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2007-11-01 11:55:29 · 12 answers · asked by Anonymous in Politics & Government Law Enforcement & Police

Also the poor young man has pleaded guilty to resisting arrest? The cops shouldn't have been trying to arrest him in the first place! Now he has to do 18 months probation just for asking a question! What is the country coming to, a police state?

2007-11-01 11:57:21 · update #1

12 answers

Please!!! so it is all-right to taser someone because you want to ask a second question? You guys don't understand it and won't care until it hits your own back yard!!!! The way police is abusing their given power, it is very likely that you'll experience some of their abuse. Good Luck !!!
Now days, if you don't plead guilty, they will make you guilty and you will be sentence to a longer time.

2007-11-01 12:23:08 · answer #1 · answered by Richard 3 · 2 1

relies upon on who you ask. in case you ask a 'present day' feminist woman, being a good woman skill being a complete beeyotch or loudmouthed bully. in case you ask a common human being, it would advise capacity of personality. as an party, those frontier females from 2 hundred years in the past weren't person-friendly. Feminists would not very last a unmarried day of their shoes. (neither would some adult adult males). Feminism's concept of what it skill to be a good autonomous females is so some distance removed from actuality that's laughable.

2016-10-23 05:55:08 · answer #2 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

Is this the "Don't taze me, bro!" guy?

*snort*

He was arrested and tazered for causing a disturbance at a lecture given by John Kerry at a university. Meyer refused to sit down after his question and be quiet. He was told repeatedly to sit down so others could ask their questions, and he refused.

Maybe, if more jerks got tazered when they make stupid plays for attention, we might have fewer people trying to disrupt guest lecturers on university campuses.

You go to college to learn, so I hope Meyer learned to act like an adult in public. Too bad he had to be taught that in public, instead of learning from his parents when he was a child.

2007-11-01 12:38:31 · answer #3 · answered by Chantal G 6 · 2 2

We'll we've never seen what happened before he asked the question about the Skull and Bones society. But basically, he was causing a disturbance and then resisted arrest. Campus police overreacted and used excessive force.

2007-11-01 12:04:04 · answer #4 · answered by It's Your World, Change It 6 · 1 2

I thought we finally put this to rest.
1. He was attending a private function.
2. He was allowed to ask 1 question
3. Each person asking questions was given a time limit.
4. He asked his question, got an answer and started asking another question.
5. The moderator asked him to step down.
6. He refused.
7. The campus police officers attempted to escort him away and he fought with them.
8. The moron got tazered. Personally I would have zapped him more and for longer.

2007-11-01 12:04:05 · answer #5 · answered by davidmi711 7 · 3 2

He WAS being disruptive during Kerry's talk. But the thing is he was already restrained and on the floor when the cops started tasering him...

2007-11-01 13:15:04 · answer #6 · answered by TURANDOT 6 · 1 1

he questioned authority and was a jack*ss at the same time, you got to pick your battles, and not wuss up when your caught.........he wussed! He should have said"That doesn't hurt,give me more untill your cheap *ss batteries run down" "You can't hurt me I'm a American" I rode a taser out for 8 seconds, anybody can!

2007-11-01 15:29:34 · answer #7 · answered by nocateman 5 · 1 0

Well that was pretty friggin stupid of him to plead guilty wasn't it. Is that the guy who was asking stupid questions about george bush's secret club?? maybe he will act more intelligently next time he is told to stop doing something.
Perhaps he will think twice.

2007-11-01 12:26:24 · answer #8 · answered by zanthus 5 · 1 1

Does the phrase "he pleaded guilty" ring any bells for you?

If HE agreed he broke the law, why are you so sure it's a "police state" issue?

2007-11-01 12:18:29 · answer #9 · answered by RangerEsq 4 · 2 1

Who is Andrew Meyer. A link or explanation would be nice.

Oh and if you obey lawful commands from cops, they don't have to tazer you. Common sense really, sadly common sense is in short supply these days.

2007-11-01 12:04:02 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 2

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