General Discussion
Showing Original Post only (View all)You are not required to support Dorner, [View all]
but you should try and understand him. He is not that different from any other human that becomes obsessed with their own failings and can't find away to rise above their pain. Dorner knows what he is doing is wrong, but he has lost the ability to care.
The most unfortunate reality is that he is most likely correct, that without events to shed a light on the insular behavior of police services, nothing can ever change. Institutions don't suddenly decide they have too much power and step back.
Suddenly the LAPD is faced with a demon of their own making. They held him up to a standard he would not accept then excluded him and stripped him of his identity. This is a bad deal for all involved but it is nothing more the inevitable consequences of systematic abuse. It no longer matters if he is right or wrong, he has already forced the LAPD to change.
The police are now trying to bribe the public. First they want to pretend they are going to be fair to him (re-open investigation), and they want the public's help to find him. This tactic could very well backfire on the LAPD they have been abusing the public's trust out of sight for far too long.
The public seems to realize that the greatest danger isn't the suspect, but the institution who is acting desperately to stop him.