Why would I know that to be true?
And , no, it's not ridiculous to ignore crime levels in high crime areas when talking about police relations. I never said anything about there being a fine line between aggressive policing and police brutality, so I'm not sure who you were agreeing with.
A large part of poor police relations, and quite frankly, deceptively bloated crime statistics, stems from ridiculous drug enforcement policies, which are abusive, predatory, essentially racist and cause far more harm than good. I don't see a fine line here.
A few different posters have stated that liberal policies have destroyed the black family over the past 3 or 4 decade, when any clear-eyed analysis makes it pretty obvious that the blame really should be laid at the feet of law enforcement and absurd drug enforcement policies.
I assumed by your other response you knew something about inner city neighborhoods, apology if I was wrong. I don't know you or your background.
Agree about the war on drugs, our people should never go to prison over non-violent drug offenses and yes, agree again, it affects more young black males. However, more blame lies with repeated criminal behavior, dysfunctional families, maladaptive behaviors, poverty and lack of respect. These issues need front and center focus. We must also condemn police brutality but one problem in focusing so much on isolated cases of police brutality, is that many of the people in that community put blinders on to all the other issues and focus all their efforts and energies coming together to yell, complain and protest rather than help fix their community. Even if all aggressive police are off the streets, it doesn't change the root problems in the community. Regardless, it still requires attention because no one should be harassed that is not a criminal.
How about this then, why don't we take the police out of these communities and see what happens, very likely things will be worse because too many people will prey on others that need protection. Even though I fully fault the individual police that commit brutality and they need to be fired immediately, the criminal behavior, lack of respect for self and others, maladaptive habits, and dysfunctional families are not the police's fault whatsoever. Sounds like you are more on the blame the police and society bandwagon. People need to stop blaming everyone else and look at themselves to see how to fix things. Law enforcement is not ruining black communities, to insinuate that is just idiotic, in some of these areas dysfunctional behavior, broken families, maladaptive habits and criminality is the primary driver of that.
Oh, and I wrote the wrong word. I meant assertive policing not aggressive policing. The police consider assertive policing to be trying to head off crimes before they happen. It does involve some profiling but mainly the ability to question a suspicious person. That did work in NYC but there is a profiling element, which will always cause some error. In my city, this practice was known to have been pretty effective but with recent national events, police were told to back off.