What happened in Kenosha was wrong. I don't agree with shooting someone numerous times in the back. That being said. I have several perspective points to make.
When you listen to the videos, you can hear hysterical screaming. We're all football fans here. Why do we scream at the top of their lungs? Well, because it knocks the professional athletes off their game as it distracts them and makes it difficult to communicate.
You see officers attempting (unsuccessfully) to apprehend Blake behind a vehicle. The fact that Blake refused to be apprehended adds hostility to the situation. I watched that part and asked myself, how is it two or three officers couldn't subdue him? Then I asked, I wonder if their go-to training tactic teaches them to put a knee in the back to subdue, but with what happened to George Floyd they avoided that tactic in fear of a knee on the neck due to him struggling? (the thought there is they attempt to put a knee into his back, but since he's struggling it knocks the officers knee toward his neck)
You see officers instructing Blake to stop as he walks around the front of the vehicle and opens the drivers door.
Let's stop for a moment right here. We have a situation that required officers. We have hysterical screaming. We have an individual refusing apprehension. And now this person is attempting to get into a vehicle. How can this hostile and tense situation be deescalated?
What if officers let Blake get into his vehicle? Maybe he drives the children home to a care taker and turns himself in?
Maybe he slams on the gas and runs over the child near the sidewalk?
Maybe he has a gun in the vehicle and is feeling all is lost so takes his life, or more horrifically, takes the lives of his kids and then himself?
If Blake would have harmed himself, or anyone else after getting into the vehicle or grabbing something from the vehicle, then police would be eviscerated for not doing enough to deescalate the situation. Blake put himself and the officers in a no-win situation -- I feel.
I come back to how does this get deescalated? While I opened with it was wrong and don't agree with shooting someone in the back numerous times, I don't have a satisfactory answer. I feel Blake put the officers in a horrible situation in an already hostile environment. No, I am not saying he deserved to be shot. I'm saying Blake didn't do himself, nor his kids, nor the bystanders any favors by his actions.