Predict today's death toll, comrades.
12/9/2011 10:20:04 PM
Nil.
12/9/2011 11:43:33 PM
Zero seems to be correct. 40,000 people in Moscow alone protesting the legitimacy of the government, and not a single police brutality complaint. It would appear that Russian police are more disciplined than their American counterparts.
12/10/2011 10:12:57 AM
It's pretty much like that anywhere else in the world (outside of 3rd world country dictatorships where the police and the military are one in the same). Usually in countries where you see violence, it's the protesters who begin the violence and the people who go in to contain it are the military, not the police.It's pretty damn sad when I'm more scared of the police in the US than I am when I was in Germany/Austria or that HORRIBLE COMMIE COUNTRY ( ) of China.
12/10/2011 10:40:35 AM
I wonder if Obama is going to call for Putin and Medvedev to step down.
12/10/2011 1:21:12 PM
do you really wonder that.
12/10/2011 4:54:42 PM
12/10/2011 5:28:03 PM
Or maybe they just know they might end up in a ditch somewhere if they do.Hey, I know!! WE SHOULD BE MORE LIKE THEM!!!
12/10/2011 6:46:23 PM
China has those reeducation places or whatever you call it (where your beasically tortured all the time)...whenever anything happens in China the leaders of the protest disappear, to these places, for life (or they are released when they are near death)....still some from the T. Square protests are at these sort of places. Russia probably has something like that too.[Edited on December 10, 2011 at 8:18 PM. Reason : w]
12/10/2011 8:17:21 PM
Yeah, this is a pretty fucking stupid statement:
12/10/2011 8:42:39 PM
^^It's called prison, and we have them too.
12/10/2011 8:43:44 PM
We don't throw people in prison for "subversive speech"and other bogus laws created lock up dissenters.
12/10/2011 8:52:05 PM
^ Read the edit you fucking simpleton.You're discussing a country's laws. It's totally irrelevant to what I said. I'm talking about police behavior and accountability. The two are separate topics. Stop trying to build strawmen, faggot.
12/10/2011 9:06:14 PM
Hey, instead of telling us how awesome German Polizei are compared to our police because you spent all of a week or two there on some vacation, how about you do some research instead? 68er-Bewegung, Rote Armee Fraktion, Notstandgesetze, usw. Amnesty International doesn't exactly have nice things to say about the Bundespolizei, either. But hey, I'm sure Benno Ohnesorg will be glad to know that you think the Polizei are nice guys.
12/10/2011 10:26:30 PM
Italian Cops (Carabinieri) are by far the most corrupt police branch I have ever seen. They do not react well to protesters and they will frequently get into altercations with the local Gypsies because they know no one will believe the gypsies.http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/1460505.stmFor just one example.Seriously, a lot of Americans have this super idealized thoughts of what Europe or the rest of the world is like or how bad we have it compared to the rest of the world. For those too lazy to read the article, in 2 days of riots at a G8 summit, 230 people were injured and one killed by the police.[Edited on December 10, 2011 at 10:42 PM. Reason : a]
12/10/2011 10:30:02 PM
^^ You could have saved us all a lot of time by just typing "I am a fucking idiot and here is why..."
12/10/2011 11:01:49 PM
Oh it really is, my friends and I liken it to the Mexico of Europe. However, my point still stands, American cops aren't that bad, also we have loads of freedom. We can protest something we don't like, we can write about essentially anything we want (I'm saying essentially, because we can't publish death threats and the like) if there is police brutality, we can bitch about it, call for the cops resignation, sue the cop, etcI'm not nervous when I see a cop in this country.
12/11/2011 1:50:45 AM
12/11/2011 2:08:19 AM
^but yeh, fuckin horrible united states. complain all day about a grossly skewed and 'edited out segment' of a UC pepper spray incident (in reality they warned the students not to surround them for 45 mins)..... yet you live here peacefully better than any possible location in the universe so many fucking idiots in this country that need to just gtfo and enjoy their paradise in tehran.
12/11/2011 2:36:12 AM
They need a holiday in cambodia
12/11/2011 10:14:54 AM
Ah, winter; the greatest ally of any russian leader.America's next summer is going to be hot though.[Edited on December 11, 2011 at 11:04 AM. Reason : .]
12/11/2011 11:03:23 AM
Oh, ok, so we a have a statute of limitations on police brutality. As long as we're clear on that. At least, that's what I got when I skimmed through that abortion of a quote repost. I'm quite capable of Googling the events and groups I listed, I don't need you to do it for me. Now, having actually lived in Germany and Austria, I can tell you that half the shit you get away with when dealing with a police officer here wouldn't be tolerated there. Try arguing with the Pistol/MP-5 buddy team about how 'you have rights' and 'you can't do this to me' and see how long it takes before you're eating curb.Look, merbig, the point I'm making is not that the US of A is all sunshine and unicorn giggles. I agree with many people that accountability over law enforcement needs a lot of work. But when you sit there and you sincerely state that you feel police in China or Germany are more well-behaved that ours, and I can look back at history at things like the German Student Movement and Tienanmen Square, you sound like an idiot. Please, honestly tell me that as a Chinese citizen, if you and a bunch of your friends got together and started protesting, shit wouldn't go down. I got it - you think things are broken here in the US. I hear your words, and they speak to me. Drive on. Just stop telling me (incorrectly) about how Country X is better than us in Area Y, because Country X has got it's own fucking skeletons to worry about.
12/11/2011 11:54:47 AM
12/11/2011 12:04:36 PM
12/11/2011 12:42:11 PM
I'm doing this separately to keep one post from becoming anymore of a cluster fuck than it already is.
12/11/2011 12:53:39 PM
ITT we learn that merbig is a fucking idiot
12/12/2011 11:58:21 AM
its been known methinks-
12/12/2011 12:04:26 PM
ITT we larn that blind patriotism runs deep.
12/12/2011 12:30:40 PM
I think the Russian government treated this protest rather nicely in hopes that once people have a chance to bleed their frustrations and the government promises to "look into it" then folks will simply go away and forget. If protests continue, I imagine that the Russian government will start taking a much more brutal approach.As for all the discussions on police, I would point out that you can't make a perfect comparison between the United States and other nations. Many countries have separate paramilitary agencies (gendarmerie I believe is the term) that do the "dirty work" that is primarily being discussed. China is a good example. You have the rank and file Chinese People's Police (blue uniforms) are "soft" because they deal only with traditional policing. However, the Chinese also have the People's Armed Police (green uniforms) that use violence for riot control, internal political suppression and border security. You see a similar model used in many other countries. This of course contrasts with the American model where local police forces have to do both policing and riot control. That's in part why you have the perception that other nations' police forces are more "friendly" because they don't have to deal with the nastier side of public security. Italy, France and South Korea are other nations I can think of off hand that have similar models.I would also add that US police are more heavily armed because of the proliferation of firearms. I'll save the second amendment discussions for a different thread, but that simple fact alone means that police have to be better armed to keep up with the citizenry and also be more cautious in dealing with situations. When you don't have to worry about waging combat with criminals who could be more heavily armed than you, you can be a lot more relaxed. I think the recent tragedy at VTech perfectly illustrates this.Also, a third point is that our policing is highly decentralized, so the level of training and discipline varies widely from region to region, more so than you would see in smaller nations that have single, national police forces. While not directly responsible for violence in our policing, it does mean that best practices and lessons aren't as easily disseminated.To top it off, a reminder that the recent police handling of Occupy was gentle versus a lot of other nations. Yes, it can be worse.http://www.google.com/search?tbm=isch&hl=en&source=hp&biw=1117&bih=717&q=South+Korean+riot+policehttp://www.who-sucks.com/people/the-exciting-world-of-south-korean-protestsI'll even throw in a link of South Korean Riot Police battling military veterans armed with homemade flamethrowers.http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5qhIZ8Px9Sc[Edited on December 12, 2011 at 4:46 PM. Reason : More pictures!]
12/12/2011 4:42:23 PM
It's interesting that you posted that last link. America, too, has a long and proud history of not paying its veterans and then beating the living shit out of them when they protest.The Continental Army was disbanded and sent home without pay in 1781. Two years later war veterans marched in Philly, and congress fled the city and used the current U.S. Army to crush the protesters.Interestingly, when congress(many of them southerners angered by the federal occupation of the south) passed the Posse Comitatus Act in 1878(which protected American citizens from the use of military force), they specifically exempted Washington DC so the politicians could use the military to save their own asses in the future. The subsequent lack of a federal military presence in the south let the local cops beat the negroes back into submission again, but hey, them's the breaks.The Washington, DC exemption came in handy in 1932 when starving World War I vets marched on washington to demand their pay. The Army was again ordered to heroically pushbroom them out of town and mop their blood up, killing many in the process.I mention the Posse Comitatus Act because, while there have been some bullshit loopholes allowing the Coast Guard and National Guard to occasionally blow U.S. citizens' hippy brains out, the military has largely stayed out of domestic affairs. This is all set to change NOW; if the National Defense Authorization Act passes, it will directly override the Posse Comitatus Act and allow military intervention on U.S. soil at any time, conveniently providing exactly the sort of secondary "thug" police force you describe in so many other countries.
12/12/2011 5:13:51 PM
12/13/2011 9:15:03 AM
^ Good point. Regardless, it'll be interesting to see how things play out.^^ Fair enough, but I think that the Federal government has gotten better about how it handles returning veterans. There's still plenty of room for improvement (the VA Hospital system being one of the immediate examples I can think of), but there have been a lot of other things like the GI Bill from the end of WWII that improved the situation significantly.Agree that the National Defense Authorization Act is dangerous, but I think that the threat of a direct military intervention is not one of them (at least from what I saw in the most recent coverage). I don't think the US is anywhere near establishing a gendarmerie only because the constitutional challenges and the resistance of states rights type wouldn't allow for it; I think governors would prefer to march over people with their own National Guard units than be beholden to the Federal government.[Edited on December 13, 2011 at 9:39 AM. Reason : Oh yeah... thread topic]
12/13/2011 9:37:40 AM
Yes, and I see no reason why the majority of military would want anything to do with domestic police actions, but I'm sure there's a minority that would jump at the chance, if for no other reason than to be "deployed" close to home.As for the independence of states to call in the National Guard...Governors can't take a shit these days without asking the Federal government for money to purchase the pot to sit on. Without federal money, schoolchildren would go unfed and the state government would grind to a halt. And that's assuming that the state's national guard unit isn't deployed abroad anyway.
12/13/2011 10:04:37 AM
^^ I'm very interested to see how things play out. Hopefully I will be over there for the presidential election to see things first hand. Being present for the Orange Revolution in Ukraine and then the failed revolution in Belarus, this could go either way at this point and will be fascinating to watch.
12/13/2011 11:55:15 AM
http://antonnikolenko.blogspot.com/2011/12/russian-legislative-elections-2011.html
12/13/2011 12:46:00 PM
^^ Yeah, please let us know what you see if you do get to go over there. I'd be very curious to hear your perspective on it. Especially given how Russians tend to be so "apolitical", any kind of voter revolt would be interesting to see.
12/13/2011 1:21:33 PM
The end is near.
12/27/2011 10:02:30 PM
The dictator is expected to be reinstated on Sunday. Expect violence in the streets.[Edited on March 2, 2012 at 4:42 PM. Reason : .]
3/2/2012 4:41:46 PM
Interesting thing though is that President Putin is looking a lot more vulnerable now. Before, he had a near invincible aura. Now he's got people that are openly criticizing him, even at his own rallies. Not sure what happens when he starts tightening the screws again, but the chink in his armor is going to leave room for protest actions.
3/2/2012 5:23:22 PM
protesting without violence occurring = stalemate = nothing changes.[Edited on March 2, 2012 at 11:42 PM. Reason : .]
3/2/2012 11:42:11 PM
Massive arrests. Two obviously corrupt elections in 3 months. The Arab spring is spreading.
3/6/2012 8:18:52 PM
lol this threadPutin had 0 competition. He legit won. He didn't even need the corruption. The next best opponent was a fucking retard
3/6/2012 8:44:05 PM
Zhirinovsky has a case of the cray cray, to be sure.Then again, no sane man would run for president against a dictator.
3/6/2012 9:55:13 PM
just talk to anybody over there. this election for them was like bill clinton running against donald trump, al franken, and sideshow bob.
3/7/2012 10:19:58 AM
That's because George Bush I, Bob Dole, and Ross Perot already got killed or were too scared to run.
3/7/2012 11:58:36 AM
Russia was more Democratic during the latter Soviet days, it's not a surprise nostalgia for "the old days" is on the up there.
3/7/2012 12:10:19 PM
^^ guess ur mad this country has been run by republicans for the last 50 years by and largelolwhat a horrible train-wreck it has been too. wouldn't you agree? probably the worst country ever during the last 4 decades
3/8/2012 10:02:41 PM
By "More Democratic" I wasn't referring to the party in power, but the integrity of their elections. You're dumb as shit dude.
3/9/2012 9:21:37 AM
LOL look at the fucking "^^". HAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHHAAHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAsee it's funny because you are that 'smart' guy at the party pointing out everyone's flaws...yet for some reason you are the only one standing around alone like a jackass lol[Edited on March 9, 2012 at 2:27 PM. Reason : hahahaha i'd love to meet you in reality and watch your psycho babble nonstop]
3/9/2012 2:25:58 PM