At this point we're going to start giving the same advice for interacting with police as with soldiers in a war zone. Basically do whatever they say. And if it's contradictory then sit on your heels and put your hands up. Make yourself as un-aggressive as possible so the scared, sleep deprived, teenager with a machine gun man child with a badge and a gun can't possibly see you as a threat.
Lol, no. Remember when they shot the aid worker who was spread-eagle on the ground next to their charge? And then the aid worker asked the cop "why did you shoot me?" Cops response? "I dunno."
Yup. I actually pointed this out a couple comments down. You can do everything right and still get shot because they're just that stupid and unaccountable.
They will also give you conflicting orders (often on purpose, so they can claim resisting arrest), so sometimes it is literally impossible to "just do what they say."
Unless you've declared yourself independent of everyone else that's only going to help you 50% of the time, and it's not easy to deploy in a manner allowing escape. I would really just suggest joining whichever side you support at that point.
They aren't "training" them. Certainly not as well as actual soldiers. But they are arming them with more and more military gear. If you were a high-school bully who never grew up or a racist who wanted to harass and maybe even kill a black person, what job would you get?
They are just always on-edge and terrified for their life no matter what the situation is. What does their training do to them... there was absolutely no reason to see this as some sort of well-disguised trap intended to kill the police officer, so why did his mind go there?
How many times in 2020 did I see a cop or cop apologist say "Only .000000000231% of interactions go bad why are those what you focus on??" (I'm totally making that number up, and they probably were too.)
How about this cops? Only a vanishingly small percentage of the rest of us actually intend to do you harm, so why do you treat everyone that way?
Wait a minute. Just having a gun isn't a reason to shoot someone in Maryland, is it? They might have a license. So the policeman would be guilty of manslaughter either way.
At some point I'm about to read an article where a cop was overtaking someone, rolled down the window, shot the other driver, continued onwards, and called for backup from a dinner.