A Can of Man
Je suis aware
Guys I just got back from the protests at City Hall in Seoul. I wasn't protesting, rather just taking a look, taking photos and video of the event.
It's mob rule against a democratically elected government.
I had a face off with a protestor so I have a bit of an adrenaline rush right now. The guy was verbally abusing the riot police so I told him to stop doing it because the cops can't go home even if they want to. The protestor (a real old guy) started getting pissed off at me for standing up against an older person and started saying all sort of stupid stuff.
"Were you a riot policeman? Hey, you've seen me, right?"
Etc etc. Said all kinds of foul sh*t but I just didn't give a damn. He started calling his friends and since my plan for the day didn't involve crippling old people, I disappeared into the crowd when he and his friend turned their back on me.
Yeah, so they claim they have a right to be there? Well what about my right to be there? I guess it's like how if their people get elected, it's democracy but if anyone else gets elected, it's suddenly dictatorship. Great.
I just love this country.
btw: BBC ran the story too but their video clips did not really reflect what was going on. Violence was at an absolute minimum unlike some video clips they chose, although the reporter did say that it wasn't violent and it looked more like a "sit it out" fest. Overall, if you were listening, not a bad piece of reporting. If you were just watching the clips, it was inaccurate.
It's mob rule against a democratically elected government.
I had a face off with a protestor so I have a bit of an adrenaline rush right now. The guy was verbally abusing the riot police so I told him to stop doing it because the cops can't go home even if they want to. The protestor (a real old guy) started getting pissed off at me for standing up against an older person and started saying all sort of stupid stuff.
"Were you a riot policeman? Hey, you've seen me, right?"
Etc etc. Said all kinds of foul sh*t but I just didn't give a damn. He started calling his friends and since my plan for the day didn't involve crippling old people, I disappeared into the crowd when he and his friend turned their back on me.
Yeah, so they claim they have a right to be there? Well what about my right to be there? I guess it's like how if their people get elected, it's democracy but if anyone else gets elected, it's suddenly dictatorship. Great.
I just love this country.
btw: BBC ran the story too but their video clips did not really reflect what was going on. Violence was at an absolute minimum unlike some video clips they chose, although the reporter did say that it wasn't violent and it looked more like a "sit it out" fest. Overall, if you were listening, not a bad piece of reporting. If you were just watching the clips, it was inaccurate.
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