Police Force

  • Policing public opinion

    In our tech-savvy, digitally connected world an opinion is easier to get around than ourselves. A quick post on X, for example, elicits likes and shares which means thoughts can move quicker than speeches.

    The truth is the opposite, but like-minded bedfellows can easily slip into each other’s feeds to reenforce inaccurate perceptions. It’s an act that, accompanied by a photo, may make a few converts as well.

    Take for example a user by the name of Chris Hobbs on X, who posted a photo of three officers on a break and doing a bit of light shopping. Also without a basket in sight, they’re lambasted as time-wasters.

    The policing beat is long and arduous, and while a lot of casual intelligence gathering is done in this way, a pop into a shop isn’t a break in duties or the cycle of catching criminals. In fact, it makes a lot of us feel safer.

    The occasional snap shows where police officers really are, and what they’re doing. Irregardless of opinions on policing, it proves officers are protecting our wellbeing outside and not always indoors typing away.

  • Caught: Police impersonator

    In a stunning exclusive for ConservativeNewsSite.com, a police impersonator has been spotted in London.

    His work is to impersonate high-level, senior police officers to give an impression of having a high level of authority.

  • Crime update: Anti-Police activist

    In a first of its kind for ConservativeNewsSite.com, a sighting of an anti-Police activist can be revealed. It’s unprecedented in English law and crime fighting. Due to its sensitive nature not much more can be revealed at this time.

    However, this individual has been known to work against law and order – and in favour of public disorder – for over 30 years. The individual is not an ‘anarchist’ in a traditional sense but he’s operated largely covertly and as a fugitive from investigators for far too long.