Saturday 2 January 2016

[WardFive] Americans' Faith in Honesty, Ethics of Police Rebounds

SHARED!

 

Brother Blue,

 

Black youth who have been raised and educated in solidly middle or upper middle class neighborhoods throughout their lives have experiences with the police that are vastly different than those experienced by their less fortunate brethren.  Many of today's law enforcement officers know with a degree of certainty if they single-out black youth in such neighborhoods for the N-word treatment their parents know how to bring heat upon the individual officer involved in such incidents and their departments.  ln my opinion, these decisions are common sense based.  ln the wild such a decision might be analogous to the decision a polar bear might make when deciding whether to attack an adult seal or adult bull walrus.  The experienced polar bear has learned that attacking an adult tusk armed bull walrus can be hazardous to the polar bear and is seldom attempted.

 

Unfortunately, black youth who have been raised and educated in sheltered environments sometimes find themselves unprepared to address white racism when it inevitably smacks them in the face.  When l lived in the Boston, MA, area some years ago, numerous black parents who lived in well to do communities outside of Boston e.g., Lexington, Belmont, Winchester, Stoneham, Waltham, Newton, Marblehead, Brookline, Woburn, and Cambridge, but had relatives or very good friends still living in the city of Boston, occasionally allowed their children to spend week-ends with their urban relatives or family friends to ensure that they didn't lose touch with the reality of the black experience in most of America.  Pew Research Center data indicate that wealth inequality has widened along racial and ethnic lines since the end of the Great Recession.  White net worth in 2013 was 10x greater for whites than for blacks.  This data may indicate that fewer and fewer black youth today are living the middle class or upper middle class experience.

 

Most of the complaints about the use of excessive or deadly force by the police against blacks today occur in less prosperous neighborhoods or in areas where youth of all races gather to socialize.  Few complaints of this phenomena come from middle or upper class neighborhoods.  One of my granddaughters was raised and educated for most of her life in middle or upper middle class communities in areas outside of Tampa, FL.  She was also one of a select group of blacks matriculating throughout her K-12 experience in Florida's gifted and talented public school programs.  Like your sons and nephews this granddaughter views police differently than her cousins living in Charles County, MD, or blacks living in predominantly black neighborhoods in Washington, DC, or Prince George's County, MD.  ln my opinion, environment for black youth greatly influences their attitudes toward the police.  My granddaughter from Florida got her N-word wake-up call recently as a graduate student at Brandeis University in Waltham, MA, when a professor at this university assumed that because she was the only black member of a panel discussing female incarceration that she was a former prisoner.  My granddaughter was rightly outraged and expressed her outrage to this professor in front of members of the panel and the audience.  l am sharing this incident with you because at some point your sons and nephews will also get their N-word wake-up call.

Be Blessed my Brother and have a joyous and safe Holiday Season.

 

Brother Clarence

 

 

 

  

 


 

Depends on the community they are surveying.  For example my sons and my brother sons have been shielded from the streets. Despite the admonition given by us they don't have negative views of police. 

 

And, because they have seen some of the thuggish behavior of some of their high school and college peers they believe police act appropriately when confronting these individuals.  

 

I am on the East Coast my brother is on the West Coast.  Our 4 sons ages range from 18 to 23. 

 

I am a strong believer that you can make statistics say what you want if you target your audience.   

 

There are too many Black Attorneys and Law Enforcement People who don't tolerate misbehavior from deviant police officers in my community. 

 

Clearly this is an anomaly and not the norm. 

 

 



l find the conclusions reached by this supposed poll incredulous.  l don't believe that four out of ten people of African descent living in the U.S. now suddenly have begun trusting the police.  What do you think about the content of this article?

 

Clarence

 


 

 

Americans' Faith in Honesty, Ethics of Police Rebounds

PRINCETON, N.J. -- After dipping to 48% in 2014 amid a national firestorm over police treatment of young black men, the rating Americans give the honesty and ethical standards of police has rebounded to 56%. This is more consistent with the 54% to 58% ratings Gallup found between 2010 and 2013.

Americans' Ratings of Honesty and Ethics of Police -- 1977-2015

Four in 10 nonwhites now rate the ethical standards of police as very high or high -- a sharp increase from the 23% who held this view in 2014. A steep drop in nonwhites' ratings of the police in 2014 was the sole cause of the profession's overall ratings dip last year. While nonwhites' attitudes have not rebounded to their pre-2014 levels, the slight increase in whites' positive views of the police this year, from 59% to 64%, coupled with the rise in nonwhites' ratings, pushes the overall percentage back to the "normal" range seen in recent years.

Honesty/Ethics Ratings of Police Officers, by Race

This year's results are based on a Dec. 2-6 poll in which Gallup asked Americans to rate the honesty and ethics of the police and workers in 20 other professions.

Nurses Still No. 1, Congress Among the Lowest

Nurses have topped Gallup's Honesty and Ethics ranking every year but one since they were added to the list in 1999. The exception is 2001, when firefighters were included on the list on a one-time basis, shortly after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. (Firefighters earned a record-high 90% honesty and ethics rating in that survey.)

With an 85% honesty and ethics rating -- tying their high point -- nurses have no serious competition atop the Gallup ranking this year. Pharmacists and medical doctors constitute the next tier, with about two-thirds of Americans viewing each highly, followed by high school teachers at 60% and police officers at 56%.

Less than half of Americans consider clergy (45%), funeral directors (44%) or accountants (39%) to be highly ethical. Still, Americans are much more likely to view these professions positively than negatively.

Journalists, bankers and building contractors have closely split images, while lawyers, real estate agents, labor union leaders, business executives, stockbrokers, advertising practitioners and car salespeople all have low "high/very high" ratings and are more likely to be viewed negatively than positively. Still, at least four in 10 Americans consider the honesty and ethics of these professions to be "average," rather than low. On the other hand, there is little good news in the numbers for members of Congress, telemarketers and lobbyists. Solid majorities of Americans consider the honesty and ethics of these professions to be low or very low, while fewer than one in 10 believe they have high ethics.

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It is noteworthy that the clergy continue to earn their lowest ratings since Gallup first asked this question in 1977. Since 2013, less than half of Americans have believed clergy have very high or high honesty and ethical standards, with the 45% measured this year being the lowest yet.

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Bottom Line

The overall image of the police is largely restored to what it was before incidents in Ferguson and elsewhere in 2014 spawned the "Black Lives Matter" movement against police behavior. However, it is a tenuous recovery as the police's rating among nonwhites is still not fully repaired. That could partly reflect additional controversies over police behavior that have erupted in 2015, including the death of Freddie Gray -- a young black man who died while in police custody in Baltimore. As long as events like these continue to make news or spread through social media, the police's image may continue to suffer among minorities, even if the profession's overall image remains high because of whites' positive views.

Meanwhile, the clergy's image continues to sag. Even the popularity of Pope Francis has yet to undo the damage that declining religiosity and numerous church and televangelist scandals over the years have seemingly done.

Members of Congress, lobbyists and telemarketers have shown no improvement at the bottom of the list, while nurses, pharmacists, medical doctors and high school teachers remain untarnished at the top.

Historical data are available in Gallup Analytics.

Survey Methods

Results for this Gallup poll are based on telephone interviews conducted Dec. 2-6, 2015, with a random sample of 824 adults, aged 18 and older, living in all 50 U.S. states and the District of Columbia. For results based on the total sample of national adults, the margin of sampling error is ±4 percentage points at the 95% confidence level. All reported margins of sampling error include computed design effects for weighting.

Each sample of national adults includes a minimum quota of 60% cellphone respondents and 40% landline respondents, with additional minimum quotas by time zone within region. Landline and cellular telephone numbers are selected using random-digit-dial methods.

View complete question responses and trends.

Learn more about how Gallup Poll Social Series works.

 

 

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