By Patrick Pike
By Patrick Pike
Organized gang of cops
Following the debauchery of blows struck on Michel Zecler, a music producer, by an organized gang of three cops imagining themselves above the law, then the treachery consisting in producing a false report relating the reasons for his arrest at the very least muscular, there is not much to add to their indictment nor to the incarceration of two of them, except that I do not quite understand the judge’s reasons for exonerating the third as well as the one who trained in grenade swinging in a closed and private place.
But I am not a judge, fortunately.
There is, however, one point that I would like to clarify. These peacekeepers, the misnamed, should in addition to their banishment from humanity, paradoxically, receive the congratulations of the jury if by chance they appear one day in court for their crimes.
Why? Quite simply because they have brilliantly demonstrated, at their expense, in vivo, first of all the inanity of the global security law – which one wonders who are the fools who saw fit to add to this which already exists – against which a large number of supporters of freedom marched on Saturday – despite, as always, the crimes committed by these thugs who are the black blocks, a pack without ideology except that of breaking cops and equipment, to equally unacceptable behavior that gangrenes and discredits any demonstration – then proved, once again, that wearing a police cap turns you from a moron into a criminal sure of his impunity.
It is therefore becoming urgent to review in depth the recruitment and training of police officers, especially when we are witnessing, practically live thanks to multiple witnesses with cell phones, the totally gratuitous wickedness of a commissioner who, believing he is playing still in the playground of the kindergarten where he assiduously studied ethics, tripped a running migrant, while his henchmen, last Monday, shook and destroyed tents to extricate men, women and children who were trying to protect themselves from the cold while waiting for decent shelter, beat them as hard as they could as savagely as the following Saturday, the journalist who found himself in the hospital, with a broken nose, after having fumbled with their truncheon .
All these abuses are unacceptable, and further dishonor their entire corporation.
If the police look like that, I am not surprised that they are calling for a law to hide the shameful actions they commit (what would have been the future of Michel Zecler if the images of his beating had not been broadcast ?) nor do I wonder about the very special humanity that their elders displayed during the Vel d’Hiv roundup, without a doubt the prolegomena to this « …republican line which serves as a guide, this line who enlightened the footsteps of our elders in the darkness of history…” as the current prefect of police in Paris hums in a letter addressed to these civil servants with their striking enthusiasm.
As for Darmanin who thinks that messing around characterizes a crime, I advise him to consult the dictionaries before speaking and to his predecessor in the function, Castaner, to stop gargling by predicting an overhaul of article 24 which, in This state cannot be rectified because it is currently before the Senate. The most sensible thing would be to withdraw the bill. Especially since there are enough texts to punish the criminal informers on the opposing side who shamefully dump on so-called social networks their threats against the police, but also against all those who do not think like them.
05/09/2023
Marcel Gromaire – La guerre – 1925 – MAM – Photo RMN
Le Plumier© 2023 Patrick Pike