PPEcel
cope and seethe
★★★★★
- Joined
- Oct 1, 2018
- Posts
- 29,087
What I find fascinating about CuckTears is despite their incessant politicking and virtue-signalling, they have an unusually shallow understanding of administrative law and international organizations. You'd think that a group of ostensibly intelligent know-it-alls who post links to the FBI tipline on every other thread would know better, but I guess not.
View: https://www.reddit.com/r/IncelTear/comments/hr4qal/dont_know_what_to_say/fy28aay?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web2x
View: https://www.reddit.com/r/IncelTear/comments/hjsgec/on_the_rate_my_next_r_victim_situation/fwq298f?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web2x
View: https://www.reddit.com/r/IncelTear/comments/hqxdrw/toxic_antirape_people_part13/fy1r313?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web2x
View: https://www.reddit.com/r/IncelTear/comments/glgp4d/incels_discuss_whether_or_not_to_murder_their/fqy1gka?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web2x
View: https://www.reddit.com/r/IncelTear/comments/hri2rs/according_to_that_one_fbi_has_an_eye_on_any_man/fy4hfy7?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web2x
There are more, but you get the drift.
Interpol is in reality NOT a law enforcement agency. Its employees have no powers of arrest and have very little in the way of investigative powers. Interpol itself cannot request nor issue search warrants. If they did, it'd be highly concerning, considering that authoritarian Interpol members (e.g. Russia, Turkey, China) occasionally abuse Interpol's system to harass political dissidents and refugees based on trumped-up charges.
Interpol mainly provides administrative assistance and to the police agencies of their member states. That is it.
How Interpol works in the mind of a Redditcuck:
A Brazilian soycuck gets triggered after he reads a rape joke on the interwebz that he does not like. He submits a tip report to Interpol. Interpol magically compels an American internet service provider to release information on the author, who is found to be located in Lithuania. A team of armed agents flies from Interpol's headquarters in Lyon on an unmarked jet and touches down in Vilnius on a private airfield, where they board an unmarked van. They drive to the author's residence, kick in his door, and summarily execute him.
How Interpol works, in reality:
Local detectives in Germany are investigating the murder of a femoid. An American exchange student becomes a person of interest but they find out that he has since returned to his hometown in, say, New York. The local detectives then request assistance from the Bundeskriminalamt, Germany's federal law enforcement agency, who asks for the issuance of a blue notice. The notice is received by Interpol's office in Washington, the U.S. National Central Bureau, which is co-managed by the Department of Justice and the Department of Homeland Security. The NCB transmits the request to the FBI's field office in NY, who question the student. Later, a German detective decides to fly to the U.S. to interview the student in person; given language and bureaucratic differences, Interpol's D.C. office helps the Bundeskriminalamt get in contact with USCIS and CBP to smooth out travel and entry arrangements, and to notify the U.S. Department of State of the trip, as is customary. When the German detective wants a copy of the student's smartphone location data from Google, he has to convince his U.S. colleagues in the FBI to make the request, who then has to obtain a warrant signed by an American federal judge.
See? Boring stuff. You soycucks watch too many TV shows.
View: https://www.reddit.com/r/IncelTear/comments/hr4qal/dont_know_what_to_say/fy28aay?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web2x
View: https://www.reddit.com/r/IncelTear/comments/hjsgec/on_the_rate_my_next_r_victim_situation/fwq298f?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web2x
View: https://www.reddit.com/r/IncelTear/comments/hqxdrw/toxic_antirape_people_part13/fy1r313?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web2x
View: https://www.reddit.com/r/IncelTear/comments/glgp4d/incels_discuss_whether_or_not_to_murder_their/fqy1gka?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web2x
View: https://www.reddit.com/r/IncelTear/comments/hri2rs/according_to_that_one_fbi_has_an_eye_on_any_man/fy4hfy7?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web2x
There are more, but you get the drift.
Interpol is in reality NOT a law enforcement agency. Its employees have no powers of arrest and have very little in the way of investigative powers. Interpol itself cannot request nor issue search warrants. If they did, it'd be highly concerning, considering that authoritarian Interpol members (e.g. Russia, Turkey, China) occasionally abuse Interpol's system to harass political dissidents and refugees based on trumped-up charges.
Interpol mainly provides administrative assistance and to the police agencies of their member states. That is it.
How Interpol works in the mind of a Redditcuck:
A Brazilian soycuck gets triggered after he reads a rape joke on the interwebz that he does not like. He submits a tip report to Interpol. Interpol magically compels an American internet service provider to release information on the author, who is found to be located in Lithuania. A team of armed agents flies from Interpol's headquarters in Lyon on an unmarked jet and touches down in Vilnius on a private airfield, where they board an unmarked van. They drive to the author's residence, kick in his door, and summarily execute him.
How Interpol works, in reality:
Local detectives in Germany are investigating the murder of a femoid. An American exchange student becomes a person of interest but they find out that he has since returned to his hometown in, say, New York. The local detectives then request assistance from the Bundeskriminalamt, Germany's federal law enforcement agency, who asks for the issuance of a blue notice. The notice is received by Interpol's office in Washington, the U.S. National Central Bureau, which is co-managed by the Department of Justice and the Department of Homeland Security. The NCB transmits the request to the FBI's field office in NY, who question the student. Later, a German detective decides to fly to the U.S. to interview the student in person; given language and bureaucratic differences, Interpol's D.C. office helps the Bundeskriminalamt get in contact with USCIS and CBP to smooth out travel and entry arrangements, and to notify the U.S. Department of State of the trip, as is customary. When the German detective wants a copy of the student's smartphone location data from Google, he has to convince his U.S. colleagues in the FBI to make the request, who then has to obtain a warrant signed by an American federal judge.
See? Boring stuff. You soycucks watch too many TV shows.
Last edited: