The Myth Of American Exceptionalism

How tired are you of hear­ing the phrase American-excep­tion­al­ism thrown around to deride oth­er nations?
What is this excep­tion­al­ism you ask? After all, this term has been thrown around by Liberals like Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton and Conservatives like lying Ted Cruz and every­one in between.

So what is it?
The web­site [the​week​.com] a high­ly ranked site on Google seem to be the go-to author­i­ty on this ques­tion.
The site argues quote; “One does­n’t have to use the term to believe in the under­ly­ing con­cept. But the phrase has a his­to­ry that helps us to under­stand the cur­rent hyper­bol­ic use”.
Okay, I get that, but I nev­er latch onto any­thing except when I am con­vinced of its authen­tic­i­ty, so I’m going to need more meat on these bones.

Well the site did give more and for those of you who are inter­est­ed I will pro­vide a link to that site right here https://​the​week​.com/​a​r​t​i​c​l​e​s​/​6​5​4​5​0​8​/​w​h​a​t​-​e​x​a​c​t​l​y​-​a​m​e​r​i​c​a​n​-​e​x​c​e​p​t​i​o​n​a​l​ism
I need­ed a pre­cise expla­na­tion some­thing I can sink my teeth into and sure enough, here it is.


American excep­tion­al­ism the site argues; is not the same as say­ing the United States is “dif­fer­ent” from oth­er coun­tries. It does­n’t just mean that the U.S. is “unique.” Countries, like peo­ple, are all dif­fer­ent and unique, even if many share some under­ly­ing char­ac­ter­is­tics. Exceptionalism requires some­thing far more: a belief that the U.S. fol­lows a path of his­to­ry dif­fer­ent from the laws or norms that gov­ern oth­er coun­tries.

That’s the essence of American excep­tion­al­ism: The U.S. is not just a big­ger and more pow­er­ful coun­try — but an excep­tion. It is the bear­er of free­dom and lib­er­ty, and moral­ly supe­ri­or to some­thing called “Europe.” Never mind the dif­fer­ences with­in Europe or the fact that “the world” is big­ger than the U.S. and Europe. The “Europe” ver­sus “America” dichoto­my is the cru­cible in which American excep­tion­al­ist think­ing formed.

Yup excep­tion­al­ly hor­rif­ic, this is what ear­ly vot­ing looked like in LA coun­ty, the cen­ter of Democratic sup­port in the state of California



Okay, so let me dis­sect this a lit­tle, start­ing with, “the excep­tion­al­ism of America is not a sce­nario in which America is com­pared to the rest of the world, just Europe”.
Strange, con­sid­er­ing that America only has about five per­cent of the world’s pop­u­la­tion at about 325,000.000 and Europe hov­ers at 742,848,889.
Funny that Asia the worlds most pop­u­lous con­ti­nent weren’t even con­sid­ered in this con­test of exceptionalism.

Early vot­ing lines in Miami Dade County, these excp­tion­al peo­ple do not seem to be wait­ing to cast a vote for Ron Desantis



What’s more, the iden­ti­fy­ing char­ac­ter­is­tics of this con­cept as far as the [week​.com] sees it is that it [America], is the bear­er of free­dom and lib­er­ty, and is moral­ly supe­ri­or to some­thing called “Europe.“
I don’t know where to begin with this, the Europeans, for the most part, were large­ly also involved in the pogrom vis­it­ed on the African peo­ples,
In fact, most European pow­ers at the time carved out pieces of the African Continent for their own exploita­tion.
But Europe had its come to Jesus moment and real­ized that own­ing oth­er human beings was not such a good idea long before America ever did.
In fact, it may be argued that many in America today are still uncon­vinced about the despi­ca­ble inhu­man­i­ty of that specter.
There is your excep­tion­al­ism, there is your moral superiority.

Exceptionally long lines in north Miami large­ly black and brown peo­ple wait­ing patient­ly to vote as polling sites run out of vot­ing forms and machines break down. Exceptional indeed.



Any sys­tem which enslaves parts of its pop­u­la­tion, all while mur­der­ing, rap­ing, beat­ing and demor­al­iz­ing them and appro­pri­at­ing their his­to­ry, for hun­dreds of years design­ing laws which take their human­i­ty and their dig­ni­ty has some gall brag­ging about moral supe­ri­or­i­ty.
The idea that even as there are still entrenched forces hell-bent on pre­vent­ing oth­ers from vot­ing, and as long as they are hell-bent on dehu­man­iz­ing them by hav­ing their [race sol­diers] pose as police offi­cers, and as long as they gun down the inno­cent and are not held account­able then any claim of moral supe­ri­or­i­ty is mer­it­less braggadocio.

These peo­ple of col­or in Florida, forced to stand in long lines do not feel excep­tion­al. There is noth­ing excep­tion­al about this.



Exceptionalism is doing, not claim­ing that you are. If you have to say how excep­tion­al you are, maybe you aren’t.
America is any­thing but excep­tion­al, not just on the ridicu­lous claim of moral supe­ri­or­i­ty, but on how it treats its own cit­i­zens, (mass incar­cer­a­tion Prison Industrial com­plex. Voter sup­pres­sion. State-sanc­tioned killings. Persecuting immi­grants, while Americans walk into any coun­try and are treat­ed with love and respect). 
There is no excep­tion­al­ism in any of that, no moral supe­ri­or­i­ty.
Ask the peo­ple in Puerto Rico, the US Virgin Islands, American Samoa who have been col­o­nized but are still unable to vote in American Presidential elec­tions.
Colonization with­out rep­re­sen­ta­tion.
Moral supe­ri­or­i­ty? 
And don’t for­get that all of the peo­ple liv­ing in these places are black and brown peo­ple.
Wonder why they aren’t allowed to vote?





Being Black And Republican Is Not A Thing

Black Republicanism is a real apho­rism, how­ev­er, in some ways, it seems as log­i­cal as walk­ing in an East-Westerly direc­tion, such is the inher­ent con­tra­dic­tion of it.

The strug­gle to under­stand the idea of Blacks align­ing them­selves with the Republican par­ty or sup­port­ing the par­ty’s agen­da is a real phe­nom­e­non. Nevertheless, it also begs the ques­tion why have some Blacks in oth­er parts of the world still see the Republican par­ty as an enti­ty wor­thy of their sup­port?

If some­one was to ask me what is it that most black peo­ple who sup­port the Republican par­ty have missed?.….…. I would read­i­ly respond that they missed the fact that the two polit­i­cal par­ties switched roles in the ear­ly 1960’s.
Conversely, If I was asked what is it which caus­es any black per­son to still sup­port the Republican Party, I would read­i­ly opine that the eman­ci­pa­tion procla­ma­tion signed by the then Republican pres­i­dent Abraham Lincoln still have some star­ry-eyed about the par­ty to this very day.

The Emancipation Proclamation of January 1, 1863, may be looked at in its most sim­plis­tic form a‑la the unde­ni­able fact that 3.5 mil­lion enslaved African Americans in the des­ig­nat­ed areas of the South were moved from slave to a sense of pseu­do-free­dom.
Or we can scratch the sur­face and look at some hard facts as it relates to the mythol­o­gy sur­round­ing Lincoln’s valian­cy in sign­ing the Emancipation Proclamation. After three(3) years of a bloody civ­il war, Lincoln des­per­ate­ly need­ed bod­ies to fight his war.

The Emancipation Proclamation was lim­it­ed in many ways. It applied only to states that had seced­ed from the United States, leav­ing slav­ery untouched in the loy­al bor­der states. It also express­ly exempt­ed parts of the Confederacy (the Southern seces­sion­ist states) that had already come under Northern con­trol. Most impor­tant, the free­dom it promised depend­ed upon Union (United States) mil­i­tary vic­to­ry. Source[archives.gov]

Although the Emancipation Proclamation did not end slav­ery in the nation, it cap­tured the hearts and imag­i­na­tion of mil­lions of Americans and fun­da­men­tal­ly trans­formed the char­ac­ter of the war. After January 1, 1863, every advance of fed­er­al troops expand­ed the domain of free­dom. Moreover, the Proclamation announced the accep­tance of black men into the Union Army and Navy, enabling the lib­er­at­ed to become lib­er­a­tors. By the end of the war, almost 200,000 black sol­diers and sailors had fought for the Union and freedom.

According to [ Dr. Terry L. Jones of thep​iney​woods​.com] Lincoln became known as “The Great Emancipator,” but in real­i­ty, the Emancipation Proclamation’s promise of free­dom inten­tion­al­ly exclud­ed some 800,000 slaves-many of whom lived in Louisiana as well.
Some his­to­ri­ans have argued that Lincoln hat­ed Slavery, how­ev­er, in a pub­lic let­ter to the New York Tribune pub­lished just a month before he issued the Preliminary Emancipation Proclamation, Lincoln declared “My para­mount objec­tive in this strug­gle is to save the Union, and is not either to save or to destroy slav­ery. If I could save the Union with­out free­ing any slave I would do it, and if I could save it by free­ing all the slaves, I would do it; and if I could save it by free­ing some and leav­ing oth­ers alone I would also do that.”
Yea, the Great Emancipator had no deep burn­ing desire in his gut to erad­i­cate the scourge of slav­ery, for him what­ev­er he would do about it had to jus­ti­fy his own end.


Emancipation, how­ev­er, was a com­pli­cat­ed mat­ter because most Northerners were fight­ing to restore the Union and had no inter­est in free­ing the slaves. To win the war, it was absolute­ly vital that Lincoln keep the slave-hold­ing Border States on his side, not to men­tion the thou­sands of slave-own­ing Southerners who had opposed seces­sion and were pro­vid­ing impor­tant sup­port to the Union.

Lincoln knew that if he attempt­ed to free all of the slaves, loy­al slave own­ers in Missouri, Kentucky, Maryland, and Delaware, and in the Union-con­trolled areas of the Confederacy, might well join the Rebels to pro­tect their valu­able slave prop­er­ty. To pre­vent that from hap­pen­ing, the Emancipation Proclamation care­ful­ly avoid­ed free­ing the slaves held by most Unionists.



Lincoln real­ized that slav­ery helped the Confederacy wage its war for inde­pen­dence. Slaves per­formed most of the labor in the South con­struct­ing Rebel mil­i­tary for­ti­fi­ca­tions, work­ing in muni­tions fac­to­ries, and har­vest­ing the food that fed the Confederate army. Every slave who worked in such a man­ner freed up a white man to serve in the army. Source [ Dr. Terry L. Jones]

Probably, the most impor­tant issue of the conun­drum Lincoln faced was the need to adopt­ing eman­ci­pa­tion as an offi­cial war goal also would make it less like­ly that the anti-slav­ery Europeans would inter­vene on the side of the Confederacy.
Lincoln was sin­gu­lar­ly focused on main­tain­ing the Union. If the French entered the war to pro­tect their ter­ri­to­ry of Louisana America as we know it today may well have been only a dream.

The cal­cu­lat­ed nature of the procla­ma­tion was not lost on peo­ple at the time, accord­ing to Professor Jones, one British news­pa­per not­ed, “The prin­ci­ple assert­ed is not that a human being can­not just­ly own anoth­er, but that he can­not own him unless he is loy­al to the United States.“


Even so, the {eman­ci­pa­tion procla­ma­tion} meant that the enslaved African-America pop­u­la­tion toil­ing end­less­ly in degrad­ing servi­tude could have some­thing to look for­ward to, a start­ing point on what would become a seem­ing­ly end­less sojourn to self-auton­o­my and cit­i­zen­ship.
Little did they know that even though the eman­ci­pa­tion procla­ma­tion would to some degree, remove the lit­er­al chains from their ankles, dark forces were already hard at work cre­at­ing an equal­ly brutish sys­tem known as [Jim Crow], which all but made the new­ly lib­er­at­ed blacks slaves again to the very mas­ters from whom they were just freed.

Like two trav­el­ers cross­ing paths in the dark the Republican par­ty which for what its worth, was the par­ty of eman­ci­pa­tion became the polit­i­cal par­ty to which white men ran after President Lyndon B. Johnson signed into law the his­toric Civil Rights Act in a nation­al­ly tele­vised cer­e­mo­ny at the White House.
The Democratic Party was now the par­ty that looked out for the rights of blacks and whites were piss­ing mad.
For the aver­age white man, the negro had no right they should respect.

President Lyndon Johnson has been rumored to have said “We have lost the South for a gen­er­a­tion,” Johnson told an aide after he signed the 1964 Civil Rights Act. 
Dr. Steven J. Allen of cap​i​tal​re​search​.org push­es back against the asser­tion that Johnson ever made those com­ments.
Allen’s argu­ments are root­ed in the con­cept that if LBJ had made those com­ments, he would have been wrong. The Goldwater surge in the South„ he argues fad­ed quick­ly. With a hand­ful of excep­tions, Republican gains in the region in 1964 van­ished by 1966. Decades passed with Democrats still in firm con­trol of the South. 
In seek­ing to label those with whom he dis­agrees, like the Reverend Al Sharpton whom he tar­nish­es pejo­ra­tive­ly a ‘racist preach­er”, Allen for­got that President Johnson could have made the state­ment and be wrong, could have made the state­ment and be right even­tu­al­ly, and that there was no mutu­al exclu­siv­i­ty between com­pet­ing events.

Dr. Steven J. Allen, in seek­ing to estab­lish that the state­ment attrib­uted to President Johnson was a myth, inher­ent­ly failed to speak to the irrefutable fact that for decades after the sign­ing of the civ­il rights act, to the present day, the entire south has been a bas­tion of Republicanism.
An almost impen­e­tra­ble gar­ri­son which has hard­ly seen a Democrat car­ry a south­ern state, out­side Florida except for Carter who won his home state of Georgia, Bill Clinton who car­ried Arkansas and Al Gore win­ning Tennessee.

The laugh­able truth being ignored by Allen is that, whether Johnson said “we lost the south for gen­er­a­tions” or not is man­i­fest­ly unim­por­tant.
The Democratic par­ty even­tu­al­ly lost the south and parts beyond even­tu­al­ly. As a con­sol­i­da­tion of pur­pose devel­oped to re-lit­i­gate, if not retool for a new war under the mantra the south will rise again.


It prob­a­bly makes more sense to lay out the gross atroc­i­ties which the Republican Party has vis­it­ed on peo­ple of col­or since the par­ty took over the per­se­cu­tion of black peo­ple from the south­ern Democrats.
 Voter sup­pres­sion. Police bru­tal­i­ty. Blatant Racism and the list goes on and on. However, no Republican ini­tia­tive has been more detri­men­tal to African-Americans than the Nixon so-called war on drugs, con­tin­ued through Ford, Reagan and Bush.
In the peri­od since the war on drugs was launched the American prison pop­u­la­tion has sky­rock­et­ed to over two mil­lion. Many of those caught in the drag­net have been low-lev­el non­vi­o­lent drug offend­ers who just hap­pen to be black.

Even as Republican poli­cies have packed the pris­ons with non­vi­o­lent drug offend­ers, and result­ed in the depor­ta­tion of count­less oth­ers, state leg­is­la­tures con­trolled by Republicans have passed laws that make it impos­si­ble for offend­ers who have done time in prison to vote after they have paid their debt to soci­ety.
This has ren­dered a huge seg­ment of the male black pop­u­la­tion not just felons but made them unem­ploy­able and with­out the abil­i­ty to chose their lead­ers.
In many cas­es, they are denied basic ben­e­fits such as food stamps for the rest of their lives, that includes preg­nant women, peo­ple in drug treat­ment or recov­ery, and peo­ple suf­fer­ing from HIV/​AIDS sim­ply because they were once caught with drugs.
These racist dra­con­ian poli­cies ensure the recidi­vism of blacks and ensure that pris­ons remain filled with black bodies.

Speaking to this in her best sell­ing book [the new Jim Crow] Lawyer, Activist and Author Michelle Alexander said;” If shack­ling for­mer pris­on­ers with a life­time of debt and autho­riz­ing dis­crim­i­na­tion against them in employ­ment, hous­ing, edu­ca­tion, and pub­lic ben­e­fits is not enough to send the mes­sage that they are not want­ed and not even con­sid­ered full cit­i­zens, then strip­ping vot­ing rights from those labeled crim­i­nals sure­ly gets the point across.

I will prob­a­bly not change a sin­gle mind of the black peo­ple who vote Republican.
That was not my inten­tion, what I set out to do in this piece was to estab­lish a fac­tu­al foun­da­tion that puts to rest the friv­o­lous argu­ments around black peo­ple’s sup­port for a polit­i­cal par­ty which lit­er­al­ly hates them and has sys­tem­at­i­cal­ly worked toward their destruc­tion.
Black Republicanism is an oxy­moron that only makes sense if you are trav­el­ing in an east-west­er­ly direction.

More Dangerous Weapons Off The Streets


Police con­tin­ue to remove these dan­ger­ous weapons from the streets despite the lack of resources they have to grap­ple with>
These were recov­ered in Tivoli Gardens two days ago.


Democracy Under Assault Worldwide/​has It Ever Existed


The Definition of [DEMOCRACY] accord­ing to @Merriam Webster is this; A gov­ern­ment in which the supreme pow­er is vest­ed in the peo­ple and exer­cised by them direct­ly or indi­rect­ly through a sys­tem of rep­re­sen­ta­tion usu­al­ly involv­ing peri­od­i­cal­ly held free elec­tions. 
G
overn­ment by the peo­ple espe­cial­ly: rule of the major­i­ty, Ha, we will talk about this par­tic­u­lar caveat lat­er.

Democracy a con­cept where a small minor­i­ty con­trol the mass­es through force of arms

Democracy, as a con­cept has faced chal­lenges by some who view it as a zero-sum game. They see it’s unsteady and irreg­u­lar progress as a sign that its fail­ings are a tes­ta­ment to it imprac­ti­cal­i­ty if not it’s lack of exis­tence.
In fact, many in parts of the world ruled by auto­crat­ic regimes have argued that Democracy does not and can­not work.

Writing for [quo​ra​.com] in an Article titled; Why do so many peo­ple say that democ­ra­cy won’t work for China, or that it only works for Western coun­tries, Christian Kober writes.
Democracy requires sound insti­tu­tions and some fun­da­men­tal shared beliefs. If, for exam­ple, the mil­i­tary sees itself as ‘above the law’, democ­ra­cy will stand on very fee­ble feet.”

Whose con­cept is this where the voic­es of the less pow­er­ful are drowned out by the pow­er of money?



I
n an opin­ion piece titled [Columbia, proof that democ­ra­cy does­n’t work] writ­ten for the New York Times Martín Caparrós wrote;

The mech­a­nism of rep­re­sen­ta­tion doesn’t work. Democracy is in trou­ble. And not only in Colombia, of course. Voting, to which so many aspired for so long, has become a bur­den or has been for­got­ten by so many. There are rea­sons for this, but there’s a fac­tor that con­founds all of them: Those who elect not to elect,  do so because they don’t think they are actu­al­ly elect­ing any­thing.
Then they wash their hands of the mat­ter and accept, for a while, being left out. But inevitably, lit­tle by lit­tle, they will start look­ing for ways in which they can exert influ­ence. From what we see, democ­ra­cy is not one of those ways”.

If the con­cept, as explained by @Merriam Webster is the pure expla­na­tion of the very con­cept to which we ought to sub­scribe when we think of democ­ra­cy the ques­tion then becomes, have we ever had democracy?

A spec­ta­cle which was the norm after slav­ery was abol­ished up through­out the 1960’s.



If the con­cept of Democracy is a Govern­ment by the peo­ple espe­cial­ly: rule of the major­i­ty, then it leaves pre­cious lit­tle to the imag­i­na­tion.
Ask Al Gore and Hillary Clinton whether they agree with the con­cept of a Democracy in which they both got expo­nen­tial­ly more votes than their oppo­nents and end­ed up being the los­er.
Ask the African-Americans who have strug­gled for the right to vote, being lynched, shot and seen their prop­er­ty burned to the ground sim­ply because they dared to want to exer­cise their right to vote

Native-American Protesters were hit with rub­ber bul­lets and smoke grenades for stand­ing up to pro­tect their drink­ing water.


It is 2018 and all across the world’s old­est democracy[sic] in state after state, Georgia, Wisconsin, Texas, North Dakota and places in between forces opposed to the pure con­cept of a demo­c­ra­t­ic nation have erect­ed bar­ri­ers in the path of some vot­ers who would vote against the can­di­dates they sup­port.
In North Dakota, entire Indian Tribes liv­ing on reser­va­tions are being pre­vent­ed from vot­ing as a result of oner­ous and uncalled for state laws imposed by Republicans as a means of pre­vent­ing native tribes from voting.

Police unleashed mil­i­tary style assault at stand­ing rock




A major vot­ing hur­dle for Native Americans in North Dakota used to be thought of as a kind of force of nature, sort of like grav­i­ty or sun­shine: Indian reser­va­tions didn’t have named, num­bered streets. And with­out these des­ig­na­tions on the trib­al IDs that Natives car­ry, they couldn’t vote in the state.
If you are a dyed in the wool believ­er in the con­cept of good over evil, right over might, and democ­ra­cy over dic­ta­tor­ship then you are imag­in­ing that the State Appellate court upheld the low­er court’s rul­ing which sided with the tribes.
You would also imag­ine that the United States Supreme Courts would side with the dis­en­fran­chised native tribes.
If you did any of that you would be wrong.

Peaceful protest to pro­tect their land evoked this response


According to [inthe​se​times​.com] 
There was no way around the prob­lem. No res­i­den­tial address on trib­al IDs meant no bal­lot box access for Native peo­ple — unless they were will­ing to under­take pro­hib­i­tive­ly long and cost­ly dri­ves and oth­er hur­dles to get an alter­nate ID. “It is a vot­er-sup­pres­sion tech­nique North Dakota tar­gets at its Native pop­u­la­tion,” accus­es OJ Semans, the Rosebud Sioux co-direc­tor of Four Directions civ­il rights group.

If you took the path of prece­dent and con­sid­ered what has hap­pened to both the Native and African-American peo­ple in America and decid­ed that nei­ther the Appellate court nor the Supreme Court sided with the aggriev­ed par­ties you would be right.
There is the democ­ra­cy for you.

A pic­ture speaks a thou­sand words


So a purist con­cept of Democracy may be best defined as a work in progress, maybe best defined by the Nation’s 44th President Barack Obama ” We waged a Civil War. We over­came depres­sion. We’ve lurched from eras of great pro­gres­sive change to peri­ods of retrench­ment”.

We are in one of those ter­ri­ble peri­ods of retrench­ment, a dis­mal dark place when com­pared to Ronald Reagan’s myth­i­cal “shin­ing city on a hill”.
If we have not arrived at the place envi­sioned by the found­ing fathers where all peo­ple are treat­ed equal­ly, is there such a thing as democ­ra­cy yet?

John Adams




“Government is insti­tut­ed for the com­mon good; for the pro­tec­tion, safe­ty, pros­per­i­ty and hap­pi­ness of the peo­ple; and not for the prof­it, hon­or, or pri­vate inter­est of any one man, fam­i­ly, or class of men.” 
― John Adams



Jamaica’s Criminal Justice System A Haven For Murderers And Terrorists

Kevin Tyndale o/​c Richie Poo

WHEN WE SAY JAMAICA IS A CRIMINAL’S PARADISE DON’T QUESTION US.

The entire sys­tem is cor­rupt and shit­ty to the core. Despite the hard work of the Police to gath­er evi­dence and put mass mur­der­ers away the sys­tem does its’ lev­el best to find ways to return them to the streets through the dif­fer­ent loop­holes in the sys­tem.

According to the Jamaica Gleaner; Gangster mur­der­er Kevin Tyndale,(Richie Poo) a mem­ber of the Gideon Warriors gang based in August Town, St Andrew was released from Prison on parole with­out con­di­tions Tyndale
was sen­tenced to a total of 90 years in prison in 2005 after he was con­vict­ed of ille­gal pos­ses­sion of a firearm, rob­bery with aggra­va­tion, and wound­ing with intent.

See sto­ry here:http://​jamaica​-glean​er​.com/​a​r​t​i​c​l​e​/​l​e​a​d​-​s​t​o​r​i​e​s​/​2​0​1​8​1​1​0​1​/​h​a​s​-​r​e​l​e​a​s​e​-​r​e​p​u​t​e​d​-​g​a​n​g​s​t​e​r​-​t​r​i​g​g​e​r​e​d​-​r​e​v​i​e​w​-​j​a​s​-​p​a​r​o​l​e​-​s​y​s​t​e​m​?​f​b​c​l​i​d​=​I​w​A​R​0​N​L​4​-​4​3​T​O​I​0​j​X​v​G​f​L​p​y​0​B​n​N​X​5​F​H​f​C​c​h​k​d​k​h​x​Z​f​9​C​G​i​j​x​G​L​O​2​1​g​B​C​A​n​0xs

PLEASE SHARE THIS POST FOR THE SAFETY OF THE POLICE AND POPULATION ALIKE. THE SYSTEMS WHICH ARE SUPPOSED TO PROTECT ARE FAILING THE INNOCENT

Despite Jamaica’s Affinity For Siding With Criminals The JCF Can Become The Envy Of The Region/​our Officers Are

In October 1991 I dropped every­thing and walked away from the job I loved for two rea­sons.
(1) The pay was shit­ty, the sum of mon­ey I was get­ting paid once per month was nowhere near close to what was required to live a medi­an basic exis­tence. (1a) I did not want my life to be a medi­an basic exis­tence.
(2) I looked at polic­ing strate­gi­cal­ly and real­ized that the peo­ple who occu­pied the posi­tions I would be striv­ing to achieve were hard­ly any bet­ter off than I was.

Twenty-sev­en years lat­er my deci­sion is val­i­dat­ed day after day and it seems to me that despite the fact that near­ly three decades have passed since my own exit not only has police offi­cers work­ing con­di­tions and remu­ner­a­tions hard­ly changed, the qual­i­ty of the peo­ple they serve has dete­ri­o­rat­ed dra­mat­i­cal­ly.
What we are left with today is a soci­ety which has den­i­grat­ed expo­nen­tial­ly, cre­at­ing an ever-increas­ing dirty pool from which the nation is forced to draw it’s pub­lic sec­tor work­ers. 
It is hard to imag­ine a sit­u­a­tion in which water drawn from a tox­ic pool can be good for any­one’s con­sump­tion.
The spot­light in Jamaica is usu­al­ly focused on two sets of pub­lic sec­tor work­ers, Politicians, and Police.
The Jamaican politi­cian is sup­posed to be the deliv­er­er of goods to every­one and the police is sup­posed to be the sav­ior of every­one.
In that blink­ered myopic envi­ron­ment, it is hard to near impos­si­ble, to focus atten­tion on the fact that the entire pub­lic sec­tor is lit­er­al­ly cor­rupt.…. they all came from the same dirty pool.

Despite the fore­gone, I have always main­tained that the Jamaican Police can eas­i­ly do a bet­ter job despite the chal­lenges if it choos­es to.
It does­n’t require any effort out­side just avoid­ing stu­pid mis­takes for Christ’s sake.
The JCF is nev­er going to be the dar­ling of Jamaica in my life­time lets face that real­i­ty but it can become an agency that fix­es itself, crit­ics be damned. 
It can make itself the envy of its hate­ful detrac­tors, it can make itself feared by its ene­mies, not feared out of a vio­lent ten­den­cy, feared because of its inves­tiga­tive and com­pe­tency capa­bil­i­ties.
The shine and lus­ter the JDF receives were always (a)because sol­diers weren’t out arrest­ing crim­i­nals, and (b) more sol­diers were in fact prod­ucts of the vio­lent inner-city com­mu­ni­ties.
Police offi­cers large­ly come from the Island’s rur­al com­mu­ni­ties. 
The lus­ter and shine will soon wear away as sol­diers are more and more thrust into the role of pseu­do police officers.

Tesha Miller

One way for the JCF to become a bet­ter agency is to devel­op bet­ter inves­tiga­tive capa­bil­i­ties. 
Of course, we know that the pub­lic sec­tor is cor­rupt, we know that con­trary to the mis­guid­ed per­cep­tions that Judges are above it all many are in fact just as cor­rupt as the worst crim­i­nals, so too are the crim­i­nal lawyers. They all come from the same dirty pool.
But the JCF must on its own move into the 21st cen­tu­ry and drag the coun­try along if it is to sur­vive.
Improving itself will absolute­ly [not] be accom­plished by look­ing to the University of the West Indies, that incu­ba­tor of anti-police -ism.

The police can­not con­tin­ue to keep expos­ing its vul­ner­a­ble under­bel­ly by arrest­ing peo­ple sim­ply because they are known crim­i­nals with­out hav­ing hard evi­dence against them.
The arrest with­out charge of life­long gang­ster Tesha Miller by detec­tives from the Counter Terrorism and Organized Crime branch of the Constabulary, and the resul­tant order by a judge to release him if he is not charged by Friday, November 2nd is shame­ful.

Why arrest him if the evi­dence is not ready? Why arrest his girl­friend if there is no evi­dence against her?
If she was arrest­ed for some breach of con­duct as a result of the arrest of her boyfriend why not charge her and place her before the court?
In as much as I loathe many of the crim­i­nal lov­ing hacks who sub­sti­tute as judges, I can­not fault them for respond­ing in like man­ner to writs of habeas cor­pus by defense counsel.

The much vaunt­ed [CTOC] has striv­en to dif­fer­en­ti­ate itself from oth­er parts of the [JCF].
[CTOC’s] has done good work before it must con­tin­ue to do good work going for­ward.
If the JCF and its dif­fer­ent arms want to be tak­en seri­ous­ly, not nec­es­sar­i­ly by the crim­i­nal lov­ing Jamaican pub­lic but at least in the CARICOM region, it has to do a bet­ter job at the fol­low­ing.


CASE MANAGEMENT
Brainstorming ses­sions not only help par­tic­i­pants to start talk­ing about why evi­dence col­lec­tion is impor­tant but also pro­vides the facil­i­ta­tor with an oppor­tu­ni­ty to assess offi­cers lev­el of knowl­edge and com­pe­tence.
According to @[reinventingtherules] these are some point­ers which may help police agen­cies, par­tic­u­lar­ly in devel­op­ing coun­tries deal with the ris­ing tide of crim­i­nal­i­ty.
a) inves­ti­gate crime scenes;
b) col­lect and pre­serve evi­dence;
c) inter­view and exam­ine vic­tims and wit­ness­es;
d) use tech­nol­o­gy and foren­sic sci­ence;
e) coör­di­nate inves­ti­ga­tions across police precincts and divi­sions; 
f) coör­di­nate among the var­i­ous actors in the crim­i­nal jus­tice sys­tem (police, inves­ti­ga­tors, prison offi­cials, pros­e­cu­tors, and judges).

The inabil­i­ty of the police to inves­ti­gate crime has very real con­se­quences, the most obvi­ous of which is the chal­lenge of pros­e­cut­ing and con­vict­ing crim­i­nals. 
Where seri­ous crimes are often preva­lent, the inabil­i­ty to address it can be immense­ly desta­bi­liz­ing for the coun­try.
Jamaica is a case study in this regard.
A lack of police train­ing in crim­i­nal inves­ti­ga­tion is often exac­er­bat­ed by a lack of the basic resources required to under­take it. For exam­ple, police in devel­op­ing coun­tries may lack com­put­ers, pens and paper, stor­age con­tain­ers for evi­dence, DNA kits, and so forth.
Inadequate laws, that are either out­dat­ed or do not pro­vide suf­fi­cient oper­a­tional guid­ance and more impor­tant­ly enough puni­tive teeth to deter crim­i­nal con­duct.
this fur­ther hin­ders efforts to ensure the effec­tive inves­ti­ga­tion of crimes con­sis­tent with inter­na­tion­al human rights stan­dards and best practices. 



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Why Young Men Of Color Are Joining White-Supremacist Groups

Patriot Prayer’s leader is half-Japanese. Black and brown faces march with the Proud Boys. Is the future of hate multicultural?

PORTLAND, Oregon — Outfitted in a flak jack­et and fight­ing gloves, Enrique Tarrio was one of dozens of black, Latino, and Asian men who marched along­side white suprema­cists in Portland on Aug. 4.

Tarrio, who iden­ti­fies as Afro-Cuban, is pres­i­dent of the Miami chap­ter of the Proud Boys, who call them­selves “Western chau­vin­ists,” and “reg­u­lar­ly spout white-nation­al­ist memes and main­tain affil­i­a­tions with known extrem­ists,” accord­ing to the Southern Poverty Law Center. Last month, pri­or to the Patriot Prayer ral­ly he attend­ed in Portland, Tarrio was pic­tured with oth­er far-right activists mak­ing a hand sign that start­ed as a hoax but has become an in-joke. Last year, Tarrio said trav­eled to Charlottesville, Virginia, for the Unite the Rightral­ly that end­ed with a neo-Nazi alleged­ly killing an anti-fas­cist pro­test­er. (The Proud Boys said any mem­bers who went to the event were kicked out.)

View image on Twitter

Patriot Prayer + Proud Boys in Vancouver night b4 Aug 4 Portland ral­ly many fear will end in vio­lence. Tusitala “Tiny” Toese and oth­ers make an appar­ent “White Power” hand ges­ture. T‑shirts read, “Pinochet Did Nothing Wrong.”

A lot of these young guys, espe­cial­ly from the soft­ware world, who are being sucked into white nation­al­ism, start out being worked up about Ayn Rand in high school.”— David Neiwert 

Tarrio and oth­er peo­ple of col­or at the far-right ral­lies claim insti­tu­tion­al racism no longer exists in America. In their view, blacks are to blame for any lin­ger­ing inequal­i­ty because they are depen­dent on wel­fare, lack strong lead­er­ship, and believe Democrats who tell them “You’re always going to be broke. You’re not going to make it in soci­ety because of insti­tu­tion­al racism,” as one mixed-race man put it.

If racism doesn’t exist, I ask Tarrio, how would he explain the dis­pro­por­tion­ate killing of young black men by police? “Hip-hop cul­ture,” he says. It “glo­ri­fies that lifestyle… of sell­ing drugs, shoot­ing up.” Because of that, “Obviously you’re going to have high­er crime rates. Obviously you’re going to have more police pres­ence and more con­fronta­tions.” (Police kill black males aged 15 to 34 at nine times the rate of the gen­er­al population.)

Elysa Sanchez, who is black and Puerto Rican, attend­ed the “Liberty or Death Rally Against Left-Wing Violence” in Seattle on Aug. 18, join­ing about 20 mili­ti­a­men open-car­ry­ing hand­guns and semi-auto­mat­ic rifles.

Sanchez says, “If black peo­ple are com­mit­ting more mur­ders, more rob­beries, more thefts, more vio­lent crime, that’s why you would see more black men hav­ing encoun­ters with the police.”

Also in Seattle, Franky Price, who said he is “black and white,”wore a T‑shirt read­ing, “It’s okay to be white.” Read more here: https://​www​.thedai​ly​beast​.com/​w​h​y​-​y​o​u​n​g​-​m​e​n​-​o​f​-​c​o​l​o​r​-​a​r​e​-​j​o​i​n​i​n​g​-​w​h​i​t​e​-​s​u​p​r​e​m​a​c​i​s​t​-​g​r​o​ups


Black Navy Sailor Attempting To Help ‘Stranded Motorist’ Shot And Killed

Curtis Adams

Active duty Navy sailor Curtis Adams, 21, was dri­ving in Mountain View, Calif., Saturday morn­ing when he spot­ted a man near a vehi­cle Adams believed the man need­ed help with. Adams, who was with his girl­friend, pulled over to offer assis­tance. He didn’t know the man was attempt­ing to steal the car.

The “strand­ed motorist” shot Adams. His girl­friend called 911. Adams was tak­en to UC San Diego Medical Center, where he died.

According to NBC San Diego, the sus­pect, who was caught Sunday, was also involved in anoth­er shoot­ing min­utes before he shot Adams. The accused shoot­er has been iden­ti­fied as 21-year-old Brandon Acuna.

Acuna, who has a long crim­i­nal his­to­ry, “was booked into San Diego County Central Jail on charges of first-degree mur­der and sec­ond-degree bur­glary and held with no bail,” NBC San Diego reports. 

The police are still inves­ti­gat­ing the motive behind both shootings. 

A Fascist Won Brazil’s Presidential Election, And The Media’s Tweets Were Very Bad



By Travis Waldron

The élite media still can’t fig­ure out how to call right-wing author­i­tar­i­ans what they are. 



These are con­fus­ing times for the estab­lish­ment media. Fascism is on the hoof, and the lib­er­al order and its var­i­ous shib­bo­leths are under threat, among them the very notion of a free press. But how to get a han­dle on such a phe­nom­e­non? How does one report objec­tive­ly on the can­non being point­ed at one’s head?

One way would be to pre­tend that the can­non isn’t a can­non. That’s what we saw on Twitter Sunday night after Brazil, the world’s fourth-largest democ­ra­cy, elect­ed a neo-fas­cist as its new pres­i­dent.

Jair Bolsonaro, a far-right con­gress­man, is by any rea­son­able def­i­n­i­tion an author­i­tar­i­an, a fas­cist and a poten­tial dic­ta­tor. He prais­es dic­ta­tor­ships and says the only prob­lem with pre­vi­ous dic­ta­tors is that they didn’t kill enough. He has called for killing his polit­i­cal oppo­nents and said last week that he would “cleanse” Brazil of left­ists, who would have no choice but to “leave or go to jail.” He calls immi­grants “scum” and said mem­bers of Afro-Brazilian com­mu­ni­ties aren’t suit­able for pro-cre­ation, wants police to kill alleged crim­i­nals on sight and chose a run­ning mate who refus­es to rule out a return of mil­i­tary rule. His entire polit­i­cal career is built on vio­lent rhetoric aimed at Brazil’s most mar­gin­al­ized peo­ples.

These are all objec­tive­ly fas­cist, author­i­tar­i­an, auto­crat­ic things to say, and Bolsonaro’s long his­to­ry of espous­ing such sen­ti­ment sug­gests they are a good bet to become the fas­cist, author­i­tar­i­an, auto­crat­ic things he will do. 

And yet after the returns were in, the élite press, which we’re told is very com­mit­ted to objec­tiv­i­ty, start­ed hem­ming and haw­ing its way around the elec­tion of a pres­i­dent who would glad­ly shut­ter their oper­a­tions and throw them all in prison if he could. 

Bolsonaro is a “divi­sive pop­ulist,” The New York Times said, jam­ming a euphemism and a cat­e­go­ry error togeth­er, the lat­ter premised on the idea that pop­ulism is noth­ing more than a mat­ter of coarse rhetoric. (As with Donald Trump, Bolsonaro’s “pop­ulist” ges­tures served main­ly to dis­tract from the sup­port he was con­sol­i­dat­ing among the reac­tionary fan­cy class­es.) Read more here: https://​www​.huff​in​g​ton​post​.com/​e​n​t​r​y​/​j​a​i​r​-​b​o​l​s​o​n​a​r​o​-​b​r​a​z​i​l​-​e​l​e​c​t​i​o​n​-​m​e​d​i​a​_​u​s​_​5​b​d​7​6​9​f​4​e​4​b​0​7​4​2​7​6​1​0​a​3​6de

The Incredible Ability Of American Cops To Arrest Violent White Murderers Without Hurting Them


Gregory Alan Bush report­ed­ly has a vio­lent past


It took them a while to do it and one has to won­der why? Even, when the evi­dence is glar­ing, there are hes­i­ta­tions to treat attacks on Black Americans as hate crimes?
That “it”, is rec­og­niz­ing that the brazen mur­der of two elder­ly black peo­ple in a Kentucky super­mar­ket was a hate crime.
As the Nation grieves the dead­liest attack on Jews in America’s his­to­ry, a case in which a right-wing hate mon­ger mas­sa­cred peo­ple sole­ly on the basis of their faith, the mur­der of two inno­cent African-Americans in a Kentucky Kroger gets shoved to the side.


‘Whites Don’t Shoot Whites,’ Said Alleged Kroger Shooter  Gregory Alan Bush when con­front­ed by an armed white man. The man did not shoot at him and so he hus­tled away before being tak­en alive by police.
You ever noticed how lit­er­al­ly all of these mur­der­ous losers always have three names, think about it? 

Now the evi­dence was always there that this was a racial­ly moti­vat­ed shoot­ing, he killed two black peo­ple and no one else. He tried enter­ing an African-American church before opt­ing for the Kroger super­mar­ket. And then he told a white man who might have nailed his sor­ry ass, that “whites do not kill whites.” Obviously, his the­o­ry had some res­o­nance with his white con­tem­po­rary as well as with the police, he was not killed by that man and he was cer­tain­ly tak­en alive by the police.



Bush report­ed­ly has a black ex-wife who said in court records that he called her a “nig­ger bitch.” [Lie with Dogs you rise with flees](sorry Bud).
The larg­er take­away which gen­er­al­ly gets lost in the shuf­fle is the skillset of police depart­ments across the coun­try.
They have the incred­i­ble abil­i­ty to take the most despi­ca­ble white mur­der­ers into cus­tody with­out harm­ing them.
I’m actu­al­ly sur­prised they did not take him to Burger King and got him a super­sized whop­per with extra fries and a large Frosty.


Yet two cow­ards wear­ing police uni­forms in the state of Florida could­n’t restrain a 14-year-old black girl with­out pum­melling her kid­neys in order to arrest her for the very seri­ous crime of talk­ing back at police.
These are the Gestapo tac­tics play­ing out across the coun­try, yet vio­lent white right-wing extrem­ist kill who they hate and are almost always tak­en into cus­tody alive.


As for African-American men whose only crimes is that they are occu­py­ing their black skins, it is quite com­mon to receive mul­ti­ple gun­shots to the back for sim­ply exist­ing.
In a very brief moment of time since Donald Trump has esca­lat­ed his war of words on the media and has declared pub­licly that he is a white Nationalist much has hap­pened.
Here are a few of the events which have occurred.


Eliminating Crime Requires Much More Than An Equipped Police Department

Crime is soci­etal; it is a prod­uct of the con­struct of the par­tic­u­lar soci­ety in which it is occur­ring. 
Crime gen­er­al­ly thrives in sit­u­a­tions in which peo­ple are denied the basic ameni­ties of every­day liv­ing. Usually, when they are unable to work or source jobs that pay a liv­able wage.
On the oth­er hand, crime thrives when peo­ple have jobs and homes and are real­ly not too bad­ly off, but soci­ety makes it easy for those with the pre­dis­po­si­tion to com­mit crimes.
View of parts of down­town Chicago

With the most sophis­ti­cat­ed polic­ing tech­niques avail­able to law enforce­ment offi­cers, crimes, includ­ing vio­lent crimes, will per­sist and grow if cer­tain mixed com­po­nents are left unad­dressed.
The city of Chicago police depart­ment in Illinois is the sec­ond-largest munic­i­pal police depart­ment in the United States. It has about 12,244 offi­cers behind only the New York City Police Department.  Chicago has a pop­u­la­tion of 2,716,450.

Despite hav­ing the largest police depart­ment in the Midwest and all of the trade’s sophis­ti­cat­ed accou­ter­ments, the city of Chicago has one of the high­est homi­cide rates and vio­lent crime in the nation.
This is not unique to Chicago’s city; the same is true of Detroit, Michigan, and many oth­er cities the length and breadth of the United States.


So you ask, “If the police depart­ments across the coun­try are so well equipped and staffed, why are there so many killings in the United States each year”?
If you ask that ques­tion, it means you are think­ing, so I will try to address two fac­tors that con­tribute to the over 33,000 gun killings in the US each year.

Poverty and the lack of oppor­tu­ni­ties and a stri­dent refusal to accept that there are far too many guns in the hands of far too many peo­ple who should ‘t have them have seri­ous­ly influ­enced the con­tin­u­a­tion of vio­lent crimes in the United States.
During the 1970s to ear­ly 1980s, New York City was allowed to slide into depres­sion; vio­lent crime was ram­pant. Many busi­ness­es fled to oth­er areas more con­ducive to their bot­tom line.
New York City

After Mayor David Dinkins took over, he ini­ti­at­ed some­thing called “safe cities, safe streets”. This was.” a mul­ti-faceted approach aimed at increas­ing the num­ber of cops on the streets while improv­ing police-com­mu­ni­ty rela­tions.
The oth­er was pros­e­cut­ing minor offens­es, there­by lim­it­ing the process of small­er crim­i­nals grad­u­at­ing to larg­er, more vio­lent crimes.


A cleanup of the city began, and busi­ness­es start­ed to return. Rudolph Guliani suc­ceed­ed David Dinkins; he con­tin­ued Dinkins’ pol­i­cy and put them on steroids.
Getting caught with a gun in New York City meant manda­to­ry prison time, on the gun charge, as well as for the ammu­ni­tion.
Violent crimes plum­met­ted in NYC, as busi­ness­es returned, so did the jobs.
Today NYC is one of the world’s safest big cities.

It seems that the take­away, at least to me, is that when we tack­le the issues of pover­ty by pro­vid­ing jobs to peo­ple, ensure that we keep unreg­is­tered guns out of the hands of peo­ple. Most of all, ensure that offend­ers are duly penal­ized; the out­comes are positive.

Kingston, Jamaica — Aerial view of Kingston’s uptown area, called New Kingston.

If we co-opt the fore­gone and apply them to Jamaica, a coun­try with the pop­u­la­tion of Chicago, Illinois, we may be able to gar­ner the accom­plished results of New York City.
Today Chicago Illinois, remains one of America’s most dan­ger­ous and vio­lent cities because those who run the city failed to learn from the prin­ci­ples applied in New York City.
In Jamaica’s case, there is an (a) seem­ing lack of under­stand­ing of what it takes to reduce and ulti­mate­ly elim­i­nate vio­lent crimes, and (b) an absence of will to get the job start­ed.
Instead, they blame the police for some­thing far out­side the scope of what the police can accom­plish with­out exec­u­tive input.

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Mike Beckles is a for­mer police Detective cor­po­ral, busi­ness­man, free­lance writer,
he is a black achiev­er hon­oree, and pub­lish­er of the blog chatt​-​a​-box​.com. 
He’s also a con­trib­u­tor to sev­er­al web­sites.
You may sub­scribe to his blogs free of charge, or sub­scribe to his Youtube chan­nel @chatt-a-box, for the lat­est pod­cast, all free to you, of course.

Black Props For Trump’s Ego

Harriet Tubman was quot­ed as hav­ing said “I saved a thou­sand slaves and could have saved thou­sands more, if only they knew they were slaves’.


We know that not every Black per­son act or think the same way, we are all dif­fer­ent human beings but lordy.

Young so called Black Conservatives being used by the Trump régime and Donald Trump Jr. as props after Donald Trump told Blacks their neigh­bor­hoods and schools are shit­ty .
But more than all Trump’s par­ty is active­ly engaged in sup­press­ing the black vote across the country.




This shock­ing manip­u­la­tion of black peo­ple for polit­i­cal pur­pos­es should actu­al­ly not be shock­ing at all, igno­rance is bliss.




Donald Trump Addresses Gathering of so-called Young Black Conservatives at White House




It does not take a lot to con black peo­ple and although I do not believe that Blacks are sup­posed to act as a mono­lith , it is shock­ing that these peo­ple are with Trump whoop­ing it up based on the things he has said and done to peo­ple of color.

Can you imag­ine how much bet­ter Jamaica would be if the coun­try spent the req­ui­site resources going after mur­der­ous crim­i­nals as it spends going after errant cops who may have stepped over the line?

No one should be com­fort­able with a cop who betrays his oath. But as I have writ­ten sev­er­al times before, it is sim­plis­tic and rather hyp­o­crit­i­cal to pre­tend that shit flows upstream.
It begins with that cup of cof­fee, that offer of a drink on a real­ly blis­ter­ing 96-degree day and it cul­mi­nates in sweet­er and more sub­stan­tial gifts and the resul­tant expec­ta­tion of some­thing in return.

Young offi­cers know as soon as they leave the Academy what senior col­league is on the take and they damn sure know which Superintendent is get­ting an enve­lope to look the oth­er way.
Duties are designed around those envelopes, young offi­cers are trans­ferred as a result, and peo­ple behave in a man­ner toward the junior offi­cers on the street based on their rela­tion­ships with senior offi­cers

It is ridicu­lous to expect to pay off the super­in­ten­dent then lam­baste the con­sta­ble who accepts a cold soda while on patrol.
I am not mak­ing the case for cor­rup­tion, I am mere­ly stat­ing an incon­ve­nient truth.

Mohammad-bin-Salman

The sad real­i­ty is that the less influ­en­tial the per­son who errs against the law the more like­ly he will be seri­ous­ly pun­ished.
It is safe to assume that Mohamed Ben Mohammad bin Salman is not ever going to face a court of law and be held respon­si­ble for the death of Jamal Jamal Khashoggi

In the same vein as the bare­ly lit­er­ate con­sta­ble Collis [Chucky] Brown makes a spec­ta­cle of him­self and the once noble orga­ni­za­tion he has brought ill repute to no one above him m will even be forced to defend Brown’s accu­sa­tions in a court of law.

Rest assured that as Brown was spilling his guts to Hamish Campbell they nev­er sought once to read his [Miranda rights]!
It is safe to con­clude that if Hamish Campbell told the bare­ly lit­er­ate Brown that he “had a right to remain silent, that he had the right to an attor­ney, and that any­thing he said would be used against him in a court of law”, as dumb as Brown is we would not be talk­ing about this today. 

If Chucky Brown was dri­ving around shoot­ing and killing gun­men that would not cause me to lose any sleep let me be clear.
Nevertheless, we can­not become them in order to com­bat them.
The truth is that all of the forces which ought to line up against crim­i­nal­i­ty on the Island are arrayed against the rule of law.

The truth of the mat­ter is that the polit­i­cal class the judi­cial class the busi­ness class and every­one in between, the Island is awash in cor­rup­tion and as a result, there is no real effort to squash this can­cer­ous bug called vio­lent crime once and for all.
Whether the pathet­ic Brown is telling the truth or not is imma­te­r­i­al at this point. What he told Hamish Campbell at INDECOM is exact­ly what Campbell, Terrence Williams and those who hate the police want­ed to hear. So no one would have warned him of the grave dan­ger he was plac­ing him­self in by spilling his guts with­out a lawyer or a guar­an­tee of immunity.

Whatever Chuck Brown expect­ed, be it that he was going to receive immu­ni­ty with­out a guar­an­tee, makes the case that the hap­less Brown was way over his head the moment he met with INDECOM and was even fur­ther over his head when he allowed him­self to be conned into giv­ing a state­ment, essen­tial­ly mak­ing a deal with the devil.

If Chucky Brown was dri­ving around shoot­ing oth­er crim­i­nals he will get his just desert, no ques­tion the courts will throw the book at him, he will nev­er see the light of day again.
And why not? Throwing Brown in prison and throw­ing away the keys will be a tremen­dous dis­trac­tion from the fact that INDECOM is not only a fail­ure and a drag on the Jamaican tax­pay­ers, but it will also mask the fact that the much-revered courts get to con­tin­ue enjoy­ing the pre­sump­tion that it is above board.

Between the lax laws, polit­i­cal inter­fer­ence and the courts at all lev­els run­ning inter­fer­ence on behalf of crim­i­nals it is no won­der that some cops would think just shoot­ing the moth­er­fuck­ers would be an appro­pri­ate remedy.
But police offi­cers can­not allow them­selves to indulge in the same cesspool the crim­i­nals are mired in. When we do we become them and that helps no one.

The JCF has one of the high­est attri­tion rates of any police depart­ment I know of. There is a rea­son for that, the sense of not accom­plish­ing any­thing, and a recog­ni­tion of the bar­ri­ers to law enforce­ment becomes clear once you are in. 
Hence the mad scram­ble for the door. Chucky Brown may not be the sharpest tool in the shed but he was clear­ly not blunt enough that he did­n’t know what he was doing and so he has to face the music. 
He could have walked away!

Cesar Sayoc Identified As Mail Bomb Suspect: Reports

Sayoc

A sus­pect has report­ed­ly been arrest­ed in con­nec­tion with more than 10 pack­ages con­tain­ing like­ly pipe bombs mailed in the past week to peo­ple crit­i­cal of President Donald Trump.

The Department of Justice con­firmed Friday that a man in Florida has been arrest­ed in con­nec­tion with the terrorism.

The sus­pect is report­ed­ly Cesar Sayoc, 56, of South Florida, accord­ing to Reuters, NBC News and The Wall Street Journal, cit­ing law enforce­ment officials.

DOJ offi­cials are set to brief reporters this afternoon.

Read more about Sayoc here.

In remarks at the White House before a youth lead­er­ship sum­mit, Trump con­grat­u­lat­ed local and nation­al law enforce­ment agen­cies for appre­hend­ing the sus­pect. The pres­i­dent pledged to pros­e­cute those respon­si­ble ― “them, him, her, who­ev­er it may be,” he said ― to the fullest extent of the law.

We must nev­er allow polit­i­cal vio­lence to take root in America,” Trump said.

The bot­tom line is that Americans must uni­fy,” he went on. His com­ments echoed those he has deliv­ered at ral­lies and sent over Twitter in the wake of the bomb scares, call­ing for uni­ty and a calmer dis­course but refus­ing to tone down his own inflam­ma­to­ry rhetoric.

Minutes after address­ing the threats to promi­nent Democrats, Trump claimed Republicans are often attacked for sup­port­ing him. “Come to think of it, does any­one get attacked more than me?” Trump said.

The devel­op­ment came hours after two addi­tion­al pack­ages were dis­cov­ered, one addressed to Sen. Cory Booker (D‑N.J.), and the oth­er to for­mer Director of National Intelligence James Clapper.

Authorities have height­ened their search in Florida, as sev­er­al of the pack­ages may have passed through the state. The FBI said Friday that the pack­age for Booker was found in a Florida mail facility.

Throughout the week, more than 10 pack­ages con­tain­ing poten­tial explo­sive devices have been mailed to law­mak­ers and oth­er pub­lic fig­ures crit­i­cal of Trump, includ­ing for­mer President Barack Obama, for­mer President Bill Clinton, Trump’s 2016 pres­i­den­tial oppo­nent Hillary Clinton, Rep. Maxine Waters (D‑Calif.), actor Robert De Niro and for­mer CIA Director John Brennan.

The pack­age addressed Brennan was sent to CNN’s New York City bureau, spark­ing an evac­u­a­tion Wednesday. Brennan is an MSNBC and NBC con­trib­u­tor. On Friday, postal offi­cials inter­cept­ed the pack­age for Clapper, a CNN con­trib­u­tor, before it could reach the CNN offices, where it was addressed, accord­ing to the network.

All of the pack­ages list­ed the Florida office of Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz (D‑Fla.), the for­mer chair­woman of the Democratic National Committee, as the return address. Story orig­i­nat­ed here: https://​www​.huff​in​g​ton​post​.com/​e​n​t​r​y​/​m​a​i​l​-​p​i​p​e​-​b​o​m​b​-​p​l​o​t​-​s​u​s​p​e​c​t​_​u​s​_​5​b​d​3​2​b​4​d​e​4​b​0​d​3​8​b​5​8​8​2​c​a62

Racist Grocery Store Shooter First Tried To Enter A Black Church, Police Say

While you were divert­ed by the rash of bombs sent to two pre­vi­ous Democratic pres­i­dents and their fam­i­lies, Vice President Joe Biden a mem­ber of Congress and oth­er promi­nent Trump crit­ics a white wing domes­tic ter­ror­ist walked into a Kroger in Kentucky and killed two African-Americans.

The main­stream media in the mean­time is heav­i­ly invest­ed in chas­ing the lat­est shiny object Trump throws them while this egre­gious inci­dent has gone on with­out any report­ing to date.

The Kroger where Gregory Bush killed two black people he didn’t know appears to have been his plan B, after a failed attempt to replicate Dylann Roof.

A 51-year-old man who killed two peo­ple at a Kentucky gro­cery and was sub­dued by a civil­ian who told him that “whites don’t shoot whites” had ear­li­er tried to enter a church with a pre­dom­i­nant­ly black con­gre­ga­tion, police con­firmed late Thursday.

Though chief of police Sam Rogers refused to “spec­u­late on motive at this time” dur­ing an after­noon news con­fer­ence in Jeffersontown, Kentucky, the killer’s failed attempt to enter the town’s First Baptist church was caught on video. Though the church wel­comes all com­ers, it “is head­ed by a black pas­tor and has a large African-American mem­ber­ship” accord­ing to the Associated Press.

Predominantly black con­gre­ga­tions of Baptists have been close­ly linked to strug­gles for social, legal, and eco­nom­ic equal­i­ty for African American peo­ple in the U.S. for cen­turies. As such, they have repeat­ed­ly become tar­gets for racist vio­lence — includ­ing the mas­sacre of nine parish­ioners at a famed A.M.E. church in Charleston, South Carolina, dur­ing a mid-week bible study meet­ing by white suprema­cist Dylann Roof in 2015.

Jeffersontown’s First Baptist holds reg­u­lar Wednesday night ser­vices, as well as week­ly bible study groups and choir prac­tices. The killer tried to enter the church in the mid-after­noon, how­ev­er, and would like­ly not have found it crowd­ed had he been able to gain entry.

Rogers’ pro­fes­sion­al reluc­tance to spec­u­late on what moti­vat­ed Gregory Bush to kill two peo­ple in the large Louisville sub­urb on Wednesday is under­stand­able, but one detail from the son of the man who con­front­ed and sub­dued Bush before police had arrived sheds sub­stan­tial light on the killer’s brainwaves.

He said, ‘Don’t shoot me, I won’t shoot you.’ He’s like, ‘Whites don’t kill whites,’” Steve Zinninger, son of the man who con­front­ed Bush out­side the store, told local WAVE‑3 News, explain­ing how his father had got­ten Bush to stop shoot­ing. Police seemed to con­tra­dict some details of Zinninger’s account, say­ing that the licensed firearm own­er who con­front­ed Bush had exchanged gun­fire with the man. They did not com­ment on the report­ed racial sol­i­dar­i­ty expressed between the two in the park­ing lot. 00:13 /​00:14SKIP AD

Both peo­ple Bush killed — a man inside the store, and a woman he pur­sued out of the store — were black.

Maurice Stallard, 69, was at the store buy­ing poster board for his grand­son, who the Courier-Journal reports was stand­ing next to him when he was killed. Friends described Stallard “as a warm, easy-going man who always greet­ed peo­ple with a hug” and “as a hard-work­ing fam­i­ly man,” the paper wrote.

Vickie Lee Jones, 67, lived a mile or so from the store and was in the park­ing lot when Bush shot and killed her. Family mem­bers told the Courier-Journal that Jones, a wid­ow since 2010, “had moved to Jeffersontown to be safe” and described her as “one of the sweet­est peo­ple you could know.”


Years before he attacked the two strangers — calm­ly hol­ster­ing his gun to walk out of the store between the two killings, accord­ing to local reports — Bush had showed signs of insta­bil­i­ty and vio­lence, fam­i­ly mem­bers told the Associated Press. He had attacked his elder­ly par­ents in 2009 and threat­ened his ex-wife dur­ing a court hear­ing the same year, the wire ser­vice report­ed.

Like Roof before him, Bush was brought in by police alive and unharmed. He has been charged with two counts of mur­der and sev­er­al less­er crimes relat­ed to dis­charg­ing a firearm in pub­lic.
https://​thinkprogress​.org/​r​a​c​i​s​t​-​s​h​o​o​t​e​r​-​b​l​a​c​k​-​c​h​u​r​c​h​-​k​e​n​t​u​c​k​y​-​4​4​d​1​c​b​5​9​3​a​75/

Video: Librarian Calls Cops On Student For Brazen Attempt At #StudyingWhileBlack

By Michael Harriot

This sto­ry is ridiculous.

This sto­ry is so ridicu­lous it will not dis­cuss library col­o­niza­tion, the trou­bling trend of peo­ple plan­ning book heists by con­ning their way into school facil­i­ties under the pre­tense of study­ing. The offend­ing par­ty in this tale does not require the req­ui­site nick­name. She shall not be called Laura the Librarian or Becky the Book Bouncer. We shall call ber Brittany McNerlin (or maybe “Brittni” with a heart over the i), because that is her name.

However, this sto­ry begs one question:

What’s the pur­pose of police?

Is their pur­pose to pro­tect and serve? Or are cops tools that can be weaponized at the behest of our white broth­ers and sis­ters who believe the world exists only to serve their desires, and there­fore, law enforce­ment is lit­tle more than a Caucasian cus­tomer com­plaint hotline?

This sto­ry begins on Oct. 10 when Juán-Pabló Gonźalez, a black stu­dent at the Catholic University of America, decid­ed he want­ed to study at the university’s law library. Gonźalez had been cor­rect­ly informed that as a Master of Library and Information Sciences stu­dent, he had access to the law library. He had stud­ied in the facil­i­ty on numer­ous occa­sions before and had no trou­ble in the past.

Although he was sup­posed to swipe his stu­dent iden­ti­fi­ca­tion card to gain entry, Gonźalez told The Root his ID nev­er worked at the building.

I had just been ring­ing the buzzer, wait­ing for them to buzz me in and then show­ing them my ID to prove I was a library infor­ma­tion sci­ence stu­dent,” Gonźalez said. “And I was able to get in with­out any issues.”

But on this day, Gonźalez noticed the door was propped open when he arrived. Per his usu­al rou­tine, Gonzalez showed his ID and announced to McNerlin he would be study­ing in the law library.

She was pret­ty rude,” Gonźalez recount­ed. “She said: ‘The law library is for law library stu­dents.’ So I told her that I real­ized that, but that we’d been giv­en per­mis­sion to use the library.”

When Gonźalez told her that he had spo­ken to the librar­i­an at the facil­i­ty, but couldn’t recall the name, McNerlin informed him he couldn’t come in; nei­ther would she offer a name to jog his memory.

I tried to explain to her that, because we have a law librar­i­an pro­gram, we had access to the facil­i­ty,” Gonźalez said.

After a brief back and forth, the woman allowed Gonźalez o go study and told him she would leave a note say­ing she had benev­o­lent­ly grant­ed a black man access to the library with­out his free­dom papers.

Because the entire trans­ac­tion was so neg­a­tive, I went back and said, ‘Can I have your supervisor’s infor­ma­tion?’ I didn’t say any­thing else,” Gonźalez said, to which she refused. “I said: ‘I’m ask­ing for the infor­ma­tion of the man­ag­ing librar­i­an of this facil­i­ty and you’re refus­ing? On what basis? Just because you don’t like the way I’m asking?’”

After McNerlin refused Gonźalez sec­ond request, she final­ly “snatched” a busi­ness card from the desk with the librarian’s information.

I asked some more ques­tions about why she took so long to give me the infor­ma­tion … She said I was being argu­men­ta­tive and that she didn’t like my tone,” Gonźalez said, to which he replied: “I didn’t ask for your per­son­al opin­ion. I just asked for infor­ma­tion about this facil­i­ty so that I can use it.”

So McNerlin called the police.

When she informed Gonźalez she was alert­ing the author­i­ties, he asked her: “On what basis? Because you don’t like the ques­tions I’m asking?”

From there, Gonźalez began record­ing the inci­dent. The six-minute video shows that McNerlin does not appear to be in any immi­nent dan­ger and Gonźalez does not raise his voice above a calm half-whis­per. When the clip begins, McNerlin is on the phone telling the Catholic University Department of Public Safety about “an argu­men­ta­tive stu­dent,” which I didn’t even know was a legal­ly pun­ish­able offense.

That must make me a career crim­i­nal, then.

When Gonźalez specif­i­cal­ly asked McNerlin why their back-and-forth war­rant­ed a police call, she replied: “I’ve answered your ques­tions. You didn’t appre­ci­ate my answers …” She admits she has done this at least one oth­er time in a sit­u­a­tion “very sim­i­lar to this.”

Gonźalez offered to let the whole thing go if McNerlin called off the cops, ask­ing: “May I go into the library and you can­cel your call to the police?”

McNerlin wasn’t hav­ing it.

The most reveal­ing part of the video was when the when the Catholic University police offi­cers arrived. One would expect McNerlin to con­coct a har­row­ing sto­ry about how she felt threat­ened and how Gonźalez burst into the library and demand­ed that he stay.

Nah, bruh. She told them exact­ly what happened.

Summoning all of the aggriev­ed-white vic­tim­iza­tion her voice could muster, McNerlin calm­ly explained, with a straight face no less, that she called the police because Gonzalez ques­tioned her, made state­ments about the col­or of his skin, was “becom­ing argu­men­ta­tive,” and she “did not appre­ci­ate it.”

That was it. That was her entire expla­na­tion of why she called the police.

Gonźalez reports that at least sev­en offi­cers arrived before he was forced to leave. He explained to The Root that he filed a com­plaint against Mcnerlin, which the school said only war­rant­ed “addi­tion­al training.”

Gonźalez also met with human resource offi­cials from Catholic University who he says dis­missed his sto­ry until he showed them video evidence.

If you think Gonźalez was not in any immi­nent dan­ger, you should be remind­ed of Sam Dubose, who was shot and killed by University of Cincinnati Police offi­cer Ray Tensing in 2015.

Or maybe you’ve heard of Jason Washington, the Navy vet who was shot nine McNerlinMcNerlintimes by Portland State University offi­cers James Dewey and Shawn McKenzie way back in 2018.

Although they might look harm­less, Catholic University describes its police force this way:

Campus spe­cial police offi­cers are appoint­ed by the chief of police of the Metropolitan Police Department under the pro­vi­sions of the D.C. Official Code to pro­tect the cam­pus prop­er­ty of an aca­d­e­m­ic insti­tu­tion of high­er edu­ca­tion… Campus spe­cial police offi­cers have full police author­i­ty, includ­ing arrest pow­er, on the premis­es they are assigned to pro­tect or out­side of the premis­es in fresh pur­suit for offens­es com­mit­ted on the premises …

Persons arrest­ed by cam­pus spe­cial police offi­cers are trans­port­ed to a facil­i­ty of the Metropolitan Police Department for processing.

Gonźalez says he has encoun­tered pre­vi­ous inci­dents of racism as a stu­dent at Catholic, includ­ing notes with the n‑word being slipped under his dor­mi­to­ry room door and being ques­tioned by cam­pus police after some­one report­ed­ly called the cops on “two sus­pi­cious black males” stand­ing out­side their dorm.

I’m not going to accept the racism that’s on this cam­pus. I’m not going to be qui­et, and I’m going to chal­lenge it,” he said.

Watch the entire inci­dent below:

YouTube player


https://​www​.the​root​.com/​v​i​d​e​o​-​l​i​b​r​a​r​i​a​n​-​c​a​l​l​s​-​c​o​p​s​-​o​n​-​s​t​u​d​e​n​t​-​f​o​r​-​b​r​a​z​e​n​-​a​t​t​e​m​-​1​8​2​9​9​4​0​301

Police: Three Alleged Gangsters Killed In Trelawny (graphic Images)

The Police are report­ing that three (3) men were shot and killed in a shootout with them in Friendship District in the Parish of Trelawny.



According to the cops, the three are mem­bers of the Bunker’s Hill Gang which have been oper­at­ing in that Parish. The name Bunker’s Hill gang was alleged­ly derived from a District in the Parish bear­ing the same name.



Two of the dece­dents have been iden­ti­fied as Adrian Walker ( o/​c Lippy and Macka).
The oth­er is Robert Miller (o/​c Ghost and Tiler).


According to the Police, the encoun­tered occurred at about 5: pm Yesterday.
Two firearms and ammu­ni­tion were recovered.