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3/8/2009 7:57:07 PM
was it the Stanford prison experiments that dealt with this type of behaviour?last night i went to the porch, and saw something like this manifest. it all began with a fight that broke out where one girl hit the other in the face with a water bottle, and the other girl retaliated by throwing a beer bottle that flew over most peoples' heads and hit the bar. the girls and all their friends were removed by a small army of security personnel.following that incident there was one chick on staff that was pointing out people who had too much to drink. i saw atleast 8 people being removed by the use of physical force. these were mostly guys, and were all targeted preemptively. one really big guy was squirming and kicking as 4 or 5 securitymen removed him forcefully. no other fights had started.after about half dozen people were preemptively removed, i asked one of the bouncers - "how many is that, 6?" he said "man, people need to stop drinking so much".finally, they removed a pair of girls that were grinding on each other and were obviously drunk. at this point i went up to the expeditionary unit (the chick that was pointing out all the ultradrunks), and said "so you're the one that decides who stays and goes huh?" she said "yeah" sort of arrogantly and then got a guilty look real quick. i think she was just doing her job - the manager of the place probably said to her something like "get rid of all the drunk fighters or your feet to the fire".the situation had made her a bit trigger happy, and all the bouncers doing their jobs were being really rough because they had to - the first couple of people were walked out, and the removals got increasingly forceful as the night went on.the last few removals were formulaic/textbook. it was like: "sir you're drinking too much, you need to go" -- "what do you mean i'm drinking too m..." -- *full nelson/headlock* -- *grabbing arms and legs* -- *out the door*
3/8/2009 8:19:12 PM
The bar situation is always tricky. Long story short, I don't have a problem with physically removing them from the bar as long as you don't hurt them physically or break any of their belongings. I have a fair amount of experience removing drunks from bars -- used to be my job, as a matter of fact. If they argue at all, it's a bad sign. They're clearly confrontational, because here they are arguing with you. They're getting more angry every second, because you can't really reason with a very drunk person. And they figure they're going to have to leave soon anyway, so they don't have as much motivation to behave themselves.
3/8/2009 9:04:04 PM
I've only been removed from a bar once, and I don't remember the incident. It was the start of a bizarre night/early morning that had technically begun around noon that day when I polished off a fifth of JD and set the tone for what was probably the booziest day of my life, excluding those instances in which other things helped me stay up longer and drink more.[Edited on March 8, 2009 at 9:49 PM. Reason : Just felt like sharing.]
3/8/2009 9:42:40 PM
^AHA. That's probably the lamest post I've ever made, and I've made some pretty lame ones.I normally at least pretend like I'm trying to relate to people or be relevant.Anyway, my bad, guys. I apologize.
3/9/2009 2:23:55 AM
3/9/2009 2:27:14 AM
^It's not clear that productivity or organization are very important to Megaloman84.You know, it's like when everybody is arguing...if they just stepped back and took a breath, they'd see that they actually want the same thing, but they just disagree on how best to achieve it.Megaloman84 is the odd guy out who doesn't want the same thing as everybody else.
3/9/2009 2:38:04 AM
It's a little off topic but, I was reading about a tragedy out in the Bay Area where a transit cop shot one of the passengers dead. It was videotaped, and the video showed little justification.One of the commentors posts seemed appropriate to a number of circumstances:
3/10/2009 11:52:32 AM
have they let this guy off yet or is he still on paid vacation
3/10/2009 11:27:30 PM
^^There is such a subculture: youth. The girl in the video is 15.
3/11/2009 2:46:21 AM
i actually agree with Bridget for once holy fucking shit
3/11/2009 8:16:14 AM
lolhttp://www.lewrockwell.com/blog/lewrw/archives/025593.html
3/11/2009 9:36:07 AM
3/11/2009 3:30:42 PM
^ ha, holy shit - first time I actually saw the shoe from the 1st camera, hitting the officer. Makes the whole thing even more pathetic
3/11/2009 4:34:07 PM
3/11/2009 5:01:13 PM
and what's especially absurd is that this is a 15 YEAR OLD GIRL. what kind of man hits a 15 year old girl????? cop or no cop, he's definitely a poor excuse for a man. what a bastard, i hope he gets fired and put in jail.
3/11/2009 5:08:58 PM
i hope he gets fired and put into jail and someone double his mass in jail throws him around and beats the crap out of him
3/11/2009 5:15:46 PM
3/11/2009 5:23:13 PM
I wasn't there but from what I can tell this cop got his feelings hurt over nothing and let his emotions get the best of him. Its pretty pathetic to let something like that get to you. Don't get me wrong, I have a zero tolerance for people putting there hands on me in anyway, but this guy went nuts and its unacceptable.But those of you who think a 15 year old girl couldn't hurt you in a fight are dead wrong. People can do extraordinary things when their freedom is in jeopardy.[Edited on March 11, 2009 at 7:21 PM. Reason : g/s/p]
3/11/2009 7:20:46 PM
3/11/2009 7:30:44 PM
Protect and to Serve AM I RITE!?
3/11/2009 7:33:04 PM
^^I wasn't saying that she was a threat. But those who are thinking, 'how could someone beat up a girl?" in general.
3/11/2009 7:37:13 PM
Bridget, I know you claim to be reading about Libertarianism, but if you think that Libertarians, whether anarchist, like myself, or the more common minarchist sort, have anything against productivity or order, then you clearly haven't read enough. As for me not wanting the same things as everyone else, that's only true to the extent that people don't want freedom, peace or prosperity...
3/12/2009 5:51:50 AM
3/12/2009 6:35:30 AM
3/12/2009 8:47:56 AM
I don't see a problem.If you don't want to get roughed up by the police, don't fuck with them. It's that easy. If that bitch would have had some respect for the police and not kicking a shoe at them she would have been fine.You people aren't seeing the cause of this incident. It had nothing to do with the police.
3/12/2009 8:49:52 AM
^ troll if we have a traffic accident, and you come out of your car and insult me and throw your empty coke can at me in such a way that it barely touches me, i guess i am justified to beat the hell out of you or even shoot you. because, as you said, your insult would be the cause.
3/12/2009 9:45:26 AM
3/12/2009 10:10:04 AM
3/12/2009 11:29:25 AM
3/12/2009 11:32:41 AM
Ah, Megaloman84. So right and yet so wrong. Market and government collude to create the inequality that inspires the underclass to threaten supposedly productive citizens. The government dependency you speak of merely prevents this from spiraling out of control and leading to mass unrest. But whatever. I'm down with anyone who's got my back against the pigs.
3/12/2009 12:07:20 PM
3/12/2009 1:09:55 PM
What a bunch of tripe you are posting good god
3/12/2009 1:23:46 PM
I'm sorry, I forget, this is the Internet, I shouldn't try to make points that wouldn't fit on a bumper sticker.
3/12/2009 2:09:44 PM
^ Its a free country, post all the words that you want. Just be aware no one is reading your shit. I have found to that for a post to be most effective it should be written with a few sentences and should only contain one or two concise thoughts.
3/12/2009 9:08:23 PM
3/12/2009 11:09:19 PM
sure, sounds reasonable. 'cause in the mall, we have guys like this protecting us!
3/12/2009 11:21:37 PM
Hey laugh if you want, but while the Paul Blarts of the world may be untrained, unarmed, and underpaid they have a number of advantages over the pigs.1) They have a direct incentive to protect their customers2) They're ordinary citizens, not anointed demigods, clad in the sacred vestments of the Most High and Holy State. If they fly off the handle or overreact, they can easily be held accountable for it. 3) That movie kicked ass.
3/13/2009 5:13:48 AM
you're trolling now..... right?
3/13/2009 10:02:45 AM
Ok, you're going to need more than incredulity to establish that private security, which hard-nosed businessmen pay billions of dollars per year for, is ineffective.The empirical fact is that places protected by private security tend to be very safe. The theoretical angle is that the incentives shake out favorably for protection and against abuse.Can you say anything to shed a different light on this, or is rolling your eyes all you can do?
3/13/2009 2:07:06 PM
ok, you've made two points:1) "hard-nosed businessmen pay billions of dollars a year" for private security - yeah, great. and you expect normal people to dish out thousands of dollars a month for the same kind of security?2) are you actually claiming that the reason malls are relatively safe is because of the rent-a-cops roaming the corridors? I think you're mixing up correlation and causation here
3/13/2009 2:27:08 PM
"yeah don't piss off that 1% that are psychopaths and are trusted with weapons and public security. you don't want that! just pay them your tax dollars and move along, just like you would a Don.even 1% is too much of a risk."You're retarded. So what should we do, not have a police force since we will always have at least 1% of the police force that is corrupt? I'm not saying it isn't more and that we can't lower it, but to say 1% is too much of a risk isn't very intelligent.
3/13/2009 5:41:49 PM
hell ya i can pay my "uncle" tony to protect and serve my security interests. If someone does something he can make them an offer they can not refuse.
3/13/2009 8:16:31 PM
3/14/2009 12:46:23 PM
3/14/2009 3:18:41 PM
Ok, if, as you "guess", malls are "inherently safe" then why do you "guess" mall owners each nearly universally pay what has to be hundreds of thousands of dollars per years to keep guards on duty during all operating hours?And granted, they do bring in the state cops when things get out of control, but if that were such a great option, why not simply use it as the default? Why even have the mall cops at all?And why would some even larger businesses, like Disney World, go to the extra trouble of getting some of their security people trained and sworn in as law enforcement officers, so that they never have to call the government's cops?[Edited on March 15, 2009 at 9:40 AM. Reason : ']
3/15/2009 9:37:54 AM
And what type of pro-active work do security guards do? Places like amusement parks, etc get sworn personnel so they can arrest, take real action if necessary not so they don't have to call the police. A place like an amusement park, which might be out of the way, and large areas might take awhile for a sworn LEO to respond. These company police officers works in the park, its like their city. If you have someone who has violated the law, having a sworn LEO employed by the company insures that justice can be carried out immediately. There are some things police can do that security can't if you haven't figured that out. Usually, an amusement park has a small number of sworn company police that is augmented by regular security. [Edited on March 15, 2009 at 11:49 AM. Reason : fsfd]
3/15/2009 11:42:18 AM
I think it would be cool if regular responsible people could get registered as like 'citizen's police', carry a gun around all day, and get like a beeper message if a call came up near them.
3/16/2009 12:44:59 AM
3/16/2009 10:22:26 AM
nvm[Edited on March 18, 2009 at 6:06 AM. Reason : doop dee do]
3/18/2009 6:05:28 AM