• deadtom@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Ah the naivete. Make sure you don’t fall off that high horse you’re liable to hurt yourself.

        • Norgur@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          That’s what the police report says anyway. The bodycams had a rather peculiarly timed malfunction during the event. But hey, the two policemen involved investigated each other and decided that it wasn’t them, so it’s all good… Foolish rider injured himself by not holding onto the saddle more. Funny how all the injuries are police baton shaped. That seems to happen a lot. I wonder if there is any law of nature that gives them that shape all by itself.

          • ivanafterall@kbin.social
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            1 year ago

            Well, yeah, you’re gonna get a police baton-shaped injury when you’re riding your horse illegally and fall off the horse right onto the police baton.

    • Kbin_space_program@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      The police are prejudiced against those without power. They’re merely bullies, enabled by those in power.

      That’s why governments don’t enforce stricter hiring practices for police. Last thing they want is a smart police force that might turn on them when the people inevitably do.

        • aesthelete@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Only people who have criminal mentalities see police as “bullies.”

          Source: tygerprints’ asshole

        • Kbin_space_program@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          Robert Dziecanski was not a criminal, nor did anything illegal. He fell through the cracks at YVR and was stuck inside the secure area. Security guards called the police, thinking they’d come in, calm him down and get an interpreter and sort it out.

          He was confronted by the officers, given conflicting orders about what to do, and then was murdered by four RCMP officers via tazer overuse and extended knee-to-the-neck for daring to interrupt their (extended) break at a Tim Hortons(shit coffee and donuts shop).

          After which they conspired to confiscate all bystander cellphone footage of the event and then created a false narrative about him “picking up a weapon”. The “weapon” was a stapler on a table that one of the officers literally pointed at, and in a lack of language, he picked up.

          It only came to light because a judge listened to the people whose phone was taken and forced the police to release the phones and the footage.

          For the record I’ve never even been ticketed for anything. Only time I was ever stopped was because I slowed down to ensure I wasn’t interfering with a cop walking down the middle of a sidestreet, because I was wondering why a cop was slowly walking down the middle of a street. I’m not against cops, just against cops that have no oversight and resist getting adequate oversight.