Hope you're considering the fact that these CAHOOTS guys have been doing it for over 30 years and actually attend to 20% of calls that were usually given to police. Right now I'd give a lot of credit to what you're saying because the instances of when social workers can replace police that I can think of are instances that can escalate into something more dangerous like you said. Even all the situations these CAHOOTS guys say they attend to: cases where people are being bothered by homeless people around their houses, cases where people are being threatened by a mentally challenged, cases where people are calling due to some unfounded suspicions of danger. These are cases that you were right to say could turn out to be way more trouble than would have been thought, but these guys have been handling it for years without much trouble (atleast according to the interviews I've watched).
Hahaha, is that really the Mafia?😂
How do you think it will inflate police presence if say two of them accompany social workers and the understanding is that the social workers are in charge but the police are just there in case?
RE: How Power Determines Real Life Villains