Yeah, but there are factors of misinformation and perception that may negatively affect that hoped-for equilibrium. Because, the way I see it, 2 major factors which I am convinced are true:
1) a few elite people making the rules. those people don't live in low-income, high-crime areas with zero security like many others do, so the obvious need for active policing and, occasionally, tragically required LEO intervention will never naturally "push" them to follow common sense. they are implementing policies from a place of guaranteed safety.
2) the people who support those in #1, and who are in low-income, high-crime areas, have been misled and not given actual facts. if they never know the truth about the data, they will literally never realize that certain racial justice movements have typically resulted in more hesitant policing, which has then resulted in enormous crime waves--suffered mostly by these very people! so there is this amazing fact: "The additional suffering that ANY race experiences based on same-race-on-race violence, fueled by less active policing, is actually very many times (100x) greater than the occasional suffering you experience with bad cops". They will never know that and I'm not sure it's their fault. You turn on your TV, you hear what you hear. I don't blame them for that, this is why allowing voices to be heard with facts and data--even if it contradicts some current narratives--must occur. It's very important. More than anything, important to preserve the lives of the very people who suffer the most.