07-12-2015, 11:21 AM
Out of interest any members here who have seen continuous footage, or a continuous series of photo's of the shootout between police and the two apparent terrorists? I've looked at all those seemingly available on Google, and there are no images prior to the stopped vehicle full of rounds, and there seem to be only a few showing the bodies of the perps on the ground - but non in between showing the perps being dragged out of the car or how the tarpaulin full of weapons and ammo etc., being dragged from the car and laid out across the road. For me, the media helicopter (I guess that's what it was?) didn't stop filming for one second, so it's being judicious about what pics it publishes, and I wonder why.
In the after scene picture above where everything is laid out across the road and tagged with yellow police crime scene flags looks contrived doesn't it? There is debris everywhere in shot. But the two must already be well and truly dead inside the vehicle and so they're not responsible for tossing all that stuff on the road? And if one weren't following the plot carefully, the post action crime scene pics looks like a firefight occurred outside the car not inside it.
Is it police procedure these days to completely and utterly destroy the existing crime scene (inside the car) establish another after the event crime scene across the road, but have not one picture of this occurring..... but to then "allow" pics of the finished setting to be made public? I call this scene dressing. Maybe I'm wrong?
In the after scene picture above where everything is laid out across the road and tagged with yellow police crime scene flags looks contrived doesn't it? There is debris everywhere in shot. But the two must already be well and truly dead inside the vehicle and so they're not responsible for tossing all that stuff on the road? And if one weren't following the plot carefully, the post action crime scene pics looks like a firefight occurred outside the car not inside it.
Is it police procedure these days to completely and utterly destroy the existing crime scene (inside the car) establish another after the event crime scene across the road, but have not one picture of this occurring..... but to then "allow" pics of the finished setting to be made public? I call this scene dressing. Maybe I'm wrong?
The shadow is a moral problem that challenges the whole ego-personality, for no one can become conscious of the shadow without considerable moral effort. To become conscious of it involves recognizing the dark aspects of the personality as present and real. This act is the essential condition for any kind of self-knowledge.
Carl Jung - Aion (1951). CW 9, Part II: P.14