The CCP aren’t the only ones that deceive their population, where all you have to do is look closer to home, i.e. here in this colony we call Australia.
Australia’s media is not unbiased, where to put it quite simply they are the government’s lap dog/biatch/corporate whores, doing whatever it takes to put the herd into a zombie state of government/corporate subservience for whatever agenda is on the table irrespective of the truth.
The general population is treated on the ‘idiot box’ to a propaganda series called Highway Patrol which currently airs on Channel 7 on Wednesday’s from 7:30pm.
In this case we pay attention to a section from Season 9 Episode 6 called Drunk Off Roading:
From the 6m21s and 16m50s marks, a road pirate or cop (Senior Constable Damien O’Brien) as they are commonly referred to stops a driver, where the following conversation occurs:
O’Brien: How you doin’ mate, ah have you got your driver’s licence there?
Driver: Ah, can I ask what for?
O’Brien: Ah, ‘cause you’re driving a car, so you’re required to produce your licence.
You’re required to produce a licence when .... intercepted by police.
“This man reckons he knows the law better than senior constable O’Brien.” chimes in the narrator.
O’Brien: So far you failed to produce your licence... name and address... that’s two offences.
Putting the driver’s other banter aside, O’Brien also mentions that the driver must follow the Road Safety Act, but (deliberately?) FAILS to mention that a driver does NOT have to have a licence in his/her possession if the driver is 26 years of age or over.
O’Brien has given the driver false/misleading information using the fear of incarceration on the driver, irrespective of the other aspects of law.
You are not required at law to answer any questions by a police officer, when driving or in charge of a vehicle, other than providing your name and address.
In Victoria, you are not required to carry a driver licence if you are over 26 years of age.
O’Brien also failed to notify the driver that he is not required to answer any questions, but if he does that information may be used in a court of law, you know your 'Miranda Rights'.
In any event you cannot trust the police, even with a ‘simple’ roadside stop.
Would you trust O'Brien in a so called court of law, since he has shown on national television that he does not know the very Road Safety Act he is quoting?
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