I do not represent anyone else.
I am not represented by anyone else.
I am an individual.
The concept of "represented communities" is ugly, collectivist, and racist.
@owenjonesjourno Interesting.
I notice you didn't say that you don't want rage, or that rage isn't justified.
You just make an accusation of hypocrisy that *if* you demanded rage, *then* "right-wingers" would accuse you of incitement.
@mrcharlesamos@GideonFalter Seeing other people with highly disagreeable pins could well harm satisfaction, no?
It also creates schelling points for all sorts of nefarious collusion.
@DPJHodges A full review into policing to ensure that noone else is harmed by racist (so called “anti-racist” but actually anti white ideology), and policing becomes entirely race blind and neutral would be an act of healing which would reduce hatred, tension and division.
@Jeremy_Hunt Mostly good but AI + NHS is a recipe for dead patients.
How exactly can you force, from the top down, the NHS to be a pioneer in anything?
@SancastleAir@mickyglasses@SirApexTv The police officer in question said "c*nt" three times, including one "f*cking c*nt.
If it was the other passengers who were harassed, alarmed, and or distressed, perhaps the copper should arrest himself?
No-one was misled by Henry Nowak when he told police multiple times that he had been stabbed.
That Nowak was *only* humiliated as he lay dying in the gutter is weak consolation, and doesn't change the fact that the police *would* have killed a different victim.
@paulusclericus@JoeBlog377719@SirApexTv So hypothetically speaking, if someone wanted to sue the police they would need to go to the county court? I just want to be clear.
@SancastleAir@SirApexTv Not so.
"Offended" or "Offensive" does not appear in Section 5 of the public order act.
Insulting the police is not, by itself, a crime.
@TJTreacy@Keith_GadgetUK@SirApexTv The force was used well before arrest was mentioned or initiated, as was the repeated used of the word "c*nt" by the allegedly harassed constable.
Pushing someone *away* from you is not what you do in order to arrest someone.
@SancastleAir@SirApexTv Not so.
"Offended" or "Offensive" does not appear in Section 5 of the public order act.
Insulting the police is not, by itself, a crime.
@TJTreacy@Keith_GadgetUK@SirApexTv Reasonable force has to be used in an arrest or to a prevent crime.
This police officer was clearly just angry about being called a c*nt, which is why he said: "Call me a c*nt? F*cking c*nt."
Ironically the constable swore more than the youth. Perhaps he should arrest himself.