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ALL OUT Wild Brawl Breaks Out At A Club On 6th Street In Austin, Texas!

What's the point of having cops?

By Skyler SaundersPublished about 9 hours ago 3 min read

A few miles from the campus of University of Texas, Austin, a major rumble broke out with young people throwing blows. Police disrupted the fighting but what was so interesting was how the fight ended.

With whistles and wits, the police officers rounded up two out of the dozen or so scrappers. But they did it with words. with physical contact and an authoritative voice, each one of the three responders rounded up the miscreants and arrested them.

As any WorldStar video replete with fisticuffs can show, there are a lot of pants being pulled up and wild, uncontrolled punches. Once the cops arrive, however, the participants scatter like roaches in the kitchen when the light illuminates.

This is the function of the government that is so crucial. It’s not the most central part, but it retains an air of sophistication and import nevertheless. Cops have to deal with these kinds of actions every day. That’s why it’s so important for police officers to be mentally and physically fit in their roles.

This Austin scene of the initiation of physical force is just another reminder of how necessary policework actually is.

For the officers to make everyone disperse, fearful of being brought up on charges, they instituted force to match the start of force. In their efforts, they could only do minimal arrests as they were outnumbered. But no shots were fired. Nobody got slashed or stabbed. It was just a melee that could have been much worse had the cops not shown up to the scene.

Their professionalism and will to see that justice be carried out is a welcoming sign of what should happen in these precarious situations. It is often said “defund the police!” Oh, really. Defund the people who defend individual rights and property? That’s who we should defund? Not the cartels and the gangs?

Police officers get a bad rap and some of them should, but the vast majority of them are just trying to do their job and come home. In all of the ways that police are painted as the criminal, people ought to realize they’re the ones that protect. Let’s just say all police officers shrugged. Let’s say they all went on strike and went to a valley somewhere in Ouray, Colorado. What happens then? Your imagination validates the reality of what would transpire.

Austin, Texas is one of the most advanced and forward thinking places on the planet. For these ruffians to brawl in a site that offers so much intellectuality is an affront to all people, within the city and without its borders.

The thinking brains behind some of the most revolutionary ideas call Austin home. They constitute a portion of the city which would like to see these animals on two legs prosecuted for their crimes. It is the way in which these men and women of the mind must safeguard their most valuable possessions against scum that choose fists over thought.

To consider the idea of them being awful actors in a space where they could flourish and use their brains instead of brawn is a considerable task. It takes willpower and knowhow to properly showcase these different ideals. What could be a simple plan might turn into a complicated mess of bureaucracy and law infringements.

The difference between the cops and the thugs and savages and brutes is the code. The police code is to preserve order, the rest want to disrupt and engage in bestial acts that would make gorillas blush.

In all, police are needed and ought to be respected for not the badge, but the mind behind it.

Essay

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Skyler Saunders

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