I don't. I merely question, or beg the question, of how the contact was initiated -- via a call for service, or a self-initiated.How do you assert that something relevant happened off-camera to begin with?
I don't. I merely question, or beg the question, of how the contact was initiated -- via a call for service, or a self-initiated.How do you assert that something relevant happened off-camera to begin with?
Well he was staying there as i understand it, unlikely in his car for a very long time or doing anything menacing, so if I was forced at gunpoint to use occasion razor I'd say that the cop was rolling through on patrol and witnessed him Sitting in Car While Black.I don't. I merely question, or beg the question, of how the contact was initiated -- via a call for service, or a self-initiated.
When I do what I do I do what I'm doing but I'm doing it like I'm doing it for TV.
Police officer: please respond
Police officer: please respond
Police officer: please respond
Police officer: please respond
Police officer: please respond
Well he was staying there as i understand it, unlikely in his car for a very long time or doing anything menacing, so if I was forced at gunpoint to use occasion razor I'd say that the cop was rolling through on patrol and witnessed him Sitting in Car While Black.
If there was a complaint I imagine the officer would have leeway to be more forward.
It's all speculative.
It also depends on who the complainant is. Say, a hotel guest, the hotel manager, or an anonymous complaint.
You know whats also speculative? Your claim that there has been a complainant
If there has been really a call, what would have stopped the Cop from saying so, or why would he had let go of that Guy if there was really some kind of Problem?
Would you leave a suspect alone just because he didn't wanted to talk with you? I bet not.
I never declared that as such, only that it's a possibility.
His own discretion.
It depends.
The fact you'd compare a doctor or nurse (lol) to a profession like cop makes it clear you have no idea how your chosen job is different from basically any other. One is highly educated and helps people. Even on bad days at worst a nurse will have to stick me twice trying to find a vein. A doctor might kill me... but he's trying to save my life. If a cop is doing his job right(or wrong) at the worst someone gets killed. Middle of the road scenario is an innocent person ends up with a arrest on their record because they didnt respect a hs dropout's badge. Best case scenario, which usually happens in white guy open carry videos, is they see they are in the wrong, turn tail, and leave.The officer was not in his face at all. To how do you define such?
And yes, I would find that very impolite if your average Joe constantly knocked on my window and I told them to go away. Things are very different if a police officer is trying to contact me and I'm going out of my way to be immature towards him/her.
Ah yes, someone who found enjoyment out of being difficult for the sake of being difficult. I'm curious to how the interaction came to be... as was it a call for service or a self-initiated stop? Matters in regards to ability to detain someone or being able to demand identification. Calls come in all the time with a suspicious person walking around cars in a parking lot/building or an occupied vehicle parked in front of a house for a long time.
Your framing of someone who simply didn't answer questions as difficult terrifies me. It's as if people whom are aware of their rights are immediately made suspect by that very quality.
Furthermore the fact that the officer whom is equally difficult because of not answering all pertinent questions is completely ignored.
You may think you do good here by trying to defend your fellow officers but you do them a disservice. You bring to life my very worst fears about the police. You are a living version of the blue wall for GAF to observe in a some microcosmic glory. From how you don't notice the same "difficult" behavior coming from the officer at all and to how you criminalize and make suspect those whom show anything less than immediate and full compliance to officers.
Here's a tip.
Don't just record on your phone. Record onto a live streaming service. If the cops decide to get violent and arrest you, they can just take your phone, smash it, and say it got broken during the arrest. Evidence gone.
If you live stream it, doesn't matter what happens to the phone, it's already uploaded to the servers.
Auto back-up. Turn the feature on and don't worry about your phone being smashed.
soooo, having no cops will solve all of the problems? is that what you are trying to say?
change the system, but cops are kinda needed.
I disagree. Clearly separated by a window, cracked by an inch or two, in a relaxed mantra. "In your face" is a hostile and aggressive mantra which typically necessitates a physical response due to violating one's personal space. Saying the officer was in his face is a huge stretch.
The video does not present anything inherently suspicious, but it's clear the video does not paint the entire picture as I've already discussed earlier in this thread.
No they're not.
This video was hilarious, but seriously, are you twelve years old?
Your framing of someone who simply didn't answer questions as difficult terrifies me. It's as if people whom are aware of their rights are immediately made suspect by that very quality.
In America? Would love to see your thought process on that one.