@longislandaudit: Secret Service Will Ask Questions! #firstamendmentaudit #1stamendment #copsoftiktok #dismissed #karen #wethepeople #policeofficer #lawsuit #constitution #copwatch

Long Island Audit
Long Island Audit
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Region: US
Monday 11 March 2024 20:36:11 GMT
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sprinkle_rdg.2
Sprinkle_rdg 📚 :
Put on a seatbelt 😏 lol
2024-03-17 22:37:22
1
ab4qc
Felipe :
Here is where Sean gets a little annoying 🤔
2024-04-27 09:43:38
0
ahmedbakriteam0
بكري الفريق :
🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰
2024-04-22 01:45:23
0
richy3400
richy3400 :
“Put your seat belt on” clearly was trying to bait the officers. What a dusche bag frauditor.
2024-03-11 23:40:30
12
fatdetlige
Bauer :
Don’t bait like that. That’s messed op
2024-03-12 01:00:16
6
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Is your dog jumping on guests the moment they walk through the door? Here’s how to fix it without yelling or punishment.  This training method is all about management, teaching alternative behaviors, and setting your dog up for success in real-world situations. Let’s break it down: Step 1: Manage the Behavior Use tools like a leash, baby gates, crates, or x-pens to prevent your dog from rehearsing the jumping. If your dog keeps practicing the jump, they’re only getting better at it. So management is critical. Stop the behavior before it starts. Step 2: Teach a Clear Alternative Behavior. Train a behavior you DO want like “sit,” “down,” or “place.” Make it super rewarding. Practice in low-distraction environments, then gradually increase the difficulty by adding distractions (like movement, new people, doorbells, etc.). This is called “proofing” the behavior. Step 3: Add in a Guest When your dog can reliably hold their alternative behavior, bring in a guest but with rules. No petting, no eye contact, no talking to the dog. That excitement can trigger the jump. Instead, your job is to cue the dog to hold their sit, down, or place. If the dog stays calm? Mark it and release them calmly to say hi. If they get too excited and jump? That’s feedback. It means your dog isn’t ready yet. Use the leash to guide them back to the original behavior and try again. Jumping doesn’t get the reward, calm behavior does. You’re teaching them that self-control = access. Jumping = back to work. Keep sessions short, positive, and consistent. This method works for puppies and adult dogs, big or small. Don’t just stop the jumping teach your dog what to do instead. ✅ Use management (leash, crate, gates) ✅ Teach a reliable behavior like sit or place ✅ Practice with increasing distractions ✅ Use guests to build real-life proofing ✅ Reward calm, redirect jumping ✅ Repeat until your dog gets it every time Training takes time, but this process builds trust, impulse control, and polite greetings, all while keeping paws off your guests. #DogTraining #StopJumping #DogBehavior #DogTrainingTips #PuppyTraining #LeashTraining #PlaceTraining #ImpulseControl #DogTrainersOfTikTok #RespectfulGreetings #DogObedience #CalmDog #PositiveDogTraining #DogTips #HowToTrainYourDog #NoMoreJumping #DogEtiquette #TrainingThatWorks #TrainDontComplain #CanineManners #StructuredTraining
Is your dog jumping on guests the moment they walk through the door? Here’s how to fix it without yelling or punishment. This training method is all about management, teaching alternative behaviors, and setting your dog up for success in real-world situations. Let’s break it down: Step 1: Manage the Behavior Use tools like a leash, baby gates, crates, or x-pens to prevent your dog from rehearsing the jumping. If your dog keeps practicing the jump, they’re only getting better at it. So management is critical. Stop the behavior before it starts. Step 2: Teach a Clear Alternative Behavior. Train a behavior you DO want like “sit,” “down,” or “place.” Make it super rewarding. Practice in low-distraction environments, then gradually increase the difficulty by adding distractions (like movement, new people, doorbells, etc.). This is called “proofing” the behavior. Step 3: Add in a Guest When your dog can reliably hold their alternative behavior, bring in a guest but with rules. No petting, no eye contact, no talking to the dog. That excitement can trigger the jump. Instead, your job is to cue the dog to hold their sit, down, or place. If the dog stays calm? Mark it and release them calmly to say hi. If they get too excited and jump? That’s feedback. It means your dog isn’t ready yet. Use the leash to guide them back to the original behavior and try again. Jumping doesn’t get the reward, calm behavior does. You’re teaching them that self-control = access. Jumping = back to work. Keep sessions short, positive, and consistent. This method works for puppies and adult dogs, big or small. Don’t just stop the jumping teach your dog what to do instead. ✅ Use management (leash, crate, gates) ✅ Teach a reliable behavior like sit or place ✅ Practice with increasing distractions ✅ Use guests to build real-life proofing ✅ Reward calm, redirect jumping ✅ Repeat until your dog gets it every time Training takes time, but this process builds trust, impulse control, and polite greetings, all while keeping paws off your guests. #DogTraining #StopJumping #DogBehavior #DogTrainingTips #PuppyTraining #LeashTraining #PlaceTraining #ImpulseControl #DogTrainersOfTikTok #RespectfulGreetings #DogObedience #CalmDog #PositiveDogTraining #DogTips #HowToTrainYourDog #NoMoreJumping #DogEtiquette #TrainingThatWorks #TrainDontComplain #CanineManners #StructuredTraining

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