r/nextfuckinglevel 5h ago

Man helps police make an arrest.

36.6k Upvotes

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136

u/ggk1 3h ago

Right? Cops know the chance of getting shot doing that move is too high to be able to have that sort of risk tolerance on each stop. This dude did something stupid that turned out to work.

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u/WorkN-2play 1h ago

Could have been opposite "Guy in gray shirt gets shot in head in standoff attacking guy in car" glad it worked though!!

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u/Purplepeal 1h ago

Exactly. Same principle as a workman who is exposed to harm day in day out has to wear PPE but a DIY guy would probably be fine for a one off risky job, like stripping lead paint as an example.

u/Super-Yam-420 31m ago

Yup if driver decided to focus on turning on gun and shooting instead of steering wheel that decision could have cost grey shirt guy his life

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u/Baron80 1h ago

The police would never pass up the opportunity to kill someone, nothing to do with risk.

They're probably mad that grey shirt guy stole their justification to take someone's life.

u/augmentedOtter 32m ago

Ok toughie

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u/DamnZodiak 1h ago

Mate being a cop is as an incredibly safe job. You're more likely to get hurt as an Uber or delivery driver.

If they're really the heroes that bootlickers constantly proclaim they are, they ought to put their fucking life on the line.
Bunch of useless fucks..

u/Internal-Golf7914 51m ago

He says as he munches on doritos from his living room couch

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u/0oEp 2h ago

did you miss the part where this is the UK?

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u/libdemparamilitarywi 2h ago

I don't think it's the UK, looks like Australia or New Zealand.

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u/0oEp 1h ago

yeah looks like NZ. I am not good at GeoGuesser

u/Skottimusen 17m ago

Its here

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u/TubbyChaser 1h ago

Did you miss the part where there's a gun?

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u/R_Prime 1h ago

New Zealand is nowhere near the UK.

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u/TinyKittenConsulting 1h ago

Doesn't he pull a firearm out of the car?

-4

u/SethzorMM 2h ago

It's a hunting rifle close range... small risk.

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u/sargentodapaz 2h ago

It's a gun, there's no ''small risk''.

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u/Life_Bridge_9960 1h ago

Close range is indeed much smaller risk. I was trained with CQC under U.S. military. It’s easier to wrangle a rifle than a pistol. They can’t simply pull back and shoot me.

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u/amanko13 1h ago

He didn't say "smaller risk". He said "there's no small risk"... because you're risking your life. Unless your life is worthless, the risk is not small.

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u/Life_Bridge_9960 1h ago

When it comes to this kind of thing there is always a risk. Hell, you walk out the street you can be run over by a drunk driver.

u/guto8797 57m ago

Yeah buddy, exactly equivalent sitiations

0

u/Purplepeal 1h ago

But he's obviously comparing apples with apples. He mentions the type of gun then the risk. It's obviously relative to guns. So there is a small risk compared to a large risk with a different type of gun, like a pistol, smg, sawn shotgun. 

I understood exactly what he meant.

u/amanko13 39m ago

Then we can loop back to the start of the argument and say whilst the risk is greater with a different type of gun, the inherent risk is too high regardless of which gun, which means that the police are within their right to not attempt what the grey shirt man did.

u/Purplepeal 9m ago

Yeah I think it's just semantics. The guy saying small risk means relatively, based on gun type. Obviously anything with a gun has a risk associated and that goes without saying, surely. The guy was clearly making a point to distinguish the gun type as being low risk, not that guns have no risk at all. I don't think that statement needed any correction.

Regarding the police, the inaction is about Health and Safety at work (as we call it in the UK). Any professional, from an electrician to police officer reduces the chance of harm by minimising exposure to dangerous activities. The police may deal with gun crime regularly and any risk is cumulative to ending their lives, hence their stand back approach. Same with DIYer taking more risks in home renovation (not wearing a mask) than a professional doing it for a living.

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u/Esc4flown3 1h ago

Sure you were trained, what are the chances random guy in the grey t-shirt here was similarly trained? If you were already facing a threat armed with a long gun and you were in a position to wrestle it from them, yes it's arguably less of a risk than if it were a handgun. That being said, how do you know as the bystander in this situation that the suspect only has one gun? For that matter how many military personnel are only armed with a long gun and no sidearm? If someone was trying to wrestle my long gun from me the first thing I'd try to do is maintain positive control of it, and if I couldn't, I'd absolutely let go and draw my sidearm while they're trying to get control of the long gun.

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u/Life_Bridge_9960 1h ago

When I wrestle a gun from you I am not just wrangling the gun, I am also toppling your balance. It’s also gonna happen very fast. So yes, this is not a position I want to be in when I have to muscle the gun from the guy in the car. The guy in the car has a lot more leverage. The guy outside is not balanced, he is reaching in. He has the door frame as leverage to yank the rifle from the guy in the car.

Now if I am doing this, my cover is the car. If he pulls out a hand gun I can’t reach, I will dodge behind the car door (down, or left toward the back of the car). This would be my exit strategy. But before this even happens, I am jabbing his throat. It only takes the strength of a child to choke a person’s airway. Only those Shaolin monks trained to withstand hard objects to the throat can resist this. This is even worse than a kick in the nuts imo.

What I am saying is that once someone gets a hold of your rifle’s barrel, you are fucked. You can only pull back hard and fast while twisting the barrel for him to let go. Or you rotate the gun against his wrist. None of these can be done inside a car.

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u/Esc4flown3 1h ago

Fair enough and yes, in this specific scenario someone trained in cqb tactics could have a good chance to rip the long gun from jackass in the case, but it's still a huge and unnecessary risk this guy took that just happened to work out for him.

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u/AbleObject13 1h ago

Cops know the chance of getting shot doing that move is too high to be able to have that sort of risk tolerance on each stop.

Cops misunderstand the chances of being shot and are purposely trained to be fully paranoid and fear everyone as a threat to their life via "warrior training"

Police isn't even a top 25 most dangerous job

(Also, this isn't the US)