Try having a military puppy-milling couple (on base making lots of money) set you up, and get your fingerprints by asking you to punch in their bank, than sell and/or use it horrifically. All for money. They got so excited, they neglected to read the laws of HIPPA. I hope they see this and thanks for letting me sound off here. Learned a lot.
What the cop should have said was that the requested information is needed to make the Court feel O.K. with giving the defendant pre-trial release. If someone won't cooperate, he/she can stay in jail until they do.
His license had been suspended in his home state and they had failed to inform him of it. It was all cleared up as soon as he knew of it. Meanwhile, the cop was waiting for him to get in his car so he could arrest him for it.
First thing I discovered when I started standing up to cops and their stupidity is that if you are unafraid of them, they are TERRIFIED. They are so programmed to believe that the sheeple will bow down and do an act of worship that failure to do so blows several fuses in whatever they put in place of their brains when they surrender their individuality to the collective.
Kbiomech: So here is a cop, being courteous to all of this guy's friends, something he didn't need to do - and you feel the need to blather on like a freedom prophet. You people read like an Archie comic book - you always know how it ends.
I didn't say he misbehaved. What I'm saying is that the REASON he was being courteous, most likely, is because he felt threatened. Not because the people involved were threatening, but because they were unafraid and were willing to point out the errors in his philosophy.
If you don't bend the knee, the parasites are afraid.
Are there cops who are basically good people? Absolutely. But the institution they represent is unspeakably evil. Except that we MUST speak about it!
I disagree. If he felt threatened, he simply would never have gone into the lobby to listen to any of them - or gone back inside...but instead he conversed. I disagree wholeheartedly with you regarding anything evil that the police represent. In this case its simple, the guy had a suspended license, and for that, comes a consequence - as minor as SOME people might think it is. Besides which, he got what he wanted...attention.
Ok, let's step back to basics: What do the police represent? It's not protection, as their masters seek to disarm all but the criminal. That they seek vengeance after the fact is not justice, since even should they punish a criminal they do not seek to gain compensation for the victim.
Primarily, their function is to suppress dissent IN ANY FORM. They literally and frequently get away with murder.
At least 90 percent of "law" is prohibition of voluntary action. How is that just? or moral?
Besides a few speeding tickets, which I take responsibility for, they have been nothing but helpful to me when needed...a few jerks here and there - like any profession. From smacking a deer with my car to the cuckoos next door who blare their music to the wee hours of the morn - nothing but helpful. Absolutely nothing you said makes a lick of sense to me...and apparently, nothing I say will make sense to you. So...I guess freedom is working then isn't it?
When I get a chance to, I'll hand the entire raw footage to ObscuredTruth (Sam's channel) and he may want to post all of it. I just wanted to comment on about the first five minutes. The conversation continued even further past that and I left before the end of it all. I think it was all recorded by someone though.
"suppose his fingerprints aren't there" suppose they aren't where? at the scene of some random crime in the future, perhaps? sure, suppose that there's no physical evidence of his involvement in something and a witness recalls seeing a person who has similar features or scars or marks as him. with his information in their database of permanent suspects, that increases the chance he'll be charged with something he didn't do.
I suspect you are all criminals thats why you won't do the finger print thing.
runningwolfkenpo 3 days ago
Try having a military puppy-milling couple (on base making lots of money) set you up, and get your fingerprints by asking you to punch in their bank, than sell and/or use it horrifically. All for money. They got so excited, they neglected to read the laws of HIPPA. I hope they see this and thanks for letting me sound off here. Learned a lot.
lissakr11 1 month ago in playlist More videos from AnarchyInYourHead
What the cop should have said was that the requested information is needed to make the Court feel O.K. with giving the defendant pre-trial release. If someone won't cooperate, he/she can stay in jail until they do.
wardenphil 2 years ago
Just out of curiousity, what was the charge or charges that brought this man there to begin with?
wardenphil 2 years ago
His license had been suspended in his home state and they had failed to inform him of it. It was all cleared up as soon as he knew of it. Meanwhile, the cop was waiting for him to get in his car so he could arrest him for it.
AnarchyInYourHead 2 years ago
Notice how the bald parasite is sweating visibly?
First thing I discovered when I started standing up to cops and their stupidity is that if you are unafraid of them, they are TERRIFIED. They are so programmed to believe that the sheeple will bow down and do an act of worship that failure to do so blows several fuses in whatever they put in place of their brains when they surrender their individuality to the collective.
Kbiomech 2 years ago
Kbiomech: So here is a cop, being courteous to all of this guy's friends, something he didn't need to do - and you feel the need to blather on like a freedom prophet. You people read like an Archie comic book - you always know how it ends.
SILENTNATION1 2 years ago
Some criminals happen to be courteous about their enterprises, but that doesn't mean they shouldn't be examined or ridiculed for their crimes.
TehBANN3D 2 years ago
Comment removed
nohindrance 2 years ago
I didn't say he misbehaved. What I'm saying is that the REASON he was being courteous, most likely, is because he felt threatened. Not because the people involved were threatening, but because they were unafraid and were willing to point out the errors in his philosophy.
If you don't bend the knee, the parasites are afraid.
Are there cops who are basically good people? Absolutely. But the institution they represent is unspeakably evil. Except that we MUST speak about it!
Kbiomech 2 years ago
I disagree. If he felt threatened, he simply would never have gone into the lobby to listen to any of them - or gone back inside...but instead he conversed. I disagree wholeheartedly with you regarding anything evil that the police represent. In this case its simple, the guy had a suspended license, and for that, comes a consequence - as minor as SOME people might think it is. Besides which, he got what he wanted...attention.
SILENTNATION1 2 years ago
Ok, let's step back to basics: What do the police represent? It's not protection, as their masters seek to disarm all but the criminal. That they seek vengeance after the fact is not justice, since even should they punish a criminal they do not seek to gain compensation for the victim.
Primarily, their function is to suppress dissent IN ANY FORM. They literally and frequently get away with murder.
At least 90 percent of "law" is prohibition of voluntary action. How is that just? or moral?
Kbiomech 2 years ago 3
Besides a few speeding tickets, which I take responsibility for, they have been nothing but helpful to me when needed...a few jerks here and there - like any profession. From smacking a deer with my car to the cuckoos next door who blare their music to the wee hours of the morn - nothing but helpful. Absolutely nothing you said makes a lick of sense to me...and apparently, nothing I say will make sense to you. So...I guess freedom is working then isn't it?
SILENTNATION1 2 years ago
Is it possible for you to put subtitles on this?
Chrisnoscrub047 2 years ago
When I get a chance to, I'll hand the entire raw footage to ObscuredTruth (Sam's channel) and he may want to post all of it. I just wanted to comment on about the first five minutes. The conversation continued even further past that and I left before the end of it all. I think it was all recorded by someone though.
AnarchyInYourHead 2 years ago
"suppose his fingerprints aren't there" suppose they aren't where? at the scene of some random crime in the future, perhaps? sure, suppose that there's no physical evidence of his involvement in something and a witness recalls seeing a person who has similar features or scars or marks as him. with his information in their database of permanent suspects, that increases the chance he'll be charged with something he didn't do.
TheDastardlyDildo 2 years ago
It is always a crime to not bow down to Lt. Tyrant
txballoonman 2 years ago
"your little blog thing"...lol
OBEY!
landofthefreemyass 2 years ago
fin·ger·print·ing
tr. v.
1.The act of the state getting it's fingerprints all up in your bizness
SheyOneTen 2 years ago