If I drink light. I need this added, in a schnapps glass in the beer. Is that the way you guys are doing it as well?
Edit: The commercial was for the soccer Euros in 92.
Jägermeister? There is only one proper way to consume that...
If I drink light. I need this added, in a schnapps glass in the beer. Is that the way you guys are doing it as well?
Edit: The commercial was for the soccer Euros in 92.
If I drink light. I need this added, in a schnapps glass in the beer. Is that the way you guys are doing it as well?
Edit: The commercial was for the soccer Euros in 92.
Jägermeister? There is only one proper way to consume that...
The Jägermeister Poutine from Brutus restaurant in Montreal (Rosemont). Sadly, the place closed its doors last year. That was one of my goto places for a while, great vibe, great drinks and a special menu with bacon in everything. Was really popular when bacon was the trend. They even had bacon-flavored vodka.I really, but really hate Jager. Sorry
Okay. WHAT. THE. BLEEP. IS. THIS?
The Jägermeister Poutine from Brutus restaurant in Montreal (Rosemont). Sadly, the place closed its doors last year. That was one of my goto places for a while, great vibe, great drinks and a special menu with bacon in everything. Was really popular when bacon was the trend. They even had bacon-flavored vodka.
True, most people equate age to health, but it’s not necessarily true.That sucks. But I would love to see that person's medical chart before all this.
Too often now "good shape, no conditions" means 30-40 pounds overweight, sedentary, blood pressure 135/90...
As a society we are used a bad metabolic baseline, eating terrible and not moving enough.l All the healthcare workers that I saw on the news that died from COVID were obviously obese.
In any case good luck to that person.
Indeed, so it had a special flavour, but mixed in a poutine, I don’t know if you really taste the Jäger itself since I know you don’t like it. Can’t really tell, never really drinked Jäger.Like, Jager-based sauce?
Indeed, so it had a special flavour, but mixed in a poutine, I don’t know if you really taste the Jäger itself since I know you don’t like it. Can’t really tell, never really drinked Jäger.
Requiring a law degree, or similar level of education that takes time and focus, will weed out many of those who struggle with decision making or are overly emotional. As it stands, it's not very difficult to become a cop in the USA. Especially in smaller towns.
Often times, cops escalate things themselves. They think they're the law, so if people question them they get annoyed and escalate things as well.
I mean...if anybody did that to your daughter, what would you do?? It's disgusting. All this for a kid's pool party? Why are they lining them up on the ground like they're part of a mexican cartel gang?
What about this f***ing bozo?
Pulling your gun on children...bravo man.
And this woman officer pulling out her gun for no reason at all..
Some people are being idiots, no doubt, but often times too the police doesn't know how to interact with the population. It's like the classic bully in school...he tells you to do something, you say no, he comes back to punch you. Cops are like that except they have weapons.
I’ve done my masters. Some students I met along the way are some of the most emotional people I’ve ever met. I don’t see how education weeds out emotional people.
Also, this is the US. Why would someone do a law degree then become a police offer after all that debt?
I get where you’re coming from but I don’t see it happening. In fact, “defund police” movement would take huge hit as you’d have to pay people more to become police.
Yeah, I can see sociopaths being attracted to the power and dominance part of policing, but sociopaths don't conform to rules and they don't work within a group, so wouldn't that make sociopaths a bad fit in a police department? Before they get to dominate anyone, a cop has to learn the other parts of the job -- respecting the chain of command, following a ton of protocol, and having his fellow officers' back. If they can't do those things successfully, they'll never get past cadet. I'm not sure an extreme personality disorder like sociopathy could work in an environment like that where they're highly regulated & socially accountable.No, it simply means that sociopaths are attracted by this line of work, like sny other line of work that is recognized to have power snd dominance. This is something entirely recognized by those who create and administer the standardized personality tests. A great deal of the focus of those tests have to do with narcissistic traits, but since they're yes or no type of questions and since polygraph tests are based in nervous response only, it leaves a lot of room for intelligent sociopaths and psychopaths to manoeuvre. How do you suppose there's been such a big ongoing battle to remove these anti-social traits from law enforcement, if there isn't a problem to begin with.
Another dominant trait of psychopathy and narcissism is their ability to cheat compared to most people.
Should I need to start listing all the great scandals of law enforcement corruption that lead to these views, to this ramping up of psych evals on police prospects?
Just moved my ass to my backyard to work. Freakin pool takes a ton of maintenance, but every now and then it's worth it.My quarantine will be at my swimming pool aye...
I see kids overweight all the time. At 16 they're in worse shape than kids were long ago. Much more susceptible to complications. My grandmother was still splitting her own firewood at 80+. She's laugh in the face of covid-19.True, most people equate age to health, but it’s not necessarily true.
Yeah, I can see sociopaths being attracted to the power and dominance part of policing, but sociopaths don't conform to rules and they don't work within a group, so wouldn't that make sociopaths a bad fit in a police department? Before they get to dominate anyone, a cop has to learn the other parts of the job -- respecting the chain of command, following a ton of protocol, and having his fellow officers' back. If they can't do those things successfully, they'll never get past cadet. I'm not sure an extreme personality disorder like sociopathy could work in an environment like that where they're highly regulated & socially accountable.
That doesn't negate the corruption you mention. Nor does it negate other f***ed up personality traits that have obviously infiltrated the police force. I'm just saying that if the cops are a hotbed of negative traits, those traits are probably more socially 'normal' and less extreme, like arrogance, aggression, ego, maybe an overabundance of physical confidence. Kinda like pro athletes. For the record, those are just guesses. Another guess -- I'm wondering how many cops were bullies or were victims of bullying.
White people get DUI’s all the time.Ok. But the police have leeway in this situation and their procedures are not dictated by MADD.
They had his information, they did not need to arrest him.
Got to wonder if they would have sent him home to sleep it off if he was white.
I don't know if this answers your question, but fun fact, police are much more likely than the general population to engage in domestic abuse.You called the police a "Hotbed for sociopaths". That's your idea of nuance?
So answer that charge directly. You linked cops and sociopaths -- fill in the nuance you claim I missed. You said 'hotbed', so I assume that means you believe a lot of cops are sociopaths, no? How do you determine that they fit the term 'sociopath'.
I don't think this argument holds up. It seems to me like the police, protected by their unions, are basically an old boys club where your boss, and your boss's boss, all engage in this kind of toxic behavior together. So it's a perfect fit for that new cadet, if he conforms to patterns of behavior that exist all the way up the chain of command.Yeah, I can see sociopaths being attracted to the power and dominance part of policing, but sociopaths don't conform to rules and they don't work within a group, so wouldn't that make sociopaths a bad fit in a police department? Before they get to dominate anyone, a cop has to learn the other parts of the job -- respecting the chain of command, following a ton of protocol, and having his fellow officers' back. If they can't do those things successfully, they'll never get past cadet. I'm not sure an extreme personality disorder like sociopathy could work in an environment like that where they're highly regulated & socially accountable.
Let’s see it!
What does Atlanta’s say about tasers?
The equivalent of our certificat en droit "I'm not sure Law Certificate is the right word" should probably be required.
There are clearly upsides in having things like Admin Law, Public Liberties/Const. Law, Criminal Law and Criminal Procedure thought to police officers.
And saying the cops were justified to use deadly force in a situation where it was not required because he resisted arrest is also victim blaming.
Just moved my ass to my backyard to work. Freakin pool takes a ton of maintenance, but every now and then it's worth it.
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