It's off-message, especially with the current media trends being about the cops themselves.
It's the wrong place to target, #fuckthepolice is mostly ragers and trolls pretending to be ragers related to some squeaky wheel cases of violence (or fans of N.W.A.).
There's places to complain about laws without weakening the meaning of your message with this "assumed shortcut" into people's heads. If you aren't somewhat synchronized (or polarly opposing) the message they're saying, it'll be overlooked entirely.
by Luna PreyHi everyone,
Okay, so I really hate American cops. They give you tickets for doing things that don't even hurt others! Every time I see a cop, I feel fear, dread, resentment, and hatred. Not because I've hurt anyone, but because I choose to self medicate myself with weed, or drive the SAME speed as everyone else (5 over). In today's society, everyone is basically breaking the law all the time. It's impossible not to because there are so many of them, and police have the DISCRETION to choose to punish you for it if they dislike you, or your kind.
Lately, I have been extremely happy to see all the anti-police campaigns going on. For the longest time, we American children have been indoctrinated to believe that police are friendly, and good, and view them as protectors, but I think now, no modern times, society is finally beginning to see what the police really are-- war mongering, power hungry, uneducated government trolls who use their power to satisfy their own moods and egos as much as they do to uphold the law.
That's why I would really like if we could all go out into the internet, and begin posting, and sharing "#fuckthepolice". Perhaps if we do it enough, it will become a trend, and we the internet can show the disgusting American police what we really think of them, and hopefully stop impressionism young Americans from joining their ranks.
Share my tweet too!Love,
Luna
#fuckthepolice
You've so much to learn, Luna. Naive, so naive
by Tryptamine
2. When my buddy was a teenager, he ripped a four-way intersection sign out from the ground, and tossed it into nearby grass. The next day, he and his friends returned to the park. They watched a police officer parked off to the side and right beyond the missing sign, and the cop give ticket, after ticket, after ticket. This cop noticed that the sign was gone, and decided he was gonna bank on it. One of my friends' buddies got pulled over. My buddy ran up and said that he'd been watching the cop do this for hours, and that the cop knew damn well that the intersection sign was missing. The cop said "alright, you guys are free to go."
I don't get it. Didn't people see the 4 way intersection without the sign? They needed the sign to know not to park there? Maybe I misread, what was the cop giving tickets for?