You guys ever watch those tiktok videos where someone asks a question and a bunch of other people answer it? Saw one earlier for nurses, about something they wish was taught in nursing school, and one of the answers was "How to deal with so many elderly people admitting to outright murder on their deathbed." One of the spin-off answers to that was a nurse telling the story of an old white woman who was dying of COVID in Louisiana, who opened up to her that back in the 1930s she told her parents that a black boy touched her inappropriately, all because the boy's sisters had "nicer dresses" then she had. Her parents gathered a mob, beat the boy, lynched him, and cut off his genitals and she watched him die, before the mob burned down the boys family home, scaring off his surviving family. She told the nurse because she wanted to be forgiven before she died and was hallucinating the boy staring at her while on meds. I know that's not really fully police based (though they probably where there helping lynch in the 1930s south or at least did jack shit) but just felt relevant with this conversation. I don't know, maybe I am just so fucking angry that we still have not evolved past this shit. We need at least two more generational exchanges before we can hopefully get past this shit, and even then I am being optimistic.