Arathain Kelvar wrote:
Nothing of the kind. Don't be ridiculous. I just listed situations where I will not do this under any circumstances, and as to bullying? That's nonsense. It's quite the opposite, actually.
Yes, you did admit it. You stated Stathol was right, then in the very next sentence said that you do it anyhow. As for bullying, that's how schoolyard bullies operate. They provoke, and then when another kid finally retaliates, they say "but he swung first!". It's unsurprising that you prefer words, sinee simply walking over and taking a swing at someone would unequivocally constitute an assault. What you don't seem to understand is that walking over and confronting someone on the side of the road simply for their rude behavior might very well be taken as a threat even if you don't say something specific like "I'm going to kick your ***". It depends on the circumstances, and one of the major circumstance is the fact that whoever you're confronting doesn't know you or anything about you, except your appearance, and that seems from your photo and expressed desire to try Iron Man, to be a relatively young, physically fit, man.
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Yell and scream? Nonsense. Don't need advice? I thanked you for the advice, and agreed with Stathol. Don't make **** up. As to whether my determination is important? Well, considering I'm the one taking action, it's pretty important. Don't be intentionally ignorant.
No one's making **** up. You rolled your eyes at it first (because you had no intelligent response) then did your little e-sarcasm thing with the thumbs-up emote, so if by "thanked for the advice" you mean "totally sarcastically" then yes, you did. Unless, of course, you're suggesting that you actually do really love getting advice from "cops" and were totally sincere. In which case, since you like it so much, I'll happily tell you everything you should do from now on.
No? Good, didn't think so. We can stop the coy word games then.
Getting back to your determination, no your determination is not important. Yes, you're the one taking action. Duh. So what? That does not somehow mean your determination as to the quality of someone else's manners is important to anyone but you, and certainly does not entitle you to a hearing by them.
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Certainly not. But I don't tussle with women. Nor to I engage in any activity that may make them feel intimidated. If that makes me sexist, I don't care. I'm not sure why this matters.
Because you seem to feel that a "tussle" is how to handle people that lack proper manners. Do women always have proper manners? Or when they don't are they just automatically "idiots" or "making honest mistakes"? How about young kids that just got a license? I'm quite certain many of them have atrocious manners. How about men that are fat, or older, or seem to be disabled? Or are they all somehow exempt? What's your plan if a woman or one of the various other people I mentioned takes a swing at you first? What's your plan if they pull out a weapon?
I don't care at all if you don't "tussle with women", sexist or not, men should not go looking for fights with women. Men are generally bigger and stronger; the type of "sexism" that says "don't hit women" is simple fairness. The problem here, however, is that despite the fact that driving is driving, and care accidents are car accidents, you seem to have a standard that physically fit men are at risk of a verbal harangue from you and maybe a "tussle" for their allegedly poor driving but others that appear unable to effectively fight back are not.
This makes very little sense, since ability to deal with a physical confrontation is not an indicator of driving ability, nor intelligence (idiots) nor of whether someone makes an honest mistake.
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What law protects against two adults getting in a fight? And who's protected? And from whom, their own bad choices? Why should fighting be illegal?
As Stathol pointed out, Assault or Battery laws,(name dependent on the state) protect people, and it protects the victim from whoever is assaulting him or threatening him. "Their own bad choices" is irrelevant; someone making what you perceive to be "bad choices" does not give you the right to fight with them. Aside from the fact that fighting
is illegal whether it should be or not, fighting is illegal, because fights in public, over whatever matter is at hand, is
by definition not consensual. In order to have that be the case, we would need to totally abandon the concept of self-defense, and basically give people license to fight, and assume that anyone defending themselves was "consenting". Claiming "well it shouldn't be illegal" is irrelevant. No one else is obligated to adhere to your ideas of what should or should not be legal. Take it up with the legislature if you want legal fights on the roadside.
Furthermore, in point of fact, consensual fighting between two adults is legal; that's how we get MMA, Boxing, etc. We specifically set up rules so that both sides
know its consensual, know that weapons are off limits, and there are no misunderstandings. Even back when
actually killing each other in a consensual fight was permissible (dueling) it was arranged in advance and there were rules you had to follow.
Your roadside tussles are not consensual, and that is not what we are talking about. You can't legitimately stipulate that because anyone you get into a confrontation with over their manners or rudeness or whatever will not necessarily perceive the situation the way you do. He isn't aware of your intentions, and there is no magic line between a "tussle" and "when weapons are called for". That's why Treyvon Martin is dead and George Zimmerman is on trial. We don't know; maybe Treyvon felt Zimmerman's behavior was racist and decided to learn that honky good and Zimmernan felt Treyvon was going to slam his brains into paste on the sidewalk, or maybe Treyvon felt threatened by this guy that's following him for no apparent reason, and then when he confronted the guy, Zimmerman decided he was not taking any crap from some hoodlum, and blasted him.
When you stop to confront someone on the side of the road, they do not give a **** about your idea of manners, nor your ideas about what constitutes a "good honest tussle", and neither does the rest of society. That's what this is about - your failure to understand that your perception of the situation and the code of behavior you have drawn up in your mind do not apply to anyone but you, and while other people's bad judgement might land them in jail for attacking you or shooting you, you might be seriously hurt in the process. You also might end up in jail yourself because guess what? The court does not care about your ideas about a good honest tussle either, and if your behavior legitimately caused the other person to feel threatened, they may very well get off on self defense, and you will be cooling your heels in the slammer.
At which point you'll no doubt be back here with a very self-serving version of events wherein you did nothing wrong, and where it's all about the power-tripping cops that arrested you, despite the fact that they A) didn't have anything to do with the driving you disliked B) didn't make you pull over to confront the other person C) didn't cause the other person to do whatever it is they did D) didn't cause you to "tussle" with them E) didn't make the law against street fights that you oppose and F) did not try nor sentence you for violating that law.
Really, this entire discussion has nothing at all to do with cops; it doesn't take a cop to see that the actions you describe are foolish, and they don't make the laws you disagree with. Even if there were no cops at all, or street fights were totally legal, you could still end up shot or stabbed, or just having your brains bashed out because you don't understand that losing a fight without weapons on the street still means you are totally at the mercy of your opponent. You seem to recognize that it puts your family at risk if they're present, but if they're not, it becomes a "good honest tussle" apparently by magic. How this thought process works is a total mystery to me.
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Well, like I said, there's never a threat to anyone that doesn't feel compelled to fight. That decision is theirs to make. Sure, there's some pussies out there that might feel compelled to use a weapon because they are being told off, or if the engage in a brawl and cannot stand the thought of losing, but that's the risk. It's certainly not justified.
I hate to break it to you, but a threat is judged from the viewpoint of a reasonable person based on the totality of the circumstances, not based on whether you intend to make a threat or not. The totality of the circumstances includes the fact that a young physically fit adult male
is confronting them on the side of the road over a traffic dispute. Not only is this out of the ordinary and an uncertain circumstance, but the fact is that people do not know what you will do. People do know, however, that there are crazies out there that will kill them for no reason, and the fact that
you know you aren't one of those crazies means nothing.
The fact that people might use a weapon against you has nothing to do with them being "pussies" that are "afraid of losing" or "don't like being told off". Even if they don't like being told off, that does not change the fact that they don't know who you are or what crazy **** you might try to do. They can't read your mind, and the law does not expect them to. Losing a fight on the street can mean permanent injury or death. There is no "code of the good honest tussle" out there or however you think of it, no matter how much you might want one.