公式動画ピックアップ
AAPL
ADBE
ADSK
AIG
AMGN
AMZN
BABA
BAC
BL
BOX
C
CHGG
CLDR
COKE
COUP
CRM
CROX
DDOG
DELL
DIS
DOCU
DOMO
ESTC
F
FIVN
GILD
GRUB
GS
GSK
H
HD
HON
HPE
HSBC
IBM
INST
INTC
INTU
IRBT
JCOM
JNJ
JPM
LLY
LMT
M
MA
MCD
MDB
MGM
MMM
MSFT
MSI
NCR
NEM
NEWR
NFLX
NKE
NOW
NTNX
NVDA
NYT
OKTA
ORCL
PD
PG
PLAN
PS
RHT
RNG
SAP
SBUX
SHOP
SMAR
SPLK
SQ
TDOC
TEAM
TSLA
TWOU
TWTR
TXN
UA
UAL
UL
UTX
V
VEEV
VZ
WDAY
WFC
WK
WMT
WORK
YELP
ZEN
ZM
ZS
ZUO
公式動画&関連する動画 [‘What About Us, Who Are Both Black and Blue?’ | NYT Opinion]
This week, a veteran officer in Brooklyn Center, Minn., killed an unarmed man, claiming to have mistaken her gun for her Taser. The Ethical Society of Police, a St. Louis group consisting mostly of Black officers, was quick to comment on the shooting, calling out the negligence of the officer.
What is it like for some officers who see themselves in both Black Lives Matter and Blue Lives Matter after such high-profile shootings? In the video Op-Ed above, Lt. Cheryl E. Orange, a longtime member of the Ethical Society of Police, explains how her organization places morality and ethics over blind loyalty, even as most traditional police unions continue to defend their officers, no matter what. Sometimes this means publicly condemning its own members, however painful that is.
The Ethical Society of Police was formed in 1972 to address race-based discrimination within the St. Louis Metropolitan Police Department and is open to all officers. It is unafraid to speak out about high-profile cases of police misconduct in St. Louis and in other cities. Lieutenant Orange argues that when police unions stand behind their officers, seemingly regardless of their conduct, it erodes public trust in law enforcement, creating an “us versus them” dynamic. As she says in the video, “The union should lean to what’s right, not what’s loyal.”
Subscribe: http://bit.ly/U8Ys7n
More from The New York Times Video: http://nytimes.com/video
----------
Whether it's reporting on conflicts abroad and political divisions at home, or covering the latest style trends and scientific developments, New York Times video journalists provide a revealing and unforgettable view of the world. It's all the news that's fit to watch.
21311
834