According to a NYTimes investigation, in the last 5 years, American police conducted at least 100,000 million traffic stops. That's 50,000 per day according to Stanford. They are the most common interaction between tax paying citizens and those who are payed to "serve and protect." And while the chances of an officer being killed during such encounters are 1 in 3.6 million (60 officers in the last 5 years), police have killed 400 unarmed individuals (1 per week.) Disproportionately, those individuals are Black.
Police training and culture instills a paramilitary "us against them"/ "occupied territory" mentality and too often, African Americans are perceived by a largely white police force (30% higher than the population that they patrol in hundreds of departments) as criminalized and them. The racial disparities in traffic stops and subsequent search and seizure expose dangerous levels of anti-Black racism in policing.
In too many municipalities, traffic stop revenue is used to bolster if not out right fund jurisdictions and it's done disproportionately on the backs of African Americans. Some of these municipalities receive federal grants that encourage and enable the same traffic stops that lead to racial inequity.
What can be done to dramatically minimize these interactions?