Security Hell: InSecurity Reveals The Worst Things He's Been Called on the Job
I'm here to share some of the worst things I've been called. I've been called spit on and called a fascist, pig, thug, tool, and asshole. They aren't the tops
The first one, is a little more of a peeve of mine, but somehow it feels worse when I hear it. People love to tell their kids that I am a "police officer," and will arrest the kid for simple behavioral issues that the parents should be handling. That just pisses me off the most.
The second one was more of an implication, but it still hurt the worst. I was dispatched to the report of an unaccompanied kid. I get eye level and start talking to the kid.
That's when Mommy Dearest arrives and flips out. She starts off with, "Who are you and how do I know you aren't a child molester!?"
When I'm in full uniform, company ID badge and all, talking to the kid left behind on a bench. That one hit like a gut punch.
Well, those are my two least favorites. Peace.
--InSecurity
Sounds like a security guard uniform would be a great disguise for an actual child molester.
Perhaps the correct answer would be "You don't. That's why you should never leave your child alone in a shopping mall."
Posted by: plus.google.com/108073606865059711666 | Sunday, May 21, 2017 at 12:07 AM
Disturbing psychology and lack of insight here. Why is it that every man in public is suspected as either Schrödinger's rapist or pedophile, yet statistics tell us that the vast majority of sexual abuse is perpetrated by people the victim knows and trusts, often family.
It's pretty sad that she immediately attacks someone trying to help her child. As my friend likes to say, "No good deed goes unpunished."
Posted by: Sgtpsycho | Monday, May 22, 2017 at 01:24 AM
Blame the rapists that dress up like police officers and go around raping women. I had the displeasure of having one in my shop shortly before he was finally arrested. I'll never be able to trust another badge wielder in my life and I wasn't even one of the people he hurt.
Posted by: Lil_Tiger42 | Monday, May 22, 2017 at 11:15 AM
Wow, Lil. Sorry you experienced that. I always teach my son to seek out police men if he is ever lost or in trouble, rather than instill fear of them in him. As an unintended consequence, we now have to stop and ask EVERY officer who is not obviously doing something, like investigating or at a crime or accident scene, if they have a police sticker. "Daddy, can we ask them if they have any police stickers?" "No, son. They're here working right now" When they were at my complex for a DV call
Posted by: TenebrisVenator | Monday, May 22, 2017 at 04:07 PM