There are two things I find interesting in this video:
1. When being annoying and calling the police wasn't effective in stopping his behavior, she attacked him physically. It could have been because she thought she was a vigilante and doing the right thing or an attempt to get him to clock her good so that she could play the victim card. Probably a combination of both. This line of female "thinking" is an unfortunately common incident which has been chronicled well here and also in other parts of the manosphere.
2. The intersection of technology and "privacy rights" are going to make incidents like this both more common and better documented. I used quotations because this happened in public and there isn't any privacy in public, some state laws notwithstanding. Most people, women especially, hang on to a fiction that if you don't like what somebody else is doing then it is illegal and calling the police will immediately stop them. Even if the police don't actually have a reason to suspect you are doing anything illegal, they will still ask you to stop and claim you are "causing a public disturbance" or some other vaguely written law if they just want you to leave. This changes too. With enough technology, such things can, and are, being defeated.
It's a double edged sword.
For further, more coherent reading:
http://photographyisnotacrime.com/
1. When being annoying and calling the police wasn't effective in stopping his behavior, she attacked him physically. It could have been because she thought she was a vigilante and doing the right thing or an attempt to get him to clock her good so that she could play the victim card. Probably a combination of both. This line of female "thinking" is an unfortunately common incident which has been chronicled well here and also in other parts of the manosphere.
2. The intersection of technology and "privacy rights" are going to make incidents like this both more common and better documented. I used quotations because this happened in public and there isn't any privacy in public, some state laws notwithstanding. Most people, women especially, hang on to a fiction that if you don't like what somebody else is doing then it is illegal and calling the police will immediately stop them. Even if the police don't actually have a reason to suspect you are doing anything illegal, they will still ask you to stop and claim you are "causing a public disturbance" or some other vaguely written law if they just want you to leave. This changes too. With enough technology, such things can, and are, being defeated.
It's a double edged sword.
For further, more coherent reading:
http://photographyisnotacrime.com/