Thursday, July 05, 2007

Davis Death: An Opportunity For Discussion

The inconvenient conversations are uncomfortable. They are arduous and impolite. They probe complex subjects. They encompass unspeakable thoughts. The inconvenient conversations are unpleasant. They are painful. However, they are necessary. They are where alteration and comprehension occur.

On June 15, Jessie Marie Davis, a nine-months pregnant mother, was reported missing. On June 17, searches commenced. On June 18 and 20, police examined Bobby Cutts’ (Davis’ boyfriend, Canton police officer) home. On June 23, police discover Davis’ body. They also arrest Cutts.

Prior to serving, Cutts faced a restraining order. During his career, he furnished felons guns. Why was he a police officer? Obviously, Cutts was violent. He was aggressive and erratic. How was he hired? Affirmative action, understaffing, quotas? Presumably, Cutts was interviewed. His background was scanned. Yet, he was hired. He was publicly entrusted. He should not have been.

Police have one mission. They protect the public. They are underappreciated and understaffed. However, they must discriminate. Diversity is critical. With that stated, everyone does not merit hiring. Police would not consider pedophiles. They should not ponder race. They should only select qualified individuals.

Obviously, Davis was a sociopath. With three women, he fathered four children. He was not marriage material. He was not dating material. Yet, be bedded three beautiful women. They were not unique. Women love cads. They have throughout history. Occasionally, the relationships thrive. Unfortunately, the vast majority are toxic.

America loves trivia. Sadly, trivia obscures reality. Cutts is a monster. He warrants severe punishment. Blake (Davis and Cutts son) is beautiful. Davis is a sympathetic victim. The aforesaid are true and irrelevant. The relevant discussion has been stated. These topics are awkward. However, they affect society.

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