
To be fair, the camera was only looking at one direction. So, who knew.
Moderators: Alyrium Denryle, Edi, K. A. Pital
I'd be all in favor of the cops having video devices of their own, but there would invariably be accusations of improper conduct, both by tainting evidence, and accusations of the same selective posting of video that the protestors are engaging in if they were to start posting them online.Shroom Man 777 wrote:Would be another argument for the whole cops should bring video documentary devices. You already have those for routine squad cars, why not for critical dangerous and sensitive riot control? Guise post some stuff about cops brutalizing some veteran, police can counter that by posting videos (or using these videos in court) of that shellshocked veteran trying to assault them with arrows or something, justifying their thing.
Then you could have these videos be televised in those World's Most Exciting Riot Crackdown TV shows.
Don't be a moron Los, clearly the police were in the right to shoot a cameraman who was doing nothing to agitate an entire line of riot cops. Besides, the example of domestic abuse you gave clearly doesn't apply unless a police officer gave her the black eye. Then clearly she must have been UP TO SOMETHING.Losonti Tokash wrote:I always wonder if you guys make these crazy situations up for cases that don't involve violence inflicted by the police. Like if you go to a domestic abuse incident and the woman has a black eye, do you say "well we didn't see what happened and it is possible she did something to deserve it anyway"? After all, since we do not literally see everything within 360 degrees of this guy for an extended period, it's possible he may have been brandishing a weapon, even though none of the other police reacted to him in any way. Meanwhile we've got the OPD inflicting brain injuries and ruptured organs on protesters and you just go "man they broke some windows, clearly just as bad???" Or even better, that this guy was trying to provoke the police into shooting him.
What exactly is so "crazy" about the idea that a protestor may have done something to indicate he was about to engage in a violent act? Protestors are just such nice people that they wouldn't do that?Losonti Tokash wrote:I always wonder if you guys make these crazy situations up for cases that don't involve violence inflicted by the police. Like if you go to a domestic abuse incident and the woman has a black eye, do you say "well we didn't see what happened and it is possible she did something to deserve it anyway"? After all, since we do not literally see everything within 360 degrees of this guy for an extended period, it's possible he may have been brandishing a weapon, even though none of the other police reacted to him in any way. Meanwhile we've got the OPD inflicting brain injuries and ruptured organs on protesters and you just go "man they broke some windows, clearly just as bad???" Or even better, that this guy was trying to provoke the police into shooting him.
Could you post the video, or however else it is you know what the cameraman was doing? I'd be very interested to know how you came by this evidence.Flagg wrote: Don't be a moron Los, clearly the police were in the right to shoot a cameraman who was doing nothing to agitate an entire line of riot cops. Besides, the example of domestic abuse you gave clearly doesn't apply unless a police officer gave her the black eye. Then clearly she must have been UP TO SOMETHING.
I did not think the audio was terribly clear, and in any case, lifting an arm to throw makes no sound whatsoever.White Haven wrote:The audio, for one. The video has fairly clear audio of the cameraman's own voice, fainter but still audible detection of voices on the far side of the riot police line, and clear pickup of the gunshot. Unless the cameraman had a squad of ninjas creeping about behind him...
Again, I don't see that lifting an arm to throw would result in this kind of "erratic behavior". Maybe, but probably not. Generally when we see those videos, the situation is already chaotic, while this one is calm until the shot is fired. Clearly that means no one did anything violent up to the point, but violence has to start somehow. It could have been because the officer fired, it could ahve been because he saw the cameraman or someone else do something.As for the cameraman himself doing something threatening, the camera doesn't display the kind of erratic motion that would indicate that. Look at many of the other protest videos; when the cameramen are doing anything but standing still or moving very slowly and carefully, the camera goes wild immediately. Obviously we don't have footage of the cameraman himself, but the lack of any erratic camera movement would tend to argue against his free hand being about to peg a brick or something of that nature.
When you see someone about to throw an object at you, doing something to prevent that is not a "preemptive strike on the suspicion of possible attack." Engaing in bodily behavior that indicates you are about to attack someone is a threat, and allows self defense. This is true whether a cop or a private citizen is the target of the threat.Of course given that nothing was thrown until (possibly, given that the video ends) after the police shot the cameraman down, that also raises the question of whether the police should be engaging in preemptive strikes on the suspicion of possible attack. Given that the police DID strike first in this case, I'd have a hard time feeling sorry for them if a few bricks got hummed their way as a result.
My point is that by attempting to de facto declare war on the Establishment, you're left with no choice but to become a revolutionary and hope for the radical overthrow of society. And when you take a position like "cops are just hired goons of the rich!" you're pretty much declaring war on the Establishment- because you're excluding the possibility that they might be restrained, might actually be less bad than what real hired goons would look like (say, if Wall Street hired Blackwater to provide security for itself against OWS), because hell, they might even be on your side while doing their duty to maintain some kind of public order through it all.NoXion wrote:You seem to be under the mistaken impression that I want some tinpot dictator or some self-appointed vanguard party to form a new kind of society. I don't think that's possible, and I'm pretty sure that ultimately those best qualified to decide are the 99% themselves. If the politicians in so-called representative democracies were really our representatives, then there would not be increasing numbers of people who feel their needs and voices are being ignored by the rich and powerful.
Maybe. Maybe not. I do not know that this is necessarily true, especially if you are concentrating on getting a good camera shot.Shroom Man 777 wrote:He means that if the camera man was doing something with his other hand (like say throwing a boulder), then his camera would've been shaky like a Bourne Cloverwitch Blairfield Project video because one-handing a camera gets you shitty shots.
Nobody gives a fuck about what the public largely feels, they're a bunch of know nothings and if they knew what was good for them, they'd stop taking videos of cops doing things. The police's job is to keep the public in line. By force, if need be.Losonti Tokash wrote:Shroom, would you agree that the important question here is whether the police realize the public largely does not feel safe/protected by them?
There are plenty of stories and videos that are being interpreted that way by people that are untrained in police procedures and riot control, and there are plenty of references to "peaceful" protestors that are not engaged in active assault, but are still breaking the law.Losonti Tokash wrote:So here's the issue. We keep getting stories and/or videos of peaceful protesters being severely injured either by police action or in their custody. There's plenty of media showing protesters being restrained without consideration for their safety.
I agree with KS. The problem, however, is that we do not just get unspecified additional "instances like Scott Olson." Each incident has to be treated on its own merits; that's how the legal system works. If you want it dealt with en masse, just declare OWS a revolution, we'll call out the National Guard, and law enforcement can wash its hands of the whole mess.We get instances like Scott Olsen where not only do the police 5 feet away fail to render aid, they grenade the people who actually do try to help him. I don't know what your opinion was, but KS agreed that the cop who threw that grenade ought to be prosecuted.
What video was this?There was a video earlier of a group of non-violent, cooperative protesters sitting on the ground were assaulted and pepper sprayed in the face before being restrained in a prone position.
It's "likely" according to who? First of all, we didn't ever see what happened in the actual confrontation. Second, the fact that the torso is not a target does not mean that it can't be struck; batons are used in chaotic situations and its very easy to miss; no one stands still for them. Third, as pointed out, there can be a form of delayed laceration. Fourth, where and under what circumstances was he "Calling for help for 18 hours"? Is this just his story? Are we to believe him just because he's a veteran?We had a second veteran get confronted by at least a half dozen officers and came out of it with a lacerated spleen whose cries for help were ignored for 18 hours. It's likely the injur came from repeated blows to the torso, which has been stated to not be a valid target for batons. It's suggested they missed and accidentally hit his abdomen, presumably while he was lying on the ground.
The reason there's no apparent provocation is that the camera is positioned so that any provocation would be out of its field of view. Claiming "no apparent provocation" in this instance is incredibly self-serving and dishonest. Of course it's not apparent; the camera doesn't point that way.We now have a cameraman being shot with no apparent provocation, after years of police threatening and harrassing bystanders recording their actions nationwide. You have suggested that the cameraman was apparently being threatening or just happened to walk in front of someone who was.
It "has been made fairly clear" by who? To who? I have news for you, in any sort of riot or combat situation, you do not stop in the middle of fighting and render aid.And yeah, I'm at these protests as a street medic. It's been made fairly clear that protesters' welfare is not a top priority, or else the police wouldn't interfere with their prompt treatment. I've also been doing a lot more internal policing of idiots trying to sir shit up than it seems the police have done. It doesn't even matter if you guys are or not, no one sees it and the wall of secrecy or whatever just adds to the feeling of corruption.
In other words, you have your mind already made up and are unwilling to look critically at the behavior of people you agree with. Guess what? I've spent my entire life watching people make bullshit accusations against law enforcement, since long before I had any desire to be in law enforcement or inkling that I'd be doing that; I was well into adulthood when I switched to this career.Or you get shit like in Occupy DC where was a car runs into multiple groups of protesters and the police decline to press charges. We're not the ones undermining the relationship between the police and their communities. You guys have been working on that for literally my entire life.
OWS is not "the public". You feel that way; you do not get to speak for the public at large.Losonti Tokash wrote:Shroom, would you agree that the important question here is whether the police realize the public largely does not feel safe/protected by them?
Who said anything about boulders? All you're doing here is trying to make it sound as if the possibility he was doing something he didn't want the camera to see is inherently silly and unreasonable, while the possibility that he was doing nothing of the sort is perfectly resonable, because that's the possibility you like better. This is just ridiculing the other position and trying to make it sound like an argument. I realize this is your thing, since you almost never say anything really substantial, but there it is.Shroom Man 777 wrote:If you're concentrating on a good camera shot, then you'd be two-handing it because one-handing it gives you shit shots, or if you are one-handing it, you would otherwise not be throwing around boulders and stuff. Or the guy could be holding the camera with one hand, and with a really strong and steady arm, and concentrating on a good shot, while holding another object with his other hand half-mindedly while waving it around threateningly or vaguely or in a way that might be interpreted as threateningly or maybe outright throwing it, while concentrating on a good shot? Whatever. For all we know, the guy might've been a quadruple-amputee and was holding onto the camera with his mouth while his seeing eye dog was pushing him on his wheelchair.
Your predjudicial language aside, I think that the scruntiny should be equally on the angry protestors who feel business and banks have taken over the country as well as on the working stiffs who are trying to maintain law and order, and that equal weight ought to be given to both what the video shows, and the fact that it's a carefully selected short snippet of a narrow field of view, and put on the internet by people with a vested interest in a certain perception.Well, who knows what really went on there. Though I think the onus, or the scrutiny, should be on part of the very powerful institutions whose members are protected by layers of secrecy or heavy bureaucratic obstruction and who are capable of dealing (and have dealt, repeatedly) great injury to people, and whose powers should naturally be under strict oversight, rather than a mob of crusty ragtags who people dismiss as know-nothing purposeless unorganized liberal effete college slackers with designer jeans and Macbooks (at least, they dismiss these guys as such, until it is convenient to portray them as a great and dangerous and destabilizing communist horde bent on socializing all our precious bodily fluids)*.
It's interesting, that you think constantly shouting things like SPARTAFREEDOMERICA or whatever pertains to the topic at hand and simply using a lot of prejudicial language to dismiss any inconvenient details is really convincing. I'm sure it is when you'r having an outrage contest with people you basically agree with on the internet, but the fact is that you're simply unable to address counterpoints. Not because it's not possible, but because you simply don't want to; you want your view of events to simply stand unquestioned. This is why you're constantly making posts that are nothing but factless, pointless sarcasm; you know perfectly well that no one is going to seriously spend time addressing such bullshit because you're saying nothing concrete to be addressed. This lets you pretend that people can't address the "truth" you're pointing out, when in point of fact all you're doing is rendering your own position unworthy of the time necessary to address it.*It's interesting, the dichotomy in the portrayals of the enemies of the establishment. On one hand, they love downplaying the opposition as weak girly men living in caves or being primitive foreigners or know-nothing unemployed weed-smoking yuppies, in order to reassure their power base that things are going good and that all is fine. On the other hand, they also love scaremongering and portraying the other side as this grave apocalyptic threat that will destroy the American way of life or whatever, in order to galvanize their power base and mobilize them into doing dumb things, like willingly voting for the regime to curb their civil rights, or cheering on hypethyroid stormtroopers stomping protesters and bayoneting people with white phosphorus tear gas shotgun grenade launcher baton pistol gunblades or whatever.
I guess not slavishly agreeing to the Occupier's every word and claim, and failing to constantly keep them on the news at all hours is "ignoring" them.God, I love how the media pretty much ignored these Occupy movements during the starting days, until the time came that people could open their windows and see the Occupiers Occupying their Occupation with their own eyes. It's morning again in America.
Don't worry man, it's not like there hasn't been a whole lot of controversies, scandals and other horrible things that have happened before the People Power thing started, to affect how the public views the police at large. And I think the people making up the People Power are also part of that same public, even though not everyone, not even most, in "the public" is in the People Power or may agree with them.Ferdinand Marcos wrote:People Power is not "the public". You feel that way; you do not get to speak for the public at large.
I'm saying that filming with one hand results in a shitty video, particularly if you have to do something with the other hand, and if you want to do something naughty with your other hand, you won't be really concentrating with your camera hand and you won't be able to film a decent video unless you're like Chow Yun Fat, except instead of twin Berettas, it's a camera in one hand and a rock/molotov cocktail/bad thing in another. Filming a decent shot involves the guy looking into the screen/eye-thing to make sure he's actually shooting something in the video, and not videoing the pavement or the ground or getting a shit image, like those guys in Cloverfield or Blair Witch Project got (maybe because they were busy fending off monsters/witches/whatever with their other hands).SVPD wrote:Who said anything about boulders? All you're doing here is trying to make it sound as if the possibility he was doing something he didn't want the camera to see is inherently silly and unreasonable, while the possibility that he was doing nothing of the sort is perfectly resonable, because that's the possibility you like better. This is just ridiculing the other position and trying to make it sound like an argument. I realize this is your thing, since you almost never say anything really substantial, but there it is.
Except, when the protesters do something naughty, they can get arrested, and even when they're doing nothing, they can get the shit beaten out of them. If the cops do something bad, what do they get? Some internet fatties mocking and jeering them and forcing the hand of other internet peoples to defend them from mean internet words?Your predjudicial language aside, I think that the scruntiny should be equally on the angry protestors who feel business and banks have taken over the country as well as on the working stiffs who are trying to maintain law and order, and that equal weight ought to be given to both what the video shows, and the fact that it's a carefully selected short snippet of a narrow field of view, and put on the internet by people with a vested interest in a certain perception.
See how much better it sounds when we address the valid concerns of both sides instead of trying to use predjudicial language to simply dismiss things we're uncomfortable with?
That assumes that I'm trying to enter a debate or raise points when all I'm doing is just expressing disdain and mockery and contempt towards your nation whenever it bombs innocent people, gets caught torturing the fuck out of its prisoners, has mercenaries sell child prostitutes to its allies, invades whole nations over mistaken evidence and gets thousands of your own citizens killed, violates the rules of war and human rights, erodes your civil liberties, starts killing your own citizens via secret President-authorized assassinations, does all of these things that results in bankrupting your country, fucks up other people's nations and other people's peoples, and finally when it's done with all these things, also fucks up its own people by giving billions of dollars to the companies that caused your financial crisis while people get poor, and then tear gas and rubber pellet-shotgun and stickbeat the hell out of the people protesting this and other injustices. I'm just mocking all these events, which have now culminated in all these Occupation things you're seeing today. There are no points in my posts, they are spontaneous exclamations and excretions aimed at America's ugly face.It's interesting, that you think constantly shouting things like SPARTAFREEDOMERICA or whatever pertains to the topic at hand and simply using a lot of prejudicial language to dismiss any inconvenient details is really convincing. I'm sure it is when you'r having an outrage contest with people you basically agree with on the internet, but the fact is that you're simply unable to address counterpoints. Not because it's not possible, but because you simply don't want to; you want your view of events to simply stand unquestioned. This is why you're constantly making posts that are nothing but factless, pointless sarcasm; you know perfectly well that no one is going to seriously spend time addressing such bullshit because you're saying nothing concrete to be addressed. This lets you pretend that people can't address the "truth" you're pointing out, when in point of fact all you're doing is rendering your own position unworthy of the time necessary to address it.
In that regard, this post from you is highly unusual in that it has something at least concrete enough to address, although it's heavily laden with the usual prejudicial terminology in order to beg the questions at hand. 90% of the time you're not really saying anything at all and I wouldn't even bother.
I'm talking about how narry a word was on the mainstream news about the Occupy movement when it began, until the Occupation movement ended up everywhere. I wasn't talking about you since I said "God, I love how the media pretty much ignored these Occupy movements during the starting days", unless you're some kind of law enforcing journalist, in which case you would count as a media.I guess not slavishly agreeing to the Occupier's every word and claim, and failing to constantly keep them on the news at all hours is "ignoring" them.
SVPD wrote:There are plenty of stories and videos that are being interpreted that way by people that are untrained in police procedures and riot control, and there are plenty of references to "peaceful" protestors that are not engaged in active assault, but are still breaking the law.Losonti Tokash wrote:So here's the issue. We keep getting stories and/or videos of peaceful protesters being severely injured either by police action or in their custody. There's plenty of media showing protesters being restrained without consideration for their safety.