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Black Cops on the Murder of Tyre Nichols | Uncomfortable Conversations | Police Brutality FULL EP.

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  • čas pƙidĂĄn 18. 08. 2024
  • In a long-awaited conversation following the brutal killing of Tyre Nichols, Emmanuel Acho sits down with the Austin Police Department to dive deeper into the controversial case and explore the unique challenges faced by Black police officers in America. Officer Jeremy Bohannon, Sergeant Tonya Thomas, and Detective Mike Rhone discuss their encounters and experiences as Black police officers in America today.
    0:24 Introduction
    0:56 The Murder of Tyre Nichols
    1:53 The Murder of George Floyd v Tyre Nichols
    3:10 Is this a race issue or a system issue?
    4:14 You're no longer black, you're blue.
    4:24 "Black on Black Crime"
    8:13 The uniform and the badge
    9:00 Is the system corrupt?
    9:22 Who polices the police?
    10:20 Do blue lives matter?
    12:02 Name calling and racial slurs
    12:50 Choosing to become a police officer
    13:33 What can be done to bring reconciliation of Black people in society?
    15:40 Closing Remarks
    Stay connected with Emmanuel! 🔔
    WEBSITE âžĄïž emmanuelacho.com/
    TIKTOK âžĄïž / emmanuelacho
    INSTAGRAM âžĄïž / emmanuelacho
    TWITTER âžĄïž / emmanuelacho
    FACEBOOK âžĄïž / theemmanuelacho
    Buy a copy of Emmanuel's books! 📕
    ILLOGICAL âžĄïž www.illogicalbo...
    UNCOMFORTABLE CONVOS W/A BLACK MAN âžĄïž uncomfortablec...

Komentáƙe • 2,3K

  • @tonyb3083
    @tonyb3083 Pƙed rokem +851

    Anytime an officer is interviews they need to ask two questions. Have you ever witness a fellow officer commit a crime ( to include lying on a report)? What did you do after witnessing this crime?

  • @Lostcause1974
    @Lostcause1974 Pƙed rokem +326

    At what time in America's history was policing not corrupt? During slavery, during Jim Crow, during segregation, during desegregation, during the Civil Rights movement, during anti-war protests, during class struggles, during protests for water and land protection?
    When?

    • @rollsroyce2627
      @rollsroyce2627 Pƙed rokem +17

      EXACTLY smfh

    • @michealmahmoud6391
      @michealmahmoud6391 Pƙed rokem +13

      All of this!!!

    • @larryparker4370
      @larryparker4370 Pƙed rokem +4

      Never

    • @stan467
      @stan467 Pƙed rokem

      The entire time in America cops have been the good guys. You judge all of them by the actions of a few. By that standard all black people are drug dealing, murdering, rapists. The idea of the police being corrupt, is no different than believing all blacks are criminals. We should be smart enough to realize both those things are wrong.

    • @shadowpop5895
      @shadowpop5895 Pƙed rokem +7

      Amen Maggie's you hit the nail on the head.

  • @DeeboX-vv8ji
    @DeeboX-vv8ji Pƙed rokem +431

    I remember seeing a black female officer stop her partner from choking and beating a man that was in handcuffs. She got fired for doing the right thing, and they held her pension until George Floyd incident happened. I think if they took the money from police involved settlements out of the Pension Fund, instead of taking it from tax payers would lessen the mistakes made.

    • @keyfield8967
      @keyfield8967 Pƙed rokem

      Police departments themselves are the problem -they know that they have punk coward thugs with badges on their force and still turn a blind eye. So-called "law enforcement in America was and still is intended to "stifle" Black folks more than white criminals. Whites can kill a cop and "only" be arrested - you all see what happens to many 'alleged' black perps...

    • @maxtorque5329
      @maxtorque5329 Pƙed rokem +10

      I remember that case

    • @gregorycourtney8591
      @gregorycourtney8591 Pƙed rokem +25

      Taking the money from the pension fund is a great idea. That would force the police to police each other. That would bring sweeping overnight change to every police department in this country. Money is the language that everyone understands.

    • @carlamarlene2927
      @carlamarlene2927 Pƙed rokem +11

      Mistakes made? How bout murders committed?

    • @leonwhite864
      @leonwhite864 Pƙed rokem +10

      She got paid but it took a minute but she got paid 🎉

  • @brownsvilleborn
    @brownsvilleborn Pƙed rokem +19

    Never ask a cop if the system corrupt. Hell yes the system is corrupt.

  • @christophersmith3867
    @christophersmith3867 Pƙed rokem +204

    "I don't care about what you know until I know that you care." That is a very powerful and important statement.

    • @hmiller041
      @hmiller041 Pƙed rokem

      JUST LIKE PREACHERS IT SOUND GOOD TO THE UNCONSCIOUS MIND, BUT THE BLUELIFE COMMUNITY SHOW US THAT THEY ARE AT WAR AGAINST PEOPLE OF BLACK COLOR

    • @friendlypedokiller3026
      @friendlypedokiller3026 Pƙed rokem +2

      Facts don’t care about your feelings. Stop being so emotional.

    • @RogerGFenn
      @RogerGFenn Pƙed rokem +6

      As hard as it is at times I believe we need to care about all people even those we do not agree with or identify with.

    • @sludgerat666
      @sludgerat666 Pƙed rokem +2

      @@RogerGFenn ESPECIALLY if your duty is to protect and serve

    • @krane15
      @krane15 Pƙed rokem

      If you expect someone to care in today's system of justice you're going to be sadly disappointed.

  • @alankjkj1
    @alankjkj1 Pƙed rokem +242

    Law enforcement has never given me a reason to trust them. The best way to deal with the police is to have no dealings with them at all.

    • @metcalfhottie6305
      @metcalfhottie6305 Pƙed rokem +12

      Yes, if possible. I'm witchu on all you said

    • @raphaelostrowski6336
      @raphaelostrowski6336 Pƙed rokem +7

      Yea don’t break the laws

    • @moeych6291
      @moeych6291 Pƙed rokem +31

      @@raphaelostrowski6336 you do know that innocent citizens come in contact with cops and are falsely charged as well. Or did you just drop onto this planet?

    • @chiefrcker
      @chiefrcker Pƙed rokem

      Yep, 1000%.

    • @sheryl-ks3nd
      @sheryl-ks3nd Pƙed rokem +5

      I agree with you. Don't give the police a reason to arrest you in the first place,

  • @Polyphemus47
    @Polyphemus47 Pƙed rokem +116

    As a part of training as a security guard in Las Vegas, we were taught to de-escalate any encounter with what they called 'verbal judo'. Detective Rhone hit that nail smack dab on the head by bringing up the 'empathy' issue. The ability to imagine yourself in the other person's 'head', or position, is key to being able to understand why the other might react as they do. IF empathy could be taught (it can't), Tyre, George, and so many others would be living their natural lives today. The time to determine whether a potential applicant for these positions of power is capable of remaining human in conflict is before they're hired. Nip them in the buds with better screening procedures. I'm of the opinion that a sizeable percentage of those who are drawn to the police force are malignant narcissists who imagine that a badge proves their superiority to the rest of us.

    • @edgarcruzsr9695
      @edgarcruzsr9695 Pƙed rokem +4

      @Bill-one of the questions in an pre employment exam for a security firm, was DO YOU BELIEVE YOU'RE BETTER THAN OTHER PEOPLE? yes or no..

    • @marybrown5238
      @marybrown5238 Pƙed rokem +7

      Good points. Research shows that empathy is a learned behaviour and can be taught. Now, are their folks who have a certain personality trait that may causes them to be less or have difficulty with being empathetic, yes. Even narcissistic folks can learn empathy but often it's facilitated by their own self interest.

    • @bertthompson7342
      @bertthompson7342 Pƙed rokem

      ​@@edgarcruzsr9695 Won't work.
      People will lie in order to get a job.

    • @Polyphemus47
      @Polyphemus47 Pƙed rokem +6

      @@marybrown5238 I was going off of some o-o-o-old research that indicated that, if a child hasn't learned empathy by 5y/o or so, they won't develop it. I hope you're right! We need a world full of empathic people!

    • @Polyphemus47
      @Polyphemus47 Pƙed rokem +2

      It seems obvious to me that a child who never experienced empathic parents would have a difficult time 'getting it' later on.

  • @BlackMoses2061
    @BlackMoses2061 Pƙed rokem +61

    I would have loved to see Acho ask the officers if they feel that qualified immunity should be taken away, and if police should have to carry personal liability insurance, such as doctors have to do. I know it is called malpractice, but they can be sued for harming others. I believe it would make police officers more responsible and respectful of their duty to serve the public, if they knew they would be civilly liable for their actions. I also believe it would lead to more respect in the communities they police, because people in the community would not always feel criminalized because of current police mentality. Prayerfully it may even open up a way of dialogue between the police and the public. (Just a thought)đŸ€”

  • @janemiettinen5176
    @janemiettinen5176 Pƙed rokem +100

    Its a PD issue and very little is done to fix it. Only 22 weeks of training, little or no mental evaluations, no personal accountability, departments investigating themselves, qualified immunity and the us vs them mentality has brought us here. And I think its only going to get worse.

    • @4Khyla
      @4Khyla Pƙed rokem +19

      I agree with you. My concern among many is the lack of education. Heck, cosmetologists have to go through a least 6 months of training and they want to give a gun to people in a little over 5 months! Officers should have a degree in criminology, where they really learn the Constitution, the history of policing, dealing with people who have mental issues, de-escalation techniques, and dog behavior. (Obviously, for people who want to be handlers eventually but also go over it in general for all the recruits). Then after that, they go to the academy. I live in a small town that only requires a high school diploma. No Kidding!
      The culture of police brutality needs to stop. Believe me, I support vigorous action when dealing with dangerous criminals. But I saw a video where the officers were yelling at a man during a traffic stop and told him to get out of the car. He kept saying he couldn't walk. They dragged him from the car and totally ignored the wheelchair in the back seat. That's what I mean about brutality. Just senseless aggression.

    • @Dr.Atomic
      @Dr.Atomic Pƙed rokem +7

      @@4Khyla Your first paragraph says it all. You can tell it as well. Some of them have trouble with simple communication skills. I mean really simple. That means they can't comprehend a lot of the conversation they are having with a citizen ..................

    • @komiczar
      @komiczar Pƙed rokem +1

      @4Khyla Perhaps more coommunity involvement by police and citizens as members who interact with citizens,and as citizens, could impact the respectful social behaviors of both police and citizens.

    • @brianmeen2158
      @brianmeen2158 Pƙed rokem +4

      Yes and we are lowering standards even more in many areas because many cops have left the job or retired. The 2020 “defund the police” anti-cop narrative has been disastrous .. It’s like we keep making wrong decision after wrong decision then are shocked when things keep breaking down

    • @brianmeen2158
      @brianmeen2158 Pƙed rokem +4

      @@Dr.Atomichalf of our country cannot even read at grade or a functioning level - that means they can’t read the side of a prescription bottle .. how did we get here? Oh and what’s worse is we keep dropping standards in the school system!

  • @asuficharles7232
    @asuficharles7232 Pƙed rokem +55

    Are there any good cops.? How many bad cops have you arrested? The hard hitting question like these should be asked!

    • @lonniejolly5882
      @lonniejolly5882 Pƙed rokem +2

      Facts.

    • @Bombadda
      @Bombadda Pƙed rokem +2

      Even if it did happen, would you hear about it on national news? Probably not.

    • @pike54545454
      @pike54545454 Pƙed rokem +7

      @@Bombadda no kidding, it's like all the black crime that is never reported by the media, it's all disgusting.

    • @karinaz8756
      @karinaz8756 Pƙed rokem +2

      @@pike54545454there is no such thing as “black crime”. There’s systematic racism in law enforcement. Fixed it for you.

    • @pike54545454
      @pike54545454 Pƙed rokem

      @karinaz8756 hi stupid, you fixed nothing. Blacks overwhelmingly lead crime in the US...the thing systematic, well automatic is Black's are prone to violence...another fun fact....in the UK, same issues, same group, must be inherent.

  • @daffyduck858903
    @daffyduck858903 Pƙed rokem +63

    I’m a Title 1, high school teacher in the same city these officers serve. If police officers would take the time to build personal relationships with their communities, not only would crime decrease in that community, but also officer-involved deaths. It is very simple to build relationships of trust! It just takes willingness.

    • @nyk3334
      @nyk3334 Pƙed rokem

      I agree with much of this however criminals need to be in jail. It’s always 0.00003% of the community causing 99% of crime. This lenient liberal attitude kills people.

    • @QueenAnitaSoul1
      @QueenAnitaSoul1 Pƙed rokem +4

      ​@@nyk3334
      You living In a bubble

    • @tonybrown9208
      @tonybrown9208 Pƙed rokem

      @@nyk3334 not jail...rehabilitation is needed so they stop wanting to do crimes.

    • @DarthVader1977
      @DarthVader1977 Pƙed rokem

      FBI crime statistics - Table 43.

    • @DarthVader1977
      @DarthVader1977 Pƙed rokem

      @@QueenAnitaSoul1 You're*

  • @jamieharris2633
    @jamieharris2633 Pƙed rokem +16

    What they did to Tyre Nichols was brutal. They didn't just kill him they beat him to death and then allowed him to lay there and suffer. I get chills and a nauseous feeling in the pit of my stomach when he calls out for his mom.

    • @coolguy6654
      @coolguy6654 Pƙed 10 měsĂ­ci

      Frfr that video is way too hard to watch. Very very sad.

  • @dandrefalcon3963
    @dandrefalcon3963 Pƙed rokem +45

    Every bad encounter I’ve ever had with a cop was with a “Black” cop! It’s sad but crazy out there. đŸ€ŠđŸżâ€â™‚ïž

    • @pHixiq
      @pHixiq Pƙed rokem +1

      And you know what's crazy ? Same here. I've only been pulled over 3 times in my life. 2 times with the white cops ? Very easy and let me go with no issues. Both me and them were respectful and everything else.
      First black cop ? Tried his best to give me a ticket and bewtittled me. Like fam ?

    • @drumgoldparks
      @drumgoldparks Pƙed rokem

      For decades I've said I know what to expect from white cops. It's the Black and Puerto Rican cops that I feel are the worse of the gang.

    • @marcusdarden1535
      @marcusdarden1535 Pƙed rokem

      Anti Black racism is taught to every American... even other Black people.

    • @redtap5426
      @redtap5426 Pƙed rokem

      U black?

    • @greymatter33
      @greymatter33 Pƙed rokem +2

      That goes to show the disrespect and violence comes from a brotherhood of corruption and power. The facts are different for everyone, butI myself and Hispanic. Honor roll, GATE, academic my entier life, but harassed and physically assaulted by white, Mexican, and black cops before I was even 18. After that, constantly getting pulled over. Most of this was in Southern Californa. I moved to to Northern California and I only ever had one encounter with police. Both white, power tripping, stopped me for something that was completely untrue, although I knew they just didn't see it from where they were. They were lying, but that was 13 years ofonly one encounter. AS a young Mexican male, I was treated like a criminal when I was just a kid. It's racist, it's corruption, it's both.

  • @Paranormal-Alien
    @Paranormal-Alien Pƙed rokem +83

    I love the lady she is a brave honest women much respect and I pray that God keeps these officers safe!

    • @spaceghost9465
      @spaceghost9465 Pƙed rokem +5

      "I love the lady she is a brave honest women" You're her family member aren't you. Way to be objective, Son.

    • @hewyp06
      @hewyp06 Pƙed rokem

      Understand I couldnt watch the this so call me the fool I am if im wrong.. But unless the officer is talking about the Police as a whole and how horrendous they(the Cops) are she is NOT brave!!! They are allowed if not encouraged to speak about this like this is some outlier sh!t that they are shocked and appauled by!!! PLEASE dont fall for the BS!! That Officer sees sh!t everyday that she engages in or ignores!!

    • @krane15
      @krane15 Pƙed rokem

      She's a sergeant, a veteran, and a female. All the things that allow her more latitude that anyone else. The only one higher than she is a white female.

  • @juripanda
    @juripanda Pƙed rokem +5

    As a journalist, TV show host, producer, survivor of child sex abuse, DV and homelessness, and an advocate, your questions and rapport building is just extraordinary and we truly appreciate you shedding a light to many difficult issues that no one wants to talk about. You are brave and fearless of what you do.
    Great questions bring the best answers.
    Truth and a perfect world should be we don’t have to talk about this.
    But facing a reality and having uncomfortable conversation can break through biases and promote more peace.
    Thank you, Mr. Acho for being the best host and using your intelligence, insight, and courageousness to bring these black officers to this show.
    Please keep going.
    Story telling can shift our minds and I truly believe in the power of journalism.
    Juri Love
    Feature Correspondent
    The Sun Chronicle

  • @jujutrini8412
    @jujutrini8412 Pƙed rokem +36

    This type of thing will never stop until they get over this “one cop going rogue” attitude and face the fact that this type of behaviour is ENDEMIC!

  • @ultimatetruthteller4169
    @ultimatetruthteller4169 Pƙed rokem +80

    These cats have done some of the same things and have acted outside the color of law many times. Having them on this platform is meaningless


    • @jimmyjames1474
      @jimmyjames1474 Pƙed rokem

      Yep, never trust a cop, they're trained incorrectly, every single one of them.

    • @lonniejolly5882
      @lonniejolly5882 Pƙed rokem +8

      Big facts.

    • @frederickbunter3181
      @frederickbunter3181 Pƙed rokem +12

      Thank you cause they sit there an play politics as they are told to do . Blue lie for Blue

    • @jermainej82
      @jermainej82 Pƙed rokem +7

      I thought it was refreshing to see and hear them and talk. They didn't have to be there but I can tell they have been wanting to speak about this

    • @joemagwood9130
      @joemagwood9130 Pƙed rokem +7

      For them to say they was shocked it was blacks cops who did this is an insult !!!

  • @brandonjcoleman1
    @brandonjcoleman1 Pƙed rokem +100

    Shes right! It's a level of trust. Even though a person my not like officers they will trust someone that looks like them or come from the same background as them

    • @platterjockey
      @platterjockey Pƙed rokem +4

      For me, it's definitely about shared background rather than race. Usually, the cops i've ever had questionable or bad interactions with were those from a different world than what I grew up in.

    • @johnhorrobin1538
      @johnhorrobin1538 Pƙed rokem

      Makes no difference if they are White ,Black ,or another Ethnic minority group , once that uniform goes on its watch your backs as I've said Colors know no bounds on Murder & Abuse Sad but TRUE.

    • @allaboutthemurzic
      @allaboutthemurzic Pƙed rokem +14

      Which is stupid because having the same color as someone doesnt automatically mean you can relate to them or you have the same life

    • @allaboutthemurzic
      @allaboutthemurzic Pƙed rokem +4

      @@platterjockey This
      Its about upbringing not color

    • @platterjockey
      @platterjockey Pƙed rokem

      @@allaboutthemurzic Are you assuming I grew up in the Black culture?

  • @boondocksdragon8959
    @boondocksdragon8959 Pƙed rokem +42

    I have far too many thoughts on this to condense into a YT comment, so I'll just settle for sending Love & Light from Mississippi. Y'all stay safe and keep taking care of each other. âœŒđŸŒđŸ–€
    P.S. Thanks for another wonderful conversation, Emmanuel, as uncomfortable as it may be. Your videos should be required viewing. 💯

  • @DianaEricJ
    @DianaEricJ Pƙed rokem +2

    I’m on the Police Advisory Committee for a smaller city near Seattle. We just got our first commander of color in the last few years. The things he has had to deal with in the department are insane. We have had amazing conversations and I think our biggest issue is the top leadership doesn’t know how to connect with the community and won’t work on it. And that’s with anyone in the community, even white people who love them.
    We will have officers come to community events, and just kind of sit there and not engage because the culture is to be stoic and impersonal and always on guard.
    A big advantage officers of color have (specific to what I am seeing and learning in our area) is knowing that a person of color yelling, pacing, being upset doesn’t mean they’re a threat or that you need to use a higher level of force. Growing up in Polynesian culture, and now living in close connection with Black and brown friends, I see there is a level of expressing “negative” emotions that isn’t typical in white culture.
    Most white officer’s instincts is to see that as a threat, instead of a nervous system response that needs help to regulate. Our officers of color and female officers tend to see a person who is in distress or upset they’re about to be arrested. Their instinct even before training is often on helping the person deescalate because they grew up knowing that expressing big feelings doesn’t automatically mean violence. My husband and I grew up that in white culture someone yelling is automatically danger.
    The past two years our department has seen a great change in deescalation training and reducing force. Policies have changed dramatically and it has made a difference. I love hearing the stories of Officer spending two hours talking someone who robbed a store at gunpoint out of a tree until they surrender. A few years ago that would have been a physical altercation.
    But there is still a mindset issue that I think Black officers have an easier time overcoming, while also having an advantage of being seen as more likely to be safe for people of color in the community.

  • @ginjuice8951
    @ginjuice8951 Pƙed rokem +47

    Is the system corrupt? Do I really have to answer that? The number of corrupt , tyrannical, blood-thirsty, deranged, psychotic, unhinged, cops I have watched either violating, harassing, intimidating, and deleting innocent citizens is insane! I’m yet to see a good cop or they haven’t been born!
    New subscriber ❀

    • @SlickArmor
      @SlickArmor Pƙed rokem

      Full of ginjuice I see. There are tons of great cops. If all you meet are bad cops then I would say you're the problem.

    • @pike54545454
      @pike54545454 Pƙed rokem

      What a stupid comment, how about, don't commit crime, then we don't need the police. You want to talk about all cops being bad but I guarantee you do nothing to make your community better, nothing. Comical that there's more compassion for bad people, well just the ones without a badge.

    • @brianmeen2158
      @brianmeen2158 Pƙed rokem +1

      Your comment is hyperbole . I don’t think we’ve learned anything since 2020 and that’s a damn shame

    • @krane15
      @krane15 Pƙed rokem

      The CJS is inherently corrupt. It was made by the white man, for the white ma and is ultimately controlled and run by the white man. The racism is systemic.

    • @HouseMDaddict
      @HouseMDaddict Pƙed rokem

      There are "gangs" in some police systems where they actively do corrupt things and you move up in the hierarchy the more wrong you do...all ethnicities. I've encountered really nice community based cops who play ball with kids and such, and I've encountered racist and sexist cops who try to intimidate you for legit no reason đŸ€·đŸ»â€â™€ïž. They get satisfaction by making you cry. There ARE nice cops out there and I've met many of them, but it's luck of the draw who you get.

  • @LaurenOrion
    @LaurenOrion Pƙed rokem +30

    This is arguably one of the most important series on CZcams

  • @doomtho42
    @doomtho42 Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci +9

    All 3 of these guests were fantastic, but in particular Officer Bohannon’s self-awareness and ability to both think critically and communicate effectively was incredibly refreshing and a pleasure to hear - and I’d like to emphasize here the fact that effective communication is equally as much about actively listening and truly considering the message the other person is attempting to convey (not just listening for keywords and using those to fill in the blanks of your preconceived notion of who they are and what you assume they probably think) as it is about clearly conveying your own thoughts and ideas.

    • @jadesedelifus
      @jadesedelifus Pƙed 10 měsĂ­ci

      BS .......if they speak up, they are punished. When OUR PEOPLE stop lying to protect the system of supremacy (and that paycheck), something MIGHT change. Safe answers will keep your job-TRUTH will get them all fired💯

  • @JB-uk8hw
    @JB-uk8hw Pƙed rokem +52

    What an amazing conversation. I pray these officers stay safe and do wonderful things in the communities they serve.

    • @krane15
      @krane15 Pƙed rokem +3

      Its all fake bub. There's a reason the idiom, "believe half of what you see and none of what you hear," exists.

    • @alphinmesa9945
      @alphinmesa9945 Pƙed rokem +2

      It's sucks that we have to hope these people do the right thing lmaoo

  • @SunshineWeathers
    @SunshineWeathers Pƙed rokem +41

    I've missed "Uncomfortable Conversations" ! Glad you're back! 💯

  • @Mega9830
    @Mega9830 Pƙed rokem +16

    The problem has a name. QUALIFIED IMMUNITY.

  • @kaymac227
    @kaymac227 Pƙed rokem +6

    I absolutely loved this interview, 4 intelligent black minds having a much-needed conversation!

  • @leecy1268
    @leecy1268 Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci +1

    I absolutely loved this conversation. I am a black man from the UK. The first time I went to the US was the wonderful Detroit, and I admired the black officers I saw there, I had never seen so many people of colour in uniform. They gave me a sense of purpose and belonging. At the time, I was only twenty years old, living in the UK, we may have had only 200 black officers then. Now, at the age of 61, we may have about 100 times that number, but I doubt it. Thank you once again

  • @mikecooper5780
    @mikecooper5780 Pƙed rokem +18

    Why isn't this conversation being had on the main stream ?! This is so good for us all !

    • @lewiskunst1089
      @lewiskunst1089 Pƙed rokem +2

      What's mainstream; MSNBC, abc7 .. etc?
      I don't like those news networks cause they're sooo damn cheesey / boring / lack of intelligence... I wish we had something equivalent to BBC (British broadcasting company) or "democracy now!" Podcast... But the stuff we get on the television is crap!!! It's so damn simple minded and I don't feel like I learn anything from those channels... Not to mention it's mostly commercials then them showing news... Would be great if say New York times journalists did TV news. Anyways I feel like mainstream just doesn't exist anymore...

    • @rebeccamartin2399
      @rebeccamartin2399 Pƙed rokem +1

      Because they make more money with outrage. It's not about doing the right thing with them. Follow the dollar.

  • @mom2babygkaterad946
    @mom2babygkaterad946 Pƙed rokem +68

    Why, just why? He posed NO threat to any of the officers. He was simply trying to go home. Rest In Peace Tyree. He didn’t deserve this at all.đŸ’”đŸ„€đŸ•Šïž

    • @nthekno9427
      @nthekno9427 Pƙed rokem +9

      that was a "hit" , a personal vendetta, a concerted move of one officer, who involved his fellow peers unbeknownst to them. A "get back" over Tyree's involvement with the officers "X" Woman-friend.

    • @elias560
      @elias560 Pƙed rokem +2

      @@nthekno9427 any evidence? please show

    • @leightonlawrence8832
      @leightonlawrence8832 Pƙed rokem +4

      Tyre was a peaceful and humorous guy. He was not the type of guy to ever be involved with police. I skated with him for years and I know damn well he didn’t deserve it. All he did was skate and film and skate and film

    • @metcalfhottie6305
      @metcalfhottie6305 Pƙed rokem

      ​@@nthekno9427 yup, mmm hmm!

    • @beefstickswellington1203
      @beefstickswellington1203 Pƙed rokem

      The officers that murdered him were literally gangsters in blue. It was personal

  • @thomaspamelawashington1397
    @thomaspamelawashington1397 Pƙed rokem +5

    Excellent interview, truth will triumph. Thanks for sharing.

  • @alidamcgee4452
    @alidamcgee4452 Pƙed rokem +1

    As a black woman, I was treated like shit from police. They ran my name in every county because he said their is no way I don’t have a record and he harassed the hell out of me

  • @MbongeniMthombeni-yh5jp
    @MbongeniMthombeni-yh5jp Pƙed rokem +33

    The lady looks too sweet to be an officer,but she said she loves her job. Listening to the conversations I personally think she is more than just a police officer in uniform,she's an angel, a mother, a wife and most importantly a human being who understands how to deal with people within her society!! May God bless her,thanks sister. Keep it up queen!!!❀

    • @brettmorrison1
      @brettmorrison1 Pƙed rokem +2

      As I listened to her, I was thinking that I bet she has saved many lives.

    • @mikewhitman578
      @mikewhitman578 Pƙed rokem +2

      They did not do this stuff right 👍

    • @ivyjackson8695
      @ivyjackson8695 Pƙed rokem +2

      Yes she does look sweet she will take your ass down

    • @kinglawrey8948
      @kinglawrey8948 Pƙed rokem +1

      ​@@mikewhitman578 This right here. 💯

    • @kinglawrey8948
      @kinglawrey8948 Pƙed rokem +1

      ​@@ivyjackson8695 And this! đŸ’ŻđŸ€Š

  • @prodigal1970
    @prodigal1970 Pƙed rokem +23

    When is someone going to give Emmanuel his own hard hitting talk show? Are any of the networks paying attention to this guy..? đŸ€”

    • @platterjockey
      @platterjockey Pƙed rokem +2

      I doubt any of the news channels even have the guts to give him his own show. They won't want to offend whatever audience the CEO is going for.

    • @annoyedatthis1
      @annoyedatthis1 Pƙed rokem

      Good point. It's just a matter of time. Glad to have found this forum here.

    • @TheIncredibleStories
      @TheIncredibleStories Pƙed rokem +1

      You know legacy network media is no longer the biggest player, right?
      CZcams's audience is bigger than all legacy networks' audiences combined.

    • @aquarius-woman5364
      @aquarius-woman5364 Pƙed rokem

      Fox can give him a show. That's where he belongs

  • @boxcarairwaves182
    @boxcarairwaves182 Pƙed rokem +2

    This is fire đŸ”„ , thanks for these interviews. Just found this through a wayne interview. More people need to watch this.

  • @ginad2827
    @ginad2827 Pƙed rokem +3

    Please keep up these conversation, Emmanuel. What you're doing is of paramount importance!

  • @sgheindel
    @sgheindel Pƙed rokem +61

    So informative, so honest, and so powerful to hear these officers using their voices for change!! I greatly appreciate each of these people and their heart and commitments to being a part of the solution! Let's be bridge builders

    • @andrewczski1969
      @andrewczski1969 Pƙed rokem +1

      Haha

    • @marthamorales6445
      @marthamorales6445 Pƙed rokem +1

      You have no idea how these pigs really conduct themselves on the job. Ex: I'm an aspiring writer and drug user, i give these 2 groups the benefit if the doubt always, wrong or not, its the truth. Comedians back comedians... you think these people are any different, really?

    • @nickwells20
      @nickwells20 Pƙed rokem

      You are right. This was hard to watch and not want to just keep commenting lol Every time someone spoke it was real and just good stuff.

  • @javianjohnson8746
    @javianjohnson8746 Pƙed rokem +27

    This was a fantastic, and very real, conversation. Love this insight

    • @Dr.Atomic
      @Dr.Atomic Pƙed rokem +1

      I don't think they FULLY tipped their hand.....................

    • @krane15
      @krane15 Pƙed rokem

      To bad none of them are in any position to make any true change. The two stripped officers have some control. But their orders can easily be overruled by their white superiors. Now do you see how all this kumbaya exhibition is futile?

    • @factmanamerican882
      @factmanamerican882 Pƙed rokem

      George Floyd died from an OVERDOSE. Did you not read the Toxicology report? Floyd had enough Fentanyl in his system to kill 4 men his size, then add the opioids, the meth and THC. Floyd OD'D. That is just a FACT.
      The whole trail was a SHAM and everyone knows it. The democrats have corrupted the FBI and DOJ and they used them as weapons to create a race war, and/or division. And those like you bought it. Stop LYING. Floyd OD'D and the toxicology report is 100% PROOF of thata.

  • @MarvaLuss1
    @MarvaLuss1 Pƙed rokem +2

    "We have to understand as police officers we escalate the situation as soon as we get there".

  • @leniece2
    @leniece2 Pƙed rokem +3

    When you ask black cops; is the system corrupt and they say anything but yes, they're compromised! Everything they say after that is suspect. The answer is; definitely yes! But we're doing all we can to change that, including standing up & calling out bad cops & their actions. Period!

    • @krane15
      @krane15 Pƙed rokem +2

      Wow, you sound jaded. Yet, you're absolutely correct. That why you have to take anything a current cop in uniform has to say with grain of salt. The first thing you have to realize is that they're hand selected. No department would allow a rogue cop in uniform to make a public statement they haven't already pre-screened.

    • @HouseMDaddict
      @HouseMDaddict Pƙed rokem

      People in the system are corrupt. Some want to help people and others want the power to hold over people. The people who go in for power and dominance find loopholes to game the system so they can be corrupt with minimal consequences. A lot of cops, just do their job helping people, deescalate situations, and then go home.

  • @thatonepianoguy_
    @thatonepianoguy_ Pƙed rokem +9

    Educating myself on these discussions I never heard at home nor school as a white individual in a predominantly white community
 thank you


  • @derekvancampenhout5530
    @derekvancampenhout5530 Pƙed rokem +23

    I think the world is slowing seeing that evil comes in all colors , no matter what the race , give a black man power and some will become the very thing the despied.

    • @meb777
      @meb777 Pƙed rokem

      😂😂 you are so White! "evil comes in all colors"...."give a Black man power and some will become the very the dispised". Why not give a "man" power and some will become what they despised. We have other races that has and will abuse power.
      That's has always been the problem a Black people are judged as a whole when one goes array.

  • @logandeactress
    @logandeactress Pƙed rokem +1

    I am a police officer and this converstaion was needed. Thank You!

  • @rustynails68
    @rustynails68 Pƙed rokem +17

    The officer’s responsible for the Nichols murder need to be convicted. Nichols wasn’t even a criminal and he tried to comply safely. I am glad that you were able to have this conversation. I hope that you visit this again.

  • @ceeclue7038
    @ceeclue7038 Pƙed rokem +10

    I understand what she said. I had a female African-American female student who was failing my class call me a “n..and mother
f..”
    In all the years I have been teaching, no student has ever insulted me. Students from various ethnic backgrounds were apologizing for the adults black female student. In conclusion, she dropped out of college.

    • @talez5361
      @talez5361 Pƙed rokem +4

      This student, by her actions, came from a broken home (no matter the veneers used to convince others to the contrary), and that home's disarray was intentionally beought about by the United States government. So, don't be too hard on the memory of her. She was designed

    • @candyxox
      @candyxox Pƙed rokem +3

      I wouldn't care what she had to say. She was failing. That's why she was angry

    • @krane15
      @krane15 Pƙed rokem +2

      @@candyxox Failing covers a lot of territory. Just because someone fails doesn't mean they don't try. As someone who went to college and have had successes and failures, I say without equivocation that the system is poorly designed. Its not just difficulty for black students, but many white students as well.
      The white student just have a better system of support that helps them overcome many of those learning and comprehension obstacles. I've seen and experienced the prejudice and its immense.
      Believe me when I say, I could write a book. I can say that the single most important element in a students success is the teacher. If a teacher can take credit for a student's success. The must also accept the deducction for their failures.

    • @robertrobert6788
      @robertrobert6788 Pƙed rokem +4

      Hurt people hurt people . We need to do better as a society to teach our kids better

  • @meltorme-ntor2933
    @meltorme-ntor2933 Pƙed rokem +61

    Wow, talk about "uncomfortable conversations"! And I don't mean it as these folks being or acting uncomfortable. They were all incredible! They were honest. I immediately was drawn to what Jeremy said, about the uniform automatically gives you power. That is absolutely true. Some people can't handle power, some people want it from the very start. How do you weed those individuals out? How can you recognize them before it's too late? Very good and interesting convos. And I would LOVE it if those three officers were in my community!

    • @ellarweegadsden8483
      @ellarweegadsden8483 Pƙed rokem +4

      But, police departments are now claiming that they are finding it so difficult to hire that they have to lower the hiring standards. Now there won't even be an attempt to weed out the bad apples. There might even be some situations where clearly unqualified prospects may be hired because they'll cause trouble racially.

    • @joeblow2069
      @joeblow2069 Pƙed rokem

      They were not honest. They probably violate people's rights all the time.
      They will stop, harass and even forcibly detain a law abiding person and force them to provide them an ID.

    • @thenny10
      @thenny10 Pƙed rokem +1

      How do you know they were honest??? Is it because they were saying what you want to hear?? That doesn’t mean they were being honest!!!

    • @joeblow2069
      @joeblow2069 Pƙed rokem

      @@thenny10 Exactly.

    • @rcollins4958
      @rcollins4958 Pƙed rokem

      ​@@thenny10also doesn't mean they aren't being honest 🙄

  • @sladesurfer
    @sladesurfer Pƙed rokem +2

    My dad was a cop, he said, Police are just basically legalize gang members

  • @rashawnwilliams2264
    @rashawnwilliams2264 Pƙed rokem +1

    This is my first time watching your show you are having real conversation with real people bra this should be the biggest show on all platforms.. I also love the pivot

  • @pilargonzalez8442
    @pilargonzalez8442 Pƙed rokem +16

    Bless all police officers worldwide that refuse to go rogue under any circumstances. 💙💙💙 Thank you for trying to keep us all safe.

    • @ZillaMesh
      @ZillaMesh Pƙed rokem

      It's not their job to keep us safe. Supreme Court already ruled on that. They are Peace officers supposed to uphold our Rights. They actually though are just order followers who implement the orders of their chief who's beholden to the mayor's & governors.

    • @ellarweegadsden8483
      @ellarweegadsden8483 Pƙed rokem +2

      How do you know they're keeping you safe?

    • @pilargonzalez8442
      @pilargonzalez8442 Pƙed rokem

      @@ellarweegadsden8483Gadsden well, at least in my country when you call 911 (112 in this part of the world) for an emergency, people will help you instead of shooting you to pieces. Also, the last time I checked, police officers don't shoot people unless their own lives are in danger. I trust law enforcement here; I have never committed a crime myself. It's a hard job to do and I respect people putting their lives on the line to help others, regardless of color of skin, religion or sexual preference. You know, like normal humans that live in a democracy.

  • @davidpalmerslawncare9130
    @davidpalmerslawncare9130 Pƙed rokem +43

    To see a person literally killed by police officers is sickening and disturbing. Especially if the victims are black and brown and are done under the pretense of fear and control. It’s extra disturbing when the officers are minorities themselves. But I believe this happens for several reasons which points to primarily the culture of policing. Everything else falls underneath that perception that officers have the belief of “them against us” mentality. As for those minority officers who kill other minorities are swept up in the same culture. But compounded with fear to speak up against other officer and the sense of wanting to belong to the sense of power over others. I’m sure there are other factors, and this is my opinion.

    • @Huzzunga
      @Huzzunga Pƙed rokem +8

      Why is skin color a factor. From what you wrote I could imagine you’d care less had Tyre been a white teenager
      Skin color is no more important to the abuse of power, violation of right, and in this case and out and out murder
      Tyranny against one is tyranny against all.

    • @davidpalmerslawncare9130
      @davidpalmerslawncare9130 Pƙed rokem +4

      @@Huzzunga I agree that tyranny against one is against all. The unfortunate part is that race has plenty to do with it. That is not an opinion, but rather facts per Southern Poverty Law Center. And to think otherwise would be turning a blind eye to reality.

    • @missmarya747
      @missmarya747 Pƙed rokem +1

      Not only a mindset but office culture in these public serpents offices/stations across the đŸ‡ș🇾 USA đŸ‡ș🇾.

    • @andrewmatzo8167
      @andrewmatzo8167 Pƙed rokem +7

      So how do you feel when a Black police officer is gunned down by Black men, while she was simply sitting in her marked squad car writing reports.

    • @ronnietexan
      @ronnietexan Pƙed rokem

      @@davidpalmerslawncare9130 Apart from that many more white people are killed by police than black people or more black people kill white people than vice-versa, so I guess you are right it is racist, just not the way you're trying to convince people it is. As you say, to think otherwise would be turning a blind eye to reality. All info/stats are available from Google.

  • @deemon710
    @deemon710 Pƙed rokem +2

    Thank you Emmanuel for broaching these sensitive, uncomfortable topics in a fair, open discussion format.

  • @drumma4lyfe06
    @drumma4lyfe06 Pƙed rokem

    I'm 35 and I'm going to the police academy in December. My dad is a retired officer after 33 years and we talk all the time about this stuff. One statement he said that I will carry with me, "I'm black before the badge. I'm black after the badge." He never, ever forgot where he came from...and that's my mentality. This badge is an occupation, NOT who I am. Being black, abiding by the law, enforcing the law, and being TRUTHFUL are not easy tasks...and it's not supposed to be. I agree with Acho; it's the system that's the issue. How do we resolve it? I honestly don't know. My love for keeping these streets safe, keeping the community safe, and giving back to the community supersedes the system that is meant to work against us which is why I'm taking up the badge. I actually want to BE the difference and hopefully impact some lives along the way.

  • @kuyab4602
    @kuyab4602 Pƙed rokem +5

    Thanks đŸ™đŸœ Bro we needed this type of show.

  • @franjohnson6140
    @franjohnson6140 Pƙed rokem +6

    This was such a hot topic Emanuel! Thank you for bringing light to this subject.

  • @STOPTRUMPPROJECT2025
    @STOPTRUMPPROJECT2025 Pƙed rokem +4

    Glad you're keeping this in the news.

    • @brianmeen2158
      @brianmeen2158 Pƙed rokem

      This is the first time I’ve seen this brought up in months. Mainstream media and politicians don’t care about it because it’s black officers killing a black civilian

  • @GraciousJay
    @GraciousJay Pƙed rokem +1

    Missed your videos! Welcome back! As always good content

  • @teeokeefe
    @teeokeefe Pƙed rokem +10

    Most officers (neutral of ethnicity) are "good" cops; however, the "bad" ones make the headlines and have the power to wreak havoc within communities. That is the core problem. As long as departments continue to bring bullies into their ranks, we will have systemic problems in the police force. There are so many psychological evaluation tools available now to weed out these individuals that every division should be COMPELLED to employ these tests in the hiring process. No department should be so needy for officers that they allow folks whom they KNOW will be problematic with the public be hired.
    It's also unfortunate that some departments are more concerned with protecting their own than protecting the public.
    People that talk about "black on black" crime - that's just silly. Statistically, people commit crimes within their own community by a huge margin. If "black on black" is something you think the black community at large (I'm talking to you CARL TAYLOR) is responsible for eliminating, why is there no conversation about "white on white"? I'll tell you why - because it's a stupid way to look at crime. POVERTY is the largest driver in both black and white (and other) crimes - yes, even the overwhelmingly senseless killings of young black men by other young black men. That dog whistle question is so tired and overused. Any time you feel the need to deflect from a topic with "what about" - pause, ask yourself why it's not OK with YOU to discuss the current topic. Therein lies the problem

    • @missmarya747
      @missmarya747 Pƙed rokem

      Not only what you said.
      But most of their crimes, civil rights violations are ignored, covered up, evidence tampered with, body cameras tampered with, allowed to lie to citizens 24/7, allowed to lie in court, allowed to lie on body cameras, allowed to lie on reports, and no accountability or charges. Its a mindset and an office culture that they have cultivated and have become THE THICK BLUE/đŸ„“đŸ„“đŸ„“đŸ„“đŸ„“BACON LINE GANG MEMBERS.
      They 5 or more attempted to cover up their crime of Murder on Tyre, But God had that sky camera to show what they did.
      Not all public serpent are corrupt, BUT MOST ARE.

    • @marw1920
      @marw1920 Pƙed rokem

      There is well documented tension between those who subscribe to “a few bad apples” and others who contend that the misconduct is institutionalized in a systemic culture of bad policing. Law enforcement focus on a few bad apples narrative is misguided at best and dangerous at worst. “The k*lling of George Floyd demonstrates how one bad apple may have spoiled the bunch from a systemic racism perspective 
 How many bad apples do you need before the ‘bunch’ is spoiled?” Good apples don’t stop decay and inevitably decline when bad apples are exposed to the bunch.
      “Bad apples come from rotten trees in policing”. Bad apples are rarely discarded and instead recklessly transferred into another barrel of (good?) apples. Bad apples should not be allowed to proliferate and spread to other apples. The failure for leadership to identify bad apples and justify their removal is further complicated by deteriorating police unions with rotten roots.
      When recent psychological evaluation tools have been employed whole departments failed and further exasperate public security. A federal court’s decision back in 2000 even suggests that applicants can be "too smart" to be a cop. PD's have been lowering standards to meet personnel needs and fill required positions. Many of those are coming from short military backgrounds comfortable with executing unmanaged dominance and authority. Todays recruits are more apt to dress and act like combat soldiers while imposing marital law and suspending habeas corpus.

  • @gajeel6
    @gajeel6 Pƙed rokem +9

    I was a fan you you when you were playing and I'm an even bigger fan of you now with the all of the hard work and bridge building that you're doing. Keep using your platform to connect. âœŠđŸ»âœŠđŸŒâœŠđŸœâœŠđŸŸâœŠđŸż

    • @victorstrong7378
      @victorstrong7378 Pƙed rokem

      Interesting Fact: the host in this video full name is Emmanuel Chinedum Acho. He is mostly known by just the name Emmanuel Acho, and his youtube channel is actually named Emmanuel Acho. When u put the name Emmanuel Acho in a gematria calculator the result is 666 in the English Gematria.

  • @wildhogs1ful
    @wildhogs1ful Pƙed rokem +1

    Black or white it should make no difference. Murdering someone should equal PRISON

  • @JeromeProductions
    @JeromeProductions Pƙed rokem +2

    I felt so sorry that the one guys son had to go through that. Every race deserves to exist. We can't play God.

  • @justshar7215
    @justshar7215 Pƙed rokem +4

    Thank you for hosting and participating in this conversation❀

    • @krane15
      @krane15 Pƙed rokem

      Correction: hosting.
      Just to be clear, a good host doesn't participate.

  • @ScottLRoyal
    @ScottLRoyal Pƙed rokem +12

    "The greatest thing in my opinion is your voice." And giving (all) our peoples hearts a chance to Live and Love, will create better people, with better intentions behind our voices.

  • @devaughnlanham4033
    @devaughnlanham4033 Pƙed rokem +3

    It’s the power it’s the uniform. It’s only a certain kind of human that can adjust to that kind of power!!

  • @MrNeutralParty
    @MrNeutralParty Pƙed rokem +1

    Regarding police brutality, Officers happen to be black but they are officers first.

  • @T.T.J.E.
    @T.T.J.E. Pƙed rokem +4

    Acho thank you sir. As a police officer in the Southeast this was needed.

    • @frederickbunter3181
      @frederickbunter3181 Pƙed rokem

      You need to stop you probably do worst to the public who you protecting your partner when he's wrong or the community an do the right thing when your partner do wrong an arrest his or her ass I don't think you have the balls to do so

  • @willienewman5898
    @willienewman5898 Pƙed rokem +9

    I thought you were going to asked the uncomfortable questions. Good conversation just not an uncomfortable one

  • @coponetwork
    @coponetwork Pƙed rokem +3

    Truth is - whenever we see controversial content the vast majority of productive discourse is censored from view, not just by platform toxicity software but content creators as well. If we can't get beyond the unreasonable fears and hysterical censorship we can't have open and honest conversations. Emmanuel here, is as guilty as any other when he intentionally participates in overzealous censorship. I won't bore you in debate on particulars, suffice to say publishers do in fact block, filter, or censor comments. YT makes lists of comments removed available to content publishers who may decide to publish - or not, thus limiting individual freedom to speak openly, and protest things that are not right. Most importantly, suppressing opposing views can hold back social progress and restrict people's ability to learn more about the world and other people.

  • @stevenpalmore9429
    @stevenpalmore9429 Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci +1

    These are three examples of the kind of examples of police officers that we need in the black community and across the country

  • @anbigham4615
    @anbigham4615 Pƙed rokem +8

    Amazing conversation on an uncomfortable issue. Great job for leading this conversation.

    • @factmanamerican882
      @factmanamerican882 Pƙed rokem

      George Floyd died from an OVERDOSE. Did you not read the Toxicology report? Floyd had enough Fentanyl in his system to kill 4 men his size, then add the opioids, the meth and THC. Floyd OD'D. That is just a FACT.
      The whole trail was a SHAM and everyone knows it. The democrats have corrupted the FBI and DOJ and they used them as weapons to create a race war, and/or division. And those like you bought it. Stop LYING. Floyd OD'D and the toxicology report is 100% PROOF of thata.

  • @six3reggie
    @six3reggie Pƙed rokem +16

    It was so sad see our brother deleted in the manner. Even worst by our own black police officers.

  • @devinlynch2752
    @devinlynch2752 Pƙed rokem +3

    It's not a black or blue issue it's a right or wrong issue .

  • @loon78112
    @loon78112 Pƙed rokem +2

    This was awesome im really proud of these police officers đŸ‘đŸŸ we need more like themđŸ‘đŸŸđŸ‘đŸŸđŸ‘đŸŸđŸ‘đŸŸđŸ‘đŸŸ

  • @user-qk6tm8ch6m
    @user-qk6tm8ch6m Pƙed rokem +11

    So happy to see this video pop up. So many conversations to be had, such great perspective and love hearing the stories. Thank you Emmanuel, I hope there are more episodes to come.
    You are changing the world one conversation at a time. THANK YOU

  • @randygonzalez5758
    @randygonzalez5758 Pƙed rokem +9

    My hat is tipped to the officers that participated in this interview. This is how the communities can start the process of healing

    • @brianmeen2158
      @brianmeen2158 Pƙed rokem +1

      Agree props to them but I truly wonder how honest they could be in this discussion? Seriously everything these days is ultra PC and I highly doubt these cops were being 100% honest. I don’t blame them at all as there’s too much that could go wrong if you say the wrong thing. So many land mines

  • @andykrueger7564
    @andykrueger7564 Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci +2

    They all went silent when he said who is going to police the police and then one can come up with the canned response

  • @theraplawyer
    @theraplawyer Pƙed 3 měsĂ­ci +1

    I am somewhat impressed with Mr. Acho. I appreciate the conversations.

  • @Morris774
    @Morris774 Pƙed rokem +14

    I love the transparency and the willingness to sit and have these conversations. Because if more conversations as transparent as this were happening, then a bridge between the communities and law enforcement would be better. It used to be the clergy used to be the bridge between law enforcement and the communities. In all honesty we all need to do better on all sides to make it better for the future.

    • @krane15
      @krane15 Pƙed rokem

      Its no transparent bub, you're naive. Ask more questions from now on if you want to know the truth. Or just continue to take the blue pill.

  • @roymcleod2514
    @roymcleod2514 Pƙed rokem +6

    I am retired . Over my years. I do not subscribe to the white /black Identity. Just like race all of these things we're used as separators.. How can we have humans But different races. But that's for a different Discussion. I do not knock anyone else for how they view themselves because it was a learning journey for myself as well. After traveling Many countries. And lots of study I view myself differently. I truly appreciate the conversation And the value each of these officers brought. I think officer Bohannon. Was very solid an own point. I pray each of these officers be safe. And again I commend them And thank them for their service. And I hope each and every one of us will 1 day. Look and see who profits the most out of us being the way we are and that we become the best versions of ourselves. And that in turn will help each and every person no matter Where they are from or What group they may associate with. Continue blessings

  • @ElijahCotton
    @ElijahCotton Pƙed rokem +1

    They didn't want to answer the question truthfully about the system. It's absolutely corrupt by it's design.

  • @edwardkalafat2750
    @edwardkalafat2750 Pƙed rokem +1

    This is how we can all heal from the constant barrage of angry and frightened voices that have spread throughout our country.
    Dialogue, honest, kind , well thought out dialogue can change how you look at me and I look at you.
    We must meet on common ground or we will fall on that ground.

  • @Gremlack13
    @Gremlack13 Pƙed rokem +3

    I love me some acho.
    So smart and eloquent when getting his views across.
    Much love and respect.
    I think getting the perspective of these officers is important. I have not really seen anybody try to get the perspective of black police officers about police brutality.
    Thank you.

  • @easy6427
    @easy6427 Pƙed rokem +3

    The fact that the arguement almost always shifts to black on crime is a perfect example of the cultural bias. I base this statement on the statistical fact that with any racial group the overwhelming majority of the time the perpetrator of a crime is the same race as their victim. So the question is, why is only black on black crime a "problem" or excuse??

    • @Scumbagwhitemen
      @Scumbagwhitemen Pƙed rokem

      Frfr cause best believe white on white crime goes on everyday but white media does there best to shadow that..

    • @toricollins6516
      @toricollins6516 Pƙed rokem

      Exactly. They simply don't want to actually address or solve the problem.

  • @thomasthomasphilp4393
    @thomasthomasphilp4393 Pƙed rokem

    As a person of colour living in Germany, once Nazis ruled, I have to say German police officers are very friendly. Why? They learn from childhood about their brutal past. America hasn't healed with its brutal history with natives and African Americans. We need healing

  • @mcronn1002
    @mcronn1002 Pƙed rokem +1

    Acho your doing a good thing having discussions that are very relevant in today’s society. Kudos to you

    • @metcalfhottie6305
      @metcalfhottie6305 Pƙed rokem

      Agree

    • @krane15
      @krane15 Pƙed rokem +1

      To bad it means nothing to the people that control the system. Unless you get to them, nothing will change.

  • @gregorybarnes7346
    @gregorybarnes7346 Pƙed rokem +4

    Great panel wishing this was longer

  • @nickwells20
    @nickwells20 Pƙed rokem +12

    Watching this and not commenting 100 different posts is hard. There is just so much to be said. Great job Acho, you have a long journalism career ahead of you. Hopefully, this will be the last topic like this with black or white cops or people in general!

    • @blaq7892
      @blaq7892 Pƙed rokem +1

      In the history of black cops,
      Name the Black equivalent of Seripco?

    • @krane15
      @krane15 Pƙed rokem

      The "last" topic? Is that a joke?

    • @newlife-true
      @newlife-true Pƙed rokem

      ​@@krane15 he dont understand none of this..

  • @jaztonheard1422
    @jaztonheard1422 Pƙed rokem +4

    Thanks for doing your part in breaking barriers between the community and police. To expand on this conversation you need high level command level police officials who are working on the strategies of organizations and not the tactics. They spoke well of the grand level but there is so much more to this conversation that could be unveiled.

    • @krane15
      @krane15 Pƙed rokem +2

      Meaningless. The law is already set, and none of these conversation can change that.

    • @curtiscarter3824
      @curtiscarter3824 Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci

      @@krane15 EXACTLY! These 3 are so full of shit!

  • @reginacameron3011
    @reginacameron3011 Pƙed rokem

    My uncle was a cop and he told us that the most hate he got was from Blacks using the race card.

  • @amandasnider2644
    @amandasnider2644 Pƙed rokem +14

    I have some thoughts and comments as I watched this video however It cannot be ignored the fact that I am white and therefore I have a very different background that shapes my thoughts knowingly and unknowingly.
    My first comment is based off of a realization of horror that I discovered I unintentionally created racial bias in my mind. It wasn't from the culture I was raised in, it was because I kept watching shows like THE FIRST 48 which often deals with homicide of black individuals often committed by other black individuals because the show is filmed in areas with a very large population of black people. I was watching the show often because I was interested in police procedure and investigation that is not fiction or Hollywood.
    But... There was a moment I realized that I unintentionally gave myself racial bias when I was reading a news article about a domestic violence incident that involved weapons and drugs in my local small city and I was picturing in my head the events. There was no video footage or pictures of the individuals but I realized in horror that I pictured them as black people. There's multiple reasons why this absolutely horrified me. Firstly, It shouldn't have been something automatic as I am white. I say automatic in the same way as often we picture characters in books as being like us of the character is not described or as kids, we tend to draw people with the same skin colour as ourselves.
    Secondly, I had ZERO reason to picture the people in the article as black, logically speaking, because the vast majority of people who lived in this little city are white. The next largest groups of people are Indian and Chinese and then maybe Algonquin etc.
    Thirdly, I had no reason to assume it was a black on black crime because I wasn't even aware of any previous crimes involving black individuals in the area whatsoever.
    When I realized my bias I completely stopped watching THE FIRST 48 or A & E NEW ORLEANS etc in hopes to undo the damage. I actually started watching more cop and paramedic shows based in the UK where most of the criminals are white in hopes of "evening out" the bias if that makes any sense.
    I bring this whole journey up because I wonder if police officers should rotate frequently from state to state, city to city, province to province to avoid unintentionally creating biases against sny groups of individuals. Sure, it'd suck for the officers and their families and I'm sure that there must be relationship building between the local police and the local people they encounter frequently but perhaps it might be for the best?
    For example, maybe officers are dealing primarily with one group of people everyday (specific races, specific religions, gangs, mobs, homeless etc) and they might unintentionally develop a bias towards these people because they deal with them all the time. Perhaps it'd be wise to send them to another location with more diverse issues and individuals or just a different environment?
    Perhaps rotating police might also cut down on corruption and compliance as well as harassment issues?

    • @Babidi111
      @Babidi111 Pƙed rokem +1

      - yeah, you can have pattern recogntion and it not be some evil racism. Just what color did you decide you should repaint people when you imagine crime? you have to imagine them as looking like someone right? Now you want to go with purposely imagining them as a demographic that is less likely to be the perpetrators isn't you escaping Bias. Its just you having a Bias based on recognizible patterns, then using a whole new Bias to re color what you just imagined. Mental gymnastics is all that is.
      - Rotating police isn't a great solution, communities like to get to know the police in their area, and just how are you going to find places with diverse crime and how fair is it to the police that you want to constantly move around just so that they don't recognize where the problems are coming from?

    • @ellarweegadsden8483
      @ellarweegadsden8483 Pƙed rokem +3

      That's what is done in the military. Like Babidi, Americans wouldn't buy it. They're too conservative, they don't like change. And American's idea of change is having a fictional character's race changed. Many men go into law enforcement, because that's the best job they could get with what they had to offer. And in large cities the pay is okay. Sometimes their only inconvenience is to have to deal with people they don't like. They don't know how to do that. Just as we don't know how to get along with one another out side of the criminal justice system.

    • @allaboutthemurzic
      @allaboutthemurzic Pƙed rokem

      Woke white guilt

    • @jeromejefferson7709
      @jeromejefferson7709 Pƙed rokem

      Well said Ms Amanda, I appreciate your honesty and acknowledging your intentionally influenced bias. I say “intentionally bias”, because show like The First 48 are designed just for that purpose. So when you enter a jury box you already have that, “well they kill each other” mentality which never works in a black victim’s or black defendant’s favor. The over saturation of so called black on black crime in the mainstream media, is another brainwashing technique. Meanwhile they ignore white crime as if it doesn’t exist at all. The sad and dangerous thing about that is, when white folks move to the suburbs to avoid black people and find this false sense of security, that white male domestic terrorist reminds us all that white on white crime does exist. Whether it’s a school, a concert, mall or movie theatre white on white crime is a bigger problem. Why? Because the suburbs have less crime and more security, yet that disgruntled white male will find a way to destroy innocent life with an high powered automatic weapon. Ijs! Thanks!

    • @garyclarke2385
      @garyclarke2385 Pƙed rokem

      Most crimes have a witness, not all, but the officers are supposed to look for what the witness or victim description, what's messed up if the description is white, tall and slim and cop's arrest a black man, or visa versa , both are wrong...but predominantly black neighbourhood communities is black on black just the same in white communities it white on white crimes...
      This statistic us from a major study on serial killer's, if white they rarely kill outside their race, black serial killer's for the very same...reason is if a white man goes to the black communities he's easily seen and also car description, just the same thing the other way...I WISH PEOPLE WOULD LOOK FOR AS MUCH INFORMATION ABOUT STATISTICS AND INFORMATION NOT FROM THE MOCKINGBIRD CONTROLLED MEDIA...WE ALL GOT ALONG BEFORE KILLARY KILLATONNE LOST TO TRJMP...LOOK WHAT HE DID PRE 2016...SEE JUST WHO HE WAS, AND IN NEW YORK HE EMPLOYED THE BEST PERSON FOR THE JOB'S BUT NOBODY AND I MEAN NOBODY ELSE WOULD GIVE PEOPLE OF COLOR THE INTERVIEW NEVER MIND THE JOB....

  • @niccishepherd8410
    @niccishepherd8410 Pƙed rokem +13

    What a great episode. The best officers I've ever known are the ones who when asked why they became officers are the ones who say "to help my community " or "to help people." These officers all said that. :)

    • @spaceghost9465
      @spaceghost9465 Pƙed rokem +1

      The only people they're looking to "help" are the ones who sign their time cards.

  • @erichainey3157
    @erichainey3157 Pƙed rokem +2

    I JUST DON'T GET IT !! IT'S NOT A RACE THING THE SYSTEM IS SCEWED UP. SAD CASE .

  • @Harlowerayne
    @Harlowerayne Pƙed rokem +1

    To most blacks, black on black crime is just another day in the ghetto. There's nothing to say or hear here. Keep it moving, folks.
    I have only met one black officer who was respectful and decent. I would rather interact with white male officers than with non-white officers. Also, white male officers ROCK. In my past experience, I found most white male officers to be more laid back and easygoing.

  • @deborahblount8571
    @deborahblount8571 Pƙed rokem +4

    Hi Emmanuel great to see your back on CZcams with Emmanuel Acho đŸ™đŸœđŸ‘đŸœ "Uncomfortable Conversations with a Black Man" I have your book bought 3 gave two to my nieces husband's a father's day gift. Thank you for the solid dialogue. To hear the perspective of these officers each one had their own dealings with people and what how they feel on shootings, murders of black people. Sadly there are the rogue cops and the fight continues onward. The varied communities of all ethnicities to understand different cultures and Communication

    • @victorstrong7378
      @victorstrong7378 Pƙed rokem

      @Deborah Blount, the host in this video full name is Emmanuel Chinedum Acho. He is mostly known by just the name Emmanuel Acho, and his youtube channel is actually named Emmanuel Acho. When u put the name Emmanuel Acho in a gematria calculator the result is 666 in the English Gematria.

  • @timcarp1964
    @timcarp1964 Pƙed rokem +4

    There are people crossing the bridge. It's just slow and I realize it's seems too little, but this is how change occurs. Change isn't usually a monumental event, it's a slow gradual process.

  • @jrich972
    @jrich972 Pƙed 10 měsĂ­ci +2

    How this doesn’t have over a million views

  • @juliewoods6534
    @juliewoods6534 Pƙed rokem +1

    I do not know if y'all noticed it or not, (I am a retired LEO with 29 years experience) but I did. The difference in their responses had nothing to do with race and everything to do with generation. The younger officer by far has a better handle on a possible solution.

  • @pokerstiff
    @pokerstiff Pƙed rokem +4

    Wish @emmanuelacho would have posed the statement, "the System is not broken, it was created that way" and then asked true or false? Do you believe it to be true?

    • @rivercrow8988
      @rivercrow8988 Pƙed rokem +1

      You are correct. The system is working exactly the way it was designed to work. Older white lady here, and it was wonderful to hear police officers who genuinely want to NOT function in the system that way. My degree is in criminal justice and over the years my feelings toward the police have gone back and forth so many times.

    • @DennisMoore664
      @DennisMoore664 Pƙed rokem

      The System that with only occasional exception protects, enables, and excuses the rich and powerful and maintains their control over the US power structures by convincing enough of us to punch sideways and kick down? I'd argue that some progress here and there was made over the generations of struggle for real equality, but by and large the fact that the US is still a functioning nation with a predominantly White Anglo Saxon Protestant ruling class is proof for me that the statement is true.

  • @bobnewsdog
    @bobnewsdog Pƙed rokem +3

    Interesting video. Far too short given the subject matter. While prejudice drives many abuses of power in our criminal justice system, we need to always remember that there is an ineherent conflict between a criminal justice system / public order system and the average human being. Individual freedoms and liberties vs security and order. How do you balance the competing needs? This is true in any nation on the planet. The deeper you go into problems you will have to deal with challenges driven by socioeconomic class, gender, ethnicity, religion and other human attributes and they may need specific solutions and strategies.

    • @marw1920
      @marw1920 Pƙed rokem

      Your observation, while affirmative and dynamic, appears to whitewash the deeper problem of systemic culture of violence caused by unrestrained over-policing. A blue culture that draws a thinly veiled line between 'them vs us' mentality in policing. To make my argument more succinct - the ‘lawful order problem’ legal scholar Orin Kerr opinions in Sandra Bland case law with peer review. To put it mildly, the growing body of evidence that the ‘principle of equality before the law has been effectively abolished. Instead, a two-tiered system of justice ensures that the country's police state and government class is virtually immune from prosecution, licensed to act without restraint, while the politically powerless are imprisoned with greater ease and in greater numbers than in any other country in the world.’
      That inherent conflict between a criminal justice system / public order system and the average human being reminds me of a recent argument in a similar case heard before the (NJ) Supreme Court the following exchange took place as reported in the press. The defense attorney was quoted as saying, "a person has a public duty to refuse to obey an illegal police order." Chief Justice Joseph Weintraub's answer was, "You'd have anarchy if you didn't have order." To this the defense attorney replied, "It's a police state otherwise."
      How do we balance abuse of power to competing needs of the public - for starters we end the recent and ilegal advent of 'qualified immunity'. Because ... "It is hard to imagine a more disingenuous and dangerous way of enforcing law than by putting those decisions in the hands of ‘officials’ who pay no price for being wrong"'

  • @tonyrome068
    @tonyrome068 Pƙed rokem

    Excellent content. Im now a Minister born in Chicago and have been assaulted by Officers 5 times. Three times in Chicago, once in GR Mich and once in Muskegon Mi. I guess I qualify as an Expert on Systemic racism against Black Men. By the grace of God I survived.

  • @ahines8032
    @ahines8032 Pƙed rokem +1

    I wish the same conversations take place whenever black youths are killed by other black youths.