← Back to context Comment by dTal 11 hours ago Rule of law? Innocent people are being shot. 9 comments dTal Reply account42 10 hours ago Wile I don't think they deserved to loose their lives over it, calling them "innocent" is quite dishonest. They were at the very least intentionally being a nuisance and in most cases breaking actual laws in the process. JumpCrisscross 8 hours ago > They were at the very least intentionally being a nuisance and in most cases breaking actual laws in the processPretti was breaking zero laws. You’d have to do some prosecutorial voodoo to conjure up a misdemeanor.There is lawbreaking in that videos. But the felony-level stuff is all from folks in uniform. (Which, thankfully, they’ve started wearing.) zahlman 1 hour ago > Pretti was breaking zero laws. You’d have to do some prosecutorial voodoo to conjure up a misdemeanor.Does an ongoing protest empower civilians to stand in the middle of a road that has not been closed to traffic by local authorities? mexicocitinluez 7 hours ago > calling them "innocent" is quite dishonestYou're not actually arguing that American citizens shouldn't be able to film the cops are you? That would be pretty un-American. zahlman 1 hour ago That is not at all the argument being made. 1 reply → maxehmookau 8 hours ago Being a nuisance is not illegal. In the eyes of the law, someone being a nuisance is, indeed, innocent - and to say so is not dishonest. kdkirsch 9 hours ago So now being a nuisance is justification for summary extrajudicial executions?! If people on HN believe this then we’re toast. zahlman 1 hour ago That is not at all the argument being made.
account42 10 hours ago Wile I don't think they deserved to loose their lives over it, calling them "innocent" is quite dishonest. They were at the very least intentionally being a nuisance and in most cases breaking actual laws in the process. JumpCrisscross 8 hours ago > They were at the very least intentionally being a nuisance and in most cases breaking actual laws in the processPretti was breaking zero laws. You’d have to do some prosecutorial voodoo to conjure up a misdemeanor.There is lawbreaking in that videos. But the felony-level stuff is all from folks in uniform. (Which, thankfully, they’ve started wearing.) zahlman 1 hour ago > Pretti was breaking zero laws. You’d have to do some prosecutorial voodoo to conjure up a misdemeanor.Does an ongoing protest empower civilians to stand in the middle of a road that has not been closed to traffic by local authorities? mexicocitinluez 7 hours ago > calling them "innocent" is quite dishonestYou're not actually arguing that American citizens shouldn't be able to film the cops are you? That would be pretty un-American. zahlman 1 hour ago That is not at all the argument being made. 1 reply → maxehmookau 8 hours ago Being a nuisance is not illegal. In the eyes of the law, someone being a nuisance is, indeed, innocent - and to say so is not dishonest. kdkirsch 9 hours ago So now being a nuisance is justification for summary extrajudicial executions?! If people on HN believe this then we’re toast. zahlman 1 hour ago That is not at all the argument being made.
JumpCrisscross 8 hours ago > They were at the very least intentionally being a nuisance and in most cases breaking actual laws in the processPretti was breaking zero laws. You’d have to do some prosecutorial voodoo to conjure up a misdemeanor.There is lawbreaking in that videos. But the felony-level stuff is all from folks in uniform. (Which, thankfully, they’ve started wearing.) zahlman 1 hour ago > Pretti was breaking zero laws. You’d have to do some prosecutorial voodoo to conjure up a misdemeanor.Does an ongoing protest empower civilians to stand in the middle of a road that has not been closed to traffic by local authorities?
zahlman 1 hour ago > Pretti was breaking zero laws. You’d have to do some prosecutorial voodoo to conjure up a misdemeanor.Does an ongoing protest empower civilians to stand in the middle of a road that has not been closed to traffic by local authorities?
mexicocitinluez 7 hours ago > calling them "innocent" is quite dishonestYou're not actually arguing that American citizens shouldn't be able to film the cops are you? That would be pretty un-American. zahlman 1 hour ago That is not at all the argument being made. 1 reply →
maxehmookau 8 hours ago Being a nuisance is not illegal. In the eyes of the law, someone being a nuisance is, indeed, innocent - and to say so is not dishonest.
kdkirsch 9 hours ago So now being a nuisance is justification for summary extrajudicial executions?! If people on HN believe this then we’re toast. zahlman 1 hour ago That is not at all the argument being made.
Wile I don't think they deserved to loose their lives over it, calling them "innocent" is quite dishonest. They were at the very least intentionally being a nuisance and in most cases breaking actual laws in the process.
> They were at the very least intentionally being a nuisance and in most cases breaking actual laws in the process
Pretti was breaking zero laws. You’d have to do some prosecutorial voodoo to conjure up a misdemeanor.
There is lawbreaking in that videos. But the felony-level stuff is all from folks in uniform. (Which, thankfully, they’ve started wearing.)
> Pretti was breaking zero laws. You’d have to do some prosecutorial voodoo to conjure up a misdemeanor.
Does an ongoing protest empower civilians to stand in the middle of a road that has not been closed to traffic by local authorities?
> calling them "innocent" is quite dishonest
You're not actually arguing that American citizens shouldn't be able to film the cops are you? That would be pretty un-American.
That is not at all the argument being made.
1 reply →
Being a nuisance is not illegal. In the eyes of the law, someone being a nuisance is, indeed, innocent - and to say so is not dishonest.
So now being a nuisance is justification for summary extrajudicial executions?! If people on HN believe this then we’re toast.
That is not at all the argument being made.