dualstow wrote:
Unbelievable.
I always operate under the assumption that the police are predators who wish to hurt me and my family, but who are mostly untouchable absent the most egregious and obvious evidence, which is why it makes sense that they would destroy the cameras. I similarly assume that prosecutors and judges are mostly in bed with the police, owing to their shared stake in keeping their cushy jobs that create and support the prison-industrial complex. So every search warrant will be approved, all the evidence against the police will be deemed inadmissible, and the general aura of trustworthiness in the system and its agents will be constantly bolstered by the trappings of the process itself.
If I operated a retail store of this nature, I would have cameras that constantly uploaded their streams to a remote server to prevent such mischief from being effective. And in fact, I don't want to ever run a retail operation partially out of fear of the police. Those are the realistic, Harry-Browne-approved answers.
The ideological question, of course, is,
is this the kind of thing that ought to happen? Probably most people would say no, but at the same time, what solution can be envisioned when the "checks and balances" are revealed to have been replaced with cronyism and collaboration?
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