I have friends that are police officers. I appreciate just how much stress it is to pull over a 22 year old car, with no tags, with questionable folks at the wheel. I have done ride alongs, I have shot with SWAT team leaders on police firing ranges. Their job is never easy. Many pay with an ultimate sacrifice.
Some facts about LEO's
On average, more than 65,000 law enforcement officers are assaulted each year and some 23,000 are injured annually.
-The deadliest year in law enforcement history was 1974 when 268 officers were killed. The deadliest decade was the 1970's when a total of 2,182 officers died, or 218 each year. That figure has dropped dramatically in the 1990's to 152 per year.
-A total of 1,533 law enforcement officers died in the line of duty during the last 10 years, an average of one death every 58 hours or 153 per year. There were 130 police deaths in 1999.
-There are approximately 740,000 sworn law enforcement officers now serving in the United States. About 10 percent of them are female.
Source:
http://www.leoaffairs.info My class does not seek to lower the rights of the 2nd amendment. Far from it. However, I do teach, in all traffic stops, do whatever it takes to lower the stress level of LEO's on the scene. It is in everyone's best interest. Work with LEO's, not turn the traffic stop into a civics lesson.
A traffic stop should be like a pit stop at the Daytona 500,. Quick and easy. It is dangerous for everyone, to be stopped along side the road while traffic is going by, and it is best to yes sir, no sir, and get it over with.