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Wow. Imagine that. It’s as simple as “DONT BREAK THE LAW”.Here is how not to be shot by ICE officers
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Wow. Imagine that. It’s as simple as “DONT BREAK THE LAW”.Here is how not to be shot by ICE officers
Yes, obey the law. BelannF on X: "IF YOU HAVEN'T SEEN THIS ANGLE OF THE ICE AGENT BEING ASSAULTED BY A 4K LB SUV - You should. The ICE agent was acting in self-defense. https://t.co/Tu492lnhpR" / X https://share.google/rrOBUWumPX3nEzhMkHere is how not to be shot by ICE officers
His shooting did not stop the vehicle and yet he survived basically unharmed. How is that self defense?Yes, obey the law. BelannF on X: "IF YOU HAVEN'T SEEN THIS ANGLE OF THE ICE AGENT BEING ASSAULTED BY A 4K LB SUV - You should. The ICE agent was acting in self-defense. https://t.co/Tu492lnhpR" / X https://share.google/rrOBUWumPX3nEzhMk
I saw the video. It was self defense. Chicago Police superintendent Larry Snelling gave a press conference in which he reminds the public that federal agents ARE members of law enforcement, and as such - it is reasonable for them to use deadly force if you box them in with your vehicle. Don't do it.His shooting did not stop the vehicle and yet he survived basically unharmed. How is that self defense?
Because he would have been dead and she would be heralded as a hero if she had actually struck him.His shooting did not stop the vehicle and yet he survived basically unharmed. How is that self defense?
What it looks like to me is that the woman purposely accelerated into the policeman who was right in front of her car. You can see her looking directly at him as she was in the process of accelerating. And her wife was taunting them as she recorded the whole thing. This was not an accident, the woman was trained at the little activist workshops the sponsors offer, which include things such as taunting tactics, recording everything to try to intimidate, and phone numbers to call in case you get arrested so you can be bailed out.The way it looks to me:
* The woman did not set out to kill the agent. She was not acting as a terrorist.
* She could reasonably be charged with reckless endangerment, and (if you assume that ICE is a legitimate law enforcement agency) resisting arrest
* The agent's life was not in danger. He just had to step out of the front of the car, a position he had put himself in
* Whether the agent was justified depends upon policy, which I'm not qualified to judge. It's conceivable that he was, though the public justifications have been based on untrue statements that the driver was trying to hit him.
* Noem made extreme accusations before she would have had a chance to look at the evidence
* Walz was unjustiably inflammatory,, though what he said was probably true if looked at in a purely objective way. Still, that's not how i would expect a governor to act.
It is unlikely that an investigation by a unit supervised by Noem will be in a position to be unbiased. Participation by Police would help, though they might have biases in the opposite direction. It would be nice if there were some group that we could trust, and that both sides would be willing to have participate. I doubt that will happen. The result will almost certainly be an increase in distrust of DHS. For example, the recent shooting in Portland may well have been justified, but I won't believe it unless there's an investigation involving someone from outside DHS.
This is why I said policy is important. She did not, as accused, set out to kill the agent. She was trying to get away. Other videos show she had turned to go around him, but if he hadn't moved she probably would have hit him. That's why I said you could reasonably accuse her of reckless endangerment and resisting arrest.What it looks like to me is that the woman purposely accelerated into the policeman who was right in front of her car. You can see her looking directly at him as she was in the process of accelerating. And her wife was taunting them as she recorded the whole thing. This was not an accident, the woman was trained at the little activist workshops the sponsors offer, which include things such as taunting tactics, recording everything to try to intimidate, and phone numbers to call in case you get arrested so you can be bailed out.
If a police officer points a gun at me and says, stay right where you are . . . I clearly understand I could get shot if I do not do what the officer says. And there seem to be cases when a person gets shot because the person did not stay still for an officer with a gun.The agent's life was not in danger. He just had to step out of the front of the car, a position he had put himself in
I saw the video. It looked to me like the shooter was already enough to the side of the car's path so it could not hit the guy. May be, if the car was still aiming at him, he would have first made sure he was out of the way, versus staying in the way of a moving car while shooting so the car would be sure to hit him. The car did not hit the guy who was shooting, that I saw.Whether the agent was justified depends upon policy, which I'm not qualified to judge. It's conceivable that he was, though the public justifications have been based on untrue statements that the driver was trying to hit him.
She set out to kill the moment she put her foot on the accelerator while he was standing in front of her car. She might not have gone in in the morning with the intent to kill a police officer, she was paid to restrict the flow of traffic, but what she did was intentional. She, and she alone, was responsible for taking her foot off the break and putting it on the accelerator and then proceed to press the pedal while a person was in front of her.This is why I said policy is important. She did not, as accused, set out to kill the agent. She was trying to get away. Other videos show she had turned to go around him, but if he hadn't moved she probably would have hit him. That's why I said you could reasonably accuse her of reckless endangerment and resisting arrest.
The question is whether policy says when an agent is standing in front of a car and it starts moving, he should step a couple of feet to the right, or shoot the driver. There's some evidence that DHS policy says he should step away. It's also pretty clear that he shot her after he had stepped out of the way. Again, a policy question. If you're out of immediate danger, and it does't look like the driver is going to come back and attack again, should you shoot? I suspect the answer is you shouldn't shoot.
Should the officer who killed Ashlie Babbitt done the same thing?I think she was flustered, panicked and the officer probably had ptsd from the time he was dragged. Thus also impaired. They both made mistakes.
Now it becomes pa artisan litmus test. I do not fault the officer. We should not be looking for someone to blame. She either did not have control or worse. But shooting her in the head seems over reaction. How many of us would draw a weapon rather then do our best to just get the heck out io the way. We should all try to de-escalate.
I’ve asked this question three times now and nobody’s had a response for it.Should the officer who killed Ashlie Babbitt done the same thing?
Still waiting for the posts arguing that ICE should have shot the car in the leg...
Same thing as what? Get out of the way? It was his job to be in the way defending the capital. Two incomparable situations, don’t you think!Should the officer who killed Ashlie Babbitt done the same thing?
Still waiting for the posts arguing that ICE should have shot the car in the leg...
It does not matter what was in the woman's mind. It matters what was on the officers mind. It doesn't matter what you think of noem, They have jurisdiction here. This undermining of our system is a problem.The way it looks to me:
* The woman did not set out to kill the agent. She was not acting as a terrorist.
* She could reasonably be charged with reckless endangerment, and (if you assume that ICE is a legitimate law enforcement agency) resisting arrest
* The agent's life was not in danger. He just had to step out of the front of the car, a position he had put himself in
* Whether the agent was justified depends upon policy, which I'm not qualified to judge. It's conceivable that he was, though the public justifications have been based on untrue statements that the driver was trying to hit him.
* Noem made extreme accusations before she would have had a chance to look at the evidence
* Walz was unjustiably inflammatory,, though what he said was probably true if looked at in a purely objective way. Still, that's not how i would expect a governor to act.
It is unlikely that an investigation by a unit supervised by Noem will be in a position to be unbiased. Participation by Police would help, though they might have biases in the opposite direction. It would be nice if there were some group that we could trust, and that both sides would be willing to have participate. I doubt that will happen. The result will almost certainly be an increase in distrust of DHS. For example, the recent shooting in Portland may well have been justified, but I won't believe it unless there's an investigation involving someone from outside DHS.
And there it is again. Ashlie Babbitt, who was unarmed, was shot and killed by a Capitol Police officer, and some here have argued that that this was justified. But when an ICE agent shoots someone who attacked him with a car, some of the same ones argue that Good's shooting was not. And yet Babbitt was unarmed and Good used the vehicle as a weapon. That, to put it politely, is inconsistent.Same thing as what? Get out of the way? It was his job to be in the way defending the capital. Two incomparable situations, don’t you think!