ducky14528
Member
- Joined
- Sep 21, 2009
- Messages
- 51
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A guy posted about being arrested for carrying a Swiss Army knife in the Zona. Some of you guys--predictably--yelled police corruption. You guys are clueless.
Bar fights are common. A knife is not a good thing in the ZN; it is also illegal.
When the cops arrest people for carrying weapons in the Zona (which they do all the time) they are not being corrupt. They are protecting people by enforcing the law and making the ZN a safer playground for all to visit.
It is time for some of you guys to understand that not everything the cops do is bad. Keeping weapons out of the ZN is a good--and lawful--thing to do. This is not police corruption; rather it is police protection at work.
Yes, the cops let the guy go after paying a $250.00 bribe. He could have legally gone to jail instead. They cut him a break--even if some are too dense to see that. Or maybe some don't think it isn't worth $250.00 to stay out of jail. Or don't think it a good idea to keep knives out of the hands of guys who long experience has shown often get into bar fights hurting or killing others during those fights.
It is time for some of you guys to understand that just because something is done differently in Mexico than in the US it isn't necessarily bad. Mexico has a sovereign right to its own laws and culture. Enforcing those laws and following the cultural mores does not make a cop corrupt--even when the US has different laws and mores.
If you can't understand or accept that Mexico has a right to its own laws and culture, then you really should stay in the US. That is what being an 'ugly American' is all about and why locals call us 'pinche gingo' all the time.
I posted before about how Mexican culture views bribes (in some cases) as being a tax on criminals whereby criminals pay the cost of law enforcement saving taxpayers money. Also, how (in certain situations) cops may view taking a bribe as being a tip for good service. If you consider that the guy broke the law--enacted for a valid public safety reason--and should have gone to jail then perhaps youโll understand what Iโve been saying and also understand the cops really did cut him a break. Also, that their system worked as intended. In a manner foreign to our culture, justice was serviced. I bet he'll never again carry a weapon in TJ.
Bar fights are common. A knife is not a good thing in the ZN; it is also illegal.
When the cops arrest people for carrying weapons in the Zona (which they do all the time) they are not being corrupt. They are protecting people by enforcing the law and making the ZN a safer playground for all to visit.
It is time for some of you guys to understand that not everything the cops do is bad. Keeping weapons out of the ZN is a good--and lawful--thing to do. This is not police corruption; rather it is police protection at work.
Yes, the cops let the guy go after paying a $250.00 bribe. He could have legally gone to jail instead. They cut him a break--even if some are too dense to see that. Or maybe some don't think it isn't worth $250.00 to stay out of jail. Or don't think it a good idea to keep knives out of the hands of guys who long experience has shown often get into bar fights hurting or killing others during those fights.
It is time for some of you guys to understand that just because something is done differently in Mexico than in the US it isn't necessarily bad. Mexico has a sovereign right to its own laws and culture. Enforcing those laws and following the cultural mores does not make a cop corrupt--even when the US has different laws and mores.
If you can't understand or accept that Mexico has a right to its own laws and culture, then you really should stay in the US. That is what being an 'ugly American' is all about and why locals call us 'pinche gingo' all the time.
I posted before about how Mexican culture views bribes (in some cases) as being a tax on criminals whereby criminals pay the cost of law enforcement saving taxpayers money. Also, how (in certain situations) cops may view taking a bribe as being a tip for good service. If you consider that the guy broke the law--enacted for a valid public safety reason--and should have gone to jail then perhaps youโll understand what Iโve been saying and also understand the cops really did cut him a break. Also, that their system worked as intended. In a manner foreign to our culture, justice was serviced. I bet he'll never again carry a weapon in TJ.