There also is the little problem that some people can't tolerate pepper spray. That happened where I live. Kid was 19 or 20 and died on his way to jail. His crime had something to do with a line scuffle at Waffle House.
Could you show me where I mentioned Gitlow? If you don't want to be educated, don't ask questions or post wrong information.
I think there was something about people being upset about monopolies and taxes on "luxury" items. They boarded a boat, behaved rudely, and made the tea unsuitable to drink -- even by American standards.
Close enough.![]()
Do I think it was right for them to pepper spray those kids, I dunno did the police have much of a choice, I don't think so. They repeated told them to leave or they would be sprayed.
Yep, protest is against the rules. So when you break the rules, accept the consequences. In this case, the consequences were pepper spray and arrest.
The students were ordered to leave, they were warned they would be sprayed, and yet, they remained. They have no one to blame but themselves.
The worst person here is the UC-Davis President. She gave the order to have the protesters removed, and then when the PR went bad, she hung the police out to dry. They followed her orders, and rightly so. If she now thinks the order to remove them was wrong, say it, admit it, accept it.
Those particular students where violating the rights of other citizens and particularly the owners of the property to use that sidewalk. Sometimes the world is not all about "you" and your rights. Did you really want the police to forcible separate their arms and then arrest them? You would be crying why didn't you just leave them alone. You can't have it both ways either the government can enforce the rights of citizens or they can't. The property owners did not give up their rights to use their property so whose rights prevail?![]()
It really doesn't matter if you don't equate pepper spray and Taser on the same level for use of force, for many police departments they are considered the same.
You think they should have been hit with pepper spray -- are you kidding me? This was not an appropriate use of pepper spray. So, you think policemen should be allowed to do whatever they want as long as they warn you first . . .
IF pepper spray doesn't work, then arrest them? Why is it alright for pepper spray to come first on a bunch of students just SITTING there?
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Yep, protest is against the rules. So when you break the rules, accept the consequences. In this case, the consequences were pepper spray and arrest.
The students were ordered to leave, they were warned they would be sprayed, and yet, they remained. They have no one to blame but themselves.
And to think, we've morphed into a society that believes you should never behave rudely because the "authorities" might not like it. I mean come on, the patriots had the choice to drink some thing else. no one was forcing them to drink the tea. They should have just went home and not brought the tea then they wouldn't have had those pesky soliders bothering them.
Oh how the mighty have fallen.![]()
Those particular students where violating the rights of other citizens and particularly the owners of the property to use that sidewalk. Sometimes the world is not all about "you" and your rights. Did you really want the police to forcible separate their arms and then arrest them? You would be crying why didn't you just leave them alone. You can't have it both ways either the government can enforce the rights of citizens or they can't. The property owners did not give up their rights to use their property so whose rights prevail?![]()
That child isn't being taught to hate. That child is being taught to fear. And while fear may lead to hatred, what the sons were taught are excellent safety tips.
I'm sorry; my post confused. Yes, I agree that people who weren't sprayed were arrested. I was trying to point out that the pepper spray wasn't in lieu of arrest; it was in conjunction with the arrest.
The correct first action would be to attempt to arrest after the warnings not pepper srpay.
There are other laws that they could be in violation of.No, they weren't violating rights of the owners of the property by using that sidewalk.
Hague v. C.I.O., 307 U.S. 496 (1939), the high court ruled that peaceful demonstrators may not be prosecuted for "disorderly conduct." This case also secured streets and sidewalks as public forums.
Call it what you want, but when you teach a child that "cops will shoot the black kid" just be proud of yourself because it isn't WHITEY keeping him down anymore.
Oh, that's right. Now that we've elected a black President, we're in the post racial era, where arrest and incarceration rates for blacks v. whites are proportionate.
My sons were taught and now that they drive we reinforce it daily, they are never to argue or resist a policeman, that is a recipe for a black kid to get killed and shot. They are to tell them their name period. and to repeatedly request to call their parents. They are not to answer any questions about any thing.
Cops do not have the authority to do what they want simply because they have a badge. There is a name for that, it's called a police state.
Don't go by me, my favorite person was Eleanor Roosevelt.
Oh, that's right. Now that we've elected a black President, we're in the post racial era, where arrest and incarceration rates for blacks v. whites are proportionate.
UC Davis police may well have violated the Fourth Amendment's "objective reasonableness" standard. In 1989, the U.S. Supreme Court held in Graham v. Connor that excessive force claims are properly analyzed under the Fourth Amendment's "objective reasonableness" standard. The court had to determine whether a particular use of force is legal under the Fourth Amendment in the course of making an arrest or investigatory stop. In other words, how much force is necessary?
Like most general standards found in FourthAmendment precedent, the answer is, "it depends."
The Graham ruling requires an officer to give "careful attention to the facts and circumstances of each particular case," including:
The severity of the suspect's crimes.
The immediacy of the threat posed by the suspect to the safety of the officers or others.
Whether the suspect is actively resisting arrest or attempting to evade arrest by flight.
That polce chief has been put on paid admin leave, pending an investigation.