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PostPosted: Fri Aug 22, 2014 7:44 am 
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Oh right, I didn't post that on this forum, which explains your confusion.

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PostPosted: Fri Aug 22, 2014 9:39 am 
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Anyone defending the Ferguson Police and Officer Darren Wilson needs to be mindful of Corolinth's post and the fact that it's taken the Ferguson Police several weeks to claim that Officer Darren Wilson was assaulted and beaten. The Ferguson Police have no credibility for any of their claims at this point.

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PostPosted: Fri Aug 22, 2014 10:45 am 
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Corolinth wrote:
Self defense claims are sketchy at best. Unlike George Zimmerman, the officer involved in this shooting was not checked into a hospital with serious injuries. He does appear to have been belted in the face, but he was certainly not drowning in his own blood as Zimmerman claimed to be. The most serious injury he suffered was to his pride, being punched by an uppity young black kid who wasn't respecting his authoritah


The extent of his injuries are relevant, but do not indicate the appropriateness of a "self defense" claim. Police do not / should not wait to have Zimmerman-style injuries prior to dispatching a suspect. Charging an officer that has drawn his weapon and told you to freeze is enough - even if you do not touch him.

We don't know that is what happened here, but you don't need to sustain injury to legitimately believe you are defending yourself.


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PostPosted: Fri Aug 22, 2014 7:34 pm 
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Arathain Kelvar wrote:
Corolinth wrote:
Self defense claims are sketchy at best. Unlike George Zimmerman, the officer involved in this shooting was not checked into a hospital with serious injuries. He does appear to have been belted in the face, but he was certainly not drowning in his own blood as Zimmerman claimed to be. The most serious injury he suffered was to his pride, being punched by an uppity young black kid who wasn't respecting his authoritah


The extent of his injuries are relevant, but do not indicate the appropriateness of a "self defense" claim. Police do not / should not wait to have Zimmerman-style injuries prior to dispatching a suspect. Charging an officer that has drawn his weapon and told you to freeze is enough - even if you do not touch him.

We don't know that is what happened here, but you don't need to sustain injury to legitimately believe you are defending yourself.


^this


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PostPosted: Sat Aug 23, 2014 11:45 am 
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RangerDave wrote:
Diamondeye wrote:
Never mind that "looking intimidating" is a good way to get people to quit rioting and go home, and stop looting the stores of people that had nothing to do with the shooting!

By the way, DE, did you notice that in the middle of your rant about how silly it is to complain about "camo pants", you straight up admitted that intimidation via a visible display of force is part of the purpose behind the cops' tactics and gear, which is, you know, part of my point?


So your point basically amounts to "the police should not try to control riots"? Because that's the implication. When people who are in a large, violent crowd need to be ontrolled, the best way to do so without additional bloodshed is to intimidate them.

Do you think that people have some right to never feel intimidated by the police, regardless of what they happen to be doing? Even when they are clearly engaging in illegal activity such as.. looting and burning the stores of local shopkeepers that have nothing at all to do with the incident the people are ostensibly upset about? For the last 3 days Ferguson has been peaceful, but prior to that there was a period of well over a week of nightly violence, much of it directed at local businesses who are clearly not involved.

Sorry, but the protection of the property and livelyhood of citizens is more important than people not "feeling intimidated", or for that matter, people's internet outrage at the cops.

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PostPosted: Sat Aug 23, 2014 11:50 am 
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FarSky wrote:
CAMO PANTS RARRR!!!!

Or, y'know, arrests of reporters for...nothing.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/ ... story.html[/quote]

Yeah, he's not one of the cops, so his side of the story is above suspicion.

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Ordering reporters to turn off recording equipment.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/08/1 ... 76940.html

First sentence in your article "may have" gotten them arrested. In other words, they got arrested, and as reporters they feel they are above the law and any arrest of them must be an assault on freedom of the press, so they published a piece to imply that's the case, with only their side of the story.

This is why we don't take the press at it's word. They have total control of messaging. They're more dangerous than the government.

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Firing tear gas on a news crew setting up for a live shot.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/08/1 ... 78081.html

Bro.


Yeah, because clearly there's nothing else going on besides reporters setting up for a live shot. :roll:

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PostPosted: Sat Aug 23, 2014 12:03 pm 
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Arathain Kelvar wrote:
Those pictures are F-ing absurd. There is absolutely no excuse for the presentation of the police in this fashion. Regardless of the obvious tactical irrelevance of the color of one's pants, the civilian protect-and-serve police force should not be presenting itself in this manner. First, it's inappropriate to what their mission should be (serve the public), second it's counter productive. After all, the populace is upset about possible excessive use of force.

I won't speak too much on the need for assault weapons - seems very excessive, but yeah.


The same "assault weapons" we talk so frequently about how citizens should ahve a right to own them and use as they see fit? If a weapon is one we all agree is well within the rights of citizens to own and use, it should not seem in the least excessive for the police to have the same - especially given that watching the events unfold revealed a great many shotguns and less-lethal weapons as well as rifles.

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They should be dressed as cops - standard uniforms - pants, yes, not cammo.
Kneepads - yes
Helmets - yes
Gas masks - yes
Goggles - yes
Gloves - yes
Boots - yes
Zip ties - loads


Realizing that you're not the one getting upset at me pointing out the ridiculousness of the "camo pants" things, seriously, what difference does it make? Police almost never wear camo; the most likely reason they are in this case is that the military is downsizing and dumping cheap surplus tactical pants on the market. I saw very, very few officers wearing camo or tactical uniforms on the news; the vast majority were wearing standard police uniforms in various colors - light or dark blue, various shades of tan. That only emphasizes the silliness of concerns about "militarization of the police" - not only are they not in one common uniform like the military would be, most of their uniforms aren't military, and people are intentionally focusing on the few that ARE.

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Armored vehicles? I can see the advantage of a large sturdy vehicle in a riot zone - keeps you from having to defend more vehicles, and might keep post-riot repairs down. Still, appearance matters.


Appearance does matter - and in the case of a riot, you should appear as though the rioters have no chance to overcome you. Doing so means they, and you, are less likely to be hurt in such an attempt. Police armored vehicles, notably, are not painted in military camo patterns (further lending credence to the idea that the pants are purchased based on cost) and lack crew-served weapons and other systems found on military versions.

Again, if the police fail and the National Guard shows up they will do so in REAL military vehicles, WITH crew served weapons, and with personnel that might train on law enforcement and rot control once a year - or might not, depending on other training requirements. Training time is scarce as it is, and the Reserves and National Guard are overwhelmed with endless new training requirements that are all about maintaining appearances to the public who sit at their televisions drooling over stories of suicides and the imaginary military "rape problem" rather than preparing soldiers to.. actually fight.

The police intimidating a riot out of existence means that some rioter is less likely to get machine-gunned by a panicky private or someone with PTSD issues from his 3 prior deployments.

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Last edited by Diamondeye on Sat Aug 23, 2014 5:00 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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PostPosted: Sat Aug 23, 2014 12:16 pm 
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Müs wrote:
Arathain Kelvar wrote:
FarSky wrote:
More video of the Al Jazeera news team getting gassed. Note the complete lack of protestors around them.

http://www.ksdk.com/videos/news/local/2 ... /14042891/


That's incredibly bad.

Meatheads.


I know right!

What's the matter Cop guys? If you're not doing anything wrong, you shouldn't worry about being videotaped.


So.. you admit the police have reasonable concerns with people videotaping them, then relying on things like camera angle and limited field of view to create a different picture than what the officer perceived at the time? "If you're not doing anything wrong, you have nothing to worry about" is exactly the principle people want to apply when filming the police. That isn't to say that the police shouldn't be filmed, but the practice of simply accepting video at face value, and then claiming that due process for the police or *shock* allowing other evidence to be considered when considering the events needs to end, particularly amongst the armchair quarterbacks of the internet.

In this case, this video DOES pan around and show a little more than just the 4 feet around the crew, but it doesn't show what they were filming (pretty sure it wasn't "absolutely nothing interesting", and on the date of this video violence was still ongoing), and it DOES show that the police handled their equipment gently and didn't take the tape or drive or card or whatever they store video on these days out of the camera, and didn't try to damage it. That doesn't excuse the polcie entirely, but it does call into question what else was going on - maybe that single gas grenade just took an odd trajectory for some reason, or it was an accidental discharge - still a mistake. We don't know.

This also, frankly, does not speak to militarization of the police at all. Interference with reporters, or for that matter, unruly conduct BY reporters are issues regardless of whether the police ar "militarized".

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PostPosted: Sat Aug 23, 2014 12:17 pm 
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Lenas wrote:
Hold on guys, I'm sure DE will tell us why it was okay to tear gas a camera crew.


I'm sure one day you'll stick to the issue instead of "what DE will say." Really, you can stop protecting the echo chamber now.

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PostPosted: Sat Aug 23, 2014 12:24 pm 
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RangerDave wrote:
Here's another important point about how the culture of police departments is both established and reflected in the aspects of the job they emphasize in their recruitment videos:



Note the aspects of policing the video emphasizes: Shooting stuff. K-9 enforcement. Nabbing the bad guys. The SWAT team. This is the first step in the process.

(There’s also the separate but related question of why Hobbs — a town of 35,000 people — needs a SWAT team in the first place. As the Watchdog reports, the SWAT team has its own page on the Hobbs department Web site, complete with a video of SWAT cops shooting and destroying things, set to heavy metal music. The statement in the video that “The rules of engagement of SWAT are simple: Defeat the enemy . . . any way you can” is also troubling. The mission of a SWAT team ought to be to resolve volatile situations without force and violence whenever possible.)

Note, too, what’s missing from the recruiting video: Public service. Cops walking beats. Community policing. Helping people.

Now ask yourself: What sort of person would be attracted to a career in law enforcement based on the images and activities depicted in that video? And is that the sort of person you’d want wearing a badge and carrying a gun in your neighborhood?

The video isn’t disturbing only because of the type of police officer it’s likely to attract. It also suggests that the leadership in the Hobbs police department believes that these are the aspects of police work most worth touting — that this is the face they want to project to the community.

Hobbs isn’t alone in this. It’s a trend in policing that I’ve covered for a few years and part of a general move toward more aggressive, militarized police forces. There are many other examples. [Click through to article for additional videos - RD]

...You get the idea. But they aren’t all bad....Here’s one from Decatur, Ala.:



Admittedly, the latter video is cringeworthy in a dorky way, but the difference in emphasis is obvious. Conor Friedersdorf at The Atlantic comments on the comparison here:

Conor Friedersdorf wrote:
The officers in that latter video will strike most people in this article as the ones they'd want policing their neighborhood. But their type is not venerated in the movies or television shows that we watch. Neither is it lauded in most American police departments. There are training methods, cultural conceits, and a martial culture that America uses to surround those we send abroad to kill declared enemies. And when police departments and officers adopted that same culture to prepare and surround those meant to protect and serve on America's streets, we thought it was cool.

The type of either sheer idiocy or intentional focus on minor issues it takes to claim that a recruiting video somehow means that only people interested in the violent, action-oriented parts of the job will apply, or for that matter, make it through the hiring process is hard to imagine.

This guy is doing exactly the sort of thing I'm talking about - question-begging. He simply claims that the first video shows "militarization" then claims it's part of a "trend" he's been covering - except that SWAT activities are not evidence of militarization. They are not at all similar to military tactics for entering and controlling a building - except when the military adopts police tactics in order to accomplish certain objectives that demand less-lethal results.

We have had 10+ years of police-ification of the military, moving away form heavy combat systems and tactics in the name of nation-building. We are not militarizing the police. The increased resemblance is because we've forgotten what the military is for.

There's also the fact that the police, first and foremost, are there to catch criminals. There's nothing wrong with emphasizing that. This is the part of police work people find entertaining even when they aren't police, as it mentions in reference to movies and TV shows. Finally, the fact that you think the last video is "cringeworthy" and "dorky" indicates a catch-22. People know they want the police to enforce the law, and not just do the soft side of stuff, but they want to complain when brought face-to-face with the reality of what that involves, and think community service stuff is "dorky".

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Last edited by Diamondeye on Sat Aug 23, 2014 5:07 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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PostPosted: Sat Aug 23, 2014 12:26 pm 
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FarSky wrote:
Foamy wrote:
Is anyone besides me disgusted by the fact that people have already chosen sides and have made up their minds absolutely on who is at fault?

How about stepping back and waiting to find out the details? People see a dead young black male in the street shot by a cop and automatically he was a good boy who didn't deserve it? It was racism because "Black teen shot by white cop"?

Because of this, the idiot masses of the town have taken to looting and destroying their own community for Justice for Brown?

Me, I haven't heard anything either way that convinces me of either side's story.

I can stand the activism on what could only be assumptions of the situation that occurred. People need to look at these situations with a little common sense and logic before damning one side or the other and never letting their perceptions change no matter what facts come out.

Do please justify these actions taken by the police, then.

Also.


Do, please, stop just assuming that someone else's side of the story is unimpeachably true simply because they aren't the cops.

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PostPosted: Sat Aug 23, 2014 12:29 pm 
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FarSky wrote:
By the way, where are all of the Tea Party folks who protest government overreach with guns and ****? Shouldn't they be there with guns instead of protesting Chipotle and Starbucks? Does Missouri just not have them?


Maybe they have jobs and such? Other obligations outside the tea party? Unlike the people trying to pick up a few extra bucks by looting businesses. Where's your concern for the business owners? Getting your shop looted and burned apparently just has to be ignored because we wouldn't want it to distract from the the actions of the cops! Obviously they just went out and started gassing and arresting reporters for the hell of it.

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PostPosted: Sat Aug 23, 2014 12:33 pm 
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Arathain Kelvar wrote:
FarSky wrote:
Foamy:
"Unacceptable" is the correct term. You move past "reaction" when these contemptible "officers" started tear gassing news crews and demanding (now with death threats!) that reporters cease showing their offenses to the world. Jesus Christ, this is how they act when they know the world is watching.


Jesus.


That officer has already been suspended pending disciplinary action, and has been for days. But remember, that one guy doing it means that's how "they" act in Farsky-world. You know, just like all dem niggers (see, Coro? We can all play the shock game) loot stores because there were some doing it in Ferguson.

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PostPosted: Sat Aug 23, 2014 12:50 pm 
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FarSky wrote:
No one (here, at least, or anywhere I've seen) is claiming the looting or riots are in any way justified. Period. They're also not to be conflated with the peaceful protests and, once again, news coverage.


And yet, the police are out there because of those people, and using appropriate tactics for the most part. You're focusing on one guy displaying that he shouldn't be there, and one tear gas grenade, and a few alleged incidents by reporters, to make broad claims about "jackbooted thugs!" and such, nd now just getting in the pious "but that doesn't mean the looting is justified!". No doubt you're now going to claim that they should do "different" things to control the riots - despite having absolutely no business telling anyone what the proper way to deal with a riot is, and why it would work. We are talking about a few isolated cases of impropriety - some unconfirmed, not mass beatings or shootings.

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Arathain:
First point: I mention nor intend nothing of racism. I'm just curious why people who hold "property rights" in such high regard that they protest "overreach" by private companies who deny open-carry firearms on their property seem uninterested in literally jackbooted paramilitary government officials according American citizens the same treatment as terrorists.


The police are not according anyone the same treatment as terrorists. Furthermore, I don't see you out there despite your internet outrage over "literally jackbooted government officials", so why should the Tea Party be there? Maybe because they realize that the police are confronting violent looters and rioters and need to use significant force to overcome them, lest they embolden them via ineffective action or the appearance of weakness? Unlike you, who apparently want them to do things in some unspecified "different" way, despite knowing zilch about riots, and for no better reason than that it would look better to you through the lens of selective internet photo and video? Here's a clue - the goal is not assuaging your living room outrage.

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Fourth point: I actually think that some whites showing solidarity with the protestors (not the looters/rioters, who I feel are being conflated here and in other outlets) would very much decrease the racial tension, or at least (cynically) serve to make more people care when a pretty white girl gets hit in the face with tear gas or sent to the hospital from being shot by an officer.


Why don't you go take care of that?

Tell me why whites are the ones with the obligation to show racial solidarity? How about black people start rejecting hatemongers like Sharpton and Jackson, stop preaching about the "white man" in so many black churches, and stop telling "white America" what it supposedly thinks, or how in a country of 300 million people, 400 police shootings a year, only about a third directed at blacks, describes some casual attitude towards the shooting of young black men?

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PostPosted: Sat Aug 23, 2014 12:55 pm 
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Numbuk wrote:
This is why I believe all cities everywhere should adopt Rialto, CA's stance: Police officers must wear cameras. Police brutality dropped by 60%, and complaints against the department dropped by 88%.

It's a beautiful and wonderful solution for *BOTH* parties involved. It keeps the truth in the spotlight. It keeps an overzealous policeman in check. It proves interactions with a citizen false who is wrongly claiming brutality.


This is mostly true, as long as we keep in mind that cameras can become damaged or malfunction, and that they don't always show everything - especially what's going on to the dies or behind. If cameras are regularly "malfunctioning" or "breaking" then there's a problem, but if people are going to instantly leap to the conclusion of wrongdoing ANY time it happens, there's going to be a new problem. Your healer can lose their internet when the boss is at 10% health - **** happens. The camera is not a substitute for due process, either for the police, or anyone else.

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PostPosted: Sat Aug 23, 2014 12:55 pm 
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Müs wrote:
Rorinthas wrote:
Numbuk wrote:
This is why I believe all cities everywhere should adopt Rialto, CA's stance: Police officers must wear cameras. Police brutality dropped by 60%, and complaints against the department dropped by 88%.

It's a beautiful and wonderful solution for *BOTH* parties involved. It keeps the truth in the spotlight. It keeps an overzealous policeman in check. It proves interactions with a citizen false who is wrongly claiming brutality.


I'm kinda down with this. We'd know right now what happened.


In Ferguson we wouldn't. The PD would have withheld the video until the last possible moment. And blamed the victim.


How do you know he's a victim?

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PostPosted: Sat Aug 23, 2014 12:59 pm 
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Khross wrote:
A lot has been made of the camouflage pants; quite a lot, in point of fact. As such, I must ask the resident expert:

What possible tactical, strategic, material, or operational advantage does jungle patterned camouflage provide in an urban combat situation?


None. So why people think the police are intentionally purchasing suboptimal clothing in order to militarize is inexplcable - other, of course, than fueling the internet hobby of outrage against the police, and having some Grave Threat to Rights and Freedoms to protest from the comfort of one's armchair.

The real answer is that they're almost certainly cheap surplus, purchased from a military that is downsizing. Not unlike those armored vehicles everyone is so worried about.

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PostPosted: Sat Aug 23, 2014 1:05 pm 
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Müs wrote:
And why do small town police departments need an MRAP?

Or a tracked APC?
Image

Or one of these:
Image


Well, let's see - the M113 chassis is now 54 years old, and over 80,000 have been manufactured. They are dirt cheap, easy to maintain, readily available as surplus AFAIK, and provide a solution for police departments that may have areas unsuitable for wheeled-vehicle access. You'll note the distinct LACK of crew served weapons or the military camo pattern that gets people so uptight.

As for the others, that's for inserting SWAT members under small arms fire, and providing a mobile command post in dangerous situations. What's the problem? It's scary?

MRAPS - the military is dumping them wholesale. Thousands were ditched in Iraq and Afghanistan because they weren't worth the cost or effort to bring home. They're cheap, readily available, and all they really are is a big truck. What's the worry? Because they have v-hulls to protect soldiers from IEDs that somehow automatically means that using them for anything else indicates a fear of IEDs? :lol:

There isn't any rule that says "because an item is used for military purposes in a combat zone, it therefore represents a 'militarization' of any activity it's used for domestically." The military practically runs on PowerPoint. Does that mean giving PowerPoint presentations is "militarization" too?

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Müs wrote:
Nitefox wrote:
Müs wrote:
Hey everyone, its cool. Brown beat up the cop. Its totally justified. We can all chill out now.

http://www.theblaze.com/stories/2014/08 ... wn-report/



I'm assuming sarcasm...

If so...so he cop should have just let this very large man beat the crap out of him? If the cop was attacked and Brown did go for his gun and then came back at him...the cop is still to blame in your opinion? Try to keep your screw the cops bias to a minimum.


Yes. The cop is to blame for the death. Once the suspect is subdued, you are no longer allowed to apply deadly force.


Or how about - we don't actually have a clear picture yet, just like the Trayvon Martin case.

Here's what else we are not allowed to do - demand punishment or assign blame based on public opinion.

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PostPosted: Sat Aug 23, 2014 1:22 pm 
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Corolinth wrote:
Michael Brown is not Trayvon Martin in a number of respects. The first is that according to reports, Michael Brown actually was fairly large and imposing. The second is the incident occurred at noon and there are witnesses. The third is that the shooter is actually a police officer. The fourth is that the officer did not call for medical attention, either for himself or for Michael Brown.


Indications are that the officer was taken to the hospital.

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Self defense claims are sketchy at best. Unlike George Zimmerman, the officer involved in this shooting was not checked into a hospital with serious injuries. He does appear to have been belted in the face, but he was certainly not drowning in his own blood as Zimmerman claimed to be. The most serious injury he suffered was to his pride, being punched by an uppity young black kid who wasn't respecting his authoritah.


So, if someone punches you in the face, because they didn't inflict serious injury with that blow (as determined later by medical personnel) that means if you defend yourself it was because of wounded pride? I know how anxious you are to get that "respect athouritah" joke out there that's so frequently mistaken for actual argument, but if you think getting hit in the face is merely wounded pride, you're a total **** idiot. This officer has 6 years on the force with nary a complaint against him - not just no justified complaints, but none at all, yet you want to contend that one day he thought he'd shoot a black kid for injuring his pride. Yes, clearly that total lack of self-control and disregard for the consequences is what got him through 6 years with a clean record. :roll: He may well have been unjustified in the shooting, but it was pretty clearly NOT because of injured pride, no matter how much you might think South Park is inspired social commentary.

First, blows to the head (as repeated evidence from Iraq and Afghanistan, not to mention major-league football) have shown can cause other problems - the immediate kind, like unconsciousness, or later problems from concussion that may not be readily apparent.

Second, when someone is attacking you, you do not magically know at what point they will stop - being hit in the face is an extreme level of threat, especially when the attacker is larger and stronger than you.

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Perhaps the biggest and most significant difference between the Michael Brown shooting and that of Trayvon Martin is that police in Florida did not repeatedly violate First Amendment protections. Speaking as a resident of St. Louis who does have to drive through Ferguson on a regular basis for business, I now feel more threatened by Ferguson police who may decide they should arrest me for my own protection against violent protesters than I do the angry black people protesting the police.


That would not be a difference, mainly because the alleged First Amendment issues after the fact have nothing whatsoever to do with the justification or lack thereof of the shooting in the first place. This is a difference only for people looking for an excuse to feel threatened by the police, and who think reporter's versions of incidents are always impeccable, or at least are impeccable when it's convenient for them. You seem to have a real problem comprehending the first amendment, since you also thought that Freedom of Religion means that people have the right to expect the government to force someone else to spend money for their birth control, even when less-intrusive means of providing the same product are available. Here's a hiunt - the First Amendment is not a blunt instrument for Coro to club people he doesn't like over the head with.

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Reporters with cameras are being arrested while reporting on the story. That is a clear cut case of the police curtailing First Amendment rights. That is not an opinion. That is an objective fact.


So your contention is that reporters can never be arrested while reporting, and are above the law?

The only "objective fact" here is that you don't think through the implications of your statements, nor understand the First Amendment very well. It's nice to know, though, that you think we have a class of super-citizens immune to all allegation of wrongdoing based on nothing more than their own say-so - at least as long as it's convenient for complaints about cops.

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Journalists reporting on events in Ferguson are being arrested for reporting on events in Ferguson. For those of you who have ever said that the Second Amendment exists to protect the First Amendment: Why are you not calling for Ferguson police to be shot? I post this question expecting to be arrested tomorrow for having done so.


For those of you (that, specifically would be you) that think the First Amendment is there to provide automatic canonical truth to the claims of reporters, and immunity from arrest under any circumstance, why are you not out there shooting the police yourself? Oh right. It's about feeling cool and rebellious, and most importantly smarter than anyone else. I mean, you're right there in MO. Why don't you get off your *** and go do something about it?

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Last edited by Diamondeye on Sat Aug 23, 2014 5:26 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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PostPosted: Sat Aug 23, 2014 1:31 pm 
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Khross wrote:
Anyone defending the Ferguson Police and Officer Darren Wilson needs to be mindful of Corolinth's post and the fact that it's taken the Ferguson Police several weeks to claim that Officer Darren Wilson was assaulted and beaten. The Ferguson Police have no credibility for any of their claims at this point.


The Ferguson police may be indeed terrible at managing public information, but that does not call into question the claims of him being hit. It takes pretty much zero cleverness to figure out that a claim of being physically attacked are the strongest argument in their favor. Waiting to put that information out does not impeach its credibility one iota - if that were false, it would gain them nothing to put it out when it is sure to be scrutinized extensively.

Darren Wilson was, indeed, taken to the hospital. As of yesterday it is unclear if he was admitted or not.

As for Coro's post, the only thing we need to "bear in mind" is that Coro does not understand the First Amendment, just like he didn't in the Hobby Lobby discussion a little while back. There is no merit whatsover in the claim that any arrest of a reporter, while engaged in reporting, is a violation of the first amendment, nor is there any reason whatsoever to take reporters at their word that they were "arrested for reporting" if we are not going to take the cops at their word. This just has the effect of making the First Amendment into a shield for an institutionalized press that is already far more dangerous than the government, or any other form of corporate activity.

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PostPosted: Sat Aug 23, 2014 5:53 pm 
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I notice, by the way, that the fact that the President felt it necessary to become involved by sending his Attorney General there. Never mind the near-certain bias of Eric Holder, the Federal government has no business whatsoever getting involved in this matter, especially not given that the Civil Rights division of the Justice Department is one of the most biased organizations in government, made up almost entirely of social crusader-lawyers.

Then there's the fact that the Governor of Missourri made statements on TV - prepared statements, with teleprompters and all, not off-the-cuff remarks - talking all about "justice for the Ferguson family", and making little, if any mention, of needing to thoroughly investigate.

The simple fact is that for a large number of people in this country, white people and police officers are not entitled to civil rights or due process, and respecting those things in their case is somehow evidence of corruption or racism. Doubly so when it's a white police officer. At this point, the amount of influence exerted on this case is so great that they have called any prosecution of the officer into question.

Those of you that worry so much about police corruption, brutality, and "militarization" ought to be more concerned about this than anyone. Assuming there is a case against the officer (which, despite all the other nonsense, is still a real possibility) it's being heavily jeopardized by the antics of people that are so concerned about appeasing racial tensions.

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PostPosted: Sat Aug 23, 2014 9:19 pm 
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I kinda feel that replying to the same thread 18 times in a row is like killing someone by stabbing them 18 times. Right, wrong, or indifferent, that's a lot of rage.

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PostPosted: Sat Aug 23, 2014 9:25 pm 
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Stathol wrote:
I kinda feel that replying to the same thread 18 times in a row is like killing someone by stabbing them 18 times. Right, wrong, or indifferent, that's a lot of rage.


Or maybe he's just passionate about the subject?


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PostPosted: Sun Aug 24, 2014 12:11 am 
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Stathol wrote:
I kinda feel that replying to the same thread 18 times in a row is like killing someone by stabbing them 18 times. Right, wrong, or indifferent, that's a lot of rage.


There's no rage involved, Stathol. I had replied as much as I was going to because really, the camo pants thing just made the entire issue a joke. Then I noticed someone complaining that "my response was requested." There was a lot to respond to. When you quote, the window at the bottom does not really let you scroll back very far so if you're dealing with something 4 pages ago and accidentally delete part of it, you can't get back to it, nor easily add multiple quotes to the same response. If I had combined them into one big post people would have complained about TL;DR. And no, I didn't respond to everything; there are a hell of a lot more posts than 18.

That's 2 one-liners about me, now, and nothing to do with the issue at hand. I don't need to rage though, Stathol. The status quo is fine with me; no one ***** on this board is going to change anything.

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