Comments by "c. j. macq" (@cjmacq-vg8um) on "The Civil Rights Lawyer" channel.

  1. these aren't police. they're jailhouse guards. (county sheriff's dept.) this is a common attitude among guards. they're offended when asked to do their job. they're insulted when someone interrupts their leisure time. i've been incarcerated. during the intake process i was asked about my medical condition. when i began to list my many medical ailments the intake bureacrat called me a LIAR and called her colleagues to take me away. i was hauled into a small empty room where 6 or 7 guards assaulted and threatened me. i said all i was doing was answering her questions. and they didn't like that. later, after having the charges dropped, when the judge ordered my release there's a release "interview" process. something i knew nothing about. i've never been in jail before. in my case, the interviewer, who refused to identify her purpose or give me her name, was so upset that she actually had to do something she REFUSED to release me. AND I WASN'T EVEN GUILTY OF ANYTHING! why did i need the jail's approval to be released? THE JUDGE ALREADY ORDERED IT! people don't know this but the JAIL can defy judges orders and hold you indefinately if they choose. while in custody the inmates treated me better than the guards. and police aren't any different in their general attitude towards the public. for every example of a good cop doing the right thing there's 100 examples of them doing the wrong thing. all law enforcement see strangers and the public as their ENEMY! its an us-vs-them mentality.
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  2. these aren't police. they're jailhouse guards. (county sheriff's dept.) this is a common attitude among guards. they're offended when asked to do their job. they're insulted when someone interrupts their leisure time. i've been incarcerated. during the intake process i was asked about my medical condition. when i began to list my many medical ailments the intake bureacrat called me a LIAR and called her colleagues to take me away. i was hauled into a small empty room where 6 or 7 guards assaulted and threatened me. i said all i was doing was answering her questions. and they didn't like that. later, after having the charges dropped, when the judge ordered my release there's a release "interview" process. something i knew nothing about. i've never been in jail before. in my case, the interviewer, who refused to identify her purpose or give me her name, was so upset that she actually had to do something she REFUSED to release me. AND I WASN'T EVEN GUILTY OF ANYTHING! why did i need the jail's approval to be released? THE JUDGE ALREADY ORDERED IT! people don't know this but the JAIL can defy judges orders and hold you indefinately if they choose. while in custody the inmates treated me better than the guards. and police aren't any different in their general attitude towards the public. for every example of a good cop doing the right thing there's 100 examples of them doing the wrong thing. all law enforcement see strangers and the public as their ENEMY! its an us-vs-them mentality.
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  3. these aren't police. they're jailhouse guards. (county sheriff's dept.) this is a common attitude among guards. they're offended when asked to do their job. they're insulted when someone interrupts their leisure time. i've been incarcerated. during the intake process i was asked about my medical condition. when i began to list my many medical ailments the intake bureacrat called me a LIAR and called her colleagues to take me away. i was hauled into a small empty room where 6 or 7 guards assaulted and threatened me. i said all i was doing was answering her questions. and they didn't like that. later, after having the charges dropped, when the judge ordered my release there's a release "interview" process. something i knew nothing about. i've never been in jail before. in my case, the interviewer, who refused to identify her purpose or give me her name, was so upset that she actually had to do something she REFUSED to release me. AND I WASN'T EVEN GUILTY OF ANYTHING! why did i need the jail's approval to be released? THE JUDGE ALREADY ORDERED IT! people don't know this but the JAIL can defy judges orders and hold you indefinately if they choose. while in custody the inmates treated me better than the guards. and police aren't any different in their general attitude towards the public. for every example of a good cop doing the right thing there's 100 examples of them doing the wrong thing. all law enforcement see strangers and the public as their ENEMY! its an us-vs-them mentality.
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  20. these aren't police. they're jailhouse guards. (county sheriff's dept.) this is a common attitude among guards. they're offended when asked to do their job. they're insulted when someone interrupts their leisure time. i've been incarcerated. during the intake process i was asked about my medical condition. when i began to list my many medical ailments the intake bureacrat called me a LIAR and called her colleagues to take me away. i was hauled into a small empty room where 6 or 7 guards assaulted and threatened me. i said all i was doing was answering her questions. and they didn't like that. later, after having the charges dropped, when the judge ordered my release there's a release "interview" process. something i knew nothing about. i've never been in jail before. in my case, the interviewer, who refused to identify her purpose or give me her name, was so upset that she actually had to do something she REFUSED to release me. AND I WASN'T EVEN GUILTY OF ANYTHING! why did i need the jail's approval to be released? THE JUDGE ALREADY ORDERED IT! people don't know this but the JAIL can defy judges orders and hold you indefinately if they choose. while in custody the inmates treated me better than the guards. and police aren't any different in their general attitude towards the public. for every example of a good cop doing the right thing there's 100 examples of them doing the wrong thing. all law enforcement see strangers and the public as their ENEMY! its an us-vs-them mentality.
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