What do you call 57 Buffalo cops resigning?

Is there a longer video than what I've seen so far? The man getting in their way, being shoved (but not hard), perhaps after putting his hands on one of the cops first, falling back, one of the two cops in the direct confrontation looking down at him and saying something (would be interesting to know what the cop said. A taunt? An "Are you OK?"), and a third cop holding up immediately and getting on his mobile as the other cops continued. Presumably the third cop called for a medic. That's where the clip I've seen stops. Did the third cop stay with the man until medical attention arrived? Did the protester receive medical attention as soon as possible?

I'm not seeing this as outrageous police brutality by what I've seen so far, and the protester clearing voluntarily put himself in harm's way in what I've seen.

When a person is unconscious, bleeding profusely from their head/ear, you can't leave it at a phone call. Every second counts with certain types of injury, and whoever could get to him first should have been checking that he was breathing, not being dragged away from the scene by his colleagues.

You don't leave a casualty unless either you're in danger, you've assessed them and they're safe, it's the only way to get help, or a someone more qualified has reached your position and taken over. They're the most basic rules of first aid.
 
When a person is unconscious, bleeding profusely from their head/ear, you can't leave it at a phone call. Every second counts with certain types of injury, and whoever could get to him first should have been checking that he was breathing, not being dragged away from the scene by his colleagues.

You don't leave a casualty unless either you're in danger, you've assessed them and they're safe, it's the only way to get help, or a someone more qualified has reached your position and taken over. They're the most basic rules of first aid.

My question was whether a fuller version of the clip was available than the one I saw--and noted where it stopped. You're talking about what happened after what I could see. That's what I was asking for. Or are you just making assumptions of what happened?
 
"Nothing wrong?" A line of cops walked over and around a 75 year old man that was bleeding profusely from his ear as the result of the lack of professionalism from one of their colleague.

Play stupid games, win stupid prizes.
 
When a person is unconscious, bleeding profusely from their head/ear, you can't leave it at a phone call. Every second counts with certain types of injury, and whoever could get to him first should have been checking that he was breathing, not being dragged away from the scene by his colleagues.

You don't leave a casualty unless either you're in danger, you've assessed them and they're safe, it's the only way to get help, or a someone more qualified has reached your position and taken over. They're the most basic rules of first aid.

This is all text book stuff, you dumb fucks should know this for christ sake!

Airway, Breathing, circulation! let the rampaging mob carry on running towards an unconcious person! Stop! Look! Listen! FFS people. Get with the virtue signaling programme. two of you should get trampled underfoot - you comrades should retreat to a safe distance so as not to hurt the feelings of said rampaging mob - this is social work policing.

p.s. ask the mob for a new TV if you need one.
 
When a person is unconscious, bleeding profusely from their head/ear, you can't leave it at a phone call. Every second counts with certain types of injury, and whoever could get to him first should have been checking that he was breathing, not being dragged away from the scene by his colleagues.

You don't leave a casualty unless either you're in danger, you've assessed them and they're safe, it's the only way to get help, or a someone more qualified has reached your position and taken over. They're the most basic rules of first aid.

Or maybe you don't want the commie sack of shit suing you into oblivion so call for the EMT's and move on. :cool:
 
makes me wonder how many here thinking that was just a little shove would condone the same being done if it were their elderly parent or grandparent who decided they needed to speak up to the crowd-controllers? if it were their relation or loved one walking up to the cop who yells 'what the fuck you approaching me for?' before shoving them hard enough to send them flying backwards? to see them shoved and suffering a likely cracked skull (the blood from the ears) but walked past like they were a discarded placard by the very people who are paid to serve and protect them?

come to think of it, probably most of them.
 
another point of consideration is that this could have proved a flashpoint to a real outbreak of mass violence if the crowd had seen and turned on the cops. and what if the man had died??? he's in a stable but serious condition we can only hope he recovers well from. if that guy had died, right there on the street (entirely possible in the circumstances), how do you think this would have inflamed the protests that have calmed down over the past few days?
 
flying backwards? if that was flying then....

If any of my relatives were there, Id want to know why (depending on what a protest was about i might agree with them) and why they had been so fucking dramatic in their pratfall. Dying swan springs to mind.

Next question ?
 
When a person is unconscious, bleeding profusely from their head/ear, you can't leave it at a phone call. Every second counts with certain types of injury, and whoever could get to him first should have been checking that he was breathing, not being dragged away from the scene by his colleagues.

You don't leave a casualty unless either you're in danger, you've assessed them and they're safe, it's the only way to get help, or a someone more qualified has reached your position and taken over. They're the most basic rules of first aid.

It's hard to pick up on it until one watches it Numerous times as I did, because the optics are so misleading.
Upon my 3rd? viewing I decided to focus
only on THE THIRD COP.

Initially, he tried to pull the first cop from behind, to de-escalate the situation.
After the civilian fell and the cop who shoved him tried to bend over him (hopefully?? to help him) he pushed the cop aside.

This, while requesting their EMT/+ help via his speaker, and directing the cops away.
The EMT was the one of the two in military gear marching with the cops, they tended to the civilian within 10 seconds.

When the other panicked civilian started screaming: " He's hurt!" you hear some cop saying: "It's ok, we have an EMT on site".
 
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Gosh, the more I watch the video, the more I root for the other (not the two) cops.
https://www.nzherald.co.nz/world/news/article.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=12337658

Look at the calm leadership the third cop displayed,
directing the confused cop & away from the injured man, while requesting help via his speaker.

And it wasn't just the two medics in military gear who tended to the injured guy, two other cops kept guard too.
While their peers were restraining the two panicked & agitated civilians, who would have done more harm than good.
 
makes me wonder how many here thinking that was just a little shove would condone the same being done if it were their elderly parent or grandparent who decided they needed to speak up to the crowd-controllers? if it were their relation or loved one walking up to the cop who yells 'what the fuck you approaching me for?' before shoving them hard enough to send them flying backwards? to see them shoved and suffering a likely cracked skull (the blood from the ears) but walked past like they were a discarded placard by the very people who are paid to serve and protect them?

come to think of it, probably most of them.

That guy had no business physically confronting and harassing the police. What was he doing with his (phone?) tapping at the cop's wrist? A citizen's duty is to comply with lawful orders from the police, who are civil servants charged with public safety.
 
flying backwards? if that was flying then....

If any of my relatives were there, Id want to know why (depending on what a protest was about i might agree with them) and why they had been so fucking dramatic in their pratfall. Dying swan springs to mind.

Next question ?

he's a local activist standing up for what's right

or falling down, in this case, for what's wrong

*shoves hobbit--having provided a pillow first*
 
That guy had no business physically confronting and harassing the police. What was he doing with his (phone?) tapping at the cop's wrist? A citizen's duty is to comply with lawful orders from the police, who are civil servants charged with public safety.

elle oh elle, what a sweet little copsucker que has come up with.

#MasterOfPuppets
 
That guy had no business physically confronting and harassing the police. What was he doing with his (phone?) tapping at the cop's wrist? A citizen's duty is to comply with lawful orders from the police, who are civil servants charged with public safety.
public protest permits speaking too, standing near, and gesturing at law enforcement. he also had a police helmet in his hand... now was he trying to return that to the cops? maybe he has something on his phone relating to the helmet, some incident he feels they need be aware of. it'll be interesting to hear what his story is if and when he recovers enough to speak out.

if they wanted him out of the way, there were far better ways to handle him physically. but then i guess you're okay with a senior citizen, clearly posing no threat, being physically assaulted by law officers. gotcha. looks like you've got the kind of america you love.

public safety *snorts*
 
he also had a police helmet in his hand... now was he trying to return that to the cops?

maybe he has something on his phone relating to the helmet, some incident he feels they need be aware of.

or
he was trying to warn them about an imminent Antifa attack
 
Or maybe you don't want the commie sack of shit suing you into oblivion so call for the EMT's and move on. :cool:

Commie sack of shit? You're the one preaching the commie mantra while he was exercising his right to protest his government. For someone who thinks he is all american you sure are the farthest thing from it, comrade. Send in the gulag and teach these protesters how to be american!
 
Lets hope the elderly man survives, he's hanging on to life in intensive care. The cops that pushed him better hope he survives or they could have a life changing career.
 
i'm trying to get my head around why the other cops and firefighters are supporting this; they're claiming it's what they've been ordered to do. if that's the case, there's a drastic change needed in how america trains its cops right across the board.

i kind of understand the thinking (at a long stretch) as in some past jobs I had we were taught to respond to customers in a certain way if they got rude or aggressive, but if we did and the customer complained. then you can bet the bosses would publicly side with the customer (even if they told us privately we were doing the right thing). fortunately for me, i have my own strict code of what is and what isn't acceptable and know how to treat people with respect while maintaining my own right (and the rights of my staff) for the same.

my point is, do they feel this is how they've been trained and then, in performing their duties they're being publicly hung out to dry?
 
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Lets hope the elderly man survives, he's hanging on to life in intensive care. The cops that pushed him better hope he survives or they could have a life changing career.
can you imagine how it would have lit up those protests if he'd been dead on the scene there? things would have kicked off SO bad with yet another public killing.
 
i'm trying to get my head around why the other cops and firefighters are supporting this; they're claiming it's what they've been ordered to do. if that's the case, there's a drastic change needed in how america trains its cops right across the board.

i kind of understand the thinking (at a long stretch) as in some past jobs I had we were taught to respond to customers in a certain way if they got rude or aggressive, but if we did and the customer complained. then you can bet the bosses would publicly side with the customer (even if they told us privately we were doing the right thing). fortunately for me, i have my own strict code of what is and what isn't acceptable and know how to treat people with respect while maintaining my own right (and the rights of my staff) for the same.

my point is, do they feel this is how they've been trained and then, in performing their duties they're being publicly hung out to dry?

You should apply for a job as a Senior lecturer in Military tactics.
Those 58 morons and the rest of the Emergency response Teams would benefit from your wisdom.
 
Commie sack of shit? You're the one preaching the commie mantra while he was exercising his right to protest his government. For someone who thinks he is all american you sure are the farthest thing from it, comrade. Send in the gulag and teach these protesters how to be american!

He's not good at words.
 
The two hotheads that pancaked the 75-year old noncombatant had their charges upgraded to 2nd Degree Assault, which is a felony in New York.


Flathead suicide protocols are now in effect.
 
can you imagine how it would have lit up those protests if he'd been dead on the scene there? things would have kicked off SO bad with yet another public killing.

Yes....l thought he was dead when l first watched it. What infuriated me was they just walked away. Whatever happened to world peace and caring people. l feel bad for the young kids that have to grow up in this cruel world.
 
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