Archimedes Plutonium wrote on Fri, 19 Apr 2013 14:59:40 -0700:
> cameras increase security and deter crime.
While I don't doubt this lesson, if I were a bad guy, I'd simply
spend energy on the simple act of obfuscated my appearance and
my illicit activities.
The biggest lesson "I" learned from the bombing is that the police
are so very comfortable with "putting the gun in the dead burgler's
hand", that they insisted for days that the gunmen shot first,
and that they exchanged fire with the gunman in the boat for an hour
and that the gunmen had a formidable arsenal that the police were
up against, etc.
What's worse, the NY Times reported all these coverup lies, even
though they were known to be false within 5 minutes of each suspect's
capture.
The lesson learned is that the biggest danger when you put a
bunch of scared trigger-happy revenge seeking money grubbing (they
have 43 cops on paid administrative leave at this very moment simply
because they pulled the trigger and the trauma is too much for them
that they holed a boat in a gunbattle where the gunman, who fired
first, didn't even have a weapon - and - worse yet - he tried to
commit suicide with that weapon that he didn't even have and that
the police knew this within minutes of his capture - yet- Commissioner
Davis went on National TV proclaimin for DAYS (yes, DAYS!) that
the gunman shot first!
The lesson is that the police are a larger danger than the gunmen.
Ask these two questions:
Q1: How many bullets were fired by the police versus the gunmen?
Q2: How many police (traffic cops, FBI, State, Boston, & Watertown) fired?
Q3: Who hit the transit cop?
That's where the lessons are to be learned.