Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Lots of haters on here from couch potatoes who know nothing about the profession.
I know plenty about the profession and the criticisms are accurate and justified.
+2
I'm sure that some of you actually do have LEOs who are good people in your family,
but I have two cops in my family who are total meatheads. And based on their stories, a lot of their colleagues are even bigger meatheads.
So I take the anecdotes I've heard, stories from friends who are POC, and what's in the news and it paints a clear picture that there are plenty of a$$hole cops in America, and there are too few 'good cops' who are actually keeping their destructive colleagues in check.
You have two meathead family memebers who are cops. And here you are, dissing your own family members.
So just because they're cops, and just because they're family, I should put them on a pedestal like all of you do?
You have two meathead family members who are cops. And you are here dissing two of your own meatheads. It's just the irony.
I don't think you know what irony means.
Irony, def:
a state of affairs or an event that seems deliberately contrary to what one expects and is often amusing as a result.
plural noun: ironies
"the irony is that I thought he could help me"
synonyms: paradox, incongruity, incongruousness
"the irony of the situation"
a literary technique, originally used in Greek tragedy, by which the full significance of a character's words or actions are clear to the audience or reader although unknown to the character.
It was like a mute calling two of his or her family members "dumb."