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Howdy!
In article .com, Bucky wrote: Michael Houghton wrote: I call bull**** on you. First for calling it "kidnapping". OK, "kidnapping" was overstated. Change it to "seized by force and intimidation". Technically accurate, but overblown rhetoric. The raid was a consequence of the refusal to surrender custody of the boy as directed by a competent court, and in accordance with basic principles of child custody. The family holding Elien seemed unable to admit that the father should have custody since the mother was dead. No sensible reason was adduced for why the father was incompetent to have custody. If there was any "kidnapping" going on, it was the extended family doing it, and the raid could be cast as a "rescue mission". Given the posturing by the family, using a display of force to intimidate the "kidnappers" to prevent them from resisting was not way out of line. Second for misrepresenting the placement of the rifle What part of "pointing an assault rifle inches from the boy's face" was misrepresented? http://www.pbs.org/newshour/images/l...an/elian_a.jpg (and conveniently ignoring the important (and easily seen) placement of the trigger finger). Oh that's right, with the barrel of an assault rifle pointed inches from his face, Elian was able to remain calm and unfrightened because he noticed that the agent's trigger finger was one inch away from the trigger. It was nice to know this fact afterwards, but during the situation it was irrelevant where the trigger finger was or whether the rifle was even loaded. The detail of where the officer's trigger finger was placed shows that the officer was using proper gun discipline. Eline is clearly frightened in that picture. Who wouldn't be? Objectively, there was very little risk of an accidental discharge of the gun. In addition, note that the gun appears to be clearly pointed at the man holding Elien, not Elien. You chose to use language that seriously miscast the whole affair as some sort of abuse of authority. In point of fact and law, the raid was most akin to a hostage rescue -- one carried off with no casualties aside, possibly, from some underwear. Well, you only addressed my example. So does that mean you concur with the first part of my statement? "This kind of treatment is routine. If this is the worst case of unnecessary force used by law enforcement, then we're in really good shape." I reject your thesis that that was "unnecessary force". What basis do you have for that claim? Without that thesis, the rest of your statement has no value. yours, Michael -- Michael and MJ Houghton | Herveus d'Ormonde and Megan O'Donnelly | White Wolf and the Phoenix Bowie, MD, USA | Tablet and Inkle bands, and other stuff | http://www.radix.net/~herveus/wwap/ |
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