Originally posted by tabbyblack13
View Post
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Arrested for trying to get into one's own home
Collapse
X
-
Last edited by Dreamstalker; 07-23-2009, 12:29 AM."Any state, any entity, any ideology which fails to recognize the worth, the dignity, the rights of Man...that state is obsolete."
-
Originally posted by BroomJockey View PostOkay, why? Are the police in the habit of cuffing people they have no intention of charging with anything? Should they be? Anything?
Comment
-
Originally posted by Flyndaran View PostIf they weren't doing something worthy of getting arrested then they weren't doing anything worthy of getting cuffed.Originally posted by BroomJockey View PostOkay, why? Are the police in the habit of cuffing people they have no intention of charging with anything? Should they be? Anything?
I've always found it funny and exceedingly annoying that people jump on everything police do wrong hollering for their blood, yet when the shit hits the fan who's the first person people go running to? Cops are human, just like you, yet unlike you they have made the choice to protect their fellow citizens, until you decide to do the same thing, you have no right to criticise them. Just stop and think, everyone who claims "The first responsibility of the police should be to leave law abiding citizens alone." what if they decide that because of situations like this to treat everyone as a law abiding citizen, because it's to dangerous to assume otherwise, and leave everyone alone, wouldn't that be a fun place to live?I am a sexy shoeless god of war!
Minus the sexy and I'm wearing shoes.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Nyoibo View Postyou have no right to criticise them.
b) the line I quoted is perhaps the silliest thing you could have possibly said, especially on a debate forum.Any comment I make should not be taken as an absolute, unless I say it should be. Even this one.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Nyoibo View PostIf a guy's ranting and raving yelling screaming and such, maybe having extenuating circumstances the cop may cuff him until he calms down, then let him go once he's calm, the handcuffs stop the situation from possibly escalating from simple ranting and raving to a point where someone may get hurt, at which time said rant guy goes to jail and gets a record.
I don't like the ease with which it would be for cops to macho-ego-trip and just let people go later. If I were harrassed by a cop, I sure as hell would demand to be arrested, so that when their complete lack of case comes out I can sue the hell out of the city for false arrest.
Originally posted by Nyoibo View PostI've always found it funny and exceedingly annoying that people jump on everything police do wrong hollering for their blood, yet when the shit hits the fan who's the first person people go running to? Cops are human, just like you, yet unlike you they have made the choice to protect their fellow citizens, until you decide to do the same thing, you have no right to criticise them. Just stop and think, everyone who claims "The first responsibility of the police should be to leave law abiding citizens alone." what if they decide that because of situations like this to treat everyone as a law abiding citizen, because it's to dangerous to assume otherwise, and leave everyone alone, wouldn't that be a fun place to live?
Comment
-
Originally posted by Nyoibo View Postyou have no right to criticise them
If we don't have the right to criticize someone for performing a job we have not done ourselves, then the following is true:
- you're never allowed to complain about a malfunctioning computer unless you have written an actual program, on your own, to make your computer do something, and done it for pay.
- you're never allowed to say a movie sucked unless you've made your own or participated in the making of your own, and done it for pay.
- you're never allowed to say a book sucked unless you've been paid for writing/editing/publishing one.
- and on and on and on and on and ...
The simple fact remains that the police have a job to do. Some aspects of that job are known to the public, some are not. In this case, the man had presented ID showing who he was. Once his identity and proper residency was established (by the showing of that ID), the police business was concluded. They should have left. Instead, they claimed he became confrontational, and arrested him.
That is where they screwed up. He can be a raging asshole, as long as he's not threatening them. Since that claim is never made, it's a fairly safe assumption that it did not happen.
They made a mistake, and are refusing to apologize. Damn straight we have a right to criticize them for their behavior.
Oh, and since he went to China, that ID he presented? It could well have included his passport (which is considered valid ID for federal, state, and local government purposes). It could have included his driver's license (considered valid ID for all state and local purposes). Hell, it could have even included his faculty ID card for all we know. All of which would have identified him as who he claimed to be, and at least one of which would have positively identified this as his home (driver's licenses across the country all have home address on them so far as I know).
Comment
-
According the an article on CNN.com the police stated that refused to so any proper ID. If he had shown any ID and explain what he was doing then the cops should have left him alone.
I also don't think that a cop should assume that everyone is a law abiding citizen. They will end up getting killed."Human history becomes more and more a race between education and catastrophe" -H. G. Wells
"Nature, to be commanded, must be obeyed" -Sir Francis Bacon
Comment
-
Originally posted by tabbyblack13 View Post...
I also don't think that a cop should assume that everyone is a law abiding citizen. They will end up getting killed.
I also don't take thier word as gospel. I am an atheist after all.
Comment
-
Originally posted by tabbyblack13 View PostAccording the an article on CNN.com the police stated that refused to so any proper ID.
I think the true ground is somewhere in the middle. I doubt either of them acted quite as heinously as portrayed by the other.Any comment I make should not be taken as an absolute, unless I say it should be. Even this one.
Comment
-
Originally posted by BroomJockey View Post...
I think the true ground is somewhere in the middle. I doubt either of them acted quite as heinously as portrayed by the other.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Flyndaran View PostIt in no way should be used to denigrate him.Any comment I make should not be taken as an absolute, unless I say it should be. Even this one.
Comment
-
Originally posted by BroomJockey View PostAnd I wasn't. However, I don't think he was as genteel as he purports himself to have been. That would be kinda what I said. "Neither side how the other says, but in the middle."
Comment
-
Originally posted by BroomJockey View PostOkay, a) I wasn't criticizing the police, I was attempting to figure out dd's position, which he's now expounded upon to my satisfaction.
b) the line I quoted is perhaps the silliest thing you could have possibly said, especially on a debate forum.
b) debating the actions and critcizing are 2 different things.
Originally posted by Flyndaran View PostNo one said that this jet lagged professor was berserking like psycho. That is dangerously close to libel.
Originally posted by Flyndaran View PostMy father was one of the few great cops and even greater men. I've met too many of his disgusting macho disgraceful coworkers to ever give anyone the benefit of the doubt. Just because they have a more dangerous job than most, does not give them the right to illegally harrass others. Being human does not give them carte blanche to antoganize others and arrest anyone that they don't like.I am a sexy shoeless god of war!
Minus the sexy and I'm wearing shoes.
Comment
Comment