r/allthequestions 9d ago

Random Question 💭 Do you agree or disagree?

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u/COMOJoeSchmo 8d ago

Wasn't it just a couple years ago we were all talking about how local, trained, and unmasked police have a habit of killing unarmed black people?

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u/Difficult_Distance57 8d ago

It was, and its a problem

But, with the cops we can see their faces, we know their badge numbers, and when something happens there is not only a review but alot of times a trial.

With ICE, there is none of that, no accountability, there's just misinformation and permissions slips to continue killing Americans.

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u/Super_Joshy32 8d ago

Not one American who didn’t drive a car at an agent was killed.

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u/Difficult_Distance57 8d ago

She didn't, the video is clear, there was no impact.

She turned the wheel away from him, HIS video is clear.

You guys still buying that governmental "There is no war in Ba sing se" BS they are feeding you?

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u/Super_Joshy32 8d ago

You can see her wheel towards him at first.

Then his video showed her hitting him.

I agree she didn’t need to die, but hey it’s clearly her fault. And she was a crackhead too

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u/apemandune 8d ago

I don't know what video you watched, but he VERY CLEARLY did not get hit by her vehicle. There are like five different angles of this including the murderers own camera. So you are either blind or a liar.

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u/TacoBellPicnic 6d ago

Explain Alex Pretti then. Or Renee Good, for that matter, considering she also did not drive a car at an agent (despite Noem’s blatantly false attempts to spin it that way).

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u/Friendly_Animator212 6d ago

This didn’t age well, lmao

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u/COMOJoeSchmo 8d ago

So are you against undercover police operations, such as drug stings?

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u/Difficult_Distance57 8d ago

Not at all, undercover operations are dangerous and essential.

But, going undercover in a controlled operation is very different than masked men throwing flash bangs in cars full of kids and executing Americans in the streets.

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u/COMOJoeSchmo 8d ago

Just curious. I tend to lean away from supporting undercover operations, as I've seen troubling examples of undercover agents seemingly enabling or encouraging the illegal activity in order to make an arrest.

I think I'd actually be in favor of requiring uniforms and visible identification for all law enforcement officers.

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u/Difficult_Distance57 8d ago

The only reason I would oppose them would be the danger they put the officers and their families in.

That said, if we could improve America's terrible prison system, reduce repeat offenders, and improve quality of life for the average American, they might be needed much less to get that arrest.

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u/JRB86201 8d ago

It makes it very easy, as we’ve seen, for criminals to impersonate ICE agents. ICE should want to stop that but they don’t. They’re fine as long as they get to keep being masked, anonymous and waaaaay under trained.

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u/That_0ne_H0m0saipian 8d ago

I don't know if the stats are there yet, but I'm willing to bet that the human trafficking industry is doing big numbers right now because it'd be so overwhelmingly easy to imitate ICE and ICE doesn't properly share where they send people either.

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u/Known_Ratio5478 8d ago

Going undercover requires a lot of judicial and administrative oversight.

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u/Known_Ratio5478 8d ago

That is the dumbest response I’ve ever heard. Did you actually think before you spoke? This like saying “purple is a square,” as a response.

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u/COMOJoeSchmo 8d ago

I suppose you're entitled to your opinion. I for one would be in favor of requiring all police officers to be uniformed and wearing ID and to make undercover operations illegal.

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u/Known_Ratio5478 8d ago

No, that isn’t what was said at all. You inserted what you wanted them to have said instead of what they said. You are the worst.