<<However if he was dealing with a homicidal cop, i doubt the camera with or without sound would be much of a match for a well placed bullet to the head.>>
Always with the extremes. What if he were dealing with a NON-homicidal cop, like the one who jammed the broken handle of a toilet plunger up Abner Louima's ass, or the sicko thugs who beat Rodney King to a pulp?
The only extreme I am worried about is the current level of extremist overkill exhibited by American cops from coast to coast.
For years people have watched Cops, a Fox product.
Gradually, the violence exhibited by the cops on this show has increased, the American people the more innured. Now, the show is almost too arrogant to watch. And you won't see any Momo Giancannas--all of the enemy in this show is the trailer-park trash, the losers with tattoos . . . the attritioned ones . . . the unemployed, and of course those who, when subjected to sudden ambush, forced to lie facedown at gunpoint, and roughly cuffed, a beaming anntenae on to pick up the slightest resistence, ready to beat him "into submission," might ask why. Nothing seems to piss the current cop off more that having the temerity to ask why one is being beaten--it seems to quicken the juice that makes them pound things.
What was appalling in terms of authority abuse and physical contact in arrests only a few years ago is now almost boring. The average American now witnesses massive over-copping and hurries home, hoping the cops didn't see him. In the ghettoes, they have long known that calling the cops to report a felon could be like flipping a coin. In areas outside of the swell cocoons, the blue has always been a dark blue.
During the Sixties, there was exhibited some overkill by the cops, but the difference then was that the press was right there to get the story. Now, reporters and photograhers have learned to keep their distance or receive the same rude behavior from the cops. That means that the counter-balance has been removed.
These days, reporters are expected to grovel at the gates as if they were salespeople trying to land an interview with a CEO.
One can also see this currently in the coal fields: the press are kept a full mile away from the accident, I am sure at the request of the lying shitbag owner, and reporting from Iraq translates into participating in one of the most perilous jobs on the big list. That has not been the history of American reporting in other wars.
The Sixties had a beneficial effect on the police. If the cops over-reacted, the world was told, and they adjusted--never with contrition really, but they adjusted. This had a beneficial effect of cauterizing away the potential for overt violence.
Now cops exhibit almost shameless spin around their own mistakes, no matter how obvious they are.