When pulled over by military police, military personnel will be required to had over their military ID in addition to their driver's license. Additionally, many states will allow you to drive with an expired license if you are currently active duty. For those reasons, most military will hand over their ID when stopped by a cop, it's just habit.
that’s a great point. It’s interesting how different rules apply to military personnel, and it really reflects the unique relationship between the military and civilian law enforcement
"We dont write tickets to cops or their families" is the reason local businesses and services should "refuse any and all service to cops and their families"
Cops earn my respect when they don't let other cops act above the law. The cop that owns the wrong doing, if they do, earn double my respect. If they'ren't above the law and lead by example, we shouldn't either! Hats off to you respectable 5-0!
Ooooh, I have a "Not a Cop" version! I work in security, and a few years ago I was working in Road Security as a Manual Director for where to drive. And this one time I was positioned near an intersection where there was a hole for some pipe restauration or something. At the other end of the street there was a "No motored vehicle past this point" sign. Obviously I had the usual "I thought this didn't apply to me" comment, to which I'd respond "Sorry, but the hole is an equal opportunity blockade. Turn around and stop breaking the road laws." One day, much to my enjoyment, a uniformed Police car drives in. I raise my stop sign, grin the largest shit eating grin I can muster and slowly walk up to the driver seat window. Driver opens the window and I see a slightly nervous cop with a passenger cop with a bigger grin than mine. I say "Hello. I am SO tempted to ask for license and registration, but I do believe as a mere security guard I do not hold that power." I hear a "BAHA!" from the passenger cop. "But what power I do have is to ask if you can read road signs?" Driver responds "Uhm, yes?" Me: "Are you asking me or confirming? Cus that sounded like a question. I'm going to assume it was a confirmation and ask you to let me know the meaning av the signs you drove past." Driver Cop: "It meant that I was not allowed to drive in here." Me: "Correct, I am also gonna assume you to know this would obviously not apply if you were on an emergency outing with the sirens and blue lights and shit. I would still attempt to stop you, cus hole don't care about any of that. But you wouldn't be breaking the legal laws of the road in that case... unlike now." That was the moment the passenger cop lost his shit and broke out laughing. I give him a nod. "So do a 180 degree turn, drive back out and stop breaking the law you are hired to uphold." This whole thing took place in 2017. Last year, at my new job, I told the story to a guy. He enjoyed it a bit too much. I said it was funny, but not that funny. He went "Oh no, you don't understand! This is my second time hearing it! The driver cop is still a cop in the city, but my cousin was the cop in the passenger seat!" According to this dude, this story comes up every time new people start working the force, Christmas party, drivers birthday aaaaand whenever he is honored for any reason. Personally... I'd ask for a transfer. I actually feel kinda bad knowing how much shit he's gotten. Still funny tho.
There’s a good reason to put your badge out the window off duty policemen are carrying a weapon. If a gun is seen before you identify yourself it is more problematic.
This is the earliest I’ve ever been, keep up the good vids. I really like how you actually commentate on the stories, and how you’re obviously NOT an AI
as amusing as it is to hear about cops getting into "ticket wars" with one another, talk about a monumental waste of tax-payer resources! maybe they should just focus on following the law themselves.
Horrible fact. Drunk drivers generally brace less when crashing into something or someone. Being more relaxed causes them to injure themselves less. So when you drive drunk you risk your own life but other peoples even more.
Just because one wears a badge, it doesn't make them "Above" the law. They may be there to enforce the laws, but they still should have to follow the laws themselves.
Okay, I was actually a witness to one of these incidents. I live in a small town, we have five cops on duty at any given point in time. I was working in an electronics store, early morning shift, and my usual routine was to stop off at my local gas station and pick up a cup of coffee and something to snack on on my way to work I go in one day and I see an officer that I know fairly well, he's standing there with his hands on his thighs looking down at the ground and an expression on his face like a kid who just got caught opening their Christmas presents a month early. I go to ask him what's wrong, and the person working the counter at the time says my name, puts her index finger up and shakes her head no. I don't think 2 minutes went by when the sergeant walks in and I whisper "oh s***" to myself. The sergeant didn't normally respond to calls unless he was the only one on duty or if it was something absolutely serious. He starts calling this officer a bunch of names and telling him he's an embarrassment to the force before turning to the convenience store employee and asking if she can give him a detailed description of what happened. As it turns out, she was stocking chips a aisle over when she saw him grab a couple of handfuls of 5-Hour energy shots before placing them in his cargo pants pocket. He tried to walk out before she stopped him and told him he had to pay for everything. He told her to put it on the county tab. Instead, she got the other employee to call his Superior officer and let him know he was attempting to shoplift. So, in a small town where anything rarely happens, you better believe this made the paper. He was made to resign due to the embarrassment he brought to the force and about a year later.. he's working for the state troopers. That lasted less than a year before he was caught pocketing a baggie of a little white substance he confiscated from somebody during a traffic stop. I haven't seen him in ages so I wonder if he ended up doing time over this or if he was just made to quit and he moved away. In any case, a badge doesn't give you carte blanche or immunity if you decide to be a thief.
@@stevefurrier9932 No first you said "a lot of" then you said "some". If you don't know the difference between "a lot of" and "some" you really should check a dictonary.
I don't have time this morning to type out both stories, so if anyone wants to read it, let me know. 1. I worked with a woman who used to be a bartender. She told me about this officer that got away with r*ping prostitutes. 2. When I was 6, a cop gave my dad a ticket because he HATED my uncle, a police lutenant. (I spelled that wrong, didn't i?)
My dad ran one of those double lights (the second one) and was pulled over. Only because he was in his pickup truck, he couldn't stop between the lights without getting hit. After he explained that to the cop he was let go with a warning.
This episode is basically a run down of how silly it is to expect police to police themselves. They’re small-minded, petty, and they act like school girls. They aren’t capable of holding themselves accountable.
I wonder if any if these ticket wars are actually the same ones being told by different people unknowingly... In other words, I think there were 4 mentioned, maybe 5. I'm curious if any are duplicates, but shared by someone else who also know about them...
"suspicion" doesn't guarantee guilty. I've known plenty of cops in my own family that write that down as their reason for pulling people over when they actually had no reason, kind of a reason I don't talk to the same members of my family, it's a bs thing they can put down and cover their own ass. I 100% agree with you though if they are indeed under the influence, but if they're proven to be innocent then they should be let go.
Your wording is wrong. A suspicion does not mean the person is really intoxicated. People who drive under the influence of alcohol or other substances should never let go.
My nephew was in the Army. He also had a lead foot and enjoyed it. He's never gotten a speeding ticket. He handed his Military ID and License over every time. Gets thanked and told to slow down.
in the UK if you are off duty military or civvy police and are pulled over you are required to show your military or police id. So cop stopping another cop or a military personnel will be presented with ID as they walk up to the car, it is not asking for a favour, it is legally (or used to be) required and the stop should go ahead as normal but record of the stop is past automatically to the chain of command of the person... so is actually more sever than a civvy stop.
Lieutenant is a funny word. I was at a Remembrance Day ceremony as a kid in choir. We were at the veterans hospital to sing in Flanders Field. During the ceremony I was so confused thinking that the person leading the ceremony was addressing each veteran as “left handed”. Such confusing pronunciation!
The military ID thing is about expiration. For my whole career my driver's license had "military" on the expiration date, and under the law of the state I was licensed under my license expired 90 days after I left the military.
In lot of countries actually can fire you if you break the least amount of laws,so it ot would have been followed,some countries wouldn't have enough cops,and i think it works like in some states too
Funny the guy with the Air Force.Dad, that gives a bunch of seatbelt tickets.Replied with a bunch of stuff to make his dad sound like a better guy like launching spy satellites and working on engines of planes that would murder
Damn, i kinda feel bad for the guy in story 46. Going 74 in a 65 isnt even that bad, and there wasnt any actual proof that they were doing it, that just sucks man
Just different pronunciations depending on the region. British and Canadian people tend to say it like "lef-tenant," and Americans usually say it like "loo-tenant," which is closer to the original French pronunciation.
@@JaelinBezel that is because Cologne is actually a french word. In french it is pronounced closer to "Colonye" (not like Bill Nye). Maybe you should look it up how the french say it because it is hard to explain. Funny enough that they decided to call a product by the french translation for the german town called Köln xD
Wrong, there is the exactly correct amount of professional courtesy officers in Denmark. If police catches one of their own, they're throwing the book at them. They've spent years to get their degree, get into the police academy and pass the tough exams, they want the best. There's definitely knobs in our police, I've only encountered one rude officer in over a decade, rest has been a delight to deal with. Never seen a civilian get heated at an officer, but I'm sure it happens.
25:39 How would that officer defends that son? He literally can say,that the gun what was under the seat,he wanted to bring to the station,but forgot,and t away with a small warning and he could admit the ownership of alcohol,even if it's not true, that's it his. If the bottle was not empty,he can say,he just delivered it to home At least thats what i would do if my children got in trouble
48:04 I would neber let the same guy do the dui testing,who arrested the guy,dause in that case lawyers can come that he purposefully gave false results about the arrested person. And even can say that is racist and antisemitic,if the guy has another race,or religion A great lawywr can bust out the case with these marks
3:29 dude you’re the one supposed to tell us; aren’t you making the compilation taking comments from reddit posts? Wasn’t there the answer in the comments under the Story 5 you read? You could’ve just directly read it yourself if you’re the one who makes this compilations, right?
I realize this channel is run by younger people but the anti police attitude comes through, quite a bit. In the US there are literally millions or police interactions with citizens a day and they mostly go well. Please give police officers and their families respect as they swear to protect their communities and life would be chaos otherwise. Look at the cities who cut back on police lately. It's bedlam.
I think the reason these interactions go peacefully most of the time is because when law enforcers are overstepping their rights it goes right over most citizen's heads and they just comply, which is a dangerous thing.
idk my dad is a retired cop and even he agrees there are lots of shit cops he wrote tickets to cops that sped or tried to steal things this is in the US
@@bread9173 That is straight up criminal and many people will never see that side. I mean the more subtle overstepping of boundaries they are not supposed to do. I live in Switzerland, and like 15 years ago when I had my first cabrio I was rather careless and sometimes smoked a very mild mix of green leaf on my way to work in the morning. Somebody must have snitched on me. One morning the police was at the side of the road behind a corner and they almost looked like they were waiting for me. They waved me over to the side of the road and told me to get out of the car immediately and started searching it. To this day I don't know whether they were even allowed to do that in my country and there is the problem. I just let it happen and I know plenty of people who also have a lot better things to do in their lives than having to learn the freakin book of law because those who are supposed to guard it make up shit as they go along, just banking on that damn circumstance. We always say people aren't perfect and they make mistakes. Sure! If I work as a clerk and I make a mistake and something wrong gets delivered is something WAY DIFFERENT than people who are there to guard the law and the citizens abusing their power. That is a whole different level of people making mistakes. One is a mishap, and one is just lowlifery. That is the thing I am talking about. We need a thorough house clean in this place honestly. There are too many wrong things going on in places where people vowed to do the opposite all over the world.
When pulled over by military police, military personnel will be required to had over their military ID in addition to their driver's license. Additionally, many states will allow you to drive with an expired license if you are currently active duty. For those reasons, most military will hand over their ID when stopped by a cop, it's just habit.
It's all about your attitude.
that’s a great point. It’s interesting how different rules apply to military personnel, and it really reflects the unique relationship between the military and civilian law enforcement
This. I had the same vertical under 21 drivers license till I was nearly 30 because of this exemption
Actually came here to post this exact thing, but I see it's already been stated.
"We dont write tickets to cops or their families" is the reason local businesses and services should "refuse any and all service to cops and their families"
May I ask why? I don't understand why wrongfully turning a blind eye relates to lack of service?
@@Madditude we need to treat them how they treat us. Shit like this would stop quick if we just reserved our rights to refuse service.
Okay but the story about the kids fanboying over the officer is so adorable
Cops earn my respect when they don't let
other cops act above the law. The cop that owns the wrong doing, if they do, earn double my respect. If they'ren't above the law and lead by example, we shouldn't either! Hats off to you respectable 5-0!
And hats off to you for that impressive grammar!
Amen! Cops need to be willing to police themselves.
Ooooh, I have a "Not a Cop" version!
I work in security, and a few years ago I was working in Road Security as a Manual Director for where to drive.
And this one time I was positioned near an intersection where there was a hole for some pipe restauration or something. At the other end of the street there was a "No motored vehicle past this point" sign. Obviously I had the usual "I thought this didn't apply to me" comment, to which I'd respond "Sorry, but the hole is an equal opportunity blockade. Turn around and stop breaking the road laws."
One day, much to my enjoyment, a uniformed Police car drives in. I raise my stop sign, grin the largest shit eating grin I can muster and slowly walk up to the driver seat window.
Driver opens the window and I see a slightly nervous cop with a passenger cop with a bigger grin than mine.
I say "Hello. I am SO tempted to ask for license and registration, but I do believe as a mere security guard I do not hold that power." I hear a "BAHA!" from the passenger cop.
"But what power I do have is to ask if you can read road signs?"
Driver responds "Uhm, yes?"
Me: "Are you asking me or confirming? Cus that sounded like a question. I'm going to assume it was a confirmation and ask you to let me know the meaning av the signs you drove past."
Driver Cop: "It meant that I was not allowed to drive in here."
Me: "Correct, I am also gonna assume you to know this would obviously not apply if you were on an emergency outing with the sirens and blue lights and shit. I would still attempt to stop you, cus hole don't care about any of that. But you wouldn't be breaking the legal laws of the road in that case... unlike now."
That was the moment the passenger cop lost his shit and broke out laughing. I give him a nod.
"So do a 180 degree turn, drive back out and stop breaking the law you are hired to uphold."
This whole thing took place in 2017. Last year, at my new job, I told the story to a guy. He enjoyed it a bit too much. I said it was funny, but not that funny.
He went "Oh no, you don't understand! This is my second time hearing it! The driver cop is still a cop in the city, but my cousin was the cop in the passenger seat!"
According to this dude, this story comes up every time new people start working the force, Christmas party, drivers birthday aaaaand whenever he is honored for any reason.
Personally... I'd ask for a transfer.
I actually feel kinda bad knowing how much shit he's gotten.
Still funny tho.
Good to know that not everyone plays the “blue look out for blue” game. Gives me some hope for humanity.
Glad my dad was one of those cops that still would arrest or ticket other cops for breaking laws. He's retired now.
There’s a good reason to put your badge out the window off duty policemen are carrying a weapon. If a gun is seen before you identify yourself it is more problematic.
😮😮😮
This is the earliest I’ve ever been, keep up the good vids. I really like how you actually commentate on the stories, and how you’re obviously NOT an AI
same
Same
There's this guy currently in the US who actually got a court to say that the laws should not apply to him the way they apply to everyone else.
😭
I’m not sure whether to laugh or cry at this. Good work, fine human.
This guy who encourages his crowd of cultists to hang the man who was his second in command for 4 years? Kinda weird
@@andreaseverin1346 The guy with the big crowd size complex.
How does one love and hate their country at the same time.
as amusing as it is to hear about cops getting into "ticket wars" with one another, talk about a monumental waste of tax-payer resources! maybe they should just focus on following the law themselves.
Horrible fact. Drunk drivers generally brace less when crashing into something or someone. Being more relaxed causes them to injure themselves less. So when you drive drunk you risk your own life but other peoples even more.
Exactly! And they're inside the car, all safe and sound. It's the other people.... 😬
Just because one wears a badge, it doesn't make them "Above" the law. They may be there to enforce the laws, but they still should have to follow the laws themselves.
Okay, I was actually a witness to one of these incidents.
I live in a small town, we have five cops on duty at any given point in time. I was working in an electronics store, early morning shift, and my usual routine was to stop off at my local gas station and pick up a cup of coffee and something to snack on on my way to work
I go in one day and I see an officer that I know fairly well, he's standing there with his hands on his thighs looking down at the ground and an expression on his face like a kid who just got caught opening their Christmas presents a month early.
I go to ask him what's wrong, and the person working the counter at the time says my name, puts her index finger up and shakes her head no.
I don't think 2 minutes went by when the sergeant walks in and I whisper "oh s***" to myself.
The sergeant didn't normally respond to calls unless he was the only one on duty or if it was something absolutely serious.
He starts calling this officer a bunch of names and telling him he's an embarrassment to the force before turning to the convenience store employee and asking if she can give him a detailed description of what happened.
As it turns out, she was stocking chips a aisle over when she saw him grab a couple of handfuls of 5-Hour energy shots before placing them in his cargo pants pocket.
He tried to walk out before she stopped him and told him he had to pay for everything. He told her to put it on the county tab.
Instead, she got the other employee to call his Superior officer and let him know he was attempting to shoplift.
So, in a small town where anything rarely happens, you better believe this made the paper.
He was made to resign due to the embarrassment he brought to the force and about a year later.. he's working for the state troopers.
That lasted less than a year before he was caught pocketing a baggie of a little white substance he confiscated from somebody during a traffic stop.
I haven't seen him in ages so I wonder if he ended up doing time over this or if he was just made to quit and he moved away.
In any case, a badge doesn't give you carte blanche or immunity if you decide to be a thief.
Gosh I love this narrator, the humor, the morals, the voice 🤗 perfect combo
Sooo... half of these were like the exact opposite of the prompt lmao. Anyway, great job reading them, i always enjoy hearing your vids!
3:33 In a lot of countries military is over police in ranks,and never know if they are in a secret mission,or driving there.
Wrong, lol, dont lie kid
@@cocoalocoa8702 I said in some countries.Did you check every countries raking system?
@@stevefurrier9932 raking.
@@stevefurrier9932 No first you said "a lot of" then you said "some". If you don't know the difference between "a lot of" and "some" you really should check a dictonary.
I don't have time this morning to type out both stories, so if anyone wants to read it, let me know.
1. I worked with a woman who used to be a bartender. She told me about this officer that got away with r*ping prostitutes.
2. When I was 6, a cop gave my dad a ticket because he HATED my uncle, a police lutenant. (I spelled that wrong, didn't i?)
My dad ran one of those double lights (the second one) and was pulled over. Only because he was in his pickup truck, he couldn't stop between the lights without getting hit. After he explained that to the cop he was let go with a warning.
This episode is basically a run down of how silly it is to expect police to police themselves. They’re small-minded, petty, and they act like school girls. They aren’t capable of holding themselves accountable.
That's quite the generalized opinion. Remember that these stories are few and far between- some of these stories are from 30 years ago.
I wonder if any if these ticket wars are actually the same ones being told by different people unknowingly... In other words, I think there were 4 mentioned, maybe 5. I'm curious if any are duplicates, but shared by someone else who also know about them...
Absolutely no one should ever be let go after being pulled over for a DUI/DWI suspicion. No one. Period.
"suspicion" doesn't guarantee guilty. I've known plenty of cops in my own family that write that down as their reason for pulling people over when they actually had no reason, kind of a reason I don't talk to the same members of my family, it's a bs thing they can put down and cover their own ass.
I 100% agree with you though if they are indeed under the influence, but if they're proven to be innocent then they should be let go.
Your wording is wrong. A suspicion does not mean the person is really intoxicated. People who drive under the influence of alcohol or other substances should never let go.
My nephew was in the Army. He also had a lead foot and enjoyed it. He's never gotten a speeding ticket. He handed his Military ID and License over every time. Gets thanked and told to slow down.
in the UK if you are off duty military or civvy police and are pulled over you are required to show your military or police id. So cop stopping another cop or a military personnel will be presented with ID as they walk up to the car, it is not asking for a favour, it is legally (or used to be) required and the stop should go ahead as normal but record of the stop is past automatically to the chain of command of the person... so is actually more sever than a civvy stop.
Story 42 is HILARIOUS!
My greetings to the OP whose dad was at Wright-Patterson Field. Spent 30 years in central Ohio and loved Fairborn and having Wright Patterson nearby.
Glad to have the old narrator back
Lieutenant is a funny word. I was at a Remembrance Day ceremony as a kid in choir. We were at the veterans hospital to sing in Flanders Field. During the ceremony I was so confused thinking that the person leading the ceremony was addressing each veteran as “left handed”. Such confusing pronunciation!
it’s shocking to see someone in authority act so entitled, thinking they could bypass the rules just because they wear a badge
The military ID thing is about expiration. For my whole career my driver's license had "military" on the expiration date, and under the law of the state I was licensed under my license expired 90 days after I left the military.
Guess who’s back back again Unsersparkeds back
we missed u it’s Ben 2 or 3 days until knock we can’t go more then a day with out u 😂😂
Real
In my country the cops cannot speed, because they're the example and people follow it. Unless they have sirens on, then ppl gtfootw.
I'm Canadian amount of times I've almost got charged for street racing for going over the speed limit is crazy
Omg!! 3 days is to long you go without your videos! 😢
Is there a new rank called leftenant im unaware of?
In lot of countries actually can fire you if you break the least amount of laws,so it ot would have been followed,some countries wouldn't have enough cops,and i think it works like in some states too
Funny the guy with the Air Force.Dad, that gives a bunch of seatbelt tickets.Replied with a bunch of stuff to make his dad sound like a better guy like launching spy satellites and working on engines of planes that would murder
Damn, i kinda feel bad for the guy in story 46. Going 74 in a 65 isnt even that bad, and there wasnt any actual proof that they were doing it, that just sucks man
Right off the bat, the first two people didn't answer the question. Arrests are not tickets.
Is there some difference i am unaware of bewteen leftenant and lieutenant?
Just different pronunciations depending on the region. British and Canadian people tend to say it like "lef-tenant," and Americans usually say it like "loo-tenant," which is closer to the original French pronunciation.
The most confusing thing in the american "jargon" is how Colonel is pronounced like Kernel. It makes no sense when viewed superficially.
@@im3phirebird81 well I don’t understand why “Cologne” is pronounced “Ko-Loan”
@@JaelinBezel that is because Cologne is actually a french word. In french it is pronounced closer to "Colonye" (not like Bill Nye). Maybe you should look it up how the french say it because it is hard to explain. Funny enough that they decided to call a product by the french translation for the german town called Köln xD
What if the country's main police boss does something illegal?Or the boss of the highest ranks ever?
Thank you for saying leftenant properly! Keep it up with the correct Canadian pronunciation!
It's literally wrong, though. The US pronunciation is also wrong, but it's closer to the correct pronunciation.
Wrong, there is the exactly correct amount of professional courtesy officers in Denmark. If police catches one of their own, they're throwing the book at them. They've spent years to get their degree, get into the police academy and pass the tough exams, they want the best. There's definitely knobs in our police, I've only encountered one rude officer in over a decade, rest has been a delight to deal with. Never seen a civilian get heated at an officer, but I'm sure it happens.
25:39 How would that officer defends that son? He literally can say,that the gun what was under the seat,he wanted to bring to the station,but forgot,and t away with a small warning and he could admit the ownership of alcohol,even if it's not true, that's it his.
If the bottle was not empty,he can say,he just delivered it to home
At least thats what i would do if my children got in trouble
Why cite the conductor. The speed of the train is the engineers job
2 possibilities, 1. OP doesn't know the difference or 2. Some obscure rule or law dictates that citations be given to the conductor.
BATTLEFIELD: BAD COMPANY 2 GAMEPLAY, WHAT????? (We need a 3rd game)
I'm just crying wondering why in Canada the left tenant always becomes an officer. At least a loo tenant is willing to deal with sh*t!
Oh story 46-go step on legos
what does OP stand for?
48:04 I would neber let the same guy do the dui testing,who arrested the guy,dause in that case lawyers can come that he purposefully gave false results about the arrested person.
And even can say that is racist and antisemitic,if the guy has another race,or religion
A great lawywr can bust out the case with these marks
What with you guys like annoy the shit of each other
3:29 dude you’re the one supposed to tell us; aren’t you making the compilation taking comments from reddit posts? Wasn’t there the answer in the comments under the Story 5 you read? You could’ve just directly read it yourself if you’re the one who makes this compilations, right?
25:06 Even worse, possibly a gun the father confiscated and held in his possession.
A
Military vets like this comment
I realize this channel is run by younger people but the anti police attitude comes through, quite a bit. In the US there are literally millions or police interactions with citizens a day and they mostly go well. Please give police officers and their families respect as they swear to protect their communities and life would be chaos otherwise. Look at the cities who cut back on police lately. It's bedlam.
I think the reason these interactions go peacefully most of the time is because when law enforcers are overstepping their rights it goes right over most citizen's heads and they just comply, which is a dangerous thing.
idk my dad is a retired cop and even he agrees there are lots of shit cops
he wrote tickets to cops that sped or tried to steal things
this is in the US
@@bread9173 That is straight up criminal and many people will never see that side.
I mean the more subtle overstepping of boundaries they are not supposed to do.
I live in Switzerland, and like 15 years ago when I had my first cabrio I was rather careless and sometimes smoked a very mild mix of green leaf on my way to work in the morning. Somebody must have snitched on me. One morning the police was at the side of the road behind a corner and they almost looked like they were waiting for me. They waved me over to the side of the road and told me to get out of the car immediately and started searching it. To this day I don't know whether they were even allowed to do that in my country and there is the problem. I just let it happen and I know plenty of people who also have a lot better things to do in their lives than having to learn the freakin book of law because those who are supposed to guard it make up shit as they go along, just banking on that damn circumstance.
We always say people aren't perfect and they make mistakes. Sure! If I work as a clerk and I make a mistake and something wrong gets delivered is something WAY DIFFERENT than people who are there to guard the law and the citizens abusing their power. That is a whole different level of people making mistakes. One is a mishap, and one is just lowlifery. That is the thing I am talking about.
We need a thorough house clean in this place honestly. There are too many wrong things going on in places where people vowed to do the opposite all over the world.
The grand standing the reader does is low key annoying. Just read the posts