>>/20325/
>>/20327/
My thoughts are returning to this video time to times and things comes to my mind such:
1. How confused/scared was the dude it took a while to him to decide which one is his left leg.
2. At the end he really put his right hand behind his back, or at least he started to. Why did he do that? And previously he put both back. Hindsight we know he hadn't had a gun so why did he do it? I guess he had some vague notion - from movies for example - how an arrest goes down, so he might been put his arms back because he waited to be handcuffed, and in the end as well. He thought he can lay down the ground and they will put on the cuffs.
3. Many people really can't follow simple instructions or can be perplexed with simple things. I have two experience with this.
3a. In school I witnessed many times that a teacher asked something extremely simple or obvious from a student who couldn't answer and it felt like he can't believe the teacher asked that and suspected some trick in the question.
3b. Not long ago I saw aquaintance telling his kid to do something who didn't because he didn't want to and the dad left his kid to do what he wanted to and didn't forced his own will on the kid. Then I interjected for a moment and asked the kid - I confess, unkindly but angry - why he doesn't do what his father tells him. His only job is to do just that. Then the kid started to cry and asked forgiveness from his father, that he was sorry. Still in the end he didn't have to do what his dad asked (which was really a simple thing, like "pick up that can!"). Many times I see such scenes when kids shat on what their parents say who left the whole thing at it. No consequences. At one level ofc this way the kids learn to be disobedient and at another level they learn not to follow simple instructions.
4. When was this? Before or after the Las Vegas hotel shooter? If after could this generate some excitement/fear in the cops as they could assume they will confront another one?
5. stuff
Extrapolate your onions.