Local ICE agent Tony Stockton added wounded veteran plates to his Ford F150 after getting his feelings hurt in what he referred to as “the Battle of San Bernadino,” confirmed sources who were pointing and laughing.
“We were just following orders and trying to catch a couple of farm worker ladies. They were leaving an alfalfa field to allegedly pick up their toddlers and we were told they might be undocumented,” said Stockton. “The women went into a building decorated with primary colors and we followed. We were planning to send them to an internment camp, but then a pre-school teacher referred to us as the modern day gestapo and gave us a double middle finger. It’s almost like the general public despises us. I tried calling the VA to talk to them about my PTSD and they hung up. My wife said I should go to therapy, but I don’t believe in it.” […]
Jfc these people know no bottom.
When did law enforcement officers stop believing in the inherent danger of their jobs? Do they believe they’re above the very nature of their positions? During training, isn’t the risk involved in this line of work clearly and specifically explained and at the very least inferred by the need for guns and armor?
I once had a family member tell me with tears in their eyes that ‘no police officer should go to work and fear for their life’. My retort was that perhaps those officers should seek employment elsewhere if they don’t understand the risk they undertake by becoming an armed officer of the law who works with the public in some of the most high-stress situations you can work with people in.
Oh I see. People go into this line of work expecting all of the reward with none of the risk. They want the respect and merit without actually having to earn it.