Kamakazie Sith wrote:Actually, they are punished/not punished based off a whole range of reasons from I'm personally involved with them to I feel like being a nice guy to they have a good driving record and just made a mistake. You, and others, keep trying to narrow it down as if personal reasons are the only reason anyone ever gets a break. This is simply untrue and those warnings given to those within an officers social circle represent a very small number of the warnings issued, and there's no way to tell if that person would have been released on warning anyway.
The reasons for not wanting to punish those within your social circle are valid reasons that have real consequences that is extended to others within the judicial system but for some reason you feel police should be made to bear those consequences because "they are members of the community who command a great deal of respect and get special provisions others do not, so IMO they should be able to deal with personal discomfort" as if a judge or a prosecutor doesn't also command a great deal of respect and shouldn't also be expected to "deal" with the discomfort.
The degree of punishment a prosecutor and a judge is expected to wield is entirely different, as I pointed out several times. But yet you still persist that a Judge and a prosecutor is the same. Do you think there is a difference between being forced to try to send your wife to death row or writing her a parking ticket? If you think so, then why should you be allowed to exercise discretion on the sole basis of people being related?
In case you do not notice, this creates a second class of citizens, those that can speed, park in the wrong spots and when caught, whip up a card or name people and then get off with almost 100% certainty. This is what horrifies me.
You say you're horrified by this? Really? Could you be more dramatic, please.
Yes, I am horrified by it, that a state that is supposed to have equality before the law just does not - but not because of wealth or merit, because they are a different sort of people.
Since you feel you're qualified to evaluate my qualification as a US police officer (you aren't) then here's my assessment of you.
I am of course not qualified to evaluate you as a police officer. I am however qualified to express an opinion on the moral validity of your point of view and given that your only excuse so far is that it is somehow impossible to change the system (gee, wonder how we Europeans managed it, given that a mere 100 years ago the situation was exactly the same in Europe) or that it would force you to have some discomfort - well, neither reason is very convincing.
You are offended not horrified, and you're offended because this system is different from your own, and you hold an elitist view of your own system because you work and live in it.
I've also worked and lived under the US system, so this point of view holds no validity.
Whoever says "education does not matter" can try ignorance
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A decision must be made in the life of every nation at the very moment when the grasp of the enemy is at its throat. Then, it seems that the only way to survive is to use the means of the enemy, to rest survival upon what is expedient, to look the other way. Well, the answer to that is 'survival as what'? A country isn't a rock. It's not an extension of one's self. It's what it stands for. It's what it stands for when standing for something is the most difficult! -
Chief Judge Haywood
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