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#231
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06-21-2020, 06:45 PM
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Re: Minnesota Man Dies In Custody
If you have one bad cop and ninety-nine cops who don't do anything to stop him, you have one hundred bad cops. Period. I often liken them to pilots. Even if 'only a couple' of Delta's pilots couldn't land a plane and alllll the rest of them could, you still wouldn't wanna fly Delta, would you? Jobs that involve giving one man power/authority over the lives of many have ZERO room for 'bad apples.' Or for the other bad apples who support them while pretending to be good. |
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#232
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06-21-2020, 07:18 PM
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Re: Minnesota Man Dies In Custody
I think it is ironic that opponents to reform use that particular part of the proverb to describe the problem. "A few bad apples." Because the rest of the proverb really describes the actual issue. or |
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#234
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06-25-2020, 04:55 AM
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Re: Minnesota Man Dies In Custody
"Now is not the time rush to (judgment) and immediately condemn our officers," Fuck the police. Frey said he understood the anger in the community but reminded potential protesters that "there is another danger out there right now which is Covid-19." FUCK THE POLICE. The Hennepin County Attorney's office said in a statement Tuesday that the Minnesota Department of Public Safety Bureau of Criminal Apprehension was investigating, along with the FBI. There was no immediate response from the FBI. The FBI is in on this shit too. Fuck them! |
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#235
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06-25-2020, 05:07 AM
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| My Rank: CORPORAL Poster Rank:1491 Join Date: Oct 2019 Posts: 383 Mentioned: 0 Post(s) Quoted: 113 Post(s)
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Re: Minnesota Man Dies In Custody
I'm curious why the medics that arrived on scene had such a lackadaisical attitude even after checking for a pulse. He apparently was in cardiac arrest, start the ACLS protocols. I'm also curious why we haven't seen the body cam footage. |
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#236
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06-25-2020, 05:09 AM
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| My Rank: CORPORAL Poster Rank:1491 Join Date: Oct 2019 Posts: 383 Mentioned: 0 Post(s) Quoted: 113 Post(s)
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Re: Minnesota Man Dies In Custody
Why didn't he die sooner? Cutting off blood supply to the brain renders someone unconscious pretty quickly, it is part of why the LVNR works so well.
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#237
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06-26-2020, 02:07 AM
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| My Rank: PRIVATE Poster Rank:11618 Join Date: Dec 2009 Posts: 10 Mentioned: 0 Post(s) Quoted: 1 Post(s)
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Re: Minnesota Man Dies In Custody
Something is not right about this video. Why did the EMT not preform basic life-saving techniques before putting him in the bus? |
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#238
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06-26-2020, 09:30 AM
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Re: Minnesota Man Dies In Custody
Your right he would have been out of it in seconds, if it was blocking the blood supply to his brain, i watch enough UFC to know that...Am done with this George Floyd bs, to many people jumping on the band wagon.. |
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#240
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06-28-2020, 10:35 PM
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Re: Minnesota Man Dies In Custody
Ok Let's go one at a time here. Starting with Overlord: From what I read, he started to suffer cardiopulmonary arrest while enroute to the hospital. So here goes... My guess is the medic checked Mr. Floyd's pulse and breathing while he was on the ground (and found the pulse was present but slow, and breathing was slow). Prior to getting up, the officers have had their body weight on the patient to keep him immobilized for 9 minutes. Remember how much pressure I told you guys it takes to stop arterial blood flow? (That's right!! approximately 3 lbs per square inch). Wanna bet that one or more of those officers weighed 3 or more pounds and constricted blood flow through the patients body? Well while that was happening his body regulated his blood pressure to accommodate for the lack of flow. The blood that was not allowed to flow properly becomes deoxygenated, the patient is unable to breath, and becomes unresponsive. Then the officers one by one get off the patient to allow medical personnel to check him out. Once they get up, the deoxygenated blood is now allow to flow Now, this next part happens fucking hella fast, so you really have to be looking for it. Imagine the feeling you have when you get up to fast...but 100 time worse. He would probably have a sudden drop of systolic blood pressure. My best guess, 65 mm of Hg and prolly a heartrate of 40/min. If we catch this happening then we try to combat it with an i.v. start, injection of mephentermine 10 mg i.v and the injection atropine 0.6 mg i.v given along with 100% oxygen by mask. Based on how things turned out, those steps didn't solve the issue and the patient leads into cardiac arrest with ventricular fibrillation showing on electrocardiogram (ECG) monitor. Next, immediate cardio-pulmonary resuscitation (CPR) would be started and unsynchronized shock of 200J. We would continue the CPR-shock cycle, until we got a normal sinus rhythm. In Mr. Floyd's case this never happened, and the paramedic just kept the cycle going until the doc at the hospital called time of death. You never want to give up. Sometimes they are beyond your reach no matter what you do... I would never blame those paramedics for not being able to bring back a murdered patient. Especially when you have know idea that an officer would be so stupid as to hold the patient in that position for so long. |