Diamondeye wrote:
Arathain Kelvar wrote:
I wasn't sleeping, he was just being a tool.
Oh no, he was "being a tool." How dare he.
What is your point with this? This is my entire point. Not that he's not allowed to be a tool.
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And when he realized I wasn't sleeping, he went fishing for something else. That's a douchebag cop.
No it's not. That's silly. Especially since he could have run the plate on the jeep, then wrote the ticket to the owner and left the copy on the windshield. He didn't "go fishing", he observed a violation. Then he investigated, discovered you were the owner, and gave you a ticket.
He went fishing. When I explained I was not sleeping, he asked me how I got there, went over to the jeep I just pointed out to him, walked around it twice until he found something wrong, and issued me a ticket.
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Yes, my registration was expired. There's ALWAYS some damn thing they can find if they look hard enough. You don't see how this would make an individual not want to talk to cops?
There isn't always something, and if you don't like the laws, try to get them changed. There's no reason the cops shouldn't enforce the law just because you think it's too easy for them to catch you breaking it. You're also moving the goalposts. We're not discussing not talking to the cops because they might catch you doing something, we're talking about how they act when you ARE talking to them.
That is what I'm saying. I'm talking to a cop, and low and behold he looks for a reason to snag me on something. And yes, there is always something. Maybe not with others, but with me there is always some damn thing. Something I didn't know about, forgot to do, overlooked, didn't realize was burned out, expired, or whatever. There is always something. Only one time have I ever survived an obvious fishing attempt unfazed.
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You keep trying to say I'm wrong about things I'm not even talking about. You "deem it appropriate" based on whether or not the cop gets "butt hurt." That's what you've been saying since the beginning. That's also you being a douchebag. I'm also not talking about you being in control of the way you talk; I'm talking about your need to control whether or not the cop gets the information he's looking for from you.
No, I deem it appropriate based on his response. "you fit the description of a suspect" vs. "i'm looking for people who witnessed an accident around the corner" vs. "oh, just being friendly" are all going to result in different responses. Whether he gets butt hurt or not isn't going to affect my response at all, merely how I think of him. I'm smart enough not to fall into the "argue with a cop" trap they like to set out.
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Ah, so you ARE questioning his authority. Good. I'm glad we cleared that up. I'm glad you finally abandoned this bullshit story about "determining if its in your best interests" to answer or not.
No, learn to read. I'm not questioning his authority, I'm getting information. The only explanation for him getting bent is that he somehow thinks it's not acceptable for me to question him.
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You're right about one thing. The officer should not get upset. That's unprofessional. It is not, however, retarded, nor over the top. People question authority all the time, because they think that the time and place to do that is the street rahter than the courthouse. Just because some douchebag wants to "question authority" and think that somehow that entitles him to an answer does not mean the cop should waste time entertaining, or arguing with, such nonsense. He should go on about his business.
If a cop did that, he wouldn't be a douchebag. And there would be no issue. "Sir, what's your name?" "Why, what's up?" "Nothing, nevermind." "Ok."
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I'm quite sure that none of these officers started crying. As for "getting belligerent", we already addressed that. There's laws and standards of conduct. If he's not violating those, he isn't doing anything wrong even if he is being a "douchebag" in your estimation, which is evidently very difficult to avoid.
Based on the criteria I laid out, you pretty much can't be a douchbag unless you get belligerent, or go fishing. If only they followed that standard...
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It's exactly what you've been saying this entire time. It's not "wrong" and don't retreat behind the "learn to read" defense. I've been reading what you've said very carefully. You've been caught giving contradictory answerss and you're just screeching "You're wrong!" in denial.
I'm not screeching. And no, you are not correct. I don't think you are reading my responses if you think this.
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Yes, that is one way to put it. I don't know what you're golfclapping about; you've been trying to argue against that by arguing that an exceedingly rude, confrontational question is not rude. But we can avoid that now, since you admitted above that you are questioning the officer's authority.
No, I have not. I've never suggested it's ok to be rude to an officer. It's your contention that asking him a question is somehow rude, which is ridiculous. Then you turn around and suggest that you can ask a question, but it's rude to ask it rudely? Well no ****. Who ever said anything about asking something rudely? If I ask something in a rude fashion, then yes, I must concede that I am rude. /boggle
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No, so what we have established here is, that from a cop's perspective (in your view at least):
1) If you have a problem with someone, it's perfectly acceptable to ask them questions and look around until you find something, even if totally unrelated to the issue at hand, to nail them on.
Yes. Why wouldn't it be? Would it be better to just nail them ont hat in the first placewithout asking any questions? Or are you suggesting that laws should not be enforced because they don't fit your personal idea of what's important enough, or just because the officer was already talking to them about something else?
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2) If you ask them a question, and they want to know why you are asking, then they are self-important assholes who are inappropriately challenging your "authority" over them.
Well, you just admitted that you ARE challenging their authority.
Never did. Asking why they want my name is not challenging their authority, it's asking a question. Now, they may come back and say something stupid like "I'm a cop and I have authority in this matter, and you have to do anything I say!", in which case I would feel compelled to question that.
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However, if YOU had been reading carefully (since you just try to escape from every inconsistency by claiming the other person "isn't reading" or "isn't paying attention") you'd have said that I said they have authority to investigate. Furthermore, a cop doesn't even need any authority to come up and ask you a question any time he wants. Anyone can do that. You don't have to answer, but you're challenging authority that isn't even relevant. Furthermore, it's perfectly obvious from the question "why do you need to know my name?" that you are making a challenge. What do you think criminals ask when they're trying to weasel out of something "why, why, why..."?
I've never suggested he does not have the authority to ask me questions. Where is this coming from? This is why I'm not challenging his authority. Of course he has the authority to ask me this. I just need to decide whether to answer. He doesn't have the authority to make me answer, as you have said. That's all I'm "challenging" by asking. I'm not responding with "you can't ask me that!!" That would be a challenge to his authority, and is not the case.
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There's a place (I'll remind you yet again) where you can challenge authority you think has been misused. It's called a court. Here's the thing: you actually stand a chance of winning there too, since you're before an impartial person, and not just trying to bull your way through on your own insistence that you're right. Just because you are challenging authority does not put you in the right and authority in the wrong. there is nothing inherently virtuous about challenging authority anymore than authority itself is inherently virtuous.
Good thing I'm not challenging any authority. I'm deciding whether to answer a question. I don't need to go to court for that. (Well, I might, but that would be the cop's decision, not mine, at that point.)
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Well, there's your problem. Stop using your personal metrics. The cops aren't obligated to avoid being douchebags in your personal estimation. Your metrics suck.
I can see how a cop would think that.