Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The great majority of police officers have never drawn their weapon, except for target practice. We are all dependent on officers to help us when we are frightened or victimized. It's an honorable profession and should be treated as such. By the way, today is National Peace Officers Day, which is why the flags are at half mast.
Speak for yourself. There are millions of Americans who would never dream of calling the police no matter what happens, as in their experience the police only make things worse.
It could be an honorable profession, but the bad apples and unions have ruined that. Respect isn't automatic.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The great majority of police officers have never drawn their weapon, except for target practice. We are all dependent on officers to help us when we are frightened or victimized. It's an honorable profession and should be treated as such. By the way, today is National Peace Officers Day, which is why the flags are at half mast.
Speak for yourself. There are millions of Americans who would never dream of calling the police no matter what happens, as in their experience the police only make things worse.
It could be an honorable profession, but the bad apples and unions have ruined that. Respect isn't automatic.
Bad apples are everywhere. Cops don't have a monopoly on this. Most people couldn't pass the background check.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:he has better odds being accepted to Harvard than landing a job with LAPD ... Target security guard? he won’t make it, so you shouldn’t worry.
?????
How's LAPD that hard?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The great majority of police officers have never drawn their weapon, except for target practice. We are all dependent on officers to help us when we are frightened or victimized. It's an honorable profession and should be treated as such. By the way, today is National Peace Officers Day, which is why the flags are at half mast.
Speak for yourself. There are millions of Americans who would never dream of calling the police no matter what happens, as in their experience the police only make things worse.
It could be an honorable profession, but the bad apples and unions have ruined that. Respect isn't automatic.
Anonymous wrote:The great majority of police officers have never drawn their weapon, except for target practice. We are all dependent on officers to help us when we are frightened or victimized. It's an honorable profession and should be treated as such. By the way, today is National Peace Officers Day, which is why the flags are at half mast.
Anonymous wrote:he has better odds being accepted to Harvard than landing a job with LAPD ... Target security guard? he won’t make it, so you shouldn’t worry.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It can be dangerous, but probably not as dangerous as you think.
Let him get a couple years in, then push him towards federal law enforcement. Better pay, better benefits, easier work.
Disagree completely. It’s every bit as dangerous as you fear. Anything can happen at any time.
Cops are targets and there is very little fear or respect for the profession anymore.
OP, you’re right to be concerned. It’s not a good life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would not date or marry anyone who has to have a gun for a living.
Op here and yes that’s also a concern of mine. I don’t like guns
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No future as a security guard. Being a cop is not easy - a high percentage of applicants wash out at the application stage, e.g, lie detector. Can provide for a family. Can be rough mentally, always watching one's back, especially those one must work with.
Hi, op here. I mentioned in ge post his next step is background check but I meant the polygraph and then background I believe. What is the polygraph test for?
They pretty much cover same questions on the application. This is where a lot of people fail at least in my agency. The other area is financial info as part of the background investigation. Generally, personal finances have to be extremely clean, at least in my agency.
Op here. his income has been from working. Do they check anything else?from what I’m aware of his financials are clean
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No future as a security guard. Being a cop is not easy - a high percentage of applicants wash out at the application stage, e.g, lie detector. Can provide for a family. Can be rough mentally, always watching one's back, especially those one must work with.
Hi, op here. I mentioned in ge post his next step is background check but I meant the polygraph and then background I believe. What is the polygraph test for?
They pretty much cover same questions on the application. This is where a lot of people fail at least in my agency. The other area is financial info as part of the background investigation. Generally, personal finances have to be extremely clean, at least in my agency.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No future as a security guard. Being a cop is not easy - a high percentage of applicants wash out at the application stage, e.g, lie detector. Can provide for a family. Can be rough mentally, always watching one's back, especially those one must work with.
Hi, op here. I mentioned in ge post his next step is background check but I meant the polygraph and then background I believe. What is the polygraph test for?
Anonymous wrote:No future as a security guard. Being a cop is not easy - a high percentage of applicants wash out at the application stage, e.g, lie detector. Can provide for a family. Can be rough mentally, always watching one's back, especially those one must work with.