There is something to be strongly said when two different heads of Inkster police have resigned in the past six months. They are clearly not happy with the way things are being done there. Also, it may be because Inkster has become a dumping ground for cops with a bad past.

No, not all cops are bad, however, the issue of police brutality has been with society for a very long time [[the literature, political cartoons reflecting the past, the many reports going back to famous situations in labor, civil rights, the Chicago 1968 Democratic Convention, Rodney King, etc.) and I for one, have seen police at the worst many times. It is an issue that must be acknowledged and addressed, and no one should assume it's some sparse rarity.

However, I think it odd when the media puts a magnifying glass on it, when it was well known for hiding past details. I sited my three theories earlier, and mob mentality to get violently riotous is what I would hope people would avoid.

I do think that someone's past is an indicator if we are to mention the pasts of the suspected infractors the media show the police arresting. Also, what happens when the past of someone is muddled by those protecting him like this ICE agent claiming a kid "fell through an attic floor" to get at him. http://www.clickondetroit.com/news/a...shots/32618568 yet, http://www.freep.com/story/news/loca...ting/26571925/ A clear case of being protected, and as for the "hole in the ceiling" http://www.clickondetroit.com/news/d...agent/32652604. Darren Wilson was shown to have quite a past before killing Brown.

It is not wise to try and use someone's past military service record as a shield in your argument. I respect many veterans, but I don't fool myself as to why they were sent into a battle situation, and it was not to pass out flowers and candy. Some Republican had to apologize for comments he made about all mass murderers being Democrats. If I kept to his flawed train of logic with better applied scrutiny, and the chutzpah to dare say it-I'd point out what many assassins, mass murderers, serial killers, etc. have in common with each other that Kubrick once pointed out in one of his movies. Yet, I won't.

Also, if it isn't just a matter of history, how about how one acts after being let go-let's not forget how many ugly things we've heard about George Zimmerman since he was cleared?