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uǝʃƃ ⊥ glen
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On 4/30/21 4:36 PM, uǝlƃ ↙↙↙ wrote: > https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/apr/30/colorado-police-loveland-officers-resign > https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SmtxTWTTdC4 > > We met a guy the other day who countered our assertion that jury duty is a civil duty with "You don't want me on your jury!" He claimed he would *always* take the law enforcement side because anyone who's had "contact with the system" is most likely a criminal. Both Renee' and I were disgusted by the assertion. We later found out he's a union rep for prison guards and is big in Washington lobbying for guards' rights to aggressively handle prisoners. I'd just gotten over my disgust with that arbitrary dude ... then see this today. [sigh] > > Fucking cops. My partner from 2 lifetimes ago (90s) was the eldest of 4, with all three youngers being brothers in various law-enforcement roles... CO Game&Fish, Loveland City Police and State Parks (in a location where he was expected to maintain a firearm in his vehicle if not on his person at all times). They were all plenty nice guys but two things disturbed me in the 10 years I knew them. 1) When they got together all they could talk about at some level was the various "dirtbags" they had to cope/deal-with and corral. Each one with a different perspective of course, and while it generally didn't offend me because I heard it as "locker room talk" of sorts... none of it was police-abuse class talk even for a snowflake like myself, but it was instructive to realize where two of them derived their identity (from their authority) and the third chimed in to obtain first-class insider status with the other two. 2) The Game and Fish and Police bros loved their guns... guns of all kinds... they fetishized them. When the city police fellow visited with his family (wife and 2 pre-teens) he didn't ask, he told us that he was required to carry his personal firearm at all times but when he was in our house he would put it (in it's mildly misdirecting/obscuring fanny-pack) on top of our refrigerator. We had 4 teens living in the house who were all tall enough to reach that weapon. HIs kids were young enough that while they *might* have been able to slide a chair over and get to it, I deferred to the implicit idea that he knew their range of behaviour and the likelihood either would mishandle a *loaded* handgun. He may have known his nephew and niece well enough to know that *they* would *never* do anything risky or untoward (and in fact I believed that myself), but he really didn't know *ME* nor my teenage daughters (who could well have been full of hidden angst or ??). As it was, if I *had* been acutely worried about any of this I would have spoken up and insisted that he handle his (required to be within reach at all times on/off duty, even far out of his jurisdiction) weapon differently. My preferred handling would have been for him to lock it in his vehicle gun-safe while visiting us, but it was clearly his security blanket/pacifier. He was actually a *very* reasonable cop by my standards. He was about 6 years into his career and had taken his first policing job in Federal Heights district Denver *because* it was a high crime area and he thought he could/should/would bring something important to the job there. This was before he had children. He lasted a year before he decided that he needed to move back (near) home to Loveland where it was more "Andy of Mayberry" than "Training Day". In fact, he cited the main reason for that shift was that his fellow officers were too Derick Chauvin-like and that as a rookie he had no ability/opportunity to effect that... and that he was constantly in hot water with partners, peers, and "management" for pushing back on the way he was being trained to handle "civilians". It was to his credit that he realized the best thing he could do was to retreat to "Mayberry". This in contrast to the general attitude about anyone from a jaywalker to a petty drug user who he could clearly *barely* stand to accept might just be "good folks". I'm sure he's a senior officer (he'd be in his late 50s) in Loveland but highly unlikely to be one to bitch-slap a demented senior into submission. But is he one of the peers to these scumdogs who should have seen that coming? I'm afraid he might be. I haven't seen him in 25 years. A lot can change. > - .... . -..-. . -. -.. -..-. .. ... -..-. .... . .-. . FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv Zoom Fridays 9:30a-12p Mtn GMT-6 bit.ly/virtualfriam un/subscribe http://redfish.com/mailman/listinfo/friam_redfish.com FRIAM-COMIC http://friam-comic.blogspot.com/ archives: http://friam.471366.n2.nabble.com/ |
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