Before I get to the female cops, early in the movie there is a scene where Marty is running hover boarding away from Griff and gets stuck in the middle of a small pond in front of the Clock Tower. As Marty is furiously trying to get to the other side in the foreground you can see a cop just standing there watching him about to be chased by a gang with bats and does nothing.
They cut to the foreground 3 times and the cop throws his hands in the air and just stands there doing nothing. Apparently Back to the Future perfectly predicted that in 2015 cops would be so pussy wipped that they would be afraid of doing anything lest they get in trouble or be fired.
Back to the cop women
A few scenes later, two female cops show up and find Marty's sexy wife sleeping in the ally and they comment on her 'face lift' (not, 'hey what is she doing here? Did she get raped?). Again, Back to the Future perfectly predicts the converged police department. Obviously, as we saw in the previous scene; crime is so rampant that kids can cause crime at the Court House and get away with it (until they literally crash in the Court House), so it's not like having 2 female cops is necessary because the city is so "safe".
No, I proposition that in 2015 everything is so politically correct that it's illegal to have such a masculine police force so they must have more female cops than male.
And this was predicted 30 years ago friends.
PS. Final comment: When Marty Gets back to the future, Niggers live in his house. So we also have Demographic replacement.
Back to the Future definitely needs to be placed in our v/theredpill movie list!
Greenzero86 ago
Predictive programming is real.
carnold03 ago
It's still a profoundly blue pill flick and an extreme example of delusional leftist projection. I hope you list it appropriately. For example, the demographic replacement scene you mention only appears to occur in the dystopia of a Hill Valley resulting from old Biff Tannen going back in time to give his younger self a sports almanac to make himself wealthy enough to buy the town. By contrast, it presents 1980's Hill Valley with a black mayor running for reelection as normal and the future Hill Valley with apparently one group of cybernetic thugs as typical, if not idyllic.