Guy calls cop on ATF agent - Hilarity ensues
(twitter.com)
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Setting aside how hilarious and amazing the whole thing is, his reaction is the most key thing to take away.
He thinks because he is a federal agent he is above them, doesn't have to do what they say, and they must abide by his demands because he has a badge lazily hanging off his belt. That he is in complete control. Yet when the slightest bit of pushback is given, he suddenly has a medical condition, his wife is pregnant, and he is crying. No control, no dignity, just squealing.
Its almost a perfect representation of the empty straw house the entire fed system is built on. And how quickly they fall apart when you stand up to them, which while funny here is how you end up with them reacting with overt violence to the slightest slights.
They all think they are above everyone. It's why they murder people and their dogs like it means nothing to them. Because it doesn't. The common rabble are lesser peasants to them, the oh so gracious nobility.
I wish more people understood that just because someone isn't called a lord or duke or king, doesn't mean that they aren't in practice or don't behave like it. The ATF would never have been able to do what they do back in 1822, because people rejected a kingly authority. But 200 years later, people have their dogs killed and don't take a few agents with them, and it only serves to embolden organizations like the ATF.
One of the things that I still don't entirely get is the American idea that they don't have any aristocracy.
I mean, maybe, because I'm a Brit, I can see it more readily than they can, but if you know what to look for, yeah, it's there, plain as day. In some cases worse than the UK system, which has been around long enough to have rules and boundaries placed on it - not a feature of the US system.
I think the real issue with this is that the aristocracy in America has brainwashed the common man into thinking that the well off people are the aristocracy and not the politicians and their obscenely rich owners who operate above the law.
Just look at the BLM protests. I didn't see them protesting in front of Biden's house despite his policies destroying black lives long before Trump got in office.
Or the people who hate landlords. They bitch and moan every time rent goes up, but at no point do they direct their anger at the source of the problem, which is property tax (the thing rent is largely based on).
Then there's the whole vaccine bullshit. The aristocracy got all the peasant mobs to go after people who didn't leap at the chance to inject themselves with unknown chemicals, claiming that they were the ones keeping society from returning to normal. Innocent people's lives were destroyed by this phenomenon. Meanwhile, the aristocrats were flouting the very laws that they set in place and no one even threw a brick through their windows.
I think one of the problems with the constitution is that the founders either didn't predict or didn't prepare for an aristocracy when they founded the country. A lack of ability for vigilante justice means that the state has the ultiimate power to dispense justice. This inevitably leads to corruption, because while the state might guard our country, who will guard the guards?
Well, the founders of the US thought they'd done a pretty good job of dismantling any aristocracy ... and if you'll recall, one of them advocated for periodic revolutions to keep any such tendencies in check.
More prosaically, the US system, with it's focus on building things up from a low level rather than imposing from above, does offer plenty of prospects to shutter doors to would-be aristocrats ... or would have done, had those local- and state-level organisations stopped playing ball somewhat earlier than this. As it is now, I'm just not sure if the mere fact that the letter of the law is on their side will be enough to counterbalance the immense weight of a US Federal government intent on turning the country it's conquered into a colonial possession.