How Police Make Up The Law (ft. LegalEagle)

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Philosophy Tube

Philosophy Tube

Күн бұрын

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@PhilosophyTube
@PhilosophyTube Жыл бұрын
STOP RIGHT THERE CRIMINAL SCUM! Nobody breaks the law on my watch! Now go to Patreon.com/PhilosophyTube or it's off to jail!
@hypatia-du-bois-marie
@hypatia-du-bois-marie Жыл бұрын
This is worse than LegalEagle's "subscribe or I'll see you in court"... (Did you really dress as an eagle?
@BMBrooks09
@BMBrooks09 Жыл бұрын
Now THIS is intimidation and threat.
@hypatia-du-bois-marie
@hypatia-du-bois-marie Жыл бұрын
@@BMBrooks09 also defamation maybe? don't like calling people criminals whenever one wants to lol
@Darquine
@Darquine Жыл бұрын
Elder Scrolls 4; Oblivion. And the Imperial guard are probably just as corrupt as many real cops.
@penelopegreene
@penelopegreene Жыл бұрын
Oh Noes! (Hoosecow full of guilty puppies...)
@jdprettynails
@jdprettynails Жыл бұрын
One time my partner was violently assaulted and threatened with a knife on the way to work. We called the police who told us to go to where it happened and request the CCTV footage ourselves, then e-mail it to them. I didn’t realise we’d been recruited onto the police force!
@karmica7591
@karmica7591 Жыл бұрын
Just like when I went to the police station to report my ex partner’s stalking me for months, and the officer all cutsey said “yeah, that’s sad, go home and write all the story down and come back”. Didn’t know I had to be the one to do all the work with the report. 🤦🏻‍♀️
@MrSageOlorin
@MrSageOlorin Жыл бұрын
And people complain about self-checkout kiosks...
@Kas_Styles
@Kas_Styles Жыл бұрын
​@karmica7591 I'm really glad I'm in cybersecurity so I know how to find, research, collect and analyze information and I know human psychology so I can be very persuasive when want/need to be. Its sad that cops themselves won't do it.
@ezachleewright2309
@ezachleewright2309 Жыл бұрын
Depending on where you live, that is definitely tax dollars going to waste due to piggy laziness
@PokeShadow77
@PokeShadow77 Жыл бұрын
@@Kas_Styles would you mind sharing how your day-to-day work in cybersecurity + human psychology plays into those skills?
@carlosmiguelteixeiraott3643
@carlosmiguelteixeiraott3643 Жыл бұрын
“The law, in its majestic equality, forbids rich and poor alike to sleep under bridges, to beg in the streets, and to steal their bread.” ― Anatole France
@maluse227
@maluse227 Жыл бұрын
God that is such a good quote.
@vodkaboy
@vodkaboy Жыл бұрын
What a guy Anatole was :)
@LeeDanielCrocker
@LeeDanielCrocker Жыл бұрын
"Punishable by fine" = "Legal for rich people".
@Odinarcade00
@Odinarcade00 Жыл бұрын
Well they didn’t know about America apparently
@Lucarioguild7
@Lucarioguild7 Жыл бұрын
Damn that quote slaps
@acerock013
@acerock013 Жыл бұрын
as a career Public Defender in the US, i can say that the only crimes about 90% of my clients have committed is being poor and lacking access to services like health care and housing.
@pnutqpublic
@pnutqpublic Жыл бұрын
public defenders.... along with protesters the real modern american heroes. thank you for your service 💚💚💚💚
@thexalon
@thexalon Жыл бұрын
Thank you for doing what I'm quite certain is often thankless and woefully underpaid work.
@acerock013
@acerock013 Жыл бұрын
@@pnutqpublic thanks. i am fortunate to have the career i do.
@nowlun
@nowlun Жыл бұрын
thank you for doing what you do your work is very important
@bruhdabones
@bruhdabones Жыл бұрын
Imagine being convicted of “poverty” by the judge 😢😢😢
@tomtom-uy3ov
@tomtom-uy3ov Жыл бұрын
22:46 its depressing how the physical indicators of "criminal activity" as donnelly puts it are literally 1-to-1 descriptions of symptoms of paranoia and anxiety, characteristic of SO MANY mental disorders. its like they arent even trying to hide the fact that most of the people who the police target are just mentally unwell
@Liam-oh2gb
@Liam-oh2gb 9 ай бұрын
The question raised is also who is mentally unwell? Poor people and people of colour are less likely to receive treatment for mental health conditions, in part because of cultural things (POC are less likely to trust in all kinds of medical institutions because of the way they were treated historically) and because of how poverty is intertwined with race. So its just more of an excuse to target harassment at POC and poor people. It's intersectionality all the way down
@samgould8567
@samgould8567 Жыл бұрын
I stutter, so every interaction I’ve ever had with law enforcement has been completely unfair when I have been alone without my attractive wife. The first time I got a speeding ticket, the fog was so thick that visibility was near zero. A car was passing me but I got pulled over by a cop who radared “me” without actually seeing me. I wasn’t speeding, but my inability to answer basic questions without uncontrollably stuttering was enough to convince the cop that I committed the traffic violation. The trend continued until my trust in all police was completely eroded. Now I won’t speak to them at all under any circumstance.
@yurigagarin9765
@yurigagarin9765 Жыл бұрын
This right here is all the explanation you need to understand why police systematically discriminate against autistic people.
@jedicraftmaster2426
@jedicraftmaster2426 Жыл бұрын
​@@yurigagarin9765lmao bro not all people who stutter are autistic. Also this one case doesnt prove police discriminate against all autistic people. It's TRUE they are likelier to be discriminated against but making statements like this torwards one case only makes our position look worst
@-user_redacted-
@-user_redacted- Жыл бұрын
​@@jedicraftmaster2426that's not at all what they said.
@mithrae4525
@mithrae4525 Жыл бұрын
@@jedicraftmaster2426 He didn't say that people who stutter are autistic, and he didn't say that the anecdote proves anything. It EXPLAINS why that discrimination occurs because - as highlighted from 22:54 in the video - police officers often use their discretion and 'instincts' from sometimes suspicious or sometimes merely atypical social queues (and of course sometimes outright prejudice) to frame their application of the law as they see it.
@sonsauvage
@sonsauvage Жыл бұрын
Did you go to court or did you just take the L on the citation? Just curious how that turned out
@Tweakedish
@Tweakedish Жыл бұрын
"sudden death in restraints syndrome" imagine working in a restaurant and just on the spot saying "nah man, that was wild steak just incinerated itself syndrome" I didn't burn it, very sad, many such cases.
@avz1865
@avz1865 Жыл бұрын
Yeah, it just happens sometime when you leave a steak next to a very hot object such as a a stove or oven. Completely natural phenomenon with no human culpability
@mergele1000
@mergele1000 Жыл бұрын
Still better than the "Sudden death because of to delicious food syndrome" when it is 100% not the hygene violations fault.
@joe-583
@joe-583 Жыл бұрын
@@mergele1000there’s a phenomenon called “sudden death from lack of oxygen while eating food” syndrome, or SDFLOWEFS. It happens all the time, it’s completely unrelated to what people call “choking”
@foremanhaste5464
@foremanhaste5464 Жыл бұрын
Never be shocked by the lengths denial will go to, to explain away the inconvenient truth.
@Voidelle
@Voidelle Жыл бұрын
Not being even ALLOWED to fire/remove unquestionably criminal cops is so insanely terrifying.
@ShapesWithoutColors
@ShapesWithoutColors Жыл бұрын
I mean, that's just taking the word of the top cop.
@tommyhammer-bladejnr.7723
@tommyhammer-bladejnr.7723 Жыл бұрын
I live in Australia. In the last 20 years,law makers in this country have gone into overdrive creating laws on top of laws to show the citizenry they are doing their job and need to be re-elected for us to remain safe. Not even the enforcement officers can keep up at times. Today most law officers are just extensions of the governments revenue raising programs and have not much time or interest in keeping the peace or solving petty crimes that seems to be increasing as people struggle more to feed themselves. If you drive a vehicle in Australia and you live in an area known for mainly employed people living there, you are the governments No.1 targetted demographic for revenue raising. Employed people are more likely to pay traffic fines because they need to keep fines to a minimum to keep their licences and by extension , keep their job. Policing in Australia is mainly about traffic cops making traffic stops, 'KPI's, and governmental personnel's personal security,rather than real policing. I see videos from other countries where people question the officer issuing a ticket. Not in Australia. If you even think about questioning an officer while they are writing you a ticket you will be bombarded with more tickets because in their eyes it's showing disrespect. The craziest thing about policing in Australia is that the public is now extremely docile and obedient because of the amount of laws police have at their fingertips. The power they possess over the citizenry is mind bending. Seeing an officer approach your vehicle because you didn't come to a complete stop at the last 'Stop sign' with a gun, Taser, baton, nasal sprays and whatever else is on their utility belt just shows the arrogance of our government how it views it's No.1 cash cow. The working citizens. Good luck getting police to take an interest in a neighbour who you can identify as stealing your lawn mower to bother going past giving you a form to fill out. You gotta feel some sympathy for the people who join the police force to help society,only to realise they are the uniformed enforcement arm of our governmental tax collection agency.
@aznthy
@aznthy Жыл бұрын
That is why ACAB because they keep the bad ones while the ones who are trying to do good is being overwhelmed by the bad ones so in turn, the majority of cops are bad. So ACAB.
@sarasteege2265
@sarasteege2265 Жыл бұрын
Not just terrifying, but a great way to grow a bunch of corruption. D: The "what do you mean you're not supported?" question was very much a "I would call that the wrong kind of support." It makes you think...what if there was a teammate on my who was known for raping or physically abusing clients and/or other teammates...and then that person could get sacked and then rehired. That seems like a massive, bloody hole in the whole 'let's have a safe and ethical work environment' social contract of a good work situation.
@nctpti2073
@nctpti2073 10 ай бұрын
"Unquestionably" is leading and also curious your definition of criminal
@JWinterhaven
@JWinterhaven Жыл бұрын
Sudden Death in restraints syndrome sounds like "Idk. These people kept dying but since finding out why would require to investigate our behaviour and the situation, and godforbid that, we just think the wind did it and call it a day"
@chloesibilla8199
@chloesibilla8199 11 ай бұрын
It reminds me of the word "hysteria" or that one diagnosis racist slave owners made up that basically aquates to "running away disorder"
@fevre_dream8542
@fevre_dream8542 10 ай бұрын
God, as a healthcare worker that phrase rattled me to my bones. That diagnosis doesn't exist - that person was _murdered_ .
@transsnack
@transsnack 10 ай бұрын
​@@fevre_dream8542 I'm pretty sure anyone with any sort of medical training would raise an eyebrow at that one. I know I certainly did the first time I heard it. My exact reaction was "Wow, that sounds like actual bs."
@Alex-kg6ob
@Alex-kg6ob 8 ай бұрын
The cause of these deaths has been known since the 90’s. It’s called “positional asphyxia” (in the US anyway), and cops used to get training on how to avoid causing it inadvertently. Sometime in the mid 2000’s positional asphyxia disappeared from cop rhetoric, and unexplained in-custody deaths started to be blamed on “excited delirium” (which doesn’t exist) a medical condition which is effectively identical to positional asphyxia, but conveniently absolves cops of all wrongdoing or negligence. Btw, positional asphyxia is the method by which George Floyd was murdered, among several other victims.
@ashleylongley1628
@ashleylongley1628 3 ай бұрын
@@transsnackI feel like most people without medical training could pick up on that lol
@ultimateninjaboi
@ultimateninjaboi Жыл бұрын
The whole talk of "police using 'instinct' to sus out a criminal" talk had me actually in chills, as someone with neurological disorders that cause me to display the same kind of symptoms cited as "things that can help spot a criminal." Like. Yes. Im fully (and unfortunately practically) aware that that kind of ableism happens frequently. But to hear officers proudly speaking of it as a feature, and not a symptom of a problem will never not be chilling to me.
@cloud_appreciation_society
@cloud_appreciation_society Жыл бұрын
It makes me very nervous hearing people insist they're experts at reading body language. Because the cues they list as signs of guilt or deception align with how I act as an autistic person in public. In their eyes, the fundamental way I move through the world with my fidgeting and inconsistent eye contact is an admission of guilt. I think the only reason this hasn't caused problems for me is because I'm white and middle class.
@Usernameneverseen
@Usernameneverseen Жыл бұрын
I'm the exact same and yes, I came to the same conclusion, which is disheartening.
@ladymacbethofmtsensk
@ladymacbethofmtsensk Жыл бұрын
Same here. As an autistic, feminine-presenting AFAB person, I was recently harangued for quite an inordinate amount of time at an airport while on holiday with my partner (very typical white cishet man), who was not questioned at all going through border control. I told my mum about the experience and she reckons I got profiled as a trafficking victim/prostitute 😬 I’m university-educated. I’m getting a master’s degree. I just have the misfortune of not being white and being very nervous around people, especially when it’s things like travel and border control. I was genuinely worried I’d be deported.
@thaddeushamlet
@thaddeushamlet Жыл бұрын
I'm so incredibly nervous around authority figures even if I have "no reason" to be. I'm a white masc presenting guy and I still side eye/try not to stare or look suspicious at every cop or security guard I come across. (Also probably somewhere on the ND spectrum but unconfirmed)
@Blairington
@Blairington Жыл бұрын
As someone who's both on the fringes of autistic, and who's studied books on body language, any responsible person who studies this stuff should also be acutely aware of the grey area involved and not make definitive judgements.
@sarahnelson8836
@sarahnelson8836 Жыл бұрын
I once had to body block a cop who was responding to someone calling the cops on my autistic friend having a panic attack…. I’m female, white and tiny - he is tall and mixed race. We are both neurodivergent. It took HOURS to explain and even then the officer had to do something so he drove us to the schools therapy center (my friends personal therapist was already on the way, in part because the last time this had happened he had been tazed and forcibly institutionalized) My intervention made that particular day a Best Case Scenario. And still the trauma from that day and being reminded of it when we were together would eventually drive a wedge between our friendship. You know something needs to change when the best case is still bad. Defunding isn’t the answer we need a full fire, rehire (with community input and interviews) AND community integration for officers where they have positive interactions with the people in the area they protect. That has been shown to reduce crime, reduce police brutality and increase job satisfaction. It’s literally a win win win, but it takes more work than people want to do….
@scottfield5082
@scottfield5082 Жыл бұрын
I’ve known and worked with a lot of cops, mostly in the US. A lot of them were decent enough as individuals. But nearly all of them expressed opinions similar to Donnely: cops are the good guys, therefore whatever we do is good, therefore anyone who criticizes what is do is a bad guy, QED. They also vastly overestimate their ability to spot a criminal, know when someone's lying, etc. And once they've made up their mind about something, they REALLY don't like to admit they might've been wrong because if they're fallible that calls the whole system into question...
@seattlesoundisgrunge
@seattlesoundisgrunge Жыл бұрын
I've also known cops and trained martial arts/MMA/BJJ with them. Every single one of them has a, "don't care, whatever it takes, I'm going to be the one who makes it home to my family" attitude, as a background with how they carry themselves daily on the job. They will be decent friends, family, training partners, etc. in person. But once they are on the job, they will kill you immediately for flinching the wrong way, just so they're the ones who make it home safe. IIIIITCHY trigger fingers just waiting for a chance to fire at somebody acting even a little sus according to their paranoid delusions.
@cadthunkin
@cadthunkin Жыл бұрын
@@seattlesoundisgrunge ok, not my experience. They do have a particular attitude and seem to like their place in the pecking order. Most are level headed though.
@seattlesoundisgrunge
@seattlesoundisgrunge Жыл бұрын
@@cadthunkin I'm also originally from Oklahoma btw. So that's my sample; martial artist cops from a deeply conservative state.
@ThatOpalGuy
@ThatOpalGuy Жыл бұрын
Never shed a tear...
@seattlesoundisgrunge
@seattlesoundisgrunge Жыл бұрын
@@gotmilkbutt ?
@jennifermunro4374
@jennifermunro4374 Жыл бұрын
19:12 "One time during a protest I was thrown to the ground by a policeman wearing a rainbow Pride pin. I paused midair to appreciate the irony" Absolute Legend Lass right here.
@AlexMint
@AlexMint Жыл бұрын
This one time, a police officer hit me on my bicycle, crumpling the wheel, and he claimed that I violated the law by 'running a red light' when my state has a right on red law, and he was the one who pushed me into the intersection. Also called me a bunch of slurs and sexually assaulted me. Naturally the police investigated themselves and found no wrongdoing.
@mariaathena7910
@mariaathena7910 Жыл бұрын
I'm so sorry about this!
@bigwijdsljla
@bigwijdsljla Жыл бұрын
This just kept getting worse and worse I’m so sorry
@fuzzycounsellor9147
@fuzzycounsellor9147 Жыл бұрын
How dare you be in the right when a cop is wrong, 30 days in the hole for you. The cop was embarrassed because of his boner, so he blamed you rather than admit he was in the wrong. Yep happens all the time, this is what the power of the badge does to some people. If he happened to be wearing a camera or the vehicle he was driving had one you could've subpoenaed the footage to prove he was the bone head, but the time & effort might not be worth it. Hope everything is alright now & ya got your wheel fix. Keep an eye out for the police as Bob Seger is known to advise. Very believable story.
@systemicsystems703
@systemicsystems703 9 ай бұрын
That was an excuse for them to detain me and then run my identity through corrosion by force. (Command). In the U.S. it's illegal for police to stop and detain you if there is no crime? They make one up!👹
@sookmedic1959
@sookmedic1959 4 ай бұрын
Same thing! But the cop just turned on his lights and left like he was on a emergency! It was insane, if I wasn't a 13yr old id have gotten his plate and seen it through but I figured noone would believe me
@cinemaocd1752
@cinemaocd1752 Жыл бұрын
Would just love to see how Abigail writes her tax deductions. "The latex bikini and the black demon wings are necessary business expenses..."
@fandomcringebucket
@fandomcringebucket Жыл бұрын
I'm actually pretty sure the demon wings are leftover from the Lucifer costume in her first Jordan Peterson video!
@artyb27
@artyb27 Жыл бұрын
​@@maksymbykov**she** is a real trans woman. But if you actually watched the video, you'd know that, so I guess we have to assume you're just being a troll.
@YeetTheMeat
@YeetTheMeat Жыл бұрын
​@maksymbykov I'd recommend not calling anyone an "it" as that's rude. Trans or cis,doesn't matter.
@fandomcringebucket
@fandomcringebucket Жыл бұрын
​@@maksymbykov *She* is a woman, who is also trans. And yes, please don't call anybody (but especially trans people) "it", if you don't know someone's pronouns, just call them. Well, _they._
@robodog3571
@robodog3571 Жыл бұрын
you don't have to write tax deductions you just deduct them
@DouglasZwick
@DouglasZwick Жыл бұрын
I really love how consistently Abigail sticks with the dictionary joke.
@OscarHazeGaming
@OscarHazeGaming Жыл бұрын
Caught me off guard there, bc this time it was the only one and towards the end of the video.
@bug688
@bug688 Жыл бұрын
It’s a requirement for every video to include atleast one dictionary joke
@BuildersOfBlocks
@BuildersOfBlocks Жыл бұрын
​@@OscarHazeGamingthere were two dictionary jokes, one right at the start about the definition of law, and one at the end about the definition of lesbianism
@alexsch2514
@alexsch2514 Жыл бұрын
I hate it bc it's a bad joke. Love her vids in general. Just that one bit is always icky
@ThewOrldIssqUare
@ThewOrldIssqUare Жыл бұрын
Gotta love a running gag
@dayl0vebunny
@dayl0vebunny 11 ай бұрын
At 40:30 I just wanna say something. I was a teenager (still exploring my gender identity and sexuality) walking home from school, when I was stopped by a cop for and I quote "Looking like a wh*re". I was 15. I was wearing a pair of jeans, a scoop necked tee, and my walking sneakers. I had on my school bag with cute stickers and anime characters. He asked me to unzip my bag and empty the contents to prove there were no drugs. He called back-up and they cornered me about 50-ft from my parents' home. I told them repeatedly I was a minor, and that I knew they couldn't ask me questions without my legal guardian present, and they proceeded with threatening me with arrest. I showed them my school ID which had all my identifying info (my birthdate, full name, grade level, and SS#). After they asked me, what felt like, 40,000 questions about my personhood and where I was going, and why I was on the street so late in the evening (it was 7 PM and I had stayed afterschool for extracurricular activities), I was allowed to leave. They snickered behind me, high-fived, and stared after me. The officer who had performed the original stop had gotten my phone number after demanding it out of me under threat of arrest. I never got a call from anyone, but my parents' also continued to let me walk home. I saw that officer almost everyday on my way home. He cat-called me a few dozen times. You may be asking what about me made him stop me. May it have been my shirt being too low, my jeans too tight, the way I walked maybe... no. He stopped me because I had massive breasts for my age. After filing a report, demanding to see his report of the incident, and requesting bodycam footage, I now know that he thought I was a college girl. He wanted my number so he could call me for a "hook-up". I saw his wedding band that day. He didn't care I was a minor. He didn't care about what I had to say. He chose to stop me on the side of the road. Not because he was following the law, but because he felt he should. His report claimed that I was waving my hands and jumping up and down to shake my breasts and distract traffic. I was walking home, head down, listening to music on my phone.
@mariahmier9313
@mariahmier9313 10 ай бұрын
It’s disgusting you had to go through that and have your time wasted by that jerk. Your experience is unfortunately all too relatable-just about all of my female friends and I agree that we got way more unwanted male attention and advances at age 15 than at 25. Insecure men like that often assume teens are completely naive and will worship the ground he walks on for some reason. It’s good to hear that you knew better and knew your right to have guardians present (though it sounds like he searched you without a warrant and probably wrote that you “volunteered” to because a lot of people don’t realize they can say no and demand to see a search warrant even if the cop is being coercive)
@Mrsmagic707
@Mrsmagic707 10 ай бұрын
I'm so sorry you had to go through that loves :( 💗💗
@StonyCephalopod
@StonyCephalopod 9 ай бұрын
Absolutely fucking sick pervs, so sorry u had to go through that at such a young age.
@Oblivion9996
@Oblivion9996 9 ай бұрын
That is deplorable and disgusting, I hope you don't have to deal with anything like that again
@Raven.flight
@Raven.flight 9 ай бұрын
Which is why ACAB is a thing. I don’t doubt that there are members of the police force who genuinely want to “serve and protect”, but whilst ever they are tacitly supporting the few (90% of the force, it seems) “bad apples”, they are a part of the problem.
@lydiamac1771
@lydiamac1771 Жыл бұрын
UK resident. Somebody broke into the water supply of a nearby apartment and poured turpentine into it, poisoning the water for the whole building. The police were called. They said there were no cameras so the crime would be too hard to solve and they dropped the case. Hundreds of elderly residents couldn't use the water for a week. That was my last straw with the police
@darrens3
@darrens3 Жыл бұрын
They told someone I know to get a camera as there was no evidence of a crime that happened in the same manner as you, so they couldn't do anything. So they got a camera, the crime happened again but this time it was committed by relatives of the first criminals, but this time they had it on film full front on face shots, they refused to do anything about it. They wrote an email complaining that they had essentially bought a costly camera and that they now complied with what they had asked and why weren't they doing anything about it. So they got no reply. 🙃 It feels like the country is a ship listing at sea piloted by a deceased or absentee captain and everyone on board is dying of scurvy whilst M ogg throws the last pallette of lemons overboard because nanny and his son Rectangle are offended by the colour yellow or some bs. Deeply insane nation.
@Big-Timbo
@Big-Timbo Жыл бұрын
not sure what's more sickening, the person who could do something like that or the police for ignoring it
@edwardlomeli5657
@edwardlomeli5657 Жыл бұрын
US resident here. About 10 years ago I had a customer steal my phone at work. We had video proof of them stealing it, their name and credit card info, license plates and a picture of the phone being located at their house Police refused to use any of the information given to them and dropped the case. About 8 years later same thing happened with somebody hitting my car with their door HARD numerous times. Nothing happened again despite the video evidence and the lady even admitting it.
@BruceNJeffAreMyFlies
@BruceNJeffAreMyFlies Жыл бұрын
Ok but what could they possibly do?
@edwardlomeli5657
@edwardlomeli5657 Жыл бұрын
@@BruceNJeffAreMyFlies charge them for a felony since the phone was over $500. Or just made them give me my phone back which is all I wanted. As for the car they could have made them pay for the damage to my car. Was slightly dented and had a lot of pain come off.
@cassiemedina4026
@cassiemedina4026 Жыл бұрын
Honestly? I feel like putting the "Offensive-to-KZbin" parts of this video in text, with little to no sound effects, makes the impact of what you're learning SO much more impactful - I got goosebumps several times. Amazing job as always!
@christianwise637
@christianwise637 Жыл бұрын
The progressively louder thunder sound effects especially sent literal shivers up my spine
@left4twenty
@left4twenty Жыл бұрын
It does add something like an insinuation that the things being discussed are "unspeakable" Which is poignant, for certain
@amazinggrapes3045
@amazinggrapes3045 14 күн бұрын
It really draws attention to and points out the things that are considered "unmentionable"
@MCArt25
@MCArt25 Жыл бұрын
I remember the incident of a British undercover cop who married a suspect and fathered two children with her. At that time, he was married and had children with his legal wife. IIRC he got promoted for his commendable efforts in maintaining his cover. The suspect's crime: Animal rights activism.
@satellitebreakfast
@satellitebreakfast Жыл бұрын
Do you have a name or source? Id love to read more about this, sounds wild
@elowin1691
@elowin1691 Жыл бұрын
Gotta second that request, gimme them deets please
@andydyer6591
@andydyer6591 Жыл бұрын
There's a Wikipedia page on it titled 'UK undercover policing relationships scandal' (not sure if links will get my comment removed). It came to light in 2010 and focused on an officer named Mark Kennedy, though he wasn't the only one and this was apparently a pattern. I remember it was a very high-profile news item in the early 10s, and there still hasn't been any meaningful reform.
@AW-uv3cb
@AW-uv3cb Жыл бұрын
I remember reading about that on BBC and Guardian, it was shocking.
@eicha41624
@eicha41624 Жыл бұрын
Just read up on this, what the fuuuuck
@jdlech
@jdlech Жыл бұрын
"stop and search" was common practice in New York City, though we called it "stop and frisk". But it was essentially the same thing. But here's the problem. It wasn't actually done in the whole city. It was practiced in certain boroughs, and not others. And those certain boroughs were traditionally inhabited by black people. So while a guy working in Queens, making $40K/year might get stopped and searched for no reason at all, a guy working on Wall Street would never be searched. Mayor Rudy Giuliani (you might have heard the name more recently) decided where these searches took place, and they were always in poor, primarily minority neighborhoods. The practice finally ended. Not because of any spark of enlightenment, mind you. But because a judge ordered the city to stop and frisk *everywhere* . Rudy decided to end the practice entirely rather than have to stop and frisk rich white kids on their way to school, or rich guys working Wall Street. That's how we found out the practice was entirely just another way to kick minorities in the teeth. And for no other reason than pure spite and malice.
@davechongle
@davechongle 10 ай бұрын
anti drug laws period were created to attack groups of people the president didnt like (hippies, commies, and black people). it succeeded, now America has the most prisoners on the planet, and the vast majority of them were imprisoned for low level, nonviolent drug crimes.
@AzureRadio
@AzureRadio 3 ай бұрын
No matter how you look at it that is a violation of the 4th, I'm surprised there weren't constantly Supreme Court cases regarding it. Although if it only affected marginalized people's that makes a little more sense, but still....
@kinglewis6553
@kinglewis6553 Ай бұрын
Well, considering the 92 police riot that got him into office, it's no surprise
@davidshi451
@davidshi451 Жыл бұрын
If you live in America, I highly recommend reading "You Have the Right to Remain Innocent" by James Duane, as well as his talk "Don't talk to the Police". He outlines the nearly infinite ways that the police can convict innocent people of crimes they didn't commit. Thankfully, his advice is pretty simple: Don't talk to the police, and clearly DEMAND a lawyer.
@aceous99
@aceous99 Жыл бұрын
the police, the tools of oppression of the government (which most countries hate their own for various reasons) poor poor policemen.
@Kurgosh1
@Kurgosh1 Жыл бұрын
You're assuming they let you get as far as lawyer and trial. As we've seen over and over again, the police can "investigate," convict, pass judgment and inform your next of kin for anything from smoking a cigarette to having a broken tail light to lying prone with your hands above your head as ordered, begging not to be shot.
@justinwatson1510
@justinwatson1510 Жыл бұрын
Our Enemies in Blue is another great read for anyone who wants to get angry and depressed.
@MadameCorgi
@MadameCorgi Жыл бұрын
@@Kurgosh1 they're not talking about trial, but the pre-trial 'investigation' phase
@Iudicatio
@Iudicatio Жыл бұрын
​@@Kurgosh1Well you are right since a lot of innocent people get pressured into taking plea deals. Because they get convinced that losing a trial is inevitable and the jail time on that will be way more.
@maol2038
@maol2038 Жыл бұрын
I appreciate the use of the uncensored words being onscreen, rather than saying things like "unaliving." It's a bit harder to listen to, but well worth it, as it gives the words the impact that they should have.
@vylbird8014
@vylbird8014 Жыл бұрын
It's also necessary censorship: The ways of youtube's algorithm are intentionally mysterious, but it is known to process the auto-generated subtitles to identify video subjects that might not be advertiser-friendly and reduce their presence in recommendations.
@TheDSasterX
@TheDSasterX Жыл бұрын
@@vylbird8014 Necessary censorship or a vague law designed to empower it's wielders!? o_O
@EloquentTroll
@EloquentTroll Жыл бұрын
tell the cops nothing, tell the paramedics everything, your eyebrows are fine -the three eternal truths
@TheNormExperience
@TheNormExperience Жыл бұрын
It seems my eyebrows defy eternity then
@luqmangabarti
@luqmangabarti Жыл бұрын
*Medical Professionals
@LeafyK
@LeafyK Жыл бұрын
Agreed
@aclaymushroomwithaberet7084
@aclaymushroomwithaberet7084 Жыл бұрын
my eyebrows defy the truth
@stevenorrington473
@stevenorrington473 Жыл бұрын
Many people get it wrong, telling the medics they "only had 1 "beer"", the police that they had 3, and then shave their eyebrows.
@chloesibilla8199
@chloesibilla8199 Жыл бұрын
When I was little my brother and I got lost in a giant subburb of exactly identical houses and couldn't find my way back, we found this nice Mexican lady who let us use her phone to call the police. This guy was the biggest chode I've seen in a while. My brother is autistic and I was literally 12, suffer from anxiety and panic disorder and at that moment panicked to tears . He repremanded us for not showing proper respect to a police officer by standing ram rod straight and calling him sir and not boring him with my panicked rambling. I was a kid who didn't know that this wasn't a normal way for an adult to act and legitimately worried would leave if I didn't comply. He made me feel actually embarrassed that I wasn't standing at attention like 'oh I had no idea I was supposed to be doing that, I hope he doesn't get mad' .He made my brother get of his scooter and stand at attention next to me. He got us in the car and immediately threatened that I couldn't point the way home within five minutes he was going to jump drop us off at Foster care because he had better things to do, yes he said that. Of course I was a hysterical 12 year old completely broken down and sobbing in the back of a cop car. Luckily I spotted a cactus that looked familiar and was doubly lucky that my hunch was right and that that was the way home. My brother and I would've been orphans because we pissed off a pig before his lunch break. 🐖 🍩 😈
@ThrottleKitty
@ThrottleKitty Жыл бұрын
I always laugh when people respond to anti-police sentiments with some variation of "bet you'll change your tune when someone does a crime against you", when everyone I know who is anti-police is so explicitly because they've repeatedly watch crimes against them swept under the rug while the cops instead spend their time beating up black teenagers and peaceful protestors. When I was a kid I watched my mother call the police on my father who was threatening her and his own life, and the cop threatened to arrest my mom if she ever called the cops over domestic abusive situation again, threatened to arrest me for physically standing up to my father, then left.
@timdunn0
@timdunn0 Жыл бұрын
Yep. It's almost always the folks who boast they've "never had dealings with the police" who have the most positive opinion of them. People who've actually been victims of crime, especially sexual assaults and domestic abuse, tend to have a more realistic view of the policing system and the people working within it.
@jackriver8385
@jackriver8385 Жыл бұрын
Yep. Over and over again, the police have shown me that they will not offer help when I need it, and they'll make my life more difficult if they're involved in it in any way.
@exosproudmamabear558
@exosproudmamabear558 Жыл бұрын
What you want is not anti police tho. You just want them to do the job they supposed to do. Which is actually pro police which means police should get better education,screening and disipline along with proper wages. In short we dont need this kind of police does not mean we dont need police. This is a systemical problem. The framework is not the problem(which is polices existence) but the inside the framework is a problem wheter it is caused by corruption, nepotism in law making part,low education low dicipline lack of psychopatic screening,no consequences for crimes among police,low wages etc.
@jackriver8385
@jackriver8385 Жыл бұрын
@@exosproudmamabear558 nah. The main takeaway here is that the police simply are not there to help us. No amount of funding changes that.
@wamyc
@wamyc Жыл бұрын
​@@exosproudmamabear558we don't need police. They are fundamentally evil. We don't need evil. We need another way.
@JollyFuchsia
@JollyFuchsia Жыл бұрын
I remember realising how vague police powers are when I was filming a documentary at a protest and I was stopped and searched for "suspicious photography of buildings or infrastructure". I believe this was intended to be about photographing infrastructure re planning bomb attacks (?). So, you can see how that phrasing and police power is basically completely open to them claiming any video or photographic activity is "suspicious". Of course, there was no doubt the cop was just playing with power as they followed me around, stepped on my foot, shoulder barged me multiple times and would then apologise. I think the tactic was to get me to respond with a push so they could arrest me for assaulting an officer and then using my footage. Thankfully, I kept a cool head. When they searched me and my assistant I said I wanted to film them searching her and and reached for my camera bag. He yelled "he could have a weapon!" and they all drew their weapons on us. I was very afraid. After the search (they found nothing of legal note) was when they were following us and tripping us etc etc. After the anxiety wore off my assistant and I went to get an ice-cream and giggled as we lapped up our ice creams and waved at the two cars and 6 cops they had following us. Anyway, words like "suspicious" included in laws just opens up SO much opportunity for abuse of power. Who says what behaviour is suspicious? How do you take a photo in urban areas without including infrastructure or a building? Anyway. That's one of my experiences with imprecise wording of rules and cops being real smart about trying to use what would be considered regular behaviour (yelling at or pushing someone that is following you and stepping on you and shoulder bashing you and your friend) in order to get their way. Could very easily have stopped a film being made. 37:21 TL;DR some cops used laws intended to stop terrorism to bully me and my friend.
@CarmenRare
@CarmenRare Жыл бұрын
This shit terrifies me cuz I don’t exactly know if this is connected to any of my conditions but my stepdad does the same stuff where he will explicitly make fun of me and shit like that to get me to get mad enough to push him or something so he can tackle me and I know I wouldn’t be able to stop myself from trying to stop a cop from doing something blatantly unjust especially since I am autistic and will absolutely fight back and try to get out of being tackled or held down and probably get myself killed
@squashfei8907
@squashfei8907 Жыл бұрын
Did you end up making the documentary and if so where can I find it?
@zchularoceribfjan
@zchularoceribfjan 4 ай бұрын
Yes, where can we see it? ​@@squashfei8907
@malicekitten2690
@malicekitten2690 Жыл бұрын
Gotta love what Donnelly says about reading people. I have been arrested and stopped by police because of this. What did I do? Nothing. I'm autistic, have ADHD and Anxiety. I wasn't medicated at the time due to my meds being out of stock. Apparently my being anxious, not making eye contact and looking up tight made me a criminal and shifty.
@IfWiccanYouCan
@IfWiccanYouCan Жыл бұрын
As a fellow ND I hope to take down one less problem for us, I plan on being a criminal psychologist. So if I run across a fellow ND it won’t be so harsh on them. ✌️ Note: criminal psychologist do the interrogation, police usually just watch.
@numbersix8919
@numbersix8919 Жыл бұрын
@@IfWiccanYouCan We need a reformed system, not another diverse enforcer. You think you'll be free inside that system. Uh-uh, you'll be victim #1.
@themedia1271
@themedia1271 Жыл бұрын
My dad is a paramedic and if he sees that a patient is having a breakdown and is about to be arrested by police (which will only make their breakdown worse) he will start IVs on them and make it so that the patient has to be taken to a hospital instead of jail.
@Beaverthing
@Beaverthing Жыл бұрын
In 2014 in Copenhagen, a woman called the police because she was on a train with a middle eastern man, who was carrying a large suitcase and looked encredibly nervous. He was even reading a book called "War On Terror". The police closed down the whole train network, large parts of the inner city, and started a manhunt that ended up taking several hours. The airport was even closed down at some point. It turned out to be a student af The University of Copenhagen who was on his way to a sit-in exam where he had to bring his own printer, which was in the suitcase.
@ChibiGeeBee
@ChibiGeeBee Жыл бұрын
This happened to me. When the cops pulled me over, I had a breakdown from anxiety. I was mocked and brought in for questioning, Later, I was told that I shouldn't have 'acted suspiciously'. Fuck the police. ACAB.
@de.cadence
@de.cadence Жыл бұрын
Honestly, Trixie is probably my fave persona/character. I'm sure that says something about me as a person, and I refuse to examine further at the present time.
@M_M_ODonnell
@M_M_ODonnell Жыл бұрын
I've gotten some funny looks (for a start) from people when I describe police activity (and the ideology of those defending it) as treating "criminals" as a fundamental type of person who laws are designed to give police (and the legal system) reason to punish instead of just anyone who commits a crime. But there's Iain Donnelly, coming right out and saying it as if it were a defense of police violence against marginalized groups. "Sure, they weren't doing anything that's officially illegal, but I could tell that they were Criminals, so I did my job by stopping them" is dystopian, but it's been the norm in policing as long as police have been a thing.
@maxsalmon4980
@maxsalmon4980 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for articulating brilliantly the vague and nonverbal uneasiness reading and hearing his words gave me. Couldn't quite parse it out, but yeah. That's it exactly.
@moresnqp
@moresnqp Жыл бұрын
the same goes for incarcerated people i occasionally watch shorts from an excon guy who is like the ideal model citizen, and talks about the socio-economic forces that lead people to crime. and yet of course in his comments so many people repeat "don't commit crimes then"
@BlindErephon
@BlindErephon Жыл бұрын
It's pretty funny that to Donnelly the ability to succeed at his job 16% of the time is "respectable" while 7% is bad. Imagine how little it would matter where you work if you went from failing to do your job 93% of the time to 84% of the time.
@SusanHiggins
@SusanHiggins Жыл бұрын
Here's police thinking in a nutshell: in the US cops say they are the "thin blue line" between good guys and bad guys. They symbolize this with a flag that shows a black background with a blue line running across it. So on either side of the blue line is black, I assume that symbolizes the "bad guys" cause black = bad, right? But where are the good guys the thin blue line protects? It's not there, because cops think everyone is a potential "perp".
@comradethalia5491
@comradethalia5491 Жыл бұрын
What is even more insane is when cops rip off the mask around people they believe are allies and really start getting into how "criminal" is defined. US cops in particular seem to have an extra affinity for brutalized the homeless, LGBT, and people of color.
@xingcat
@xingcat Жыл бұрын
LegalEagle being held in captivity by a demon lawyer just makes so much sense.
@JackSears95
@JackSears95 Жыл бұрын
He’s gonna need Scowl Owl to argue him out of his contract
@skeetsmcgrew3282
@skeetsmcgrew3282 Жыл бұрын
He has always seemed suspiciously handsome
@tatianar9429
@tatianar9429 Жыл бұрын
@mavand4476 it's a common mistake. Devils are the lawyers and ones who make deals, demons on the other hand are the agents of chaos.
@Nyundaa
@Nyundaa Жыл бұрын
@@tatianar9429 Pretty sure that is just D&D that has that specific distinction between the two. Even wizards of the coast isn't consistent though because their other IP of Magic the Gathering has it the other way around.
@tatianar9429
@tatianar9429 Жыл бұрын
@@Nyundaa that was the joke
@bricky-brikson9487
@bricky-brikson9487 Жыл бұрын
When I was about ten years old, I brought a Swiss Army knife to school out of edginess. It was a mistake I chose to make - but part of why I remember it so clearly is because about a month after the incident a police officer showed up on our doorstep and came into the house to lecture me about bringing weapons to school, all while his hand was resting on his belt decked out with a taser and gun as he stood in our house blocking our front door and with a straight view of our back door. I barely remember what he said. All I remember was nodding silently trying to get him to leave.
@WarrenPeaceOG
@WarrenPeaceOG Жыл бұрын
My best police/cultural studies moment occurred after learning about Althusser and the concept of 'interpellation,' from which I learned the basis of police power is, in the first instance, a matter of recognising myself as the subject of their authority. I was riding my bike on the sidewalk in Toronto. Rotund, breathless cop shouts, "Hey you!" I kept pedalling slowly and thought, 'I don't recognise myself as the subject of this call.' It felt very good. It still feels good. It occurs to me all my best moments in life are victimless crimes
@NicholasMaus
@NicholasMaus Жыл бұрын
"speaking only for myself as an L, not G, maybe B, notorious T" that absolutely made my day.
@arkayder1325
@arkayder1325 3 ай бұрын
She’s a b.l.t 😂
@Strogman25
@Strogman25 19 күн бұрын
Abby's gonna start a music career, and call herself "Notorious BLT". Everyone will be like "Why did she name herself after a sandwich?" But we'll understand.
@Cutie_Amor
@Cutie_Amor Жыл бұрын
I love how legal eagle started off nervous than gradually slipped into his normal as he focused more on the topic than the situation, great acting
@FederalBurroOfInvestigation
@FederalBurroOfInvestigation Жыл бұрын
Here's a story about cops: I reported a threat at a school I went to as well as who made it. The cops, when aware of this threat, never questioned that person besides asking to see their phone. They never checked to see if that person had brought a weapon either. That person then bragged about all of this and that there had been literal evidence on it when the cops looked at it. They were never charged for the threat. Meanwhile, I got arrested for a "false report", which is a felony. These same cops also arrested another student for disorderly conduct for swearing and took him to jail (their words), because that's how most schools would totally handle that. Oh, have I mentioned they also did next to nothing about teachers' kids/sport players pinning down a student and shoving genitals in their face yet? Such wonderful people...
@phileas007
@phileas007 Жыл бұрын
there's a movie trope about "anonymous tips". Now you know why.
@aceous99
@aceous99 Жыл бұрын
students maybe but teachers? wha?
@intboom
@intboom Жыл бұрын
Wow, cops are pathetic. Clearly in your case they were too afraid to engage an actual threat. We need bigger, burlier, cops that aren't willing to get their hands dirty, correct?
@FederalBurroOfInvestigation
@FederalBurroOfInvestigation Жыл бұрын
@@aceous99 I meant teachers' kids, oops.
@Catatonic2789
@Catatonic2789 Жыл бұрын
This comment makes me think of Uvalde
@haikuheroism6495
@haikuheroism6495 Жыл бұрын
I didn't know you were trans! This is great! This is genuinely one of my favorite things that's happened to me a couple times. Where I enjoy the content/media a woman produces and then I learn she's a trans woman like me. It makes me really happy to see.
@abigailbender1435
@abigailbender1435 Жыл бұрын
Every time Abigail says, "If you're very clever, you'll have already...", I'm sitting in suspense waiting to see if I've thought of the thing that will make me clever. And I never have. I am not very clever.
@karmica7591
@karmica7591 Жыл бұрын
You’re not alone buddy. Sometimes I say to myself “it’s all because of the language barrier, I’m sure”, but I know I am lying to myself 🥲
@badger6882
@badger6882 Жыл бұрын
Makes me feel like a good student no matter what I was thinking
@Rebecca-oh5yh
@Rebecca-oh5yh Жыл бұрын
Me neither.
@darla1aeryn1fan
@darla1aeryn1fan Жыл бұрын
Me either. One time, I thought of a completely different thing that I thought was just as good, though! It had to do with "But who decides what trans people's medical rights are and why are they the ones who decide them?" during the Catch 22 video.
@wendyheatherwood
@wendyheatherwood Жыл бұрын
You'll be very clever one day. I believe in you.
@solutanbrun
@solutanbrun Жыл бұрын
As an academically inclined lawyer-by-profession I must say this was one of the best video experiences I’ve had in a long, long time (your video on transhumanism being one other). I often find myself disappointed when someone talks about something I know a bit about and it’s clear that they do not completely comprehend the subject at hand. This time, however, I am absolutely blown away by your understanding and subsequent analysis of a phenomenon I experience in my day-to-day life. I feel as if you have showed me a door in my brain I previously was unaware of, with a whole new set of thoughts to think on the other side. Wonderful work! I am in awe if you and your team - what you do, the content you produce, everything ❤ Thank you!
@ynokenty
@ynokenty Жыл бұрын
I have a question - how do you cope with all this ambiguity on a daily basis?
@solutanbrun
@solutanbrun Жыл бұрын
@@ynokenty I think that is a very good question tbh :) maybe “cope” is not the term I would use however. I’ve worked in fintech for quite some time, so I’ve had ample opportunities to talk to developers and I find that law is very much like coding, but with subjective (human) components. Every area of law has its own code/language - sometimes they look very similar to other ones, sometimes they’re completely different - and each area of law also has different versions of subjective components. Maybe we could also compare it to modern Pokémon games where you always have to keep like a thousand different stats in mind when planning your next moves :) I think I love law because of its complexity, and also because of the constant unexpected outcomes that are partially due to the subjective components. Maybe this was a very weird answer haha
@eyeh8yootoob241
@eyeh8yootoob241 Жыл бұрын
​@@truecatholic1there is a difference between justice, and the law. Morality, and The Law. Plenty of clearly terrible people have done morally reprehensible things, but were never convicted of a crime.
@jogailejurkonyte4746
@jogailejurkonyte4746 Жыл бұрын
Shoving a door open inside the brain is such a creative way to explain it, I love it!
@TorchwoodLinger
@TorchwoodLinger Жыл бұрын
I know it is due to having to censor the video but I find the silence when the names of those who were killed very striking. It emphasises what happened in a impactful way, it almost reminds me of the end of tv cop documentaries where they show the sentences
@RedSpade37
@RedSpade37 Жыл бұрын
I agree, and wanted to say, I thought so, too.
@seattlesoundisgrunge
@seattlesoundisgrunge Жыл бұрын
Juxtapose that with the fact that she's simultaneously wearing a revealing latex...article of clothing...? What will and won't trigger the algorithm police to enact the TOS (the law) is almost ridiculous and variable isn't it?
@eyesofthecervino3366
@eyesofthecervino3366 Жыл бұрын
There's something sobering about someone feeling fine acting basically on vibes to stop and search random strangers, with the threat of violence and the full force of the law behind him, while I feel like I have to worry about being seen as paranoid if I just want to leave someone alone and avoid them because of vibes.
@DeMonSpencer
@DeMonSpencer Жыл бұрын
I live in the United States where police routinely target African Americans. For me it started in high school where my new Audi my parents bought me ended up getting searched in school with drug dogs because they supposedly got a tip that I may have drugs or firearms in my car. I was the only black kid at that school and it was humiliating. Everyone saw my car getting searched by drug dogs. I had the 2nd highest GPA in that school but they still thought I was a drug dealer. The day before this search, a teacher asked me who did the car belong to. I told her it was mine. Then she tells me it looks like a drug dealer's car. I ignored her stupid comments and went about my day. It's not a coincidence that my car got searched the day after her comments. The police called me out of class and treated me like some kind of gang leader. I knew I did nothing wrong but I was absolutely terrified. Here it's very common for racists to use the police to harass black people, and most of the time law enforcement is very happy to play that role. In cases like that, the law is just a tool to enforce a social hierarchy. My humiliation was the price I paid for being a black kid with a car that my white teacher and the white police officers could not afford.
@LDrosophila
@LDrosophila Жыл бұрын
What did they say when nothing was found?
@cheezbiscuit4140
@cheezbiscuit4140 Жыл бұрын
​@@LDrosophila damnit I really wanted to trip balls tonight!
@Montrana
@Montrana Жыл бұрын
What kind of car looks like a "drug dealer's"? what???????
@DeMonSpencer
@DeMonSpencer Жыл бұрын
@@Montrana Any foreign car driven by someone black I guess. That was probably her criteria.
@DeMonSpencer
@DeMonSpencer Жыл бұрын
@LDrosophila I had to wait in the principal's office while they searched my car in the parking lot. When they were done they brought my keys back and told me to go back to class. They didn't apologize and didn't tell me the results of the search. When I got to my car to go home I couldn't believe the condition they left it in. They had all of my glove compartment contents on the floor. There were dirty dog paw prints on my seats and on the outside of the front doors. I had a bag of snacks sitting in the back of my car and they emptied the bag and left the contents scattered on the floor and in the back seat. I was so scared when I was sitting in the office waiting for the search to be over, but when I saw what they did to my car I was angry. My parents were beyond angry when I got home and told them what happened. . They were livid. They wanted to take legal action against the school and the police but I begged them not to. I just wanted to forget it ever happened. They didn't take legal action but they did get the principal to resign. He called me to his office the day after the search and apologized to me. I listened to what he had to say, then got up and left without saying a word. His apology didn't feel genuine to me. It felt like he was trying to save his job.
@naldormight6420
@naldormight6420 Жыл бұрын
Even here in Switzerland. Recently police officers have been recorded allegedly using excessive force. How does our police lobby react to such criticism, scrutiny and new form if accountability? - They suggest making the recording of officers in the public illegal. - In bloody sane. 😑
@darrens3
@darrens3 Жыл бұрын
Oh here in the U K they record it and just do the crime anyway. They'll just record themselves doing the crime as they think they're beyond the law.
@arthurreitz9540
@arthurreitz9540 Жыл бұрын
Same in France
@kaisarina
@kaisarina Жыл бұрын
In Germany it just so happens that all cameras suddenly got shut off at the same time without any explanation how that happened...
@bdd7881
@bdd7881 Жыл бұрын
They actually did that in Arizona, USA. Gotta love the "freedom" we have.
@soderlove42
@soderlove42 Жыл бұрын
They already did that in France for the good reason that cameras are the only thing holding cops accountable nowadays. Even then, they have their ways and the government bends over to satisfy their smallest desires, but without the person who recorded it Nahel's murder would have been yet another statistic unspoken of outside of Nanterre.
@ReneeAnnette
@ReneeAnnette Жыл бұрын
Those Donnelly quotes are just chilling. They remind me a lot of David Grossman's "warrior cop" ideology and mindset that been spread throughout US police departments. So much "criminals" vs "regular people," and the whole "we just don't get support" vibes. Ugh.
@sourgreendolly7685
@sourgreendolly7685 Жыл бұрын
See also- the idea that "regular people" are sheep that need protection from the wolves ("criminals") by the sheepdogs ("cops") I've heard that one a fair amount here in the US too.
@Kfroguar
@Kfroguar Жыл бұрын
"criminal" really needs to be de-nouned
@mattsgrungy
@mattsgrungy Жыл бұрын
Fun Fact: a drug dealer I knew voted Conservative because their cuts made his job easier.
@JSowder21
@JSowder21 Жыл бұрын
Vote for your interests to the max
@justsomeoneelse5942
@justsomeoneelse5942 Жыл бұрын
I mean, he’s doing what leftists say they want ppl to do: vote for their interests
@bengoacher4455
@bengoacher4455 Жыл бұрын
If he voted labour then they would give his customers more of my money, so he could raise his prices and make more money. Clearly as a drug dealer he wasn't that smart
@girlboss12345
@girlboss12345 11 ай бұрын
where did he find a conservative to vote for (or really, anyone to vote for) that wasn't "tough on crime"/pro police budget expansion. hard to find someone from either party that is willing to take that stance
@defeatstatistics7413
@defeatstatistics7413 11 ай бұрын
​@girlboss12345 in the UK, the Tories are much more ideological about economics. As in, if the state pays for it, cut it to within an inch of its life. Includes cops, fire brigades, healthcare, schools, waste disposal, everything. Our conservatives cut the police budget massively, meaning that dealer is waaaay less likely to get caught.
@moo3060
@moo3060 Жыл бұрын
With regards to stop and search, I'm autistic, and am terrified of the whole idea that "criminals act different than law abiding citizens." I'm so scared that one day I will be stopped in the street, searched and even arrested because I am stimming and often look like I'm high because of this. Very scary
@TreesPlease42
@TreesPlease42 Жыл бұрын
I've dealt with this some. Movement without purpose is threatening to their fearful paranoia.
@Thesaurcery4U2C
@Thesaurcery4U2C Жыл бұрын
Move to a consertive state. Stop and search, or "perry stops" are unconstitutional, and not done by LEO's (cops)
@azul4916
@azul4916 Жыл бұрын
That's exactly what I thought when watching that part! Everything the guy describes is a sign of neurodivergency, like avoiding eye contact and being anxious.
@chloesibilla8199
@chloesibilla8199 11 ай бұрын
I have a problem where when I'm anxious i pick at my arms. It leaves them covered in little ted spots. I'm terrified someday a cop will see me pull of my sleeve and stay futzing with my skin and see those spots and think I'm a tweaker .
@Hm-qd9lo
@Hm-qd9lo 11 ай бұрын
I'm autistic and when I'm nervous I completely avoid eye contact and even rub my hands like crazy over each other. I'm afraid if I were to ever be stopped for anything, that that would be seen as suspicious behavior, because it kind of already is considered that. I think I'm usually good at masking in public, as in I just pay overt attention to how I walk, stand, use my hands, use my eyes, talk, and what have you, to make sure I appear as "normal" as possible, but sometimes I just can't help it and start stimming because of my anxiety.
@Totoofwarful
@Totoofwarful Жыл бұрын
“Laws! We know what they are, and what they are worth! Spider webs for the rich and powerful, steel chains for the weak and poor, fishing nets in the hands of the government.” ― Pierre-Joseph Proudhon
@twenty-fifth420
@twenty-fifth420 Жыл бұрын
Proudhon was not perfect as a mutualist, but damn is he the most quotable anarchist and socialist when he hits it out of the park.
@catlap44
@catlap44 Жыл бұрын
Reminds me of this one by Anatole France : “The law, in its majestic equality, forbids the rich as well as the poor to sleep under bridges, to beg in the streets, and to steal bread.”
@marcomoreno6748
@marcomoreno6748 Жыл бұрын
​@@catlap44That one slaps harder than rent increase on a Tuesday.
@publicutility
@publicutility Жыл бұрын
Power abused by the powerful against the powerless.
@robertshelton3796
@robertshelton3796 Жыл бұрын
Pierre-Joseph Proudhon; 15 January 1809, Besançon - 19 January 1865, Paris) is considered by many to be the "father of anarchism" If you want anarchy so bad go to Haiti, it's working out great there. I like my law enforcement heavily armed and well supported
@TimelessTomfoolery
@TimelessTomfoolery Жыл бұрын
“Often, there are no consequences for breaking the law” - traffic laws are a good example of this, especially in the US. People mostly follow traffic laws in consideration of other drivers; the legal system doesn't usually get involved. Sometimes, it is expected that certain laws will be broken (like the speed limit on the interstate). However, when witnessed by police, whether or not traffic laws are enforced is just a matter of vibes and whatever mood the cops are in (ie, how boring or otherwise their day has been). This is particularly relevant in the US, which is incredibly car-centric, and where people's access to cars and driving often affects their ability to work, access groceries, etc.
@BigFrankieC
@BigFrankieC Жыл бұрын
Oh holy smokes, this is my first viewing of your channel. You are amazing! This was super informative, and extremely entertaining. I'm a giant hulking cis-(mostly)het white guy who has spent most of my adult life working as a bouncer/doorman/cooler. A lot of my gigs were at LGBT-oriented venues. Bigots and cops always assume I'm one of them, which allows me to better protect my customers and friends from them. Especially since in my city, there are several cops that used to be notorious white supremacist gang members.
@owleyes9739
@owleyes9739 Жыл бұрын
I still remember the day my professor explained that what gives governments and rulers their power is a “monopoly on violence.” Murder is bad but the government can dole out the death penalty. Slavery is illegal, except technically imprisonment is a form of slavery. Governments choose who their people go to war with. What gives them their power is their ability to choose what violence is allowed and what isn’t.
@itchylol742
@itchylol742 Жыл бұрын
Govnernments don't have a monopoly on violence, they just have a majority market share. There is no barrier to entry on the violence market except the high likelyhood of dying
@shannonjaensch3705
@shannonjaensch3705 Жыл бұрын
Well said. Sadly anyone that supports such systems as Government by way of voting, paying taxes, use of Government systems are equally immoral as those in the Government that they support who enact those immoral acts upon others. The simplest way to explain this is this. If we as an individual do not have the moral right to enact harm or loss upon another then what right do we have to have to give the power to another to enact harm/loss unto another on our behalf.
@aielianna
@aielianna Жыл бұрын
In Highschool they taught us that the government gets their power from the consent of the people. Which is painfully untrue…
@abies2000
@abies2000 Жыл бұрын
​@@aieliannaconsent can be withdrawn. Not a comfortable path. But neither is remaining compliant, eventually for all classes. Blaming "government" for the misuse of our ceded sovereign right to primal action (violence) goes nowhere useful. Rather than collective organizing to remove the class capture of that sovereign power to benefit the most violent amongst us.
@BruceNJeffAreMyFlies
@BruceNJeffAreMyFlies Жыл бұрын
Slavery in prisons is only really a third world thing, or an American thing. It doesn't really exist in first world nations outside the states.
@pavarottiaardvark3431
@pavarottiaardvark3431 Жыл бұрын
I know it's a result of the platform rules, but the thunderous silence during the censored words is really effective.
@monsterhunter445
@monsterhunter445 Жыл бұрын
It's quite sad we cannot discuss r word. Or other topics in an educational context. Huge problem with the history channels.
@ambulocetusnatans
@ambulocetusnatans Жыл бұрын
@@monsterhunter445 This platform has a number of problems, and most of them are related to their blind and indifferent algorithm. It's the same across most social media. I got thrown in Facebook jaIl for quoting a line from a movie. Abigale mentioned Nebula, and paid subscriptions are one way around it, or a more effective solution might be to find algorithm-free solutions like Mastodon and Peertube. Hitting them in the wallet is the only way they will pay attention.
@PiotrDzialak
@PiotrDzialak Жыл бұрын
People: A quarter of population suffers from anxiety. Police: Being anxious is a sign of a crime.
@RedKincaid
@RedKincaid Жыл бұрын
We're all criminals in the eyes of the state, it's all about whether or not they feel like enforcing it at any given time
@Chris-et2fm
@Chris-et2fm Жыл бұрын
The police: tased a guy who was in a moment of suicidal crisis standing on the edge of a building, causing him to fall to his death Also the police: why do we make people anxious?
@drone306
@drone306 Жыл бұрын
I've been searched for seeming anxious before, and I've been stopped for driving anxiously (not illegally by any means). though that last one didn't end in a search because I said to the cop "DO YOU WANT TO SEARCH MY CAR?" (in like a 'did I stutter?' tone) and the dude's brain broke a for a second I swear.
@damien678
@damien678 Жыл бұрын
I'm so obviously ADHD that now I'm gonna be anxious to look around a bunch like I normally do Apparently civies can't have an eye for detail, only cops can have that!
@SimpleSlave
@SimpleSlave Жыл бұрын
Also police: "Being police is an extremely stressful job that causes a lot of anxiety...Wait! Does that makes us criminals then? Oh, that makes sense now. Now I see it. NOW! I see it."
@azul4916
@azul4916 Жыл бұрын
A famous case of law being not very good at punishing people adequately in my country (Chile) is the Penta case or Pentagate. Penta Security was a company sued for tributary fraud. The two owners Alberto Délano and Carlos Lavín were sentenced to ATTEND A BUSINESS ETHICS CLASS (they stole around 2000 million between 2009 and 2010 alone) (in dollars thats 2.12 million stolen in 2 years) (they probably stole more before 2009 and after 2010 but the police pretends they have no way of obtaining more information). Also there were charges for many other crimes that were mysteriously dropped for some reason. Also the people who violated human rights during the dictatorship are still in political charges and ceos of the biggest companies in the country, while the disappearance, torture and murder cases from the dictatorship are not investigated. I wonder why. Its almost like we had our dictator as chief commander of the military and then as a senator for years AFTER the dictatorship "ended", and he made a fucking LAW that says you cant investigate any cases from 1973 to 1989...... i wonder who was in charge between those years...
@melatoninfiend
@melatoninfiend Жыл бұрын
“My services cost 500 dollars… and I’m also a lawyer” had me dying 💀💀
@phileas007
@phileas007 Жыл бұрын
fun fact: lawyers do charge more per hour.
@austinluther5825
@austinluther5825 Жыл бұрын
Yeah, that was cheeky. Abigail is such a great writer.
@2shy2guy52
@2shy2guy52 Жыл бұрын
"Kneel down. Bend over. Put on these cat ears." This needs to be a real law, with no real way to follow it or break it but it's just there
@uprktk
@uprktk Жыл бұрын
i wouldn't mind if someone enforced it on me tbh
@noobynoob138
@noobynoob138 Жыл бұрын
if you don't do it without having a good reason to not do it, you get taxed an extra prosent.
@bnd2nd
@bnd2nd Жыл бұрын
It is enforced by the authority given to Abigail by a paddle, a whip, and a chastity device.
@rosecarter5597
@rosecarter5597 Жыл бұрын
I'm already doing that rn
@bloodink9508
@bloodink9508 11 ай бұрын
"These are commands. These are expressions of desire and they are backed up with threats of force."
@SomethingSomethinNew
@SomethingSomethinNew Жыл бұрын
This material is deeply saddening for me, as here in Poland, a person just got charged, because he said police was incompetent, the reason he was charged was that it makes people trust police less. It's both hillarious and just sad, that it was said after everything that happend in Poland in last 3 years, starting with police beating and spraying with pepper gas protesting people (bc of polish government making ab0rt10n almost impossible) and ending with commander of police firing from howitzer in his office. Obviously, no police officer was charged for anything
@helohel5915
@helohel5915 Жыл бұрын
"Says the police is incompetent" - Police charge him Task failed successfully I'll say. Proved his own point by getting convicted Now lets hope Polish people recognise that problem, right?
@rbxless
@rbxless Жыл бұрын
The police chief personally fired heavy artillery at protesters? Poland sure is wild
@SomethingSomethinNew
@SomethingSomethinNew Жыл бұрын
@@helohel5915 "right?!" Sadly, most of polish people won't care
@martaaleksejczuk1660
@martaaleksejczuk1660 Жыл бұрын
​@rbxless he didn't fire it at anybody, he just accidentally fired it off in his office.
@leeshapon
@leeshapon Жыл бұрын
@@Ellen_de_LingA fetus isn’t a baby.
@capri_spritez8594
@capri_spritez8594 Жыл бұрын
not even 10 minutes into the video yet, but i just have to say: i absolutely LOVE the production value and humor in the introduction, it reeled me into the video almost instantly. and i dont even have the critical thinking skills necessary to think about philosophy too hard
@unwillingly_will
@unwillingly_will Жыл бұрын
I'm sure it doesn't feel great as a cop to hear people complaining about you a lot, but at the end of the day no one forced you into being a cop, and when you hold power of people they're gonna be relentless when they feel you're abusing this power you chose to wield. Same applies to politicians and lawmakers too.
@willjapheth23789
@willjapheth23789 Жыл бұрын
That might drive away people that genuinely care about regular people more though, because they will be more hurt by shunning. Unpleasant social work is easier for people that are unpleasant, it seems to me anyway.
@TehNoobiness
@TehNoobiness Жыл бұрын
It's funny how "don't commit crimes then" is perfectly acceptable until you're saying it back to the police.
@Gingersnaps_the_pumpkin_kitty
@Gingersnaps_the_pumpkin_kitty Жыл бұрын
​@@willjapheth23789 social workers don't carry guns or beat their wives 4x more often than everyone else. They also aren't then over 4x less likely to be arrested for domestic abuse, while also being even less likely to be fully charged for it so they can continue to carry guns. Cops live that reality. *Social workers should be doing the social work, and cops are not social workers.*
@BlindErephon
@BlindErephon Жыл бұрын
@@TehNoobiness Yeah I mean.........the police arent exactly out there earning the public trust when not a week goes by without some cop doing something awful. Just in the last two days off the top of my head I've seen video of a kid apparently minding his own business get his face smashed into a window, and a body cam of a cop freaking out over a pomeranian and shooting a woman in the ankle. Not great looks if you want to make the argument that cops are anything but violent, stupid assholes looking to fuck someone up to protect their rackets.
@shamanic_nostalgia
@shamanic_nostalgia Жыл бұрын
I don't feel too bad for most of them because a lot of them choose to be a cop because on some level they want to force everyone else to respect them
@JohnBainbridge0
@JohnBainbridge0 Жыл бұрын
Marge: "I thought you said the law was powerless!" Wiggum: "Powerless to help you, not punish you."
@eoinboru
@eoinboru Жыл бұрын
An unfortunate truth today is "If you don't like the law, get a better lawyer"
@leandervr
@leandervr Жыл бұрын
*be rich enough to afford a better lawyer
@i-love-comountains3850
@i-love-comountains3850 Жыл бұрын
​@@leandervr Be rich enough to buy lobbyists to buy politicians*
@apersonwhomayormaynotexist9868
@apersonwhomayormaynotexist9868 Жыл бұрын
@@i-love-comountains3850 I mean that's if you want to change a law, not if you just don't want it to apply to you. The latter is much easier and cheaper
@danbeaulieu2130
@danbeaulieu2130 Жыл бұрын
Only the rich can afford a personal lawyer. The rest of us actually work for a living... and try to not be noticed by the pigs
@joem5615
@joem5615 Жыл бұрын
I actually learned a lot a law on the fly while I was a street kid in Boston gettin inta dust ups'. Then I met this guy who looked like Ms. doubtfire and I realized it wasn't my fault and left
@TheNecromancer6666
@TheNecromancer6666 Жыл бұрын
This Video gives a me strong reminder of a very important lesson I had to learn. I am straight, white, male, my family is educated and wealthy and I reached the top 10% of the income bracket in my country of residence in my early 20s. I am from an educated, liberal, left leaning family. Feminism and LGBTQ rights, the equality of everyone no matter gender, race or sexual orientation in my mind was the natural order and any exception was a shocking scandal. A Singular, exceptional shocking scandal. My lived reality was an egalitarian wonderland. I didn't experience discrimination and in the wealthy, liberal, left leaning circles I frequented, that was also not a thing. Imagine my surprise when I learned from people not in that bubble what life was like if you are not wealthy, white, straight and a man. I just didn't know... cause in my World discrimation didn't fucking happen. Certainly not systemically. It took getting into the LGBTQ community via two friends of mine to get that reality check, which I am utterly grateful for. Because I was in a way Part of a problem. Not experiencing discrimination myself and not seeing it happen to my peers left me utterly ignorant of the deep rooted problems society still has. Which meant, in my ignorance, I didn't do anything proactively. I only reacted on the two occassions I did see such behaviour. Just reacting is not enough in my view. I myself was a living example how you can have your heart in all the right places and still be part of the problem.
@boxcarz
@boxcarz Жыл бұрын
That wording reeks of internalized irrational guilt, please go get some help.
@TheNecromancer6666
@TheNecromancer6666 Жыл бұрын
@@boxcarz If you had the intelect to understand, you would know that its merely realistic. But you are some Kind of simp for whom "understanding" or "reflection" are alien concepts.
@faffywhosmilesatdeath5953
@faffywhosmilesatdeath5953 10 ай бұрын
I remember hearing "it's not enough to be 'not racist' you need to be 'anti-racist'" and I feel like that relates to what you're talking about
@stripedpolkadots8692
@stripedpolkadots8692 10 ай бұрын
@@boxcarzwhat are you, a cop?
@DaveGrean
@DaveGrean 9 ай бұрын
@@boxcarz Your wording reeks of internalised irrational white/male fragility, please go get some education. The fact that you are too weak to admit to yourself that, just because you have problems, it doesn't mean other people can't be even worse off, does not make you cool. Last time I checked, weakness is not considered cool. It makes you pathetic. It makes you immature. Your weakness is not something to brag about, it's something to be ashamed of.
@alexthorntonfilms2148
@alexthorntonfilms2148 Жыл бұрын
I loved the line at the end of Wolf of Wallstreet: "I'm not ashamed to admit it. When we arrived to prison, I was terrified. But I needn't have been. See, for a brief, fleeting moment, I forgot I was rich. And I lived in a place where everything was for sale." As the camera pans up from him and the other inmates playing tennis.
@NeoPhoneix
@NeoPhoneix Жыл бұрын
I found it really interesting when a court in China found a son liable for care of his elderly parents, not because it was an offical law, but because it was custom.
@veiledAutonym
@veiledAutonym Жыл бұрын
China built their legal system almost entirely based on the writings of Confucius, which is *heavy* on the idea of social customs being innately good, especially caring for your family. It gives their legalities a very different sort of vibe from a lot of western nations.
@David-sq2en
@David-sq2en Жыл бұрын
@@veiledAutonym The fact that now people is being forced to spend resources on the elders is now a factor in people deciding no to have kids... they just don't have enough money to support that many people...
@dunndudebemelol
@dunndudebemelol Жыл бұрын
Common law/ equity law kinda worked like that. See R V R 1991 too.
@skibidinasdas
@skibidinasdas Жыл бұрын
it's even part of their civil law actually, and it applies even if a child is disowned by their parents. filial piety is extremely strong there
@grandempressvicky6387
@grandempressvicky6387 Жыл бұрын
​@@David-sq2enI don't know what it is about thr Chinese government that keeps shooting themselves in the foot like that. The one child policy not considering the need for women (which results in increased trafficking of women from other counties), and now this (I am not going to talk about Mao).
@7bootzy
@7bootzy Жыл бұрын
The local cops came to my junior high in the late 90s to do a presentation; one of those PR events for them. At one point, the cop asked us "Who here is afraid of me?" Me, being the nerdy little white shit I was, started to raise my hand. Why would I be afraid of one of the good guys, right? I looked around and noticed there were only 4 hands raised and they were all "troublemaker" kids. So, I kept my hand down. The cop told them all to go out in the hall. Found out from one of them later the cops put them up against a wall and started screaming at them and trying to intimidate them, threatening them with jail because "only bad guys don't fear cops." FYI, this was a town of like 3,000 people in an extremely rural area. I never trusted a cop again. Further experiences have only reinforced this. So many bad cops out there, and there always have been.
@christianwise637
@christianwise637 Жыл бұрын
Jesus Christ! They did this to literal kids?! And this was supposed to be _good_ PR for them?
@atillafiliz6591
@atillafiliz6591 Жыл бұрын
​@@christianwise637at least it was unintentionally honest PR
@phoebeel
@phoebeel Жыл бұрын
Things like this show that we are basically all living in a police state. Even in the EU, the cops can do anything and you need to have physical evidence, filmed evidence as well as DNA of the cop if they do stuff to you. Even then, evidence would probably disappear or the victim's morals would be questioned. It's scary.
@ellerose5997
@ellerose5997 Жыл бұрын
@user-mf7zi4sx9fthanks user22483917, your contribution helps prove the point.
@1e1001
@1e1001 Жыл бұрын
i feel like you're missing a "not" or two there
@PyronusSouria
@PyronusSouria Жыл бұрын
I found this channel through the LegalEagle connection right when I started HRT. What a time to be alive.
@megwilcox2878
@megwilcox2878 Жыл бұрын
I grew up in Toronto, and was a young teen during the bath-house raids. Even then, I knew that was all wrong. I was probably as homophobic as a young woman could be at the time, but I sensed that it was just my ignorance, and how bad could they be? Bad enough to deserve that? The parade is a vivid memory. I was so impressed with the bravery, I could see the threat on the street around them, and they just glittered and danced and smiled and waved. In a very real way, this incident formed my compassion for all the marginalized people, along with destroying any faith I had in police. Both good things for me. Thanks for another great episode, Abigail!
@victoriab8186
@victoriab8186 Жыл бұрын
The thing that really struck me in the quotes from Donnelly was that police can spot 'criminal behaviour and criminals ... not because they're doing anything dramatic at that moment but because they behave differently to law-abiding people'. This suggests people, behaving 'differently' to what cops consider to be the standard of the majority of 'law-abiding people', are specifically likely to be picked out as criminals; not just this, but that 'criminal behaviour' may not be defined, in police usage, as the act of committing crimes - Donnelly says that people might not be doing anything dramatic at all - but as the act of behaving differently to the norm. And that, of course, is the essence of discrimination. Someone who seems to be behaving differently, is probably engaging in criminal behaviour, is a criminal. Divergence from the norm is what is punished.
@Owesomasaurus
@Owesomasaurus Жыл бұрын
Uh yeah of course someone is going to be anxious around a cop if they realise that the cop can legally ruin their life on a whim based on nothing for no reason. Anxiety is the correct emotion in that situation!
@FlameDarkfire
@FlameDarkfire Жыл бұрын
It’s this line of reasoning that leads to an autistic young man dying while police held him down and paramedics dosed him unnecessarily with sedatives. All because he had ski mask on and was acting ‘weird’ but not out of his norm.
@p0etrygh0st
@p0etrygh0st Жыл бұрын
People may feel anxious around a police officer without having done anything ever.
@Iudicatio
@Iudicatio Жыл бұрын
Yes it is kind of frightening to think about. I haven't had much contact with the police but I have autism and always struggled to dress and behave "normally." I was severely bullied because of it. It is scary to think that this could lead to more than just bullying. I watched one of the documentaries on the Michelle Carter s*icide texting case, and I really started to wonder if she has autism. Her actions were abnormal and probably immoral, but whether they were illegal was very unclear. And her abnormal behavior was a huge factor in the eventual decision.
@krunkle5136
@krunkle5136 Жыл бұрын
Yeah I get it it's truly bad if someone walks to a corner store at 2AM is picked on, but there are abnormal behaviors like hanging out right in front of the doors so people can't easily get in, or wearing baggy clothing (where a piece can be hidden) with a swagger which is a signal that you're into the thug life.
@weltenkrank7807
@weltenkrank7807 Жыл бұрын
KZbin really shoots itself in the foot with their content rules sometimes. KZbin looses it's value for having honest discussions while still opening the ports for defamatory political influencers.
@kamiriniko
@kamiriniko Жыл бұрын
This is by design, especially the part about "opening the ports for defamatory political influencers"
@404findnotnamed
@404findnotnamed Жыл бұрын
Yeah fuckin infuriating that people gotta resort to silly baby talk and euphemisms and bullshit censoring of random words because some algorith finds them too spooky oh nooo
@Mene0
@Mene0 Жыл бұрын
Meanwhile the actual hate speech thrives and nothing is done to, well, police it.
@moondrummer
@moondrummer Жыл бұрын
As a child, I grew extremely upset if any rule was broken by anyone for any reason, because to me that negated the entire point of rules. Even as late as my 30's, I always had an enormous respect and trust in the police and the rule of law. These were what defined a modern, liberal society to me. It has taken 10 years, multiple accounts of police brutality in the news, multiple reports of statistics on the ineffectiveness of criminal prosecution, a lot of videos and more news stories on how wealth leads to an effective barrier to criminal prosecution for crimes, and videos like these...for me to admit what I now believe: That - at best - our legal systems are an ATTEMPT at controlling crime. They are about as real as money is: a kind of collective illusion that is more or less real to you depending on who you are (and how much power/privilege you have). I think subtley referring to the law as a game is very apt. It's certainly how the wealthy and powerful seem to view it. It's been a pretty big point of dissolutionment in my life to learn about the other side of policing. I still believe that most cops genuinely want to help people. But they're human like anyone else. They make mistakes. They make emotional calls and snap judgements. Their perceptions can get just as fooled as my own.
@DireBeastRexYT
@DireBeastRexYT Жыл бұрын
the helluvaboss/legaleagle/philosophytube crossover was NOT one I was expecting but I literally needed it like burning
@angeliparraguirre7329
@angeliparraguirre7329 Жыл бұрын
Fr fr
@oumtjackawillie
@oumtjackawillie Жыл бұрын
Yeah, I'm a thankfull new subscriber... ☺
@wyrowood3490
@wyrowood3490 Жыл бұрын
missed the F1nnester reading!
@spudsbuchlaw
@spudsbuchlaw Жыл бұрын
Helluvaboss?
@Boo-qg9fj
@Boo-qg9fj Жыл бұрын
​​@@spudsbuchlawit's a show here on KZbin. It's part of the Hazbin Hotel universe. It's a funny cartoon about demons living in hell.
@terellemclean9042
@terellemclean9042 Жыл бұрын
"My services are $500 an hour... and I'm also a lawyer" instant follow
@terellemclean9042
@terellemclean9042 Жыл бұрын
After watching this video I'm so glad I found her channel
@PhilosophyTube
@PhilosophyTube Жыл бұрын
Welcome!
@terellemclean9042
@terellemclean9042 Жыл бұрын
@@PhilosophyTube ah thank you! I spent all of last night binging your videos. I took philosophy in uni for a bit before health issues got in the way but I've always enjoyed it and I just really love how thoroughly you examine these different arguments and the discourse around them. You're doing a fantastic job!
@ClayDress
@ClayDress Жыл бұрын
Where I live, fireworks used to be illegal. So, we'd just drive over the state line to Tennessee and bring some back for the 4th of July or New Year's. In a downtown, upper middle class area, we set off these massive illegal fireworks and no one batted an eye. Cops would stop and watch and didn't do anything. A couple years ago, after fireworks had become legal, someone held their own fireworks show in an income-assisted housing area. Less than a mile from where we'd had a show with illegal fireworks, the fire department showed up and shut down their display of legal fireworks because it was 'hazard'.
@michimatsch5862
@michimatsch5862 Жыл бұрын
How dare poor people enjoy their own fireworks? They can already enjoy gazing at the fireworks of the rich people at a distance.
@AirConditioner402
@AirConditioner402 Жыл бұрын
For the poor, it is punishment. For the rich, it is just a fee to be paid.
@theab3957
@theab3957 Жыл бұрын
What time of year was it? If it was a dry summer, it might have been a fire hazard.
@starlingseraphim
@starlingseraphim Жыл бұрын
It's funny you mention Tennessee because I live there and it's illegal in my county but not the surrounding ones, so people just buy them there and still set them off here.
@adeadarcadia
@adeadarcadia Жыл бұрын
​@theab3957 4th of July? In a suburban or rural area that would've been a fire hazard
@JWinterhaven
@JWinterhaven Жыл бұрын
I'm not sure what you guys did but your community management is either amazing, or you found a niche where even with a million views, thw comment section is so overwhelmingly positive and actually on topic that even doom scrolling is impossible. Did you cracked the code on what keywords only horrible comments use to rule them out with a filter? Or did the horrible people not find the video yet and the 1 million views are genuinely all subscribers and fans? That would be amazing.
@phoebeel
@phoebeel Жыл бұрын
I think most people who leave blue lives matter troll shit are dumdums who don't usually watch 45min videos, not even to troll
@transsnack
@transsnack 10 ай бұрын
They have a really good mod team, as far as I can tell. Trans people, especially openly trans women, get some vile comments so they've got to go through and get rid of the a-holes to keep things civil.
@icyfire97
@icyfire97 Жыл бұрын
Shout out to my GCSE sociology teacher Mr McDonnell for teaching our class about everything Abigail mentioned in this video!!! He specially told us about Operation Soap even though it wasn’t on the syllabus, and didn’t beat around the bush about it! I still remember the term “canteen culture” to describe the toxic masculinity within the Police as an institution. Our country needs more Mr McDonnells!!!!!
@katharineeavan9705
@katharineeavan9705 Жыл бұрын
Sounds like my psychology GSCE teacher who made the section about eye witness accounts waaayyy more in depth than the syllabus asked for, despite use having less than the recommended time to cover everything, and included a recorded university lecture about how eye witness accounts and lie detectors are massively inaccurate but are held by public opinion to be the two highest forms of evidence aside from DNA.
@icyfire97
@icyfire97 Жыл бұрын
@@katharineeavan9705 it’s honestly such a shame that it seems like the Govt is doing everything in their power to dissuade people who are passionate about teaching from going into the field :( it’s such a loss for us as a society, our kids are being intentionally failed because it’s easier to indoctrinate citizens who aren’t well informed nor have any critical thinking skills. I’m so glad you got to have a great educational experience with your psychology teacher!
@Sam-iu8nb
@Sam-iu8nb Жыл бұрын
That's amazing. I had a physics teacher who really went above and beyond their job description in a way that really stuck with me. Still playing catch up on my socio-economic education as an adult though!
@lordgemini2376
@lordgemini2376 Жыл бұрын
Every secondary school kid needs to do Sociology, if even for just a year or during form or w/e. It taught me so much about the world, society and how everything works in relation to each other. It's invaluable!
@icyfire97
@icyfire97 Жыл бұрын
@@lordgemini2376 totally agree!! It completely changed my life trajectory and worldview, and I felt like I finally understood why my family, friends and I went through so much shit (we’re all from minority ethnic backgrounds living in a majority white town). It’s definitely informed my political leanings and career choices, and how I go about in the world!! But of course, since it’s considered a humanities subject, it’s not as important as STEM for some people 🙄
@weatheranddarkness
@weatheranddarkness Жыл бұрын
Part of me doesn't actually want to watch this. It's just so upsetting, having experienced police impunity.
@KingAntDaProphet
@KingAntDaProphet Жыл бұрын
Stay strong brother some people are trying to sue protest and organize. In the meantime just be lazy and break the system
@salsaroja9740
@salsaroja9740 Жыл бұрын
That’s ok! If you feel like it, the first part of the video doesn’t focus on policing too heavily but on the definition of “Law” if you wanna watch that :)
@GigglelandEmperor
@GigglelandEmperor Жыл бұрын
The solution is obviously world communism
@krunkle5136
@krunkle5136 Жыл бұрын
Ever experienced gangland inpunity?
@KingAntDaProphet
@KingAntDaProphet Жыл бұрын
@@krunkle5136 your taking away from the point. You probably yell all lives matter at a BLM rally
@StormSought
@StormSought Жыл бұрын
Despite the astounding funding the NYPD is given, when I, a pedestrian, was in a hit and run, they gave me a police report form to write up myself and mail to albany. They then did exactly nothing about it.
@evilsanta8585
@evilsanta8585 Жыл бұрын
The nypd only works for themselves that’s why it’s time to vote to ban police unions.
@evilsanta8585
@evilsanta8585 Жыл бұрын
Why do the police get a union that can’t or won’t be broken up by the government but truckers rail road workers nurses and FAA controllers all get there unions broken up
@elowin1691
@elowin1691 Жыл бұрын
@@evilsanta8585 because police unions are among the only unions rich people feel benefit them
@enclaveslayer
@enclaveslayer Жыл бұрын
​@@evilsanta8585Taft Hartley act strikes again
@tia3831
@tia3831 Жыл бұрын
@@elowin1691 they don't just feel it. the police exist to defend property rights, not to serve and protect. a court case even ruled the latter.
@star2705
@star2705 Жыл бұрын
I just love the EXTREMELY powerful vibes you bring to these videos
@SantaCruzJokerProductions
@SantaCruzJokerProductions Жыл бұрын
I've dealt with the police a lot in my life and yeah, they just make up whatever they want and mess with you even if you're not the person who is causing any problems at all
@utubepunk
@utubepunk Жыл бұрын
Yup. In America, police have qualified immunity & are rarely held accountable for violating people's rights.
@usernamesrtoostupid
@usernamesrtoostupid Жыл бұрын
Same.
@aviendha1154
@aviendha1154 Жыл бұрын
They’ll also straight up steal your shit. And then force you to sign a piece of paper saying that they’re returning everything so you can get your phone back. Fuck the police.
@daviddestin1990
@daviddestin1990 Жыл бұрын
Ja, kiss their boots or face the consequences
@oso1248
@oso1248 Жыл бұрын
How interesting, I’ve almost never dealt with police in my life.
@ChaosRaych
@ChaosRaych Жыл бұрын
Funny that Donnelly says "criminals" just have a different vibe that he can innately sense, yet when he wants to justify stop-and-frisk, he says that contraband is often found on innocuous people. So which is it? If his vibe detection skills were accurate, every (or even just most) stop-and-frisk encounter would yield predictable results
@Laezar1
@Laezar1 Жыл бұрын
Yeah I found that striking too. If anything that would justify completely randomized checkup, but obviously that's not possible cause even assuming you could do it without taking people's look into account the very place police are patroling aren't themselves random. So yeah... (besides I'm sure there would immediately be a stop put to it if wealthy people had to deal with being suspected and searched). Same thing with the sudden death thing, like, guy is literrally saying people randomly die under police custody and he just shrugs instead of y'know... not arresting people anymore so that they don't die? Police are just fine with murdering innocent people if they don't like their look
@nebufabu
@nebufabu Жыл бұрын
That transition from abstract discussion with lewd jokes into a genuine anger... It's perfect. And a bit scary.
@thomasneal9291
@thomasneal9291 Жыл бұрын
she is also a professional actress now. so not really all that surprising.
@superrswalkthrougn
@superrswalkthrougn Жыл бұрын
Scarousing
@MegaChickenfish
@MegaChickenfish Жыл бұрын
She is a master of transitions, after all.
@lizzyb.8009
@lizzyb.8009 Жыл бұрын
anyone else have to pause the video for a minute around 3:53 to recover their breath? i'm not typically a bottom, but that delivery...
@austinb3463
@austinb3463 Жыл бұрын
Excellent use of legal Eagle. Always maintained that no person should look that much like a lawyer.
@elias486
@elias486 Жыл бұрын
just watched it on Nebula, and I gotta say the way the censorship was handled actually made some moments stronger and more impactful. Especially when "THE R*PIST* appeared in bold letters I felt it in my stomach. Kudos to the editor for working around these limitations in such a way that gave these moments the gravitas they deserve
@TryinaD
@TryinaD Жыл бұрын
Yup, it’s so much powerful this way
@graemechetcuti
@graemechetcuti Жыл бұрын
I am recently horrified by the actions of the police. I found out on Friday about why my friend's car got impounded. They were hanging around in their car in the middle of the night near a park with the engine off playing Pokemon Go. The police refused to believe they were not there to sell drugs. Unsatisfied when they could not find the drugs on the vehicle they impounded it and refused to return it to my friend without impound insurance and a fee.
@burningsnow9870
@burningsnow9870 Жыл бұрын
Has he gone to court to sue? I'm pretty sure that's against the law since the officer would have no reason to impound the car as reasonable suspicion should have gone as far as they could after the officer found no drugs and thus had no reason to impound it for the reason of drug possession/trafficking
@burningsnow9870
@burningsnow9870 Жыл бұрын
Did your friend give them permission to search the car or did they investigate without asking? Was the car locked/closed?
@iraqiwalker1436
@iraqiwalker1436 Жыл бұрын
That's the kind of thing complaints and lawsuits are made of.
@jeffrobodine239
@jeffrobodine239 Жыл бұрын
You're lucky they didn't plant anything in the car
@evilsanta8585
@evilsanta8585 Жыл бұрын
Lmaooo you guys are acting like a complaint will do anything and the lawsuit is just your money being wasted
@jeandunham1363
@jeandunham1363 11 ай бұрын
I act nervous about acting nervous. Getting arrested is so terrifying to me bc i generally act weird as a normal state. Its not something i can control
@42saram42
@42saram42 Жыл бұрын
As someone who is autistic and trans in the US I very much try to avoid interacting with the police at all. They always approach with their hand on their gun when they pull you over which makes me extremely nervous given literally everything I've seen them do to people of minority groups in the news and in bystander videos so I am visibly anxious, won't make eye contact, and am very standoffish so I always have negative interactions with them and usually get lectures about how they are the good guys and I'm an asshole for being afraid of them or not liking them. I'm just glad so far it has only been lectures and not just them murdering me or something over a minor traffic violation or whatever.
@bazdarinothebizier9085
@bazdarinothebizier9085 Жыл бұрын
To be fair, I understand the impulse. If you're willing to destroy yourself, what is to say what you're willing to do to other people. It's just basic human nature unfortunately and it takes a lot of compassion to overcome that natural response.
@nimexwolf
@nimexwolf Жыл бұрын
Yeah, a lot of things people say online made me terrified, like to the point where making eye contact with a police officer made me feel like jumping out of my own skin. I slowly became more comfortable with them when I started to realize that most cops aren't like people say online, and won't actually murder somebody for a traffic violation. It gets better!!!
@lintree
@lintree Жыл бұрын
Hard to argue you're the good guy who deserves compassion when you have your hand on your gun ready to shoot someone in the head
@Romanticoutlaw
@Romanticoutlaw Жыл бұрын
I got pulled over by a sheriff last night who commented on me seeming nervous and asked if I might have a reason to be. Like, yeah, buddy, the whole time you were driving behind me without your flashers on, all I could think about was the trans man who nearly got murdered by a cop over an _air freshener,_ which I happen to have hanging in my car too. I was pulled over, _by the sheriff,_ in a conservative town in a conservative state. I feel I'm within rights to presume that the instant I stop sucking your ego off I run the risk of being assaulted. Wouldn't you be nervous? But I managed to leave all of it out except "it's hard not to be a little nervous when a sheriff pulls you over" with an affable nervous little laugh and that seemed to suffice.
@TheCalebMoline
@TheCalebMoline Жыл бұрын
“Come on! We’re the good guys. We only shoot people we feel like shooting.”
@riccardoolivieri1159
@riccardoolivieri1159 Жыл бұрын
I 10000% support Abby continuously slipping kinky innuendos in her vids
@crimsonsapphire6680
@crimsonsapphire6680 Жыл бұрын
"my services cost 500 dollars an hour... and I'm also a lawyer ;)"
@garbagesalt
@garbagesalt Жыл бұрын
is it still innuendo if you're in a latex caution tape outfit?
@Vooblebooble
@Vooblebooble Жыл бұрын
​@@garbagesaltlegally we'll say yes
@jenm1
@jenm1 Жыл бұрын
ngl it makes me uncomfortable but the rest of the video is usually worth it
@GigglelandEmperor
@GigglelandEmperor Жыл бұрын
Typical degenerate commie behavior
@anacecilia1387
@anacecilia1387 Жыл бұрын
19:00 me and my family were just remembering this week about a famous singer that got thrown off the closet by getting arrested for accepting going into the toilet with this guy who was secretly a cop. Just, the entire stupid idea of a huge department of police officers getting trained on how to pretend to be gay men, conveniently staying near areas where gay guys might hook up, spending hours propositioning men on the off chance that one of them might fall for the trap and accept the offer, thereby committing the crime of "hooking up in a public toilet while gay", so now they have a reason to bring this random gay guy to prison... I'm sorry, don't any of you have better things to do with your work time and money? What the hell is all this for?
@synthetic240
@synthetic240 Жыл бұрын
It's for bigotry. They went to all that effort to be bigots. They probably said it was to protect kids or whatever, but they were lying. It's always been about bigotry. I thought you knew that.
@KC426859
@KC426859 Жыл бұрын
@@synthetic240Also money. For-profit prisons are mind bogglingly fucked up
@angelikaskoroszyn8495
@angelikaskoroszyn8495 Жыл бұрын
Wait, wasn't it a politician who got caught this way. Either one of us remembers the case wrongly or there were more than 1 guy arrested in a gay sting operation While I believe that there're places where you shouldn't do sexual activities (I want to shit in peace without hearing moaning) I think there're more important issues to focus your limited resources on
@synthetic240
@synthetic240 Жыл бұрын
@@KC426859 Ever heard of Elan School in Maine? Or Kids-for-Cash schemes in juvie court? It was basically billed as a drug-rehab for troubled teens to avoid jail, but the abuse kids would receive there was far, far worse than jail. And worse than physical abuse, it was mostly extreme psychological abuse, sleep deprivation, and it was constant. "Graduates" of their sadistic program either join back up to continue the abuse, off themselves within a few years, or have such severe PTSD they can't reintegrate with society.
@kajmace
@kajmace Жыл бұрын
@@angelikaskoroszyn8495 Sounds like they were thinking of George Michael, but yeah I'm sure there's been more than one
@vaughnvarma8447
@vaughnvarma8447 Жыл бұрын
Excellent job as always One thing I have noticed, which I think fits into the narrative here, is how the letter of the law can itself be used to create the vague conditions within which police can act. There are, and have to my knowledge always been, numerous laws which contradict other laws, and even where one is meant to have priority over the other (e.g. the US constitution over US federal laws), this nonetheless creates a system of tension, wherein the actual nature of "the law" is decided in real time by those meant to carry it out, and personal preference can be used to relieve that tension in whichever way they would like
@ThatDangDad
@ThatDangDad Жыл бұрын
As lefttube's favorite American ex-cop, I can co-sign the sense of not "feeling supported", we used to complain about that all the time. Guys would complain "you can't even do your job anymore without the ACLU getting all over you." Also, the UK officer whose own dept nicknamed him "The R*pist" reminded me, we nicknamed an old coworker of mine "Sgt. Murderer"...
@disengronkulifactice
@disengronkulifactice Жыл бұрын
It always blows my mind that cops can hang out with “sgt. murderer”, do nothing about him, and think they’re “good” ones. Until you all clean your own house you’re all scum IMO.
@BlindErephon
@BlindErephon Жыл бұрын
"I don't feel supported right now!" - Cop shooting your dog and beating your ass.
@harkonen1000000
@harkonen1000000 Жыл бұрын
My first thought was that those nicknames sound like a cast of a hentai. Then I remembered, the title is "A Kite". It's one of the most banned pieces of media globally. I wonder why.
@bearmarco1944
@bearmarco1944 Жыл бұрын
@@disengronkulifactice maybe it was a joke, and Sgt Murderer was a chill individual who had never behaved poorly
@LoveProWrestling
@LoveProWrestling Жыл бұрын
@@BlindErephon 10,000 dogs shot every year by police officers. It's almost automatic at that level. Edit, U.S. stat cited.
@pinknblackproductions
@pinknblackproductions Жыл бұрын
I've found that a lot of the time when people talk about someone acting "suspicious" or "like they're a criminal" or "like they're lying" a lot of the things they list are things I do as someone with autism and adhd. A lot of them are common symptoms and behaviour of mental illnesses. No, im not avoiding eye contact because I'm lying, I'm avoiding eye contact because I can only make a certain amount of eye contact before I get overwhelmed & I have reached that limit today. "They keep looking over their shoulder" I am a woman, I have been taught that if I'm followed and attacked, it was my fault.
@miriamlevenson9430
@miriamlevenson9430 Жыл бұрын
it’s insane that youtube won’t let you say the names of victims and what happened to them. thank you for doing the work you do 💞
@RichTapestry
@RichTapestry Жыл бұрын
Oh, KZbin will let you say it, just without monetizisation, which creators need. It is large advertising customers like multinational conglomerates (Unilever, PepsiCo, Johnson and Johnson etc.) who "won't let you say things" in effect, because they arbitrarily choose what content to advertise around.
@LandonStrauss-hc1sc
@LandonStrauss-hc1sc Жыл бұрын
Not unlike enabling
@LandonStrauss-hc1sc
@LandonStrauss-hc1sc Жыл бұрын
Maybe people should include their opinions about that in the Google play page!
@DJDocsVideos
@DJDocsVideos Жыл бұрын
youtube cares about maximizing its profits, nothing else.
@Vinemaple
@Vinemaple Жыл бұрын
Abigail: "There's nothing original being made these days, it's all sequels and remakes." Me:
@BiggusFroggus
@BiggusFroggus Жыл бұрын
I will never get sick of the joke where Abigail gets denied access to a source
@Squishy876
@Squishy876 Жыл бұрын
Justice wasn't served but Abigail sure did ❤️‍🔥
@jrg2866
@jrg2866 Жыл бұрын
As an American, I'm a little upset at how much of the world is trying to one-up us on police brutality, but at least we still spend way more on them than the UK for worse results 🇺🇸
@1320crusier
@1320crusier Жыл бұрын
A lot of the world is many times worse.
@Star-pl1xs
@Star-pl1xs Жыл бұрын
@@1320crusier by what measure? furthermore, who asked?
@BaronFeydRautha
@BaronFeydRautha Жыл бұрын
In the UK they just let illegal immigrants go around stabbing and murdering their native populations.
@tbdaemon
@tbdaemon Жыл бұрын
Spending more for worse quality seems to be the American way.
@mattshriner4897
@mattshriner4897 Жыл бұрын
Quality sounds expensive, in America spare no expense keeping costs down.
@Rugerfred
@Rugerfred Жыл бұрын
As a game designer, on the topic i DEFINITELY suggest people to read the rules (and maybe play) an old game called Nomic. It gives people an incredible amount of insight on how and why people create laws, and ho many problematic dynamics are generated in that context.
@Taxrenn93
@Taxrenn93 Жыл бұрын
I was not expecting Trixie to be LegalEagle’s warlock patron, but it does make complete sense
@Madwonk
@Madwonk Жыл бұрын
I absolutely adore the dictionary jokes. Like, seriously, it actually points out a great way in which people will abuse such things to their advantage: the conservative supreme court in the US loves to do this with "originalism" because it lets them cherrypick the meaning of certain words and contexts.
@aident0642
@aident0642 Жыл бұрын
Don't forget that the thing that killed Sarah Everard had complaints from 4 days before of indecent exposure at a Mcdonald's. Something he had prior complaints about just a few years before. So many failings by the police around that case. And who knows she would still be alive had it all been investigated properly
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