I know he's a tad different but in my experience people who've dealt with extreme circumstances (such as what's in this story) can seem rather agitated because their stories are so outside the mainstream that people affected by normalcy bias can't process the possibility of an extreme circumstance.
So I give him the benefit of the doubt.
I forget who it was but we used to have someone who wrote about gangstalking all the time and the case in this story would certainly qualify as gangstalking by a police department, wouldn't it?
So who knows? Maybe the gangstalking guy wasn't all that paranoid after all.
I remember my dad (who was a well-known Staff Sargent for a medium sized city in S. Ontario) telling me about a time when the OPP got a domestic with firearm call. They rolled out their TRU unit and they set up on the house, the occupant put his dog out and it started barking at the hidden coppers, so they shot the dog. The occupant came out with a rifle. They dropped him. They had the wrong house.
"llama66" said I remember my dad (who was a well-known Staff Sargent for a medium sized city in S. Ontario) telling me about a time when the OPP got a domestic with firearm call. They rolled out their TRU unit and they set up on the house, the occupant put his dog out and it started barking at the hidden coppers, so they shot the dog. The occupant came out with a rifle. They dropped him. They had the wrong house.
All that matters is officer safety. Everyone else is expendable.
He hates the OPP.
Maybe with good reason.
I know he's a tad different but in my experience people who've dealt with extreme circumstances (such as what's in this story) can seem rather agitated because their stories are so outside the mainstream that people affected by normalcy bias can't process the possibility of an extreme circumstance.
So I give him the benefit of the doubt.
I forget who it was but we used to have someone who wrote about gangstalking all the time and the case in this story would certainly qualify as gangstalking by a police department, wouldn't it?
So who knows? Maybe the gangstalking guy wasn't all that paranoid after all.
I remember my dad (who was a well-known Staff Sargent for a medium sized city in S. Ontario) telling me about a time when the OPP got a domestic with firearm call. They rolled out their TRU unit and they set up on the house, the occupant put his dog out and it started barking at the hidden coppers, so they shot the dog. The occupant came out with a rifle. They dropped him. They had the wrong house.
All that matters is officer safety. Everyone else is expendable.