AirVol
Let’s go Brandon
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I'm not one to put much stock in what a group of 9 Megalomaniacs have to say about anything. It can be summed up as one big conflict of interest.
Who is supposedly charged with interpretation of the constitution? The megalomaniacs I spoke of, correct? Now, who pays these folks? Would that be the treasury department? A branch of the government.... Nah, no conflict there. Same can be said for cops, lawyers, judges or anyone else involved in government.
Then there is sovereign immunity.
SOVEREIGN IMMUNITY PRINCIPLE
Every jurisdiction in the country recognizes that it is impossible for the police and other public authorities to provide adequate protection to any individual. Therefore, they developed a legal principle that government is not liable for failure to provide adequate protection. They can only attempt to provide some level of protection to the community as a whole. Most states (approximately 37) have sovereign immunity statutes stating that government is not responsible for failure to provide police protection to any individual. The remaining jurisdictions have precedent cases which permanently established the same legal principles. These statutes and precedents are consistently cited by the courts to dismiss suits by individuals for government failure to provide adequate protection.
From this link.
Public Safety Project - Laws on Police Protection / Sovereign Immunity
So, isn't that really just a catch all for the fraud that is government? How long would i be in the protection business if I failed to protect my clients? We are clients, right? We pay (by force) for the services right? Sounds more like victims to me.
I'll just leave this here.
http://youtu.be/kqoBZLSm1WA
Not the same situation as that meme was illustrating. That meme was expecting a cop to make a split decision between a bb gun vs a real gun. Totally different than driving up behind a guy that is walking away and driving into him and through the neighboring wall.
Of course, I have no problem paying for something i voluntarily want, nor do I have a problem firing someone when they don't do the job I pay them for. The government and their enforcers are not subject to market forces. So we can't opt out of their "protection" even though everyone is forced to pay for their so called services. A private business, on the other hand, will cater to their customers.so in this case you are upset that the government recognizes it can't be large enough to offer 100% protection all the time??? so you either want the full nanny state or nothing at all?
most of the non-government protection companies are insurance scams, that don't actually protect you but instead inform you and the police when something has happened. even personal body guards aren't anywhere close to 100% effective. all they can do is react, most of the time, after the damage is done. so its not protection but limiting damage done after the fact. even with the protection you are getting you have to be under 24hr surveillance. you don't like it when the government does it with your tax dollars, but apparently you have no issue with paying for the same thing from a private business looking out for its bottom dollar.
Of course, I have no problem paying for something i voluntarily want, nor do I have a problem firing someone when they don't do the job I pay them for. The government and their enforcers are not subject to market forces. So we can't opt out of their "protection" even though everyone is forced to pay for their so called services. A private business, on the other hand, will cater to their customers.
Truth be told, most cops show up after the crime is committed.
http://youtu.be/kqoBZLSm1WA
And yet didn't want to discuss the item you felt was worth discussing last night.
Any commentary on the SCOTUS case and the NYT article?
No one on here has ever second guessed a cop in a situation where a guy pulled a bb gun vs real gun on them. In a case like that, I would obviously side with the cop to defend himself. But when a cop pulls a guy over on a minor traffic stop and decides to escalate the situation or decides to take a simple street arrest to a street fight, then that is where the cop hatred begins to ooze out.
On October 22, a 13-year old boy was shot and killed by Santa Rosa, California Sheriff's deputies after they saw him walking down the street with what they thought to be an "assault rifle."
According to the Associated Press, the deputies ordered the boy to drop the weapon and eventually "fired several rounds." The boy fell to the ground and was handcuffed, after which the deputies "began administering first aid."
The 13-year old was pronounced dead at the scene. It turns out his "assault weapon" was only a replica. He also had a "plastic handgun in his waistband."
CA Deputies Shoot, Kill 13-Year-Old Carrying Fake 'Assault Weapon'
Walking away?
The guy was continuing moving through a residential area with a loaded weapon. The officer made a split decision on how to stop the threat. You chastised the entire handling of the situation. That was my comparison. See the parallel?
Of course, I have no problem paying for something i voluntarily want, nor do I have a problem firing someone when they don't do the job I pay them for. The government and their enforcers are not subject to market forces. So we can't opt out of their "protection" even though everyone is forced to pay for their so called services. A private business, on the other hand, will cater to their customers.
Truth be told, most cops show up after the crime is committed.
http://youtu.be/kqoBZLSm1WA
What's there to discuss? It's pretty clear, police are under no constitutional duty to protect anyone. Even if there is a court order in place. The title of the article is spot on. Yet, for some reason people are forced to pay for this protection. That's the overall point i am making. Why should we have to pay for a system that has no obligation to do what it is we pay them to do?
It's almost as egregious as the fact that cops can legally lie to you.
Sorry my response took so long, I'm on night shift.
I found this interesting that we seem to have LE zealously enforcing ridiculous drug laws, but don't enforce laws regarding immigration.You can still complain about the drug laws and how absurd they are all you want, but it doesn't change the fact the politicians are the ones that will have to make those laws change. And until said time, LE will continue to enforce the law as it stands. And in turn earn the disdain of the public for enforcing said laws. Now I agree with many on here that sometimes LE goes way overboard on enforcing the law and I do think it should be dialed back. But until the focus of the people is on the root problem, the politicians, there is nothing that will change.
