The Way Police Get ...
 

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[Closed] The Way Police Get Treated

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Some of you will know that I have a vested in interest in this, but WTF is with the way the *police sometimes get treated in this country? Is it a UK thing?

I have seen police face down real challenges in the line of duty in places like Canada, the US, Mexico, St Kitts, and many countries across Europe. Clearly, it's part of the job. But outside of the UK, I have never seen the police face challenges to their authority, such as happened today in Slough.

Police have a job to do. They enforce the law, they keep us safe day and night, and they see shit daily that no human being should ever have to see. Where do people get off ridiculing them? Harassing them? Making their lives additionally hellish?

What I'm referring to here is the way in which they seem to get disrespected. I have simply never seen it anywhere else. By all means stand your ground if you're being spoken to unnecessarily roughly or rudely by an officer. There is no need to be uncritically deferential. But to speak to an officer as if he was some guy at a pub you were trying to pick a fight with, or to respond in a mocking way when you are the one breaking the law.... WTF is that about?

I know that in response you can probably cite examples of similar things happening elsewhere, but I would definitely argue that, of all the places in the world in which I have lived or travelled, there is something especially cynical and nasty about British behaviour toward the police.

Why? Or am I imagining things?

* And other emergency services workers


 
Posted : 06/05/2020 8:37 pm
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You're imagining it.


 
Posted : 06/05/2020 8:46 pm
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Sum balance here


 
Posted : 06/05/2020 8:47 pm
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Easy to do when the Police are unarmed..
(I'm not advocating for armed police, though I live in Canada now so it's irrelevant)


 
Posted : 06/05/2020 8:49 pm
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Idiots being idiots.


 
Posted : 06/05/2020 8:51 pm
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Sum balance here

That doesn't address what I am asking about. Individual bad acts by individual officers can and do happen everywhere.

I am asking about a cultural approach to police I perceive here in the UK that sees people treat police with more derision and less inherent social respect than they get in other countries.

EDIT:

Easy to do when the Police are unarmed

That's the sort of thing I'm wondering. Is it because they are unarmed, and therefore more like your mate down the pub, only wearing a prefect's badge?


 
Posted : 06/05/2020 8:51 pm
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Probably because we let them. Whether or not that’s a good thing is a different question.


 
Posted : 06/05/2020 8:52 pm
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Why? Or am I imagining things?

No. Some people seem to view the police as a general enemy rather than another party of society.  Quite what they imagine would happen without a police force I don't know.


 
Posted : 06/05/2020 8:53 pm
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The bad apples do the rest no favours and when the organisation closes ranks in some instances to protect the bad apples more reputational harm occurs. (See Tomlinson passim and the services of Cambridgeshire and Northamptonshire just recently). There are some convicted criminals within the police services and these should not be tolerated at all.


 
Posted : 06/05/2020 9:05 pm
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I can only really comment on The UK, the US and Australia.

In the U.K. we have a system of “Policing by Consent” the Police try to work with and within the Community. Few people in the U.K. fear the Police and they generally have a good relationship with the communities they serve. The downside of that is they’re open to abuse from people who don’t like them or what they represent.

In the US the Police seem to rely on TOTAL authority and TOTAL compliance from the people they supposedly serve, all that “Sir” bullshit. They seem to think it’s right to use force against someone just because they not doing what they’re told. Some police in some areas are virtually Paramilitary units.

The Australians seemed to be somewhere in between, some were cool, but you never really got the impression they be up for a quick chat. I remember not long after I arrived I was still had that Neighbours/Home and Away view of Australia, I walked passed a late night Drink Driving road block, I waived and said “good Evening lads?” and was told to “**** off out of my sight now or I’ll crack you one” maybe I caught them at a bad time, but it was a bit of a shock.


 
Posted : 06/05/2020 9:07 pm
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Some people seem to view the police as a general enemy rather than another party of society. Quite what they imagine would happen without a police force I don’t know.

I was struggling to find the words, but that is pretty close.

I guess every country has a section of society that doesn't like being told what to do, has no sense of social responsibility, will always look for a way round a restriction, like to think they are "sticking it to the man" or whatever. But here we have people who have made it their whole raison d'etre, but they are usually the first to be squealing about their rights if they finally push the Police too far.


 
Posted : 06/05/2020 9:09 pm
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I am asking about a cultural approach to police I perceive here in the UK that sees people treat police with more derision and less inherent social respect than they get in other countries.

Respect is earned.
Questioning the powers of the police is essential to ensure they are doing the job we expect, without exceeding their mandate.
Blind acceptance of authority is a dangerous path.

No. Some people seem to view the police as a general enemy rather than another party of society.  Quite what they imagine would happen without a police force I don’t know.

The police are people, just like the rest of us.
It's a hell of a job, I couldn't do it, the majority of people respect the honesty and hard work put in by the vast majority of coppers.
When they do good things, they are respected.
When they do bad things they should be held to account.
And when they are used by the state as a means of oppression, they are hated.

A sense of humour is essential, I would imagine. 🙂
He did get his bike back after all.....


 
Posted : 06/05/2020 9:12 pm
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“**** off out of my sight now or I’ll crack you one”

I really want to find myself in a situation where I can use that phrase.

(Without getting battered 6 seconds later)


 
Posted : 06/05/2020 9:13 pm
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The UK state, and by extension the police hasn't always covered itself in glory.

Battle of Orgreave, Hillsborough, general Ulster constabulary shenanigans, sectarianism, numerous met scandals, having kids with activists while under cover etc

There are quite good reasons why in certain parts of the uk the police are not seen as some sort of benign force.

At a local level organisational incompetence is an issue, through under resourcing or other reasons. Our local police are every which kind of useless (bottom of the pile nationally). Not the fault of individual officers but that also undermines the whole thing. We often have 1 or 2 officers covering a fairly vast mixed rural / urban area with some badtard rough towns. The scum know it.


 
Posted : 06/05/2020 9:16 pm
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In general in the US black people are treated very badly by the police, it's no different here* but they are much less likely to be killed by the police. In consequence many black people in the US really hate the police, much the same as here, but black people here are less likely to shoot police officers. A reprter friend accompanied the police in a helicopter trip over South Central LA, he asked what the banging on the helipocter floor was, and was told it's bullets, people wre just randomly shooting at the helicopter because it has police markings, that's quite scary.

* I'm not saying all UK police are racist but there are enough to be a problem.


 
Posted : 06/05/2020 9:16 pm
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I agree with the points about policing by consent and being unarmed. In the Slough case quoted, an additional point is that it was PCSO not a Constable, so with very limited powers. The kind of people who disrespect the police will respect a PCSO even less.


 
Posted : 06/05/2020 9:31 pm
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IME German police are more relaxed than their UK counterparts, I find that UK cops often feel the need to dominate situations being vocally aggressive, whether that dealing with a drunken lout, having a word with a bicycle courier for cycling across an empty pedestrianized zone or explaining to 80 year old doris why she can't drive to her sisters in the current lockdown. I have theorised that the UK cops it is being unarmed that might be the cause.

It is actually against the law to argue with the German police, I can't quite remember the specifics, but you have to tread very lightly if they decide to be arsey, ie You can protest your innocence, but you can't tell them their wrong (or you can and get fined forit)and iirc the penalties escalate quite rapidly for what we might consider quite trivial language/statements.


 
Posted : 06/05/2020 9:52 pm
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I blame P G Wodehouse


 
Posted : 06/05/2020 10:27 pm
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In the US the Police seem to rely on TOTAL authority and TOTAL compliance from the people they supposedly serve, all that “Sir” bullshit. They seem to think it’s right to use force against someone just because they not doing what they’re told.

This is far deeper than just police/civillian relations. The power heirarchy runs through the whole of society. People say stuff like 'oh, you'd better not say that to the boss, he won't like it' even if it's true, as if he is likely to summarily dismiss you because he's the boss and has ultimate power over his employers. Or, if someone's being a dick you can't say anything to them cos don't you know his dad's the boss of XYZ and will make your life hard etc etc.

It's referred to in their cultural output constantly and seems consistent with my direct experiences.


 
Posted : 06/05/2020 10:35 pm
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SaxonRider

You explained the behaviour of the violent officer by saying "Individual bad acts by individual officers can and do happen everywhere". Fair enough.

The same can be said of the public. 99% of the interactions between officers and the public will be friendly - we only get to hear about the times the public take the piss, as in the example you gave, or the police beat someone.

I think generally people in the uk are pretty respectful of the police. I am, despite having a fair few run-ins in my younger days.


 
Posted : 06/05/2020 11:20 pm
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My respect for the police evaporated when they waited until I was unconscious before stepping in and stopping an assault which resulted in me being taken in for scans etc. Lost teeth and a broken jaw isn't fun. I could see them sitting in the car watching me taking a steel toe cap to the face.
I have friends who are Police, and older family friends who are ex police. The majority are ok, but there are some absolute bell ends. Just like a cross section of society.


 
Posted : 06/05/2020 11:29 pm
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I remember when me and Mrs Inkster went to Paris a few years ago on Eurostar. We came out of the Gare du Nord and went to cross the road only to have our path blocked by 4 Policemen and Women styled like Serbian paramilitaries walking 4 abreast. The public had to scatter out of their way.

We both looked at each other and simultaneously said, 'you wouldn't ask them for the time of day would you?'

Seen some dodgy things from police here so not naive but good and bad just like in society. Policing by Consent and no guns probably makes the job a little bit less attractive to psychopaths too. In the UK, being a PC is just too PC for a lot of little Hitlers. The imagw is a bit more Keith Lard than Robocop.


 
Posted : 07/05/2020 1:04 am
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From the U.S., 1971:

Avoid fighting in close quarters. You run less risk by throwing an object than by personally delivering the blow with a weapon you hold in your hand. We suppose this is what pigs refer to as "duty fighting." All revolutionaries fight dirt in the eyes of the oppressors. The British accused the Minutemen of Lexington and Concord of fighting dirty by hiding behind trees. The U.S. Army accuses the Viet Cong of fighting dirty when they rub a pointed bamboo shoot in infected shit and use it as a land mine. Mayor Daley says the Yippies squirted hair spray and used golf balls with spikes in them against his innocent blue boys. No one ever accused the U.S. of being sneaky for using an airforce in Southeast Asia or the Illinois State Attorney's office of fighting dirty when it murdered Fred Hampton and Mark Clark while they lay in bed. We say: all power to the dirty fighters!


 
Posted : 07/05/2020 1:36 am
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Generally positive experiences with the cops in the UK.

I'll never quite forget seeing them on TV as a kid though, being used by Thatcher to break the miners strike.

I think that left a bad taste in people's mouths for at least one generation.

PCSO's just aren't taken seriously by kids though. Used to see one getting harassed outside the school gates of my son's old school.

Many kids are now of the opinion that they are "untouchable" and to a large degree they are. See the lack of respect down to teachers etc etc.


 
Posted : 07/05/2020 2:33 am
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I guess every country has a section of society that doesn’t like being told what to do, has no sense of social responsibility,

I had a conversation once with a friend of a friend of mine, a black guy raised in Dulwich waaay back. He used the Richard Pryor joke to good effect. "My life was sweet, right up until I was 12, when I became a black man". There are parts of society that have a completely different view of the cops to (dare I say it) than the vast majority of folk who inhabit this forum. He'd been stopped by cops as a kid so many times he genuinely couldn't put a number on it. It was routine to the point of part of his daily life, like going to the Co-Op, or having a kick about. He said that one cop had said to him "You are the sort of people that we are protecting society from" ie young black men, It's not a massive surprise then, that parts of our society feel alienated from it.


 
Posted : 07/05/2020 7:42 am
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Click bait. He is not a policeman. He is a PCSO, a cheap way for the Tories to get "bobbies on the beat".

He is instructed not to confront anyone. So if someone confronts him, like in the video, he can do nothing.

Waste of time and money, should be got rid of and the Police force invested in properly.


 
Posted : 07/05/2020 8:22 am
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they arent so tough in interviews, no comment no comment no comment ;0(


 
Posted : 07/05/2020 8:29 am
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Dicks will be dicks

Wether in uniform of Chav/ Ned ( Enter whatever stereotype here ) or police.... it doesn’t matter


 
Posted : 07/05/2020 8:31 am
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There was a video on the suns website of a young PC approaching a bunch of lads in the park encouraging them to split up and leave. Didn't look like they took him seriously and one of them grabbed his bike that he left on the ground and ran off pushing it.no doubt they gave it back but they showed no respect.


 
Posted : 07/05/2020 8:35 am
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I grew up in Southport (coastal town at the nicer end of merseyside) in the 80s. Almost every time i had an encounter with the police they were utter dicks. Not just one officer and no, i wasn't up to no good. Couple that with the stories of how the police tended to behave in 70s and 80s (beating people up, deaths in custody and our old friend racism) then I can fully understand why some people have a deep mistrust of them.

The police now don't seem to be anywhere near as bad as they used to be but you reap what you sow and all that.


 
Posted : 07/05/2020 8:43 am
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but they showed no respect.

Yeah, but most of the folks on this forum (middle aged employed white guys) can "afford" some respect. It's no bother and we can give respect, as we know we'll get protection and respect back as an exchange.

These kids "don't get no respect" They are (in many cops eyes) the folk that they're protecting the likes of you and I from...There's no exchange for them, it's all one way. Those kids know that cop won't come to their aid if they need him to, so their respect has to come from each other.

You and I are being policed by consent, those kids are being policed by enforcement, the cops in this scenario are more like the prison guards than the upholders of civil society


 
Posted : 07/05/2020 8:51 am
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Posted : 07/05/2020 8:51 am
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Dicks being dicks is what it comes down to mainly, on both fronts. I’ve always been polite and civil with any officers I’ve dealt with, just as I am with anybody else. They don’t get any kind of special treatment though and if they act like dicks they’ll get called out on it. On balance I’d rather have what we gave than something like the US.


 
Posted : 07/05/2020 9:00 am
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I’ve lived in Spain for the last few years, they’ve got local police, national police and the Guardia Civil. Yes on some occasions they might not be treated with ‘respect’, and inevitable not all of them are model members of the force, but in the majority of cases they certainly are respected. It may help that Spain is somewhat a pre-facist state and has many remnants of bureaucracy (it may help they have guns too) but the examples I’ve seen recently (including the above) deeply saddens me due the the mindless ambivalence to humans endeavouring to carry out their respective roles in globally challenging circumstances.


 
Posted : 07/05/2020 9:04 am
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He is not a policeman. He is a PCSO, a cheap way for the Tories to get “bobbies on the beat”.

Introduced in 2002 following the Police Reform Act, so the brainchild of Jack Straw (1997-2001) and/or David Blunkett (2001-2004)

Part 1 Community Support Officers
1.Powers to issue fixed penalty notices

1ZA.(1) This paragraph applies if a designation applies it to...

1ZB.Power to issue community protection notices

1A.Power to require name and address

2.Power to detain etc.

2A.Powers to search individuals and to seize and retain items

2B.General power of seizure

3.Power to require name and address of person acting in an anti-social manner

3A.Power to require name and address: road traffic offences

3B.Power to require name and address etc: charity collectors

4.Power to use reasonable force to detain person

4ZA.Where a designation applies this paragraph to any person, that...

4ZB.Where a designation applies this paragraph to any person, that...

4A.Power to disperse groups and remove young persons to their place of residence

4AB.(1) Where a designation applies this paragraph to a person,...

4B.Power to disperse groups and remove young persons to their place of residence

4C.Power to remove truants and excluded pupils to designated premises etc.

5.Alcohol consumption in restricted areas

5A.Power to serve closure notice for licensed premises persistently selling to children

6.Confiscation of alcohol

7.Confiscation of tobacco etc.

7A.Search and seizure powers: alcohol and tobacco

7B.Powers to seize and detain: controlled drugs

7C.Powers to seize and detain: controlled drugs

7D.Park Trading offences

7E.Powers to seize and detain: psychoactive substances

7F.(1) Sub-paragraph (2) applies where a designation applies this paragraph...

8.Entry to save life or limb or prevent serious damage to property

8A.Entry to investigate licensing offences

9.Seizure of vehicles used to cause alarm etc.

10.Abandoned vehicles

11.Power to stop vehicle for testing

11A.Power to stop cycles

11B.Power to control traffic for purposes other than escorting a load of exceptional dimensions

12.Power to control traffic for purposes of escorting a load of exceptional dimensions

13.Carrying out of road checks

13A.Power to place traffic signs

14.Cordoned areas

15.Power to stop and search vehicles etc. in authorised areas

15ZA.Photographing of persons arrested, detained or given fixed penalty notices


 
Posted : 07/05/2020 9:06 am
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easily
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SaxonRider

You explained the behaviour of the violent officer by saying “Individual bad acts by individual officers can and do happen everywhere”. Fair enough.

That's the inequity here. Bobby does wrong, the 'bad apple/individual action' defence is trotted out. Public do wrong and it's seen as some sort of systemic/societal breakdown.

I think generally the scummers find each other be it those wearing blue uniforms or the others wearing shirts the colour of the teams of their choice. I'd like to think things improve as you get beyond the infantry but as the higher ups are drawn from the infantry, it may not necessarily be so...


 
Posted : 07/05/2020 9:09 am
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Introduced in 2002 following the Police Reform Act……….

Your point is?

They have no power of arrest, apart from citizens arrest.

They have 6 weeks training.

They are paid less than a Police Officer.

They carry less equipment.

They are told to avoid confrontation.

They are a cheap way to get "Bobbies on the beat".

If you were getting attacked on the street would you prefer to a see a PC or PCSO come to your aid?


 
Posted : 07/05/2020 9:15 am
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The police are there to maintain the established order of things. In a society divided by class that's what the police are there to defend. So if your striking or demonstrating or street life is perceived as a threat by the establishment then the police are used in an oppressive role, and special units train police in techniques learnt in places like Ireland.


 
Posted : 07/05/2020 9:23 am
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the real problem is the police round here dont think the law applies to them and so loose the respect of the community. I know several people who now carry a PDF on their phone of the current lockdown guidance as the police dont seem to have read or understood it and are enforcing made up rules rather than the guidance. Even in normal circumstances solving crimes seems to be way down their list of priorities.


 
Posted : 07/05/2020 9:32 am
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Your point is?

Straw and Blunkett weren't Tories.


 
Posted : 07/05/2020 10:06 am
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Scapegoat
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Your point is?

Straw and Blunkett weren’t

Yeah I didn't make that point to try and avoid being argumentative. Someone was so busy trying to make political capital from their post, they forgot which Govt actually introduced PCSO's... 😉


 
Posted : 07/05/2020 10:34 am
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they forgot whuch Govt actually introduced PCSO’s

I did forget.

However, they were introduced to enhance and support the actual Police force, not replace them. Which is basically what the tories have have done. The current Police numbers are way down what they were in 2002.


 
Posted : 07/05/2020 10:38 am
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You could not be arrested here by a nicer bunch of people. Look at other countries. Disrespect or mouth off the police you get shot with iive rounds and if it is a nicer cop possibly 12 guage bean bag and lastly a taser.


 
Posted : 07/05/2020 10:44 am
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Yeah, I'd much rather be beaten to a pulp, tazed and then pepper sprayed by muscled up, tattooed thug in high viz masquerading as 'the law'.


 
Posted : 07/05/2020 10:47 am
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something especially cynical and nasty about British behaviour toward the police.

Treat as you find.

I've lived in four countries for long enough to have had dealings with the police, the prize for "cynical and nasty" goes to the UK cops. I've have had a gun pulled on me by Spanish guardia (but never for an instant felt threatened), had heavy identity checks with German and French ones (and some highly amusing interviews) but I've never experienced the "cynical and nasty" contempt I've had from British ones (Edit - English ones in fact, the Welsh ones were fine, friendly even) when just minding my own business.


 
Posted : 07/05/2020 11:12 am
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Respect is earned.
Questioning the powers of the police is essential to ensure they are doing the job we expect, without exceeding their mandate.
Blind acceptance of authority is a dangerous path.

On an organisational level by the IPCC yes, by individuals that's damn near impossible or just being a dick.

An individual police officer can't 'earn' respect, they've got a job to do from day 1. It's not too much to ask in a civilized society that the police are respected by individuals. In the same way individuals don't have to go out of their way to ingratiate themselves to the police.

Just look at the "can i go outside and exercise during lockdown" thread, there's rabid loons at one end baying for the blood of anyone more than 2km from home. And at the other end there's the "*** da police, ain't no po-po gonna catch me on my steezy enduro rig", said by someone who was more likely from Compton West Berkshire than Compton LA and has never actually had professional dealings with the Police but has suddenly found their opinions on the wrong side of the rules and is determined to rebel against authority.


 
Posted : 07/05/2020 11:28 am
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I’ve have had a gun pulled on me by Spanish guardia (but never for an instant felt threatened),

Why on earth did they pull a gun on you?

Why on earth would you not feel threatened?

Or did it not happen?


 
Posted : 07/05/2020 11:36 am
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Respect or fear?

I thought I'd see if there were any of the Midlands force's finer moments in the Brimingham Evening Mail and found this just three days ago:

https://www.birminghammail.co.uk/news/midlands-news/watch-innocent-cyclist-repeatedly-punched-18188448

Edit: I was being stuborn and the Spanish Guardia no doubt thought it easier to wave a gun at me than physically manhandle me. I knew he wasn't going to use it, he knew he wasn't going to use it, it was his way of saying FFS just do what I'm telling you, I did.

When I was working for Welsh Water I got walked off a farmer's property at shotgun point which was far more worrying as mad farmers do occasionally shoot people. More worrying was going back with a police escort, because the local bobby wasn't armed.


 
Posted : 07/05/2020 11:46 am
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On an organisational level by the IPCC yes, by individuals that’s damn near impossible or just being a dick.

I disagree.

I think we have one of the finest police forces in the world.
Precisely because of the policing by consent model.
We employ them to enforce the laws we pass via our elected politicians.
That's their job.

We respect them because for the most part they do their job without exceeding their mandate.

However, it's everyone's job to question authority.
Blind acceptance of authority is equally as dangerous as mindless disregard.


 
Posted : 07/05/2020 11:52 am
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I've only had a couple of interactions with Police where I've been in the wrong - a couple of speeding offences a long time ago. In those cases I was pretty deferential as I was aware it would make a difference to the outcome.

However, in the years since I've had several engagements with Police where I've generally always come aware from them a little angry and frustrated. I feel I'm an intelligent, educated, articulate and polite person (some may disagree 🙂 ), but despite that, for the most part I've always found the Police tend to 'speak down' to you. Using an ego-state model ( https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transactional_analysis#The_ego-state_(or_Parent%E2%80%93Adult%E2%80%93Child_(PAC))_models ) to describe it, they always fall into a parent-child interaction with them as the parent, rather than an adult-adult one which I'm used to with pretty much every other circumstance in my life.

I don't think this is conscious and deliberate on the part of the Police. I think that because the Police spend 99% of their time dealing with dickheads, they just automatically fall into treating everyone like that. The problem is, when you start off treating people like children, then they continue to behave like that, and treat Police the way we see above.

If you try and move the relationship towards an adult-adult one, some officers see it as a challenge to their authority and the situation deteriorates.


 
Posted : 07/05/2020 11:52 am
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Stereotype of a copper

A lot of people have stereotypes of police being like the off duty copper in the above link.


 
Posted : 07/05/2020 12:08 pm
 Sui
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when did it ever become acceptable to say "respect needs to be earned"? Surely giving respect to your fellow, should be a given right, and then it is up to individuals to have respect lost. I saw this in the army a lot, it's b0ll0x, it hamppers training and cohesion and drives a divide and conquere mentality. Likewise in the business world i see this, it's destructive and harks of a "im better than thou" until proven otherwise attitude.. Its cockish.

anyway, back on point, this happens at family level, if your elders are feeling hard done by, this is amplified by the younger dis-enfranchised people. A lack of schooling, a lack of other means to occupy mind and opinions leads to a general downward spiral of you are all against me, theefore i must defend myself at all costs..

The general UK aproach to policing is spot on i think, no way would i want the US system and keeping arms (guns) off the streets shouldalways be the way forward.


 
Posted : 07/05/2020 12:40 pm
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However, it’s everyone’s job to question authority.
Blind acceptance of authority is equally as dangerous as mindless disregard.

So a police officer says do something, do you
a) do something
b) have an argument about how he is infringing your civil liberties and question on which specific law he is acting under the authority of to ask you do do that something
c) shout "**** da pigs" and nick his bike

Because B to my mind is just a middle-class articulate version of C.

Policing by consent works as long as everyone consents. Not just consenting to everyone but them consenting because they've drawn their line in the sand and are determined that only people on the other side of it are wrong.


 
Posted : 07/05/2020 12:56 pm
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when did it ever become acceptable to say “respect needs to be earned”?

I don't believe it's ok to treat people badly until they prove otherwise.

I respect the UK police because they do a horrible job very well. Same with the armed forces.
They do an awful job that I could not do which is worthy of my utmost respect.

But I don't automatically respect someone just because they wear a uniform, have been elected to parliament or own lots of land. I will treat them decently and respect them if they excercise their power in a way that benefits our society. I will not defer to them automatically because of the power inherent in their position.

So a police officer says do something, do you
a) do something
b) have an argument about how he is infringing your civil liberties and question on which specific law he is acting under the authority of to ask you do do that something
c) shout “**** da pigs” and nick his bike

It depends on what they are asking me to do.

If it's not an unreasonable request I'll politely and happily comply, with a smile.
I'll do this even if I don't understand why the request was made - I don't know what might be going on in the background, I won't argue and will do what I'm asked.

If it's not a reasonable request, I'll politely decline.
No need to be a dick about it.


 
Posted : 07/05/2020 12:56 pm
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A lot of the critical ideas from left were right to question the police but otoh at some point, it just becomes destructive of the ability to actually govern a society. Only in the humanities faculty can it be contemplated that a society with no power imbalance is possible, or if you knock over all western institutions then something utopian will magically replace them.

These people demanding that the police earn their respect I despair at. Who do they think they are? A king? No, you are just another citizen like any other. A default position of refusal-defiance is neither adult nor reasonable. The police should be trusted but on the condition of being subject to scrutiny and accountability or our society will go down the shitter. Any idiot can be anti-authority but one needs to also learn to obey.


 
Posted : 07/05/2020 1:12 pm
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No, you are just another citizen like any other.

As is a police officer.

A default position of refusal-defiance is neither adult nor reasonable. 

I agree. As I have stated above.

Any idiot can be anti-authority but one needs to also learn to obey.

And any idiot can do what they are told, but one also needs to learn to think for one's self. 🙂

It's not an either/or.


 
Posted : 07/05/2020 1:17 pm
Posts: 17834
 

when did it ever become acceptable to say “respect needs to be earned”? Surely giving respect to your fellow, should be a given right, and then it is up to individuals to have respect lost.

Nah, that sounds a tad quaint in the 21st century. With me it may well be an age thing and I do agree with Rusty's way of thinking.


 
Posted : 07/05/2020 1:27 pm
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Rusty Spanner
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No, you are just another citizen like any other.

As is a police officer.

But that's absolutely not the case is it? They've the right to insist and failure to comply might result in a state sponsored fisty cuffs and/or detainment. Any other (non franchised) citizen try this and see where it gets you...


 
Posted : 07/05/2020 1:30 pm
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So a police officer says do something, do you
a) do something
b) have an argument about how he is infringing your civil liberties and question on which specific law he is acting under the authority of to ask you do do that something
c) shout “**** da pigs” and nick his bike

The way you’re asked usually influences the way you respond.

Even your otherwise law abiding middle class person will react badly if an officer barks orders at them without obvious reason. Equally a scrote may be completely compliant if asked in a joshing and friendly manner.

Sadly, both public and Police often get their approaches and responses wrong.


 
Posted : 07/05/2020 1:33 pm
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thisisnotaspoon
Subscriber
So a police officer says do something, do you
a) do something
b) have an argument about how he is infringing your civil liberties and question on which specific law he is acting under the authority of to ask you do do that something
c) shout “**** da pigs” and nick his bike

Or (D) Certainly officer, could you explain why you've asked my to do that and I'll happily comply.

That's not unreasonable is it? We're not automatons...

<edit> Or wot Ben said ^


 
Posted : 07/05/2020 1:34 pm
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And any idiot can do what they are told, but one also needs to learn to think for one’s self.

So all those teens/20-somethings abusing the PCSO were masters in critical thinking?

Most people do think for themselves and choose quite reasonably to follow the law and cautiously respect the police.


 
Posted : 07/05/2020 1:41 pm
 Sui
Posts: 3107
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Or (D) Certainly officer, could you explain why you’ve asked my to do that and I’ll happily comply.

not always practicle to do this though, especially if you are being moved on etc rather urgently..


 
Posted : 07/05/2020 1:46 pm
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The last time I spoke to a pcso, it was when he threatened to arrest me for cycling on a cycle path. He refused to turn round to see the sign saying it was a cycle path, and just continued telling me walk or get arrested. I'm all for giving respect to the police, but I refuse to give respect to someone that is clearly a massive ****.


 
Posted : 07/05/2020 1:47 pm
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All this can be sorted in court after the event.


 
Posted : 07/05/2020 1:49 pm
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"No, you are just another citizen like any other.

As is a police officer."

But that’s absolutely not the case is it? They’ve the right to insist and failure to comply might result in a state sponsored fisty cuffs and/or detainment. Any other (non franchised) citizen try this and see where it gets you…

While I totally agree with this, the flip side is they could be any normal citizen - as in, any british teenager could decide they wanted to be a policeman/woman.

Its not a military peacekeeping force made up of the second sons of nobility preventing an uprising; it isn't limited to a certain caste or race with the ulterior motive of keeping the "lowers" in their station.


 
Posted : 07/05/2020 1:51 pm
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Sui
Member
Or (D) Certainly officer, could you explain why you’ve asked my to do that and I’ll happily comply.

not always practicle to do this though, especially if you are being moved on etc rather urgently..

Absolutely agreed. And the issue is, a 'one size fits all' attitude is employed where the e. g. approach to clearing the Manchester Arena is applied to cycling on the path... Nuance is everything and circumstances should dictate. Sadly, they often don't.


 
Posted : 07/05/2020 1:52 pm
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@ayjaydoubleyou They stop being 'normal citizens' when they join the gang. Yes they're sourced from the Citizens pool but being, a 'normal citizen' and a member of the Police Force are mutually exclusive.


 
Posted : 07/05/2020 1:56 pm
 jimw
Posts: 3264
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I think unfortunately that it very much depends on the actual experiences that people have with the police, and as in all walks of life you can get those who make it harder for the rest of their colleagues. It only takes one incident to potentially ruin longer term relationships.
I have had almost no dealings with serving police officers in the course of their duty. However, the only one that I can remember was unfortunate and it has to my shame perhaps, coloured my attitude towards them ever since.
One came to interview my 19 year old brother at home in 1982 about a road accident he had been involved in. I listened to the very reasonable and amicable conversation and then later saw the transcript of the officers interview. It bore very little relation to the actual experience, making my brother out to be an obstructive witness. Nothing could be done about it apparently.

In the early 2000’s I worked with a retired policeman (in his late 40’s)who was a really easy bloke to get on with and with whom I had a lot in common. However one day he got into a series of reminiscences about the time as a young West Midlands officer he had been sent to Yorkshire to ‘police’ the miners strike. I was shocked about some of the things he was quite blasé about- how the ‘lads culture’ of staying in dorms away from their normal base For weeks seemed to enhance the capacity for extreme antipathy towards the local people etc.


 
Posted : 07/05/2020 2:05 pm
 jimw
Posts: 3264
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I should have added that one of the people I cycle with is a policeman and is a really nice, straightforward bloke, if a little crazy on a bike at times.


 
Posted : 07/05/2020 3:32 pm
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Let's be honest, the vast majority of people posting here have limited interactions with the police and making rash generalisations about "the police" as one homogeneous mass based on talking to a couple of coppers once probably isn't a fair conclusion.

AS for the OP's question: Perhaps your perceived lack of respect stems from a belief that the police don't have any real power, or rather are highly unlikely to exercise their powers unless you've done something serious or otherwise given them no other option. It's the same principle as scrotal kids gobbing off at teachers, "what are you gonna do? You can't touch me." With no perceived consequences to their actions there's a certain mindset which will push things as far as they can and do as they damn well please.


 
Posted : 07/05/2020 4:52 pm
 jimw
Posts: 3264
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Let’s be honest, the vast majority of people posting here have limited interactions with the police and making rash generalisations about “the police” as one homogeneous mass based on talking to a couple of coppers once probably isn’t a fair conclusion

I don’t actually think most are making ‘rash generalisations’ to be fair, you are correct many like myself have had very limited interactions, unfortunately they were not entirely positive but I for one never said that I think all policemen are like the two I mentioned, of course not.


 
Posted : 07/05/2020 5:09 pm
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In Spain if you get mouthy they will detain you, they will waste your time(and possibly fine you) and take your ID number and they don't have the numbers problem they have in the UK. However if you are polite and look above 25 you'll be treated well.


 
Posted : 07/05/2020 5:38 pm
 ajaj
Posts: 0
Full Member
 

250,000 people dead. One PCSO, barely out of school by the look of him, trying to do his part to keep that number down.

And all you lot can do is grind the same old axe based on misconceptions and prejudice.


 
Posted : 07/05/2020 10:43 pm
Posts: 7214
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Introduced in 2002 following the Police Reform Act, so the brainchild of Jack Straw (1997-2001) and/or David Blunkett (2001-2004)

Part 1 Community Support Officers
1.Powers to issue fixed penalty notices

1ZA.(1) This paragraph applies if a designation applies it to…

1ZB.Power to issue community protection notices

1A.Power to require name and address

2.Power to detain etc.

2A.Powers to search individuals and to seize and retain items

2B.General power of seizure

3.Power to require name and address of person acting in an anti-social manner

3A.Power to require name and address: road traffic offences

3B.Power to require name and address etc: charity collectors

4.Power to use reasonable force to detain person

4ZA.Where a designation applies this paragraph to any person, that…

4ZB.Where a designation applies this paragraph to any person, that…

4A.Power to disperse groups and remove young persons to their place of residence

4AB.(1) Where a designation applies this paragraph to a person,…

4B.Power to disperse groups and remove young persons to their place of residence

4C.Power to remove truants and excluded pupils to designated premises etc.

5.Alcohol consumption in restricted areas

5A.Power to serve closure notice for licensed premises persistently selling to children

6.Confiscation of alcohol

7.Confiscation of tobacco etc.

7A.Search and seizure powers: alcohol and tobacco

7B.Powers to seize and detain: controlled drugs

7C.Powers to seize and detain: controlled drugs

7D.Park Trading offences

7E.Powers to seize and detain: psychoactive substances

7F.(1) Sub-paragraph (2) applies where a designation applies this paragraph…

8.Entry to save life or limb or prevent serious damage to property

8A.Entry to investigate licensing offences

9.Seizure of vehicles used to cause alarm etc.

10.Abandoned vehicles

11.Power to stop vehicle for testing

11A.Power to stop cycles

11B.Power to control traffic for purposes other than escorting a load of exceptional dimensions

12.Power to control traffic for purposes of escorting a load of exceptional dimensions

13.Carrying out of road checks

13A.Power to place traffic signs

14.Cordoned areas

15.Power to stop and search vehicles etc. in authorised areas

15ZA.Photographing of persons arrested, detained or given fixed penalty notices

Too many facts spoil the wrath. 🙂


 
Posted : 07/05/2020 11:03 pm
Posts: 7214
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when did it ever become acceptable to say “respect needs to be earned”? Surely giving respect to your fellow, should be a given right, and then it is up to individuals to have respect lost.

+1

I treat everyone with respect from the moment I meet them, almost everyone I meet does likewise.


 
Posted : 07/05/2020 11:10 pm
Posts: 21016
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That comment was aimed at the institution, not the individual. 😶

As would have been obvious if people actually read the thread.


 
Posted : 08/05/2020 6:06 am
 poly
Posts: 8699
Free Member
 

As others have said he was a PCSO not a PC; what nobody else has commented on (as far as I can see) is he is on his own ~10:1 outnumbered. On top of his normal don’t get confrontational training he now has new advice to keep >2m from the people he is talking to. None of that puts him in a position where he can impose any authority on the situation - and the type of people he was dealing with revel in that. They’ll quickly have learned how far they can push it and to them it’s really a game - like trolling on the internet. I’d be amazed if there weren’t people doing this in every country that’s not a totalitarian police state.


 
Posted : 08/05/2020 8:51 am
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in every country that’s not a totalitarian police state.

With my smartarse hat on I feel compelled to point out that for the last 6 weeks we have been a totalitarian police state.


 
Posted : 08/05/2020 9:13 am
Posts: 233
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https://www.manchestereveningnews.co.uk/news/greater-manchester-news/right-taser-him-video-shows-18219850.amp

I feel very upset after watching the clip. Admittedly it's a short clip and we don't know the full situation, but the poor little fella should never have been exposed to that by the police and/or his father.


 
Posted : 08/05/2020 2:52 pm
Posts: 1083
Full Member
 

Most are decent people, most are honest, most are reasonably courteous and respectful, most aren’t racist, most don’t want to hurt people and most want to do a good job. A proportion are pricks, dishonest, have no integrity, are obnoxious and rude, are racist, like to get one over on people and couldn’t care less if they do a good job or not.

And it’s the same in the police.


 
Posted : 08/05/2020 3:57 pm
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