Earlier last month, I mentioned powerful elites and Epstein + his connections, but let's also talk about the police. They act like they own the roads, but face almost no consequences when they break the law themselves.
They sit in closed business parking lots, Hide in the woods, Camp out behind billboards as if they're in a Call of Duty multiplayer map. This is all in the hopes to catch someone going 5 or 10 over the speed limit. They act like they own the roads — and in many ways, they do.
If you get pulled over, you're at their mercy. One attitude check and suddenly a warning turns into a ticket, or worse.
Okay fine, but here's what gets me.
When they break the law — body cam "malfunctions," evidence "goes missing," they rough someone up or worse — suddenly it's a different game. Qualified immunity, Union lawyers, Paid administrative leave. Internal investigations that take months and almost always end with "no wrongdoing found."
And let's be honest: how often do police actually face consequences for their own crimes? How often do their buddies step in to cover it up?
We've all seen the stories. An officer gets caught on camera doing something clearly wrong. The department launches an "investigation." The officer is quietly reassigned. The body cam footage is "unavailable." A few weeks later, the story disappears.
Meanwhile, if you or I did the same thing? We'd be in cuffs before the sun went down.
I'm not stereotyping every cop as plenty of compotent ones exist. I feel bad for the ones who DO take their oaths seriously to protect and serve. But the system protects the corrupt ones (just like the wealthy elites.)
So they sit in the woods. They write tickets, act untouchable. Because in many ways, they are. But it doesn't give them the right to treat people however they please as the LAWS SHOULD abide to them as well.