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Real reform requires honesty.
It requires evidence.
It requires experience.
And most importantly—it requires conversation.
Not lectures.
Not slogans.
And not screaming people into silence.
That’s what this podcast is about.
Not defending bad policing.
Not pretending problems don’t exist.
But talking honestly about what real police reform should actually look like—from the perspective of the people doing the job.
Because for too long, police reform has been happening to officers instead of with them.
And that’s how you end up with bad policy, dangerous policy, and officers who feel abandoned by the very people making decisions about their profession.
This season, we’re going to talk to the people on the street. Patrol officers. Trainers. Detectives. Supervisors. The men and women actually doing the work.
Not because they’re perfect.
But because if you want to reform policing, maybe you should start by listening to the people who actually police.
By Steve Kellams5
1515 ratings
Send us Fan Mail
Real reform requires honesty.
It requires evidence.
It requires experience.
And most importantly—it requires conversation.
Not lectures.
Not slogans.
And not screaming people into silence.
That’s what this podcast is about.
Not defending bad policing.
Not pretending problems don’t exist.
But talking honestly about what real police reform should actually look like—from the perspective of the people doing the job.
Because for too long, police reform has been happening to officers instead of with them.
And that’s how you end up with bad policy, dangerous policy, and officers who feel abandoned by the very people making decisions about their profession.
This season, we’re going to talk to the people on the street. Patrol officers. Trainers. Detectives. Supervisors. The men and women actually doing the work.
Not because they’re perfect.
But because if you want to reform policing, maybe you should start by listening to the people who actually police.