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Notes -
I'm curious what you think "disparate impact" means in this context.
That policing is bad, because the criminals caught are disproportionately black.
I meant re the nonpolicing issues you mentioned.
That other things are bad because they disproportionately include or exclude black people. Surely you're aware of the idea as applied to schools, jobs, or even national parks.
That's where your argument breaks down. I know many people who are left of center who are skeptical of hiring processes that disproportionately affect black people for, arguably, no good reason (eg: jobs that require a college degree for no apparent reason) or spending on state parks in the wilderness instead of local parks, etc, but who have little problem with enforcing criminal law, because there is good reason. (And of course there is a distinction between enforcing criminal law and particular practices of the criminal justice, some of which might have disparate impact [possible example: the crack versus powder cocaine sentencing disparity]).
So, yes, it is perfectly possible to update re criminal enforcement without updating re schools, jobs, parks, etc.
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