And once again, the profession can be changed from within. As well as the trifecta of the ire you bring of courts, laws and police.
As I've stated before, once you demonize the profession, do you honestly think you're going to get good, qualified people to do said job? Many on here have argued the requirements for being a cop should be higher. I don't necessarily disagree, but I also know that once that profession is branded as the one for losers, high school dropouts, power hungry sociopaths, etc, you have a hard time attracting those that can help reform it from within. It's a double edged sword in this case like many professions that has it's beginnings in honorable and good intentions (and make no mistake, law enforcement is a profession that has good intentions at the core, even you would agree) that ends up pushed away from where it started.
But where to start? You won't admit the power between the three is elemental in making necessary change. Take the gun control laws in Colorado for example. How many Sheriffs and police banded together to fight against that nonsense? And even went as far as saying they wouldn't enforce said laws? Did they get props from you for doing so? But is the lack of enforcement on their part not in line with your personal beliefs?