shockedcanadian
Diamond Member
- Aug 6, 2012
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As I've said many times on here, the one piece of advice I would give to any U.S agent of the law is, "do not become like Canada". I try not to be too critical of police outside of Canada since they haven't done me wrong. I do the see the U.S more generally looking to emulate Canada and if successful it will spell the end of America and most certainly the West.
The Canadian system is as follows: specifically the plain clothed clowns. Start by hiring the most diabolical, morally unethical and cowardly of characters, the Police State rewards them for decimating their jurisdictions. Entrapment, misrepresentation, abuse of authority, usually of the young, poor and most vulnerable so that some meathead can have an overpaid career and their equally unimpressive kids can as well.
At what cost? Your reputation, global influence, economy, future prosperity and National Security.
The world has changed drastically, respect is earned not just assumed. Reputations are also earned. Choose wisely.
www.foxnews.com
In law enforcement, our most fundamental duty is to ensure people can live free from fear—a task that has become more challenging over the past few years. FBI crime statistics released in October showed that in 2021, for the second year in a row, violent crime remained at alarmingly high levels. From conversations I routinely have with police chiefs and sheriffs every week, those violent crime trends have continued throughout 2022.
The top concern I hear from local law enforcement leaders is gang and gun violence — whether it’s gangs terrorizing a community, juveniles graduating from carjackings to even worse violence, or traffickers moving drugs through a neighborhood and inundating it with crime. Even major corporations are seeing the same thing and are having to make difficult decisions about where they operate.
While the specific drivers can be as varied and diverse as the communities we serve, in far too many instances, we’re seeing repeat or dangerous offenders end up back on the streets. For hardworking law enforcement officers, the only thing more frustrating than having to arrest a violent criminal who should be behind bars is having to arrest that same person over and over again.
The Canadian system is as follows: specifically the plain clothed clowns. Start by hiring the most diabolical, morally unethical and cowardly of characters, the Police State rewards them for decimating their jurisdictions. Entrapment, misrepresentation, abuse of authority, usually of the young, poor and most vulnerable so that some meathead can have an overpaid career and their equally unimpressive kids can as well.
At what cost? Your reputation, global influence, economy, future prosperity and National Security.
The world has changed drastically, respect is earned not just assumed. Reputations are also earned. Choose wisely.

America's crime problem is real. Tackling it requires respect for cops
FBI crime statistics showed that in 2021 violent crime remained at alarmingly high levels. Those violent crime trends have continued throughout 2022.
In law enforcement, our most fundamental duty is to ensure people can live free from fear—a task that has become more challenging over the past few years. FBI crime statistics released in October showed that in 2021, for the second year in a row, violent crime remained at alarmingly high levels. From conversations I routinely have with police chiefs and sheriffs every week, those violent crime trends have continued throughout 2022.
The top concern I hear from local law enforcement leaders is gang and gun violence — whether it’s gangs terrorizing a community, juveniles graduating from carjackings to even worse violence, or traffickers moving drugs through a neighborhood and inundating it with crime. Even major corporations are seeing the same thing and are having to make difficult decisions about where they operate.
While the specific drivers can be as varied and diverse as the communities we serve, in far too many instances, we’re seeing repeat or dangerous offenders end up back on the streets. For hardworking law enforcement officers, the only thing more frustrating than having to arrest a violent criminal who should be behind bars is having to arrest that same person over and over again.