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Thread: A Sad Day for the Thin Blue Line......

  1. #1
    Site Supporter walker2713's Avatar
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    A Sad Day for the Thin Blue Line......

    Cop killer released in Indiana....

    http://chicago.suntimes.com/feature/...er-to-go-free/

    RIP Lt.Yaros
    Gun Free Zones Aren’t an Inhibition….they’re an Invitation.

  2. #2
    banana republican blues's Avatar
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    A sad day for sure.
    There's nothing civil about this war.

  3. #3
    What kind of stupidity is this
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  4. #4
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    He doesn't remorseful at all. I wonder why he robbed the bank? He sounds like he's been playing the system his whole life

  5. #5
    And he says he thinks killing cops is still justifiable... hope he meets a bad end when he gets out and before he kills another cop.

  6. #6
    Come to think of it, I'm actually surprised that Obama didn't pardon Mumia.
    #RESIST

  7. #7
    Quote Originally Posted by LittleLebowski View Post
    Come to think of it, I'm actually surprised that Obama didn't pardon Mumia.
    He'd have last twelve seconds in freedom.
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  8. #8
    Site Supporter SeriousStudent's Avatar
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    I am perfectly happen to see cop killers released. I think their bodies should fall the six feet into their graves without being lowered.




    Wait, was the news story about something different??

  9. #9
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    This is indeed a shame. Everybody is a changed man until the pressures of life come and kick you in the balls. Then true character comes out. He's young enough. There is a good chance he will kill again. Sad, sad, sad.
    Last edited by JustOneGun; 02-06-2017 at 07:35 AM.
    What you do right before you know you're going to be in a use of force incident, often determines the outcome of that use of force.

  10. #10
    Site Supporter walker2713's Avatar
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    I'd also ask the questions: Lt. Yaros likely wouldn't be alive today, but how would his life have changed and been different as a husband, father and grandfather during the remaining years of his natural life?

    He likely would have lived his life from a different perspective. Being able to look back at your life...the good and the bad...is one of the few positive aspects of getting old. One looks at life differently at 77 as opposed to 44.

    How about his wife, children and grandchildren? How were their lives changed by this event? We can be sure that the trauma of this murder, and the subsequent absence of Lt. Yaros had deep and last effects on them: changed forever.

    There's way too much attention these days paid to the guilty, and not to the innocent victims.

    Who's writing articles about the Yaros family these days?
    Gun Free Zones Aren’t an Inhibition….they’re an Invitation.

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