[AF] WiFi is getting dangerous
RichardBJohnson@comcast.net
RichardBJohnson
Sat May 26 07:04:58 CDT 2007
Not paranoid at all, just a realist who witnessed cops killing people during the Waterbury Riots that nobody
bothered to report (the same summer as the Watts Riots). I also lost a friend to one of those "Stop <BANG>
or I'll shoot..." events in Providence, RI. The cops didn't have a spare "drop," so they planted a water-
pistol on him. Those things (and others) taught me to keep well away from cops. FYI, I don't even have
a traffic record although I was once a "Juvenile Delinquent" ... so called, and was brutally beaten by cops
on several occasions. Basically, if you are a "Type A" person who gets your rocks off by controlling others,
you become a cop. It goes with the territory. Once you become a cop, you believe that it's your duty to be
"badder" than the bad guys, you use whatever tools you have available. Lies are much gentler than the
other tools available.
There are many people who have led such sheltered lives that they imagine the police are available
to help them. The police are a necessary evil. We need them, but we had better never trust them. You
can't pay somebody to protect your civil rights. You need to do this for yourself.
I'm also not bitter or hateful. It's just that I have lived on both sided of the tracks and I devote a lot of
time to coaching young people who have already encountered the cruel facts of the downtown police
mentality.
--
Cheers,
Richard B. Johnson
-------------- Original message ----------------------
From: "Paul B. Walker, Jr." <walkerbroadcasting at gmail.com>
> A little paranoid are we? You come across as such a negative, bitter hateful
> person.
>
> I've had a few run-ins with police(for various reasons, not being
> arrested) and never had an issue with any of them(and it was different
> states too, not just the same department)
>
> PAUL
>
>
> On 5/25/07, RichardBJohnson at comcast.net <RichardBJohnson at comcast.net> wrote:
> >
> > A very important law enforcement tool is the common lie. So-called
> > citizens are trained to
> > tell the truth. Sometimes they tell lies. Police officers are trained to
> > lie. Sometimes they
> > tell the truth. That's the difference. One other thing, it's hard to argue
> > with a liar that wears
> > a gun. That's why the best advice is to avoid police altogether, even if
> > you think you have
> > nothing to hide --because, from a police perspective, you do.
> > --
> > Cheers,
> > Richard B. Johnson
> > -------------- Original message ----------------------
> >
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