The bad guy DID NOT run off when this guy racked his slide...
Where did you ever hear that?I thought legalizing was going to make the crime fall to virtually 0?
(I’m pro legalization, but I’m not pro lying to push agendas)
The only crime that it will stop is the illegal distribution, and that’s only because the distribution will now be legal. Violent crime will always happen where money is involved, and dispensaries and marijuana farmers are going to be a prime target because of the access to large quantities of cash and pot.Where did you ever hear that?
It might affect the amount of crime revolving around the illegal distribution and the violence associated with it. When the rules make it a cash business, they are setting it up for this kind of crime though.
I’d hire an armed citizen from indiana vs a security guard from California. This just feeds into anti gunners bs.
I thought legalizing was going to make the crime fall to virtually 0?
(I’m pro legalization, but I’m not pro lying to push agendas)
He probably liked the uniform and the ability to tell people what to do. Like the buttwipe at the BMV today. He was power tripping telling people to move forward and take chairs at the front of the lobby. He wanted everyone up front.Note to self:
Don't take a job you are not trained for or willing to do.
My guess is he isn't actually a security guard in that he's hired specifically for security. He's probably an employee who happens to be armed.
Dispensaries are so tempting because they are so cash heavy. They are cash heavy because MJ remains Schedule I at the federal level. I don't know anybody claimed legalization was a panacea, but customers are lot less likely to get robbed...
Dispensaries are so tempting because they are so cash heavy. They are cash heavy because MJ remains Schedule I at the federal level. I don't know anybody claimed legalization was a panacea, but customers are lot less likely to get robbed...
Amazing how all a woman has to do is give a look, and we stop. Maybe that’s what criminals need, a woman to give them the lookHe probably liked the uniform and the ability to tell people what to do. Like the buttwipe at the BMV today. He was power tripping telling people to move forward and take chairs at the front of the lobby. He wanted everyone up front.
I told him "No thank you. Your signs talk about keeping your distance. I have more distance in this chair, so per your posted rules, Im in a better place because I am farther away from others."
"You need to move up to one of the chairs up front."
"Why? Are these (motioning to the ones next to me) chairs not for people waiting for service? Unless this chair is for something else, I'm fine here. Thanks."
He started to keep arguing but the lady running tickets and controlling the front door gave him a look and he stopped.
So, Kroger, Meijer, Walmart, CVS, Walgreens...and stores that sell booze.
I also wonder what role "scripting" played in this. They actually fell all over each other getting back into the place of danger, almost like it's a procedure they're following. Had they been instructed to do this, like some kind of "school lockdown drill?" I mean, if you know someone's hitting the MJ store, why do you go back in the MJ store? You're already outside, you're already free...run like hell! I can't hear what audibles are being given by the guard, if any, but wow. If the one girl had just kept going the way she already was, she would have figuratively been a mile away from the shooting when it happened.
My guess is they'd been trained to believe the guard was a source of safety. My experience is that the guards in these types of businesses (banks, etc.) are exactly that: window-dressing for the employees. They know they're in a somewhat risky job, and it affects the employer's ability to hire, so they offer the presence of a guard as a "perk" to make the job appear more palatable to the employees. "It's ok, mom...it's all legal, and we have a guard to protect us."
If these