After rewatching the Dinkheller video to soothe my rage after watching the Shaver video it got me wondering. On a purely philosophical level, when does it become okay to fight back against cops? And when do you think your average joes would draw the line en masse and fight together?
If you feel you're endanger for your life you can legally shoot police. There's quiet a few people who get away with it too, although it's easier if they're breaking into your house. Cops are not all one group though, they're citizens charged with maintaining a state of peace and order. There's shitty cops and good cops and when you go around deciding to play judge on all of them then you're hurting your community far more than the dirty cops are.
If you want to help this problem become law enforcement and snitch like a motherfucker. We need to purge corruption from our law enforcement by hiring smarter officers and removing Jews.
Levi Gomez
you might also enjoy Liko Kenney vs Officer McKay
I'm not sure about people drawing the line en masse, but I know that if a member of my family got murdered by a police officer and then the justice system protected itself rather than actually serving justice I'd consider doing it myself
the video you posted is a separate incident. It's what started their feud, not footage of their final encounter
Parker Green
After seeing the video and reading a couple articles about their feud, I think the cop deserved it. They got him on an ankle monitor on some trumped up charges and used it to track him around and harass him
Michael Rivera
oh yeah, McKay totally deserved it. You can watch the footage, he just saunters over and casually pepper sprays Liko without saying a word, and then turns and casually strolls off. He was just bullying him and hiding behind his badge. It's too bad some nutcase war vet took the opportunity to execute Liko, and then didn't even get charged with a crime, we never got to see any of it sorted out in court.
Lincoln Lee
>With such a profile, McKay attracted a lot of talk in Franconia, little of it flattering. Once, it was said, he pulled over a 79-year-old woman for an expired registration sticker. After she tried to explain that she was heading home to cook dinner for her husband, he made her wait in the car for two hours. When McKay discovered a group of kids celebrating their high school graduation by frolicking along the river, he had every one of their cars towed. He’d even threatened to ticket a man for driving his riding mower across the road. McKay’s targets rarely filed complaints, though. “People feared retribution,” says Roland Shick, an antiques dealer in nearby Bethlehem. “They were afraid McKay would attack their kids, or themselves.”
His death gasps warm my heart
John Ortiz
This is now the most reasonable response for civilians when interacting police.
Aaron Watson
Yeah, his death was for the best. It's too bad a citizen had to martyr himself to do it. Police departments just don't have the tools nor the inclination to clean themselves up
Jose Carter
>when does it become okay to fight back against cops? never, legally speaking. the law will always take the side of the cop
Dylan Johnson
Unfortunately I would have to agree at present. I meant morally though
Justin Butler
>And when do you think your average joes would draw the line en masse and fight together? never go away nigger
Easton Walker
holy shit, that's not enough I need to see the prick bleeding out on the ground.
“Citizens may resist unlawful arrest to the point of taking an arresting officer's life if necessary.” Plummer v. State, 136 Ind. 306. This premise was upheld by the Supreme Court of the United States in the case: John Bad Elk v. U.S., 177 U.S. 529. The Court stated: “Where the officer is killed in the course of the disorder which naturally accompanies an attempted arrest that is resisted, the law looks with very different eyes upon the transaction, when the officer had the right to make the arrest, from what it does if the officer had no right. What may be murder in the first case might be nothing more than manslaughter in the other, or the facts might show that no offense had been committed.”
>On a purely philosophical level, when does it become okay to fight back against cops? Philosophy is a meme. Ignore it. Observation forms the exclusive basis of all knowledge and there is no observable philosophical force that makes things right or wrong.
>And when do you think your average joes would draw the line en masse and fight together? When death is a preferable alternative to continuing to live under tyranny.