She looks like a right and wrong person, with the courage of her convictions. I didn't read about her resisting arrest, just resisting handing out personal info, like her name. It does take two to tango, and why would an elderly woman lay hands on a man. An armed man, at that.
I'm going to bring this back to the scrubbing of God's laws off of people's hearts. As Lewis so aptly pointed out, if it was done the them they would quickly say, "Unfair!" But they can do it forever and find nothing wrong with it. They know right from wrong, moral from immoral, WHEN it is directed at them.
I am reminded of a couple of cases from my troubled past. When child welfare decided my daughter was being neglected because I was home schooling, the welfare dipstick arrived at my door with a deputy in tow. Not knowing my rights or very much about how degenerate law enforcement (esp. child welfare) was, I let her talk to my daughter alone while I went and sat on the porch. And stewed. In the meantime the deputy was rambling around our yard and finally came up to us on the porch. My temper ranneth over and I said a few things about the wrongness of this and he told me to watch my mouth. I replied that I was sitting on my own porch on my own land and I'd say what I darned well pleased. He must have had some humanity left in him, because he actually looked ashamed of himself. A few months later I heard that his wife and children left him.
When we went to court, the DA was all gung ho to take Toots away from me. But we mounted a rosary crusade like no other, and when we went back to court, the judge ruled in our favor. The DA was so upset about it she even followed the judge out of the courtroom arguing all the way. She was ignored. Less than a year later, she was no longer a DA, as the whole town got together and pitched her out of office.
Bottom line; With the same measure with which you measure it, it shall be measured unto you. And I still think Caligula is going to go the same way as Mousselini (sp).