Comments on: Secret Service hates photography?
The secret service asked a man outside a baseball stadium to delete a photo that included a security checkpoint at a game in which the President threw the first pitch.
The secret service asked a man outside a baseball stadium to delete a photo that included a security checkpoint at a game in which the President threw the first pitch.
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I think a lot of understanding and patience is required on both sides. That seems to be sorely lacking, though.
Oh, it also took over an hour to get through security a full two hours before game time. The TSA has nothing on the sluggish speed of these folks. I hope Bush stays home next year. He got booed anyway.
I can remember detail very well, sometimes drawing what I've seen. Will they break my hands so I can't draw it?
Am I the only person that sees the logical fallacy behind making people stop photographing so-called public places?
Surely, as Mr. Benedict has pointed out, understanding is called for, but the state of law enforcement these days is more of a 'we're so right and you're clearly wrong' stance instead of 'maybe we make mistakes'.
This is ignorant. I wish rationale would return...
Gosgog
- by acktracker April 3, 2008 9:23 AM PDT
- "how do law enforcement officials know what my true intentions are? " That is a classy quote right there. So if you're unsure of something, or someone for that matter, best to go ahead and detain them right? Send them to some island prison and leave them there because you don't know for sure what their intentions are. Or if they are taking pictures and you have no idea what the reasoning is, best to go ahead and make sure the pictures are deleted because no way you could be photographing for personal pleasure, its gotta be terrorism. Or say you don't know what someone is talking about on the phone? Best to go ahead a surveil them without their knowledge, and without getting proper authorization from any sort of judicial body. Yes, it is good to be an American.
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