Feds!!!

tardis

Well-Known Member
you gonna be waiting a long time dea makes to much money from marijuana busts
And if the DEA found profit in raping newborns would they continue to do that too by the same logic? Its just wrong when our government sees profit off taking away liberties from American Citizens. My tax dollars are being spent on both their salaries, and the federal subsidies which make said crimes by the DEA profitable. This is why Americans have a fiduciary duty to fight legally officers of any kind personally responsible in courts up to the highest court in the land whenever their civil liberties have been trampled upon by illegal acts of a government that is not acting in accordance with your life, liberty or pursuit of happiness. Now I say that because I follow my med license and I dont sell pot... I would be so unprofitable if I did because i spend so much on my hobby of growing that the numbers just wouldn't work out and i'd wind up having to buy pot for my ailments which just wouldn't be cost effective, so I get mad when I see other people who are following the laws being unduely harassed by the same organization that was built to protect us from harassment and unlawful search and seizures (we have helecopters which tresspass on our properties to look for weed in Hawaii... EVEN LEGAL WEED... If only more people here when their doctor perscribed medicine for actual ailments was messed with took to the courts the individual officers then officers would think twice about following illegal orders. Just as everyone has a right and obligation to say NO when a superior at any job tells them to do something that breaks the law, so do officers and its time that their rights to say no to illegal acts are made the easiest thing to do from personal lawsuits they hear about.
 

tardis

Well-Known Member
And if the DEA found profit in raping newborns would they continue to do that too by the same logic? Its just wrong when our government sees profit off taking away liberties from American Citizens. My tax dollars are being spent on both their salaries, and the federal subsidies which make said crimes by the DEA profitable. This is why Americans have a fiduciary duty to fight legally officers of any kind personally responsible in courts up to the highest court in the land whenever their civil liberties have been trampled upon by illegal acts of a government that is not acting in accordance with your life, liberty or pursuit of happiness. Now I say that because I follow my med license and I dont sell pot... I would be so unprofitable if I did because i spend so much on my hobby of growing that the numbers just wouldn't work out and i'd wind up having to buy pot for my ailments which just wouldn't be cost effective, so I get mad when I see other people who are following the laws being unduely harassed by the same organization that was built to protect us from harassment and unlawful search and seizures (we have helecopters which tresspass on our properties to look for weed in Hawaii... EVEN LEGAL WEED... If only more people here when their doctor perscribed medicine for actual ailments was messed with took to the courts the individual officers then officers would think twice about following illegal orders. Just as everyone has a right and obligation to say NO when a superior at any job tells them to do something that breaks the law, so do officers and its time that their rights to say no to illegal acts are made the easiest thing to do from personal lawsuits they hear about.
Me personally, after several ER visits, and being put under 3 times so cameras could go up my butt and down my throat, and rapid weightloss and inability to hold food down without marijuana (not even with the most advanced stomach medication on the market could I keep food down) I would see the taking of my personal grow as attempted murder on me. Now surely the courts wouldn't see it that way, but they would see that I did everything I could possibly do legally to ensure I was in compliance with the law while trying to save my own life. Compare to someone bleeding profusley with a short time to stay alive driving past the speed limit to get to the ER to save their life... Does the court uphold charging them with reckless endangerment if they were trying to save their own life? Or even someone giving birth in the car. When the action does more good then harm it is legally reasonable.
 

tardis

Well-Known Member
Me personally, after several ER visits, and being put under 3 times so cameras could go up my butt and down my throat, and rapid weightloss and inability to hold food down without marijuana (not even with the most advanced stomach medication on the market could I keep food down) I would see the taking of my personal grow as attempted murder on me. Now surely the courts wouldn't see it that way, but they would see that I did everything I could possibly do legally to ensure I was in compliance with the law while trying to save my own life. Compare to someone bleeding profusley with a short time to stay alive driving past the speed limit to get to the ER to save their life... Does the court uphold charging them with reckless endangerment if they were trying to save their own life? Or even someone giving birth in the car. When the action does more good then harm it is legally reasonable.
Tho on the upside I lost 190 pounds and went from being a very fat person my whole life to looking really really good... now if only I had the energy to do something about it... lol catch22
 
Here is a answer to your question about courts charging someone for speeding when someone is giving birth in the car what will the cops do next?

(CBS/ AP) A New Hampshire man racing to get his pregnant wife to the hospital says he was given a state police escort, and then a speeding ticket.

John Coughlin says he'll fight the ticket, but the state police say it was deserved.

Police say Coughlin hit a speed of 102 mph in a 55 mph zone on Sept. 18 as he rushed to a Manchester hospital with his wife.

When a trooper tried to stop them, "I called 911 to make sure he knew I wasn't trying to outrun him or ignoring him," John told CBS station WBZ-TV in Boston.

The trooper then turned the pursuit into a hospital escort.

Kyle Coughlin was born six minutes after they all reached the hospital.

The trooper congratulated Coughlin on the birth of his son -- and then handed him a ticket.

John lamented to WBZ, "I thought it was ridiculous. I thought I had done everything I could
have done in a situation like that."

State Police Major Russell Conte says the trooper did the right thing, contending Coughlin put his wife, unborn child, himself and the public at risk.

The two sides are slated to go before a judge Monday.

© MMXI, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
 

tardis

Well-Known Member
Here is a answer to your question about courts charging someone for speeding when someone is giving birth in the car what will the cops do next?

(CBS/ AP) A New Hampshire man racing to get his pregnant wife to the hospital says he was given a state police escort, and then a speeding ticket.

John Coughlin says he'll fight the ticket, but the state police say it was deserved.

Police say Coughlin hit a speed of 102 mph in a 55 mph zone on Sept. 18 as he rushed to a Manchester hospital with his wife.

When a trooper tried to stop them, "I called 911 to make sure he knew I wasn't trying to outrun him or ignoring him," John told CBS station WBZ-TV in Boston.

The trooper then turned the pursuit into a hospital escort.

Kyle Coughlin was born six minutes after they all reached the hospital.

The trooper congratulated Coughlin on the birth of his son -- and then handed him a ticket.

John lamented to WBZ, "I thought it was ridiculous. I thought I had done everything I could
have done in a situation like that."

State Police Major Russell Conte says the trooper did the right thing, contending Coughlin put his wife, unborn child, himself and the public at risk.

The two sides are slated to go before a judge Monday.

© MMXI, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
There is no way that held up in court. lol!
 

tardis

Well-Known Member
And if the DEA found profit in raping newborns would they continue to do that too by the same logic? Its just wrong when our government sees profit off taking away liberties from American Citizens. My tax dollars are being spent on both their salaries, and the federal subsidies which make said crimes by the DEA profitable. This is why Americans have a fiduciary duty to fight legally officers of any kind personally responsible in courts up to the highest court in the land whenever their civil liberties have been trampled upon by illegal acts of a government that is not acting in accordance with your life, liberty or pursuit of happiness. Now I say that because I follow my med license and I dont sell pot... I would be so unprofitable if I did because i spend so much on my hobby of growing that the numbers just wouldn't work out and i'd wind up having to buy pot for my ailments which just wouldn't be cost effective, so I get mad when I see other people who are following the laws being unduely harassed by the same organization that was built to protect us from harassment and unlawful search and seizures (we have helecopters which tresspass on our properties to look for weed in Hawaii... EVEN LEGAL WEED... If only more people here when their doctor perscribed medicine for actual ailments was messed with took to the courts the individual officers then officers would think twice about following illegal orders. Just as everyone has a right and obligation to say NO when a superior at any job tells them to do something that breaks the law, so do officers and its time that their rights to say no to illegal acts are made the easiest thing to do from personal lawsuits they hear about.
I should also mention that there are a lot of good cops out there. Hell I have very close old friends who work for the feds now, and they are great awsome people as I know them. But we forget to look at the good officers who do good work who dont' try to punish society for their own problems but rather try to use their job to make the world a better place for everybody they can. Those officers need to be discovered too and given raises. If you ask me a good cop who truely does follow the law and aims his attention towards problems in society (protection from violent crimes, protection from robberies), basically those officers who actually do Serve & Protect, they need to be paid a hell of a lot more money. I never understood why the cops get paid crap but risk their lives, and the lawyers get paid millions while chillin in air conditioning all day.

Its just too easy in our system for a cop to tell himself "well gee, I do all this risking my life for everyone, i deserve to break the law and punish the innocent just to get my reward" despite the fact that everything they put up with they choose to burden themselves with. Its like teachers, the good ones we need to ensure are taken care of, the bad ones we need to ensure never get to do that work because of how much harm a bad officer/teacher puts on society and our communities.
 
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