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Metropolitan Police officer does stop and search on Black Cyclists Network founder after ‘smelling’ marijuana

Mani Arthur says incident in central London yesterday was “degrading and humiliating”

A Metropolitan Police officer was filmed yesterday performing a stop and search on the founder of the Black Cyclists Network (BCN), claiming that he could smell marijuana on him. The cyclist, Mani Arthur, described it as “a degrading and humiliating experience.”

The incident happened at around 2.39pm yesterday afternoon at the junction of Woburn Place and Euston Road, with the officer stopping Mani Arthur, who was riding with two other BCN members, one of whom filmed what happened.

Posting the video to Instagram, Arthur said: “I was detained and searched by a police officer under the suspicion of ‘smelling’ of marijuana. I was harassed and humiliated in a public space.

“To say that I am pissed off is an understatement. Luckily for me, fellow BCN members Aaron and Hugo were present and recorded the incident.”

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Today was supposed to be a historic moment for @blackcyclistsnetwork and @devercycles. . . This afternoon at around 2.39pm at the junction of Woburn Pls and Euston Rd. I was detained and searched by a police officer under the suspicion of "smelling" of marijuana. I was harassed and humiliated in a public space. . . To say that I am pissed off is an understatement. Luckily for me, fellow BCN members Aaron and Hugo were present and recorded the incident. . . In short, I was waiting in traffic for a green light. Three police officers were crossing the road. The one in the video told me to reverse my bicycle back behind the white line were vehicles have to stop. I was not blocking the pedestrian crossing. . . I told the officer that I would be putting myself in danger if I reversed because a small HGV was sitting directly behind me and I would end up in the driver's blind spot if I followed his instructions. I explained to the officer that usually there are cycle box lanes ahead of vehicle stop lines to protect cyclists and because there is a lack of one, I was using my common sense to avoid putting myself in danger. . . The officer tried again but I resisted and he turned around to join his colleagues as they were walking away. The lights changed to green. . . I was riding off to join Aaron and Hugo, who by that point were in the middle of the junction when I heard a call from the officer to turn back. . . I walked over to the officer on the pavement. He asked for my I.D. and informed me that he smelled cannabis on me during our exchange. As a result he needed to search me for possession. He searched me by the side of the road. Before the search, I asked him and his colleagues if they smell cannabis on me. They said yes. After the search. They conveniently said they did not smell cannabis on me. . . I am very annoyed at having to go through such a degrading and humiliating experience. It seemed to me like a gross abuse of power by an officer who tried to show off to his colleagues and made up a reason as retribution for his failed attempt. . . . @metpolice_uk . .

A post shared by Mani (@blackcyclist) on

Recounting the background to the incident, he wrote: “In short, I was waiting in traffic for a green light. Three police officers were crossing the road.

“The one in the video told me to reverse my bicycle back behind the white line where vehicles have to stop. I was not blocking the pedestrian crossing.

“I told the officer that I would be putting myself in danger if I reversed because a small HGV was sitting directly behind me and I would end up in the driver's blind spot if I followed his instructions.

“I explained to the officer that usually there are cycle box lanes ahead of vehicle stop lines to protect cyclists and because there is a lack of one, I was using my common sense to avoid putting myself in danger.

“The officer tried again but I resisted and he turned around to join his colleagues as they were walking away. The lights changed to green.”

That seemed to have brought the episode to a close, but that was not the case.

“I was riding off to join Aaron and Hugo, who by that point were in the middle of the junction when I heard a call from the officer to turn back,” said Arthur.

“I walked over to the officer on the pavement. He asked for my ID and informed me that he smelled cannabis on me during our exchange.

“As a result he needed to search me for possession. He searched me by the side of the road.

“Before the search, I asked him and his colleagues if they smell cannabis on me. They said yes. After the search. They conveniently said they did not smell cannabis on me.”

He added: “I am very annoyed at having to go through such a degrading and humiliating experience.

“It seemed to me like a gross abuse of power by an officer who tried to show off to his colleagues and made up a reason as retribution for his failed attempt.”

Posting the same video to the Regent’s Park Cyclists group on Facebook, he added: “Anyone that knows me knows that I don’t smoke. I barely drink. This just adds insult to injury.”

British Cycling, when it published its Diversity in Cycling report in June this year, said that it had started “as a grassroots project that was sparked by a conversation between experienced road racer Andy Edwards and Black Cyclists Network founder, Mani Arthur.”

The governing body said that the report, which “sets out to explore the experiences of Black, Asian and Minority Ethnic (BAME) cyclists taking up cycling as a sport for the first time,” would be shared with “its network of volunteers, clubs and members.”

Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.

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104 comments

Avatar
CyclingInBeastMode replied to mattsccm | 4 years ago
5 likes
mattsccm wrote:

Is there something that has been cropped since the piece was first posted. Seems as if most people are spouting about something that isn't visible. Opinion maybe.

The rider made an error and was chastised for it. End. Quite possibly his attitude aggravated things. If he was in the wrong place he should do as asked by the police. Its the whole point of them.  You don't argue. To say that you do makes amockery of the system. I assume that all those who say that we can argue are suggesting that we can all decide what rules we like. I guess that they are Ok with me carrying a knife all the time. I do. Its bloody useful. Used almost every day.  However should I be asked to refrain in certain circumstances I do so as the law requires.

Two seperate incidents here with some one who has a chip on his shoulder making an ecuse for poor manners. 

The reason for the chip is totally irrelevant to a cycling forum.

Have to say, I guess,  that so is a good chunck of the what passes for news on the cycling equivelant of The Sun.

When you say an error you mean an error that plod wouldn't say a dickiebord to a motorist over despite that a motor would present far greater potential for harm and the occupent would not be threatened harm unlike the person on the bike. Rather be safe and not present any danger to the public than obeying a motor traffic rule that puts you at increase chance of harm as proven by the deaths and SI on the roads in those very circumstances, no way would I cede my safety particularly when the constable is acting against his sworn oath. The constable was wrong and discriminatory, the cyclist should not obey the discriminatory advice to lower his safety.END!

The system IS a mockery and those that swear an oath to uphold the law are a mockery and making a mockery of the monarch they are representing.

Rules/legislation is NOT law, there was no victim, statistics prove there would have been no victim in the circumstances, unlike carrying a knife which does have a massive increased chance of their being a victim and in any case it isn't against the law to carry a knife

To sit quietly and never question rules/law is wrong, it is your public duty as a citizen to question the law when laws are unjust and/or make a mockery of a fair and just society!

Avatar
roubaixcobbles replied to mattsccm | 4 years ago
8 likes
mattsccm wrote:

Is there something that has been cropped since the piece was first posted. Seems as if most people are spouting about something that isn't visible. Opinion maybe.

The rider made an error and was chastised for it. End. Quite possibly his attitude aggravated things. If he was in the wrong place he should do as asked by the police. Its the whole point of them.  You don't argue. To say that you do makes amockery of the system. I assume that all those who say that we can argue are suggesting that we can all decide what rules we like. I guess that they are Ok with me carrying a knife all the time. I do. Its bloody useful. Used almost every day.  However should I be asked to refrain in certain circumstances I do so as the law requires.

Two seperate incidents here with some one who has a chip on his shoulder making an ecuse for poor manners. 

The reason for the chip is totally irrelevant to a cycling forum.

Have to say, I guess,  that so is a good chunck of the what passes for news on the cycling equivelant of The Sun.

Things that you have made up without any evidence:

1. That the rider made an error (rather than selectively placing himself in the safest road position)

2. That the rider's attitude aggravated things (he seems remarkably courteous in the video)

3. That the rider showed poor manners

4. That the rider has a chip on his shoulder

 

"Seems as if most people are spouting about something that isn't visible. Opinion maybe." Indeed.

Avatar
nicmason replied to roubaixcobbles | 4 years ago
0 likes

1. That the rider made an error (rather than selectively placing himself in the safest road position)

 

an illegal position  actually.

Avatar
roubaixcobbles replied to nicmason | 4 years ago
5 likes
nicmason wrote:

1. That the rider made an error (rather than selectively placing himself in the safest road position)

 

an illegal position  actually.

 

It is permitted to disregard road signs and markings in exigent circumstances, e.g. one could pull through a red to allow an emergency services vehicle to pass, one could swerve over a double white "no overtaking" line to avoid colliding with a pedestrian who had fallen into the road.  If the officer had attempted to charge the cyclist with a breach of the law, I'd say there would be a good chance the cyclist would be exculpated in court (if the CPS agreed to bring the case, which they wouldn't) on the grounds that he only crossed the line in order to avoid the possibility of being crushed by a left-turning HGV.  The officer himself clearly realized that he couldn't charge on that or he would have done so; cross at being "cheeked" (as he would see it, aka spoken to logically and reasonably) by the cyclist he decided to pull a total BS "I can smell marijuana" justification (how come none of the three officers who could smell it couldn't a minute later? How come they could smell it at all when the cyclist wasn't carrying any?) for harassing the cyclist.

Your determination to blame the victim in this incident, alongside your other posts, speaks volumes about your racist character.

Avatar
nicmason replied to roubaixcobbles | 4 years ago
0 likes
Roubaixcobbles wrote:
nicmason wrote:

1. That the rider made an error (rather than selectively placing himself in the safest road position)

 

an illegal position  actually.

 

It is permitted to disregard road signs and markings in exigent circumstances, e.g. one could pull through a red to allow an emergency services vehicle to pass, one could swerve over a double white "no overtaking" line to avoid colliding with a pedestrian who had fallen into the road.  If the officer had attempted to charge the cyclist with a breach of the law, I'd say there would be a good chance the cyclist would be exculpated in court (if the CPS agreed to bring the case, which they wouldn't) on the grounds that he only crossed the line in order to avoid the possibility of being crushed by a left-turning HGV.  The officer himself clearly realized that he couldn't charge on that or he would have done so; cross at being "cheeked" (as he would see it, aka spoken to logically and reasonably) by the cyclist he decided to pull a total BS "I can smell marijuana" justification (how come none of the three officers who could smell it couldn't a minute later? How come they could smell it at all when the cyclist wasn't carrying any?) for harassing the cyclist.

Your determination to blame the victim in this incident, alongside your other posts, speaks volumes about your racist character.

 

If you ever get it together to read back you'll see I wasn't refrerring to the original  incident but to a subsequent post.  But I'm glad for you it speaks volumes. If Mr and Mrs twat ever had a baby you'd be it.

Avatar
roubaixcobbles replied to nicmason | 4 years ago
2 likes
nicmason wrote:
Roubaixcobbles wrote:
nicmason wrote:

1. That the rider made an error (rather than selectively placing himself in the safest road position)

 

an illegal position  actually.

 

It is permitted to disregard road signs and markings in exigent circumstances, e.g. one could pull through a red to allow an emergency services vehicle to pass, one could swerve over a double white "no overtaking" line to avoid colliding with a pedestrian who had fallen into the road.  If the officer had attempted to charge the cyclist with a breach of the law, I'd say there would be a good chance the cyclist would be exculpated in court (if the CPS agreed to bring the case, which they wouldn't) on the grounds that he only crossed the line in order to avoid the possibility of being crushed by a left-turning HGV.  The officer himself clearly realized that he couldn't charge on that or he would have done so; cross at being "cheeked" (as he would see it, aka spoken to logically and reasonably) by the cyclist he decided to pull a total BS "I can smell marijuana" justification (how come none of the three officers who could smell it couldn't a minute later? How come they could smell it at all when the cyclist wasn't carrying any?) for harassing the cyclist.

Your determination to blame the victim in this incident, alongside your other posts, speaks volumes about your racist character.

 

If you ever get it together to read back you'll see I wasn't refrerring to the original  incident but to a subsequent post.  But I'm glad for you it speaks volumes. If Mr and Mrs twat ever had a baby you'd be it.

 

Oh dear me. You've made rather a chump of yourself there, my little racist chum. The comment that you quoted:

"1. That the rider made an error (rather than selectively placing himself in the safest road position)"

was written by me, and you directly responded to it:

"an illegal position  actually."

 

Nothing to do with any subsequent post, you were directly responding to my comment on the incident. Perhaps you should "get it together to read back" before exposing yourself as a complete fool.

Brilliant comment about Mr & Mrs Twat though, gosh I bet Oscar Wilde wishes he'd thought of that one!

Avatar
nicmason replied to roubaixcobbles | 4 years ago
0 likes
Roubaixcobbles wrote:
nicmason wrote:
Roubaixcobbles wrote:
nicmason wrote:

1. That the rider made an error (rather than selectively placing himself in the safest road position)

 

an illegal position  actually.

 

It is permitted to disregard road signs and markings in exigent circumstances, e.g. one could pull through a red to allow an emergency services vehicle to pass, one could swerve over a double white "no overtaking" line to avoid colliding with a pedestrian who had fallen into the road.  If the officer had attempted to charge the cyclist with a breach of the law, I'd say there would be a good chance the cyclist would be exculpated in court (if the CPS agreed to bring the case, which they wouldn't) on the grounds that he only crossed the line in order to avoid the possibility of being crushed by a left-turning HGV.  The officer himself clearly realized that he couldn't charge on that or he would have done so; cross at being "cheeked" (as he would see it, aka spoken to logically and reasonably) by the cyclist he decided to pull a total BS "I can smell marijuana" justification (how come none of the three officers who could smell it couldn't a minute later? How come they could smell it at all when the cyclist wasn't carrying any?) for harassing the cyclist.

Your determination to blame the victim in this incident, alongside your other posts, speaks volumes about your racist character.

 

If you ever get it together to read back you'll see I wasn't refrerring to the original  incident but to a subsequent post.  But I'm glad for you it speaks volumes. If Mr and Mrs twat ever had a baby you'd be it.

 

Oh dear me. You've made rather a chump of yourself their, my little racist chum. The comment that you quoted:

"1. That the rider made an error (rather than selectively placing himself in the safest road position)"

was written by me, and you directly responded to it:

"an illegal position  actually."

 

Nothing to do with any subsequent post, you were directly responding to my comment on the incident. Perhaps you should "get it together to read back" before exposing yourself as a complete fool.

Brilliant comment about Mr & Mrs Twat though, gosh I bet Oscar Wilde wishes he'd thought of that one!

 

Here are some exclamation marks for you subsequent posts   !!!!!!

Avatar
roubaixcobbles replied to nicmason | 4 years ago
2 likes

 

Here are some exclamation marks for you subsequent posts   !!!!!!

[/quote]

You might want to learn to type and/or write properly before criticising the literary style of others. It makes you look rather stupid otherwise, and as you've already outed yourself as a bigotted racist your image could do without any further tarnishing, one feels.

Avatar
nicmason replied to roubaixcobbles | 4 years ago
0 likes
Roubaixcobbles wrote:

 

Here are some exclamation marks for you subsequent posts   !!!!!!

You might want to learn to type and/or write properly before criticising the literary style of others. It makes you look rather stupid otherwise, and as you've already outed yourself as a bigotted racist your image could do without any further tarnishing, one feels.

[/quote]

Does one feel that ?

Avatar
Hirsute replied to mattsccm | 4 years ago
3 likes
mattsccm wrote:

Is there something that has been cropped since the piece was first posted. Seems as if most people are spouting about something that isn't visible. Opinion maybe.

The rider made an error and was chastised for it. End. Quite possibly his attitude aggravated things. If he was in the wrong place he should do as asked by the police. Its the whole point of them.  You don't argue. To say that you do makes amockery of the system. I assume that all those who say that we can argue are suggesting that we can all decide what rules we like. I guess that they are Ok with me carrying a knife all the time. I do. Its bloody useful. Used almost every day.  However should I be asked to refrain in certain circumstances I do so as the law requires.

Two seperate incidents here with some one who has a chip on his shoulder making an ecuse for poor manners. 

The reason for the chip is totally irrelevant to a cycling forum.

Have to say, I guess,  that so is a good chunck of the what passes for news on the cycling equivelant of The Sun.

You seem to be if the view that police are infallible. Fortunately, many photographers did not take that view and managed to get changes made to the way they were treated over taking pictures in public spaces but over zealous officers.

Avatar
CyclingInBeastMode | 4 years ago
4 likes

Smelling canabis/drugs is not sufficient grounds for a search, a recent police paper shows that it has zero bearing on whether someone has drugs or not and has a very low chance of the person being in posession, that with others in the direct vicinity it would be impossible to be specific in terms of which person the smell was coming from. That they did not search the others and had no grounds other than a 'smell' which could have come fro anywhere and was a lie in any case makes it clear it was racially motivated to my mind.

Even the police college makes it clear as to how cracked up the S&S was and didn't remotely meet the threshold for doing so vis- a vis the guidelines https://www.app.college.police.uk/app-content/stop-and-search/legal/lega...

if they had walked past him/group initially they would have smelt it amongst them so why didn't they act on that in the first instance instead of waiting until he'd told them he wasn't moving to reduce his safety?

Additionally they acted in a discriminatory manner contrary to their sworn oaths, as no way in hell would they apply same actions to a motorist whose front part of the vehicle was in front of the solid white line and indeed they uphold the fact that many drivers enter ASLs illegally ognoring the foirst stop line in any case. The old bollocks about well waiting traffic etc is just that, absolute bollocks, you should wait behind the first solid white line if the road is not clear ahead to exit safely, nope, they'll sit in the ASL and then when the rest of the pricks have gone through on red because they also didn't obey the law mr/mrs I don't give a @@@@ sits there taking valuable space from people on bikes. Will plod do owt, will they @@@@!

The problem is that too many are like this, I've met a few on my travels in car, all fecking power tripping idiots who don't know the law or simply make up 'laws' to try bully you (like threatening arrest for not having a driving licence on your person, that was a good one!). Not on bike thus far though had one plastic plod telling me to get off my bike when I was cycling on a road that has no signs on it to say it's one way (it never has had any) and I was dismounting anyway, so I shouted back at "who do you think you are shouting at!" threatened to ticket me and I told her to go get a real cuntsable and I'd be in the bank while she was waiting for them to turn up!

Avatar
alansmurphy | 4 years ago
6 likes

nic,

 

Never made a miostake whislt driving, riding or walking. Never ended up out of position.

 

In this case, the rider clearly said that he'd filtered expecting there to be a cycle box and there wasn't. So he placed himself in a safe position for him and other road users.

 

You do realise that the issue is that the officer made up a bullshit excuse to search him don't you?

Avatar
Accessibility f... | 4 years ago
5 likes

Did the officer witness him crossing the STOP line while the light was red?  If not then he has no right to insist that he move.

For all he knew, the guy might have crossed it while still green, saw the junction was blocked and decided to wait.

I would have stayed right where I was.  Fuck the law on this point, it's stupid.  No way would I sit in a HGV's blind spot.

Avatar
nicmason replied to Accessibility for all | 4 years ago
0 likes
Peowpeowpeowlasers wrote:

Did the officer witness him crossing the STOP line while the light was red?  If not then he has no right to insist that he move.

For all he knew, the guy might have crossed it while still green, saw the junction was blocked and decided to wait.

I would have stayed right where I was.  Fuck the law on this point, it's stupid.  No way would I sit in a HGV's blind spot.

 

Ok so if it was green but the junction was blocked he shouldnt have gone and the policeman does have right to ask him to move . Or stop being part of the traffic get off the bike and get on the pavement.

Avatar
roubaixcobbles replied to nicmason | 4 years ago
5 likes
nicmason wrote:
Peowpeowpeowlasers wrote:

Did the officer witness him crossing the STOP line while the light was red?  If not then he has no right to insist that he move.

For all he knew, the guy might have crossed it while still green, saw the junction was blocked and decided to wait.

I would have stayed right where I was.  Fuck the law on this point, it's stupid.  No way would I sit in a HGV's blind spot.

 

Ok so if it was green but the junction was blocked he shouldnt have gone and the policeman does have right to ask him to move . Or stop being part of the traffic get off the bike and get on the pavement.

Does the policeman also have the right to then make a clearly false allegation that the cyclist smells of marijuana and subject him to a humiliating public body search? Think you're kind of missing the main point here...

Avatar
nicmason replied to roubaixcobbles | 4 years ago
0 likes
Roubaixcobbles wrote:
nicmason wrote:
Peowpeowpeowlasers wrote:

Did the officer witness him crossing the STOP line while the light was red?  If not then he has no right to insist that he move.

For all he knew, the guy might have crossed it while still green, saw the junction was blocked and decided to wait.

I would have stayed right where I was.  Fuck the law on this point, it's stupid.  No way would I sit in a HGV's blind spot.

 

Ok so if it was green but the junction was blocked he shouldnt have gone and the policeman does have right to ask him to move . Or stop being part of the traffic get off the bike and get on the pavement.

Does the policeman also have the right to then make a clearly false allegation that the cyclist smells of marijuana and subject him to a humiliating public body search? Think you're kind of missing the main point here...

 

I'm not commenting on the main point.

Several people have commented that if the police told them to move they wouldn't do it. Maybe they'd close their eyes so they where invisible as well.

Avatar
brooksby replied to nicmason | 4 years ago
5 likes
nicmason wrote:
Roubaixcobbles wrote:
nicmason wrote:
Peowpeowpeowlasers wrote:

Did the officer witness him crossing the STOP line while the light was red?  If not then he has no right to insist that he move.

For all he knew, the guy might have crossed it while still green, saw the junction was blocked and decided to wait.

I would have stayed right where I was.  Fuck the law on this point, it's stupid.  No way would I sit in a HGV's blind spot.

Ok so if it was green but the junction was blocked he shouldnt have gone and the policeman does have right to ask him to move . Or stop being part of the traffic get off the bike and get on the pavement.

Does the policeman also have the right to then make a clearly false allegation that the cyclist smells of marijuana and subject him to a humiliating public body search? Think you're kind of missing the main point here...

I'm not commenting on the main point.

Several people have commented that if the police told them to move they wouldn't do it. Maybe they'd close their eyes so they where invisible as well.

But the point is, as I understand it, that the position to which the police were asking Mani to move, was a dangerous position that bikeability etc say "Don't go there!".

If the police told your kids to go play in the motorway, would you expect them to obey or to question a dangerous/harmful instruction?  

Avatar
nicmason replied to brooksby | 4 years ago
0 likes
brooksby wrote:
nicmason wrote:
Roubaixcobbles wrote:
nicmason wrote:
Peowpeowpeowlasers wrote:

Did the officer witness him crossing the STOP line while the light was red?  If not then he has no right to insist that he move.

For all he knew, the guy might have crossed it while still green, saw the junction was blocked and decided to wait.

I would have stayed right where I was.  Fuck the law on this point, it's stupid.  No way would I sit in a HGV's blind spot.

Ok so if it was green but the junction was blocked he shouldnt have gone and the policeman does have right to ask him to move . Or stop being part of the traffic get off the bike and get on the pavement.

Does the policeman also have the right to then make a clearly false allegation that the cyclist smells of marijuana and subject him to a humiliating public body search? Think you're kind of missing the main point here...

I'm not commenting on the main point.

Several people have commented that if the police told them to move they wouldn't do it. Maybe they'd close their eyes so they where invisible as well.

But the point is, as I understand it, that the position to which the police were asking Mani to move, was a dangerous position that bikeability etc say "Don't go there!".

If the police told your kids to go play in the motorway, would you expect them to obey or to question a dangerous/harmful instruction?  

 

Mots people are very rarely told what to do by the police Ss some people to get quite chippy when that happens (lets leave aside the race issue for now thats a seperate thing). Try going to a football match between clubs where the fans have a history of attacking each other . The police will tell you in no uncertain terms where to go and what to do and won't make a special rule for you because you want to do something different because you think thats "best".

Avatar
roubaixcobbles replied to nicmason | 4 years ago
3 likes
nicmason wrote:
Roubaixcobbles wrote:
nicmason wrote:
Peowpeowpeowlasers wrote:

Did the officer witness him crossing the STOP line while the light was red?  If not then he has no right to insist that he move.

For all he knew, the guy might have crossed it while still green, saw the junction was blocked and decided to wait.

I would have stayed right where I was.  Fuck the law on this point, it's stupid.  No way would I sit in a HGV's blind spot.

 

Ok so if it was green but the junction was blocked he shouldnt have gone and the policeman does have right to ask him to move . Or stop being part of the traffic get off the bike and get on the pavement.

Does the policeman also have the right to then make a clearly false allegation that the cyclist smells of marijuana and subject him to a humiliating public body search? Think you're kind of missing the main point here...

 

I'm not commenting on the main point.

Several people have commented that if the police told them to move they wouldn't do it. Maybe they'd close their eyes so they where invisible as well.

Why aren't you commenting on the main point?  Why when the article and video show an egregious example of police racism and exceeding their reasonable powers are you focussing on whether someone's wheel was two feet over the stop line? What's more important here, and why are you insisting on distracting from the obvious and worrying abuse of power against a black man by police by nitpicking about minor traffic regs? What's your motivation?

Avatar
nicmason replied to roubaixcobbles | 4 years ago
1 like
Roubaixcobbles wrote:
nicmason wrote:
Roubaixcobbles wrote:
nicmason wrote:
Peowpeowpeowlasers wrote:

Did the officer witness him crossing the STOP line while the light was red?  If not then he has no right to insist that he move.

For all he knew, the guy might have crossed it while still green, saw the junction was blocked and decided to wait.

I would have stayed right where I was.  Fuck the law on this point, it's stupid.  No way would I sit in a HGV's blind spot.

 

Ok so if it was green but the junction was blocked he shouldnt have gone and the policeman does have right to ask him to move . Or stop being part of the traffic get off the bike and get on the pavement.

Does the policeman also have the right to then make a clearly false allegation that the cyclist smells of marijuana and subject him to a humiliating public body search? Think you're kind of missing the main point here...

 

I'm not commenting on the main point.

Several people have commented that if the police told them to move they wouldn't do it. Maybe they'd close their eyes so they where invisible as well.

Why aren't you commenting on the main point?  Why when the article and video show an egregious example of police racism and exceeding their reasonable powers are you focussing on whether someone's wheel was two feet over the stop line? What's more important here, and why are you insisting on distracting from the obvious and worrying abuse of power against a black man by police by nitpicking about minor traffic regs? What's your motivation?

Because this is a cycling magazinr not a civil rights magazine. 

 

Avatar
roubaixcobbles replied to nicmason | 4 years ago
2 likes
nicmason wrote:
Roubaixcobbles wrote:
nicmason wrote:
Roubaixcobbles wrote:
nicmason wrote:
Peowpeowpeowlasers wrote:

Did the officer witness him crossing the STOP line while the light was red?  If not then he has no right to insist that he move.

For all he knew, the guy might have crossed it while still green, saw the junction was blocked and decided to wait.

I would have stayed right where I was.  Fuck the law on this point, it's stupid.  No way would I sit in a HGV's blind spot.

 

Ok so if it was green but the junction was blocked he shouldnt have gone and the policeman does have right to ask him to move . Or stop being part of the traffic get off the bike and get on the pavement.

Does the policeman also have the right to then make a clearly false allegation that the cyclist smells of marijuana and subject him to a humiliating public body search? Think you're kind of missing the main point here...

 

I'm not commenting on the main point.

Several people have commented that if the police told them to move they wouldn't do it. Maybe they'd close their eyes so they where invisible as well.

Why aren't you commenting on the main point?  Why when the article and video show an egregious example of police racism and exceeding their reasonable powers are you focussing on whether someone's wheel was two feet over the stop line? What's more important here, and why are you insisting on distracting from the obvious and worrying abuse of power against a black man by police by nitpicking about minor traffic regs? What's your motivation?

Because this is a cycling magazinr not a civil rights magazine. 

 

 

Wow.  So a cycling magazine should ignore the police making a racist stop on the cyclist founder of a black cycling campaign when he's out cycling, or if the  magazine does misguidedly report it we should completely ignore the racism and argue about whether the initial contact of the officer telling a cyclist to pull his wheel back a couple of feet was justified?  I've got a feeling you might just be a bit of an old racist yourself there, nic, and by "a feeling" I mean "it's blindingly obvious".

Avatar
nicmason replied to roubaixcobbles | 4 years ago
0 likes
Roubaixcobbles wrote:
nicmason wrote:
Roubaixcobbles wrote:
nicmason wrote:
Roubaixcobbles wrote:
nicmason wrote:
Peowpeowpeowlasers wrote:

Did the officer witness him crossing the STOP line while the light was red?  If not then he has no right to insist that he move.

For all he knew, the guy might have crossed it while still green, saw the junction was blocked and decided to wait.

I would have stayed right where I was.  Fuck the law on this point, it's stupid.  No way would I sit in a HGV's blind spot.

 

Ok so if it was green but the junction was blocked he shouldnt have gone and the policeman does have right to ask him to move . Or stop being part of the traffic get off the bike and get on the pavement.

Does the policeman also have the right to then make a clearly false allegation that the cyclist smells of marijuana and subject him to a humiliating public body search? Think you're kind of missing the main point here...

 

I'm not commenting on the main point.

Several people have commented that if the police told them to move they wouldn't do it. Maybe they'd close their eyes so they where invisible as well.

Why aren't you commenting on the main point?  Why when the article and video show an egregious example of police racism and exceeding their reasonable powers are you focussing on whether someone's wheel was two feet over the stop line? What's more important here, and why are you insisting on distracting from the obvious and worrying abuse of power against a black man by police by nitpicking about minor traffic regs? What's your motivation?

Because this is a cycling magazinr not a civil rights magazine. 

 

 

Wow.  So a cycling magazine should ignore the police making a racist stop on the cyclist founder of a black cycling campaign when he's out cycling, or if the  magazine does misguidedly report it we should completely ignore the racism and argue about whether the initial contact of the officer telling a cyclist to pull his wheel back a couple of feet was justified?  I've got a feeling you might just be a bit of an old racist yourself there, nic, and by "a feeling" I mean "it's blindingly obvious".

 

Thanks for that man who knows nothing about me .

Avatar
roubaixcobbles replied to nicmason | 4 years ago
2 likes
nicmason wrote:
Roubaixcobbles wrote:
nicmason wrote:
Roubaixcobbles wrote:
nicmason wrote:
Roubaixcobbles wrote:
nicmason wrote:
Peowpeowpeowlasers wrote:

Did the officer witness him crossing the STOP line while the light was red?  If not then he has no right to insist that he move.

For all he knew, the guy might have crossed it while still green, saw the junction was blocked and decided to wait.

I would have stayed right where I was.  Fuck the law on this point, it's stupid.  No way would I sit in a HGV's blind spot.

 

Ok so if it was green but the junction was blocked he shouldnt have gone and the policeman does have right to ask him to move . Or stop being part of the traffic get off the bike and get on the pavement.

Does the policeman also have the right to then make a clearly false allegation that the cyclist smells of marijuana and subject him to a humiliating public body search? Think you're kind of missing the main point here...

 

I'm not commenting on the main point.

Several people have commented that if the police told them to move they wouldn't do it. Maybe they'd close their eyes so they where invisible as well.

Why aren't you commenting on the main point?  Why when the article and video show an egregious example of police racism and exceeding their reasonable powers are you focussing on whether someone's wheel was two feet over the stop line? What's more important here, and why are you insisting on distracting from the obvious and worrying abuse of power against a black man by police by nitpicking about minor traffic regs? What's your motivation?

Because this is a cycling magazinr not a civil rights magazine. 

 

 

Wow.  So a cycling magazine should ignore the police making a racist stop on the cyclist founder of a black cycling campaign when he's out cycling, or if the  magazine does misguidedly report it we should completely ignore the racism and argue about whether the initial contact of the officer telling a cyclist to pull his wheel back a couple of feet was justified?  I've got a feeling you might just be a bit of an old racist yourself there, nic, and by "a feeling" I mean "it's blindingly obvious".

 

Thanks for that man who knows nothing about me .

I do know about you from your comments on here, in which you have repeatedly tried to divert attention away from a prima facie case of police racism into a pointless discussion of traffic laws in a transparent attempt to shift the blame onto the victim of said police racism.  That quite clearly makes you a defender of/apologist for police racism, and that makes you a racist.  

Avatar
nicmason replied to roubaixcobbles | 4 years ago
0 likes
Roubaixcobbles wrote:
nicmason wrote:
Roubaixcobbles wrote:
nicmason wrote:
Roubaixcobbles wrote:
nicmason wrote:
Roubaixcobbles wrote:
nicmason wrote:
Peowpeowpeowlasers wrote:

Did the officer witness him crossing the STOP line while the light was red?  If not then he has no right to insist that he move.

For all he knew, the guy might have crossed it while still green, saw the junction was blocked and decided to wait.

I would have stayed right where I was.  Fuck the law on this point, it's stupid.  No way would I sit in a HGV's blind spot.

 

Ok so if it was green but the junction was blocked he shouldnt have gone and the policeman does have right to ask him to move . Or stop being part of the traffic get off the bike and get on the pavement.

Does the policeman also have the right to then make a clearly false allegation that the cyclist smells of marijuana and subject him to a humiliating public body search? Think you're kind of missing the main point here...

 

I'm not commenting on the main point.

Several people have commented that if the police told them to move they wouldn't do it. Maybe they'd close their eyes so they where invisible as well.

Why aren't you commenting on the main point?  Why when the article and video show an egregious example of police racism and exceeding their reasonable powers are you focussing on whether someone's wheel was two feet over the stop line? What's more important here, and why are you insisting on distracting from the obvious and worrying abuse of power against a black man by police by nitpicking about minor traffic regs? What's your motivation?

Because this is a cycling magazinr not a civil rights magazine. 

 

 

Wow.  So a cycling magazine should ignore the police making a racist stop on the cyclist founder of a black cycling campaign when he's out cycling, or if the  magazine does misguidedly report it we should completely ignore the racism and argue about whether the initial contact of the officer telling a cyclist to pull his wheel back a couple of feet was justified?  I've got a feeling you might just be a bit of an old racist yourself there, nic, and by "a feeling" I mean "it's blindingly obvious".

 

Thanks for that man who knows nothing about me .

I do know about you from your comments on here, in which you have repeatedly tried to divert attention away from a prima facie case of police racism into a pointless discussion of traffic laws in a transparent attempt to shift the blame onto the victim of said police racism.  That quite clearly makes you a defender of/apologist for police racism, and that makes you a racist.  

 

Youre quite the one for virtue signalling aren't you .

Avatar
roubaixcobbles replied to nicmason | 4 years ago
5 likes
nicmason wrote:
Roubaixcobbles wrote:
nicmason wrote:
Roubaixcobbles wrote:
nicmason wrote:
Roubaixcobbles wrote:
nicmason wrote:
Roubaixcobbles wrote:
nicmason wrote:
Peowpeowpeowlasers wrote:

Did the officer witness him crossing the STOP line while the light was red?  If not then he has no right to insist that he move.

For all he knew, the guy might have crossed it while still green, saw the junction was blocked and decided to wait.

I would have stayed right where I was.  Fuck the law on this point, it's stupid.  No way would I sit in a HGV's blind spot.

 

Ok so if it was green but the junction was blocked he shouldnt have gone and the policeman does have right to ask him to move . Or stop being part of the traffic get off the bike and get on the pavement.

Does the policeman also have the right to then make a clearly false allegation that the cyclist smells of marijuana and subject him to a humiliating public body search? Think you're kind of missing the main point here...

 

I'm not commenting on the main point.

Several people have commented that if the police told them to move they wouldn't do it. Maybe they'd close their eyes so they where invisible as well.

Why aren't you commenting on the main point?  Why when the article and video show an egregious example of police racism and exceeding their reasonable powers are you focussing on whether someone's wheel was two feet over the stop line? What's more important here, and why are you insisting on distracting from the obvious and worrying abuse of power against a black man by police by nitpicking about minor traffic regs? What's your motivation?

Because this is a cycling magazinr not a civil rights magazine. 

 

 

Wow.  So a cycling magazine should ignore the police making a racist stop on the cyclist founder of a black cycling campaign when he's out cycling, or if the  magazine does misguidedly report it we should completely ignore the racism and argue about whether the initial contact of the officer telling a cyclist to pull his wheel back a couple of feet was justified?  I've got a feeling you might just be a bit of an old racist yourself there, nic, and by "a feeling" I mean "it's blindingly obvious".

 

Thanks for that man who knows nothing about me .

I do know about you from your comments on here, in which you have repeatedly tried to divert attention away from a prima facie case of police racism into a pointless discussion of traffic laws in a transparent attempt to shift the blame onto the victim of said police racism.  That quite clearly makes you a defender of/apologist for police racism, and that makes you a racist.  

 

Youre quite the one for virtue signalling aren't you .

 

Ah, attacking racism seen as "virtue signalling" - classic racist trope.

Avatar
nicmason replied to roubaixcobbles | 4 years ago
0 likes
Roubaixcobbles wrote:
nicmason wrote:
Roubaixcobbles wrote:
nicmason wrote:
Roubaixcobbles wrote:
nicmason wrote:
Roubaixcobbles wrote:
nicmason wrote:
Roubaixcobbles wrote:
nicmason wrote:
Peowpeowpeowlasers wrote:

Did the officer witness him crossing the STOP line while the light was red?  If not then he has no right to insist that he move.

For all he knew, the guy might have crossed it while still green, saw the junction was blocked and decided to wait.

I would have stayed right where I was.  Fuck the law on this point, it's stupid.  No way would I sit in a HGV's blind spot.

 

Ok so if it was green but the junction was blocked he shouldnt have gone and the policeman does have right to ask him to move . Or stop being part of the traffic get off the bike and get on the pavement.

Does the policeman also have the right to then make a clearly false allegation that the cyclist smells of marijuana and subject him to a humiliating public body search? Think you're kind of missing the main point here...

 

I'm not commenting on the main point.

Several people have commented that if the police told them to move they wouldn't do it. Maybe they'd close their eyes so they where invisible as well.

Why aren't you commenting on the main point?  Why when the article and video show an egregious example of police racism and exceeding their reasonable powers are you focussing on whether someone's wheel was two feet over the stop line? What's more important here, and why are you insisting on distracting from the obvious and worrying abuse of power against a black man by police by nitpicking about minor traffic regs? What's your motivation?

Because this is a cycling magazinr not a civil rights magazine. 

 

 

Wow.  So a cycling magazine should ignore the police making a racist stop on the cyclist founder of a black cycling campaign when he's out cycling, or if the  magazine does misguidedly report it we should completely ignore the racism and argue about whether the initial contact of the officer telling a cyclist to pull his wheel back a couple of feet was justified?  I've got a feeling you might just be a bit of an old racist yourself there, nic, and by "a feeling" I mean "it's blindingly obvious".

 

Thanks for that man who knows nothing about me .

I do know about you from your comments on here, in which you have repeatedly tried to divert attention away from a prima facie case of police racism into a pointless discussion of traffic laws in a transparent attempt to shift the blame onto the victim of said police racism.  That quite clearly makes you a defender of/apologist for police racism, and that makes you a racist.  

 

Youre quite the one for virtue signalling aren't you .

 

Ah, attacking racism seen as "virtue signalling" - classic racist trope.

 

By any chance do you have a beard and eat avocado on toast ?

Avatar
roubaixcobbles replied to nicmason | 4 years ago
3 likes
nicmason wrote:
Roubaixcobbles wrote:
nicmason wrote:
Roubaixcobbles wrote:
nicmason wrote:
Roubaixcobbles wrote:
nicmason wrote:
Roubaixcobbles wrote:
nicmason wrote:
Roubaixcobbles wrote:
nicmason wrote:
Peowpeowpeowlasers wrote:

Did the officer witness him crossing the STOP line while the light was red?  If not then he has no right to insist that he move.

For all he knew, the guy might have crossed it while still green, saw the junction was blocked and decided to wait.

I would have stayed right where I was.  Fuck the law on this point, it's stupid.  No way would I sit in a HGV's blind spot.

 

Ok so if it was green but the junction was blocked he shouldnt have gone and the policeman does have right to ask him to move . Or stop being part of the traffic get off the bike and get on the pavement.

Does the policeman also have the right to then make a clearly false allegation that the cyclist smells of marijuana and subject him to a humiliating public body search? Think you're kind of missing the main point here...

 

I'm not commenting on the main point.

Several people have commented that if the police told them to move they wouldn't do it. Maybe they'd close their eyes so they where invisible as well.

Why aren't you commenting on the main point?  Why when the article and video show an egregious example of police racism and exceeding their reasonable powers are you focussing on whether someone's wheel was two feet over the stop line? What's more important here, and why are you insisting on distracting from the obvious and worrying abuse of power against a black man by police by nitpicking about minor traffic regs? What's your motivation?

Because this is a cycling magazinr not a civil rights magazine. 

 

 

Wow.  So a cycling magazine should ignore the police making a racist stop on the cyclist founder of a black cycling campaign when he's out cycling, or if the  magazine does misguidedly report it we should completely ignore the racism and argue about whether the initial contact of the officer telling a cyclist to pull his wheel back a couple of feet was justified?  I've got a feeling you might just be a bit of an old racist yourself there, nic, and by "a feeling" I mean "it's blindingly obvious".

 

Thanks for that man who knows nothing about me .

I do know about you from your comments on here, in which you have repeatedly tried to divert attention away from a prima facie case of police racism into a pointless discussion of traffic laws in a transparent attempt to shift the blame onto the victim of said police racism.  That quite clearly makes you a defender of/apologist for police racism, and that makes you a racist.  

 

Youre quite the one for virtue signalling aren't you .

 

Ah, attacking racism seen as "virtue signalling" - classic racist trope.

 

By any chance do you have a beard and eat avocado on toast ?

Why, would that mitigate your racism in some way, do you think?

That the best you've got? Thanks for the demonstration of the fact that while not all thick people are racists, all racists are thick.

Avatar
nicmason replied to roubaixcobbles | 4 years ago
0 likes
Roubaixcobbles wrote:
nicmason wrote:
Roubaixcobbles wrote:
nicmason wrote:
Roubaixcobbles wrote:
nicmason wrote:
Roubaixcobbles wrote:
nicmason wrote:
Roubaixcobbles wrote:
nicmason wrote:
Roubaixcobbles wrote:
nicmason wrote:
Peowpeowpeowlasers wrote:

Did the officer witness him crossing the STOP line while the light was red?  If not then he has no right to insist that he move.

For all he knew, the guy might have crossed it while still green, saw the junction was blocked and decided to wait.

I would have stayed right where I was.  Fuck the law on this point, it's stupid.  No way would I sit in a HGV's blind spot.

 

Ok so if it was green but the junction was blocked he shouldnt have gone and the policeman does have right to ask him to move . Or stop being part of the traffic get off the bike and get on the pavement.

Does the policeman also have the right to then make a clearly false allegation that the cyclist smells of marijuana and subject him to a humiliating public body search? Think you're kind of missing the main point here...

 

I'm not commenting on the main point.

Several people have commented that if the police told them to move they wouldn't do it. Maybe they'd close their eyes so they where invisible as well.

Why aren't you commenting on the main point?  Why when the article and video show an egregious example of police racism and exceeding their reasonable powers are you focussing on whether someone's wheel was two feet over the stop line? What's more important here, and why are you insisting on distracting from the obvious and worrying abuse of power against a black man by police by nitpicking about minor traffic regs? What's your motivation?

Because this is a cycling magazinr not a civil rights magazine. 

 

 

Wow.  So a cycling magazine should ignore the police making a racist stop on the cyclist founder of a black cycling campaign when he's out cycling, or if the  magazine does misguidedly report it we should completely ignore the racism and argue about whether the initial contact of the officer telling a cyclist to pull his wheel back a couple of feet was justified?  I've got a feeling you might just be a bit of an old racist yourself there, nic, and by "a feeling" I mean "it's blindingly obvious".

 

Thanks for that man who knows nothing about me .

I do know about you from your comments on here, in which you have repeatedly tried to divert attention away from a prima facie case of police racism into a pointless discussion of traffic laws in a transparent attempt to shift the blame onto the victim of said police racism.  That quite clearly makes you a defender of/apologist for police racism, and that makes you a racist.  

 

Youre quite the one for virtue signalling aren't you .

 

Ah, attacking racism seen as "virtue signalling" - classic racist trope.

 

By any chance do you have a beard and eat avocado on toast ?

Why, would that mitigate your racism in some way, do you think?

That the best you've got? Thanks for the demonstration of the fact that while not all thick people are racists, all racists are thick.

 

 

You're very angry aren't you .. I'm not a racist but I don't resent you saying that and tbh I don't care .

Avatar
roubaixcobbles replied to nicmason | 4 years ago
2 likes
nicmason wrote:
Roubaixcobbles wrote:
nicmason wrote:
Roubaixcobbles wrote:
nicmason wrote:
Roubaixcobbles wrote:
nicmason wrote:
Roubaixcobbles wrote:
nicmason wrote:
Roubaixcobbles wrote:
nicmason wrote:
Roubaixcobbles wrote:
nicmason wrote:
Peowpeowpeowlasers wrote:

Did the officer witness him crossing the STOP line while the light was red?  If not then he has no right to insist that he move.

For all he knew, the guy might have crossed it while still green, saw the junction was blocked and decided to wait.

I would have stayed right where I was.  Fuck the law on this point, it's stupid.  No way would I sit in a HGV's blind spot.

 

Ok so if it was green but the junction was blocked he shouldnt have gone and the policeman does have right to ask him to move . Or stop being part of the traffic get off the bike and get on the pavement.

Does the policeman also have the right to then make a clearly false allegation that the cyclist smells of marijuana and subject him to a humiliating public body search? Think you're kind of missing the main point here...

 

I'm not commenting on the main point.

Several people have commented that if the police told them to move they wouldn't do it. Maybe they'd close their eyes so they where invisible as well.

Why aren't you commenting on the main point?  Why when the article and video show an egregious example of police racism and exceeding their reasonable powers are you focussing on whether someone's wheel was two feet over the stop line? What's more important here, and why are you insisting on distracting from the obvious and worrying abuse of power against a black man by police by nitpicking about minor traffic regs? What's your motivation?

Because this is a cycling magazinr not a civil rights magazine. 

 

 

Wow.  So a cycling magazine should ignore the police making a racist stop on the cyclist founder of a black cycling campaign when he's out cycling, or if the  magazine does misguidedly report it we should completely ignore the racism and argue about whether the initial contact of the officer telling a cyclist to pull his wheel back a couple of feet was justified?  I've got a feeling you might just be a bit of an old racist yourself there, nic, and by "a feeling" I mean "it's blindingly obvious".

 

Thanks for that man who knows nothing about me .

I do know about you from your comments on here, in which you have repeatedly tried to divert attention away from a prima facie case of police racism into a pointless discussion of traffic laws in a transparent attempt to shift the blame onto the victim of said police racism.  That quite clearly makes you a defender of/apologist for police racism, and that makes you a racist.  

 

Youre quite the one for virtue signalling aren't you .

 

Ah, attacking racism seen as "virtue signalling" - classic racist trope.

 

By any chance do you have a beard and eat avocado on toast ?

Why, would that mitigate your racism in some way, do you think?

That the best you've got? Thanks for the demonstration of the fact that while not all thick people are racists, all racists are thick.

 

 

You're very angry aren't you .. I'm not a racist but I don't resent you saying that and tbh I don't care .

 

Yep, casual, petty, cowardly, anonymous racism such as you have quite clearly displayed on this thread does make me very angry indeed. Well done.

Avatar
vonhelmet replied to nicmason | 4 years ago
4 likes
nicmason wrote:
Roubaixcobbles wrote:
nicmason wrote:
Roubaixcobbles wrote:
nicmason wrote:
Roubaixcobbles wrote:
nicmason wrote:
Roubaixcobbles wrote:
nicmason wrote:
Peowpeowpeowlasers wrote:

Did the officer witness him crossing the STOP line while the light was red?  If not then he has no right to insist that he move.

For all he knew, the guy might have crossed it while still green, saw the junction was blocked and decided to wait.

I would have stayed right where I was.  Fuck the law on this point, it's stupid.  No way would I sit in a HGV's blind spot.

 

Ok so if it was green but the junction was blocked he shouldnt have gone and the policeman does have right to ask him to move . Or stop being part of the traffic get off the bike and get on the pavement.

Does the policeman also have the right to then make a clearly false allegation that the cyclist smells of marijuana and subject him to a humiliating public body search? Think you're kind of missing the main point here...

 

I'm not commenting on the main point.

Several people have commented that if the police told them to move they wouldn't do it. Maybe they'd close their eyes so they where invisible as well.

Why aren't you commenting on the main point?  Why when the article and video show an egregious example of police racism and exceeding their reasonable powers are you focussing on whether someone's wheel was two feet over the stop line? What's more important here, and why are you insisting on distracting from the obvious and worrying abuse of power against a black man by police by nitpicking about minor traffic regs? What's your motivation?

Because this is a cycling magazinr not a civil rights magazine. 

 

 

Wow.  So a cycling magazine should ignore the police making a racist stop on the cyclist founder of a black cycling campaign when he's out cycling, or if the  magazine does misguidedly report it we should completely ignore the racism and argue about whether the initial contact of the officer telling a cyclist to pull his wheel back a couple of feet was justified?  I've got a feeling you might just be a bit of an old racist yourself there, nic, and by "a feeling" I mean "it's blindingly obvious".

 

Thanks for that man who knows nothing about me .

I do know about you from your comments on here, in which you have repeatedly tried to divert attention away from a prima facie case of police racism into a pointless discussion of traffic laws in a transparent attempt to shift the blame onto the victim of said police racism.  That quite clearly makes you a defender of/apologist for police racism, and that makes you a racist.  

 

Youre quite the one for virtue signalling aren't you .

Virtue signalling is a bullshit term used by people to shut down arguments with people who may actually be more virtuous than them.

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