Author Topic: Encounters...what to do?  (Read 102893 times)

jbeegoode

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Re: Encounters...what to do?
« Reply #165 on: August 11, 2016, 09:25:55 PM »
Although I’m sure that I don’t see things like Bob sees them, I certainly can’t just dismiss it as a few bad eggs. There is a culture within the police department’s internal affairs and training that has gotten out of hand. The police don’t treat or look upon the population, nor interact with us in the same manner as they used to, back when it was just a few bad eggs.

I think that what Bob is concerned with needs some Americana context that might help to explain.

We have Rights, which have been constitutional guarantees, ever since the revolution over two hundred years ago. Much of the Constitution is addressing the abuses of the then occupying force (uh ho, a long time ago? :-[... ;D), to make sure that those abuses of power never happen to a free citizenry again. We have a right to our personal papers and correspondence. From keeping soldiers from being housed in people’s homes, grew to a man’s home is his castle. Warrants have to be approved by a judge, be specific and produced before anyone can enter our homes. We have a right to free assembly, free association, protest, speech, organizing, and anywhere on public property. We can say what we want, and we can keep what we want to ourselves. We are all to be treated equally before the law. We are not to be stopped and detained, or searched at the whim of an authority. There must be a probable cause to do this and that is supposed to be a very strict interpretation restraining the police. We are to have a right to a jury of our peers, which can throw a law out of court, if they desire. We are to have an attorney provided to represent us, if we can’t afford one, so that we get a fair and impartial trial. Everybody is innocent until proven guilty and shall be treated as such. We can have an arsenal, protect ourselves, and our property when necessary, and be organized to have another revolution, if necessary, when our government fails us. These and more protect our freedoms. They are a framework. The freedom is a gift from God. It is sacred. It is not a privilege.  All of these have been eroded to the point where they hardly exist in actual function. This country is now a police state. It is not 1984, but subtly all of those principles are going on.

In many neighborhoods, police presence is an occupying force. It has been for a long long time. Now, these policing methods are being spread into the rest the country, by the police training, trained attitude and political permission and encouragement.
 
Even as I sit here now, I have in the back of my mind that in the years ahead, I may have negative consequence for speaking the truth as I am here. When under investigation for anything, even just because I might have associated with someone in the minutest way that would be plotting revolution, this could be used as evidence to indict me as a “bad guy.” The police have been militarized because it is illegal to send the military upon the citizenry. The excuse is terrorism. Any act planned against the ruling government, not a government by and for the people is twisted into being called a terrorist act. Anyone who is involved in confronting government in power is under investigation to some extent, and with the potential to be drawn into a “conspiracy” charge at some time. This isn’t just about a few bad eggs, cops on the street. It is systemic. That is intimidation.
 
I can tell you of probably twenty involvements that I have had with police in my lifetime, in which they abused their power, my rights and my guarantees, or others. I can remember four traffic stops, twenty or more years ago, where I was treated properly. I was even let go once for a traffic violation, because he recognized that I had made a mistake, not intentional, and my CDL indicated that the result might cost me my job. But that was a minority of encounters. When I am at a public gathering and police come around, it IS like a dark cloud. They have been trained to act as such to maintain intimidation and fear. I see this everywhere and I have been around long enough to remember a huge difference in the past.

You are correct, this isn’t the experience of most people, but if you don’t look the part, or are on the other side of a political spectrum than the government’s police, look out. However now, even white people with kids in the back seat are being stopped for minor traffic violations by a guy dressed in black uniform with his hand on a trigger, bent over ready to shoot, telling you to put your hands on the steering wheel, and asking if they have a gun. They are told to shut up, including the kids, and produce the proper paper ID and paperwork by this scary thug. They are asked where and what they are doing, where they are going, run through a computer, and told ”AND DON”T MOVE.” The manner of speaking is not anything like friendly; you are suspect, guilty until they deem you innocent. If investigated, the cop may be in violation of department procedures for treating you civilly, not for being a jerk.

Bob is relating this context to the simple act of taking his trash out and walking his personal domain without the encumbrance of clothing, in short minding his own business. All of this abuse mounts up and then there is the potential of further extra-legal unconstitutional actions. You are assumed to have broken a law until a judge decides that you haven’t. All it takes is a nosey neighbor (who may actually be hiding in the bushes), an anonymous call, and an overzealous cop making up his own law, and being the jury and executioner.

I’m still getting my head around cops with no guns. That is soo reasonable and civil AND it works, AND I know that people do have guns over there, even though they may not be supposed to have them. I remember previous to 1970, when police had to knock on a door and serve a duly approved warrant, before they searched for a specific piece of evidence AND it worked in this country.

The other side of the coin is that several times, I have gone up to an officer to ask something, like directions, at a public event. They don’t want to have anything to do with people. Perhaps they are concerned that you are a distraction for a crime, or have an alternative motive. They are trained to suspect that you are very likely about to attack them and immediately seek control and intimidation. Perhaps they are alarmed, thinking that you have a serious problem. They seem to be very over-reactive beings trying not to be human.

So, although I don’t fully share Bob’s assessment of the situation, I certainly understand his sense of the situation.
Jbee

Incidentally ric, the culture around NYC is noticeably more surly than most of the rest of the country. The Fed TSA has become outlandishly empowered. The reason given is terrorism and illegal immigration. If you sit in a factory situation all day looking at documentation and being surrounded with, probably justly, irritated people....well.
« Last Edit: August 11, 2016, 09:29:51 PM by jbeegoode »
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Peter S

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Re: Encounters...what to do?
« Reply #166 on: August 11, 2016, 10:22:56 PM »
The tone of our US brothers brings to mind my favourite saying - to an expert with a hammer, every problem can be solved by hitting it! Expanding this, politicians 'solve' everything by forming committees, soldiers solve problems by attacking, and police solve problems by demanding greater powers of arrest. You make it sound as though the US police generally have have taken the course of treating everyone as a potential criminal.
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jbeegoode

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Re: Encounters...what to do?
« Reply #167 on: August 11, 2016, 11:16:00 PM »
The tone of our US brothers brings to mind my favourite saying - to an expert with a hammer, every problem can be solved by hitting it! Expanding this, politicians 'solve' everything by forming committees, soldiers solve problems by attacking, and police solve problems by demanding greater powers of arrest. You make it sound as though the US police generally have have taken the course of treating everyone as a potential criminal.

That is MY sense of it. Yea, in a nut-shell, nuts-hell. Imagine how scary that world would be for a policeman. Imagine how deluded that is. Imagine the effect on the people as they realize that. The issue is much to do with trust.

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eyesup

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Re: Encounters...what to do?
« Reply #168 on: August 15, 2016, 07:17:42 PM »
I agree that the activities of police sometimes are disturbing but the activities of government and legislative bodies are also disturbing. There is an increasing push here in the US for more freedoms in regard to personal behavior. We have always had them, but many people have never fully acted on them. Too many times laws become confusing by reason of lawmakers attempting to regulate moral behavior.

I do not believe that the police are swearing oaths that are making them enemies of freedom. Nor do I believe a demonstration was staged so a citizen could be intentionally gunned down. I do believe police are being given duties that do not belong in their jurisdiction. Just because a complaint is made doesn’t mean a law needs to be in place to give them a solution to a situation. If the law doesn’t exist, say so and ask the person complaining to go talk to the person that is annoying them. Police are too frequently being looked to as babysitters. That is not their duty.

Quote from: pjcomp
. . . brings to mind my favourite saying - to an expert with a hammer, every problem can be solved by hitting it!

I have always heard this one as, “To a carpenter, every problem looks like a nail.”  ;)

This discussion also reminds me of another saying, “Everyone hates lawyers, until they need one.”  :(

As in any community, there all sorts of folks. Good and bad. The same holds for the law enforcement community. The police need to be refocused on enforcing laws not trying to control or modifying behavior. It’s more complicated than it appears on the surface. We need them. We just need them to stay focused on the laws and not allowing them to be used by politicians as a tool for advancing their careers.

I believe that is the source of more of the police problems than any other.

Duane

Safebare

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Re: Encounters...what to do?
« Reply #169 on: August 21, 2016, 01:47:29 PM »
I was sitting at my computer one evening earlier this summer, when a sheriff deputy flashed his flashlight through the window next to me to get my attention. Though I was confident that he could not tell I was nude at that point, I knew he could see me get up to walk towards the door. And I thought he would appreciate my going directly to the door instead of heading to the back of the house to retrieve a cover. So I answered the door nude. That was complicated by my Schnauzer, Sugar, who has to noisily greet all visitors.
The officer simply informed me that a complaint had been called in regarding my practice of feeding the horses without wearing any clothes. He said that it was obvious to him that I was very comfortable being naked and there is nothing wrong with that. But asked that I "wrap a towel around my waist anytime I might be seen from the road."
He noted that the woman who called in was particularly concerned that her 12 yo son was in the car with her when they passed.
They had passed just as I was approaching the gate to the back yard. I have been doing this FRN long enough to sense when I've been caught. It's a different experience from being seen.  I was very pleased with how the officer handled the situation. He explained the situation and offered a solution, then wished me a good evening. I was never asked to get dressed.
Safebare

Davie

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Re: Encounters...what to do?
« Reply #170 on: August 21, 2016, 02:09:35 PM »
I respect and appreciate your story but would comment that once again we have the "what about the children" concern. There is no evidence that simple nudity will effect anyone adversely, child or adult.

Davie  8)

Safebare

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Re: Encounters...what to do?
« Reply #171 on: August 21, 2016, 02:48:42 PM »
It's not like they will be stricken deaf, mute & blind by the sight of a nude human. But it reminded me of the rock opera Tommy. " What about the boy?! He saw it all!" ☺
But, no one died.

JOhnGw

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Re: Encounters...what to do?
« Reply #172 on: August 21, 2016, 03:08:20 PM »
My opinion is that while children aren't harmed by seeing what people look like they are definitely harmed by the reactions of people who think they will be harmed by the knowledge.
JOhn

Do not do unto others as you would that they should do unto you. Their tastes may not be the same.
George Bernard Shaw, Maxims for Revolutionaries

Greenbare Woods

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Re: Encounters...what to do?
« Reply #173 on: August 21, 2016, 05:47:08 PM »
I was sitting at my computer one evening earlier this summer, when a sheriff deputy flashed his flashlight through the window next to me to get my attention.

The deputy was prowling around peering in windows looking for anything illegal rather than coming politely and knocking on your door. 


Quote
Though I was confident that he could not tell I was nude at that point, I knew he could see me get up to walk towards the door. And I thought he would appreciate my going directly to the door instead of heading to the back of the house to retrieve a cover. So I answered the door nude. That was complicated by my Schnauzer, Sugar, who has to noisily greet all visitors.

The deputy had probably been prowling about for a while before you caught him shining his light in your windows. 


Quote
The officer simply informed me that a complaint had been called in regarding my practice of feeding the horses without wearing any clothes. He said that it was obvious to him that I was very comfortable being naked and there is nothing wrong with that. But asked that I "wrap a towel around my waist anytime I might be seen from the road."

And so it begins.  Now you have a "compliance order" directing you to avoid doing legal activity on your own property.   He said it was legal, but obey his order and don't do it anyway.  That's how they work.


Quote
He noted that the woman who called in was particularly concerned that her 12 yo son was in the car with her when they passed.

Like any 12 yo boy is going to be destroyed by the sight of an adult of his species and sex.  Its a trash excuse and may not have been true. 

Effective law enforcement would have informed the woman who called that being naked is legal, nobody was harmed, and she should mind her own business.   But instead they took to opportunity to create a "disturbance" (and "police record") with you.  That's how they operate.


Quote
They had passed just as I was approaching the gate to the back yard. I have been doing this FRN long enough to sense when I've been caught. It's a different experience from being seen.  I was very pleased with how the officer handled the situation.

I don't think the officer handled it well at all. 
  • He failed to tell the woman that the law was on your side. 
  • He prowled around your house looking into windows instead of coming to knock politely at your door
  • He created a disturbance and "police record" for another citizen, which will be used against you forever. 
  • He used the opportunity to further police authority to order citizens going about their ordinary activity when no law has been violated.

I would have been quite offended at his authoritarian misconduct and harassment of an ordinary citizen.

Quote
He explained the situation and offered a solution, then wished me a good evening. I was never asked to get dressed.
Safebare 

But you were arbitrarily ordered to cover when within sight of a road, and this event will be used against you if you are ever "caught" naked somewhere else.   Got it.

Bob
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Peter S

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Re: Encounters...what to do?
« Reply #174 on: August 21, 2016, 05:52:35 PM »
Two interesting takes on one event - Safebare appears quite happy with what happened and the way it went (correct me if I got that wrong) while John placed a far more sinister interpretation on it. I guess future events may inform us which view of the police pans out.

peter
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Greenbare Woods

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Re: Encounters...what to do?
« Reply #175 on: August 22, 2016, 04:06:47 PM »
My further adventures taking out my trash. 

The road past my house is not very well traveled.  Sometimes one can wait half an hour without any vehicles at all.  There are only about 4 homes and 6 farms in the 10 miles south to where it ends at a crossing road.  The crossing road also goes across a small creek where a canoe or flat bottom boat can navigate to a nice lake for fishing, etc.  In summer we get some boat traffic, maybe 6 per day. 

Last evening I took a bag of trash out to my trash bin at the road.  As I walked toward the bin I heard a car coming from the south. I ignored it and kept walking, holding the trash at my side.  I was maybe 75 feet from the trash bin and 100 feet from the road when a red pickup went past.  In the back of the pickup was 4 or 5 brightly colored kayaks or paddle boats of some kind.  Lake people.  I couldn't see how many people were in the pickup. They probably got a quick look at my front side as they passed. They drove on past and soon rounded the corner to my north (left). 

I walked on out to my bin and put the trash in.  I stood there for a moment wondering what I should do next when a vehicle rounded the corner to my north, headed south.   I closed the trash bin lid and began walking up the driveway toward my house.  As they passed I glanced over my shoulder and saw it was the same pickup again, this time headed south.  I was again about 100 feet from the road.  I kept walking away.  The pickup passed by.

I had gotten maybe another 100 feet when the same pickup pulled up and stopped in front of my driveway to get a better look.  I'm sure they appreciate the view of my beautiful older gluteus maximus, my crack between them, bare back, bare feet, long thinning grey hair, etc. 
 
I came to the part of my driveway where it goes up a hill and then around a corner.  As I continued walking up my hill the pickup drove off.  I do hope they enjoyed seeing a beautiful older man taking out his trash.  Whoever they were, they devoted time and energy into having a look. 

I wonder if it was the same off duty cops and deputy sheriffs who were out shooting their machine guns on my neighbor's land a couple of weeks ago?  Whomever they were it gives them an opportunity to encounter and see a human being engaged in ordinary non-confrontational activity.   So far, I haven't seen any cops shining flashlights in my window or even knocking on my door. 

Bob
« Last Edit: August 22, 2016, 04:08:47 PM by Bob Knows »
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ric

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Re: Encounters...what to do?
« Reply #176 on: August 22, 2016, 05:02:25 PM »
perhaps they thought theyed seen bigfoot  ;)



please excuse my sense of humour

eyesup

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Re: Encounters...what to do?
« Reply #177 on: August 22, 2016, 06:21:20 PM »
Quote from: JOhn
My opinion is that while children aren't harmed by seeing what people look like they are definitely harmed by the reactions of people who think they will be harmed by the knowledge.

A self fulfilling prophesy?

Duane

jbeegoode

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Re: Encounters...what to do?
« Reply #178 on: August 23, 2016, 01:46:50 AM »
perhaps they thought theyed seen bigfoot  ;)



please excuse my sense of hum our
The tourists probably took a cell phone pic and showed their friends. I really wonder what reasoning that they had to make the effort to come back for a look. Could'a shown a picture of Bob's butt to the police and been blown off. Why?...???

Ya never really know what lurks in the minds of people who wear clothes. They can be soo peculiar.
Jbee
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Greenbare Woods

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Re: Encounters...what to do?
« Reply #179 on: August 23, 2016, 01:55:22 AM »
The tourists probably took a cell phone pic and showed their friends. I really wonder what reasoning that they had to make the effort to come back for a look. Could'a shown a picture of Bob's butt to the police and been blown off. Why?...???

Ya never really know what lurks in the minds of people who wear clothes. They can be soo peculiar.
Jbee

Yes.  If they just want a photo of my rear they can look on several web sites.

Bob
Human bodies are natural, comfortable, and green.
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