The smile on Ms. Ayala's face when the officer starts lying is priceless - I guess you're referring to when he mentioned 'the tinted windows'. Was the cop lying here?
Was the police stop in the video you posted, in fact, illegal?
so, the actions of cops have come under scrutiny in recent days, what with the trial of derek chauvin and the death of daunte wright.
i certainly hope justice is served in both those cases.. what is easy for people to forget, is just what police officers have to deal with on a regular basis, during their interactions with citizens.. here's a video breaking down one such interaction.. a car owner was driving his car but the tags weren't legally displayed.
cops wanted him to pull over but the driver continued driving for a mile and a half with a police car following with sirens and lights.
The smile on Ms. Ayala's face when the officer starts lying is priceless - I guess you're referring to when he mentioned 'the tinted windows'. Was the cop lying here?
Was the police stop in the video you posted, in fact, illegal?
so, the actions of cops have come under scrutiny in recent days, what with the trial of derek chauvin and the death of daunte wright.
i certainly hope justice is served in both those cases.. what is easy for people to forget, is just what police officers have to deal with on a regular basis, during their interactions with citizens.. here's a video breaking down one such interaction.. a car owner was driving his car but the tags weren't legally displayed.
cops wanted him to pull over but the driver continued driving for a mile and a half with a police car following with sirens and lights.
Joe Gutierrez has been fired for not following procedure - specifically, what did he do wrong?
And, of course, the footage in the video I linked still shows the crap the cops have to put up with. What kind of procedure was the army guy following? I guess it was the 'I don't have to comply with cops and I can video them to score social justice points on FaceBook' procedure, lol.
The cops were actually pretty reasonable and patient under the circumstances, as far as I could tell.
so, the actions of cops have come under scrutiny in recent days, what with the trial of derek chauvin and the death of daunte wright.
i certainly hope justice is served in both those cases.. what is easy for people to forget, is just what police officers have to deal with on a regular basis, during their interactions with citizens.. here's a video breaking down one such interaction.. a car owner was driving his car but the tags weren't legally displayed.
cops wanted him to pull over but the driver continued driving for a mile and a half with a police car following with sirens and lights.
Is it time we brought in another type of official to deal with these cases? - this is a good question and I have no doubt that your motives are also good.
But how would that work out in practice?
Cops patrol the streets, focussing on pedestrians, and traffic cops focus on people driving their vehicles.
It's typically impossible to know if citizens are suicidal or homicidal. I guess if you had a case of a man on a bridge threatening to jump off then you send in the 'suicide squad' but in all other circumstances it's impossible to know.
E.g. if cops try to stop an armed guy driving a car, and they eventually get him to stop, and the guy gets out the car ignoring commands and waving a gun … how would the cops know whether that guy is suicidal or homicidal?
^^^ And remember, the cops often have to make quick decisions in a split second. <--- it just wouldn't work.
Bottom line: citizens should live within the law and comply with officers of the law. This should be taught explicitly in schools, if necessary. Y'know, 'Citizen Studies' or something similar.
so, the actions of cops have come under scrutiny in recent days, what with the trial of derek chauvin and the death of daunte wright.
i certainly hope justice is served in both those cases.. what is easy for people to forget, is just what police officers have to deal with on a regular basis, during their interactions with citizens.. here's a video breaking down one such interaction.. a car owner was driving his car but the tags weren't legally displayed.
cops wanted him to pull over but the driver continued driving for a mile and a half with a police car following with sirens and lights.
The guy who recently jumped back in the car and got himself shot did it to himself - yeah, the guy who did the breakdown in the OP did a video on the Daunte Wright killing.
It's a tragic outcome but Daunte Wright had previous (can't remember the exact details). And the dude ran back into his car as an officer was trying to cuff him. That's freaking retarded.
Do these guys want the cops to shoot them?
It's almost as if resisting being detained and refusing to comply with cops leads to bad outcomes …
so, the actions of cops have come under scrutiny in recent days, what with the trial of derek chauvin and the death of daunte wright.
i certainly hope justice is served in both those cases.. what is easy for people to forget, is just what police officers have to deal with on a regular basis, during their interactions with citizens.. here's a video breaking down one such interaction.. a car owner was driving his car but the tags weren't legally displayed.
cops wanted him to pull over but the driver continued driving for a mile and a half with a police car following with sirens and lights.
So, the actions of cops have come under scrutiny in recent days, what with the trial of Derek Chauvin and the death of Daunte Wright. I certainly hope justice is served in both those cases.
What is easy for people to forget, is just what police officers have to deal with on a regular basis, during their interactions with citizens.
Here's a video breaking down one such interaction.
A car owner was driving his car but the tags weren't legally displayed. Cops wanted him to pull over but the driver continued driving for a mile and a half with a police car following with sirens and lights. The driver (a military man) pulled over into a gas station, then refused multiple commands at gun point (put your hands out of the window, get out of the car slowly, etc.).
The entire incident was captured on the two cops' body cams. They eventually dragged the guy out his vehicle and pepper-sprayed him. The senior cop gave him a choice - the driver could continue arguing and get charges of illegal tags and obstructing justice, or everyone could just chill and hit the road. Apparently, the guy is gonna sue the two cops.
Just watch this …
ever wondered what blm do with their donations?.
well, i think i may have discovered an answer.. co-founder patrisse cullors has bought herself a nice, million dollar home in topanga, an exclusive la enclave, the demographics of which is approx.
80% white and 1.5% black.. yeah, cullors, an open marxist, has benefitted greatly from a capitalist country, lol.. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i4zrno_jcc0.
Patrisse Cullors responds to all the racist fuss of her choice of houses …
what is the difference between doctors & nurses, and police?.
studies have estimated that medical errors cause 250,000 deaths per year in the us.. police only kill around a thousand people each year in total, with only a small number being unjustified or accidental.. so the difference?.
police are expected to be perfect and for all the hype, you're are far greater risk of being killed by someone in the health industry than by a cop.
^^^ Rashida Tlaib is insane.
She's free to emigrate to Palestine if she wants.
what is the difference between doctors & nurses, and police?.
studies have estimated that medical errors cause 250,000 deaths per year in the us.. police only kill around a thousand people each year in total, with only a small number being unjustified or accidental.. so the difference?.
police are expected to be perfect and for all the hype, you're are far greater risk of being killed by someone in the health industry than by a cop.
What is the difference between doctors & nurses, and police? - one difference is the narrative that is often spun around them.
Doctors and nurses treat injuries, save lives and make sick people better, so they're 'nice'.
The police have to enforced the law, sometimes using force, so they're 'fascists'.
Although, the woke mob is also turning on the NHS over here. Apparently, black mothers are 5 times more likely to die in childbirth than white mothers. These stats are concerning but because there's a racial disparity, the anti-racists have already decided that there's 'institutional racism' in the NHS. Seriously, scientists (intelligent, educated people as opposed to retarded sjws), should investigate this.
Of course, you get good and bad people in all walks of life - doctors, nurses, police, whatever.
You also get bad or stupid citizens driving cars or walking the streets.
Here's a reminder of what many cops have to deal with on a regular basis …
most of my friends have gotten the vaccines and are quite confident that it’s just what the doctor ordered.
i’m not confident with dr. fauci.
i don’t like the fact that the makers of the vaccines are not held responsible if someone taking the vac develops an illness or even death.
@Steel - well, I think the flu is an issue for elderly people.
I caught a really bad strain of flu in summer 2013, when I was 34. I legitimately wondered at one point whether I was dying. My saliva literally burnt my tongue and mouth, and my stomach if I swallowed it. I kept having to spit saliva in the sink, then drinking iced water or cold milk. I asked my dad to drive me to hospital at 6am one morning. He refused, so I walked into A&E. I told the doctor about my saliva and he said it was the flu infection that did this. <--- this did kinda scare me, I gotta say.
If elderly people don't bother with flu jabs, or live in a part of the world that doesn't have them, they could be in real trouble.
anyone following the derek chauvin trial?.
if you are actually following it, not just listening to the media, you will likely realize that there is a huge gap between what is going on in court and what is being reported in the media.. if the trial was fair, i think he should be acquitted.
there is plenty of reasonable doubt about the cause of death (his dealer doesn't want to testify because he could be guilty of 3rd degree murder for selling him a fatal amount of fentanyl) and even doubt over whether the officer even had his knee on the guys neck or did anything counter to what they were meant to do as per policy.. but is it fair?
Here's an interesting video from a black guy who is a former cop.
Interesting …