Edward
Bartender
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Mounted police are use for downtown patrol on busy streets, as well as for large outdoor gatherings, though probably not for "riot control", but their primary use is for search and rescue types of activities. Horses seem to be the right tool for that job. In fact, there's a private search and rescue operation called Texas Equusearch, which is quite renown for their capabilities on horseback.
I've never been to Texas, but I can well imagine there's a lot of the terrain there that a horse can pass much more easily than a car... nature can still best us in many respects.
Crazy question, but aside from transport, do the horse have any other advantage - e.g. while they'd be no replacement for a dog, can they pick up a scent?
Yeah, the Rangers aren't really a "uniform", per se. And believe it or not, it's not always stifling hot in Texas. Right now, as a matter of fact, is a beautiful time of year. And we have our cold as well. But in general, it's a warm weather climate, so dress standards tend to reflect that.
Eh, well, it might not be stifling hot to you, but for me anything above 21C is serious heat...
The Sam Browne belt strap is used to bear the weight of the pistol, to keep it up from sagging. We use a breakaway system so that if someone grabs the strap it will simply just disconnect and not be used to drag the wearer. Same with the clip on tie.
Interesting, I've not seen one of those yet. If I remember rightly, the police in Northern Ireland when I still lived there didn't use a Sam Browne, and, of course, here in London they're not armed, so it's a development I've missed. Definitely a logical development, though.
To the point above about Christians not being required to wear a cross I say this. Not every Jew has a beard or a yarmulke,
True, but for a Hassidic Jew, or for some more mainstream but still traditional sects, it's an obligation.
not every Asian dress's like a Buddhist monk.
Mn.... but "Asian" isn't a religion, and Buddhists in general don't have the dress rules that the job of being a monk carry....
In the end it is a personal preference on how far you choose to take your religion. These are the rules, do you want the job or not. And perhaps I would be offended being confronted by a female officer in a burka with all or part of her face covered. So maybe we just need to remove all religion from government and it's workers and let them be free to practice at home.
Could be done, though the problem then would be the inevitable exclusion of all but those of us whose religious belief places no dresscode requirements on us, which would be rather to the detriment of an effective police force. It's a bit of a minefield, I'm sure, but I'm always glad when they take reasonable steps to accomodate. [huh]
Police are just a lightning rod no matter what continent you type from. Most hate them, some love them and respect them.
Is that how it seems on the inside? I've never seen widespread hatred of the police here in England (the riot squad might be another matter). There was a lot of it about back in Northern Ireland, from both tribes, but that's symptomatic of a much deeper cultural malaise.
The Shanghai Municipal Police ("SMP") operated within the confines of the Shanghai International Settlement, from the 1850s until the 1940s, when the Settlement was disbanded during WWII. They were originally modelled after the British Metropolitan Police ("Scotland Yard").
The SMP had one of the hardest jobs in policing back in the old days. From its earliest days, the Settlement was a hotbed of vice, crime and violence. Drug-smuggling, prostitution, racial violence, gang-violence, shootings, stabbings, underworld wars kidnappings and other hardcore crimes were VERY common in Shanghai.
Shanghai was an open port at the time. One of five 'Treaty Ports'. As people living in Shanghai were granted immunity from prosecution by Chinese officials, the only 'law' that existed within the Settlement was the SMP, or the law that you carried in your pocket. As you can imagine, this made crime EXTREMELY common. I'm not surprised at all that the police carried bulletproof/stabproof vests with them as part of their uniform.
It's a fascinating period of China's history, albeit one I can't imagine was especially pleasant to live through, except perhaps for the very rich.