![]() Here's why some people think a Camrose dentist's arrest was 'contempt of cop'Law & Order | 207807 hits | Apr 18 7:13 am | Posted by: DrCaleb Commentsview comments in forum You need to be a member of CKA and be logged into the site, to comment on news. |
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Seems to me that this case is being reported differently now than when it happened. If I remember right, at the time she was portrayed as having attacked the cop for no reason.
This is the world we've made. What a time to be alive.
I guess that when someone considers cops, firefighters, doctors, teachers, nurses, etc. as public servants they're really only interested in the "servant" part of it. As in the psychopathic level of arrogance along the lines of "I'm paying your salary therefore I can treat you as shitty as I want", like when you're pulled over by a cop you can automatically go into mega-asshole mode and start treating the cop like he's some doofus waiter in a restaurant.
This is the world we've made. What a time to be alive.
Well, you've convinced me. From now on, everytime someone is pulled over for speeding, they should get a good beating because the big muscular Sheriff might be unable to stand the hurtful words.
Perhaps one day they will even make it illegal to say hurtful things to civil servants, and that will will be part of the punishment.
If you can't keep your cool when people are being rude to you, you probably should not be carrying a gun and may want to choose the priesthood rather than police as a vocation. Personally I've always been very clear that cop has the power if he pulls me over, so there's no point being an idiot, and I have enough control of myself not to be one. But not everybody does, I guess we all reach our limits at some point. Cops should be able to deal with that in a professional manner. What if the person turns out of have mental problems?
Strange way of thinking that it's OK to be an asshole to a waiter but not a cop. You get many dates?
I never said it was OK in either case. But the punishment for it is not having your head bounced off the pavement.
What if the person turns out of have mental problems?
From the article:
He used an example from Britain, where a man threatened officers with a machete. As he swung the knife around, the police talked to him and distracted him until a special team arrived with shields. They then captured him and took him to a psychiatric institution.
Davies said when he asked his Carleton University students what would have happened to that man in Canada, most believed he would have been shot to death.
Should have been clear from the context.
It is, until it's not.
I guess that when someone considers cops, firefighters, doctors, teachers, nurses, etc. as public servants they're really only interested in the "servant" part of it. As in the psychopathic level of arrogance along the lines of "I'm paying your salary therefore I can treat you as shitty as I want", like when you're pulled over by a cop you can automatically go into mega-asshole mode and start treating the cop like he's some doofus waiter in a restaurant.
As a labour economist, this line of thinking has always frustrated me. I'm not sure how that train of thought got going. "I pay taxes, you work for the government, therefore I pay your salary, therefore you work for me", I guess was the children's logic. But it's bullshit. We all pay each others' salaries. That's how an economy works. You don't pay any more of a public workers' salary than you pay a private workers' salary, and vice-versa, a public worker pays just as much of your salary as you pay of theirs.
Here's a helpful thing to keep in mind: if you don't have the authority to fire someone, then they don't work for you.
It's nice to see the visually and cognitively challenged have the opportunity to sit on the bench. The fact that she lied about what happened, as demonstrated by the video - reaching into the car and smashing her cellphone and sexually assaulting her, doesn't seem to mean anything either.
Not that I could ever get more disappointed in the CBC but I'm actually surprised they would choose the arrest of this silly little bitch as the one to hang their entire anti-police agenda on. She fell down on her face in the gravel by the side of the road entire because of her own actions. This was about as far from the Rodney King beating as a speeding/dangerous driving arrest can get.
Cop crucified. Shithead entirely responsible for the whole situation even occurring gets turned into another martyr by a mentality that now says those who behave the worst have the most rights of all. Be nice if the haters could leave high school behind and realize that being an adult means not acting like a fool all the time, that it's actually the main part of the unwritten civil and social contract we're all obligated to live up. Just because some people had a negative experience from the school resource officer while they were doing blunts outside the smoking doors by the student's parking lot doesn't entitle them to have a lifelong grudge against the people who try to protect everyone else from the dumbfucks that keep dragging everything down into the muck with them.