View Full Version : Police Officer Wraps $100 Bill In Traffic Ticket
Vitalux
18th October 2013, 16:58
Often we hear so much about the wrong doings of those whose job it is to protect our community. :argue:
I saw this youtube video and thought i would post it here as a reminder that there are many good police out there whose contribution does make a positive change in our world. :hug:
In the below video, a man was ticketed for not having his licence plates sticker on his car up to date.
The officer included with the ticket, a $100.00 bill as a gift.
The owner of the car was able to use that money to not only pay the ticket, but buy licences for both his and his wife's car.
The officer wished to remain anonymous.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8g3BWsNik0E
Robin
18th October 2013, 17:28
Although this does come across as a good deed, I still remain a bit suspicious. It seems that more and more there are news stories depicting "the good side" of police officers (stopping and walking a mother duck and ducklings to safety (http://www.policeone.com/bizarre/articles/3385549-Video-Fla-cop-escorts-baby-ducks-across-road/), giving a homeless man boots (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/12/04/jeffrey-hillman-homeless_n_2236965.html), leaving a hundred dollar bill as mentioned above, etc.). What is with this sudden surge of media coverage of police officers doing good deeds? Surely there must have been individuals throughout history who have done good deeds?
Now, we know that the government creates false flag situations so they look like "the good guy" which gives them credence to come and "be the hero" and save the situation. Can this not also be true with the police department? Perhaps they also create scenarios to make them appear like they are working for the public to disguise the planned military police state as being beneficial.
In my mind, with this mentioned example, this officer would have done so much more good if he just ignored the sticker violation. He would have saved $100 and let this person get away with the violation. Instead, the officer chose to go out of his way and make it known to the public that police officers also do good deeds.
I'm not saying that this is the case, but it is something to think about. I am sure that officers do actually do good deeds, but not everyone who does good deeds has to make it known.
Just food for thought. :p
Ammit
18th October 2013, 17:30
Well, that certainly made me smile with happiness after a very hard week. Thanks for posting.
Snookie
18th October 2013, 18:01
This story is really emphasizing the meme that you must follow all the man made regulations that are on the books. You MUST register your vehicle etc....etc...
Sorry to be such a downer!
araucaria
18th October 2013, 18:20
Let's just approach this with a bit of sophisticated naiveté. We want people to be performing disinterested acts of kindness; when they seem to do so, maybe we should just applaud, rather than look on it suspiciously. Just ignore the possible motivation, which is basically irrelevant anyway. Just let folks get into good habits like this until it stops being news.:)
markpierre
18th October 2013, 20:05
Thanks Vitalux. I actually believed that story. Unfortunately we're conditioned to expect it to be a fraud and look for
signs of 'acting'. Who's fault is that? And the disgenuine smarm of mainstream news casters never inspires much confidence.
If it has an impact, I would hope it would inspire other officers to have a look at how they behave, and the rewards of
being thoughtful and compassionate rather than just indifferent revenue collectors.
Possibly the culture of 'us vs them' can change.
I haven't met many cops who were simply power mad. Some that have been taught and still use tricks like condescending remarks,
I've learned that if I look them directly in the eye and politely say 'pardon me?' they change their tact. They ARE people.
I think the police get a bad rap from only posting abusive stories. Get on to a YouTube page of cop abuses and you want to tear your hair out.
Even just from the morbid fascination with our love of being angry. Alternative news is not exactly innocent of manipulation.
wolf_rt
18th October 2013, 23:39
He would have had to have wrapped $2500 here in Australia if you wanted to pay an unregistered ticked and rego two cars...
Robin
18th October 2013, 23:44
Although this does come across as a good deed, I still remain a bit suspicious. It seems that more and more there are news stories depicting "the good side" of police officers (stopping and walking a mother duck and ducklings to safety (http://www.policeone.com/bizarre/articles/3385549-Video-Fla-cop-escorts-baby-ducks-across-road/), giving a homeless man boots (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/12/04/jeffrey-hillman-homeless_n_2236965.html), leaving a hundred dollar bill as mentioned above, etc.). What is with this sudden surge of media coverage of police officers doing good deeds? Surely there must have been individuals throughout history who have done good deeds?
Now, we know that the government creates false flag situations so they look like "the good guy" which gives them credence to come and "be the hero" and save the situation. Can this not also be true with the police department? Perhaps they also create scenarios to make them appear like they are working for the public to disguise the planned military police state as being beneficial.
In my mind, with this mentioned example, this officer would have done so much more good if he just ignored the sticker violation. He would have saved $100 and let this person get away with the violation. Instead, the officer chose to go out of his way and make it known to the public that police officers also do good deeds.
I'm not saying that this is the case, but it is something to think about. I am sure that officers do actually do good deeds, but not everyone who does good deeds has to make it known.
Just food for thought. :p
I should mention that directly after I wrote this comment, I started driving to Albuquerque, New Mexico for a David Wilcock conference. Within ten minutes of my condescending post, I was pulled over by a highway patrol officer!
He had no reason to pull me over. He saw that I had Illinois plates (I'm currently living in Texas), so turned around and started tailgating me. I thought that he wanted to pass me so I started to merge a bit onto the shoulder. He saw this as a reason to pull me over (for merging in the shoulder on an abandoned highway to let him pass), bombard me with questions about where I'm going and what my family is like, then giving me a warning.
WTF!!
Although he was quite polite, he obviously pulled me over for one of these reasons:
He was bored and was looking for any dumb reason to pull somebody over.
He saw my license plate from Illinois and thought I might be drug dealing in Texas?!
He knew I was about to go visit with David Wilcock and other fellow conspiracists and wanted to intervene.
He had no reason to pull me over and was obviously tailgating me to get me to swerve a little so he could intimidate me. What rubbish and poppycock!
I stand by my above comment, and this interaction gives me further reason to question the motives of the police department, whom I prefer to call "The Pigs."
Vitalux
19th October 2013, 01:11
He had no reason to pull me over and was obviously tailgating me to get me to swerve a little so he could intimidate me. What rubbish and poppycock!
I stand by my above comment, and this interaction gives me further reason to question the motives of the police department, whom I prefer to call "The Pigs."
I am sorry to hear that you had a negative experience with the police.
Myself, I 've rarely ever have been stopped by the police, and on the occasions that I do, I have always had nothing but good experiences.
Perhaps growing up with a father that was a policeman gave me a different perspective of how to view things.
I see everyone in society as living in the same boat. :noidea:
There isn't in my opinion, us, and them.
hate is such a heavy burden to carry :smow:
cursichella1
19th October 2013, 01:22
[QUOTE=SamwiseTheBrave;745994]Although this does come across as a good deed, I still remain a bit suspicious... I should mention that directly after I wrote this comment, I started driving to Albuquerque, New Mexico for a David Wilcock conference. Within ten minutes of my condescending post, I was pulled over by a highway patrol officer!
Interesting story. I think sometimes cops pick up on vibes we put out there? But then I'd also like to know on what planet one can cover a ticket and two car registrations, so now I'm mildly suspect as well...lol.
(Btw, how was the David Wilcock conference?)
Operator
19th October 2013, 03:22
Although this does come across as a good deed, I still remain a bit suspicious. It seems that more and more there are news stories depicting "the good side" of police officers (stopping and walking a mother duck and ducklings to safety (http://www.policeone.com/bizarre/articles/3385549-Video-Fla-cop-escorts-baby-ducks-across-road/), giving a homeless man boots (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/12/04/jeffrey-hillman-homeless_n_2236965.html), leaving a hundred dollar bill as mentioned above, etc.). What is with this sudden surge of media coverage of police officers doing good deeds? Surely there must have been individuals throughout history who have done good deeds?
Now, we know that the government creates false flag situations so they look like "the good guy" which gives them credence to come and "be the hero" and save the situation. Can this not also be true with the police department? Perhaps they also create scenarios to make them appear like they are working for the public to disguise the planned military police state as being beneficial.
In my mind, with this mentioned example, this officer would have done so much more good if he just ignored the sticker violation. He would have saved $100 and let this person get away with the violation. Instead, the officer chose to go out of his way and make it known to the public that police officers also do good deeds.
I'm not saying that this is the case, but it is something to think about. I am sure that officers do actually do good deeds, but not everyone who does good deeds has to make it known.
Just food for thought. :p
I should mention that directly after I wrote this comment, I started driving to Albuquerque, New Mexico for a David Wilcock conference. Within ten minutes of my condescending post, I was pulled over by a highway patrol officer!
He had no reason to pull me over. He saw that I had Illinois plates (I'm currently living in Texas), so turned around and started tailgating me. I thought that he wanted to pass me so I started to merge a bit onto the shoulder. He saw this as a reason to pull me over (for merging in the shoulder on an abandoned highway to let him pass), bombard me with questions about where I'm going and what my family is like, then giving me a warning.
WTF!!
Although he was quite polite, he obviously pulled me over for one of these reasons:
He was bored and was looking for any dumb reason to pull somebody over.
He saw my license plate from Illinois and thought I might be drug dealing in Texas?!
He knew I was about to go visit with David Wilcock and other fellow conspiracists and wanted to intervene.
He had no reason to pull me over and was obviously tailgating me to get me to swerve a little so he could intimidate me. What rubbish and poppycock!
I stand by my above comment, and this interaction gives me further reason to question the motives of the police department, whom I prefer to call "The Pigs."
You want to hear another negative story ... but with another outcome?
The police can be so lazy here that you need a real real good reason to be pulled over .... :whistle::crazy::doh:
In other countries most officers join the police-force ... only a few join the police-service :rolleyes:
gripreaper
19th October 2013, 05:13
First off, its not your automobile. Its a "motor vehicle" and the state holds the primary lawful title, in the form of the original MCO (manufacturers certificate of origin). They have the right to confiscate it any time they want without recourse. You only hold the possessionary right in the form of a "certificate" of title as long as you use their vehicle in the way they subscribe.
You entered into an adhesion contract with the state by applying for a drivers license, even though, under their own rules of the USC you are NOT a driver.
You registered "their" vehicle and agreed to abide by the statutory rules and regulations, even though the rules don't apply to you, you are not required to register, and you are not driving.
So, what do you expect?
Earth Angel
23rd October 2013, 17:47
I have to agree there are a lot of 'good cop' stories making the rounds these days and here is another......and again you ask why is this in the news, if she chose not to arrest this women why is she announcing it to the world......why not just do a good deed and be done with it
http://http://ca.news.yahoo.com/blogs/sideshow/police-officer-buys-groceries-for-woman-accused-of-shoplifting-173940197.html
Robin
23rd October 2013, 18:53
I have to agree there are a lot of 'good cop' stories making the rounds these days and here is another......and again you ask why is this in the news, if she chose not to arrest this women why is she announcing it to the world......why not just do a good deed and be done with it
http://http://ca.news.yahoo.com/blogs/sideshow/police-officer-buys-groceries-for-woman-accused-of-shoplifting-173940197.html
The link you posted didn't work for some reason. Here is the link. (http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/sideshow/police-officer-buys-groceries-for-woman-accused-of-shoplifting-173940197.html)
sigma6
3rd November 2013, 00:43
Although this does come across as a good deed, I still remain a bit suspicious. It seems that more and more there are news stories depicting "the good side" of police officers (stopping and walking a mother duck and ducklings to safety (http://www.policeone.com/bizarre/articles/3385549-Video-Fla-cop-escorts-baby-ducks-across-road/), giving a homeless man boots (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/12/04/jeffrey-hillman-homeless_n_2236965.html), leaving a hundred dollar bill as mentioned above, etc.). What is with this sudden surge of media coverage of police officers doing good deeds? Surely there must have been individuals throughout history who have done good deeds?
Now, we know that the government creates false flag situations so they look like "the good guy" which gives them credence to come and "be the hero" and save the situation. Can this not also be true with the police department? Perhaps they also create scenarios to make them appear like they are working for the public to disguise the planned military police state as being beneficial.
In my mind, with this mentioned example, this officer would have done so much more good if he just ignored the sticker violation. He would have saved $100 and let this person get away with the violation. Instead, the officer chose to go out of his way and make it known to the public that police officers also do good deeds.
I'm not saying that this is the case, but it is something to think about. I am sure that officers do actually do good deeds, but not everyone who does good deeds has to make it known.
Just food for thought. :p
Agreed it sounds like total Horsesh**... exactly how the Romans painted themselves in the bible... as good Samaritans (that's how old this technique is...)
Think about it... if the cop wanted to give the guy a break he would tell him to go straight to the license office and get his plate update...
And yet the people continue to believe it... LOL
What is interesting, that means despite all the money and power and immunity from the law and mind control television shows, they are still getting this desperate... interesting, very interesting...
¤=[Post Update]=¤
This story is really emphasizing the meme that you must follow all the man made regulations that are on the books. You MUST register your vehicle etc....etc...
Sorry to be such a downer!
Exactly, thank you Snookie...
Congratulations to be the people who dared to think outside the box... nothing cynical about, I have had good experiences and bad experiences, but either way it's a crap shoot... why should driving down the road be a crap shoot just because a cop needs to fill a quota... watch out near the end of the month, driving 'muscle cars', Friday, Saturday nights... know all the speed traps, underpasses... you get the picture... it's getting that goofy...
Vitalux
3rd November 2013, 02:13
Although this does come across as a good deed, I still remain a bit suspicious. It seems that more and more there are news stories depicting "the good side" of police officers (stopping and walking a mother duck and ducklings to safety (http://www.policeone.com/bizarre/articles/3385549-Video-Fla-cop-escorts-baby-ducks-across-road/), giving a homeless man boots (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/12/04/jeffrey-hillman-homeless_n_2236965.html), leaving a hundred dollar bill as mentioned above, etc.). What is with this sudden surge of media coverage of police officers doing good deeds? Surely there must have been individuals throughout history who have done good deeds?
Now, we know that the government creates false flag situations so they look like "the good guy" which gives them credence to come and "be the hero" and save the situation. Can this not also be true with the police department? Perhaps they also create scenarios to make them appear like they are working for the public to disguise the planned military police state as being beneficial.
In my mind, with this mentioned example, this officer would have done so much more good if he just ignored the sticker violation. He would have saved $100 and let this person get away with the violation. Instead, the officer chose to go out of his way and make it known to the public that police officers also do good deeds.
I'm not saying that this is the case, but it is something to think about. I am sure that officers do actually do good deeds, but not everyone who does good deeds has to make it known.
Just food for thought. :p
Agreed it sounds like total Horsesh**... exactly how the Romans painted themselves in the bible... as good Samaritans (that's how old this technique is...)
Think about it... if the cop wanted to give the guy a break he would tell him to go straight to the license office and get his plate update...
And yet the people continue to believe it... LOL
What is interesting, that means despite all the money and power and immunity from the law and mind control television shows, they are still getting this desperate... interesting, very interesting...
¤=[Post Update]=¤
This story is really emphasizing the meme that you must follow all the man made regulations that are on the books. You MUST register your vehicle etc....etc...
Sorry to be such a downer!
Exactly, thank you Snookie...
Congratulations to be the people who dared to think outside the box... nothing cynical about, I have had good experiences and bad experiences, but either way it's a crap shoot... why should driving down the road be a crap shoot just because a cop needs to fill a quota... watch out near the end of the month, driving 'muscle cars', Friday, Saturday nights... know all the speed traps, underpasses... you get the picture... it's getting that goofy...
True there are a lot of different ways that we can look at it I suppose a miserable approach is just as valid as a compassionate loving view. :ohwell:
This is simply how I see it.
The policeman was doing their job. :mod:
The citizen was in violation of not having his licence plate sticker up to date.
In society laws are laws and the bottom line is, if we wish to live in society we have an obligation to follow the rules to the best of our ability.
If I was a policeman, I would simply do the job I agreed to do when I was hired.
If I saw his license plate was expired, I would issue him a citation. :mod:
No one should be above the law.
The policeman giving the citizen the hundred dollars was a wonderful act of human compassion. :hug:
Often I find many members, including myself, often spend more time complaining :argue:about anything, and everything that I wonder if we are actually part of the problem.
Lets face it, it doesn't matter how good people have it, they will always find something to complain about and be miserable over.:mad2:
Even a cop handing a guy $100 was pulled through the mud. :mmph:
Would it kill people once in a while to just appreciate life rather than curse every single aspect of it. :noidea:
sigma6
3rd November 2013, 05:50
If I was a policeman, I would simply do the job I agreed to do when I was hired.
If I saw his license plate was expired, I would issue him a citation.
No one should be above the law.
The policeman giving the citizen the hundred dollars was a wonderful act of human compassion.
Like you said you are free to believe what you want...
Part of the cop's job is to use discretion, he is completely within this discretion to instruct the person to immediately update their paperwork...
So what your saying still doesn't hold water... doesn't add up...
surprised you could so easily over look that...
I guess there will always be honest decent people who get sucked into this kind of propaganda no matter how many times they spin this kind of thing, I guess that's why it never stops... no matter how illogical, or contrived it is...
Oh well... Peace love and groovy to all... everything is beautiful!... lalalalal ....weeeee!
all of my love, all of my love... all of my love to youuuu!!...
(sorry couldn't help myself there... :o, a momentary lapse of bliss! please excuse! I'll be ok... whew but everyone should experience this...)
qBI_Av00_Fo
gripreaper
3rd November 2013, 06:18
This is simply how I see it. The policeman was doing their job. The citizen was in violation of not having his license plate sticker up to date. In society laws are laws and the bottom line is, if we wish to live in society we have an obligation to follow the rules to the best of our ability.
Well, its not as simple as that. We all do our jobs, supporting the corporatocracy and the fleecing of our own wealth which we hand to the system and which flows upstream to the elite through the structure of commerce based on a fiat debt system. If your job is to gas Jews at Auchwitz, are you going to do it because it is your job and you need to feed your family? What if your job is a soldier and you are ordered to fire on civilians? Will you do it because it is your job?
And apparently you don't have a Blacks Law Dictionary, because when you use the terms "citizen" and "law" you are misapplying their meanings. A Citizen is a corporate fictional entity which is bonded chattel used as collateral for the national bankruptcy. Most humans are not even aware that they are not free nationals anymore but are bonded debt slaves whose only purpose is to feed the machine which supports the elite.
And you speak of Laws? There are no longer any lawful judicial mandates but only corporate statutes, which YOU volunteer to abide by through adhesion to the corporatocracy, and all acts against commerce are violations of commercial statutes open to interpretation. All crimes are commercial.
The cop is a "private" entity working for a privately chartered corporation acting as agents for a municipality which is ALSO a private corporation, unelected and NOT authorized by any state legislative body representative to the indigenous nationals who are domiciled within the territory of a state. Not even the state is representative of the souls who are subjected to the commercial statutory regulations mandated by these private entities to collect fees, fines, and revenues.
They are all just paid mercenaries to collect monies for their own aggrandizement and to support the corrupt private entities with which they are affiliated. No laws, no representation of citizens, and we have no obligation to follow the statutes, unless we volunteer to adhere to these mandates set forth in commerce as statutes.
There is no law that says you must have a drivers license, or get tags, unless you submit for a certificate of title and volunteer to give your automobile to the state and it is then classified as a motor vehicle, and you volunteer to get a license to drive, even though you are not driving, and you volunteer to get tags on their vehicle.
Why do most do this? Because they "think" they are supposed to and they find it difficult to operate within the commercial corporatocracy without it. Until we wake up and quit supporting the system which is choking the life out of us and making us fully indentured slaves, then no 100 dollar gesture from a corporate mercenary (cop) as he steals from you through citation, will make me feel warm and fuzzy.
TelosianEmbrace
3rd November 2013, 09:11
Do you know how hard it must be for some policemen/women? Every day they are dealing with shady characters, people who lie, steal, cheat and worse. Many of us see many reasons to be uplifted every day, either in our children, nature, our friends, customers and co-workers. You know what I do when I pass a police car? I smile and nod at them, and do my very best to send them love and good thoughts. How many of you see policemen and frown and glower, and fear? They pick up on this, and indeed, pass this energy on in their every day dealings. After all, we are all just receivers and senders of energy. Police men and women are people! They love and fear, feel joy and sadness.
Let them do their job, but do not judge what they do, see who they are!
gripreaper
3rd November 2013, 15:18
Let them do their job, but do not judge what they do, see who they are!
Most humans are empathic and most of those who became cops did so with full intent to help their fellow man, to support a system of freedom and justice and civil order, not knowing that they are actually supporting a system of corrupt psychopaths and are now corporate mercenaries for an elite global cabal.
Am I being too dramatic? I don't think so. The cops need to be taught who they are working for and what they are supporting, and it is those who are willing to travel without their tabs, who get pulled over and are willing to site the USC codes, Supreme Court cases, and relevant LAWS which render the statutes mute, and point out who the cops are really working for. Those are the true heroes in this scenario.
No longer can we say: Oh, they're just doing their jobs and they're good people so we should just obey and look the other way. Nope. That continues to support the corrupt system of scarcity and slavery, and we need to dismantle it on every level. We need to educate everyone who participates in supporting the corrupt system, whether they are aware of it or not, or whether their intentions were good when they signed up for supporting the system, and NO MORE excuses of ignorance or nobility.
Many of us see many reasons to be uplifted every day, either in our children, nature, our friends, customers and co-workers.
And we uplift others by empathically understanding their plight and the plight of all humans who are subjected to slavery, and we work to dismantle the matrix of control which causes most suffering and poverty, and change the context through which we view the world and how it works.
The reason the cops are exposed to so much crime is because these people have lost hope, do not see a way out of or into the system of slavery and control, and have therefore run out of options. If the elite weren't stealing everything from them, with the help of the cops, then most of these crimes would disappear.
Really, there is only about 5% psychopaths on the planet, the rest of us are empathic.
sigma6
3rd November 2013, 21:10
The reason the cops are exposed to so much crime is because these people have lost hope, do not see a way out of or into the system of slavery and control, and have therefore run out of options. If the elite weren't stealing everything from them, with the help of the cops, then most of these crimes would disappear.
Actually I would say if you analyze their institutions and their methods of control, and what is really going on, they are constantly 'manufacturing' crime or creating the environment to cultivate and nurture crime. Usually to hide their own crime both within it and behind it... It's an institution, a social organism, that takes on a life of it's own, the very environment necessary to create bureaucracy. The result of all 'organisms', biological or social is self perpetuation and growth.
Like the Heart foundation and the Cancer Research Foundation, they just keep growing and growing and absorbing more and more money... and the very thing they are supposed to eliminate grows equally proportional to their parasitical growth, so I am not just singling out cops. It's a designed system. A pattern.
Next thing you know it's illegal to eat healthy food or use nutritional supplements and you are living in a police state... all for your 'benefit' of course... look around you ... the 'water is boiling... slowly boiling' who wants to play 'lucky lotto'? ... I'd say your money would be better invested in purchasing a copy of 1984. Everyone should read that book at least ONE time in their LIFE.
You won't believe that book was written in 1948... you will think someone has written a very black 'satire' of todays society right down to the fake hospital lotteries and the perpetual war propaganda... Orwell was connected to British Secret Government, he knew what was coming... nothing random about it.
Vitalux
3rd November 2013, 23:26
You won't believe that book was written in 1948... you will think someone has written a very black 'satire' of todays society right down to the fake hospital lotteries and the perpetual war propaganda... Orwell was connected to British Secret Government, he knew what was coming... nothing random about it.
All I can tell you sigma6 is that I see the world as a incredible magical and awesome place.
I try each day to look for the good in people, places and things.:hug:
My goal is not to really change the world, perhaps just my view of it.
It is a wonderful place to be.:hippie:
http://i298.photobucket.com/albums/mm258/Claudiu_2008/20%20Claudiu/sydney4.jpg
sigma6
4th November 2013, 05:37
the highest experience is to experience awe and wonder...
there are things that contribute to that experience and things that take away from it...
so naturally therefore there are people trying to create a world where everyone has the same opportunity to share in that experience...
Some are just spectators wrapped in their own bubble, and that is all good, but others have opted to invest more of themselves... nothing wrong with that either...
http://ww2.hdnux.com/photos/10/22/04/2171173/5/628x471.jpg
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