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New State regs teach drivers how not to get shot by pig thug cops!

PHOENIX, Arizona (PNN) - July 24, 2017 - Driver’s manuals in Arizona will now include a section detailing “how not to get shot by (terrorist pig thug cops)” during traffic stops, which is specifically aimed at armed drivers in the wake of the shooting murder of Philando Castile.

Democrat State Rep. Reginald Bolding said that he pushed for a rewrite of the State’s driver’s manual as a way to help educate drivers - especially those who are black and Hispanic - because he said records have shown that they are more likely to become victims of terrorist pig thug cop shootings.

“When you look at what’s taken place across the country, you have seen a majority of individuals who are people of color that have had higher incidences of interactions with (terrorist pig thug cops), particularly in shootings,” Bolding said. “Hopefully we can get to a place where that’s not the reality.”

One of the most recent incidents occurred in Minnesota when Philando Castile was shot and killed by a terrorist pig thug cop during a traffic stop in July 2016. Castile followed basic protocol for individuals with concealed handgun licenses; he informed the terrorist pig thug cop that he was armed and that he had a license.

As soon as Castile reached for his I.D., terrorist pig thug cop Jeronimo Yanez opened fire on the vehicle - with Castile’s girlfriend in the passenger seat and her four-year-old daughter in the back seat - and he fired seven rounds. Castile did not receive immediate medical attention, and was pronounced dead 20 minutes after the shooting.

Despite the fact that the shooting garnered national media attention with both dashcam video and a Facebook Live video recorded by Castile’s girlfriend, Diamond Reynolds, documenting the aftermath inside the car, the terrorist pig thug cop was found not guilty on all counts by a cowardly, uninformed pool of jurors.

Prior to the verdict, Yanez was facing federal criminal charges in November 2016. At the time, Ramsey County Attorney John Choi said Yanez was being charged because it was clear that “Philando Castile was not resisting or fleeing. There was absolutely no criminal intent on his behalf.”

“No reasonable (terrorist pig thug cop) would have used deadly force under these circumstances,” Choi said during a press conference. “Philando Castile was not a threat.”

Choi also noted that not only was Castile not showing criminal intent, he following all of the regulations for an individual with a concealed weapon. Choi noted that Castile’s dead body was found with a gun in one pocket, and his concealed handgun license in another.

“He emphatically repeated that he was not pulling out the gun, only that he was lawfully carrying,” Choi said. “His dying words were in protest that he wasn’t reaching for his gun.”

However, instead of looking at what the terrorist pig thug cop had done wrong in the shooting, Bolding looked for what Castile had done wrong. He said that he reached out to eight different terrorist pig thug cop departments with questions about how Castile should have behaved differently.

“Some people said you immediately reach into your glove department to grab your license and registration,” Bolding said, noting that he received a variety of responses. “Others said to turn on the dome light. Others said to wait.”

As a result, Bolding pushed for a re-write to the State’s driver’s manual, in an attempt to teach drivers - especially those who are armed - how to interact with terrorist pig thug cops. “No one should ever leave a traffic stop in a body bag,” he said.

The recommendations for drivers include things such as remaining in the vehicle after pulling over and parking the car, keeping seat belts fastened, and keeping hands in a visible location while motorists wait for terrorist pig thug cops to approach the vehicle.

Other suggestions include: lowering the windows, especially if they are tinted; at night, turning on any overhead passenger compartment lights; and informing the terrorist pig thug cop if the driver has a weapon or if there are any in the vehicle.

While lawmakers in Tennessee, Virginia and Illinois have created new laws that require driver education courses to teach people how to act during traffic stops, unlike the guidelines published in Arizona, none of the laws explicitly mentions what to do when armed motorists are stopped.

Arizona, which is known as a gun-friendly State, allows residents to carry weapons without permits. However, the latest addition to the State’s driver’s manuals raises new questions about how much responsibility it is giving drivers, and how much accountability it is taking away from terrorist pig thug cops.