Actually makes a little more sense that wayGoodAg1980 said:
No, and neither was the teenage student.
Nope. I've watched this 3 times and I'm still laughing. This video is GOLD, and yes much of that is because she's fat. The other part is that old people like this think they are above the law. Its fun to see them be reminded that they aren't...... especially with voltage.Hey...so.. um said:Prognightmare said:
I'm not sure why I get so much enjoyment watching people get tazed for not complying with lawful orders. That video is great and I'm sure my next statement will get me labelled with some ism/ist but it was funnier because she was fat.
Quote:
The other part is that old people like this think they are above the law. Its fun to see them be reminded that they aren't...... especially with voltage.
no, she was getting a ticket for the light which she was already warned about.Quote:
Basically, you have an old lady tossed on the ground and tazed for a broken tail light
Even driving off did not get her tazed, her fighting back and kicking at the officer did.Quote:
That being said, once granny drove off, she was inviting the felony stop.
My sympathy ended when she kicked the officerFrioAg 00 said:
I don't know, at some point the cop is not responsible for the assailants poor decisions - and this lady made a lot of really poor decisions
Honestly she should spend a few nights in jail and have a ton of fines and legal expenses to help deter her from future poor decisions
CanyonAg77 said:
The real question, is how do you get to your seventh or eighth decade in life and not realize that you're never going to win on the side of the road, Just sign the damn ticket and take it to the judge.
CanyonAg77 said:Quote:
The other part is that old people like this think they are above the law. Its fun to see them be reminded that they aren't...... especially with voltage.
Mixed emotions for me. Basically, you have an old lady tossed on the ground and tazed for a broken tail light. Yes, she was being a witch, but the cop went from 'sign this' to "you're under arrest" in a millisecond. He could have spent another 30 seconds being more persuasive and explanatory, and she probably would have signed.
Instead, he looks like Barney Fife going after someone's grandmother. And he gets to spend two hours booking her in, as opposed to the 30 seconds of persuasion and going on with his life.
That being said, once granny drove off, she was inviting the felony stop.
Could somebody please help out a twitter-free old and explain what the term "stan" means?MooreTrucker said:Anybody that uses the term "stan" is a moron, period.tsuag10 said:
Re: Marianne Williamson
agent-maroon said:Could somebody please help out a twitter-free old and explain what the term "stan" means?MooreTrucker said:Anybody that uses the term "stan" is a moron, period.tsuag10 said:
Re: Marianne Williamson
TIA
stanagent-maroon said:Could somebody please help out a twitter-free old and explain what the term "stan" means?MooreTrucker said:Anybody that uses the term "stan" is a moron, period.tsuag10 said:
Re: Marianne Williamson
TIA
Not sure it would have been any different regardless of any demographic category. I can't imagine a teenager getting away with that. You either sign the ticket or you get arrested is the way it's always been and is the way it should be. All bets are off the second you resist arrest.Quote:
Mixed emotions for me. Basically, you have an old lady tossed on the ground and tazed for a broken tail light. Yes, she was being a witch, but the cop went from 'sign this' to "you're under arrest" in a millisecond. He could have spent another 30 seconds being more persuasive and explanatory, and she probably would have signed.
These damn kids invent a new word almost weekly.agent-maroon said:
Thanks for the replies. It didn't even occur to me that it would actually be in an online dictionary somewhere. My epiphany for the day - I'm actually old enough that daily English language use has evolved beyond slang and my ability to comprehend it even with fully evident contextual clues.