AMERICAN REACTS to UK Man Tasered After Attacking Police Officer (50K VOLTS MADE A GROWN MAN CRY😂)

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  • čas přidán 12. 08. 2023
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    Original Video: • Man Tasered After Atta...
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Komentáře • 82

  • @thefiestaguy8831
    @thefiestaguy8831 Před 10 měsíci +6

    I'm in the UK police service. I've been assaulted (minorly) on two ocassions, one of those was a woman who was sectioned under mental health act kicking a full cup of water over me, and then proceeding to kick me three times. Between me and my colleague we were able to take her to the ground in a controlled manner and restrain her there. I didn't make much fuss over it and nothing came of it. That shift was horrendous as we literally spent 8 hours constantly being shouted and screamed it and abused by the woman, we had to continually restrain her as she kept trying to lash out, she had to be taken to the ground on multiple ocassions.
    I've seen first hand officers be assaulted, who then don't care about it, because the assault is minor (a push), and the courts never take it seriously.
    You're a police officer - you've got mountains of paperwork to do when you go back to the station, you're already off late and a suspect pushes you. Are you going to arrest them for assaulting yourself? You might do, a lot of officers in that sitution wouldn't do.
    Why?
    Because it's at least 2 - 3 MORE hours of paperwork, the courts never really punish it unless the assault is very serious, and if the person is suffering from mental health at the time of the assault, no charges or conviction ever come from it unless it is incredibly serious. This is why "assault on officer" statistics are under-reported, and you could probably add another 30-40% of those 1,500 assaults to get the actual number.
    Where I police, in a much bigger force (Kent only has around 6,000 officers), we have around 30,000 officers, the assault statistics are of course much higher.

  • @lindamerrett6600
    @lindamerrett6600 Před 11 měsíci +30

    Our police shouldn’t have to put up with the violent behaviour .

    • @babalonkie
      @babalonkie Před 11 měsíci +4

      No one should.

    • @Rionnagan
      @Rionnagan Před 11 měsíci +1

      Nor should we have a need to have police on duty in emergency departments of hospitals on Friday and Saturday nights as fellow patients and staff come under attack. Yes, that was in a London hospital.

    • @_Professor_Oak
      @_Professor_Oak Před 10 měsíci

      @@Rionnagan really? Prison is not harsh enough for scum like that.

  • @neilb1751
    @neilb1751 Před 10 měsíci +2

    first responders first and no violence against them, they are the ones keeping us alive when needed, and should always be treated with dignity and respect

  • @diamondlil7819
    @diamondlil7819 Před 11 měsíci +12

    The county of Kent, which is south-east of London, has a population of just under 2m.
    I have three children, now adults with children of their own. My generation always saw the good sense in allowing young children to have a drink at family celebrations and occasionally when eating out. It meant that they never saw alcohol as something 'naughty' that had to be consumed behind their parents' backs nor was alcohol something which they desperately consumed in vast quantities once they reached the legal drinking age. No member of my extended family nor my children have ever been in trouble with the police and now that they are adults, they either drink in moderation or not at all. There are no heavy drinkers or alcoholics in the extended family. And so, the theory worked. Similarly, when we went to the fair when they were small, we let them waste all their pocket money on the slot machines. They soon worked out that the machine always won in the end and then they got bored; no-one has grown up to have any interest in gambling. If you bang on about the evil's of drinking and it being the devil's work, kids will think they are missing out on something exciting.

    • @gailstubbings8606
      @gailstubbings8606 Před 10 měsíci +2

      Did the same thing with my son as you did with your kids and live in the same county too lol. Xxx. He socially drinks but that is occasionally and doesn’t get obliterated when drinking. Never been involved with the police too. X

    • @chrissampson6861
      @chrissampson6861 Před 10 měsíci +2

      I got the opposite message, and went off the rails for a while - never ended up in trouble with the police, or hurt anyone, but got plenty of headaches and a lot of money went up the wall.

  • @glastonbury4304
    @glastonbury4304 Před 11 měsíci +5

    In the UK its 999 for emergency services, however you can call 911 and get through or 112 the European emergency number, this is because its a global world and you need to cater for tourists as well...

    • @josiebridle1947
      @josiebridle1947 Před 11 měsíci +1

      Not sure about 911 getting through here. Anne Sacoolas tried using 911 when she ran down Harry Dunn & couldn't she get connected. So she waited 20 minutes for a car to pass her, to flag it down. That delay contributed to Harry's death.

    • @nobbynobbynoob
      @nobbynobbynoob Před 11 měsíci +2

      General emergencies 112 or 999
      Non-emergency police 101
      NHS help line 111

    • @glastonbury4304
      @glastonbury4304 Před 11 měsíci

      @josiebridle1947 ...try it, it works, I work in hotels in London and American tourists have use 911...

  • @Poseidon6363
    @Poseidon6363 Před 11 měsíci +4

    999, Kent is a county. Never been tased but as a kid I reached underneath a cupboard to retrieve a ball and accidently stuck my finger into an exposed live 240v plug socket, felt like I had been hit with a sledge hammer.

  • @jamesreid8523
    @jamesreid8523 Před 11 měsíci +11

    You should take a look at a show called Police Code Zero: Officer Under Attack.

  • @davebirch1976
    @davebirch1976 Před 11 měsíci +8

    You'll find in the UK allowing 10/11 year old a drink with their meal makes many (not all) respect alcohol when they get to 18 and can legally drink. Instead of in the US where alcohol is treated as something evil, are people in the US still living in the days of prohibition? 😂
    In the US at 18 you can drive, get married, own a gun but not allowed to drink alcohol, and you're calling us crazy 😂

    • @davebirch1976
      @davebirch1976 Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@babalonkie my point is, Americans seem to think alcohol is more dangerous than guns or cars, i find it hard to believe that more people aged between 18 and 21 have died because of alcohol than shootings or car accidents.

    • @_Professor_Oak
      @_Professor_Oak Před 10 měsíci +2

      @@davebirch1976 I think you'll find many Americans will find anything strange (not particularly dangerous) that differs from the policies their country holds. A lot of them are close-minded and ignorant of the rest of the world.

  • @chrisaskin6144
    @chrisaskin6144 Před 11 měsíci +3

    UK population approx 65million... er sorry an inflatable has just landed on the beaches in Kent... oh and there's another one... population is now er... oh there's a lifeboat docking with another 50 on board...

  • @Spiderdan-59
    @Spiderdan-59 Před 8 měsíci +1

    I live in Kent buddy it's outskirts of London, they call Kent England's back garden 👍🇬🇧🇺🇲because its the beauty of the south of England 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿

  • @chrissampson6861
    @chrissampson6861 Před 10 měsíci +1

    On the use of force by police - I once had a really interesting conversation with a former senior officer from London's metropolitan force.
    We've had the several principles baked into UK policing from the start - the two most relevant ones here are I think:
    "The purpose of the police is to prevent crime and disorder, as an alternative to their repression by military force and severity of legal punishment."
    "To use physical force only when the exercise of persuasion, advice and warning is found to be insufficient to obtain public co-operation to an extent necessary to secure observance of law or to restore order, and to use only the minimum degree of physical force which is necessary on any particular occasion for achieving a police objective."
    The former officer I spoke to described every use of force by police, indeed every arrest as a failure - not necessarily of the police, but of the community as a whole. The reason he gave is that if a situation has got to the point where you have use physical force or take someone's liberty away, then there's an underlying problem and usually there's been multiple opportunities missed to address it earlier.
    The guy in the video - completely drunk and really angry about something - so if someone his friends/ girlfriend / bar staff had slowed him down a bit on the booze, if he had a better way of dealing with whatever upset him - therapy, someone to talk to, better emotional skills then he wouldn't have ended up doing an impression of a lighting rod.
    As a society if we see a pattern e.g. young guys getting blitzed and hitting people, we need to look at what the underlying problem is, why they feel so angry, why they feel the need to get drunk to the point they're out of control.

  • @KenUbeleveit1
    @KenUbeleveit1 Před 9 měsíci

    999 is the UK emergency number. (112 is also emergency number)
    But 911 also works here too! 😅

  • @wrigjo101
    @wrigjo101 Před 11 měsíci +2

    Polce in the UK do not have qualified immunity

  • @iallyl3877
    @iallyl3877 Před 10 měsíci +2

    our justice system is a joke, mainly because it costs the government 46k per prisoner per year so prison sentences are not handed out lightly

  • @Mark-hb9xy
    @Mark-hb9xy Před 8 měsíci

    Kent is a county, south east of London. The population of Kent is 1.6 million, according to Kent County Council.

  • @chrispotts6727
    @chrispotts6727 Před 7 měsíci

    Take into account that 'assault' includes threatening laguage

  • @kernowgirl53
    @kernowgirl53 Před 10 měsíci

    We have roughly 65 million people in the uk and extreme force is used 1600 a day on average , the 40 a day is just the county of kent.

  • @kevinhowells5810
    @kevinhowells5810 Před 11 měsíci +2

    Should also have got a stiff prison sentence minimum 5 year's for assault on any emergency workers the courts are to soft in this country

    • @thefiestaguy8831
      @thefiestaguy8831 Před 10 měsíci

      I'm in the UK police service. I've been assaultd (minorly) on two ocassions, one of those was a woman who was sectioned under mental health act kicking a full cup of water over me, and then proceeding to kick me three times. Between me and my colleague we were able to take her to the ground in a controlled manner and restrain her there. I didn't make much fuss over it and nothing came of it.
      I've seen first hand officers be assaulted, who then don't care about it, because the assault is minor (a push), and the courts never take it seriously.
      You're a police officer - you've got mountains of paperwork to do when you go back to the station, you're already off late and a suspect pushes you. Are you going to arrest them for assaulting yourself? You might do, a lot of officers in that sitution wouldn't do.
      Why?
      Because it's at least 2 - 3 MORE hours of paperwork, the courts never really punish it unless the assault is very serious, and if the person is suffering from mental health at the time of the assault, no charges or conviction ever come from it unless it is incredibly serious. This is why "assault on officer" statistics are under-reported, and you could probably add another 30-40% of those 1,500 assaults to get the actual number.
      Where I police, in a much bigger force (Kent only has around 6,000 officers), we have around 30,000 officers, the assault statistics are of course much higher.

  • @sarahealey1780
    @sarahealey1780 Před 11 měsíci +2

    We have 64 million people in the uk. I dont think our police use excessive force they use what is required for the person they are dealing with. There is no death by police officer in the uk unless something goes very very wrong as the standard officer does not have lethal weapons on them.

    • @shanadeoreilly7416
      @shanadeoreilly7416 Před 11 měsíci

      There has been death by police! Mark duggan, and another guy on the underground because he was a suspected terrorist when he wasn't he just ran from police so there has been death by police, that's why we had the riots with ppl looting shops because of mark duggan

  • @paulinejackson8105
    @paulinejackson8105 Před 11 měsíci

    Awesome Dezz, thanks for sharing this .

  • @Spiderdan-59
    @Spiderdan-59 Před 8 měsíci

    None of the emergency services should have yo put up with violence towards them, our emergency number is (999)

  • @SuperTyrannical1
    @SuperTyrannical1 Před 10 měsíci

    Never interrupt a drunk Brit just trying to get a kebab. Some Brits after a drunk night out make Mel Gibson's drunken floor kebab seem tame. 😏

  • @theresaryan2280
    @theresaryan2280 Před 9 měsíci

    It’s 999. And they attack the paramedics and also throw bricks and stones etc at the firefighters

  • @teejai5291
    @teejai5291 Před 10 měsíci

    Pro police. There are a few bad apples like in every police force, but I'm happy that the majority aren't armed, (we have a fraction of the guns here that the US have, like most countries) and happy with the force they use. UK police are usually excellent at de-escalating situations and know how to talk to people.

  • @Spiderdan-59
    @Spiderdan-59 Před 8 měsíci

    Dezz we've hardly got a police force in the UK 🇬🇧 anymore a lot have been made redundant or something like that? All police stations especially the local stations are all closed now, 2023

  • @damicatz
    @damicatz Před 11 měsíci +1

    To answer your question about the size of Kent and having 1500 officers : Police in the UK are regional, not local. The smallest police force is the City of London police which patrols the square mile that is London proper and they have 970 officers (not to be confused with the London Metropolitan Police which patrols the rest of Greater London).
    In the US, there is a tendency for every little town and county to have its own police department or sheriff's office so you will have lots of tiny police departments with only a handful of officers with no consistency in training, rules or policies. There are so many different law enforcement agencies in the US that it's impossible to get an accurate count because no one actually knows the total amount but it's somewhere between 14000-18000 different agencies. There is tons of wastefulness in having that many different agencies. The UK, by contrast, has 45 territorial police forced and a handful of other special agencies like customs, airport police, and railroad police.
    For an example of this insanity, Uvalde County, Texas (where the school shooting took place) has a population of only just over 24,000 people and yet has four (!) separte law enforcement agencies : The City of Uvalde Police, Uvalde County Constable, Uvalde County Sheriff, and the Uvalde Independant School District Police. Each department has different equipment and policies and then that's before you get to the alphabet soup of various state and federal agencies. A large part of the reason Uvalde was a disaster is that there was a dozen different law enforcement agencies, local, state, and federal; there was no clear chain of command so no one even knew even who was in charge and even the radios don't talk on the same frequencies so they can't directly communicate with each other.
    In contrast, law enforcement in the UK has national standards, procedures, training, and equipment for their respective legal jurisdiction (England and Wales, Scotland, or Northern Ireland) and they have an economy of scale and less waste by having fewer, larger policing agencies.

    • @_Professor_Oak
      @_Professor_Oak Před 10 měsíci

      There used to be police stations in every town/village, but they seem to be disappearing now. Not sure if they were considered local or part of the larger county unit, but there was definitely more "local" cops back in the day, patrolling their own specific towns. I think the move to a county-based system has definitely increased crime in more rural area's because they simply are no longer patrolled, unless an influx of crimes has happened recently in that area, you rarely see them.

    • @damicatz
      @damicatz Před 10 měsíci

      @@_Professor_Oak I'm talking about the number of different police forces, not the number of police stations or constables. Policing was made regional by the Police Act 1964. Before then, the UK very much worked like the US with a bunch of local police forces each having their own standards and rules and having very little oversight. Multiple corruption scandals caused parliament to pass that act.
      The current situation with a reduction in rural policing and rise in crime is a result of Tory budget cuts both to the police forces themselves and to early intervention programs designed to prevent youth from getting into trouble.

  • @johnchristmas7522
    @johnchristmas7522 Před 10 měsíci

    The reason this guy didn't go to prison, is because like every other service, the prison service is massivefy underfunded, so no new prisons and very few prison officers. So like everywhere else, the public have to put up with a lawless society.

  • @eileentaylor1691
    @eileentaylor1691 Před 10 měsíci

    its the fashion

  • @ninamoores
    @ninamoores Před 10 měsíci

    We all drink since we were 10/11 years old!!! Where did you hear that Dezz? I’m sure there are kids that do….but it’s not common I promise you.

  • @jaymielee1153
    @jaymielee1153 Před 10 měsíci

    You should watch a documentary on IRA in Ireland

  • @-TomH
    @-TomH Před 11 měsíci

    I have been tased on a night out acting stupid when I was younger. It's not a nice experience you hit the floor like you have no legs and shake lol.

  • @anthonyi7284
    @anthonyi7284 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Skinny jeans = likely a wrong'un. It should have been obvious at that point

    • @DezzReacts
      @DezzReacts  Před 11 měsíci +1

      Nothing wrong with skinny jeans but that was air tight vacuum sealed 😂

  • @GillsTV
    @GillsTV Před 10 měsíci

    im from near maidstone

  • @jpw6893
    @jpw6893 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Men's jeans can be a tight fit but at least they aren't down our arse

    • @DezzReacts
      @DezzReacts  Před 11 měsíci +2

      I think I’d rather Rock baggy pants than that dudes yoga pants 😂

    • @_Professor_Oak
      @_Professor_Oak Před 10 měsíci

      😂The only people that should be wearing jeans that skinny are female tik-tok influencers and time-travelling emo's from the mid-2000's. The whole rips in your jeans thing is a resurfaced trend from the 90's, except they were baggy not skinny back then.

  • @jonathangoll2918
    @jonathangoll2918 Před 11 měsíci

    I have no problem with the police being pretty rough with people, but with two provisos. One is that death or longterm injury is always serious. The second is about prejudice.
    There has long been a lot of quiet racism in this country, although I think it's on the wane. All of us - from whatever community - tend to have unconscious prejudices, and police recruits will tend to have some.
    The result has been that the black community in particular has felt unfairly singled out for being stopped in the street, etc. An extraordinary example was an Anglican Bishop who was stopped for driving a decent car! ( He was John Sentamu, then Bishop of Stepney; he was later Archbishop of York.)
    I believe all of us can benefit from 'unconscious racism' training. I remember I was teaching an evening maths class, and a black lad didn't seem to paying that much attention. I assumed he was pissed off and not very bright. It turned out that he had attended the course, but had had to drop out, and was in fact very capable! Lesson for me.

  • @COD576
    @COD576 Před 11 měsíci

    I’m from Maidstone daz

  • @BC_Joshie
    @BC_Joshie Před 11 měsíci +4

    Generally in the UK we think our police are too soft

  • @perry-du5en
    @perry-du5en Před 10 měsíci

    I am from maidstone

  • @chrisaskin6144
    @chrisaskin6144 Před 11 měsíci

    Whilst I admit that there are occasionally some bad apples amongst the police, on the whole they are decent people doing a very difficult job dealing with the "wastes of space" of society and getting zero respect in the process. I certainly couldn't do it. Having said all that, the police are essentially a confrontational organisation when it comes to having to deal with a person or persons openly breaking the law. Criminals will understandably very often quickly resort to resisting arrest and violence, sometimes extreme violence to get away, and I don't condone that behaviour at all. But it provides an insight as to why police officers often get injured in the course of doing their job. There's absolutely no excuse for people physically targeting Paramedics/Ambulance Technicians and Firefighters. On the subject of Tasers, a few years ago not long after their introduction into service with the police, an elderly man with a white stick was making his way along the pavement when he was challenged and tasered. When questioned, the policeman responsible said he thought the white stick was a samurai sword... you couldn't make it up.

  • @lisavenor236
    @lisavenor236 Před 10 měsíci

    999 is the number

  • @eileentaylor1691
    @eileentaylor1691 Před 10 měsíci

    kent is a county,

  • @carllawrenczuk9173
    @carllawrenczuk9173 Před 11 měsíci

    Yea bro some a these lads denims look like lycra shorts. They're gonna av problems reproducing later in life haha. My bro 600,000V in my upper buttock drive stun. I pogo sticked across my bedroom. 😂👌🏻👊🏻

  • @Giveme100ksubs
    @Giveme100ksubs Před 11 měsíci

    I need the video link pls

  • @suerogerts4330
    @suerogerts4330 Před 11 měsíci +2

    You guys start drinking when your 10/11 years old are you serious who on earth have you been talking to wow that's so not true blimey I'm non plussed at that statement

    • @warailawildrunner5300
      @warailawildrunner5300 Před 11 měsíci +2

      What it means is that a 10 year old is allowed to have A drink at home, maybe on festive occasions like Christmas with something like bucks fizz (orange juice with about enough alcohol to make it seem 'cool' but in reality less than 5%... or shandy which is even less). It is legal for a child to have a drink with a meal in public... however the legal age to buy and consume proper alcohol is 18.

    • @davebirch1976
      @davebirch1976 Před 11 měsíci +1

      ​​​​@@warailawildrunner5300I think these days it's mainly in proper restaurants where this rule still applies as they're having a proper sit down meal, I know the big pub groups don't allow it, probably due to people abusing the rule in the past. I've worked in the catering industry all my life, and when I first started in the 90s there was a bit leeway with allowing children one drink with a meal, but they've definitely tightened up the rules now. If I remember rightly some places may allow it for 16/17 years old if they're having a meal but they aren't allowed to buy it themselves, and I believe its also at the managers discretion.

    • @alisonrandall3039
      @alisonrandall3039 Před 11 měsíci

      I had my first alcoholic drink when I as about four. My dad used to brew wine.

  • @stevealsop83
    @stevealsop83 Před 11 měsíci +3

    What? We don't let people drink at 10yo? That's just not what happens in this country, I'm not saying it never happens but ffs to imply it's normal is ridiculous. Usually really enjoy your stuff but that's just daft lad.

    • @BC_Joshie
      @BC_Joshie Před 11 měsíci

      its legal for a young kid to have a pint with his meal in the UK, is what he means... Not that 10 year olds are going out on the piss...

    • @_Professor_Oak
      @_Professor_Oak Před 10 měsíci

      The most we did was I was given a sip of beer when I was about 9 and the taste was enough to put me off the idea until about 15 😂😂

    • @_Professor_Oak
      @_Professor_Oak Před 10 měsíci

      @@BC_Joshie a pint? Surely not. A pint would floor a 10 year old. I also think the legal age for that is 16, not 10.

  • @elunedlaine8661
    @elunedlaine8661 Před 11 měsíci

    So glad you think this is funny . . .

    • @DezzReacts
      @DezzReacts  Před 11 měsíci

      Play stupid games, win stupid prizes. It’s hilarious

  • @rHamUK
    @rHamUK Před 11 měsíci

    Every celeb male wears tight jeans, its rock that started it, its called fashion mate. Those 2 cops from 1st one arent dating btw. Drink age is 18. 16 if youre supervised by an over 18

  • @jew-wheelsvanderburg
    @jew-wheelsvanderburg Před 10 měsíci

    999