I'm curious, who you mean by, "some of you"...what you described doesn't fit the description for any of my encounters...last one being 8 years ago...then again I don't think you are talking about me.
I don't see anything equal about a cop lying on his report to reduce the penalty...and a cashier giving someone a coupon.
If only cops were trained to have the restraint customer service employees possess.
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Call me eccentric, but I've found that obeying the traffic laws, and laws in general, is the best way to avoid trouble with the cops, NOT kissing their behinds.It ain't "badgefluffing", just common courtesy to someone that hasn't pissed me off yet. Here's a clue, if you are breaking the law and get stopped you can blame the cop all you want but you won't get the benefit of the doubt when they are deciding how to resolve the situation. Also, if you attack, run from, cuss at or otherwise escalate the situation, you are taking a chance that this is one of the 'bad cops" and you are giving them a reason to be a bad cop...at you.
Call me eccentric, but I've found that obeying the traffic laws, and laws in general, is the best way to avoid trouble with the cops, NOT kissing their behinds.
I want NOTHING to do with the police. That's why I go out of my way to avoid situations in which I will have to interact with them. I essentially got a co-worker fired the year before last because he lied to the cops and cited me as a witness to an alleged on the job altercation.
The BEST police encounter is the one that never happened in the first place.
There are people who seem to believe that they're ENTITLED to speed, drive drunk, and do a whole host of other stupid things, SO LONG as they're "respectful" to the cop(s) who have to deal with them.
As for me, I find it easier to just obey the law than to engage in ritualized shows of submission.
I do the same. I try to obey all the traffic laws and not speed. I also check that all my lights on whatever I am driving are working. I have not been stopped for years now so I have not had any problems.
If I ever do get stopped I will be respectful and not be an a$$ to the LEO. IMHO you do not poke a Tiger with a sharp stick and then complain about getting mauled!
Whodat isn't badgefluffing......this time...... He just can't admit that a former Coast Guardsman is a back-shooting, murdering coward. So now we not only have to deal with the thin blue liners, but whodat has returned to lecture us from a thin red and white line perspective, or "Coastyfluffing" if you prefer.
One warrior of the unconstitutional "War on Drugs" unable to bring himself to believe what his lyin' eyes are telling him about another former War on Drugs warrior should surprise nobody. And of course, those of us who refuse to disbelieve our own eyes, are the problem with this (and others) story.
Un-freakin'-believable!
Blues
Call me eccentric, but I've found that obeying the traffic laws, and laws in general, is the best way to avoid trouble with the cops, NOT kissing their behinds.
I want NOTHING to do with the police. That's why I go out of my way to avoid situations in which I will have to interact with them. I essentially got a co-worker fired the year before last because he lied to the cops and cited me as a witness to an alleged on the job altercation.
The BEST police encounter is the one that never happened in the first place.
There are people who seem to believe that they're ENTITLED to speed, drive drunk, and do a whole host of other stupid things, SO LONG as they're "respectful" to the cop(s) who have to deal with them.
As for me, I find it easier to just obey the law than to engage in ritualized shows of submission.
I believe I've seen at least one report that they were BOTH in the Coast Guard.Why don't you try reading the damn reports again Blues, then revise you rant. Walter Scott, the VICTIM, was formerly n the Coast Guard.
I'm going to have to recommend that you do what you recommended to somebody else. Actually READ what I said.You have used the "ritualized shows of submission" term frequently. Can you admit that being polite is not necessarily submissive? There is a difference between allowing someone to do their job and (if you were speeding or didn't signal or whatever) being polite as they do their job and being subservient and ritually submissive. Guess what? If the cop was having a bad day and decided that you going 5 miles over the speed limit down a hill was worth him pulling you over, he might be an a$$, but he is within the boundaries of the law. If you think arguing it will have better results than being polite then go for it. If you think that being as polite to a cop as you would be to ANY OTHER person you encounter in your daily routine is “badge-fluffing” then we just aren’t going to agree on this.
Chen, I see what you are getting at. I would toss in a military similarity that some on here get intuitively, some by being in the military, and some just don’t get at all.Responding to the bold:
I had a conversation recently with a coworker about respect/disrespect/indifferent and kind/mean. We settled the discussion agreeing on the following:
We can be any combination of above, but they shouldn't be synonymous.
Respect or disrespect is earned by the actions of the other, until then I'm indifferent of the stranger. Being kind or mean is solely on my part. I can be kind to a stranger, and still be indifferent or disrespect them. I can be mean to someone completely out of respect.
How can someone respect another when they have no idea who they are? Maybe I put more meaning into certain words, such as respect, friend, freedom, etc.
I drive the speed limit a well. I get a perverse pleasure out of seeing some impatient idiot behind me angry that I am following the law. Unlike you, I am not perfect. The one time I got pulled over in the past 30 years, I was on an unfamiliar road and I didn’t see the sign that dropped the speed limit from 45 to 35. I was polite; it ended up costing me nothing. I don’t see ritual submission, subservience or any other pro-establishment jargon applying, just basic politeness to a stranger.I don't want ANYTHING to do with the police. Therefore, I go out of my way to NOT do things which result in such contacts.
Me neither
I said NOTHING about "arguing" with anybody. I'm POLITE to most strangers who merit it. I am NOT "friendly" or "respectful", just POLITE. Think of a really expensive Japanese lawyer deposing you for a lawsuit.
I on the other hand am polite to any stranger (including cops) until they prove they do not merit it.
If I'm speeding, give me the damned ticket. I'm not entitled to speed, and I expect no "breaks" from cops. I'd rather drive the speed limit than tug at my forelock for not having done so.
You are correct, I didn't see that reported and I am in Charleston.I believe I've seen at least one report that they were BOTH in the Coast Guard.
Slager, originally from New Jersey, worked from 2003 to 2009 as a mechanic, fireman and boarding team member with the Coast Guard, according to information he listed on a job application for the police department.
....Michael Brown deserved it. Walter Scott did not. You roll the dice, you take your chances. One attacked a cop, one was fleeing. FYI, if you are fleeing and armed, they can still shoot you in defense of the community. I don't think that was the case here, and Slager is gonna have plenty of boyfriends in the near future.
You cannot infer from any incident that all ______ are bad. Pick a group to fill in the blank. One big problem is that the media keeps stirring the race pot. I think the cop would have shot the person in that same situation regardless of color.
He was a bad cop too lazy to chase the guy. I guess my point is that you can tell by the wording in the OP who the bad guys are, at least on here.
Slager's original story was that Scott was armed with the murdering pig's own taser. The video shows as clearly as the nose on your face that that was a lie, so why even bring it up unless it's to lend some amount of credence to his original story?
Guess what? In MY OPINION, anyone that willingly condemns an entire group of people for the actions of a portion of those people is a bad guy. Disagree? Fine. You are entitled to your opinion as well. To stoop to name calling and questioning intelligence because you don't agree with someone, well, that is right in line with good ol' Saul Alinski. Think about it.While the same link mentions Scott's (the VICTIM's) status as a Coast Guard veteran, it says exactly zero about what his job was. Maybe he was a WoD warrior too, but I tend to give VICTIMS of WoD warriors a higher degree of benefit of the doubt than their freakin' murderers. You know jack about the Coast Guard. If Scott was based in Port Canaveral and went on boardings, then he was a WoD warrior. Every assignment is different and you don't get to choose what your job will be. That's what happens when the entire service has only a few thousand more people than the NYPD. Either way it is a redh herring and has NOTHING to do with the actions of a bad cop or a person fleeing a traffic stop.
As far as the rest of the post of mine you're whining about....
Originally Posted by whodat2710 View Post
....Michael Brown deserved it. Walter Scott did not. You roll the dice, you take your chances. One attacked a cop, one was fleeing. FYI, if you are fleeing and armed, they can still shoot you in defense of the community. I don't think that was the case here, and Slager is gonna have plenty of boyfriends in the near future.
You don't "think" he was fleeing armed, but you couldn't resist injecting the specter of that possibility into the discussion. Slager's original story was that Scott was armed with the murdering pig's own taser. The video shows as clearly as the nose on your face that that was a lie, so why even bring it up unless it's to lend some amount of credence to his original story? And how can you claim to be "thinking" about anything when the video betrays that any possibility of Scott being armed, and Slager being aware of it, is indeed a lie?
Notice where I placed the bold? You can spin it any way you want, but that doesn't make it what I meant by the post Mr. MSNBC. Note the little FYI? That means it is additional information related to the topic but not necessarily pertinent. It is a fact that some are not aware of regarding "self-defense" and goes to explain why Slager would attempt to use it as justification for self defense from a fleeing person. Note the other bold item? No I don't think that is the case here. Guess what, just like with Michael Brown, we don't have all the facts yet. I base my supposition that it is not the case here based on what we have heard so far.
Upon what evidence do you base this rank conjecture?Quote Originally Posted by whodat2710 View Post
You cannot infer from any incident that all ______ are bad. Pick a group to fill in the blank. One big problem is that the media keeps stirring the race pot. I think the cop would have shot the person in that same situation regardless of color.
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Thing 1 - I don't care how many incidents you or the OP cite. It does not make "most cops" anything. I don't care how many homeless people you see drinking thunderbird, it does not make all homeless people alcoholics. Insert ANY group of people, and any incident, and you still cannot infer anything about the whole group of people. Individual responsibility...ever heard of it? From the article "Friends, don’t listen to anybody who tells you it’s 'just a few bad apples.'The whole barrel is rotten." I'm sorry but that dog just don't hunt.
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Thing 2 - Simple, I think Slager was a bad cop, I think he was too lazy to chase Scott, and would have been too lazy to chase anyone. I think he would have shot anyone, regardless of race, rather than have to tell his boss "the guy got away".
Quote Originally Posted by whodat2710 View Post
He was a bad cop too lazy to chase the guy. I guess my point is that you can tell by the wording in the OP who the bad guys are, at least on here.
And so now Axe is a "bad guy" because he posted a link to an unfriendly-to-cops website that posted a ton of statistics validating what they had to say about them? I'm a "bad guy?" Chen is a "bad guy?" Everyone who ever let a terse word pass their lips about cops is a "bad guy?"
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Your outrage is held in check for a cop caught on video murdering a citizen, but held up in righteous indignation for citizens on this board exercising their First Amendment rights to say any damned thing they wish in opposition to current acceptable cop practices that are killing Americans at a greater rate over the last 13 or 14 years than the freakin' Iraq War!
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My reading skills are working just fine. Yours on the other hand, well, you can't even "read" a video of a murder without having to "think" about whether or not the VICTIM deserved it. Pffft.
Blues