I find this thread very difficult. I know several policemen/women and would hazard a guess that there are several grans on here whose sons/daughters have chosen that profession and of whom they are very proud.
I think that we are in a far better position than many other countries where the police forces are seriously corrupt and where gratuitous violence is the order of the day and goes unremarked.
I am not naive and I do not doubt for one moment that there is corruption in our police system - the whole masonic thing gives me the nadgers - but I have the conviction that the majority of police officers are trying to do a good and honest job, and that it is unhealthy to be completely cynical about them.
A community order does seem lenient to me, but, to be fair, I often feel that about sentencing, whether police or public.
The use of restraint, which is part of both the police and the armed forces training, is open to abuse by both those forces. I think we have to ask ourselves what that training does to young minds, and how we weed out those who might be vulnerable to being unable to resist abusing this knowledge and power.
I am really just trying to say it is not simple; and that a blanket condemnation of the police, on whom we rely for stability in our society, does not feel helpful to me.