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The Law is an Ass

Poll - Total Votes: 5
I would be very offended and disappointed.
I would be understanding and might even turn it to my advantage.
Show Results
You can only vote on one answer.
If you were a burglar, a mugger or a drug dealer, would you mind your work being impertinently interrupted by her?

The first two images, of course, are AI. The last two are not.

dancingtongue · 80-89, M
My late partner was in law enforcement when we first hooked up. She took me to the station to show me around, and there was this petite blonde uniformed officer -- uniform not as grotesquely clinging as the first two photos, but well-tailored -- and the Glock riding on her hip. Something about the contrast between femineity and the reminder of she knows how to use lethal force was very sexy. Likewise, there used to be a couple of women in the National Guard that frequented the same shopping area while on weekend duty in their fatigues and combat boots. Didn't have their weapons, but the combat boots were enough of a contrast. The stereotype of women in service, rather first responders or military, being asexual or mannish is wrong.
It’s the ones with the firearms, well trained to. E mindful and respectful of; who will put an end to a madman such as was the case in Australia
A good number of emergency responders out there who are female, deserving of our respect
MagneticSid · 61-69, M
@soar2newhighs Here in the UK, very few officers, male or female, have firearms. Those who do are highly-trained (but can still make remarkable mistakes).
@MagneticSid Yes mistakes can be made. As for the officer in Australia, her actions certainly saved lives.
Regarding the unarmed UK police personnel; I don’t doubt they do their jobs to the best of their abilities but when they encounter a situation where they’re first on scene confronting an armed individual prior to the arrival of the team you mentioned their and the public are still under threat particularly if the offender is using a firearm.
MagneticSid · 61-69, M
@soar2newhighs They can call for armed officers who arrive very quickly. There are procedures for dealing with situations like that, which work pretty well, with the exception of cases where the firearms officer, though highly-trained, get over-excited or add two and two to make five. A criminal who expects police to be armed will be much more likely to use his weapon. Indeed, it encourages criminals to go armed. In the US and some other countries where police are routinely armed (and therefore standards of training for armed officers are lower), unnecessary deaths from police fire are common, including bystanders and even police. Gunshot deaths for UK police run at less than one a year for a country of over 60 million. Of course, all this depends on tight gun control and on carrying a gun when not authorised being very risky.
MagneticSid · 61-69, M
The AI has really worked out what pleases me. The prompt was "A pretty big-bottomed UK policewoman bends to examine a packing-case."

The last one is if you like subtle (or mixing behinds and food).
MasterLee · 56-60, M
Quite asinine
MagneticSid · 61-69, M
@MasterLee 😋
ian2watt · 61-69, M
Love the real ones!!
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MagneticSid · 61-69, M
@jshm2 Agree. Something more would be required.
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MagneticSid · 61-69, M
@Osogris Legally, in the UK, yes, but it's an offence anyway whoever the butt is on. That's assuming it's non-consensual, of course.

 
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