Reaction To Norwegian Police Funniest Arrest Ever

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  • čas přidán 6. 11. 2023
  • Reaction To Norwegian Police Funniest Arrest Ever
    This is my reaction to Norwegian Police Funniest Arrest Ever
    In this video I react the police of Norway and how they handle the arrest of someone who had drunk too much alcohol
    #norway #police #reaction
    Original Video - • Norwegian Police Funni...

Komentáře • 148

  • @HelenEk7
    @HelenEk7 Před 6 měsíci +95

    Norwegian here. People over here both trust and respect the police, and I find it sad that people in certain other countries have a strong distrust in the police. I think one advantage is that to become a police officer here you need to have 3 year bachelor police degree. So its a thorough education, and they can remove unsuited people along the way.

    • @intheblacklite9849
      @intheblacklite9849 Před 6 měsíci

      norwegian here as well. search up> silje saken, lomme mannen. then you will see how pathetic our police are

    • @samsote
      @samsote Před 6 měsíci +2

      Yeah we are pretty trustful of police here because they generally do a good job. From a statistics perspective 72% say they trust the police, 49% say they highly trust police. Unfortunately those numbers are declining.

    • @niklasnaper6596
      @niklasnaper6596 Před 6 měsíci

      @@samsotedeclining with good reason. I used to trust them, but now I don't over the last few years... still some good officers around but as a whole they are cunts

    • @ArthurOfThePond
      @ArthurOfThePond Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@samsote I'm from Denmark, but here it's much the same. Sadly it seems to be for no good reason. Young people are distrustful because they see American police on tv. Also I work with a man who came here 10 years ago and he has never had a bad encounter with Danish police, but he still mistrust them because they are police and the police in his home country were bad.

    • @thomasjacobsen9768
      @thomasjacobsen9768 Před 4 měsíci

      Im glad we have, for the most part, nice " Politi-folk "
      It makes interractions with them alot easier, for both parties

  • @d0uble992
    @d0uble992 Před 6 měsíci +26

    "I don't know if this guy is drunk or has got some mental problems" Nah he's just from Lofoten 🤣

  • @zirak93-2
    @zirak93-2 Před 6 měsíci +45

    The police in Norway are quite nice actually. Once I remember I was bicycling in the middle of nowhere at the middle of the night. They asked casual questions about why I was cycling on the road in the middle of the night without any reflex. They actually gave me a reflex band too.

  • @RambinoYT
    @RambinoYT Před 7 měsíci +137

    As someone who is from Norway and has worked in both Security, Bouncer at nightclubs and Special Security for famous people. I can say with the hand on my heart we have the best Police in the World. Yes we have some bad apples indeed, but overall there is so much better then bad. I have worked tight with the Police at several occasions and they have been amazing. Kind, calm, cool and collected and very on going easy people to work with and they also treat the suspects or as i should say people in a good way. In my 5 years i have yet to see any officer be reckless, say something stupid, behave unprofessional or act bad. Top Quality lads and females, shame i don't work close with them anymore as i changed jobs.
    Norwegian Police officers are very educationally trained. You need great grades, you need to be physically fit and you also go trough a mental check aswell before they allow you to become a Police Officer. 3 Years to be exact is the School. 1 Year is introduction, Law, etc etc. 1 Year is all being in the field with a supervisor where you are being followed around and taught very well. And 1 year is more law, how to behave, treat people, act, more social stuff and other aspects of being an officer.
    So with all these in mind the Police are very smart. With a general knowledge and understanding of situations it's easy to be calm. Let me do this video as an example. They are 2 trained police officers with a baton on their hips, maybe pepper spray too. They are also 2 people vs a small sized man who is intoxicated.....what threat is he to them if he starts acting out. Here is why the American and other Police Forces get it wrong....there is no threat here. Analyze the situation, put yourself in the other guys shoes, behave the way you would have like to been behaved towards and most situations are over before they even start. I learnt this as a bouncer and i avoided several knife fights, fights in general by being a nice guy. Sure sometimes it doesnt work, but it works more then if i was behaving like an asshole. I have worked with gorillas before and it always ends up in fights, it's just pointless. People are people and they dont want people to act a certain way to them because of a uniform. So behaving like a human gets you far and thats why our Police is incredible, because they are human

    • @JWildberry
      @JWildberry Před 7 měsíci +8

      Treating people as if they're good people is a smart way of de-escalating. It works in so many different situations.
      I also think it makes it easier for the police/security to handle jobs that take a toll on their mental health. If you spend all day shouting at people and getting into conflicts, it has a negative effect on who YOU are too. If it becomes a habit, you're also more likely to bring that attitude home with you. Not good for relationships, friendships, pet ownership or raising children.

    • @avienated
      @avienated Před 7 měsíci +5

      Two great takes here guys. Everything I wanted to say, but better.

    • @user-pb5vd1bn8v
      @user-pb5vd1bn8v Před 6 měsíci +3

      A good explanation about Norwegian Police. And i think that’s why we respect them here - most of us 😊

    • @alwinfrisk1482
      @alwinfrisk1482 Před 6 měsíci +5

      Ive done drills with all scandinavian police ( im swedish Army). And as a swede it hurts to say your cops are as good as ours lol.

    • @RambinoYT
      @RambinoYT Před 6 měsíci

      @@alwinfrisk1482 which region or city have you worked with? That can play a major factor

  • @terrorsapien
    @terrorsapien Před 6 měsíci +14

    Brother! On 6:05 the translation says "is she heart-dead?" but thats wrong... the drunk Lofoten man says "er dem hjernedød?" it translates to "are they braindead?".
    i just had to correct it as a northern norwegian myself, i laugh so hard at that. the way he asks it in a quiet manner after yelling so high!🤣

  • @rayymondmorgan1697
    @rayymondmorgan1697 Před 6 měsíci +6

    Wtih the drunk guys dialect humor comes naturally. "HÆSTKUK!"

  • @LilCera11
    @LilCera11 Před 6 měsíci +11

    Norwegians knows that they laughed just cuz they couldn’t hold it back 😂 it’s his accent in Norwegian that makes them laugh. It’s not a technique

  • @Blubes23
    @Blubes23 Před 6 měsíci +5

    My dads in a norwegian harley motorcycle club, you know gigantic guys with long beards, drinking and having fun, fixing their bikes… and every summer that club have summer party and the cops often get calls from outsiders for example tourists from other part of norway, but the police then simply join the party. One time one of them got a little tattoo. Yeah so they just have fun listening to live rock music and have fun with the bike guys 🥹 (all the neighbours aswell joins in.. like u see farmers in regular clothes a green teeshirt and grey shorts drinking beers and police in uniform digging to music and talking with drunk bikers) its really fun!

  • @NorseOkies
    @NorseOkies Před 7 měsíci +154

    I am from the part of Norway where that poor sod is from. In a UK perspective you could say he's from Scotland, and I don't think I need to say anything more than that as the type is quite similar in stereotypes.
    But the subtitler isn't that great. He isn't exactly goin to jail, they are throwing him into the drunk tank, which is just over the night so he can sleep it off basically.

    • @No1Agge
      @No1Agge Před 6 měsíci +6

      Not just Scotland. But outer part of Scotland. Like Orkney or Hebrides.
      Don't forget Lofoten actually has a European highway E10.

    • @NorseOkies
      @NorseOkies Před 6 měsíci +3

      @@No1Agge speaking of Orkney, Wed like it back please :P

    • @No1Agge
      @No1Agge Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@NorseOkies You have to talk to the Scottish and British about that.
      I would like the Kalmar union back.
      Or just Skåne, Halland and Blekinge. And Slesvig. But I have to talk to the Swedes and Germans about that.

    • @NorseOkies
      @NorseOkies Před 6 měsíci +3

      @@No1Agge the Swedes can give us back Jämtland, Herjedalen, and Bohuslän. But I bet we get the same answer as all the counties going to the British museum asking for their stuff back

    • @mariusmikalsen03
      @mariusmikalsen03 Před 6 měsíci +3

      The best part of Norway!

  • @skinnyjohnsen
    @skinnyjohnsen Před 7 měsíci +70

    Don't forget that Norwegian police has a long and good education. It's equal to a college degree in the US. I believe psychology and maybe sosiologi is a part of it. It's important to see the difference between a criminal and a psychotic person, or as in this case; a poor sod that is very drunk.
    He comes from Northern Norway where swear words are just a part of the common language. This drunkard calling the police man a "horse prick" has been judged to be legal by a court in Northern Norway :-)

    • @ERLC_SERVER_NEWS
      @ERLC_SERVER_NEWS Před 6 měsíci

      About that

    • @ERLC_SERVER_NEWS
      @ERLC_SERVER_NEWS Před 6 měsíci

      The Norwegian police is training for 8 years / 4

    • @nikkimango2854
      @nikkimango2854 Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@ERLC_SERVER_NEWS bah, they have a bachelor degree

    • @PhrozenN
      @PhrozenN Před 6 měsíci

      @@ERLC_SERVER_NEWS 3 years. It's equivalent to a bachelors degree. And it seems they only have one class. "how to be an asshole 101"
      Luckily they tend to mellow after working for a while. I hate those rookies fresh out of school, they're always like "respectr me I'm a cop", but respect is received when respect is given...

  • @kabra72
    @kabra72 Před 6 měsíci +15

    I think it depends of the human being behind the uniform, Ihave seen US police men being very kind also. Said that, I'm a Dane and I love our Norwegian neighbors 🥰

    • @linaulnes7498
      @linaulnes7498 Před 6 měsíci +1

      Yes there is good ones in USA aswell. And there are bad ones here in Norway even tho most behave polite in the feil. I know of girlfriend beaters, rapsists and sexist/emotional abusers be in the police and go on to be cops after their actions in Norway, so off course they are a mixed bunch just like other places. But mostly they are so tied to loyalty they cant see right from wrong like raiding a baby of their needed medicine.

  • @ivendagsv
    @ivendagsv Před 6 měsíci +17

    As a fellow Norwegian with multiple police interactions, they are very very nice and calm, they are pretty cool over here.

    • @thomasjacobsen9768
      @thomasjacobsen9768 Před 4 měsíci

      They are very nice and understanding!
      Many of them go by " Kardemommeloven "

  • @whengrapespop5728
    @whengrapespop5728 Před 6 měsíci +11

    *Some context for his wild use of language;* He’s from Lofoten, a northern city in Norway. Northern Norwegians are known for “swearing like a sailor” - it is quite common for them to swear 1-4 times in every single sentence leaving their mouth (hence why he said “well of course, I’m from Lofoten!” when they commented his foul language). Even Norwegians may sometimes struggle to discern what northerners are even saying, because to the rest of Norway, northerners use quite a thick accent and most of what you can make sense of are their swear words. Norwegians don’t normally consider it rude, because it’s just part of their “language”, so it’s not registered the same way as if a southerner was swearing in every sentence. When the police officer laughed and said “he’s one of a kind”, he actually said “haha, he was lovely/wonderful, you know?” (correctly translated), which reflects how a Norwegian find northerners and their language kind of charming.
    Oh, and I know one of the police officer’s daughter. He’s a nice, yet professional cop; tends to show up when underage teens are having big parties outside getting drunk, just to make sure everyone’s okay.

  • @HankHopeless
    @HankHopeless Před 6 měsíci +7

    Greetings from Denmark.
    I've been working side by side with the police for 12 years.
    What I see here is bloody good policework.
    It might be funny, but it's also impressive.
    Those guys really know how to deesclate a situation.

  • @kirstenelisabethmunthe1342
    @kirstenelisabethmunthe1342 Před 6 měsíci +6

    In Norway we learn to respect people drunk or not. Policing is a bachelor education so I’m proud of the quality of their work. They so disarm him when they laugh and calming him down. If they had got aggressive to the situation would have escalated. I’m proud of being Norwegian 👍🏼🇳🇴😂

  • @thorbjrnhellehaven5766
    @thorbjrnhellehaven5766 Před 7 měsíci +17

    this one is legendary, those two are a great team

  • @theonilsen9417
    @theonilsen9417 Před 6 měsíci +5

    From Norway here! The Police are just ' with ' us, they are not over our leage.. it's problaby therefore the police hare resoect for us, and we have for them.🥰

  • @mariannepedersenhagen6760
    @mariannepedersenhagen6760 Před 7 měsíci +36

    Hi from Norway ❤ Love it.😂 Have great respect for the norwegian Police. The are educated and the have and give respect to the people 😊

    • @zrt10
      @zrt10 Před 7 měsíci +9

      Den er så morsom den episoden hehe han er så forbanna

    • @ScaniaDronninga
      @ScaniaDronninga Před 7 měsíci

      norsk politi er en vits for det norske folk.

    • @thomasjacobsen9768
      @thomasjacobsen9768 Před 4 měsíci

      @@zrt10 FOrbanna er vel bare forbokstaven?
      " Litt mye møllers tran ", kanskje? hahahaha

  • @user-ng2ih8mn4y
    @user-ng2ih8mn4y Před 6 měsíci +9

    These policemen are from the south of Norway, and the drunk is from the north of Norway. The way he talks is quite normal, his swearing is not seen as very awful, norwegian police goes to school for about 3 years. During these 3 years they are in trainig with highly trained policemen , often the bad apples or people that wants to be police for the wrong reasons , are being thrown out of the force even before the training is over, so most policemen in Norway are good men, respect !!!!

  • @campusmartius8450
    @campusmartius8450 Před 6 měsíci +20

    I’ve had a few encounters with the cops here too and they’ve been professional and respectful except for once. I was walking home in Oslo when I got jumped by what is the Norwegian equivalent of a SWAT team. A man had pulled a gun at a nearby bar and I matched the description. They held a shotgun to my face for about 10 minutes while frantically searching me. These guys were definitely not professional and respectful. They actually seemed scared like it was their first time searching someone. And one of them got pissed because I couldn’t help laughing at how tiny and funny he looked in his riot gear. Even with his helmet on, he only reached up to my chest😂 . A little later they caught the actual guy with the gun and let me go.

  • @christinebergesen4402
    @christinebergesen4402 Před 6 měsíci +2

    The two police officers are so funny and calm and good. Have seen them in a program on tv

  • @espenvippen
    @espenvippen Před 7 měsíci +7

    I don't know what the education in England is like. but in Norway it is a three-year education that gives you a bachelor's degree.

  • @kunilsen2519
    @kunilsen2519 Před 7 měsíci +20

    You should watch the car chase Norwigian police had thought a park. It's very short, but it really shows how skilled and professional they are, adapting to different situations.
    "Norwegian Police Dramatic Car Chase With Armed Robbers"

  • @hannaolesen4437
    @hannaolesen4437 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Love that the first clip is in Drøbak!!

  • @georglouw4549
    @georglouw4549 Před 6 měsíci +4

    Hey man, just recently discovered your content, i love your style of actually "reacting" to the content you are watching. Just nice to see more input, so the it's just not the video I'm watching, but you reacting to it. Keep it up man :)

  • @user-ky7br6gy9n
    @user-ky7br6gy9n Před 6 měsíci +2

    Norwegian cops differ as most, we got some pure a holes too. Worked at many different stations around the eastern parts of norway (before i got a perminant position) and still so many a holes and power hungry sods in the PD here. Over all i will say we have a great policeforce and love 90% of my coworkers. But yeah guess its like that everywhere.

  • @baldrbraa
    @baldrbraa Před 6 měsíci +2

    Aqualung… the Jethro Tull character.
    Sitting on a park bench.

  • @84com83
    @84com83 Před 7 měsíci +12

    The drunk man is not aggressive, he just tries to "defend" himself!

  • @leandrusguy144
    @leandrusguy144 Před 6 měsíci +3

    The police in US do NOT get enough training

  • @YannickOkpara-lx7sq
    @YannickOkpara-lx7sq Před 6 měsíci +1

    In the U.S, that kick might’ve landed him in a body slam with several broken bones. Good thing they know better.

  • @Shinsy-liberty
    @Shinsy-liberty Před 6 měsíci +1

    he saying the drunk arrest like where the cops takes intoxicated ppl to stay and he bean there 22 times XD

  • @Mordaedil
    @Mordaedil Před 7 měsíci +8

    Oh, this is from the Norwegian version of Cops that was airing back a few decades ago and this arrest was made in Drøbak where I am from. My father also served in the police for all of his life and I currently work for them, and they are usually a pretty great people, but they aren't always making jovial arrests, especially when it concerns gangs and youth drug dealers, but it still doesn't match the aggressiveness of the US police. This show, when it aired on TV was pretty good to watch, because it was never as exciting as cops, but it was more reassuring in how things are here if that makes any sense.
    We do end up having more people being arrested for drunk-arrest than being put behind bars for any permanent duration, but we do still have a homeless population and people suffering from alcoholism, drug abuse and general depression that expose a type of danger to themselves and people around them, but it's not the easiest thing to handle, since everyone's cases are so unique and require their own way of being handled and the training is still ongoing and never really ending in how to approach these situations.

  • @Doodler-be-Doodlig
    @Doodler-be-Doodlig Před 6 měsíci +4

    Im norwegian and yes they are THAT calm but arrests like that happens very few times

  • @VikingNorway-pb5tm829
    @VikingNorway-pb5tm829 Před 6 měsíci

    This is so good :)

    • @VikingNorway-pb5tm829
      @VikingNorway-pb5tm829 Před 6 měsíci

      It is respekt of people that fail in the normal.. not dangerus at all :)

  • @Gasmurken
    @Gasmurken Před 7 měsíci +7

    It is a LOT easier to be a police when you know that 99% of the people you encounter will not carry a weapon. That number will most likely decrease (or already has) in Norway as well.

  • @filipfilipio
    @filipfilipio Před 6 měsíci +1

    The person with gray hair had two twins that was in the same class as my sister in elementary😂

  • @TheWolf4636
    @TheWolf4636 Před 6 měsíci +1

    i dont know if you know this but a ton of the clips of norwegian police such as this one is from a series called Nattpatruljen that you can see episodes of. These two are a funny duo on that series

  • @rocky01ist
    @rocky01ist Před 6 měsíci +1

    No they are not always like this, but they take time to solve a situation. And the also have longer education in being a police than most other countries. We do not carry weapons here in Norway, but the situations in the world would soon require it. Sadly

  • @camillaGorilla
    @camillaGorilla Před 3 měsíci

    Norwegian here 🇳🇴✌🏼 Yes these officers did a great job for sure. But there are also some bad apple police officers in Norway aswell.

  • @rastifan7863
    @rastifan7863 Před 19 dny

    To compare to the US! American cops have around 5 to 7 month education before going into service. Here in Norway it takes 3 years and with a tight screening. They run a insane physiological program to test your limit of what you can take before you snap. They evaluate you from that. There are plenty of good cops in America, but the bad seeds would not pass the first month at a Norwegian police academy.

  • @PeterKocic
    @PeterKocic Před 6 měsíci

    An additional layer of humor here is that his dialect is from the northern parts of Norway and I think this is filmed in Oslo, the Police atleast sound from down south.

  • @TD7569
    @TD7569 Před 6 měsíci +1

    As an Nowigian this is funny

  • @lassebrynildsen7814
    @lassebrynildsen7814 Před 7 měsíci +7

    Hi neighbour. You should take it further and react to the Norwegian prisons.

  • @SauceyRedHN
    @SauceyRedHN Před 6 měsíci +2

    If I had a nickel for every channel I’ve found that is purely dedicated to learning about Norway and nothing else, I’d have two nickels. Which isn’t a lot, but it’s weird that it happened twice.
    I’m of course talking about Tyler Walker, who also has the channel “Tyler Rumple” dedicated toward learning about the UK. What’s his real last name? Who knows.

  • @carinamandarina554
    @carinamandarina554 Před 6 měsíci

    Well.. i was born in Iowa,but live in Norway..and in my City some officers are very kind and some are so rude im lost for words..if you are walking home ,maby just bought a burger or something at night,they stop you and ask you all kinds of questions..- do you do drugs?- Why are you walking alone? - are you high?- let me look in your pockets - sure you were just hungry? - where do you live? - have you done drugs before? No? Are you sure??- your record says you carried a joint when you were 17? ( i am over 40 now) i never go out alone..they stop you and are very rude to you!! The Police could be nicer,especially the new,rookie ones😊

  • @thomashenden71
    @thomashenden71 Před 6 měsíci +2

    In Norway, alcolholism is considered an illness, and as long as he isn’t a real threat, the police will often try to deal with those person in as a less escalating way, as possible. It should be pointed out though, unfortunately - even our police is not as friendly to people who use drugs, even though they are not usually threathening, like those who just use marihuana or weed. So on that point, we need a reform. We are still though, every grateful that our police isn’t as trigger happy as the american police, so mostly, Norwegian police will mostly, if not always try to de-escalate situations, compared to other countries.
    I also recommend this video czcams.com/video/zNpehw-Yjvs/video.html for how we try to reduce conflicts to re-integrate individuals to be productlve members of the society again.

  • @taccamine8312
    @taccamine8312 Před 6 měsíci

    Norwegian police are well trained, well educated, decently paid and generally respected for doing their job (of cause there are some bad apples also, but they will not be as respected). They are trained to remain polite and professional as far as possible. If you've done something possibly illegal, they'll politely ask you to sign a report, and then leave it up to the court to make a decision.
    This guy is very drunk, but probably won't face charges after sleeping it off in the drunk tank. Some policemen (not these two) are on duty in the drunk tank facility. I once saw a documentary of a night watchman officer. He was constantly on the receiving end of verbal attacks like these. But remained calm, humorous, professional and held absolutely no grudge against the repentant sinners the next day😊

  • @kranseline
    @kranseline Před 6 měsíci +1

    Three years of education will do this. And a general mentality of treating people with dignity.

  • @Deltaforce11111
    @Deltaforce11111 Před 6 měsíci

    Depends on the city, and each police officers.

  • @ronnywold6641
    @ronnywold6641 Před 12 dny

    Ronny Michael Wold from norway here

  • @kievitz
    @kievitz Před 6 měsíci +1

    Pretty much all the nordic police are like this, of course we have bad apples but our police has been educated not to be provoked by shouting and aggression.
    Besides a drunkard vs 2 police officers in a fight would not be fair :) So they dismiss hes behaviour with a laught and calm him down by talking, being calm themselves rather than use force.
    This kind of interaction is quite common, if a person is intoxicated, police usually talk them to behave and take them to the station without any hassle in 99.99% of cases.
    Over here people are customers, police uphold the public peace and law and in the nordics the public trust in the police is very high.

  • @BenvanBroekhuijsen
    @BenvanBroekhuijsen Před 6 měsíci +1

    In the US they would already have pulled the gun on this person because he hurt their ego.

    • @VikingNorway-pb5tm829
      @VikingNorway-pb5tm829 Před 6 měsíci +1

      uff... weak men then.. ;)

    • @BeatheGoth-uk5tj
      @BeatheGoth-uk5tj Před 6 měsíci

      I don’t know why US police often look like the prototype of which person you dont want to hange around with- a blown up ego, bigbellied /enormous torsos,long hairy hamsized arms ,boxer-nose, nasty temper. Like the bigest bullies in kindergarden and elementaryschool. Scary!

  • @Yes-hi3tv
    @Yes-hi3tv Před 6 měsíci +2

    I konw one of the police officers. He is the father of two of my class mates

  • @Hugbryggen
    @Hugbryggen Před 6 měsíci

    It takes three years in hard training and practical educations in the field. Its really hard becoming a police but we have more educated than spots available.

  • @tommyaleks100
    @tommyaleks100 Před 6 měsíci +1

    This guy us known by the police so they know him very well. We have many of those. Another thing is that the police is not always so nice or good as these two are.

  • @kennethpaulsen5407
    @kennethpaulsen5407 Před 6 měsíci

    both of the police officers here are also watch commanders.

  • @gautearefjord
    @gautearefjord Před 7 měsíci +2

    They know him.... That's why

  • @bluelagoon5
    @bluelagoon5 Před 6 měsíci

    😂😂

  • @profftrefelling2000
    @profftrefelling2000 Před 6 měsíci

    Great... that's 20 years ago. But compared to US/UK I guess they're 'alright'.

  • @usernameusernameuserbrain
    @usernameusernameuserbrain Před 6 měsíci

    the police bully that poor alcholic, they dont have no shame, laughing him in his face.
    this guy is not normal, he got many problems. they should give him respect, even if he acts like a clown.

  • @caprise-music6722
    @caprise-music6722 Před 6 měsíci

    The first person is from northern Norway. People from there are legendary for swearing. They basically just speak like that. like.. ‘what’s the time? Oh f***in horseco**, it’s 12!’ 😂 for example
    p.s
    Unfortunately not everyone is like that. There’s many police who are not that nice, especially when there’s no tv cameras around. But generally police here are trained to diffuse the sitch

  • @obesus787
    @obesus787 Před 6 měsíci

    I was once going through what was basically our version of a gated community, looked like shit, probably looked really shady, relatively late, around like 22:30 ish.
    I rounded a corner and almost walked into a police car, bolted to the sidewalk, and the cops pulled down the window and apologized.
    Then they asked what I was doing, and I sarcastically responded “I’m smuggling cocaine”.
    So… as I was being searched, the guy couldn’t keep a straight face, he just asked me if I was stupid in between laughs. I have a suspicion he was just fucking with me though.

  • @sonofthesea3298
    @sonofthesea3298 Před 6 měsíci +3

    I dont know this person in questioning personally,but i got family from the same area that recognized him despite the censored blurr and messing a tiny bit with his voice. Dude is notoriously known to become a handful when drunk,hes not anywhere near the same person whenever hes sober. That always baffles me,how some turn into 2 totally different personalities when drunk and sober. For the absolute majority i have only experienced people getting drunk as becoming super chatty,some even extra emotional and out of it,but i think in cases where people flip out and become a danger to others,there is some underlaying stuff there even when they are sober,its just that they suppress it better when sober.
    But as far as i got told,this guy is more vocal then anything. Yeah he puts up some sort of resistence while being arrested,but they just talk him out of it,instead of watching the police in the US,that would strap his feet up and probably give him in while doing so. You find many bad apples around in the districts of Norway,but for the most part i like to think of the police,the same like these 2 officers. Im not sure if this guy has some mental issues,but i would not be surprised if there was at least something.
    Its said that he moved from the Lofoten Islands to better "become one with the crowd",as everyone knows everyone up there,its a few small communities of only a few thousand each,so they defintly see alot of the same faces several times during amonth f ex. I guess he still didnt manage to keep the police`s interest at bay,for whenever he got drunk.

    • @styrophome3342
      @styrophome3342 Před 6 měsíci

      On the original video, there is a comment about him being the vocalist in the band "blue-x". Written by the band. They have a music video called "shooting needles", they are very talented, theme of the song may explain this arrest.

  • @evenleven
    @evenleven Před 7 měsíci +2

    A funny bit here is that the man at that time was actually allowed to call the police man for horsecock. People from the norhern part of norway where allowed up untill recently. There was even legal precedent for this at the time that since has been overturned.

  • @jonaberge9695
    @jonaberge9695 Před 6 měsíci

    The police normally act according to the people they meet. I honor them for that. They know how a over drunk man from Lofoten may behave in Oslo. This is good behaviour due to understanding the situation. I am not so sure how they do with foreigners. So foreigners, please behave.

  • @ellymasande
    @ellymasande Před 6 měsíci

    This is old 😊 but still funny 😅 🇧🇻

  • @Tvjunkieful12
    @Tvjunkieful12 Před 6 měsíci

    The problem with the Norwegian police is not the officers on patrol and in uniform, but inadequate investigations leading to miscarriages of justice, and a too high bar to correct these. The commission for reopening cases, as it is called is in fact one individual going through the case, presenting a quick summery to the rest of the commission, which if the case is not upheld, sign off to that fact. Only if new evidence significant enough to reopen the case is found by the individual having read the case on the commission's behalf, the entire commission will go through the case in full, even interview witnesses and more, before having a majority vote of whether or not to reopen the case. This encourages the commission's members to not find new evidence of significance, since that give them less to do and allow them to get through more cases more quickly. As a consequence most victims of miscarriages of justice have served their sentences before finally being found innocent. Last year a man, after more than 20 years in prison for two rapes and murders he was innocent of, got his case reopened, and earlier this year was acquitted.
    A better solution than a permanent commission, in my opinion, would have been a review board suspects or victims could complain to - and which the police was obligated to report all evidence and investigative steps to, so the review board could intervene if they saw mistakes had been made, possible alternative suspects ignored, victims or suspects' legal rights broken and similar.
    Another problem with Norwegian police is that a lot of minor crimes are not investigated at all, and reported cases dismissed because of insufficient evidence without any investigative steps being made.

  • @Safewoood
    @Safewoood Před 6 měsíci +2

    As a Norwegian i do think our police is great but a lot of our laws ar utterly ridiculous, so it can definitely create some conflict.

    • @aregrubb
      @aregrubb Před 6 měsíci

      What laws are you talking about? I can't say there are many stupid laws here, only stupid people who don't understand the laws.

    • @asbjrnfossmo1589
      @asbjrnfossmo1589 Před 6 měsíci

      @@aregrubb I'm not the OP, but if i was to wager a guess:
      - To import liquor stronger than 60%/vol counts as a narcotics offense
      - Sex is legal to sell (as long as you report the income for income tax), but illegal to buy
      - Religion, any religion except our own most common is protected from being offended; counts as racism
      - If your turn signal on your car has an orange bulb, but it is slightly faded, you can't drive your car
      - The noxious level of fines for parking, speeding or using a phone when driving
      - Don't get me started about trying to get permission to build something, or worse; tear down some old building...

    • @aregrubb
      @aregrubb Před 6 měsíci

      @@asbjrnfossmo1589 all of this is of course dangerous stuff that cost us lots of tax money every year. So if we continiue to vote for lower taxes and allow this stuff, we will get some really big economic problems on our
      hands, on top of what we allready got. The fact that you don't understand it doesn't make it wrong.

    • @asbjrnfossmo1589
      @asbjrnfossmo1589 Před 5 měsíci

      @@aregrubb All of it dangerous? You must live a very fearful life. Besides, the discussion wasn't about voting or tax money, it was about laws. Someone is not understanding, but that someone isn't me.

  • @fonebone2825
    @fonebone2825 Před 7 měsíci +2

    Once me and a friend stole a car and when the police stopped us we had to stand on our knees and my friend was pushed by the police and he said "oh, police brutality?" and the police answerd "I will show you police brutality!" and he knocked my friend to the ground LOL, the new cops are the worst but when they get older they are much more likeable. Norway btw

  • @olenilsen4660
    @olenilsen4660 Před 6 měsíci

    I´m actually amazed that you find this a lot different from how your bobbies would handle it. For us Norwegians, the UK police is way famous for not carrying any kind of guns, and they should always resolve a situation peacefully. This info seems quite a bit outdated now, so how is it now in the UK?

    • @taccamine8312
      @taccamine8312 Před 6 měsíci

      I am also Norwegian and I completely agree with that. I would say that Bobbies are very representative of the English character, and are generally even more jovial and polite than Norwegian police officers.

  • @zaloboble
    @zaloboble Před 6 měsíci

    To become a police in Norway you actually need a bachelors degree. In US its som training. We know the police here is not going to hurt us. They are socially well trained through their university-degree.

  • @rosemariefinnoen5593
    @rosemariefinnoen5593 Před 7 měsíci +2

    no not all police in norway are like this

    • @adriel6421
      @adriel6421 Před 6 měsíci

      I think it is easy to be like this if you know you will be on TV for all to see....

  • @unsubed
    @unsubed Před 6 měsíci

    They are not always this expirenced there was an incdent at Konsberg where the police attacked and harrsesed a cvillian at a gas station.

  • @gabork.8715
    @gabork.8715 Před 6 měsíci

    Obviously this was just one scenario by one drunk person actually not much able to get violent, so the officers just took it easy and handled the guy with a smile and minimum force. In other scenarios with violent people the police could apply force by holding the person down in stead of getting involved in a fist fight. So that s the normal: not to use more force than necessary. In other scenarios police have been seen shooting and killing people and also in one case several polices applied judo throw of one agressive guy and afterwards gave him good beating with a batons. So not all arrests are like the film, but the police is never like american gun toting police and shooting for no necessary reason. The reason for that is because the norwegian police has 3 years education in how to act as police and public servant, compared to the US 3-6 months. Serve and protect seems to be mostly forgotten as a motto in the US!

  • @odinhansen3640
    @odinhansen3640 Před 6 měsíci

    more north in norway, more vulgare ey get. 10 years ago im trndheim norway, my brother got beaten in his cell,

  • @dristmist7401
    @dristmist7401 Před 6 měsíci

    This is from a pretty small town in northern Norway, it's pretty much a small town vibe in that whole part of the country.

    • @janfrodeengh5904
      @janfrodeengh5904 Před 5 měsíci

      No, it's from Drøbak in Follo police district south of Oslo. The drunk guy is from the north though.

  • @DyreElsker78
    @DyreElsker78 Před 6 měsíci

    I am not intoxicated = he says he don`t wish (jeg har ikke lyst - but he did say lys, not the T at the end). And something about pussy, not for f sake. And he don`t say police that is hunting, but Norwegians (Nordmenn). And the police is asking "why do you scream so loud". The translation messed that part up too. I`m so sad that you don`t get to understand the hole thing, when they did not translate everything, and correctly. But nice to hear what you think. I can Norwegian, and they are often good and chill. Maybe a little slow to get things done, but at least most of them are nice to talk to and are not pulling out their gun and all that like in the USA (y)

  • @olenilsen4660
    @olenilsen4660 Před 6 měsíci

    5:27 - Well, how else would you get through your shift? Really? You sound scottish or at least northern, you should know about this ;)

  • @vanjanyrudhalvorsen6913
    @vanjanyrudhalvorsen6913 Před 2 měsíci

    He is just drink.

  • @linaulnes7498
    @linaulnes7498 Před 6 měsíci

    Its like every place. Good and bad. And there are bad ones here in Norway even tho most behave polite in the field. I know of girlfriend beaters, rapsists and sexist/emotional abusers who is in the police or go on to be cops after their actions, so off course they are a mixed bunch just like other places. Just with a better degree and manners thought. But if someone is a power hungry ashole they will still be so after the education. But mostly they are so tied to or laws and loyalty they cant see right from wrong like raiding a baby of their needed seisure medicine.

  • @Ettibridget
    @Ettibridget Před 4 měsíci

    What's that guy's funny accent?

  • @smaakjeks
    @smaakjeks Před 7 měsíci

    Why the focus on Norway, though?

    • @Drack-eu7xm
      @Drack-eu7xm Před 7 měsíci +4

      as haaland would say, ^why not?^

  • @geirsakariassen4728
    @geirsakariassen4728 Před 6 měsíci

    faen tåler han ikke ett tupp i ræva

  • @einarvindenes9509
    @einarvindenes9509 Před 6 měsíci +2

    Eg tror nok de fleste betjenter er omgjengelig. Og noen har vell god type humor også så som her i videoen

  • @genialefyr
    @genialefyr Před 6 měsíci

    Only thing iv noticed is the young women are usually much nicer than the young guys, atleast some of the guys always has some backhanded comments to slang out too try and act dominant, and to me it always just feel so stupid even though I still dont get "så helvetes forbanna!!!!". And usually its from another officer than the one you talk to, so it just feels like its a "I am also here" kinda thing or if everything is friendly, to kinda establish dominance in a real weird way.
    Like me and some mates were playing ball after the curfew on the field we used to hang out on, and apparently someone called the police (which we had been warned about by some old lady earlier so I suppose it was her), so they roll down a pathway which is only for walking (read low speed) and goes quite a long way which we can see the whole time, so its not like it was a surprise when they came. Then they drive unto the field and step out. By then we were already done playing and was just sitting around chatting, halfway packing up. And the driver walks slowly towards us and kinda starting to slang out comments, that when said in Norwegian is kinda lame although they sound completely normal haha. Basically its "what's going on here then" and like "is it drunk boys FC or something like that but like a real dorky way of saying it (it was like 4 empty beers in total I think so he obviously referred to that). For the Norwegians "jasså gutta hva er som skjer her a, erre fyllefotball IL, noe sånt". But then the other guy starts talking. Just asked if anything was going on, if we were done playing, and that they had some noise complaints from the area, telling us that curfew was 1 hour earlier etc. And then said that it was no problem to hang out, just dont play anymore or play music too loud or anything. And suggested we could go to the park (200m away) instead just to appease the old lady if we wanted to still play music. Im talking everything over and done with in 5 min, causing no stress for us, police here are so calm, and we kinda joked around and stuff about the old lady promising to call them on us. After that he kinda just asked if there was anything else before they left and wished us a good evening starts heading back. I think one of the boys just said something about going another way out, which is like 15m to a road instead of back down the dirt path as it is narrow and must be shit to drive. So the cool guy says "ah ok, we came from the other side so that's why we drove there but thanks that will be better" or something. However, the first guy just has to comment "I think we will drive where we need to drive so dont worry about it" again Norwegian "tenker vi kjører den veien som passer oss best jeg, uten at dere skal bry dere med det".
    Anyhow, long story short. Police here are very professional but can be a bit nerd in how to reestablish how they are actually the authorities. But mostly I have only met nice cops more interested in making sure everyone is good rather than out to get anyone, never trying to make a bigger deal out of something or anything like that. Which you often see with American cops, trying to make 50 charges over something small and insignificant. And all of my encounters which is quite a few by random chance, have been over in maybe 10-20 min never feeling like they overstay just to do it. Although I have seen them do it.
    Also for another gripping story. It was one time where we called the police and it took an hour or so, but that was because again, they truly want everyone to be ok, so they(like 6 cops) stuck around for a while to talk with people and so on and make sure we were all cool after a bit of a rough incident (and not like bother people, just kinda asked if everyone was ok etc while I had to explain everything to them as it was my apartment). There was even some weed around or atleast like paper and half a sig and stuff, and some guys that were obviously high. However they ignored it because they were not there for that, but to calm everyone down. When they were leaving and I followed them out an officer even told me to my face that he realized some had been smoking, and that I should be careful to allow it when they are at my place in the future. When I answered that I didnt know anything about that, he kinda just waved it away with his hand, looked at me with a "I dont care" look, and said that it is illegal so I could be dragged into something if neighbors starts complaining about weed smell and stuff in the future so that they actually did come there for that. He then just asked if there was anything I needed or wanted to know before they left, and then said goodnight.

  • @user-lx6dk4xd4r
    @user-lx6dk4xd4r Před 3 měsíci

    Police education in Norway is a bachelor degree. These 2 cops are in southern Norway and the drunk is from northern Norway and no one in Norway swears like a northerner. That is why the cops are laughing cause it is very colourful dialect and swearing in northern Norwegian dialect is like wiping your ass with silk (quote from matrix)

  • @andersrefstad8235
    @andersrefstad8235 Před 6 měsíci

    OP = Oslo Police,
    is Good !
    There was a clear difference when they vent from Politiskole to Politihøyskole ! Big different from "Mussel" to " Brain" based !
    Oslo East here.
    Edit: This clip is from Akershus. Drøbakk

  • @Valeria-Visions
    @Valeria-Visions Před 6 měsíci +1

    I am very proud over our police force here in Norway. They carry guns ect in their car, but its locked in a thingy, until they get a clear to acctually use it, and that is rare. I am so glad, and even tho there are idiots in the police, just remembert, its idiots everywheree, you cant get away from it 🤣