Re: Why is the danger of fake weapons ignored?
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Brandy Blue
@ Hussar
Well, one of the points that's been raised in this thread is that Americans are not all Anglo Saxons, or at any rate the cops don't think so. Perhaps a young guy who played too much with toy guns would be alive today if the cops thought he was a fellow "Anglo Saxon." So, no, I don't think there is any magic melting pot. Not for everyone.
I fail to see why you let English and American pedophiles pass unchallenged, but consider German ones off topic. Racial profiling? :laugh4:
No, the topic that I commented on was whether the public in the US or the UK is more willing to accept pedophilia. It was not about which country has more of it, but in which country more of it is not being prosecuted.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Brandy Blue
For clarity, I am defiinitely kidding about the racial profiling. No accusations of Hussar being racist, no hidden sarcasm, no flaming.
What's offending is that you think I cannot spot a joke. ~;)
Re: Why is the danger of fake weapons ignored?
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Husar
No, the topic that I commented on was whether the public in the US or the UK is more willing to accept pedophilia. It was not about which country has more of it, but in which country more of it is not being prosecuted.
What's offending is that you think I cannot spot a joke. ~;)
Everyone knows that Germans don't have a sense of humor, unless they get US citizenship of course, and magically become Anglo Saxons. :2thumbsup:
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Re: Why is the danger of fake weapons ignored?
Attachment 14798
Most people are unaware of what police officers have to deal with. It's okay people, don't respect the badge, learn the consequences.
Re: Why is the danger of fake weapons ignored?
Quote:
Originally Posted by
The Lurker Below
Most people are unaware of what police officers have to deal with. It's okay people, don't respect the badge, learn the consequences.
And criminals in the US are the only ones with illegal guns? Why are the hardly any such cases in most European countries while we can all name several from the US?
I'm very sympathetic towards a lot of the things police officers have to deal with. Ours get threatened as well, but they still manage to get home without shooting nearly as many people even if you adjust for population. Officers here arrest people all the time without shooting them on sight. Of course you can say the USA are very different, but then you have at best found the root of the problem...
http://www.dw.de/why-german-police-o...uns/a-17884779
It's a cultural problem and US culture simply kills a whole lot more people.
Re: Why is the danger of fake weapons ignored?
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Husar
And criminals in the US are the only ones with illegal guns? Why are the hardly any such cases in most European countries while we can all name several from the US?
I'm very sympathetic towards a lot of the things police officers have to deal with. Ours get threatened as well, but they still manage to get home without shooting nearly as many people even if you adjust for population. Officers here arrest people all the time without shooting them on sight. Of course you can say the USA are very different, but then you have at best found the root of the problem...
http://www.dw.de/why-german-police-o...uns/a-17884779
It's a cultural problem and US culture simply kills a whole lot more people.
I have no doubt that some of our cultural themes/practices are tied into this.
Classic USA culture has always had a disrespect/distrust of official authority theme to it. Our early heroes -- Smith, Boone, Crockett were individuals who purposely went out PAST the boundaries of civilization and law/order (Boone actually breaking English law to do so). In literature, early figures include Natty Bumpo, Hester Prynn, and Huck Finn -- all of whom reject authority, society, and/or conventional constraints so as to pursue their individual dreams/ambitions.
There is a cultural theme that very definitely centers around a mistrust or at least wariness of central authority (the entire Bill of Rights speaks to that attitude as well) and that certainly plays a role in attitudes for interacting with police -- who have always had a less than positive interaction relationship with marginalized groups across many cultures/eras to begin with. So does our culture exacerbate the potential for violent police/public (especially marginalized sub groups)? Very likely so.