---
title: 'Dangerous Coward Needs to be Fired'
source: 'https://youtube.com/watch?v=aIW19QoiXbM'
video_id: 'aIW19QoiXbM'
date: 2026-06-20
duration_sec: 0
---

# Dangerous Coward Needs to be Fired

> Source: [Dangerous Coward Needs to be Fired](https://youtube.com/watch?v=aIW19QoiXbM)

## Summary



## Transcript

Good morning. Hope you slept well and I
hope you're ready to get angry. I'm just
going to kick your day off with some
infuriating news here. When the Knicks
won the championship, there was a woman
who was celebrating, being extremely
excited, and her neighbors in the
complex thought that it was a sign of
distress, that there was a possible
domestic disturbance. So, they called
the police for the noise. The police
showed up and within a minute and a half
killed her dog. Just executed her dog.
This adorable Knicks fan was killed for
the sole crime of being excited. And now
they've finally released that body cam
and it is clear that that is some
[ __ ] horseradish they tried to sell
you about why they killed this dog. It
doesn't aggressively charge at the
officer or anything at all. And in fact,
the body cam paints a very different
picture than the official accounts here
from the officer. Now, I think it's
important before seeing this body cam
that you know what kind of dog Jameson
was. A St. Bernard Golden Retriever
poodle mix. That's not a dangerous
combination right there. It's not like
that's a [ __ ] chimera of violence
with the sole purpose of like, you know,
brutalizing human beings or anything.
We're not dealing with some kind of
[ __ ] crypted demon monster creature.
In fact, you would be hardressed to find
a friendlier combination of dog breeds
in general. This is like the sugar spice
and everything nice to create the
perfect family dog. St. Bernards are
literally called gentle giants because
their temperament is being so calm and
loving. Golden retrievers, I probably
don't even need to regurgitate their
resume. They're like the number one
starter dog for families because of how
loving they are. And then poodles, like
this is craziness to try and claim that
it was an aggressive dog that was scary.
Like even [ __ ] scarecrows fear gas
would probably be ineffective at making
this kind of dog like Jameson appear
terrifying. He was in a Knicks jersey.
He had a little Knicks shirt on. Like
come on.
>> Police department.
Okay.
LAPD.
>> It's LAPD.
>> Hello.
>> Hi.
>> Oh, can you push your dog?
>> Put your dog away, please. Put your dog
away.
>> Put your dog away.
>> The protagonist POV here already has his
gun drawn. The second he saw that dog,
he drew his weapon, which by the way is
a complete deviation from what they are
supposedly trained to do when
encountering a potentially hostile dog.
They're not supposed to immediately draw
their service weapon or bring out the
[ __ ] bazooka on a dog. There's
supposed to be other things they attempt
first. That's like a last resort option.
But here, you can clearly see the
officer instantly draws his service
pistol from even just laying his eyes on
the dog. And it looks like his heart
stops there for a second even seeing the
thing. It's like he's never seen a dog
in his life. He like jumps back like he
just got jump scared watching [ __ ]
the first Paranormal Activity movie. And
they keep saying how they're
investigating this incident like a
thorough, transparent and fair
investigation. This should be just case
closed immediately from this body cam.
I'm going to tell you right now, there
are so many things that make this clear
that it's unacceptable and this officer
should 1000% be thrown in jail. He is
not fit to be an officer, nor fit to be
in society if he is this afraid that
he's just going to instantly start
shooting dogs. So, like I said, you can
already see he's drawn his weapon
because he saw a dog and the dog had the
gall to bark like dogs do. Not even an
aggressive bark or anything, by the way,
just a normal bark. But the officer's
already piddled in his britches. He's
already tinkled himself. He's pissing in
fear. So now he's got his weapon drawn.
>> [ __ ]
>> Dude,
>> I ain't getting bit by that, bro.
>> Just listen how angry this loser already
sounds just from even seeing a dog.
[ __ ] That's a big dog. I'm not getting
bit by that, bro. The dog was just by
the door. It wasn't threatening you or
anything. It just showed itself and
you're already panicking. How much more
of a [ __ ] can you possibly be? He is a
dangerous coward. He shouldn't have a
badge. How can someone who's already
farting and pooping because he saw a dog
be expected to protect civilians and
keep people safe if he is freaking out
after just seeing a dog and like
sweating profusely with a weapon drawn
on it? He shouldn't have a badge under
any circumstances. And yes,
unfortunately, the woman wasn't able to
put the dog away in time. But I don't
think people recognize how tense a
situation like this is. you've just been
paid a visit from the police. You have
no idea why. They haven't even said why
they're there or anything yet. So, I
imagine she herself is also kind of on
edge and worried about like, well,
what's going on? What caused this? So,
it's very understandable that she might
be feeling rushed because, you know,
like, well, if I stay in here too long,
maybe they think I'm doing something
suspicious or or whatever. So, she
didn't get Jameson put away in time
properly. So, when she went back to the
door, he slipped out. I have been
swatted before. I have dogs. One of my
dogs, Tetra, loves to jump on people
excited. She's very friendly dog, but
she likes to jump on people. So, every
time that happened, it felt like a race
against the clock to either get like
leashes on them or get them in like
another room and close the door. But
it's not easy and it's something that
doesn't happen like that. It takes time,
especially when the dogs are excited
like Jameson was here. They were just
celebrating the Knicks win together. So,
like it does take a minute and you feel
very rushed in a situation like this.
So, I get it and it's just very
unfortunate that she wasn't able to get
the dog put up in time. But I don't
think under any circumstances that
should have led to the dog being killed.
>> Is the dog put away?
>> Please
aggressive.
Come here.
>> Oh, by the way, Officer Ignore here when
he first draws and fires his weapon is
literally pointed directly at like his
partner and the woman at the door. So,
it's actually a miracle he didn't end up
shooting his other cop or that woman,
too, in the crossfire. I can already
just picture that huge smile on the
officer's face after he got to mag dump
on this dog. A dog that the owner
already said is not aggressive and is
wearing a Knicks jersey and isn't
charging at the officer aggressively
like they tried to claim it was. It is
walking towards the officer and barked a
couple times as dogs do, which is very
normal. It didn't charge or anything.
And I'm pretty confident any sane person
would see this and recognize that it
wasn't a threat. And even if you don't
know that it's a golden retriever St.
Bernard poodle mix, you can see it's a
[ __ ] poodle mix. At the very least,
it is very clearly poodle. So why are
you already frightened chomping at your
nails and just ready to start blasting
here like you're playing the House of
the Dead arcade game? This is craziness.
But now we're just surrounded by
crazies. There are actual living,
breathing, sentient slug people that
have seen this body cam and are siding
with the officer's behavior, saying
that, "Well, his life was in danger. The
body cam confirmed it. Do charged right
at him. He could have died if he didn't
shoot it." It's just so sad how far we
have devolved because there was a time
when a body cam like this would come out
and everyone would rightfully condemn
the officer's behavior here. There is no
justification for just blasting a dog to
oblivion for the crime of walking at you
and barking. It's a bigger dog. Yeah,
but it's clearly not an aggressive one.
It wasn't doing anything aggressive. It
wasn't bearing its teeth. It wasn't
charging. It wasn't doing anything like
that. And still the officer kills it,
just executes it. And you know, going
even deeper, even if you try and spin
fanfic about like why it's explainable
that he'd be afraid of a dog, like maybe
had a traumatic experience as a kid or
something like Bruce Wayne did with bats
or whatever, why are we suddenly okay
not holding cops to a high standard?
They're supposed to enforce the law and
justice and protect us. So why do we
have expectations of them that we would
have of a [ __ ] crackhead all of a
sudden? Oh, he was afraid of the dog, so
I guess why not just kill it? What are
you talking about? He's a [ __ ] cop.
Even if he is afraid of that dog, he
shouldn't fall down into Neanderthal
brain. He should follow protocol as he
is trained to do, follow order, which
very clearly he did not. This is a
complete deviation from their training,
from their own rules of handling dog
encounters that are potentially hostile.
So why are we okay like excusing that?
There was a time where everyone would
look at that and say the officer needs
to face punishment repercussions. But
not anymore. Now there is a very sizable
chunk of people that think that it's
very justified. They will swallow any
[ __ ] that they are fed as long as it
comes from an official channel and don't
want to think or really do any kind of
like actual soularching themselves. They
just want to be told what they need to
believe and what they need to support.
And here it's that the officer was
right. Even though your own eyes should
betray that, that your own eyes should
tell you that what he did here is not
right. That is not an aggressive dog.
Yes, the woman didn't put the dog away
like they instructed her to do. But as I
said, these officers have just showed up
randomly at her door. She has no idea
why. She's just gone through an
extremely happy time celebrating with
her dog for the big Knicks championship.
Now, there's some officers at her door.
So, they tell her to put the dog away.
She goes in and she probably feels
rushed, probably a bit discombobulated
as most normal people would be in a
situation like this because it's tense.
And then it takes a little bit of time
to take a dog and put it in like another
room, especially if the dog's already
excited because you've got the dog all
wound up and excited cuz you were
celebrating. So maybe she thought she
didn't fully have time to do that. So
instead, she just goes back in, probably
puts the dog like on the couch or
something, then goes to the door, talks
to the officers for a second, and as she
goes to shut the door again to ensure
Jameson stays in, he slips out. A
mistake for sure, but it shouldn't have
been a fatal one. That shouldn't have
been the death sentence for the dog. And
in no world should that be defended as
such, especially when the own officer's
training instructs them that there's
multiple other layers they're supposed
to go through before drawing their
weapon if it's a possible hostile dog
encounter, which I don't think by any
stretch of the imagination this would
classify as. But even if it did, they
still broke protocol.
>> Such a good dog.
>> Oh my god.
>> What the
Calvary. They're Calvary for this.
>> I can't. I can't. I can't. I can't. I
can't. I can't.
>> Instead of you guys kill the dog and his
[ __ ] drug dealers and [ __ ] outside,
watch you shoot those [ __ ]
>> The Nixers won a championship. We were
just so happy. We were just celebrating
the big
>> instead of [ __ ] getting the [ __ ]
piece of [ __ ] outside, you kill a
[ __ ] dog.
>> Oh god. Oh god. Jeremiah.
Jeremiah.
Jeremiah,
>> why?
>> Why?
>> Why?
>> Why?
>> Why?
>> Why? What?
>> Wow. Where is this [ __ ] out?
>> What is the purpose of all of you?
>> This is Hey, good job. This is what we
pay for. Amazing. Amazing work, guys.
>> Oh my god.
>> Oh my god. Seriously? Seriously?
>> What the for?
>> Oh my god. This is [ __ ] pathetic. Are
>> you serious?
>> That's heartbreaking stuff, man. Even
the neighbors all started to come out
and berate the cops for what they've
done there. Instead of doing anything
about actual vile, evil scum out there
on the streets doing heinous [ __ ] They
instead with a noise complaint come in
and end up killing this woman's dog. A
dog that was beloved by everyone in the
complex, it seems. neighbors come out
talking about how good the dog was. A
bunch of neighbors have spoke up about
how much they enjoyed Jameson's company
and how friendly he was with other dogs
and other people. And even the uh the
people who called the police in the
first place are extremely regretful
because they just genuinely thought she
was in trouble and it ended up with the
cops killing her dog. I think it's just
ridiculous. And I don't understand why
there are so many weirdos online, these
[ __ ] worms, this fungus that wants so
badly to defend the officer's killing of
this friendly dog. I really don't
understand that. I don't know if they're
real people for it is just bots just
trying to sew controversy or farm rage
bait for engagement. I don't know
anymore. It's just so lost now. But I
just think it is completely absurd. And
even if someone is earnestly trying to
defend it, what happens when you at your
job start to break protocol? You
probably get fired, right? That happens
a lot. If you don't follow the rules of
your job, if you break those rules, what
happens? You get punished for it. You
lose your job. Why should it be any
different for police officers? In fact,
I think it should be much more strictly
enforced for officers with much more
severe consequences for breaking
protocol because in that job, it's life
or death, not just for themselves, but
for everything and everyone around them.
So, this officer breaking protocol here,
going against the rules, going against
their training, ends with a dead dog.
Like, I think this is something that
should be taken very, very seriously.
And I don't think there's any justifying
it at all, especially not after seeing
the body cam. Anyway, that's really
about it.
