No, but it should shut the members up regarding that matter once and for all, or not. Some bonehead will still thinks so.Which is a different question than whether it was over the top.
No, but it should shut the members up regarding that matter once and for all, or not. Some bonehead will still thinks so.Which is a different question than whether it was over the top.
So all cops are assholes. Thanks for giving us your 2 centimes worth. some body who does say much here and now we know why. Back in you cave.Also don't forget the budget issues Blair is dealing with nothing like a little good press...over the top but whatever who gives a fuck all great guys one day and back to being assholes the next...
Well, when we had the funeral for the Ottawa cop who was killed just over a year ago (you know, before the G20 and in a completely different city), it was the same thing. Parade, live coverage, and not just a convention centre, but at an arena.We have a winner!
This funeral was way way way over the top, in terms of making damn sure the public knew there was one. When was the last police funeral held at a convention centre? Sure, politicians and senior cops show up, and cops from other services, but this one was way over produced.
Rob Granatstein's column in the Toronto Sun today:
The backlash erupting in response to the police funeral for Sgt. Ryan Russell is sickening.
On talk radio, in my voice-mail, in letters to the editor, calls to our office, not an insignificant number of people are expressing outrage over the events of Tuesday in Toronto.
They’re furious so many police officers showed up.
They can’t believe how much the funeral will cost the city.
They don’t think this police officer deserves the hero treatment for doing the job he’s paid to do.
They’re mad about the massive media coverage.
And, the biggest conspiracy theory of all, they believe it’s a political smokescreen to offset negative attention from the G20 policing debacle.
One caller to my voice-mail even complained, “what did Ryan Russell do for me, to make my life better?”
My problem isn’t with his freedom of speech, but let’s look at the real issues here.
On the morning of Jan. 12, a wild man behind the wheel of a stolen snowplow went demolition-derby on the city.
The normal reaction of every right-thinking citizen would be to run in the opposite direction.
Sgt. Russell ran into harm’s way. He did his very best to stop the rampage before someone waiting at a bus stop, or heading to Tims for a coffee, ended up dead.
“Ryan always put others before himself,” his amazingly strong widow, Christine, said at her husband’s funeral. “This cost him his life.”
If you can’t understand why this death is different from a construction worker killed on a job site, or a woman waiting for a bus, you don’t understand the job of the police.
Of course every death is significant to someone, but the job of the police is to maintain order in society for the benefit of all. As it says on their squad cars they “serve and protect.”
Yes, they are well-paid. But what they do helps make Toronto a safe and great place to live.
Civil society needs the instruments of law and order, and needs them to be effective and trustworthy.
No one gets a free run at a police officer. Period.
Of course, the counter to that position is the G20 debacle.
The burbling undercurrent around the funeral, where 12,500 police officers marched down University Ave. in an impressive, emotional show of unity, is that it’s a PR stunt to try and right the tarnished reputation of a force stained by irresponsibility and brutality on one weekend in June.
There is absolutely no basis to mix one event with the other. Not a single officer or member of senior command that I heard made any mention of the G20 on Tuesday, or during the past week. They are two separate issues.
One can respect Sgt. Russell's sacrifice and still be concerned about some police actions at the G20.
Far from being a “reputation fixer,” this was a typical police funeral — although bigger than we’ve ever seen in Toronto.
That had to do with the particular circumstances of Sgt. Russell’s death. Every one of those officers knows it could have been them dead on the pavement last week.
Officers showed up from as far away as Europe because they are a fraternity and they wanted to show support for Christine and her young son, Nolan, 2.
On the money side, every Toronto officer who attended was off duty and not being paid.
The convention centre only charged the police to recover its cost for the day, but took no profit.
The flowers were donated. The TTC lent buses.
If you think that’s too big a dent on the city’s budget, I’ll cut the first cheque to pay down the cost myself.
As for the media, yes, we provided blanket coverage.
A phenomenal amount. Live on TV and the web, pages of newspaper content, blogs, tweets, photo galleries.
That’s because it was an enormous news story. No one was forced to watch. If the coverage offended you, well, the Cartoon Network is always there to enrich your brain.
By Tuesday night, I was emotionally drained. I can’t imagine how the Russell family feels.
But, as Christine Russell said, “it is with Ryan’s courage and his b**********y, and along with all of you, and all of your support, I am able to stand here.”
For that reason alone, there was only honour in Tuesday’s funeral.
'Nuff said.
http://www.torontosun.com/comment/columnists/rob_granatstein/2011/01/19/16953691.html
Amen!!!Rob Granatstein's column in the Toronto Sun today:
The backlash erupting in response to the police funeral for Sgt. Ryan Russell is sickening.
On talk radio, in my voice-mail, in letters to the editor, calls to our office, not an insignificant number of people are expressing outrage over the events of Tuesday in Toronto.
They’re furious so many police officers showed up.
They can’t believe how much the funeral will cost the city.
They don’t think this police officer deserves the hero treatment for doing the job he’s paid to do.
They’re mad about the massive media coverage.
And, the biggest conspiracy theory of all, they believe it’s a political smokescreen to offset negative attention from the G20 policing debacle.
One caller to my voice-mail even complained, “what did Ryan Russell do for me, to make my life better?”
My problem isn’t with his freedom of speech, but let’s look at the real issues here.
On the morning of Jan. 12, a wild man behind the wheel of a stolen snowplow went demolition-derby on the city.
The normal reaction of every right-thinking citizen would be to run in the opposite direction.
Sgt. Russell ran into harm’s way. He did his very best to stop the rampage before someone waiting at a bus stop, or heading to Tims for a coffee, ended up dead.
“Ryan always put others before himself,” his amazingly strong widow, Christine, said at her husband’s funeral. “This cost him his life.”
If you can’t understand why this death is different from a construction worker killed on a job site, or a woman waiting for a bus, you don’t understand the job of the police.
Of course every death is significant to someone, but the job of the police is to maintain order in society for the benefit of all. As it says on their squad cars they “serve and protect.”
Yes, they are well-paid. But what they do helps make Toronto a safe and great place to live.
Civil society needs the instruments of law and order, and needs them to be effective and trustworthy.
No one gets a free run at a police officer. Period.
Of course, the counter to that position is the G20 debacle.
The burbling undercurrent around the funeral, where 12,500 police officers marched down University Ave. in an impressive, emotional show of unity, is that it’s a PR stunt to try and right the tarnished reputation of a force stained by irresponsibility and brutality on one weekend in June.
There is absolutely no basis to mix one event with the other. Not a single officer or member of senior command that I heard made any mention of the G20 on Tuesday, or during the past week. They are two separate issues.
One can respect Sgt. Russell's sacrifice and still be concerned about some police actions at the G20.
Far from being a “reputation fixer,” this was a typical police funeral — although bigger than we’ve ever seen in Toronto.
That had to do with the particular circumstances of Sgt. Russell’s death. Every one of those officers knows it could have been them dead on the pavement last week.
Officers showed up from as far away as Europe because they are a fraternity and they wanted to show support for Christine and her young son, Nolan, 2.
On the money side, every Toronto officer who attended was off duty and not being paid.
The convention centre only charged the police to recover its cost for the day, but took no profit.
The flowers were donated. The TTC lent buses.
If you think that’s too big a dent on the city’s budget, I’ll cut the first cheque to pay down the cost myself.
As for the media, yes, we provided blanket coverage.
A phenomenal amount. Live on TV and the web, pages of newspaper content, blogs, tweets, photo galleries.
That’s because it was an enormous news story. No one was forced to watch. If the coverage offended you, well, the Cartoon Network is always there to enrich your brain.
By Tuesday night, I was emotionally drained. I can’t imagine how the Russell family feels.
But, as Christine Russell said, “it is with Ryan’s courage and his b**********y, and along with all of you, and all of your support, I am able to stand here.”
For that reason alone, there was only honour in Tuesday’s funeral.
'Nuff said.
http://www.torontosun.com/comment/columnists/rob_granatstein/2011/01/19/16953691.html
Did you actually read the column I linked ?I have so much respect for the Toronto Sun literary geniuses. There are many more other media outlets that praised the funeral, the complete opposite of the Sun. Did you happen to catch the commentary on CTV and CBC?
I doubt it. He was probably having too much fun.Did you actually read the column I linked ?
Brain surgery ?I doubt it. He was probably having too much fun.
another statement "framed" as a question...will this big named personalities go to a hero's funeral without media there?Yes indeed. Maybe no retired cops have died in the pst ten years so it hasn't happened.
You could answer your own "question" but it is not a question. It is your statement of opinion framed as a question. I mentioned this fake question technique to another lousy arguer earlier.
I wouldn't miss it if they have a lady in a bikini at the end of the segment.I have so much respect for the Toronto Sun literary geniuses. There are many more other media outlets that praised the funeral, the complete opposite of the Sun. Did you happen to catch the commentary on CTV and CBC?
I caught bits and pieces of it as I was fucking this new gorgeous blonde and my head was in a weird, awkward position, did I misread it or something?Did you actually read the column I linked ?
there were a few. Any one in particular.another statement "framed" as a question...will this big named personalities go to a hero's funeral without media there?
You were reading TERB and boning a gorgeous blonde at the same time? I bet she was impressed or maybe unconscious.I caught bits and pieces of it as I was fucking this new gorgeous blonde and my head was in a weird, awkward position, did I misread it or something?
She was impressed at how I can do both, obviously I can do one well, that's the reading btw, lol. If she was unconscious then I would have read it correctly as I wouldn't have had to worry about her arms and legs flying all over the place and obstructing my vision.You were reading TERB and boning a gorgeous blonde at the same time? I bet she was impressed or maybe unconscious.
Inflatable ?I bet she was impressed or maybe unconscious.
She was impressed at how I can do both, obviously I can do one well, that's the reading btw, lol. If she was unconscious then I would have read it correctly as I wouldn't have had to worry about her arms and legs flying all over the place and obstructing my vision.
I didn't know that inflatable toys had articulated arms and legs. Maybe that was the final defensive moves before the death roll.Inflatable ?