Showing posts with label Policeman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Policeman. Show all posts

Monday 14 September 2020

WE ARE NOW ALL POLICEMEN



On December 26, 1889, The Coward Robert Ford survived an assassination attempt in Kansas City, Kansas when an assailant tried to slit his throat.

Within a few years, Ford settled in Colorado, where he opened a saloon-gambling house in Walsenberg. When silver was found in Creede, Ford closed his saloon and opened one there. Ford purchased a lot and on May 29, 1892 opened Ford’s Exchange, said to have been a dance hall. Six days later, the entire business district, including Ford’s Exchange, burned to the ground in a major fire. Ford opened a tent saloon until he could rebuild.

Three days after the fire, on June 8, 1892, Edward O’Kelley entered Ford’s tent saloon with a shotgun. According to witnesses, Ford’s back was turned. O’Kelley said, “Hello, Bob.” As Ford turned to see who it was, O’Kelley fired both barrels, killing Ford instantly. 

O’Kelley hence became “The Man Who Killed The Man Who Killed Jesse James”. O’Kelley’s sentence was commuted because of a 7,000-signature petition in favor of his release and a medical condition, and he was released on October 3, 1902. O’Kelley was subsequently killed on January 13, 1904 while trying to SHOOT a POLICEMAN.

Sunday 5 July 2020

Orson Welles on The Police






“ I have a good deal of experience in crossing borders, and coping with the coppers all over The World. 

And it is True you know, that we’re invited in the travel posters, to be tourists, and once we attempt it, we do discover, I’m afraid, that we ‘re guilty until proven innocent. 

That being so, I think a word or two about red tapism and bureaucracy, particularly as it applies to freedom of movement might be in order. I’m sure that’s True of all of us. 

Think of all of those forms we have to fill out, for example, you know what I mean, by police forms, we get them in hotels, on frontiers, in every country all over the world we’re asked, state your sex, male or female, for example. 

Well obviously, I’m a male; I’m a man, why should I have to answer that? 

State your race and religion in block letters —
Well, now why should I have to confide my religion to The Police?

Frankly, I don’t think anybody’s race is anybody else’s business. 

I’m willing to admit that The Policeman has a difficult job, a very hard job, but it’s the essence of our society that The Policeman’s job should be hard. 

He’s there to protect, protect the free citizen, not to chase criminals, that’s an incidental part of his job. 

The free citizen is always more of a nuisance to The Policeman that of The Criminal. 

He knows what to do about The Criminal. 

I know it’s very nice to look out of the window in our comfortable home and see The Policeman there protecting our home, we should be grateful for The Policeman, but I think we should be grateful too, for the laws which protect us against The policeman. And there are those laws, you know, and they’re quite different from the police regulations.

—ORSON WELLES SKETCHBOOK, 1955


I was, for many years, a radio commentator in America. And during that time, of course, I had occasion to speak on a great variety of subjects. And of all those subjects, one of the most interesting stories, one that sticks most vividly in my memory, had to do with a Negro soldier. Here he is. The boy had seen service in the South Pacific, and he was on his way home. Home was in one of the southern states, and he was on a bus, on the way fell ill, and he asked the bus driver to let him off. The bus driver refused, abusively, there was an argument, at the end of which a policeman was called in, who dragged the boy out of the bus, took him behind a building and beat him viciously. And when he was unconscious, poured gin over him, put him jail, charged him with drunkenness and assault. When the boy regained consciousness, he discovered he was blind. The policeman had literally beaten out his eyes. Now, of course, that sort of policeman is the exception. That sort of a policeman is a criminal in uniform. I had the satisfaction of being instrumental in bringing that particular policeman to justice. The case was brought to my attention, and I brought it to the attention of the radio public and we did finally manage to locate this man and bring him into a court of law. But there is another sort of police abuse. You know, I think we all suffer more or less. And we suffer at the hands of good policemen. Decent policemen. Policemen doing their duty. These are all the little petty annoyances; don’t seem very important, but add up to an invasion of our privacy and an assault against our dignity as human beings. 

I’m brought in mind of all this because just now I’ve had my passport renewed. That made me think of all the forms and police questionnaires we have to fill out. One of the unpleasant things about your passport, getting a new one of course, is that you have to have a new picture, in which you invariably look older, and sometimes a little worse than older. That’s the idea. I wonder why it is that so many of us look like criminals in a police lineup when we have our pictures taken for a passport. I suppose it’s the unconscious foreknowledge of the scrutiny to which our likeness will be subjected that gives us that hangdog, guilty look. Really, theoretically, a passport is supposed to be issued for our protection. But on how many frontiers in how many countries I’ve handed over my passport with all the emotions of an apprentice forger trying to fob off a five pound note on the Bank of England. Guilty conscience, I suppose. But, there’s something about being ticketed… and numbered that gives the man the feeling of being a piece of baggage or a convict. One can’t help thinking wistfully of our father’s day, when the world hadn’t grown so small. But one could move about in it without being watched so closely. Nowadays, we’re treated like demented or delinquent children. And the eyes are always on us. In our father’s day of course, there weren’t any passports; the only countries that required an entry visa were Montenegro and Russia. 

Here I am in the hands of the police; this is an illustration of a story. Happened to me in a country that I think had better be nameless. Enough trouble in the world as it is. First of all, I’d better explain that I carry, or at least carried, what Mr. Roosevelt once described, when I showed it to him, as the cheapest diplomatic passport in the world. In an American passport, I don’t know whether it’s true in an English one or not, but in an American one on the front page, there’s a place that says “in case of death or accident, please notify…” and then you usually put the name of some near and dear one. In my case, I put “in case of death or accident, please notify Franklin D. Roosevelt, Washington, D.C.” But at the time of this story, when I was stopped by the police, Mr. Roosevelt had died, Mr. Truman was president, and an election was coming up in which Truman was running against Dewey. Now, I made the mistake that a great many of my fellow countrymen did, I imagined that Mr. Dewey was going to win. And because I wasn’t very fond of Mr. Dewey, I had written in my passport, “in case of accident, please notify Thomas Dewey, White House, Washington, D.C.” My thought being that the least I could do to devil Mr. Dewey would be to arrive in a coffin some morning. And it was therefore that passport that I handed to the police, at eleven o’clock, one wintry night in the mountains, when they jumped out in the road, in this country, which as I say, will be nameless, and with drawn guns, demanded what it was that I had in my baggage. Now there wasn’t any frontier, there couldn’t be any question of customs, so I asked them, cheerfully, by way of conversation, whether this was a raid on dope-smugglers, or black marketers, or whatever. They didn’t feel like joking, they said, “It is not for you to converse with the police. Open your bag.” And I said, “Well, I’m afraid to, cause the bag will blow up.” And they asked me what I meant by that and I explained that I had an atom bomb, a small one, in the bag, so wired to the catch that if you opened the bag, there’d be a dreadful explosion. “Why?” 

I said I was going to La Scala, and I didn’t like the opera, and I was angry at the management and I was going to make an outrage, and that was what I had in my bag. And they said you mustn’t joke with the police, and the argument went on for some time, very unpleasant, ant it got to be about two in the morning, one of those long, drawn-out practical jokes that you regret, and finally, they got around to looking at my passport. And I was of course, grateful, most grateful, that they did, because when they saw the name, Thomas Dewey, they said, “Oh, excuse us, Mr. Dewey, please continue.” And I don’t know quite what that story illustrates, except that it shows that a passport does have its purpose. I don’t want to think from that story that I am an anarchist. I’m against the police on principle, or that I believe in fighting them by practical jokes. Much less by lawlessness, just the contrary. 

Now, I know I was wrong to make all that trouble for those police, in the mountains of that nameless country, but you see, I do a lot of traveling. I’ve been traveling all my life, as a matter of fact. I was born in America, but raised partly in China, and sent about the world, a good bit before the war, and a great deal during it, and even more afterwards. I have an office in one country, and a studio in another, the last film for example, was made in four countries. So I have a good deal of experience in crossing borders, and coping with the coppers all over the world. And it is true you know, that we’re invited in the travel posters, to be tourists, and once we attempt it, we do discover, I’m afraid, that we ‘re guilty until proven innocent. That being so, I think a word or two about red tapism and bureaucracy, particularly as it applies to freedom of movement might be in order. I’m sure that true of all of us. Think of all of those forms we have to fill out, for example, you know what I mean, by police forms, we get them in hotels, on frontiers, in every country all over the world we’re asked, state your sex, male or female, for example. Well obviously, I’m a male; I’m a man, why should I have to answer that? State your race and religion in block letters; well, now why should I have to confide my religion to the police? Frankly, I don’t think anybody’s race is anybody’s business. I’m willing to admit that the policeman has a difficult job, a very hard job, but it’s the essence of our society that the policeman’s job should be hard. He’s there to protect, protect the free citizen, not to chase criminals, that’s an incidental part of his job. The free citizen is always more of a nuisance to the policeman that the criminal. He knows what to do about the criminal. I know it’s very nice to look out of the window in our comfortable home and see the policeman there protecting our home, we should be grateful for the policeman, but I think we should be grateful too, for the laws which protect us against the policeman. And there are those laws, you know, and they’re quite different from the police regulations. But the regulations do pile up. Forms keep coming in. We keep being asked to state our grandmother’s father’s name, in block letters, and to say whether we propose to overthrow the government, in triplicate, why, and all that sort of thing. But you see, the bureaucrat, and I’m including the bureaucrat with the police, as part of one great big monstrous thing, the bureaucrat is really like a blackmailer. You can never pay him off, the more you give him, the more he’ll demand. If you fill in one form, he’ll give you ten. Now what are we going to do about it? Obviously, if we go on giving into this thing, well, you say, just a minute, you say for example, why shouldn’t we give in to it, why should we make trouble for the policeman? Well, the truth is, why should the policeman make trouble for us, why should he ask these things that are stated quite clearly in our passport? Our passport does tell everything the policeman needs to know. Why should we make trouble, well, we don’t, because we don’t want to get into trouble with the police. We’re told that we should cooperate with the authorities. I’m not an anarchist, I don’t want to overthrow the rule of law, on the contrary, and I want to bring the policeman to law. 

Obviously, individual effort won’t do any good. There’s nothing an individual can do about the protecting the individual in society. I’d like it very much if somebody would make a great big international organization for the protection of the individual. That way, there could be offices at every frontier. And whenever we’re presented with something unpleasant, that we don’t want to fill one of these idiotic questionnaires, we could say “Oh no, I’m sorry, it’s against the rules of our organization to fill out that questionnaire.” And they’d say “Ah, but it’s the regulations,” and we’d say, “Very well, see our lawyer,” because if there were enough of us, our dues would pay for the best lawyers in all the countries of the world. And we could bring to court these invasions of our privacy, and test them under law. It would nice to have that sort of organization, be nice to have that sort of card. I see the card as fitting into the passport, a little larger than the passport, with a border around it, in bright colors, so that it would catch the eye of the police. And they’d know whom they were dealing with. Something like this. The card itself should look rather like a union card, I should think, a card of an automobile club. And since its purpose is to impress and control officialdom, well, obviously, it should be as official looking as possible. With a lot of seals and things like that on it. And it might read something as follows: This is to certify that the bearer is a member of the human race. All relevant information is to be found in his passport. And except when there is good reason for suspecting him of some crime, he will refuse to submit to police interrogation, on the grounds that any such interrogation is an intolerable nuisance. And life being as short as it is, a waste of time. Any infringement on his privacy, or interference with his liberty, any assault, however petty, against his dignity as a human being, will be rigorously prosecuted by the undersigned, I.S.P.I.A.O. That would be the International Association for the Protection of the Individual Against Officialdom. If any such outfit is ever organized, you can put me down as a charter member.

Friday 12 June 2020

Loyalty Means Everything to The Clones














"It's awkward having a policeman around the house.
Friends drop in, a man with a badge answers the door, the temperature drops 20 degrees.

You throw a party and that badge gets in the way. 
All of a sudden there isn't a straight man in the crowd. 
Everybody's a comedian. 
"Don't drink too much," 
somebody says, 
"or the man with a badge'll run you in." 

Or 
"How's it going, Dick Tracy? 
How many jaywalkers did you pinch today?" 

And then there's always the one who wants to know how many apples you stole.

All at once you lost your first name. 
You're a cop, a flatfoot, a bull, a dick, John Law
You're the fuzz, the heat
you're poison, you're trouble, you're bad news

They call you everything, but never a policeman.

It's not much of a life, unless you d on't mind missing a Dodger game because the hotshot phone rings. 

Unless you like working Saturdays, Sundays, 
and holidays, at a job that doesn't pay overtime.

Oh, the pay's adequate-- if you count pennies you can put your kid through college, but you better plan on seeing Europe on your television set.

And then there's your first night on the beat. 
When you try to arrest a drunken prostitute in a Main St. bar and she rips your new uniform to shreds. 

You'll buy another one-- out of your own pocket.

And you're going to rub elbows with the elite-- pimps, addicts, thieves, bums, winos, girls who can't keep an address and men who don't care. 
Liars, cheats, con men--  the class of Skid Row.

And the heartbreak-- underfed kids, beaten kids, molested kids, lost kids, crying kids, homeless kids, hit-and-run kids, broken-arm kids, broken-leg kids, broken-head kids, sick kids, dying kids, dead kids. 

The old people nobody wants-- the reliefers, the pensioners, the ones who walk the street cold, and those who tried to keep warm and died in a $3 room with an unventilated gas heater. 

You'll walk your beat and try to pick up the pieces.

Do you have real adventure in your soul? 
You better have, because you're gonna do time in a prowl car. 
Oh, it's going to be a thrill a minute when you get an unknown-trouble call and hit a backyard at two in the morning, never knowing who you'll meet-- 
a kid with a knife, a pill-head with a gun, or two ex-cons with nothing to lose.

And you're going to have plenty of time to think. 
You'll draw duty in a lonely car, with nobody to talk to but your radio.

Four years in uniform and you'll have the ability, the experience and maybe the desire to be a detective. 
If you like to fly by the seat of your pants, this is where you belong. 
For every crime that's committed, you've got three million suspects to choose from. 
And most of the time, you'll have few facts and a lot of hunches. 
You'll run down leads that dead-end on you. 
You'll work all-night stakeouts that could last a week. 
You'll do leg work until you're sure you've talked to everybody in the state of California.

People who saw it happen - but really didn't. 
People who insist they did it - but really didn't. 
People who don't remember - those who try to forget. 
Those who tell The Truth - those who lie. 
You'll run the files until your eyes ache.

And paperwork? 
Oh, you'll fill out a report when you're right, you'll fill out a report when you're wrong, you'll fill one out when you're not sure, you'll fill one out listing your leads, you'll fill one out when you have no leads, you'll fill out a report on the reports you've made! 
You'll write enough words in your lifetime to stock a library.

You'll learn to live with doubt, anxiety, frustration. 
Court decisions that tend to hinder rather than help you. 
Dorado, Morse, Escobedo, Cahan. 
You'll learn to live with the District Attorney, testifying in court, defense attorneys, prosecuting attorneys, judges, juries, witnesses. 
And sometimes you're not going to be happy with the outcome.

But there's also this: there are over 5,000 men in this city, who know that being a policeman is an endless, glamourless, thankless job that's gotta be done.

I know it, too, and I'm damn glad to be one of them."

Thursday 11 June 2020

The Cosmology of The Police Constable

 

Why didn't you say anything?
 
Believe me, I tried.
But Keaton wouldn't have it.
It was too far-fetched for him.
Keaton was a grounded guy, an ex-cop.
 
To a cop, The Explanation is never that complicated. 
It's always simple.
 
“There's no mystery to The Street, no arch-criminal behind it all —
If you got a dead body
and you think his brother did it, you're going to find out you're right.”
 
 
CLARK, 
The One-Eyed Policeman : 
Hi.
You have a minute? 
 
LEGION :
Actually, I was I was just -
 
CLARK, 
The One-Eyed Policeman :
Oh, it'll only take a second.
I feel like this is our spot.
Are you...
 
 
LEGION :
….'Cause I got I was going in the tank to --
 
 
CLARK, 
The One-Eyed Policeman :
Oh, you were just in there, I thought.
Some modifications to get outside space-time.
Isn't that what you told Kerry?
Over my head, The Science, but I got to ask,  Did it Work? 
 
LEGION :
What? 
 
CLARK, 
The One-Eyed Policeman :
That line you gave about seeing where Farouk was gonna be --
 
Or Where He Was.
 
LEGION :
I'm - 
 
CLARK, 
The One-Eyed Policeman :
No, of course we know where he was.
He was here.
He killed 11 of my men, turned one into a pig,
scared the shit out of a bunch of kids.
 
 
LEGION :
I feel like, in order to answer that question,
I need to explain how telepathy works.
 
CLARK, 
The One-Eyed Policeman :
Did you find him? 
Yes or no? 
 
LEGION :
He hides.
 
I used to think it was just inside Oliver's mind,
but then I realized he keeps other minds in there with him.
 
Lenny.
Maybe others.
 
And when he senses me looking,
he brings one forward and hides inside of it.
 
CLARK, 
The One-Eyed Policeman :
So, uh, what you're saying is, you're useless.
Or maybe you're - 
 
LEGION :
Maybe I'm what? 
 
CLARK, 
The One-Eyed Policeman :
Are you familiar with the term "collusion"
 
DAVID: 
You're starting to make me mad.
 
CLARK, 
The One-Eyed Policeman :
Oh, are you gonna put more office supplies in my face? 
Burn me alive? 
 
LEGION :
That's - You were The Bad Guy.
 
CLARK, 
The One-Eyed Policeman :
Yeah, that's funny.
I thought YOU were The Bad Guy.
 
 
CLARK, 
The One-Eyed Policeman :
TELEPATHICALLY :
I know you're lying.
I think you're helping him, 
but I don't know why.
 
LEGION :
And I think Your Job is to suspect everyone, 
and that makes everyone a suspect.
 
 
CLARK, 
The One-Eyed Policeman :
[SIGHS.]
Why'd you take us to The Desert? 
 
LEGION :
I told you, I saw him there.
Amahl Farouk.
The Shadow King.
 
CLARK, 
The One-Eyed Policeman :
Yeah, but I-I thought you didn't know what he looked like.
 
LEGION :
Oliver.
He's in Oliver.
That's who I saw.
 
CLARK, 
The One-Eyed Policeman :
That's not what you SAID.
 
LEGION :
Just let me do my job.
This'll all be over soon enough.
 
CLARK, 
The One-Eyed Policeman :
Okay.
But just remember :
 
[SINGSONGSY]
 
We see everything.

Wednesday 15 January 2020

Are You Trying to Be Funny?



APORIA

An Englishman, A Scotsman and an Irishman walk into a Bar - 

The Barman says, 
"Is This a Joke?" 

 Elsewhere, 

 A Policeman walks into different Bar - 
"Ow!!", he says. 

Meanwhile, Back at The Ranch, 
There was a Tap at The Window. 
What a stupid place to put one..


There are these two fish, that’re side-by-side in a tank -
One turns to the other and says, 
“I hope you know how to drive this thing.”



Witness #1 : 
This ‘Condition’ of Yours.... The Laughing.

Is it Real? Or some sort of Clown Thing?

The Clown : 
“A •Clown• Thing”...?

Witness #1 : 
Yeah - I mean.... Is it part of Your Act...?

The Clown : 
What Do •You• Think...?

The Heel turns on his heel;
He Blows Smoke;
Tosses away The Flame;
Turns his back on The Two Witness and walks away in disgust, straight into an Emergency;
Attempting to Go In Through The Out Door, he encounters Reality by colliding violently with one of its Walls you cannot see;
He waves at an electronic, all-seeing magickal eye (that isn’t there), trying in vain to attract its attention

Witness # 1 : 
It’s, ah “EXIT ONLY”....




1. What do you call a joke that isn't funny?

A sentence.

2. Want to hear something that will make you smile?

Your facial muscles.

3. What do you call a pencil sharpener that can't sharpen pencils?

Broken.

4. Where was the Constitution signed?

The bottom.

5. What do you get when you mix and a goat and a sheep?

A geep.

6. What do you call a talking turtle?

Fictional.

7. What ended after 1987?

1988.

8. What did one stranger say to the other?

Nothing. They didn't know each other.

9. What does one French Guy say to another French Guy?

My name is also guy.

10. Why did the dinosaur say "hello" to the little girl?

He was being polite.

11. What's brown and sticky?

A stick.

12. How does the white-tail deer jump higher than the average house?

This is due to their powerful hind legs and the fact that the average house can't jump.

13. You know what's really odd?

Numbers that aren't divisible by two.

14. I can still remember my Grandpa's last words before he kicked the bucket.


He said, "Hey, how far do you think I can kick this bucket?"

15. My girlfriend is like an iPhone 7.

She doesn't have a headphone jack.

16. What do an elephant and a grape have in common?

One of them is purple.

17. Why did the chicken cross the road?

Chickens do not have the cognitive ability to reason. Therefore, it was random.

18. A proton walks into a bar.

No one noticed it because protons are tiny and everywhere.

19. Why do we dress baby boys in blue and baby girls in pink?

Because they can't dress themselves.

20. Yo mama's so fat…

She should be concerned because diabetes is a serious health issue.

21. What do you call a man with a shovel in his head?

An ambulance, due to the fact that he has a rather serious head wound.

22. What's yellow and is something you shouldn't drink?

A school bus.

23. What did the cowboy say at his second rodeo?

"This ain't my first rodeo!"

24. When birds fly in a V, why is one side always longer than the other?

Because there are more birds on one side.

25. What's red and bad for your teeth?

A brick.

26. I have glasses but cannot see. I have feet but cannot walk. What am I?

A riddle.

27. Why does Micheal J. Fox make the best milkshakes?

Because he uses the finest ingredients.

28. Why did the dinosaur eat the baby?

He didn't. Humans did not appear until after the extinction of dinosaurs.

29. How do you confuse a blonde?

Paint yourself green and throw forks at her.

30. Why did the swan hiss?

Biologically, it's coded in their genes to do so when threatened.

31. Knock, knock

I wonder who is at the door. I hope they know a good joke, since levity in important in this cruel life. You have to smile sometimes.

32. What did one lawyer say to the other lawyer?

"We're both lawyers!"

33. Why are there no Jewish people on Uranus?


The nature of the planet does not sustain human life.

34. What's white and annoying at breakfast?

An avalanche.

35. What's funny about five people in a Chevy Suburban driving off a cliff?

Nothing. They were my friends.

36. You can pick your nose and you can pick your friends…

But you can't rob a bank. That's a felony.

37. Why is there no aspirin in the rainforest?

Because it wouldn't be financially viable to try and sell pharmaceuticals in the vastly unpopulated rainforest.

38. You can tell a lot about a woman's mood just by her hands.

For example, if she's holding a gun, she's probably angry.

39. What's the difference between bubble wrap and a carrot?

No one eats carrots.

40. What do you call a medical student that graduated last in their class?

Doctor.

41. I ain't sayin' she's a gold digger…

But she did move to California in 1849.

42. What's green and has wheels?

Grass. I lied about the wheels.

43. What do you call 100 lawyers at the bottom of the ocean?

A horrible boating accident.

44. How is a laser beam similar to a goldfish?

Neither one can whistle.

45. What did one ant say to the other ant?

Nothing, ants communicate by pheromones, not speech.

46. Why are hamsters like cigarettes?

They're completely harmless until you put one in your mouth and light it on fire.

47. If a tree falls in the forest and no one is around to hear it…

Then my illegal logging company is a success.

48. Have you seen Stevie Wonder's house?

It's very tastefully furnished.

49. How do you empty a pool full of Canadians?

Politely but firmly tell them, "Get out of the pool, please!"

50. What's orange and tastes like an orange?

An orange.

51. What do you call a deer with no eyes?

A deer. The absence of eyes doesn't change the species.

52. What's blue and smells like red paint?

Blue paint.

53. A gorilla walks into a bar and orders a banana martini.


The bartender thinks this is peculiar and realizes it is because he is actually dreaming. The man wakes up from the dream and begins to tell his wife all about it. His wife simply ignores him and goes back to sleep. The man rolls over and begins to sob as he realizes his marriage is in shambles.

54. What do a duck and a bicycle have in common?

They both have handlebars… except for the duck.

55. How many Germans does it take to change a lightbulb?

One. They're a very efficient people.

56. Why isn't Helen Keller a good driver?

Because she passed away in 1968 and the deceased are incapable of operating automobiles..

57. What did one cannibal say to the other after eating a clown?

"We're gonna get in big trouble for this!"

58. A horse walks into a bar and the bartender asks him, "Why the long face?"

The horse says, "Evolution."

59. How tall is the Empire State Building?

One Empire State Building tall.

60. What's worse than finding a worm in your apple?

Finding a worm in your caramel apple. They usually cost more.

Friday 27 December 2019

Love The Policeman

“She’s now a Woman. And what is a Woman? 
A Woman is a Vehicle of Life, and Life has overtaken her. 
She is a Vehicle now of Life. 


A Woman’s what it’s all about - the giving of birth and the giving of nourishment. 
She’s identical with The Earth Goddess in her powers, and she’s got to realize that about herself. 



The Boy does not have a Happening of that kind. 
He has to be turned INTO a Man, and VOLUNTARILY become a Servant of Something Greater Than Himself. 


The Woman becomes The Vehicle of Nature —
The Man becomes 
The Vehicle of The Society, 
The Social Order 
and 
The Social Purpose.










Jack Webb - "What is a Cop?" 




"There is a Policeman Inside All Our Heads -
He Must Be Destroyed."


CLARK, 
The One-Eyed Policeman: 
Hi.
You have a minute? 



DAVID: 
Actually, I was I was just -



CLARK, 
The One-Eyed Policeman: 
Oh, it'll only take a second.
I feel like this is our spot.
Are you 'Cause I got I was going in the tank to Oh, you were just in there, I thought.
Some modifications to get outside space-time.
Isn't that what you told Kerry? Over my head, the science, but I got to ask did it work? 


DAVID: 
What? 



CLARK, 
The One-Eyed Policeman: 
That line you gave about seeing where Farouk was gonna be Or where he was.


DAVID: 
I'm - 


CLARK, 
The One-Eyed Policeman: 
No, of course we know where he was.
He was here.
He killed 11 of my men, turned one into a pig, scared the shit out of a bunch of kids.


DAVID: 
I feel like, in order to answer that question, I need to explain how telepathy works.



CLARK, 
The One-Eyed Policeman: 
Did you find him? 
Yes or no? 


DAVID: 
He hides.
I used to think it was just inside Oliver's mind, but then I realized he keeps other minds in there with him.
Lenny.
Maybe others.
And when he senses me looking, he brings one forward and hides inside of it.


CLARK, 
The One-Eyed Policeman: 
So, uh, what you're saying is, you're useless.
Or maybe you're - 


DAVID: 
Maybe I'm what? 




CLARK, 
The One-Eyed Policeman: 
Are you familiar with the term "collusion"? 


DAVID: 
You're starting to make me mad.


CLARK, 
The One-Eyed Policeman: 
Oh, are you gonna put more office supplies in my face? 
Burn me alive? 



DAVID: 
That's - You were The Bad Guy.

CLARK, 
The One-Eyed Policeman: 
Yeah, that's funny.
I thought YOU were The Bad Guy.



CLARK, 
The One-Eyed Policeman,
[ TELEPATHICALLY ] :
I know you're lying.
I think you're helping him, 
but I don't know why.

DAVID
[TELEPATHICALLY] :
And I think Your Job is to suspect everyone, 
and that makes everyone a Suspect.


CLARK, 
The One-Eyed Policeman: 
[SIGHS.]
Why'd you take us to The Desert? 


DAVID: 
I told you, I saw him there.
Amahl Farouk.
The Shadow King.


CLARK, 
The One-Eyed Policeman: 
Yeah, but I-I thought you didn't know what he looked like.


DAVID: 
Oliver.
He's in Oliver.
That's who I saw.


CLARK, 
The One-Eyed Policeman: 
That's not what you SAID.

DAVID: 
Just let me do my job.
This'll all be over soon enough.


CLARK, 
The One-Eyed Policeman: 
Okay.
But just remember :

[SINGSONGY] 
We see everything.