Tasered for Speeding in Utah Who's to blame?
#41
Posted 2007-November-23, 17:13
#42
Posted 2007-November-24, 08:55
mikeh, on Nov 23 2007, 03:59 PM, said:
That may be true. If, however, that is the sole criterion for a perfect world, I submit that we live in one.
Let me put it more bluntly: it never happened. If you have evidence otherwise, post it.
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#43
Posted 2007-November-24, 09:54
jdeegan, on Nov 24 2007, 01:13 AM, said:
Hopefully you aren't a cop. The one I see in the video needs psychiatric help IMO. These are the people who are supposed to maintain law and order in the US. Scary thought.
#44
Posted 2007-November-24, 11:29
1eyedjack, on Nov 23 2007, 12:34 PM, said:
http://www.taser.com...S/Pages/C2.aspx
http://www.taser.com.../TASERX26C.aspx
Enjoy.
Actually, this is scarier to me than any police officer having a taser for use, but thats an issue for a different thread.
So many experts, not enough X cards.
#45
Posted 2007-November-24, 12:13
bid_em_up, on Nov 24 2007, 06:29 PM, said:
But it comes with a training certificate!
Psyche (pron. sahy-kee): The human soul, spirit or mind (derived, personification thereof, beloved of Eros, Greek myth).
Masterminding (pron. mstr-mnding) tr. v. - Any bid made by bridge player with which partner disagrees.
"Gentlemen, when the barrage lifts." 9th battalion, King's own Yorkshire light infantry,
2000 years earlier: "morituri te salutant"
"I will be with you, whatever". Blair to Bush, precursor to invasion of Iraq
#46
Posted 2007-November-25, 07:04
bid_em_up, on Nov 24 2007, 07:29 PM, said:
1eyedjack, on Nov 23 2007, 12:34 PM, said:
http://www.taser.com...S/Pages/C2.aspx
http://www.taser.com.../TASERX26C.aspx
Enjoy.
Actually, this is scarier to me than any police officer having a taser for use, but thats an issue for a different thread.
"I will control my destiny"
That's probably a much much more malicious lie than "buy our detergent, it's intelligent". It makes me sick! ****!
George Carlin
#47
Posted 2007-November-26, 15:32
Quote
Having been arrested for resisting arrest for not signing a ticket (and spending overnight in jail), you gotta sign.
If the officer was placing the guy under arrest, and if the guy then put his hand in his pocket, he should have been tasered. People should know better than that.
And I have no love for cops, believe me.
#48
Posted 2007-November-26, 15:51
I agree with Mike that this kind of incident is one of the many hidden costs of widespread gun ownership that the gun lobby refuses to realize.
#49
Posted 2007-November-26, 16:23
cherdano, on Nov 26 2007, 04:51 PM, said:
I can't imagine that people think that if you flee a cop the cop just has to stand there repeating "please put your hands behind your back".
The guy was disobeying orders, walking back to his car, and reaching into his pocket, maybe for keys, maybe for something else. What do you think an appropriate level of aggression would have been?
#50
Posted 2007-November-26, 16:41
jtfanclub, on Nov 26 2007, 04:23 PM, said:
cherdano, on Nov 26 2007, 04:51 PM, said:
I can't imagine that people think that if you flee a cop the cop just has to stand there repeating "please put your hands behind your back".
The guy was disobeying orders, walking back to his car, and reaching into his pocket, maybe for keys, maybe for something else. What do you think an appropriate level of aggression would have been?
It seems to me that the rest of the Western democratic world has a different view of the job of a police officer than most people in the USA. I don't mean this sarcastically at all, I will try to elaborate later.
#51
Posted 2007-November-26, 16:55
jtfanclub, on Nov 26 2007, 04:32 PM, said:
Quote
Having been arrested for resisting arrest for not signing a ticket (and spending overnight in jail), you gotta sign.
If the officer was placing the guy under arrest, and if the guy then put his hand in his pocket, he should have been tasered. People should know better than that.
And I have no love for cops, believe me.
i didn't know that, thanks... in any case, when a cop gives a person a lawful order it must be obeyed
#52
Posted 2007-November-26, 20:59
Looking at the video it appeared to me that the cop overreacted.
But I just heard a TV news report from the US (they broadcast excerpts from foreign news shows in Japan) saying that so far this year 175 cops have died in the line of duty (almost all shot), up from 140 last year (and there's still a month to go in 2007). So generally speaking, you can't blame cops for being a bit jumpy.
The obvious solution seems to get handguns out of the hands of the public, but this doesn't seem possible in the present poltical climate.... Too bad.
#53
Posted 2007-November-27, 14:47
geller, on Nov 26 2007, 09:59 PM, said:
... is not necessarily the best solution.
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#54
Posted 2007-November-27, 15:05
blackshoe, on Nov 27 2007, 03:47 PM, said:
geller, on Nov 26 2007, 09:59 PM, said:
... is not necessarily the best solution.
and the best solution for the thousands of gun related deaths (and injuries), annually, is....?
Oh, I forgot... guns don't kill people, people kill people..... except, of course, that it is far easier for most people to kill someone with a handgun than it is with most other weapons...heck, it is so easy that it is child's play.... as some parents learn every year.
#55
Posted 2007-November-27, 17:08
This is a complex issue - and from the tone of your post, Mike, I doubt anything I can say will affect your opinion. And vice versa.
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#56
Posted 2007-November-27, 17:25
#57
Posted 2007-November-27, 19:14
blackshoe, on Nov 27 2007, 06:08 PM, said:
This is a complex issue - and from the tone of your post, Mike, I doubt anything I can say will affect your opinion. And vice versa.
Well, it really comes down to whose rights are we speaking of?
In most of the world, the concept of individual rights, while recognized to varying degrees, is tempered by a much greater regard for societal interests than is popular in the US. I like to think that we Canadians have a society that is every bit as free, in meaningful ways, than the US...
And the truth is that any balancing of individual rights against societal rights is a complex matter. Not only is there a continuum or spectrum of opinion, rather than two distinct camps, but many members of one camp hold views on specific issues that seem at odds with the main theme of their camp.
Thus proponents of the supremacy of individual rights are often strong advocates of a harsh penal justice system, including heavily armed police, mandatory jail terms, limited parole, and the death penalty...all of which require a strong government presence and role. They are usually anti-abortion: they claim the right to tell a woman what to do. They are often proponents of amendments to the constitution to ban flag-burning (which surely is a matter of freedom of individual expression), banning certain political parties, supporting the Patriot Act and its invasion of civil liberties, and so on. While proponents of societal interests will argue that a woman has the right to choose: that society's interest in the unborn child is trumped by individual freedom, and so on.
Furthermore, it is always possible to engage in pushing an opponent's argument to conclusions that are unfair.
Thus, and I stress that I am merely doing this to show how it could be done, not because I for one moment think Blackshoe feels this way:
My opinion is that the rights of the people killed or wounded by privately owned handguns in the US should trump the rights of the (far greater) number of perfectly innocent and responsible gun owners: take away their handguns and what have they lost, in comparision to the restoration of life and health to the victims of stolen, carelessly stored, or owned-by-irrational-people handguns. Society's interest in preserving these lives, in reducing the human and economic cost of these shootings outwieghs the selfish interests of gun owners..
And I'd argue that presumably those who disagree view their right to own a handgun as far more important than the lives of the thousands who die every year as a result of inadequate gun laws. Don't take away the handgun I never use, just so a few thousand people I don't know and don't want to know can go on living: what have they ever done for me? Besides, I'm sure that it is their fault if they get killed.
Of course, the truth is far more complex than that, and the arguments of the gun owners are neither as heartless nor as foolish as this would suggest. And only the most naive would expect a strong gun law to have a significant immediate impact.... but only the most naive of gun owners can really 'blame' careless gun owners for the death of innocent children... is any one really arguing that careless parenting is not now nor ever will be a fact of life? And is the therefore inevitable loss of innocent life (the children are often too young to be morally at fault) really a fair price to pay for anyone to own a handgun?
And so on. Blackshoe, I agree that it is unlikely that either of us will change our minds, but I do realize that there are two sides to the issue.
#58
Posted 2007-November-28, 00:34
mikeh, on Nov 27 2007, 08:14 PM, said:
Do you think that I don't realize that?
There's no such thng as "group rights". The members of a group have the same rights as every other individual, i.e., their individual rights. The group certainly acquires no new rights just because it's a group.
If you believe groups have rights extra to individual rights, how so? And do different groups acquire different group rights?
No, I don't believe it.
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#59
Posted 2007-November-28, 00:35
Just in my lifetime the number of countries that have split apart is huge.
Even in Canada or the UK they talk about it as a real issue, today. Take a look at Europe or Asia or Africa the last 60 years.
I do not know how much home invasion is an issue in other countries, I never seem to hear anything about it anyplace else except here in the USA.
In any event will all the future high tech weapons coming I bet guns are only for the old fogeys, soon.
#60
Posted 2007-November-28, 00:41
blackshoe, on Nov 28 2007, 01:34 AM, said:
mikeh, on Nov 27 2007, 08:14 PM, said:
Do you think that I don't realize that?
There's no such thng as "group rights". The members of a group have the same rights as every other individual, i.e., their individual rights. The group certainly acquires no new rights just because it's a group.
If you believe groups have rights extra to individual rights, how so? And do different groups acquire different group rights?
No, I don't believe it.
Yes, in law there are rights that belong to a group, example the state, that do not belong to an individual in law that is.............
See the formal Justice system as just one small example.
There is a whole group of rights that belong to the Military that individual nonmilitary citizens do not have. In fact they have their own justice system of rights....outside of the civilian one.