I can't get why she was complaining. She had no right to sell illegal cd's in the street. She perfectly could sell another things such as "pancito amasado o calzones rotos" but she'd rather do what seemed to be easier at the moment. does anobody agree?
You can clearly see that they are evading the "illegal" part in selling pirate CDs and they are trying to sound like they have the right to sell them. -_-
i dont think shes avioding anything but the police. the fact that the cds are illegal has really nothing to do with getting beatten while your preagnant.
Please watch both videos again and turn up the volume. In the video where the cop falls over and later confronts her with two other cops, she moves away and they grab her shirt and it rips. You can hear the ripping. In the interview, you can see where her shirt is ripped above the cleavage. You're totally losing this argument, it's becoming ridiculous.
Yo, she was not resisting arrest. She was never arrested. This interview occurred after the event. There are no police, no cop cars, no jail bars. So the extraneous force on the part of the police, tearing her clothing and exposing her red nipple was not violence induced by resisting arrest. Rather, they were roughing her up before letting her go.
>>>with a video camera I don't think YOU are poor.
Dude, you're totally missing the point. I never said I was poor. I'm not Chilean. I have nothing to do with this economy. I'm an outside observer watching the effects of a bad economy: a desperate pregnant woman selling shit on the street and coming back every day, despite the fact that cops beat her. You with your vast knowledge of the Chilean economy, please explain to me what other opportunities she has!
>>>I'm usually against police. Yo, that doesn't make you a better person. In fact, Fmdsv, I'M usually FOR police. I like not getting robbed, and police promote safe streets. What I'm against is bad policy that police have to follow. And, of course, when individual officers abuse their power. If you watch the video, there WAS police brutality. If that's not enough, listen to her interview and the witnesses who saw her get hit with a billy club.
Well, fmdsv, you're quickly proving yourself to be a boor of an intellectual opponent by not adding anything new to the argument. In your latest comment you repeat your previous points that selling CD's is illegal and that it's the fault of the woman who got beat. But in response to my lengthy explanation of the socio-economic context, you simply say "All these things are illegal for good reasons". Nor do you explain the connection between "illegal acts" (selling CD's) and "chaos".
Lastly, selling CD's on the streets benefits the consumer. Chile has ridiculously inflated prices on CD's, books. There's a tax on books. It's absurd. Neither does this systematic deprecation of the consumer t help people who are trying to make a living.
Fmdsv, you here talking tough defending police brutality, but have a complete ignorance of the economic and social context in which this abuse took place. Your honest-John, pro-megacorporation stance is completely ridiculous.
A pregnant, uneducated woman has to figure out something to survive. She owes it to her baby. So, fmdsv, if you're intelligent enough to look at the larger context (Broken economy which favors the rich, plus a rock-bottom education system, social welfare worth about $90/month) you'll find that people like this woman have little recourse to anything substantive. If Chile's inept enough not to take care of them, it certainly shouldn't beat them with a stick.
right. Blame the victim. I mean, c'mon dude. It's fine to have your opinion about whether or not selling CD's on the street should or shouldn't be illegal. But the obvious issue is police brutality. She says to the camera that the police hit her. I didn't confront the police because they would have confiscated my camera, very common practice in Chile.
mueranse flaites culiaos
lacrixxxx 2 years ago
"bashing" low class ghetto ignorant citizens who engage in illegal business...
cdanaevp 2 years ago
I can't get why she was complaining. She had no right to sell illegal cd's in the street. She perfectly could sell another things such as "pancito amasado o calzones rotos" but she'd rather do what seemed to be easier at the moment. does anobody agree?
Regards from Valpo Chile.
jhose87 3 years ago
You can clearly see that they are evading the "illegal" part in selling pirate CDs and they are trying to sound like they have the right to sell them. -_-
lemonpai 4 years ago
i dont think shes avioding anything but the police. the fact that the cds are illegal has really nothing to do with getting beatten while your preagnant.
Chefsunnyg 3 years ago
True enough, and you're English is decent :-)
(Although, you would want to say "poor" instead of "pour")
WillyChileno 4 years ago
stop!!
i am a chilean girl
and she is a stupid fuck girl
she lie lie lei lie lie lei lie!!!
Natalianw 4 years ago
What is she lying about then?
WillyChileno 4 years ago
Btw, are copies of this video really spreading over the whole internet? Where else have you seen this video posted?
WillyChileno 4 years ago
Please watch both videos again and turn up the volume. In the video where the cop falls over and later confronts her with two other cops, she moves away and they grab her shirt and it rips. You can hear the ripping. In the interview, you can see where her shirt is ripped above the cleavage. You're totally losing this argument, it's becoming ridiculous.
WillyChileno 4 years ago
Yo, she was not resisting arrest. She was never arrested. This interview occurred after the event. There are no police, no cop cars, no jail bars. So the extraneous force on the part of the police, tearing her clothing and exposing her red nipple was not violence induced by resisting arrest. Rather, they were roughing her up before letting her go.
WillyChileno 4 years ago
>>>with a video camera I don't think YOU are poor.
Dude, you're totally missing the point. I never said I was poor. I'm not Chilean. I have nothing to do with this economy. I'm an outside observer watching the effects of a bad economy: a desperate pregnant woman selling shit on the street and coming back every day, despite the fact that cops beat her. You with your vast knowledge of the Chilean economy, please explain to me what other opportunities she has!
WillyChileno 4 years ago
>>>I'm usually against police. Yo, that doesn't make you a better person. In fact, Fmdsv, I'M usually FOR police. I like not getting robbed, and police promote safe streets. What I'm against is bad policy that police have to follow. And, of course, when individual officers abuse their power. If you watch the video, there WAS police brutality. If that's not enough, listen to her interview and the witnesses who saw her get hit with a billy club.
WillyChileno 4 years ago
Well, fmdsv, you're quickly proving yourself to be a boor of an intellectual opponent by not adding anything new to the argument. In your latest comment you repeat your previous points that selling CD's is illegal and that it's the fault of the woman who got beat. But in response to my lengthy explanation of the socio-economic context, you simply say "All these things are illegal for good reasons". Nor do you explain the connection between "illegal acts" (selling CD's) and "chaos".
WillyChileno 4 years ago
Lastly, selling CD's on the streets benefits the consumer. Chile has ridiculously inflated prices on CD's, books. There's a tax on books. It's absurd. Neither does this systematic deprecation of the consumer t help people who are trying to make a living.
Fmdsv, you here talking tough defending police brutality, but have a complete ignorance of the economic and social context in which this abuse took place. Your honest-John, pro-megacorporation stance is completely ridiculous.
WillyChileno 4 years ago
A pregnant, uneducated woman has to figure out something to survive. She owes it to her baby. So, fmdsv, if you're intelligent enough to look at the larger context (Broken economy which favors the rich, plus a rock-bottom education system, social welfare worth about $90/month) you'll find that people like this woman have little recourse to anything substantive. If Chile's inept enough not to take care of them, it certainly shouldn't beat them with a stick.
WillyChileno 4 years ago
right. Blame the victim. I mean, c'mon dude. It's fine to have your opinion about whether or not selling CD's on the street should or shouldn't be illegal. But the obvious issue is police brutality. She says to the camera that the police hit her. I didn't confront the police because they would have confiscated my camera, very common practice in Chile.
WillyChileno 4 years ago