It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
Originally posted by Revealation
If most cops would do actual police work and get out of the fantasy, movie image tough guy (in their own heads) maybe they could do actual police work...cause as I like to state the only thing MOST cops are good for is coming to arrest you or to take you away in a body bag.
I'll be the 1st to tell you I judge you cops as they judge us civilians,err, or is it criminals, just that I at least have the common decency to treat everyone decent until their actions or accusations prove otherwise.
Originally posted by TKDRL
reply to post by Homedawg
So you don't mind being treated like a criminal, because you aren't a criminal? Sad the way people have been brainwashed to think these days...
Being asked to comply isnt being treated like a criminal...I neither do criminal acts,nor have I,as a 20+ year LEO,treated anyone like they are until proven to be so....however,having walked up to a dark car at 2am and not being able to see inside,or know whats going on in there,I sympathize with officers who feel the need to check things out...if you havent been in that situation,you have no grounds to attack someone who has....if your precious feelings get hurt,tough...we live with the reality of a wall in Washington DC inscribed yearly with over 200 new names of officers who didnt watch their P's and Q's and paid the price(and more attacks happening each month)....I have also seen 1st hand what happens when Law Enforcement goes away(im a Katrina survivor)....if the choice is a little inconvience at a traffic stop or anachary,Ill take the search and release....and with lib dims in power,you can bet the intrusions are just going to get more prevalent as they continue to solidify their power base...witness the new gun-control-by-executive-order initives being drawn up a we speak...
Originally posted by TKDRL
reply to post by Homedawg
So you don't mind being treated like a criminal, because you aren't a criminal? Sad the way people have been brainwashed to think these days...
Originally posted by daggyz
Don't know, but it should. There is no reason for anyone to be carrying a weapon. If the Police shot everyone who carried one, no one would a carry one and the streets would be free of that element, either due to fewer weapons, fewer people who carry weapons and both....
I'm not serious, but it would solve a problem.
Agree 1000%...and Im a cop
Originally posted by daddio
Originally posted by daggyz
Don't know, but it should. There is no reason for anyone to be carrying a weapon. If the Police shot everyone who carried one, no one would a carry one and the streets would be free of that element, either due to fewer weapons, fewer people who carry weapons and both....
I'm not serious, but it would solve a problem.
it is this type of statement that is the downfall of EVERY country. Criminals and the military will never sureender their weapons, so yea, lets leave the actual "Citizens" defenseless. That's a great idea.
Originally posted by Xcathdra
Originally posted by thov420
reply to post by Xcathdra
Just because there is no constitutional amendment that says drugs are illegal, does not make them legal. As stated Congress, as well as the states, can make laws. If the people dont like the law, then vote in representatives who will change it (which we have seen happen in California with marijuana, assisted suicide in oregon, prostitution in Nevada etc.
your dwelling on victimiless crimes to justify your position on criminalized non-violent crimes. why dont you guys REALLY focus on rapists, murderers, armed robbers- #, recommend capital punsihment on their asses! Marijuana is NOT even close to being legal in california, thats why i can still suffer a felony offense for having a LITTLE more than an ounce. even though i have a doctors recommendation , i can still be taken to a precinct and hassled until it is proven i have a phys. recom.
if you truly understood and respected common law (which is still in practice in the US), you wouldnt be persecuting non-violent criminals. As long as im not causing harm, attempting to cause harm, or showing potential to cause harm (DUI/DWI) why would you even desire to confront someone for a "crime" that is victimless? while statutory law dictates what laws you enforce and what laws you dont, you are still to adhere to the enforcement of the common law, above all else- correct?
P.S.- i meant to tell you this last time, Be safe out there dude! its NOT going to be people that think like me that will be causing you problems.
i just cant figure this quote thing out... im a lost cause.edit on 26-3-2011 by WJjeeper because: (no reason given)edit on 26-3-2011 by WJjeeper because: (no reason given)edit on 26-3-2011 by WJjeeper because: (no reason given)
Originally posted by TKDRL
reply to post by WJjeeper
Everything in between [quote] and [/quote] will be in the quote box.
edit on Sat, 26 Mar 2011 15:02:50 -0500 by TKDRL because: (no reason given)
Originally posted by Xcathdra
reply to post by byteshertz
No where in this thread has it been stated a person is presumed guilty by officers. You are confusing officer safety in this case, and there is a huge difference. As I stated before, multiple times actually, that when we are dispatched to calls, the only information we have is whats been provided by either a 3rd party, or the main parties.
We have no way of knowing if the call is real, or what is going on that requires law enforcemen involvement. Again, we also have no way of knowing whats changed from the time the call came into, to the time we arrive on scene.
So you are more than welcome to play word games in this area, but your interpretation is 100% wrong. Also, as I have explained to others, Law Enforcement does not determine who is guilty, that is the job of the Prosecuting Attorney.
Originally posted by Xcathdra
We respond to calls with the mindset of expecting the worst.
Originally posted by apacheman
What bothers me most about all this is how delusional, even psychotically delusional, police are.
Let's start with delusion No. 1:
"Police work is dangerous, they put their lives on the line every day."
www.bls.gov...
In 2007, police and sheriff fatality rates were 21.8, compared to 39.5 for farmers and ranchers, 17.4 for firefighters, 16.1 for miscellaneous agricultural workers, 111.8 for fishermen, 86.4 for loggers, 19.5 for construction laborers, 29.4 for roofers, 45.5 for structural iron and steelworkers, 13.7 for construction helpers, 29.1 for electrical and power line workers, 70.7 for pilots and flight engineers, 28.2 for drivers, sales workers, truck drivers, 18.9 for taxi drivers, 22.8 for refuse and recyclable material collectors, 27.9 for crop production....
Originally posted by apacheman
So the idea that police work is exceptionally dangerous is a nonsensical delusion unsupported by the facts.
Originally posted by apacheman
Delusion Number 2:
"I thought it was a gun."
Since most police operate under Delusion Number 1, they are predisposed to view every encounter with paranoia, rather than healthy respect. Given the propensity for "throw-downs", i.e., weapons placed by police after the fact to justify lethal force (please don't bother telling me it doesn't happen: I know from direct experience and direct police testimony that it does), the number of unjustified shootings by police is simply appalling: police are more of a public threat to the average citizen than criminals are. How many people have been gunned down by cops who shared a paranoid delusion that saw cellphones, wallets, videotapes and any number of innocuous objects as weapons?
Originally posted by apacheman
Delusion Number 3:
"Split-second decision required."
snip....utter BS argument
Originally posted by apacheman
Delusion Number 4:
"Police are there to protect the citizens."
Actually, the primary function of most police departments is to generate revenues through fines: look where they put most of their efforts and energy. As in the situations cited above, when they are in a position to actually actively protect the citizens who pay their salaries, they are in a huge hurry to "resolve" the situation, usually by arresting someone, rather than facilitating an actual genuine resolution. In actuality, by training, procedure, and custom, the very first person a cop protects is him/herself, then other cops, then friends, allies and employers and only after that, the general public. Police serve and protect those who employ them over those who pay them: the politicians responsible for their budgets, not the taxpaying citizens who provide the funds whether they will or nil. In any case, they are mostly reactive, and you can't be "protected" after the fact. In many cases, they actually foster and protect ciminals within the community, so long as that criminal gives them something of value. The question always is, or should be, valuable to whom? The police or the public?
Originally posted by apacheman
When you add the prevalence of steroid use/abuse among LEOs, is it really any wonder that police react on a hair-trigger and delude themselves into believing every encounter is life-threatening?
Originally posted by apacheman
I have utter contempt for police who act under the influence of the delusions I've cited. I have more contempt for the management practices that foster them. Police work is most certainly NOT particularly dangerous compared with other lines of work, and policies that govern their interactions with the public should not be based on the delusion that it is. Policies should require that police enter a scene quietly and unaggressively, displaying calm, resolute patience to tone it down before making and demands. Most people respond to aggression with aggression, so acting aggressively in a tense situation will nearly always guarantee a violent response.
Originally posted by apacheman
I, personally, have disarmed gangbangers trying to crash a college dance I was responsible for, taking their alcohol and weapons without myself being armed or aggressive, merely calm and determined. I have also disarmed a biker intent on shooting his cheating girlfriend, again unarmed, although with him I had to use a little speed to close the gap and remove his gun.
Originally posted by apacheman
It can be done with proper training and attitude.
Originally posted by apacheman
But as long as police continue to base their actions on delusions, innocent people will die justified by those delusions.edit on 26-3-2011 by apacheman because: spedit on 26-3-2011 by apacheman because: (no reason given)
What, exactly, are you smoking? extra DIV
Originally posted by byteshertz
I am not playing word games:
I said you said 'worse case scenario' and that you see people as 'guilty until proven innocent' through the eyes of a cop- your exact words were:
Originally posted by byteshertz
Please explain how you can go in to a situation expecting the worst but not feel people are guilty until proven innocent When:
This suggest you are not expecting but suspecting the worst of everyone - which is the same as seeing people as potentially guilty - so therefore they are guilty until proven innocent.
SARASOTA, Fla. (AP) -- A Sarasota homicide detective has been fired after declaring himself a sovereign citizen.
Tom Laughlin of Parrish filed court documents in April renouncing his U.S. citizenship and claiming he was not subject to federal law and he no longer had to pay taxes.
The 42-year-old detective was fired last week. According to an internal affairs report, supervisors accused Laughlin of associating with a hate group advocating violence, not answering questions honestly and using department computers to search websites on sovereign citizens.
Laughlin told the Sarasota Herald-Tribune that he filed the documents to make a political statement but he "didn't want to be involved in any kind of extremist movement." He plans to appeal.