Caribbean Hen wrote: ↑Sat Jan 10, 2026 5:34 am
UNI88 wrote: ↑Fri Jan 09, 2026 5:34 pm
You're one of the people who is okay with these changes, the majority of Americans disagree with you.
Much of what the protesters have done is criminal, some is not but I have no problem with them being arrested charged.
Do you have a problem with ICE/CBP agents who use excessive force, and I admit that this perception built on false narrative is completely overblown by the leftist media and their basement army of paid influencers who have never done one single good deed for their country, being arrested and charged? Answer the question - Yes or No.
Yes Of course, but not for this
If the jack-booted thug ICE agent really wanted to murder the peacefully protesting patriot, why didn’t he just shoot her the first time he walked around the car? he had a clear shot
The answer is he didn’t want too until he had an excuse to cover up the execution.
Why was her car on the road at the angle it was ?
What had she been doing hours prior to this confrontation?
Was this her first interaction with that ICE agent? I doubt it
What difference does it make If the car actually hit him or not? It's my opinion that it doesn’t make any difference, because it's my opinion that her actions put the officers life in danger
He didn't just shoot her the first time around because that would have too obviously been cold-blooded murder.
Why was her car on the road at the angle it was? I don't know. I do know that it's a traffic violation that doesn't justify her death. Maybe it was obstruction> It if was, they had her on video and had her license plate #. They didn't need to shoot her to apprehend her.
I don't know what she was doing in the hours prior or if this was her first interaction with the agent. Is it relevant? He's a law enforcement officer - he's supposed to be trained to to be a professional, to put his personal feelings aside and de-escelate situations. Are you saying he might not have been able to act professionally because of a previous interaction?
There I answered it. Your turn ...
I'll ask this one again - what if they find that he had legitimate reason to fear for his life and his first shot was justified but they also find that his life was no longer in danger when he fired the subsequent shots. Should he be held accountable for firing those shots? What if one of those shots was the fatal shot?