1. Lying to get something for free is wrong. No way around that. If you're dressing up for fun, I see no problem. The moment you're doing it as an exploit though, you deserve to get arrested. 2. Saying the that servicemen aren't deserving of a bit of nice treatment once in a while is really fucking rude. I'd like to direct your attention to homeless veterans and people who were actually injured/wounded in the line of duty, or anyone who was actually deployed out to the front line.
Quote from: Mad Max on November 19, 2014, 12:36:55 AMQuote from: Rocketman287 on November 19, 2014, 12:35:10 AMQuote from: Mad Max on November 19, 2014, 12:30:47 AMQuote from: Rocketman287 on November 19, 2014, 12:27:15 AMQuote from: Mad Max on November 19, 2014, 12:24:55 AMQuote from: Rocketman287 on November 18, 2014, 10:06:12 PMQuote from: Mad Max on November 18, 2014, 10:02:57 PMWearing a military uniform in public is a felony? I know impersonating a police officer is, but I don't see the harm in dressing as a military member.Dick move, absolutely. But I don't think it needs to be a felony.Impersonating an officer in uniform is worse. But its only illegal if you are wearing insignias or trying to use that status to get on a base or something like that.In this case, he got free food.Better lock him up for getting free food under false pretenses. We'd better lock up all those "homeless" and "disabled" people who beg for money, then hop into their car at the end of the day and drive home, too.You just sound negative all the time.Because this is stupid shit to get arrested for. He didn't infringe upon anyone's rights or well-being. He didn't steal anything. He didn't hurt anyone. I don't see why it's a problem.So you would be ok with someone ripping you off for free food when they didn't need the money?You thought you did a good deed, and it turns out that it was a ruse? This is like being a con man.Except the people who bought him food did it under their own power, presumably with no pressure from faux-military dude. If having someone buy you a cheeseburger without you saying anything to them is a con...I don't even know...He deserved being arrested, he was impersonating a serviceman so people would pay for his food. You know how con men like to work, right? Trapping people and getting them to pay for something themselves. Doesn't matter if they paid its still a con.
Quote from: Rocketman287 on November 19, 2014, 12:35:10 AMQuote from: Mad Max on November 19, 2014, 12:30:47 AMQuote from: Rocketman287 on November 19, 2014, 12:27:15 AMQuote from: Mad Max on November 19, 2014, 12:24:55 AMQuote from: Rocketman287 on November 18, 2014, 10:06:12 PMQuote from: Mad Max on November 18, 2014, 10:02:57 PMWearing a military uniform in public is a felony? I know impersonating a police officer is, but I don't see the harm in dressing as a military member.Dick move, absolutely. But I don't think it needs to be a felony.Impersonating an officer in uniform is worse. But its only illegal if you are wearing insignias or trying to use that status to get on a base or something like that.In this case, he got free food.Better lock him up for getting free food under false pretenses. We'd better lock up all those "homeless" and "disabled" people who beg for money, then hop into their car at the end of the day and drive home, too.You just sound negative all the time.Because this is stupid shit to get arrested for. He didn't infringe upon anyone's rights or well-being. He didn't steal anything. He didn't hurt anyone. I don't see why it's a problem.So you would be ok with someone ripping you off for free food when they didn't need the money?You thought you did a good deed, and it turns out that it was a ruse? This is like being a con man.Except the people who bought him food did it under their own power, presumably with no pressure from faux-military dude. If having someone buy you a cheeseburger without you saying anything to them is a con...I don't even know...
Quote from: Mad Max on November 19, 2014, 12:30:47 AMQuote from: Rocketman287 on November 19, 2014, 12:27:15 AMQuote from: Mad Max on November 19, 2014, 12:24:55 AMQuote from: Rocketman287 on November 18, 2014, 10:06:12 PMQuote from: Mad Max on November 18, 2014, 10:02:57 PMWearing a military uniform in public is a felony? I know impersonating a police officer is, but I don't see the harm in dressing as a military member.Dick move, absolutely. But I don't think it needs to be a felony.Impersonating an officer in uniform is worse. But its only illegal if you are wearing insignias or trying to use that status to get on a base or something like that.In this case, he got free food.Better lock him up for getting free food under false pretenses. We'd better lock up all those "homeless" and "disabled" people who beg for money, then hop into their car at the end of the day and drive home, too.You just sound negative all the time.Because this is stupid shit to get arrested for. He didn't infringe upon anyone's rights or well-being. He didn't steal anything. He didn't hurt anyone. I don't see why it's a problem.So you would be ok with someone ripping you off for free food when they didn't need the money?You thought you did a good deed, and it turns out that it was a ruse? This is like being a con man.
Quote from: Rocketman287 on November 19, 2014, 12:27:15 AMQuote from: Mad Max on November 19, 2014, 12:24:55 AMQuote from: Rocketman287 on November 18, 2014, 10:06:12 PMQuote from: Mad Max on November 18, 2014, 10:02:57 PMWearing a military uniform in public is a felony? I know impersonating a police officer is, but I don't see the harm in dressing as a military member.Dick move, absolutely. But I don't think it needs to be a felony.Impersonating an officer in uniform is worse. But its only illegal if you are wearing insignias or trying to use that status to get on a base or something like that.In this case, he got free food.Better lock him up for getting free food under false pretenses. We'd better lock up all those "homeless" and "disabled" people who beg for money, then hop into their car at the end of the day and drive home, too.You just sound negative all the time.Because this is stupid shit to get arrested for. He didn't infringe upon anyone's rights or well-being. He didn't steal anything. He didn't hurt anyone. I don't see why it's a problem.
Quote from: Mad Max on November 19, 2014, 12:24:55 AMQuote from: Rocketman287 on November 18, 2014, 10:06:12 PMQuote from: Mad Max on November 18, 2014, 10:02:57 PMWearing a military uniform in public is a felony? I know impersonating a police officer is, but I don't see the harm in dressing as a military member.Dick move, absolutely. But I don't think it needs to be a felony.Impersonating an officer in uniform is worse. But its only illegal if you are wearing insignias or trying to use that status to get on a base or something like that.In this case, he got free food.Better lock him up for getting free food under false pretenses. We'd better lock up all those "homeless" and "disabled" people who beg for money, then hop into their car at the end of the day and drive home, too.You just sound negative all the time.
Quote from: Rocketman287 on November 18, 2014, 10:06:12 PMQuote from: Mad Max on November 18, 2014, 10:02:57 PMWearing a military uniform in public is a felony? I know impersonating a police officer is, but I don't see the harm in dressing as a military member.Dick move, absolutely. But I don't think it needs to be a felony.Impersonating an officer in uniform is worse. But its only illegal if you are wearing insignias or trying to use that status to get on a base or something like that.In this case, he got free food.Better lock him up for getting free food under false pretenses. We'd better lock up all those "homeless" and "disabled" people who beg for money, then hop into their car at the end of the day and drive home, too.
Quote from: Mad Max on November 18, 2014, 10:02:57 PMWearing a military uniform in public is a felony? I know impersonating a police officer is, but I don't see the harm in dressing as a military member.Dick move, absolutely. But I don't think it needs to be a felony.Impersonating an officer in uniform is worse. But its only illegal if you are wearing insignias or trying to use that status to get on a base or something like that.In this case, he got free food.
Wearing a military uniform in public is a felony? I know impersonating a police officer is, but I don't see the harm in dressing as a military member.Dick move, absolutely. But I don't think it needs to be a felony.
Quote from: Statefarm on November 19, 2014, 06:10:32 AMThat's not what stealing means.
Quote from: Flee on November 19, 2014, 06:32:15 AMQuote from: Statefarm on November 19, 2014, 06:10:32 AMThat's not what stealing means.Con = stealing
Quote from: Statefarm on November 19, 2014, 06:10:32 AMSo because Americans put their armed forces on an unnecessarily high pedestal, anyone wearing clothes of the military while not being part of it should be prosecuted?He may have not said anything, but it's no fault of his that ignorant people didn't ask questions or use common sense before jumping the gun on "muh patriotism".All the guy did was be a bit of an asshole.Nothing more.If you want to jail people for being assholes...
Quote from: Byrne on November 19, 2014, 06:36:41 AMQuote from: Statefarm on November 19, 2014, 06:10:32 AMSo because Americans put their armed forces on an unnecessarily high pedestal, anyone wearing clothes of the military while not being part of it should be prosecuted?He may have not said anything, but it's no fault of his that ignorant people didn't ask questions or use common sense before jumping the gun on "muh patriotism".All the guy did was be a bit of an asshole.Nothing more.If you want to jail people for being assholes...Completely irrelevant and missing the entire point. The justice system is supposed to protect those "idiots" who fall for this stuff. Obviously you have responsibility not to fall for things like fake uniforms, but when someone is caught out smarting "dumb patriotic Americans" you don't give them a pat on the back and say "good job just don't do it again". I'm not saying jail him for 60 years here, I'm just saying it's a punishable offense and he should be fined at the least. I don't care about you guys mocking American Patriotism, I think it's over the top as well. Especially seeing how people fell for this trick. But don't connect stabs at military respect with allowing con men to get away.
Quote from: Statefarm on November 19, 2014, 07:01:02 AMQuote from: Flee on November 19, 2014, 06:32:15 AMQuote from: Statefarm on November 19, 2014, 06:10:32 AMThat's not what stealing means.Con = stealingFrom the OP he didn't ask for the food or actively try to con them. He simply wore clothes that made people's patriot dick hard to the point they had to throw money at him.
Quote from: Statefarm on November 19, 2014, 07:10:49 AMQuote from: Byrne on November 19, 2014, 06:36:41 AMQuote from: Statefarm on November 19, 2014, 06:10:32 AMSo because Americans put their armed forces on an unnecessarily high pedestal, anyone wearing clothes of the military while not being part of it should be prosecuted?He may have not said anything, but it's no fault of his that ignorant people didn't ask questions or use common sense before jumping the gun on "muh patriotism".All the guy did was be a bit of an asshole.Nothing more.If you want to jail people for being assholes...Completely irrelevant and missing the entire point. The justice system is supposed to protect those "idiots" who fall for this stuff. Obviously you have responsibility not to fall for things like fake uniforms, but when someone is caught out smarting "dumb patriotic Americans" you don't give them a pat on the back and say "good job just don't do it again". I'm not saying jail him for 60 years here, I'm just saying it's a punishable offense and he should be fined at the least. I don't care about you guys mocking American Patriotism, I think it's over the top as well. Especially seeing how people fell for this trick. But don't connect stabs at military respect with allowing con men to get away.No one's saying he should get a pat on the back, we're saying he shouldn't be punished.
Quote from: Sly Instinct on November 19, 2014, 07:13:13 AMQuote from: Statefarm on November 19, 2014, 07:10:49 AMQuote from: Byrne on November 19, 2014, 06:36:41 AMQuote from: Statefarm on November 19, 2014, 06:10:32 AMSo because Americans put their armed forces on an unnecessarily high pedestal, anyone wearing clothes of the military while not being part of it should be prosecuted?He may have not said anything, but it's no fault of his that ignorant people didn't ask questions or use common sense before jumping the gun on "muh patriotism".All the guy did was be a bit of an asshole.Nothing more.If you want to jail people for being assholes...Completely irrelevant and missing the entire point. The justice system is supposed to protect those "idiots" who fall for this stuff. Obviously you have responsibility not to fall for things like fake uniforms, but when someone is caught out smarting "dumb patriotic Americans" you don't give them a pat on the back and say "good job just don't do it again". I'm not saying jail him for 60 years here, I'm just saying it's a punishable offense and he should be fined at the least. I don't care about you guys mocking American Patriotism, I think it's over the top as well. Especially seeing how people fell for this trick. But don't connect stabs at military respect with allowing con men to get away.No one's saying he should get a pat on the back, we're saying he shouldn't be punished.Alright remove the uniform.If someone tricked you out of your money would you be angry?
He did do something wrong morally. But not illegal.
Quote from: Noelle on November 19, 2014, 01:02:03 AMQuote from: aTALLmidget on November 19, 2014, 12:57:47 AMQuote from: Noelle on November 19, 2014, 12:54:33 AMQuote from: aTALLmidget on November 19, 2014, 12:47:33 AMWhy else would he constantly wear a uniform if not to just get hand outs because it can be expected many people respect servicemen?This just... this makes me laugh. Why else would someone who is actually in the military wear their uniform to a place like that? For the same damn reason, because they think everyone has to respect them and they know idiots will pay for their food.I doubt you laughed, and I don't view people paying for servicemen's food as idiots. They do it out of respect. Who cares how much they're paid, its a kind deed either way. If you think that's stupid then all I get is that you're a negative person with a negative attitude.You are the one being negative. You keep talking about respect and how paying for the meal is a kind deed, yet you guys keep shitting all over this person, just because people were respecting him and doing a kind deed by paying for his meal. If they only gave him respect because they thought he was in the military, then that is a problem with our society. Military members do not just deserve respect because of their job. They can earn respect like every other person. A lot of people in the military are total cunt bags. People treating military members (not service members, it is not a service) like they are above everyone else is so fucking backwards. They are not above anyone, and do not just immediately deserve respect for literally no reason. I respect the person, not their job. LOL, way to turn this around. The reason we're shitting on this guy is because he's using a ploy to get free food from people by being dishonest.
Quote from: aTALLmidget on November 19, 2014, 12:57:47 AMQuote from: Noelle on November 19, 2014, 12:54:33 AMQuote from: aTALLmidget on November 19, 2014, 12:47:33 AMWhy else would he constantly wear a uniform if not to just get hand outs because it can be expected many people respect servicemen?This just... this makes me laugh. Why else would someone who is actually in the military wear their uniform to a place like that? For the same damn reason, because they think everyone has to respect them and they know idiots will pay for their food.I doubt you laughed, and I don't view people paying for servicemen's food as idiots. They do it out of respect. Who cares how much they're paid, its a kind deed either way. If you think that's stupid then all I get is that you're a negative person with a negative attitude.You are the one being negative. You keep talking about respect and how paying for the meal is a kind deed, yet you guys keep shitting all over this person, just because people were respecting him and doing a kind deed by paying for his meal. If they only gave him respect because they thought he was in the military, then that is a problem with our society. Military members do not just deserve respect because of their job. They can earn respect like every other person. A lot of people in the military are total cunt bags. People treating military members (not service members, it is not a service) like they are above everyone else is so fucking backwards. They are not above anyone, and do not just immediately deserve respect for literally no reason. I respect the person, not their job.
Quote from: Noelle on November 19, 2014, 12:54:33 AMQuote from: aTALLmidget on November 19, 2014, 12:47:33 AMWhy else would he constantly wear a uniform if not to just get hand outs because it can be expected many people respect servicemen?This just... this makes me laugh. Why else would someone who is actually in the military wear their uniform to a place like that? For the same damn reason, because they think everyone has to respect them and they know idiots will pay for their food.I doubt you laughed, and I don't view people paying for servicemen's food as idiots. They do it out of respect. Who cares how much they're paid, its a kind deed either way. If you think that's stupid then all I get is that you're a negative person with a negative attitude.
Quote from: aTALLmidget on November 19, 2014, 12:47:33 AMWhy else would he constantly wear a uniform if not to just get hand outs because it can be expected many people respect servicemen?This just... this makes me laugh. Why else would someone who is actually in the military wear their uniform to a place like that? For the same damn reason, because they think everyone has to respect them and they know idiots will pay for their food.
Why else would he constantly wear a uniform if not to just get hand outs because it can be expected many people respect servicemen?
And I though America was a "free" country?I see no harm in this other than taking advantage of morons.
Quote from: Noelle on November 19, 2014, 08:20:35 AMQuote from: Nuka on November 19, 2014, 02:12:14 AMAnd sorry Noelle, but since you came from the chair force, you don't have much room to talk. It might've been "just a job" for you, but you were also in the least labor intensive (and least dangerous) branch of the military. The Air Force also gets the best pay and benefits. I'd like to see you say what you've said to a Marine and see if you don't get clocked in the face. FYI, Marines have it the hardest AND they get the worst pay/benefits. You guys seem to have very, very little knowledge of the military. You have no fucking idea what I did in the military. Try calling it the Chair Force all you want, it makes you look ignorant, I had a very labor intensive and demanding job. Also in the military, your primary assigned job, is not your only job.Every branch works on the same payscale. You are paid by your rank, no matter what branch you are in. Stop trying to act like you know what you are talking about when you clearly do not. The Air Force is just as demanding as any other branch, you have got to be fucking kidding me. There are quite a few office type jobs in the Air Force, and in every other branch, the military does not operate without those. Guess what I did in the military, Nuka? I worked in vehicle maintenance, working on a team to maintain and repair the bases's 700+ vehicle fleet. I also worked in exercises for weeks straight in 100+ degree weather, and I also helped with real world emergencies, such as getting large pumps ready and onto a C-17 to be sent to New York to help clear the water out after Hurricane Sandy. So you can go ahead and stop trying to shit on me and acting like you know anything about what I have done.I have experience with the military, so you guys think that experience means nothing just because I am actually logical and know that people in the military do not just deserve respect for no reason. Every branch gets paid the same, every branch gets the same benefits. Benefits such as full medical/dental coverage, tuition assistance, housing, food, 30 days of vacation guaranteed annually. Some branches, such as the Navy, have more of an advantage if you are wishing to travel and live by the coast, but that is a perk of that branch, not a benefit.That's all well and good, but a friend of mine and my dad's was in the Marines went to Afghanistan and saw a shit ton of action. He came home with PTSD because he saw his friends die and killed people himself. He couldn't go to sleep because he kept seeing the face of this kid he saw get blown up. Don't even try to act like being a mechanic on a base compares to that in any way. That man did a service to our country, Afghanistan, and the world so when you start saying these people shouldn't be respected, I begin to take this personally. Because if the worst you've ever done is work hard in the sun, then shit, it doesn't even compare to what I've been through.
Quote from: Nuka on November 19, 2014, 02:12:14 AMAnd sorry Noelle, but since you came from the chair force, you don't have much room to talk. It might've been "just a job" for you, but you were also in the least labor intensive (and least dangerous) branch of the military. The Air Force also gets the best pay and benefits. I'd like to see you say what you've said to a Marine and see if you don't get clocked in the face. FYI, Marines have it the hardest AND they get the worst pay/benefits. You guys seem to have very, very little knowledge of the military. You have no fucking idea what I did in the military. Try calling it the Chair Force all you want, it makes you look ignorant, I had a very labor intensive and demanding job. Also in the military, your primary assigned job, is not your only job.Every branch works on the same payscale. You are paid by your rank, no matter what branch you are in. Stop trying to act like you know what you are talking about when you clearly do not. The Air Force is just as demanding as any other branch, you have got to be fucking kidding me. There are quite a few office type jobs in the Air Force, and in every other branch, the military does not operate without those. Guess what I did in the military, Nuka? I worked in vehicle maintenance, working on a team to maintain and repair the bases's 700+ vehicle fleet. I also worked in exercises for weeks straight in 100+ degree weather, and I also helped with real world emergencies, such as getting large pumps ready and onto a C-17 to be sent to New York to help clear the water out after Hurricane Sandy. So you can go ahead and stop trying to shit on me and acting like you know anything about what I have done.I have experience with the military, so you guys think that experience means nothing just because I am actually logical and know that people in the military do not just deserve respect for no reason. Every branch gets paid the same, every branch gets the same benefits. Benefits such as full medical/dental coverage, tuition assistance, housing, food, 30 days of vacation guaranteed annually. Some branches, such as the Navy, have more of an advantage if you are wishing to travel and live by the coast, but that is a perk of that branch, not a benefit.
And sorry Noelle, but since you came from the chair force, you don't have much room to talk. It might've been "just a job" for you, but you were also in the least labor intensive (and least dangerous) branch of the military. The Air Force also gets the best pay and benefits. I'd like to see you say what you've said to a Marine and see if you don't get clocked in the face. FYI, Marines have it the hardest AND they get the worst pay/benefits.
Quote from: Naja on November 19, 2014, 08:18:11 AMAnd I though America was a "free" country?I see no harm in this other than taking advantage of morons.Stolen Valor Act of 2013 makes it a crime for a person to fraudulently claim having received any of a series of particular military decorations with the intention of obtaining money, property, or other tangible benefit from convincing someone that he or she rightfully did receive that award
Quote from: Kinder on November 19, 2014, 09:07:08 AMQuote from: Naja on November 19, 2014, 08:18:11 AMAnd I though America was a "free" country?I see no harm in this other than taking advantage of morons.Stolen Valor Act of 2013 makes it a crime for a person to fraudulently claim having received any of a series of particular military decorations with the intention of obtaining money, property, or other tangible benefit from convincing someone that he or she rightfully did receive that award LMAOYou're joking right? Haha this keeps getting better and better.