In the same blog, I waxed nostalgically on the old days when cops kicked ass and took names. I was reflecting back to the time before I was on the job when criminals thought twice before committing their crimes if only for the inevitable ass-thumping that came in their wake. After all, that's what made my friends and me think twice before indulging in some criminal activity back when I was a young punk.
Alas, one enterprising journalist resurrected the matter a month later, inferring that *I'd* been the one administering said ass-thumping. He imposed a review of my personnel jacket upon my former department which, to its everlasting shame, obliged him and wasted both their time and effort.
One critic blasted the same blog by saying that I'd said the ONLY thing the
El Monte cop
was guilty of was working in the wrong era: Wrong. I asserted that ONE thing he was inarguably guilty of was working in the wrong era. For all I knew, (at the time of that writing) he might have been a no-limit idiot.
Another repeat offender-who goes by the nom de plume of Radgeek-has re-characterized what I've said, as well: "..and those segments of society who have fundamentally failed to hold their own [sic] accountable" and, just so we're clear, by those segments of society, Scoville means niggers. Also, I guess he's pissed off that Dick Wolf decided to cast Ice-T as a cop in Law and Order: SVU."
So, to Radgeek's mind, my alluding to jury nullification practices advocated by some segments of society is an indicator of racism. I won't dignify his assumptions regarding the N-word, but he's right about one thing: I hate the fact that Ice-T, the man responsible for the song "Cop Killer," was cast as a cop in "Law and Order: SVU" and consider his hiring to be a slap in the face of law enforcement.