MotionMan
Lifer
- Jan 11, 2006
- 17,124
- 12
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It's a CA public school...they can't "not allow it."
Don't you need to get permits to use portions of public college campuses for events?
MotionMan
It's a CA public school...they can't "not allow it."
Serious question: In the first video, do we know that the cops did not try to remove them and the protesters refused to unlock arms to allow their removal?
MotionMan
Serious question: In the first video, do we know that the cops did not try to remove them and the protesters refused to unlock arms to allow their removal?
MotionMan
Don't you need to get permits to use portions of public college campuses for events?
MotionMan
The problem is it looks like the video was edited to only show what the police did and not what the protesters were doing and assaulting people it sounds like.
The problem is it looks like the video was edited to only show what the police did and not what the protesters were doing and assaulting people it sounds like.
Thanks for putting words in my mouth. I know exactly what limits there are to speech on public universities in CA. There is a very specific standard for free speech on university campuses, and its different than that of "state owned" land or "public property."
the video is on state property, in other words, public property,
I never put words in your mouth.
You said it yourself:
So you said they are the same thing when they are not.
I don't get why lot of US cops use force even when there's no threat. It's completely unneeded. They could have simply asked them to leave and threaten to use force if they don't listen, but no, they always have to go straight to using force. Though guess it's better than tasering them or shooting them, like some other similar news stories go. And from that video, there was no macing, though the video does not really show everything.
From what I hear pepper spray is VERY painful so that's probably almost as bad as being tasered.
Though, as much as I support lot of the points of the OWS protesters, I don't think what they're doing will have any effect whatsoever on the government and they should probably just give it up. When's the last time the government actually listened to it's citizens?
That's exactly what they did.I don't get why lot of US cops use force even when there's no threat. It's completely unneeded. They could have simply asked them to leave and threaten to use force if they don't listen,
Really? I'm confused.but no, they always have to go straight to using force.
What I don't get is why they didn't simply try to arrest them and, if there was resistance, elevate the use of force accordingly.
What I don't get is why they didn't simply try to arrest them and, if there was resistance, elevate the use of force accordingly.
They assaulted a police officer and were standing in front of mass transit and thus got sprayed because of it.
They DIDN'T WANT TO ARREST THEM. They wanted to make them leave.
For the protesters, getting arrested would have been much worse and the effects would last much longer than the discomfort of pepper spray.
ATOT POSTERS: When is it OK to use pepper spray?
depends on the campus/size of the "event."
But take a look at Education Code 66301:
(a) Neither the Regents of the University of California, the Trustees of the California State University, the governing board of a community college district, nor an administrator of any campus of those institutions, shall make or enforce a rule subjecting a student to disciplinary sanction solely on the basis of conduct that is speech or other communication that, when engaged in outside a campus of those institutions, is protected from governmental restriction by the First Amendment to the United States Constitution or Section 2 of Article I of the California Constitution.
What I don't get is why they didn't simply try to arrest them and, if there was resistance, elevate the use of force accordingly.
