Joust
Regular.
- Joined
- May 2, 2020
- Messages
- 315
- Reaction score
- 182
I'm not sure how relevant your 40 year old stories of football violence are to this and recent similar news stories.I worked in crowd control & football security when I was a young man. (In the 80's) When you had a violent thug you'd use any advantage you had to keep them on the ground until the cops arrived. In fact the cops would rather we dealt with the initial incident as they had their hands tied behind there backs as to what force they could use.
If you didn't nip it in the bud the usual thugs would have a chance to join in making the situation worse. They wouldn't think twice about hurting us if we were on the ground.
If they hurt a copper during an arrest they got payback in the holding cells beneath the stadium. The usual thugs knew this would happen which kept them pretty much in control most of the time once the cops arrived. It was a game they played every home game & we all knew the culprits & spent most of the match watching the same faces every week.
I feel sorry for the cops because they're damned if you do or damned if you don't & they deal with strangers. Only a cop knows the fear of the unknown when you have to tackle these idiots day in day out, especially if the thug gets the upper hand they won't worry about using measured force against the police.
Was the guy in the news article a thug? Was he a danger? he was already handcuffed.
Was George Floyd a thug? Was George Floyd resisting?
If anything your story tells us about people In a position of power and care are being unprofessional and extracting revenge in basement beatings.