Stop dropping your pants and waving your dick. It's nauseating.

-"BB"-
Stop dropping your pants and waving your dick. It's nauseating.
Scooter posited that all cops are pigs...
When we get Robocops, we'll be fine....
No, I said:
Emphasis added.
A handful, probably...but they either turn bad or burn out and leave law enforcement (voluntarily or not) in short order. Donna Jean Watts still opens her mailbox with a broom.Scooter wrote: ↑Sun Jun 07, 2020 11:57 amNo, I said:Emphasis added.
I am no longer willing to consider someone a "good cop" unless they show that they are unwilling to look to the other way or otherwise tolerate the abuses committed by the "bad cops". IOW, any cop who stays silent in the face of those abuses is also a pig. Which probably makes most, but not all, cops pigs. I'm sure the occasional Serpico still exists.
I always give people the benefit of the doubt unless something clues me otherwise.
I got pulled over by a WV state cop while driving a red rental car (NJ plates) doing 79 mph in a 70 zone. Anyone from WV knows 80 is A OK on the interstate all day long. When he saw I didn't have a NJ driver's license, he gave me a warning.ex-khobar Andy wrote: ↑Sun Jun 07, 2020 12:47 pm
*Except for the Indiana cop who stopped me outside Cedar Lake. I was doing 42 in a 30 mph area. I know that because I looked at my speedometer when I saw him. Now I thought it was a 40 limit because my GPS told me it was, but after the incident I went back to see how I had missed the sign. There was some temporary distraction - I forget exactly what - which meant that I hadn't seen the sign: but fair enough, there it was. But he upped the ticket to 55 because the fine was doubled. I admit to being a little generous with my interpretation of speed limits but 55 on that road would have been insane and I am not that. When I got to my destination I told my friend. "Well what do you expect?" he said. "Out of state plates and the last day of the month."
** Buffalo Police, BTW.
You’re wrong, but I understand that your wrong perspective comes from your very limited experience.ex-khobar Andy wrote: ↑Sun Jun 07, 2020 12:47 pmI personally think that most* cops are OK. But I admit that my interactions for the last 40 years have almost all involved being stopped for speeding. And I'm an old (well for the last few times anyway) white guy in a halfway decent car. So Heisenberg's Principle applies - the act of observation affects the observation itself. Were I black or gay or a woman my experience and my conclusions might be very different. I had a couple of black employees who were late coming on shift. I asked them why they were late and they told me "We got a DWB coming in" and although I don't think I'd ever heard the term, I knew instantly what they meant**. And, when I was a lot younger, I had at least two woman friends who told me how they had been stopped for some driving infraction and the cop had made it pretty clear that there was a pathway to him tearing up the ticket. So the 'most cops are OK' view I have is very much a function of how and where I sit.
*Except for the Indiana cop who stopped me outside Cedar Lake. I was doing 42 in a 30 mph area. I know that because I looked at my speedometer when I saw him. Now I thought it was a 40 limit because my GPS told me it was, but after the incident I went back to see how I had missed the sign. There was some temporary distraction - I forget exactly what - which meant that I hadn't seen the sign: but fair enough, there it was. But he upped the ticket to 55 because the fine was doubled. I admit to being a little generous with my interpretation of speed limits but 55 on that road would have been insane and I am not that. When I got to my destination I told my friend. "Well what do you expect?" he said. "Out of state plates and the last day of the month."
** Buffalo Police, BTW.
I think it’s an excellent point because it is illustrative of what a great many Americans also think from their experiences.
No, it's called common sense. A badge is a danger sign, on the level of an MS13 tattoo on the face, or a dog foaming at the mouth.
Yet another reason every child should know how to make and use a garrote by age ten. Slip up behind the dirtbag, whip a loop of piano wire or monofilament over his head and PULL!BoSoxGal wrote: ↑Sun Jun 07, 2020 7:33 pmRT, I’m sorry for your daughter’s experiences and grateful they weren’t worse. Anyone who really knows cops knows they have one of the highest rates of domestic violence of any profession - not just because of the emotional problems many of them have, but because they get away with it much easier than any other abusers do. Sadly there are also cases I know of where cops have murdered their partners and gotten away with it, too. That’s why the issue of domestic violence is so hard to address in the criminal justice system - so many of the first responders/investigators can’t be arsed. Years of advocacy and civil litigation brought about laws and policies that mandate arrest in domestic violence situations, but far too many cops do that work grudgingly. Most will complain bitterly about victims who don’t sufficiently appreciate their help - because they are unwilling to learn about the dynamics of abuse and why victims can’t enthusiastically embrace their arrival on scene or their arrest of the abuser. Some cops get it and I’ve always appreciated the ones who do. In fairness there were a lot of lawyers and judges I worked with over the years who were also Neanderthals on this issue.
Can't you just feel the love?Yet another reason every child should know how to make and use a garrote by age ten. Slip up behind the dirtbag, whip a loop of piano wire or monofilament over his head and PULL!
This could get interesting....Minneapolis councilors have voted to abolish the city's police force in an historic move that comes after days of protests over the killing of George Floyd during an arrest.
The city council voted with a veto-proof three-quarters majority to begin the process of dismantling the 'toxic' police department on Sunday - overruling the objections of 38-year-old mayor Jacob Frey.
While the exact next steps are unclear, the plan calls broadly for funds to be taken away from the police department and moved into community services aimed at preventing crime - such as mental health provision, social services, and jobs programs and arts groups.
Camden, New Jersey, is the only city in recent years to undertake such reforms when it scrapped its police force in 2012 after being named one of the most violent places in America, and has reported positive results.
But it is far from clear that the same strategy will work in Minneapolis - a city with almost six times the population of Camden and with a police force that is more than three times the size of Camden's force when it was canned.
Gob wrote: ↑Mon Jun 08, 2020 8:40 amThis could get interesting....Minneapolis councilors have voted to abolish the city's police force in an historic move that comes after days of protests over the killing of George Floyd during an arrest.
The city council voted with a veto-proof three-quarters majority to begin the process of dismantling the 'toxic' police department on Sunday - overruling the objections of 38-year-old mayor Jacob Frey.
While the exact next steps are unclear, the plan calls broadly for funds to be taken away from the police department and moved into community services aimed at preventing crime - such as mental health provision, social services, and jobs programs and arts groups.
Camden, New Jersey, is the only city in recent years to undertake such reforms when it scrapped its police force in 2012 after being named one of the most violent places in America, and has reported positive results.
But it is far from clear that the same strategy will work in Minneapolis - a city with almost six times the population of Camden and with a police force that is more than three times the size of Camden's force when it was canned.