The Justice Department’s Community Relations Service released a new video this week explaining to the law enforcement community the proper way to handle encounters with transgender people.
"And likewise also the men, leaving the natural use of the woman, burned in their lust one toward another; men with men working that which is unseemly, and receiving in themselves that recompence of their error which was meet." Romans 1:27 (KJV)
EDITOR'S NOTE: Just when you thought things could not get any end times crazier, this happens. The Obama Department of Justice has just released a training video manding the new rules police have to follow for the promotion and advancement of the transgender agenda. Just wait until they start doing this to protect pedophiles.
Amid an uptick in reports of discrimination by police toward the transgender community, the CRS has released a 12-minute training video discouraging officers from stereotyping people and telling them to “keep their questions relevant” to the situation at hand.
Throughout the course of the video, viewers see several staged scenarios, including how an officer should address a transgender person during a routine traffic stop, following an assault report and what they should do if they’re called to a bathroom situation due to a transgender user.
Law Enforcement and the Transgender Community - CRS Roll Call Training Video
“I don’t have to be in the room to know what just happened. Someone snickered, laughed or made, a joke,” Sgt. Brett Parson said at the start of the video. “Trust me, I know, I’m a cop too. As police officers, we use humor to deal with things that make us feel uncomfortable or afraid. … To outsiders, it’s perceived as unprofessional and disrespectful.”
When a law enforcement official first encounters a transgender person, and is unsure how to address the individual, officers are encouraged to ask, “Do you prefer if I call you ma’am or sir?”
In one of the scenarios, a transgender woman calls the police to report an assault. Upon arriving, the two officers — a man and a woman — begin asking the individual about the incident. When the male officer sees the person’s driver’s license, he refers to the person by the unpreferred pronoun.
“In one of the examples, the video demonstrates an officer laughing at a transgender individual who appears to be the victim of a crime, and the officer’s partner pulls him aside to correct his behavior,” Parson explains after the scenario plays out.
The officer, after being taken aside and corrected by his counterpart, then apologized for referring to the transgender person as a man when they preferred female pronouns.
“This illustration not only highlights how officers should act with members of the transgender community, but also addresses the need for officers to say something to their peers when they see problematic behavior,” Parson said.
The video also gives intermittent lessons on the transgender community and proper terminology. Parson explains “assigned sex,” “sexual orientation” and “gender identity.”
“Transgender people are just trying to be their true selves and live their lives as members of our communities just like anyone else,” he said. “As law enforcement officers, we must make every effort to collaborate and learn from the transgender community, so we can better serve others today and in the future.”
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