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angelofwar wrote:Reading through this stuff reminds me of, and makes me greatly appreciate the Italian L.E. The have "Polizia Comuniale" for writing speeding tickets, etc., but their mainpolice arm is the Carabinieri. A police force that is a branch of the military...and, from my experience, a very effective one at that (that's why the mob/mafia has seriously dwindled in southern Italy over the past few decades...).
I was stationed in Italy back during Operation Allied Force ('99: The bombing campaign to dislodge Slobadan Milosevic), the Italians had the right to protest...but, they were also given simple instructions..."Do NOT go HERE (i.e. this part (what ever it may be) of the joint U.S./Italian Military installation)". The protesters were allowed to walk up and down the streets 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, unbothered. Then, some Green Peace yuppies decided to defile the Carabinieries orders by swarming the main gate in white jump suits and gas masks...bad move...They have "military jurisdiction" over all of Italy...a "Military Civilian Police Force", if you will. And when they (the protesters) disobeyed LAWFUL orders "Not to enter/Go near", the Carabinieri had full right (which they utilized) to go in there and beat their asses. A little extreme? Maybe...but, after dealing with the people they have been dealing with for the past 50-60 years (Mafia/Red Army), sometimes (often-times, in my book), a big-stick is required, and justified. Civil disobedience, short of a Gov't over throw, has it's limitations.
The peaceful protesters were left alone...the hooligans...they got their ass beat by well trained (and respected) Italian Police :0)

the_alias wrote:angelofwar wrote:Reading through this stuff reminds me of, and makes me greatly appreciate the Italian L.E. The have "Polizia Comuniale" for writing speeding tickets, etc., but their mainpolice arm is the Carabinieri. A police force that is a branch of the military...and, from my experience, a very effective one at that (that's why the mob/mafia has seriously dwindled in southern Italy over the past few decades...).
I was stationed in Italy back during Operation Allied Force ('99: The bombing campaign to dislodge Slobadan Milosevic), the Italians had the right to protest...but, they were also given simple instructions..."Do NOT go HERE (i.e. this part (what ever it may be) of the joint U.S./Italian Military installation)". The protesters were allowed to walk up and down the streets 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, unbothered. Then, some Green Peace yuppies decided to defile the Carabinieries orders by swarming the main gate in white jump suits and gas masks...bad move...They have "military jurisdiction" over all of Italy...a "Military Civilian Police Force", if you will. And when they (the protesters) disobeyed LAWFUL orders "Not to enter/Go near", the Carabinieri had full right (which they utilized) to go in there and beat their asses. A little extreme? Maybe...but, after dealing with the people they have been dealing with for the past 50-60 years (Mafia/Red Army), sometimes (often-times, in my book), a big-stick is required, and justified. Civil disobedience, short of a Gov't over throw, has it's limitations.
The peaceful protesters were left alone...the hooligans...they got their ass beat by well trained (and respected) Italian Police :0)
Now I've heard it all.
angelofwar wrote:Reading through this stuff reminds me of, and makes me greatly appreciate the Italian L.E. The have "Polizia Comuniale" for writing speeding tickets, etc., but their mainpolice arm is the Carabinieri. A police force that is a branch of the military...and, from my experience, a very effective one at that (that's why the mob/mafia has seriously dwindled in southern Italy over the past few decades...).
I was stationed in Italy back during Operation Allied Force ('99: The bombing campaign to dislodge Slobadan Milosevic), the Italians had the right to protest...but, they were also given simple instructions..."Do NOT go HERE (i.e. this part (what ever it may be) of the joint U.S./Italian Military installation)". The protesters were allowed to walk up and down the streets 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, unbothered. Then, some Green Peace yuppies decided to defile the Carabinieries orders by swarming the main gate in white jump suits and gas masks...bad move...They have "military jurisdiction" over all of Italy...a "Military Civilian Police Force", if you will. And when they (the protesters) disobeyed LAWFUL orders "Not to enter/Go near", the Carabinieri had full right (which they utilized) to go in there and beat their asses. A little extreme? Maybe...but, after dealing with the people they have been dealing with for the past 50-60 years (Mafia/Red Army), sometimes (often-times, in my book), a big-stick is required, and justified. Civil disobedience, short of a Gov't over throw, has it's limitations.
The peaceful protesters were left alone...the hooligans...they got their ass beat by well trained (and respected) Italian Police :0)
George Orwell wrote:Power is not a means; it is an end. One does not establish a dictatorship in order to safeguard a revolution; one makes the revolution in order to establish the dictatorship. The object of persecution is persecution. The object of torture is torture. The object of power is power.
squinty wrote:angelofwar wrote:Reading through this stuff reminds me of, and makes me greatly appreciate the Italian L.E. The have "Polizia Comuniale" for writing speeding tickets, etc., but their mainpolice arm is the Carabinieri. A police force that is a branch of the military...and, from my experience, a very effective one at that (that's why the mob/mafia has seriously dwindled in southern Italy over the past few decades...).
I was stationed in Italy back during Operation Allied Force ('99: The bombing campaign to dislodge Slobadan Milosevic), the Italians had the right to protest...but, they were also given simple instructions..."Do NOT go HERE (i.e. this part (what ever it may be) of the joint U.S./Italian Military installation)". The protesters were allowed to walk up and down the streets 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, unbothered. Then, some Green Peace yuppies decided to defile the Carabinieries orders by swarming the main gate in white jump suits and gas masks...bad move...They have "military jurisdiction" over all of Italy...a "Military Civilian Police Force", if you will. And when they (the protesters) disobeyed LAWFUL orders "Not to enter/Go near", the Carabinieri had full right (which they utilized) to go in there and beat their asses. A little extreme? Maybe...but, after dealing with the people they have been dealing with for the past 50-60 years (Mafia/Red Army), sometimes (often-times, in my book), a big-stick is required, and justified. Civil disobedience, short of a Gov't over throw, has it's limitations.
The peaceful protesters were left alone...the hooligans...they got their ass beat by well trained (and respected) Italian Police :0)
Wow. I greatly appreciate living in a country where the govt. pitting the military against it's own citizens is frowned upon, and police aren't empowered to simply "beat their asses" - not even when making lawful arrests.
I appreciate the role police play in apprehending people who truly victimize other citizens - thieves and rapists and etc. - but it's disheartening to hear an American celebrate a government's use of extreme violence against protestors, or sing the praises of a governments "big stick" being used to keep it's citizens in line.

angelofwar wrote:squinty wrote:angelofwar wrote:Reading through this stuff reminds me of, and makes me greatly appreciate the Italian L.E. The have "Polizia Comuniale" for writing speeding tickets, etc., but their mainpolice arm is the Carabinieri. A police force that is a branch of the military...and, from my experience, a very effective one at that (that's why the mob/mafia has seriously dwindled in southern Italy over the past few decades...).
I was stationed in Italy back during Operation Allied Force ('99: The bombing campaign to dislodge Slobadan Milosevic), the Italians had the right to protest...but, they were also given simple instructions..."Do NOT go HERE (i.e. this part (what ever it may be) of the joint U.S./Italian Military installation)". The protesters were allowed to walk up and down the streets 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, unbothered. Then, some Green Peace yuppies decided to defile the Carabinieries orders by swarming the main gate in white jump suits and gas masks...bad move...They have "military jurisdiction" over all of Italy...a "Military Civilian Police Force", if you will. And when they (the protesters) disobeyed LAWFUL orders "Not to enter/Go near", the Carabinieri had full right (which they utilized) to go in there and beat their asses. A little extreme? Maybe...but, after dealing with the people they have been dealing with for the past 50-60 years (Mafia/Red Army), sometimes (often-times, in my book), a big-stick is required, and justified. Civil disobedience, short of a Gov't over throw, has it's limitations.
The peaceful protesters were left alone...the hooligans...they got their ass beat by well trained (and respected) Italian Police :0)
Wow. I greatly appreciate living in a country where the govt. pitting the military against it's own citizens is frowned upon, and police aren't empowered to simply "beat their asses" - not even when making lawful arrests.
I appreciate the role police play in apprehending people who truly victimize other citizens - thieves and rapists and etc. - but it's disheartening to hear an American celebrate a government's use of extreme violence against protestors, or sing the praises of a governments "big stick" being used to keep it's citizens in line.
The "Green Peace" protesters weren't your normal protesters...and oft. used violence/scare tactics to get their point across...so, I have no issue with the police resulting to violence to give the peaceful citizens a sense of security with their tax dollars.
George Orwell wrote:Power is not a means; it is an end. One does not establish a dictatorship in order to safeguard a revolution; one makes the revolution in order to establish the dictatorship. The object of persecution is persecution. The object of torture is torture. The object of power is power.
OTTB wrote:"What's that you're wearing?"
"This? Oh, just my rabies hat."
shrapnel wrote:Darling, I would never fondle your sphenoid.
Dr. Cox wrote:People aren't chocolates. Do you know what they are mostly? Bastards. Bastard-coated bastards with bastard fillings.
JamesCannon wrote:Shrapnel, if you were a superhero, you'd be Captain Buzzkill Peener Pain.

George Orwell wrote:Power is not a means; it is an end. One does not establish a dictatorship in order to safeguard a revolution; one makes the revolution in order to establish the dictatorship. The object of persecution is persecution. The object of torture is torture. The object of power is power.


: Foil Cookery
TDW586 wrote:Can we please remember that a 2-minute, shaky video clip might (just possibly might) not tell the whole story?
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TDW586 wrote:Can we please remember that a 2-minute, shaky video clip might (just possibly might) not tell the whole story?

TDW586 wrote:Can we please remember that a 2-minute, shaky video clip might (just possibly might) not tell the whole story?
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Krustofski wrote:Dude, you're an open system which has energy pumped into it at least once a day. Entropy doesn't stand a chance. Plus, all living things are thermodynamically unstable anyway, we're held together by pure kinetics. You're not special. Um... what I'm trying to say is: Happy Birthday.

crypto wrote:TDW586 wrote:Can we please remember that a 2-minute, shaky video clip might (just possibly might) not tell the whole story?
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I'm sure theres always a good reason why a pregant woman needs to get beat down by the police, and the camera angle is JUST ALL WRONG for presenting evidence as why the officers safety was in immediate danger by the woman or her fetus.
ETA: #occupyuterus

duodecima wrote:TDW586 wrote:Can we please remember that a 2-minute, shaky video clip might (just possibly might) not tell the whole story?
Sent from my SGH-T839 using Tapatalk
But the same is also true of a written police report (or written professional journalist's article)- even when the author is striving for the fullest honesty and accuracy (as opposed to presenting the story that justifies their actions or a particular viewpoint, which it is very human to do) it can't show the whole picture. The data about how lousy eyewitness testimony actually is, is strong and extensive. Police are human and aren't immune from the same issues every other eyewitness has.
Any camera shows only one angle, but the more information there is about a situation, the fuller the "picture" of what happened there will be. I, for one, don't ever want there to be only one side of the story. Amateur journalism isn't the be all and end all of journalism or information, but it's a very important piece, and trying to outlaw it (as Illinois law does) or discourage it doesn't improve democracy or public safety (which is what I took to be the point of those video examples).

WY_Not wrote:All issues and players aside. WTF was a pregnant woman even doing going into a potentially hostile situation like that. I don't care if you are a reporter, protester, or LEO. Going into that volatile situation while pregnant is just plain stupid.
Krustofski wrote:Dude, you're an open system which has energy pumped into it at least once a day. Entropy doesn't stand a chance. Plus, all living things are thermodynamically unstable anyway, we're held together by pure kinetics. You're not special. Um... what I'm trying to say is: Happy Birthday.

WY_Not wrote:All issues and players aside. WTF was a pregnant woman even doing going into a potentially hostile situation like that. I don't care if you are a reporter, protester, or LEO. Going into that volatile situation while pregnant is just plain stupid.
: Foil Cookery
WY_Not wrote:All issues and players aside. WTF was a pregnant woman even doing going into a potentially hostile situation like that. I don't care if you are a reporter, protester, or LEO. Going into that volatile situation while pregnant is just plain stupid.


TDW586 wrote:I find it interesting that the amateur journalism video shows that veteran acting in a way that contradicts his claims. Why, if you're just walking to you apartment, would you square off with a line of riot police? How is that a reasonable course of action?


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