scorpioajr
Regular Member
imported post
pitythefools wrote:
pitythefools wrote:
who let broken arrows out of his cage?:banghead:
who let broken arrows out of his cage?:banghead:
ROFLMAO!pitythefools wrote:who let broken arrows out of his cage?:banghead:
Just let us know how the pizza order, delivery and confrontation (edjumication ) go.just to clear things up .... i put my gun in MY car and i would have proudly protested and stood my ground (even with his weapon drawn) if he would try to take my gun!
and as for my age .... well in the thirtys , grammer Forum and chat spellin thats what this is ..... u'll get the hang of it sooner or later .
As for Brokenarrow .... lay off the drugs man !!! and just try to diliver pizza to my trailor i'll yank ur thingy straight off and feed it to me daags!
Probably not the best idea to "approach" him. When you close the gap (slowly or quickly does not matter) you are elevating the situation. Bad move. Being that the officer is responsible for the control of the situation, your body language was aggressive. Shoulders squared and approaching head on is a dominant aggressive stance. Closing the gap forces his hand. He really had to either give you a clear/non dangerous pass or prevent you from continuing to close the gap. Your approach prevents the first option from being done quickly, especially on the side of a road. He had already indicated that you were questionable by asking about the gun. That is your clue to be cautious with nonverbal communication. Next time hold your ground and let him approach you. That way the space buffer is at his comfort level. Also to diffuse even more if necessary stand at a slight cant so you are not square to him.in the mean time i got up calmly since i was on my knees changing the tire and approched him slowly!
lets let this die. it clearly never happened.Bflamante wrote:I'd have to take that last part about the stance and disagree. Though I'd stand square with him and cross my arms so the gun wasn't immediately within reach.schwarzi88 wrote:Probably not the best idea to "approach" him. When you close the gap (slowly or quickly does not matter) you are elevating the situation. Bad move. Being that the officer is responsible for the control of the situation, your body language was aggressive. Shoulders squared and approaching head on is a dominant aggressive stance. Closing the gap forces his hand. He really had to either give you a clear/non dangerous pass or prevent you from continuing to close the gap. Your approach prevents the first option from being done quickly, especially on the side of a road. He had already indicated that you were questionable by asking about the gun. That is your clue to be cautious with nonverbal communication. Next time hold your ground and let him approach you. That way the space buffer is at his comfort level. Also to diffuse even more if necessary stand at a slight cant so you are not square to him.in the mean time i got up calmly since i was on my knees changing the tire and approched him slowly!
I would be more weary of a person quartering away from me if I was approaching them, especially if they were quartering strong side away from me and I could no longer see the side arm.
This is all from my personal opinion on how I would see the situation if I were a cop though.
I do agree with staying where you are though, no need to put an uneducated LEO already on edge on a hieghtened level of offense.