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You mean in the sense that, in addition to getting the charges dropped, the person of color would be looking at a huge discrimination lawsuit pay day?
No, I mean in the sense of this.
You mean in the sense that, in addition to getting the charges dropped, the person of color would be looking at a huge discrimination lawsuit pay day?
For the umpteenth time . . . there is no good reason to have a cop violate your rights. All I was saying is that the likelihood of this happening is smaller at a rest stop than at on the side of the road. That's it.
Pardon me for diverting discussion away from the rights violatin' cops . . .
Where did I say he did anything illegal?
Stupid maybe, but not illegal.
I'm not blaming the victim for the actions of the cops . . . I'm saying the stupid decision by the victim lead to an avoidable situation regardless of how the cops acted.
But it wasn't stupid, and you calling that decision stupid is unfair. The only basis for it being a stupid decision is how the cops acted in regard to it. The situation would of been avoidable if the cops did their job right.
Do you know why they wanted to switch drivers on the shoulder instead of a rest stop?
Maybe they had a good reason. If they had a really good reason to switch drivers right away on the shoulder (wife started falling asleep at the wheel, no rest stop for miles, etc..), would you be more willing to focus on the police violating their rights than why they didn't go to a rest stop?
Obviously you don't "get it". Because I said it was an "extreme example" of your line of thinking, not that you're extreme. Reading comprehension.
I'm only half joking when I say I think I'd rather live in a jackboot society than one filled with pain in the ass self-serious twats like he guy that made the video.
No, I mean in the sense of this.
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This is true, he'd got a beat down for "resisting arrest", probable cause would've been DWB.
I agree with that.
Now that we're all on the same page about safe driver switching procedure, what do you think about what the cops did in the video? How do you feel about the way the citizen handled it?
No, the basis for it being stupid is that it's not very safe to do something like that on the side of the road at night.
So your point is white people are being beaten by the police, for being non-black? Because I'm pretty sure those are white guys.
Why was it stupid? Nothing illegal about pulling over to the side of the road. Absolutely nothing stupid about pulling over to the side of the road.
Both the CDC and the NHTSA suggest pulling over immediately if you begin experiencing symptoms of drowsy driving(yawning or blinking frequently, difficulty remembering the past few miles driven, missing your exit, drifting from your lane, hitting a rumble strip).
They don't suggest "continue driving until you find a rest area or lighted gas station."
In fact, such a suggestion when one is in danger of falling asleep behind the wheel would be quite stupid.
No, the basis for it being stupid is that it's not very safe to do something like that on the side of the road at night.
I don't know what kind of computer or phone you have, but I can't see the guy that's getting tooled up.
Good point. So the point is regardless of your race, if you have non-black acquaintances or surround yourself with non-black people, you will get beaten?
It is a lot less safe to continue driving while in danger of falling asleep behind the wheel.
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Nothing unsafe about pulling over to the side of the road, especially given the fact that there was a wide shoulder present and no real traffic.
Spanning, yes the couple could have pulled over somewhere else. That doesn't excuse the police for their actions. You are a victim blamer
And it could of been more unsafe for the wife to keep driving, maybe that's why they pulled over then. Maybe a rest stop or exit was miles away. Either way it doesn't give the cops the right to do what they did, and the guy did NOTHING wrong. Victim blaming, keep it up.
No I'm not. I'm not excusing the actions of the police at all.
Nor did I come out and blame the victim for the actions of the police.
I said the victims could have made a different decision that most likely would've avoided this situation entirely. I'm not saying that everyone who pulls over to the shoulder at night can expect to have their rights violated.
But that's easy to say in hindsight.
If they had taken a different road they could have avoided it altogether. Or if they had pulled into a rest stop and this happened, we could say that they could have instead just switched drivers quickly on the shoulder and avoided the whole situation.
The entire problem is that the cops could have violated their rights no matter where they were, and we could be saying that if the victims had never been there then the situation might not have happened.