View Full Version : Well done Mr Policeman Te Awamutu.
oneofsix
2nd November 2012, 06:02
Small town, big crime
Andrew writes: "I would just like to thank the 'friendly' police officer in Te Awamutu who unleashed a verbal tirade at my 75-year-old parents on Tuesday this week for the horrendous crime of driving too slowly through his town while they tried to find the motel they were staying at that night. You will be pleased to know you managed to ruin the rest of their day, and the next time they look to support a small town by staying overnight, you can rest assured that it won't be Te Awamutu."
The old twits should learn to pull over and sort themselves out and so should the twat of a son. You don't get to fuck everyone else off because you can follow direction or are to cheap or old to invest in a GPS.
Well done Mr Policeman
Robbed from sideswipe (http://www.nzherald.co.nz/sideswipe/news/article.cfm?c_id=702&objectid=10844458) this morning.
Laava
2nd November 2012, 06:12
You were there? Sometimes the policeman might be in the wrong. I had an experience in the weekend with a HP officer and I gave him my thoughts on his piss poor driving. He stood and took it too cos he knew I was right. Then he wrote me a ticket for speeding.
oneofsix
2nd November 2012, 06:17
You were there? Sometimes the policeman might be in the wrong. I had an experience in the weekend with a HP officer and I gave him my thoughts on his piss poor driving. He stood and took it too cos he knew I was right. Then he wrote me a ticket for speeding.
Seen it too often to need to be there and it has to be extreme for a coppa to pull you up for going too slow. Don't have to be there to know a tree made a sound when it fell over.
So you gave a coppa your thoughts on his driving after you had been speeding :cry: Doesn't work too well does it.:lol: :innocent:
Laava
2nd November 2012, 06:23
Seen it too often to need to be there and it has to be extreme for a coppa to pull you up for going too slow. Don't have to be there to know a tree made a sound when it fell over.
So you gave a coppa your thoughts on his driving after you had been speeding :cry: Doesn't work too well does it.:lol: :innocent:
Made me feel better about being given a ticket tho!
I have had my share of tickets in the past like most people, but I have never been pulled in such a dangerous manner! The arrogance disappeared as soon as I started talking, he knew!
schrodingers cat
2nd November 2012, 06:26
You were there? Sometimes the policeman might be in the wrong. I had an experience in the weekend with a HP officer and I gave him my thoughts on his piss poor driving. He stood and took it too cos he knew I was right. Then he wrote me a ticket for speeding.
The policeman is always wrong.
He stood and took it because he is a professional who takes endless shit from fuckwits every day of his life. Then he wrote you a speeding ticket.
Obviously I wasn't actually there but if I was God and omnipresent I would have been and the story would be the same except I would probably not be a patient as the copper and zap you with lightning or some other act of god shit cause of your extream twattery
Laava
2nd November 2012, 06:30
The policeman is always wrong.
He stood and took it because he is a professional who takes endless shit from fuckwits every day of his life. Then he wrote you a speeding ticket.
Obviously I wasn't actually there but if I was God and omnipresent I would have been and the story would be the same except I would probably not be a patient as the copper and zap you with lightning or some other act of god shit cause of your extream twattery
Yeah, see, you weren,t there either. When someone does a U turn in front of you and you have to take action to avoid a collision it is called dangerous driving. I wasn,t the only one who had to swerve either. So go fuck yourself God.
oneofsix
2nd November 2012, 07:17
Yeah, see, you weren,t there either. When someone does a U turn in front of you and you have to take action to avoid a collision it is called dangerous driving. I wasn,t the only one who had to swerve either. So go fuck yourself God.
sorry but this thread isn't about a retard that was going so fast that he couldn't scrub off speed through braking and had to swerve to avoid a vehicle that had U-turn and got a speeding ticket for his troubles. It's about the ticket given to the retard that thought they had more rights to the road than the rest of NZ and their retarded son who thinks the same and the good job the cop did in teaching them otherwise.
There is a whole lot more to it but it's not you and your speeding. I don't agree with the strict enforcement of the posted limits but do agree with limiting unsafe speeds, be they high or low.
Laava
2nd November 2012, 08:35
sorry but this thread isn't about a retard that was going so fast that he couldn't scrub off speed through braking and had to swerve to avoid a vehicle that had U-turn
Actually that didn,t happen. I was below the speed limit well before
It's about the ticket given to the retard that thought they had more rights to the road than the rest of NZ and their retarded son who thinks the same and the good job the cop did in teaching them otherwise.
There is a whole lot more to it but it's not you and your speeding. I don't agree with the strict enforcement of the posted limits but do agree with limiting unsafe speeds, be they high or low.
They got issued a ticket? Not the way i read it..
They got ranted at.
oneofsix
2nd November 2012, 08:42
They got issued a ticket? Not the way i read it..
They got ranted at.
Now you have a point, he did fail to issue them a ticket which makes their son Andrew even more of a pratt, they must be sooo proud.
Swoop
2nd November 2012, 09:01
Now you have a point, he did fail to issue them a ticket which makes their son Andrew even more of a pratt, they must be sooo proud.
Society once had respect for its elders.
Small towns tend to want traffic to slow down, especially visitors. This can be evidenced by the number of speed camera vans that you find "on the edge of town". Perhaps Mr :Police: hadn't got his quota that day?
oneofsix
2nd November 2012, 09:06
Society once had respect for its elders.
Small towns tend to want traffic to slow down, especially visitors. This can be evidenced by the number of speed camera vans that you find "on the edge of town". Perhaps Mr :Police: hadn't got his quota that day?
The respect for the elders was for their knowledge and wisdom. For instance I doubt a hunter gather society would respect their elders for their ability to chase down game but would respect their knowledge as to how to find, track and trap that game. These elders don't seem to have shown much wisdom and certainly lacked knowledge. :corn:
Quota? But the :Police: don't have quotas :lol:
Katman
2nd November 2012, 12:12
The old twits should learn to pull over and sort themselves out and so should the twat of a son. You don't get to fuck everyone else off because you can follow direction or are to cheap or old to invest in a GPS.
Well done Mr Policeman
Robbed from sideswipe (http://www.nzherald.co.nz/sideswipe/news/article.cfm?c_id=702&objectid=10844458) this morning.
You should learn to relax.
oneofsix
2nd November 2012, 13:24
You should learn to relax.
totally relaxed :calm:
jasonu
2nd November 2012, 13:50
You should learn to relax.
Agreed.
One day you (and me) will be the old twat wobbleing down mainstreet looking for whatever.
When I encounter some old coot on the road I give him/her plenty of room and respect because I know my parents are prolly doing the same thing somewhere else and I hope the other road users around them show a bit of respect too.
caspernz
2nd November 2012, 18:33
Small town, big crime
Andrew writes: "I would just like to thank the 'friendly' police officer in Te Awamutu who unleashed a verbal tirade at my 75-year-old parents on Tuesday this week for the horrendous crime of driving too slowly through his town while they tried to find the motel they were staying at that night. You will be pleased to know you managed to ruin the rest of their day, and the next time they look to support a small town by staying overnight, you can rest assured that it won't be Te Awamutu."
Can't help but think this was a verbal warning that was retold a little differently...:banana:
scumdog
2nd November 2012, 18:48
Small town, big crime
Andrew writes: "I would just like to thank the 'friendly' police officer in Te Awamutu who unleashed a verbal tirade at my 75-year-old parents on Tuesday this week for the horrendous crime of driving too slowly through his town while they tried to find the motel they were staying at that night. You will be pleased to know you managed to ruin the rest of their day, and the next time they look to support a small town by staying overnight, you can rest assured that it won't be Te Awamutu."
Can't help but think this was a verbal warning that was retold a little differently...:banana:
Possibly - but it wouldn't have made for such a good rant.;)
Berries
2nd November 2012, 21:57
Fuck. Te Awamutu has got a motel?
steve_t
2nd November 2012, 22:06
I hope that if I get really old and my reactions get slow, I'll still have the presence of mind to realise if I'm holding up traffic behind me and pull over to the left to allow them to pass. If I haven't got the mental capacity to be aware of what's around me when I'm looking around for something, it's probably time to hand in the licence
tigertim20
3rd November 2012, 16:23
The old twits should learn to pull over and sort themselves out and so should the twat of a son. You don't get to fuck everyone else off because you can follow direction or are to cheap or old to invest in a GPS.
Well done Mr Policeman
Robbed from sideswipe (http://www.nzherald.co.nz/sideswipe/news/article.cfm?c_id=702&objectid=10844458) this morning.
hmmm tis always another side to the story though.
I recall a few years ago, a middle aged bloke and his wife were ticketed for riving too slowly between Blenheim and Picton. Copper wrote them a ticket even after the fella driving explained.
his explanation?
His wife had been released from hospital that day and was very sore. she had a couple hundred internal stitches and he was trying to make the drive as comfortable as possible for her.
He had been pulling over whenever he could to let traffic pass.
He did write in and get off the ticket, made headlines and the officer got a bollocking over it.
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