midnight rambler
16th September 2020, 06:02 PM
Here, now, practiced by science deniers, there's no debating/arguing with those lunatic fanatics who've succumbed to fear -
https://www.bitchute.com/video/EtCXAuVWHToV/
Bigjon
16th September 2020, 07:16 PM
Commenter has it right.
Venator Ex Iudaeis
THIS IS JUDEO-COMMUNISM AT IT'S FINEST!
Horn
16th September 2020, 11:08 PM
Was he finally tazed?
Those cops did not eat enough wheaties to tow him.
Tumbleweed
17th September 2020, 07:49 AM
That is reported to have occurred in Mitchell, SD. There's a woman in the video that has her mask under her chin. It has also been reported others there at the meeting didn't like the school board calling the cops. Christy Noem in the video below says she's not in favor of wearing masks for everyone in schools. It will be interesting to see what she has to say about this incident. I read in a newspaper article that when Bender was theatened with being tased he walked out of the school.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8LYqPW0z430
keehah
17th September 2020, 11:35 AM
In the recent past, a 'stunt' like those face-diaper refuse-necks are pulling could get the person on a public servant's gang-stalking target list. Hopefully, there are getting to be too many citizens resisting governemnt's latest new tyranny. Heck if your a Democrat you can riot, loot, steal and beat up whitey in the streets now without much worry of justice or Stasi harassment it seems.
Anyway it seems this city got it wrong. Decided to use the tricks of the state Stasi against people with criminal records to stop future crime, not good citizens with clean records opposing lies of the government or future political resistance to public servant's tyranny and corporate whoring.
Note the actions committed against people who made that list, it was not just police harassment, but coordinated targeting by by-law enforcement and other city staffers.
Tampabay.com: Targeted (https://projects.tampabay.com/projects/2020/investigations/police-pasco-sheriff-targeted/intelligence-led-policing/)
Sept.3, 2020
Pasco County Sheriff Chris Nocco took office in 2011 with a bold plan: to create a cutting-edge intelligence program that could stop crime before it happened.
What he actually built was a system to continuously monitor and harass Pasco County residents, a Tampa Bay Times investigation has found.
First the Sheriff’s Office generates lists of people it considers likely to break the law, based on arrest histories, unspecified intelligence and arbitrary decisions by police analysts.
Then it sends deputies to find and interrogate anyone whose name appears, often without probable cause, a search warrant or evidence of a specific crime.
They swarm homes in the middle of the night, waking families and embarrassing people in front of their neighbors. They write tickets for missing mailbox numbers and overgrown grass, saddling residents with court dates and fines. They come again and again, making arrests for any reason they can.
One former deputy described the directive like this: “Make their lives miserable until they move or sue.”
In just five years, Nocco’s signature program has ensnared almost 1,000 people.
At least 1 in 10 were younger than 18, the Times found...
Deputies gave the mother of one teenage target a $2,500 fine because she had five chickens in her backyard. They arrested another target’s father after peering through a window in his house and noticing a 17-year-old friend of his son smoking a cigarette.
As they make checks, deputies feed information back into the system, not just on the people they target, but on family members, friends and anyone else in the target’s orbit...
But Pasco’s drop in property crimes was similar to the decline in the seven-largest nearby police jurisdictions. Over the same time period, violent crime increased only in Pasco.
Criminal justice experts said they were stunned by the agency’s practices. They compared the tactics to child abuse, mafia harassment and surveillance that could be expected under an authoritarian regime...
“One of the worst manifestations of the intersection of junk science and bad policing — and an absolute absence of common sense and humanity — that I have seen in my career," said David Kennedy, a renowned criminologist at the John Jay College of Criminal Justice, whose research on crime prevention is referenced in Pasco’s policies.
jimswift
18th September 2020, 06:06 AM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_aNBssO4_do
Powered by vBulletin® Version 4.2.0 Copyright © 2024 vBulletin Solutions, Inc. All rights reserved.