Jamaica’s Crime Problem A Function Of Corrupt Governance

Jamaica's Prime Minister Portia Simpson Miller and Leader of the Opposition Andrew Holness
Jamaica’s Prime Minister Portia Simpson Miller and Leader of the Opposition Andrew Holness

A few days ago we took the lib­er­ty to com­ment on year-end crime sta­tis­tics sup­plied by Jamaican law-enforce­ment and trum­pet­ed by the coun­try’s nation­al secu­ri­ty minister..
Authorities informed the coun­try, Murders dropped 16 per cent, shoot­ings were down 12 per cent, rape had fall­en by 23 per cent and aggra­vat­ed assault by 17 per cent. Of note is the fact that Police killings have dropped a pre­cip­i­tous 54% against the last cor­re­spond­ing peri­od See: https://​mike​beck​les​.com/​1​6​-​r​e​d​u​c​t​i​o​n​-​i​n​-​m​u​r​d​e​r​-​r​a​t​e​-​c​o​m​m​e​n​d​a​b​l​e​-​y​et/
A
s we cel­e­brat­ed the fact that over 250 less Jamaicans were mur­dered than the last cor­re­spond­ing peri­od , we cau­tioned on January 3rd that we did not nec­es­sar­i­ly see low­er crime num­bers as a trend .

Reason being , despite the efforts of the Minister, and the police with the help of the mil­i­tary to under­take cer­tain com­mu­ni­ty out­reach pro­grams and raids, we did not see any­thing new which would lend itself to a sus­tain­able drop in crime. In fact we warned that we may yet see a dra­mat­ic spike in crime because there is no proven for­mu­la com­ing from law enforce­ment which can be direct­ly proven to decreas­ing crime. Coupled with the ane­mic econ­o­my and down­ward pres­sure on lot­to scam­mers , we believed then and now the envi­ron­ment is rife for a mas­sive spike in crim­i­nal­i­ty in the country.
The fact of the mat­ter is that inso­far as the JCF is con­cerned it appears low­er crime num­bers are pure­ly a func­tion of luck.
Don’t get me wrong I am all for luck keep­ing 256 more peo­ple alive. What we are say­ing is sim­ply that we have to find more sci­en­tif­ic and prag­mat­ic ways to keep more peo­ple alive, pre­vent more women from get­ting raped, pre­vent more peo­ple from get­ting shot and across the board reduce and elim­i­nate lawlessness.
As if to show author­i­ties that they are pow­er­less to stop crime, Jamaican crim­i­nals are on a tear , killing a report­ed 21 peo­ple over the first 6 days of the new year. Those report­ed killed may not nec­es­sar­i­ly be the only peo­ple mur­dered. That rep­re­sents only those which are report­ed to author­i­ties. At this pace the coun­try is once again on pace to see rough­ly 1,300 cit­i­zens slaugh­tered by year end. Poof there goes the 16% reduc­tion in murders.
The JCF has at it’s head now a PhD , many of the senior com­mand struc­ture have under­grad­u­ate and grad­u­ate degrees. We were once told this was need­ed to keep crime under control.
We too believed the cal­iber of peo­ple being recruit­ed into the JCF had to improve. We believed train­ing need­ed to be more reflec­tive of the sophis­ti­ca­tion of crim­i­nals and should be ongo­ing. We believed that the pri­ma­cy of the Agency’s push should be (1 Community Policing and (2 an effec­tive Criminal Investigations Branch, which would work hand-in-hand with com­mu­ni­ty policing.

Simpson Miller
Simpson Miller

Simply put, gain­ing the trust of com­mu­ni­ties cre­ates intel­li­gence streams which places crim­i­nals in jeop­ardy. When peo­ple are afraid of being caught they think twice about com­mit­ting crimes.
Fewer crimes, low­er num­bers. Those who do com­mit crimes would have to deal with the real­i­ty of know­ing they will be held account­able. Again, less crime because more peo­ple are held account­able for their actions.
Crime will not be reduced from 103 old hope road. It will depend on a com­mit­ment from whichev­er admin­is­tra­tion is in pow­er. It will depend on that admin­is­tra­tion hav­ing an under­stand­ing that crime eats away at the stan­dard of liv­ing of it’s peo­ple. It requires an admin­is­tra­tion which is itself above board, not steeped in corruption.
More than any­thing else it requires an intel­li­gent leader who under­stand that con­struc­tive crit­i­cism and advice is not an invi­ta­tion to engage in brawls befit­ting of vira­goes in Kingston 13 tenements.
It requires a leader who is not mere­ly con­cerned with being prime min­is­ter, bliss­ful­ly un-nerved as Rome burns.
It requires lead­ers with the basic under­stand­ing that crime chas­es away investors.
As long as Jamaicans con­tin­ue to elect and re-elect old-style gar­ri­son thugs to the par­lia­ment then they must be pre­pared to con­tin­ue to wash away the blood.

Former GOP Rising Star Sentenced To Two Years In Prison

U.S. District Judge James Spencer on Tuesday sen­tenced for­mer Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell to two years in prison for political

Bob McDonald
Bob McDonald

cor­rup­tion, the lat­est chap­ter in the spec­tac­u­lar fall of one of the Republican Party’s for­mer ris­ing stars. In September, McDonnell was con­vict­ed on 11 counts of cor­rup­tion in a case that exposed how he and his wife, Maureen, con­spired to pro­mote a dietary sup­ple­ment mar­ket­ed by Jonnie R. Williams, Sr. in exchange for $177,000 in loans, vaca­tions, and oth­er gifts from the Richmond busi­ness­man. Maureen McDonnell, who was con­vict­ed on eight counts, will be sen­tenced on February 20. Federal sen­tenc­ing guide­lines called for a pun­ish­ment for McDonnell of between 10 years and 12 years and sev­en months in prison. Given that judges in Spencer’s dis­trict imposed the rec­om­mend­ed sen­tence more than 70 per­cent of the time in recent years, McDonnell, 60, entered the week star­ing down the pos­si­bil­i­ty of more than a decade behind bars. But pros­e­cu­tors on Tuesday low­ered their request­ed sen­tence to between 6.5 and eight years in prison, and McDonnell’s 24-month sen­tence falls well short of even that reduced rec­om­men­da­tion. Spencer ordered McDonnell to report to prison on February 9.

Elected as Virginia’s chief exec­u­tive in a 2009 land­slide, McDonnell was con­sid­ered a top prospect to serve as Mitt Romney’s vice pres­i­den­tial run­ning mate in 2012. After Romney lost the elec­tion to President Obama, many expect­ed the pop­u­lar gov­er­nor to mount a 2016 pres­i­den­tial bid, but his polit­i­cal for­tunes rapid­ly declined in 2013 as the inves­ti­ga­tion into the McDonnells’ rela­tion­ship with Williams com­menced. Shortly after McDonnell hand­ed the keys of Virginia’s guber­na­to­r­i­al man­sion to Terry McAuliffe in January 2014, he and Maureen McDonnell were indict­ed in the case. The ensu­ing tri­al laid bare the rifts in the for­mer first couple’s mar­riage, and McDonnell tes­ti­fied that he and the one­time first lady no longer lived togeth­er. On Tuesday, how­ev­er, Maureen McDonnell made a sur­prise appear­ance at her estranged husband’s sentencing.
http://​www​.salon​.com/​2​0​1​5​/​0​1​/​0​6​/​b​o​b​_​m​c​d​o​n​n​e​l​l​s​_​c​o​m​e​u​p​p​a​n​c​e​_​f​o​r​m​e​r​_​g​o​p​_​r​i​s​i​n​g​_​s​t​a​r​_​s​e​n​t​e​n​c​e​d​_​t​o​_​t​w​o​_​y​e​a​r​s​_​i​n​_​p​r​i​s​on/

Jennifer Aniston Says ‘everybody Has’ Moved On From Her Divorce From Brad Pitt.

Jennifer Aniston says 'everybody has' moved on from her divorce from Brad Pitt.
Jennifer Aniston says ‘every­body has’ moved on from her divorce from Brad Pitt.

I think it’s a nar­ra­tive that fol­lows you because it’s an inter­est­ing head­line. It’s more of a media-dri­ven top­ic.” Aniston quipped to Cowan that “every­body has” moved on. “You guys still talk?” he con­tin­ued. “You friends?” “We’ve exchanged good wish­es and all that sort of stuff to each oth­er, but not a con­stant thing,” Aniston replied on if she stays in touch with Pitt. http://www.nydailynews.com/entertainment/gossip/jennifer-aniston-talks-brad-pitt-divorce-10-years-article‑1.2065976

The Hidden Health Benefits Of Marijuana You Won’t Believe

Marijuana
Marijuana

Few things on earth have been demo­nized in quite the same way as the hum­ble mar­i­jua­na plant. Seen as a gate­way drug to hard­er sub­stances such as hero­in and cocaine, many believe cannabis to be a high­ly addic­tive, life-destroy­ing drug that leads to depres­sion, para­noia and psy­cho­log­i­cal dis­or­ders. However, pre­scrip­tion drugs are actu­al­ly far more addic­tive, and many con­tain tox­ic chem­i­cals that cause irre­versible dam­age to the human body. Cannabis is an ancient form of med­i­cine that grows freely in many parts of the world and has a wide range of poten­tial health benefits.

Cancer

Cannabis has been sci­en­tif­i­cal­ly proven to inhib­it the growth of can­cer cells and even shrink malig­nant tumors. A study per­formed at the California Pacific Medical Center in San Francisco found that cannabid­i­ol, an active com­pound found in mar­i­jua­na, pre­vent­ed metas­ta­sis in cer­tain aggres­sive can­cers. Researchers at Harvard University found that cannabis was able reduce the rate of tumor growth by 50% in mice afflict­ed with lung cancer.

Alzheimer’s Disease

A 2006 study per­formed at the Scripps Research Institute in California found that the active ingre­di­ent in mar­i­jua­na known as delta-9-tetrahy­dro­cannabi­nol, or THC, stops the for­ma­tion of Alzheimer plaques in the brain. THC pre­vents an enzyme called acetyl­cholinesterase which accel­er­ates this process.

HIV

A recent study con­duct­ed at the Louisiana State University found that cannabis pro­hibits the spread of HIV cells in mon­keys. It also pro­vides relief from the side effects of HIV drugs such as nau­sea, vom­it­ing, loss of appetite and diarrhea.

Pain Relief

Smoking cannabis can pro­vide pain relief from a wide range of dif­fer­ent con­di­tions such as arthri­tis, migraines and painful injuries. It is said to be hun­dreds of times more effec­tive than over-the-counter painkillers and is a pow­er­ful anti-inflammatory.

Epilepsy

A spe­cial strain of med­ical mar­i­jua­na has been devel­oped to com­bat a rare type of epilep­sy known as Dravet syn­drome which caus­es fre­quent, vio­lent seizures and is dif­fi­cult to con­trol with med­ica­tion. The strain is known as ‘Charlotte’s Web’ and earned its name from a young patient named Charlotte Figi who was brought back from the brink of death after treat­ment with cannabis oil.

Depression and Anxiety

Contrary to pop­u­lar belief, cannabis can actu­al­ly help with psy­cho­log­i­cal con­di­tions such as depres­sion, anx­i­ety, ADHD and sui­ci­dal thoughts. Moderate use of medi­um strength cannabis can help to relax the mind and ele­vate the mood. However, heavy use of pow­er­ful strains of mar­i­jua­na such as skunk has been linked to psy­chot­ic episodes.

Hepatitis C

A study con­duct­ed at the University of California in San Francisco dis­cov­ered that cannabis not only relieved the side effects of Hepatitis C treat­ment, it actu­al­ly improved the effec­tive­ness of the med­ica­tion. Researchers found that cannabis helped them to achieve a “sus­tained viro­log­i­cal response” mean­ing that the virus was unde­tectable in the human body after treatment. 

As cannabis is a nat­ur­al, free resource that thrives in almost any envi­ron­ment, drug com­pa­nies are ter­ri­fied of the prospect of peo­ple being able to grow their own med­i­cine. This would result in the loss of bil­lions of dol­lars for the phar­ma­ceu­ti­cal indus­try who are des­per­ate­ly lob­by­ing for it to remain ille­gal. Still, some busi­ness­es have start­ed to see the poten­tial of this plant and are not sell­ing dif­fer­ent CBD prod­ucts, includ­ing great cbd cream products. 

- See more at: http://​www​.gnd​.com/​t​h​e​-​h​i​d​d​e​n​-​h​e​a​l​t​h​-​b​e​n​e​f​i​t​s​-​o​f​-​m​a​r​i​j​u​a​n​a​-​y​o​u​-​w​o​n​-​t​-​b​e​l​i​e​v​e​.​p​h​p​#​s​t​h​a​s​h​.​R​6​n​Z​f​6​4​C​.​d​puf

Pop Star Denied UK Visa

The Ugandan musi­cian and pop star

Bobi Wine
Bobi Wine

was recent­ly denied a visa from the UK. Gay rights cam­paign­ers in the UK have peti­tioned to bar Wine from enter­ing the coun­try because of his homo­pho­bic song lyrics that incite vio­lence. Wine’s songs encour­age vio­lence against homo­sex­u­als. Because of his very pub­lic homo­pho­bic stance, Wine will not be allowed to vis­it or per­form in the UK.
 
Cultures at Odds
In Wine’s home­land of Uganda, homo­sex­u­als recent­ly faced life impris­on­ment for their sex­u­al ori­en­ta­tion. The law for life impris­on­ment has been over­turned; how­ev­er, homo­sex­u­al­i­ty is still viewed as a crime in Uganda. Wine’s lyrics do not mince words. His lyrics encour­age Ugandans to fight and even kill homo­sex­u­als. In the UK, of course, anti-gay feel­ing is not to be tol­er­at­ed. A 2008 UK gov­ern­ment act for­bids vio­lence against any­one on the grounds of their sex­u­al ori­en­ta­tion. The UK Home Office, how­ev­er, will not com­ment about Wine’s spe­cif­ic case. The case, how­ev­er, calls atten­tion to the cul­tur­al dif­fer­ences between the two nations.
 
Canceled Gigs
Wine was sched­uled to play in London as well as Birmingham. He has been forced to can­cel those gigs. Wine has spo­ken pub­li­cal­ly about his anti-gay feel­ing. He is unapolo­getic for his stance and cites that he is not in the minor­i­ty con­cern­ing his feel­ings in his home­land. In Uganda, there have been calls to hang gay peo­ple. While Wine has not incit­ed vio­lence against homo­sex­u­als when speak­ing pub­li­cal­ly, his lyrics tell anoth­er sto­ry. Ultimately, it was those lyrics that will pre­vent him from see­ing Big Ben in person.
 
A Matter of Opinion
Although Wine has been crit­i­cized by human rights groups for his anti-gay stance, he has asked them to allow him his right to his own opin­ions. Wine is well known for his stance, which has prompt­ed some to ques­tion his regard for his own gay fans. Wine has not addressed that ques­tion and, of course, it remains improb­a­ble that he has any con­sid­er­ing his views. Fans of Wine don’t think that his opin­ions will impede his career even though he can’t appear in the UK. In fact, when the stars songs were pre­vi­ous­ly banned in his home coun­try for their explic­it lyrics about life in the ghet­to, his pop­u­lar­i­ty only increased.
 
Ghetto President
Wine has referred to him­self as a “ghet­to pres­i­dent,” which is a bla­tant ref­er­ence to his youth spent grow­ing up the ghet­tos of Uganda. He under­stands pover­ty to the core, which is one rea­son why fans flock to him. He under­stands the plight of the peo­ple. Many of his lyrics can be uplift­ing; how­ev­er, he cer­tain­ly does­n’t shy away from con­tro­ver­sial stances. In fact, he has stat­ed that at least he is free in his home­land to express him­self as he chooses.
 
UK fans of Wine will not be able to see the artist per­form live – at least not in the UK. The denial of Wine’s visa lends strength to the 2008 act. It is like­ly that oth­er artists that take a stand against gays pub­li­cal­ly will not be invit­ed into the UK either. — See more at: http://​www​.gnd​.com/​h​o​m​o​p​h​o​b​i​c​-​p​o​p​-​s​t​a​r​-​d​e​n​i​e​d​-​u​k​-​v​i​s​a​.​p​h​p​?​r​e​f​=​o​b​&​a​d​_​i​d​=​2​9​9​9​2​5​3​4​#​s​t​h​a​s​h​.​U​S​k​Q​h​g​o​A​.​d​puf

DeBlasio And Bratton Pushes Back At Disrespectful Out Of Control Cops

Mayor DeBlasio and commissioner Bill Braton
Mayor DeBlasio and com­mis­sion­er Bill Braton

Mayor de Blasio gave the cops who turned their backs on him a good smack Monday. Speaking for the first time about the pub­lic diss­ing he endured at the funer­alsof hero cops Rafael Ramos and Wenjian Liu, de Blasio said “they were dis­re­spect­ful to the fam­i­lies involved.” “I can’t under­stand why any­one would do such a thing in the con­text like that,” an angry de Blasio said. “And I think it defies a lot of what we all feel is the right and decent thing to do.” “I also think they were dis­re­spect­ful to the peo­ple of this city, who in fact hon­or the work of the NYPD,” he added.
De Blasio declined to dwell on some of the sharpest barbs that have been hurled at him, par­tic­u­lar­ly from Patrolmen’s Benevolent Association boss Patrick Lynch. Lynch ear­li­er accused the may­or of hav­ing “blood on the hands” after Ramos and Liu were mur­dered. “My feel­ings don’t mat­ter here,” de Blasio said. “What mat­ters is the peo­ple of this city who I think expect more from all lead­ers than those kind of unfair and inac­cu­rate state­ments.” “Obviously it was a total­ly inap­pro­pri­ate state­ment, total­ly inac­cu­rate. It’s evi­dent. So I’ll leave it at that.” De Blasio was fol­lowed by Police Commissioner Bill Bratton, who brand­ed as “self­ish” the hun­dreds of offi­cers who turned their backs on de Blasio at the Liu funer­al on Sunday. “I share the may­or’s con­cern about the idea of what’s effec­tive­ly a labor action being tak­en in the mid­dle of a funer­al,” he said. “I think we need to focus much more on the vast major­i­ty who did what was expect­ed rather than the few who embar­rassed them­selves and effec­tive­ly took so much atten­tion, so much attention.”

Cops turned their backs on a live video monitor showing New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio when he spoke at the funeral of slain NYPD officer Rafael Ramos near Christ Tabernacle Church in Queens.
Cops turned their backs on a live video mon­i­tor show­ing New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio when he spoke at the funer­al of slain NYPD offi­cer Rafael Ramos near Christ Tabernacle Church in Queens.

Deeply upset, Bratton lament­ed that the front pages of The Daily News and oth­er news­pa­pers “focused on them, the self­ish­ness of that action, the self­ish­ness of it.” “The funer­al is no place for that,” he said. “Come demon­strate out­side City Hall. Come demon­strate out­side police head­quar­ters, but don’t put on your uni­form and go to a funer­al and engage in a polit­i­cal action.” Bratton had explic­it­ly asked offi­cers not to engage in a repeat of the back-turn­ing that hun­dreds of cops had done ear­li­er ear­li­er at the Ramos funer­al. But hun­dreds defied Bratton any­way. In Washington, White House spokesman Josh Earnest said President Obama has got Bratton’s back. “The part of Commissioner Bratton’s let­ter I think that res­onates most strong­ly here at the White House is that those who are attend­ing those funer­als are there to pay their respect for the ser­vice and sac­ri­fice of the two offi­cers who were being laid to rest,” Earnest said. “And cer­tain­ly the President believes that their ser­vice and their sac­ri­fice is wor­thy of cel­e­bra­tion and respect and should be afford­ed all the out­ward sym­bols of the hon­or that they’ve been given.”

The bit­ter words from de Blasio and Bratton came at a press con­fer­ence to tout a dra­mat­ic 4.6% drop in city­wide crime in 2014 — and amid reports that the rank-and-file have been engag­ing in a word slow­down to show their dis­plea­sure with the may­or. “Rather than get lost in the dai­ly back and forth by the loud­est and most dis­re­spect­ful voic­es, those that have been so loud in this debate in recent weeks, let’s talk about where we need to go as a city,” de Blasio said. “Let’s talk about a pos­i­tive vision, let’s talk about what the peo­ple of this city want us to do togeth­er.” There was no imme­di­ate response from Lynch, but Roy Richter, head of the Captains Endowment Association, defend­ed the offi­cers who turned their backs on de Blasio. “It is a pal­pa­ble anger amongst the mem­bers of the NYPD that led many to turn their back out­side the funer­al,” he said. Michael Palladino, who heads the Detectives’ Endowment Association, com­plained they were being held to a dif­fer­ent standard.

When cops make arrests and give sum­mons­es they are accused of being robot­ic with no feel­ings,” he said. “When cops exer­cise dis­cre­tion and express feel­ings they’re accused of being polit­i­cal and dis­re­spect­ful. You can’t win.” Sergeants Benevolent Association President Ed Mullins’ reac­tion revealed how deep the rift was between his mem­bers and the may­or. He said Bratton’s request that offi­cers refrain from demon­strat­ing at the funer­al read “as if he was doing the may­or’s bid­ding.” “They know, deep down inside there is a feel­ing this may­or does not sup­port police,” he said. “They know there was nev­er an attempt to dis­re­spect the fam­i­ly of Officer Liu. They are using a slain police offi­cer to deflect from the issues that were pre-exisit­ing, long before these offi­cers were killed.” Earlier, in a radio inter­view, Mullins said the cops were exer­cis­ing their right to free speech. “They did­n’t break a sin­gle law and they did­n’t utter a sin­gle word and yet their actions made a state­ment that was rec­og­nized nation­al­ly and has nev­er been done before that I’m aware of to any may­or in this nation,” Mullins said on Joe Piscopo’s radio show, AM 970 The Answer.

A disrespectful   Ed Mullins calls the Mayor a Nincompoop , how do they treat people with no power is the real questions those who support everything cops do
A dis­re­spect­ful Ed Mullins calls the Mayor a Nincompoop , how do they treat peo­ple with no pow­er is the real ques­tions those who sup­port every­thing cops do

Mullins also accused de Blasio of cre­at­ing the cli­mate that prompt­ed dou­ble cop killer Ismaaiyl Brinsley to leave Baltimore and come to New York City to mur­der Ramos and Liu. “He could have killed police any­where along the line in those 3 12 hours in any city in the coun­try, but he chose New York,” Mullins said. “Why? Because the atten­tion to the demon­stra­tions and the law­less­ness that was occur­ring enabled that type of an atmos­phere.” Brinsley killed the offi­cers as part of a twist­ed plan to avenge the choke­hold death of Eric Garner by an NYPD offi­cer and the killing of Michael Brown by a cop in Ferguson, Mo. De Blasio has tak­en heat from the NYPD for express­ing sym­pa­thy for pro­test­ers demon­strat­ing against a Staten Island grand jury’s deci­sion not to pros­e­cute the cop who killed Garner. He has also angered many offi­cers by embrac­ing the Rev. Al Sharpton, a police crit­ic, and reveal­ing that he told his son Dante, who is bira­cial, to be wary around cops. Last week, de Blasio held a sum­mit with Mullins, Lynch and the heads of the three oth­er police unions aimed at end­ing the cold war between the NYPD and City Hall. When it was over, both sides agreed to keep talk­ing, although Lynch said their first sit­down was most­ly a bust. http://​mmsc​.NYdailynews​.com

DeBlasio Missed Chance To Show Cops Who Is Boss

Air Traffic Controllers at work
Air Traffic Controllers at work

August 5th 1981 less than 2 years into his first term Ronald Reagan fired over 11’000 Federal Air Traffic Controllers who ignored his orders

Ronald Reagan
Ronald Reagan

to go back to work. The mass fir­ing of fed­er­al employ­ees slowed com­mer­cial air trav­el, but it did not crip­ple the sys­tem as the strik­ers had fore­cast. Reagan brand­ed the strike ille­gal. He threat­ened to fire any con­troller who failed to return to work with­in 48 hours. Federal judges levied fines of $1 mil­lion per day against the union. To add to the woes of the fired Controllers, 3,000 super­vi­sors joined 2,000 non­strik­ing con­trollers and 900 mil­i­tary con­trollers in man­ning air­port tow­ers. Before long, about 80 per­cent of flights were oper­at­ing nor­mal­ly. Air freight remained vir­tu­al­ly unaf­fect­ed. Regan did not stop there he insti­tut­ed a life­time ban on the fired con­trollers. In October 1981, just over two months lat­er the Federal Labor Relations Authority de-cer­ti­fied PATCO, the con­trollers Union.
Some call it union bust­ing, it may well have been, but none will deny that what the President did was nec­es­sary to pre­vent fur­ther mass dis­rup­tion in air trav­el which would have dis­as­trous con­se­quences for the country.
More than any­thing Reagan demon­strat­ed that he would not be bul­lied by sub­or­di­nates. No one doubt­ed the resolve of Reagan from there on in.

Roger Touissant
Roger Touissant

April 10th 2006 Roger Toussaint, the pres­i­dent of the tran­sit work­ers’ union who led bus and sub­way work­ers in a strike that crip­pled New York City for three cold days in December, was sen­tenced to 10 days by Justice Theodore T. Jones of State Supreme Court in Brooklyn. Additionally Toussaint was fined $1000. Ed Watt, the union’s sec­re­tary-trea­sur­er, and Darlyne Lawson, its record­ing sec­re­tary, were each fined $500, but were not sen­tenced to jail.

In hand­ing down sen­tence Justice Jones said “It is unfor­tu­nate that it came down to an ille­gal strike, but it was nonethe­less ille­gal.” The charges stemmed from the union lead­er­ship’s fail­ure to order tran­sit work­ers back to work after Justice Jones ruled that they must do so under the state’s Taylor Law, which pro­hibits strikes by pub­lic employees.

Fast for­ward to the actions of NYPD cops who have made it a habit now of being dis­re­spect­ful to the Mayor of the city of New York. Mayor Bill deBlasio who did exact­ly what he ought to have done in address­ing the con­cerns of cit­i­zens of the city regard­ing unlaw­ful police con­duct , now seem to be bend­ing over back­ward to demon­strate to some thug­gish gang­ster-cops with­ing the NYPD that he is on their side. Essentially the tail now appear to be wag­ging the Dog. In two pre­scients in the Brooklyn neigh­bor­hood where two cops, Rafael Ramos and Wenjian Liu were killed recent­ly cops have vir­tu­al­ly insti­tut­ed a work stop­page. There has been a 94% drop in tick­ets writ­ten and sum­mons­es issued. Whether you agree with over polic­ing which cre­at­ed the high­er num­ber of sum­mons­es and tick­ets hand­ed out to begin with, is a legit­i­mate debate. What is not legit­i­mate is cops tak­ing it upon them­selves to insti­tute an ille­gal work stop­page while receiv­ing their pay.

Under no cir­cum­stances would this coup-de-ta be tol­er­at­ed in the pri­vate sec­tor, nei­ther would it be tol­er­at­ed in any oth­er area of the public

Mayor DeBlasio and commissioner Bill Braton
Mayor DeBlasio and com­mis­sion­er Bill Braton

sec­tor. Work stop­page and out­right dis­re­spect have no place in the work­place. At the heart of Some com­mu­ni­ties com­plaint is the issue of police dis-respect which leads them to abuse and kill peo­ple with­out con­cern for penal­ties under the laws. What is it then which allows police to believe they can kill and no one should ques­tion them on it? Further why does police believe that their boss the Mayor, have no author­i­ty to hold them account­able for their actions when they are clear­ly in the wrong ? The rea­sons are clear. Police believe they are not sub­ject to the laws which gov­ern every­one else.
Police have huge sup­port , in the United States, par­tic­u­lar­ly on the polit­i­cal right. Not because the polit­i­cal right are law and order enthu­si­asts. In fact Staten Island Republican Congressman Michael Grimm is a typ­i­cal Republican hyp­ocrite when it comes to the rule of law. He is slat­ed to be sen­tenced on Federal tax eva­sion charges lat­er this month. The stark real­i­ty is that the right sup­port police who they see as a bar­ri­er between them­selves and black Americans.

Lynch
Lynch

If over 11,000 Federal Air Traffic con­trollers can be fired with the stroke of Reagan’s pen and their Union de-cer­ti­fied, cops can be fired . If a New York City Union leader and oth­ers can be impris­oned for fight­ing for a liv­able wage for their mem­bers why are cops exempt from the rule of law?
This is a moment where Bill deBlasio may once and for all show these thugs who is in charge. Yet deBlasio is a Democrat, and Democrats do not make deci­sive deci­sions. Patrick Lynch and the oth­er police Union boss­es knows deBlasio will not squash them like bugs, that is the rea­son they con­tin­ue with what is clear­ly a soft coup de ta . The moment when the Mayor should haven take deci­sive action was right after they turned their backs to him at Woodhull Hospital, he missed that boat. Going for­ward deBlasio will have no con­trol over the City’s 39.000 cops, he has no one to blame but him­self. They are uni­formed essen­tial ser­vice employ­ees there are ways to con­trol them . deBlasio missed his chance at leadership.

Something To Think About

A bi-word ? AFRICAN-AMERICANS.….

37 And thou shalt become an aston­ish­ment, a proverb, and a byword, among all nations whith­er the Lord shall lead thee.

And thou shalt become an astonishment, a proverb, and a byword, among all nations whither the Lord shall lead thee.
And thou shalt become an aston­ish­ment, a proverb, and a by-word, among all nations whith­er the Lord shall lead thee.

38 Thou shalt car­ry much seed out into the field, and shalt gath­er but lit­tle in; for the locust shall con­sume it.

Thou shalt carry much seed out into the field, and shalt gather but little in; for the locust shall consume it.
Thou shalt car­ry much seed out into the field, and shalt gath­er but lit­tle in; for the locust shall con­sume it.

39 You will plant vine­yards and cul­ti­vate them but you will not drink the wine or gath­er the grapes, because worms will eat them.

 You will plant vineyards and cultivate them but you will not drink the wine or gather the grapes, because worms will eat them.
You will plant vine­yards and cul­ti­vate them but you will not drink the wine or gath­er the grapes, because worms will eat them.

40 Thou shalt have olive trees through­out all thy coasts, but thou shalt not anoint thy­self with the oil; for thine olive shall cast his fruit.

Thou shalt have olive trees throughout all thy coasts, but thou shalt not anoint thyself with the oil; for thine olive shall cast his fruit.
Thou shalt have olive trees through­out all thy coasts, but thou shalt not anoint thy­self with the oil; for thine olive shall cast his fruit.

41 Thou shalt beget sons and daugh­ters, but thou shalt not enjoy them; for they shall go into captivity.

Thou shalt beget sons and daughters, but thou shalt not enjoy them; for they shall go into captivity.
Thou shalt beget sons and daugh­ters, but thou shalt not enjoy them; for they shall go into captivity.

42 All thy trees and fruit of thy land shall the locust consume.

All thy trees and fruit of thy land shall the locust consume.
All thy trees and fruit of thy land shall the locust consume.

43 The stranger that is with­in thee shall get up above thee very high; and thou shalt come down very low.

he stranger that is within thee shall get up above thee very high; and thou shalt come down very low.
The stranger that is with­in thee shall get up above thee very high; and thou shalt come down very low.

44 He shall lend to thee, and thou shalt not lend to him: he shall be the head, and thou shalt be the tail.

He shall lend to thee, and thou shalt not lend to him: he shall be the head, and thou shalt be the tail.
He shall lend to thee, and thou shalt not lend to him: he shall be the head, and thou shalt be the tail.

45 Moreover all these curs­es shall come upon thee, and shall pur­sue thee, and over­take thee, till thou be destroyed; because thou hear­ken not unto the voice of the LORD thy God, to keep his com­mand­ments and his statutes which he com­mand­ed thee:

Moreover all these curses shall come upon thee, and shall pursue thee, and overtake thee, till thou be destroyed; because thou hearken not unto the voice of the LORD thy God, to keep his commandments and his statutes which he commanded thee:
Moreover all these curs­es shall come upon thee, and shall pur­sue thee, and over­take thee, till thou be destroyed; because thou hear­ken not unto the voice of the LORD thy God, to keep his com­mand­ments and his statutes which he com­mand­ed thee:

16 % Reduction In Murder Rate Commendable Yet.….

Despite anoth­er eco­nom­i­cal­ly chal­leng­ing year for Jamaicans, there is at least one area of the pub­lic sec­tor which appears to be improv­ing the qual­i­ty of life and in some cas­es deter­min­ing whether Jamaicans live or die. For the first time in years the Jamaica Constabulary Force(JCF has report­ed that there are reduc­tions in major crime cat­e­gories against the last cor­re­spond­ing period.

- Commissioner of Police, Dr Carl Williams, is this ...
- Commissioner of Police, Dr Carl Williams…

Murders have dropped 16 per cent, shoot­ings are down 12 per cent, rape has fall­en by 23 per cent and aggra­vat­ed assault by 17 per cent. Of note is the fact that Police killings have dropped a pre­cip­i­tous 54% against the last cor­re­spond­ing peri­od. This is good news across the board for the country.Remarkably the low­er crime num­bers and the par­al­lel low­er inci­dents of police killing bears out what I have always believed. In most cas­es, if crim­i­nals do not threat­en police with bod­i­ly harm they will not be shot. This is not always the case but from my decade long expe­ri­ence it is true in many cas­es of police use of lethal force in Jamaica.

Peter Bunting , Minister of National Security is ecsta­t­ic about the down­ward trend in the crime stats, as he should be, already some are tak­ing pot shots at the Minister that he prayed for Divine inter­ven­tion at the start of the new Year but have not cred­it­ed God with the drop in crime across the board. Minister Bunting took con­sid­er­able flack for what some char­ac­ter­ized as his naïveté , when he sug­gest­ed that Jamaica need­ed divine inter­ven­tion to help with it’s crime prob­lem. That aside, 1005 Jamaicans were killed at the hands of crim­i­nals. In a Country of 2.7 mil­lion a 16 % reduc­tion in homi­cides pales when looked at par­al­lel to the killing of 1005 human beings.

Nation Security Minister Peter Bunting
Nation Security Minister Peter Bunting

As Jamaicans cel­e­brate a new year, down­ward trend­ing crime num­bers, and less police killings it is nat­ur­al for politi­cians to say their poli­cies are work­ing . Minister Bunting to his cred­it, gave cred­it to the men and women of the police depart­ment for the low­er num­bers. The fact is there are more police offi­cers on the streets with the merg­er of the JCF and ISCF ‚which are now under one uni­fied command.
The police point to their efforts in arrest­ing lot­to-scam­mers, remov­ing guns from the streets and oth­er ini­tia­tives which they say are the rea­sons for low­er crime num­bers. Noticeably they have also been far more inter­ac­tive with the pub­lic. Police ‑pub­lic inter­ac­tion is cru­cial if the Constabulary is to arrest the gal­lop­ing crime wave in the coun­try. Other

Officers bring Christmas cheer to residents of Tivoli Gardens. Observer:photo
Officers bring Christmas cheer to res­i­dents of Tivoli Gardens.
Observer:photo

inter­est­ed par­ties like church­es are also involved in bridg­ing the divide.
Community polic­ing is a tried and proven method of polic­ing which has borne fruits in many coun­tries. It is imper­a­tive that the JCF con­tin­ue it’s out­reach to the pub­lic. Over the years indi­vid­ual offi­cers have had their own out­reach to the pub­lic which has borne sig­nif­i­cant fruit for the country.
I am still some­what skep­ti­cal that the down­ward trend will be sus­tained because (1 Of the absence of a well artic­u­lat­ed prov­able for­mu­la , and (2 An econ­o­my that is at best anemic.
Despite this we con­grat­u­late the law enforce­ment com­mu­ni­ty, mem­bers of civ­il soci­ety who are get­ting involved and mem­bers of the pub­lic some of whom are start­ing to real­ize that the life they save may be their own.

Copologists A New Word.…

Copologists
Copologists

Q:What hap­pens to a mem­ber of the pub­lic who dri­ves some­one to the scene of a crime?
A:That per­son is a prin­ci­pal in the com­mis­sion of the crime.
Q:What hap­pens to some­one who holds some­one down and allow anoth­er per­son to take that per­son­’s life, even if he/​she did not deal the death blow?
A: That per­son is a prin­ci­pal offender.
Q:What hap­pens to some­one who know­ing­ly hides, har­bors, or help anoth­er to con­ceal evi­dence of a crime?
A:That per­son is crim­i­nal­ly liable as an acces­so­ry after the fact
Q:What hap­pens to some­one who will­ing­ly plays even the most minute role in the com­mis­sion of a crime?
A: That per­son may still be pros­e­cut­ed as pro­vid­ed by law.
Okay you get the pic­ture , you par­tic­i­pate in the com­mis­sion of a crime you are going to jail ‚but does that rule apply to all criminals?
In fact, whether the offence is mur­der, or a mis­de­meanor, say sell­ing un-taxed cig­a­rettes, it’s still an offence irre­spec­tive of who com­mits it Right?
If you said right to my last ques­tion you would be wrong!
What do you mean wrong , are you nuts Mike?
No not in New York State inci­den­tal­ly. If you sell un-taxed cig­a­rettes you are going to jail. If for any rea­son you weren’t sell­ing any cig­a­rettes at the time the police comes around and wants to arrest you for the thou­sandth time even though you may not have been guilty on that occa­sion you will be killed.
So what hap­pens to the actu­al killers, this is America , I know they will be held account­able, they are going to jail. This is the coun­try which locks up more of it’s cit­i­zens than any other?
Well I’m glad you asked, you see, not all mur­ders are murders!
Especially if you are black.
What !! Of course all mur­ders are mur­ders, what are you talk­ing about?
Not so fast, if a mur­der is com­mit­ted by the Police it is not murder!
It is called a jus­ti­fi­able homicide.
What are you talk­ing about? That sort of thing only hap­pened in Apartheid South Africa and that end­ed years ago.
The Police are there to pro­tect all of us, you are so wrong Mike!!!
Yah , tell that to the fam­i­lies of these killed by police right here in the good old US of A.

Rumain Brisbon, 34, Phoenix, Ariz. — Dec. 2, 2014.
Tamir Rice, 12, Cleveland, Ohio — Nov. 22, 2014.
Akai Gurley, 28, Brooklyn, NY — Nov. 20, 2014.
Darrien Hunt 22 Saratoga Springs Utah Sept 16, 2014
Kajieme Powell, 25, St. Louis, Mo. — August 19, 2014.
Ezell Ford, 25, Los Angeles, Calif. — August 12, 2014.
Dante Parker, 36, San Bernardino County, Calif. — August 12, 2014.
Michael Brown, 18, Ferguson, Mo. — August 9, 2014.
John Crawford III, 22, Beavercreek, Ohio — August 5, 2014.
Tyree Woodson, 38, Baltimore, Md. — August 2, 2014.
Eric Garner, 43, New York, N.Y. — July 17, 2014.
Victor White III, 22, Iberia Parish, La. — March 22, 2014.
Yvette Smith, 47, Bastrop, Texas — February 16, 2014.
McKenzie Cochran, 25, Southfield, Mich. — January 28, 2014.
Jordan Baker, 26, Houston, Texas — January 16, 2014.
Andy Lopez, 13, Santa Rosa, Calif. — October 22, 2013.
Miriam Carey, 34, Washington, D.C. — October 3, 2013.
Jonathan Ferrell, 24, Bradfield Farms, N.C. — September 14, 2013.
Carlos Alcis, 43, New York, N.Y. — August 15, 2013.
Larry Eugene Jackson, Jr., 32, Austin, Texas — July 26, 2013.
Deion Fludd, 17, New York, N.Y. — May 5, 2013.
Kimani Gray, 16, New York, N.Y. — March 9, 2013.
Johnnie Kamahi Warren, 43, Dotham, Ala. — December 10, 2012.
Malissa Williams, 30, and Timothy Russell, 43, Cleveland, Ohio — Nov,29, 2012.
Reynaldo Cuevas, 20, New York, N.Y. — September 7, 2012.
Chavis Carter, 21, Jonesboro, Ark. — July 29, 2012.
Shantel Davis, 23, New York, N.Y. — June 14, 2012.
Sharmel Edwards, 49, Las Vegas, Nev. — April 21, 2012.
Tamon Robinson, 27, New York, N.Y. — April 18, 2012.
Ervin Jefferson, 18, Atlanta, Ga. — March 24, 2012.
Kendrec McDade, 19, Pasadena, Calif. — March 24, 2012.
Rekia Boyd, 22, Chicago, Ill. — March 21, 2012.
Shereese Francis, 30, New York, N.Y. — March 15, 2012.
Wendell Allen, 20, New Orleans, La. — March 7, 2012.
Nehemiah Dillard, 29, Gainesville, Fla. — March 5, 2012.
Dante Price, 25, Dayton, Ohio — March 1, 2012.
Raymond Allen, 34, Galveston, Texas — February 27, 2012.
Sgt. Manuel Loggins, Jr., 31, Orange County, Calif. — February 7, 2012>
Ramarley Graham, 18, New York, N.Y. — February 2, 2012.
Kenneth Chamberlain, 68, White Plains, N.Y. — November 19, 2011..
Alonzo Ashley, 29, Denver, Colo. — July 18, 2011.
Kenneth Harding, 19, San Francisco, Calif. — July 16, 2011.
Raheim Brown, 20, Oakland, Calif. — January 22, 2011.
Reginald Doucet, 25, Los Angeles, Calif. — January 14, 2011.
Derrick Jones, 37, Oakland, Calif. — November 8, 2010.
Danroy Henry, 20, Thornwood, N.Y. — October 17, 2010.
Aiyana Jones, 7, Detroit, Mich. — May 16, 2010.
Steven Eugene Washington, 27, Los Angeles, CA — March 20, 2010.
Aaron Campbell, 25, Portland, Ore. — January 29, 2010.
Kiwane Carrington, 15, Champaign, Ill. — October 9, 2009.
Victor Steen, 17, Pensacola, Fla. — October 3, 2009.
Shem Walker, 49, New York, N.Y. — July 11, 2009.
Oscar Grant, 22, Oakland, Calif. — January 1, 2009.
Tarika Wilson, 26, Lima, Ohio — January 4, 2008.
DeAunta Terrel Farrow, 12, West Memphis, Ark. — July 22, 2007.
Sean Bell, 23, New York, N.Y. — November 25, 2006.
Henry Glover, 31, New Orleans, La. — September 2, 2005.
Ronald Madison, 40, and James Brisette, 17, New Orleans, La. — Sept. 4, 2005.
Timothy Stansbury, 19, New York, N.Y. — January 24, 2004.
Alberta Spruill, 57, New York, N.Y. — May 16, 2003.
Ousmane Zongo, 43, New York, N.Y. — May 22, 2003.
Orlando Barlow, 28, Las Vegas, Nev. — February 28, 2003.
Timothy Thomas, 19, Cincinnati, Ohio — April 7, 2001.
Prince Jones, 25, Fairfax County, Va. — Sept. 1, 2000.
Ronald Beasley, 36, and Earl Murray, 36, Dellwood, Mo. — June 12, 2000.
Patrick Dorismond, 26, New York, NY — March 16, 2000.
Malcolm Ferguson, 23, New York, N.Y. — March 1, 2000.
Amadou Diallo, 23, New York, N.Y. — Feb. 4, 1999.
To protect and serve who?
To pro­tect and serve who?

This list is by no means com­plete, nei­ther does it rep­re­sent all of the unarmed peo­ple mur­dered by police.
There are a huge cross sec­tion of peo­ple for whom cops can do no wrong, espe­cial­ly when they kill black people.

They are cop-apol­o­gists. Lately with the killing of of two New York City Cops every­one is a cop-apol­o­gist. Everyone is shed­ding tears. There is absolute­ly noth­ing wrong with cry­ing for two dead offi­cers. As a for­mer cop I wel­come the out pour­ing of love the NYPD is get­ting after these two deaths. 
As much as I feel sym­pa­thy for the fam­i­lies of the two slain offi­cers, I can­not share in the hand wring­ing because of the bla­tant dis­re­gard the police depart­ment and their (copol­o­gists new­ly coined phrase)[sic] friends,showed to the fam­i­lies of those who unlaw­ful­ly died at the hands of police. When Patrick Lynch blamed Eric Garner for his own death and copol­o­gists heaped scorn on the fam­i­ly and on Garner’s weight that was dis­gust­ing and unfor­giv­able. Then they have the nerve to blame the deaths on the Mayor and oth­ers. Not sat­is­fied they engage in the dis­gust­ing, dis­re­spect­ful spec­ta­cles of turn­ing their backs on the Mayor.
It is time every con­sci­en­tious per­son of col­or turn their backs on these creeps when­ev­er they come across them.
It does not mat­ter how many copol­o­gists sing their prais­es, it does not make them wor­thy of respect.
But Mike they say the police keep us safe, that’s what the peo­ple on FOX say. Giuliani the for­mer Mayor also said so . In fact a lot of very impor­tant peo­ple say the police are great. They say there is no prob­lem of police abuse in the United States. They say offi­cers go out and put their lives on the line every day to keep “us” safe. How can what you are say­ing be true when all of these peo­ple say the cops are there to pro­tect “us”?

Well did you ask these nice peo­ple to tell you exact­ly who “us“is?

Grimm Gone.….

Grimm announced Dec. 23 that he had pleaded guilty to one count of felony tax fraud. He will be sentenced June 8.
Grimm announced Dec. 23 that he had plead­ed guilty to one count of felony tax fraud. He will be sen­tenced June 8.

WASHINGTON — Rep. Michael Grimm plans to resign from Congress in the wake of his guilty plea on a felony tax eva­sion charge. Grimm (R‑S.I.) said after he entered his plea last week that he would con­tin­ue to serve in the House.

But he reversed course after speak­ing Monday to House Speaker John Boehner (R‑Ohio), who has tak­en a hard line on Republicans fac­ing ethics charges. “The events which led to this day did not break my spir­it, nor the will of the vot­ers,” Grimm said in a state­ment issued Monday night. “However, I do not believe that I can con­tin­ue to be 100% effec­tive in the next Congress, and there­fore, out of respect for the office and the peo­ple I so proud­ly rep­re­sent, it is time for me to start the next chap­ter of my life.” He said he reached his deci­sion “after much thought and prayer,” and that his res­ig­na­tion would be effec­tive on Jan. 5, the day before the new Congress is sworn in. Boehner spokesman Michael Steel declined to comment.

Boehner
Boehner

We do not dis­cuss pri­vate con­ser­va­tions the speak­er has with mem­bers,” Steel said. Grimm issued his state­ment after the Daily News first report­ed that he had decid­ed to step down. Before his plea, Grimm had been sched­uled to go on tri­al Feb. 2 on charges of evad­ing tax­es by hid­ing more than $1 mil­lion in receipts and wages at Healthalicious, a Manhattan restau­rant he owned before he was elect­ed to Congress in 2010. Despite the charges, Grimm eas­i­ly won reelec­tion on Nov. 4, beat­ing Democrat Domenic Recchia 55% to 42%. Grimm said dur­ing that cam­paign that he would

resign his seat if a con­vic­tion left him “unable to serve.” After plead­ing guil­i­ty he said that he still could serve. But on Monday he con­clud­ed his posi­tion was unten­able, sources said.

The Staten Island Republican had said during that campaign that he would resign his seat if a conviction left him 'unable to serve' in Congress.
The Staten Island Republican had said dur­ing that cam­paign that he would resign his seat if a con­vic­tion left him ‘unable to serve’ in Congress.

Grimm’s res­ig­na­tion will mean Gov. Cuomo has to call a spe­cial elec­tion to fill the seat. GOP can­di­dates could include Staten Island District Attorney Daniel Donovan, who has faced scathing crit­i­cism over a grand jury’s fail­ure to hand down an indict­ment in the Eric Garner case, along with Assemblywoman Nicole Malliotakis and state Sen. Andrew Lanza. One GOP insid­er said Donovan was the ear­ly favorite. “He is lin­ing up the sup­port of the par­ty heads,” the insid­er said. “It seems pret­ty clear he may emerge as the nom­i­nee.” Malliotakis said in a state­ment Monday night that she is inter­est­ed in run­ning in the spe­cial elec­tion. Democratic con­tenders could include for­mer Rep. Michael McMahon and Assemblyman Michael Cusick.(NYdailynews.com.

A Department In Denial About It’s Deep Problems

Former New York City may­or, the all-know­ing Rudolph Giuliani wants the Mayor to apol­o­gize to the NYPD . In a state­ment to CBS face the Nation the race-baiter in chief beseech­es Mayor deBlasio to apol­o­gize to cops. The dis­gust­ing Giuliani knows he would nev­er apol­o­gize no mat­ter how wrong he was. Never mind that the Mayor has absolute­ly noth­ing to apol­o­gize for. In fact the Mayor should fire every cop who demon­strate dis­re­spect to him.
Nowhere else can employ­ees dis­re­spect their employ­ers and keep their job.
What makes New York City Cops any different ?
What is absolute­ly dis­gust­ing is the apol­o­gists who con­tin­ue to pre­tend that Mayor deBlasio or any­one else is respon­si­ble for what is hap­pen­ing to cops, except cops themselves.

NYPD hoodlum cops once again booded their boss the Mayor at cops Graduation  NYdaily newsphoto
NYPD hood­lum cops once again booed their boss the Mayor at cops Graduation
NY Daily news photo

It is also rep­re­hen­si­ble that Media hous­es and racial­ists like Giuliani can spread bull that police are under attack .
Un-pun­ished crim­i­nal acts by police are under attack. As in any war some­times there are inno­cent casu­al­ties. Some peo­ple feel that they have no out­let to express them­selves sub­se­quent­ly they kill oth­ers , loot and com­mit acts of arson and oth­er destruc­tion to infra­struc­ture. Pretending that pro­test­ers are the prob­lem is not only dis­hon­est it is counter pro­duc­tive. If all com­mu­ni­ties are policed the same way , with respect and civil­i­ty we would not all be hav­ing this dis­cus­sion. New York’s may­or Bill deBlasio must be com­mend­ed . He ran on reform­ing Police, he won and he is doing just that. He is reform­ing the old boys club and the good old boys and those who lick their boots do not like it. There is much to be said for a man like the Mayor who stand on his con­vic­tion to effect change despite the noise, than can be said for the State’s Governor who is an absolute dis­grace as far as lead­er­ship is concerned.

A sea of blue recruits being added to the already unaccountable NYPD
A sea of blue recruits being added to the already unac­count­able NYPD

Of course no one should expect lead­er­ship from Andrew Cuomo who sold out his Democratic Colleagues, keep­ing them out of pow­er in the state’s sen­ate. And who just hap­pen to be fac­ing ethics Investigations.
The state’s gov­er­nor has a respon­si­bil­i­ty to stand with the Mayor yet Cuomo is con­spic­u­ous­ly silent as the city’s police force engages in con­tin­ued defi­ance and engage in a qua­si coup. At least as far as the Mayor’s author­i­ty is concerned.
So lets exam­ine the argu­ments of cops and sup­port­ers like Giuliani, and oth­er cop apologists.

The Mayor threw police under the bus when he spoke about cau­tion­ing his bi-racial son Dante to be care­ful around cops. They argue that police are not bad peo­ple and there is no sys­tem­at­ic prob­lem of abuse in the NYPD
I won­der what sta­tis­tic they are look­ing at. Over the years there have been tor­ture and a mul­ti­plic­i­ty of ille­gal killings of inno­cent New Yorkers by the NYPD, and hun­dreds of mil­lions paid out to com­pen­sate cit­i­zens who endure these abus­es. Despite that they main­tain that there is no sys­temic prob­lem in the depart­ment. This leads ratio­nal thinkers to con­clude that since the assaults, tor­ture and killings met­ed out to blacks and Latino peo­ple is not a prob­lem, the NYPD must be train­ing them to com­mit these crimes against citizens.

Mayor deBlasio would be remiss in not warn­ing his son to be care­ful around these dis­re­spect­ful jack-boot­ed thugs. Who did they think they were hurt­ing when the turned their backs on the Mayor as he spoke at Ramos’ funer­al. Who were they hurt­ing when they turned their backs when he went to Woodhull Hospital after two of their col­leagues were killed. Despite the class-less thug­gery dis­played by the goons in blue, none of the dis­plays were as bad as as the dis­play in front of 884 new recruits at Madison Square Gardens . The endem­ic prob­lem of indis­ci­pline must sure­ly have been made worse with this dis­play in front of these new recruits. What kind of respect will these young cops have for the cit­i­zens they police if they see such dis­re­spect go unpun­ished for the Mayor of the city. What kind of respect will they have for poor, pow­er­less black and brown peo­ple in under-served communities?

Rudolph Giuliani
Rudolph Giuliani

When you are caught on cam­era chok­ing some­one until he dies and the laws which are sup­posed to pro­tect all peo­ple are ignored and the killers walk free, what did they believe was going to happen?
Who is respon­si­ble when some­one is exe­cut­ed by police and some­one takes it onto him­self to exact revenge? Is it the Mayor who address the prob­lem, or is it the peo­ple who com­mit­ted the killing?
There is a mas­sive sleigh of hand being employed by police and their apol­o­gists, they want you to believe the prob­lems you wit­nessed, the prob­lems of killings, the steal­ing of mon­ey from cit­i­zens are real­ly not hap­pen­ing. What they want you to believe is that the cit­i­zens who demon­strate for changes and account­abil­i­ty for ille­gal police prac­tices are in the wrong.

They want you to believe police are under attack. Police are not under attack. Illegal police killings are under attack. Every New Yorker and indeed every­one should be offend­ed when they tell you that the lives of Eric Garner Michael Brown or the dozens of unarmed black men are worth less than those killers who parade around with badges and guns.
Do not be con­sumed with the non­sense they ped­dle. Irrespective of whether some­one com­mits a crime or not, police have zero author­i­ty to sum­mar­i­ly kill an offend­er because of it.
One of the strate­gies they employ is to trot out rap sheets of young men who police kill unlaw­ful­ly, as if hav­ing a rap sheet gives police the pow­er to sum­mar­i­ly kill them. That of course is after they cre­ate con­vo­lut­ed lies and dis­tor­tions of being attacked or being afraid for their lives. Giuliani was one of the archi­tects of that strat­e­gy dur­ing his tenure as Mayor of New York City. As such Giuliani has no moral, much less eth­i­cal author­i­ty to give advise to this Mayor. In fact Giuliani is a big part of the prob­lem the city faces with the ille­gal acts being com­mit­ted by cops.
Giuliani used that strat­e­gy to demo­nize and dehu­man­ize Patrick Dorismond a secu­ri­ty guard in 2000, when NYPD cops mur­dered him. Giuliani the Mayor then, hur­ried not only to release, but dis­tort the crim­i­nal record of an unarmed secu­ri­ty guard who had been shot to death in an alter­ca­tion with an under­cov­er cop.Giuliani even released a sealed juve­nile record of Patrick Dorismond’s arrest for rob­bery and assault when he was just 13. “People have the right to know the back­ground and record of a per­son involved in a crim­i­nal sit­u­a­tion,” he said, adding dark­ly, “He’s no altar boy.” Giuliani failed to men­tion that the juve­nile arrest arose from when Dorismond punched anoth­er kid in the nose in a dis­pute over a quar­ter and that the charges had been dropped before the case even went before a judge. Nor did Giuliani men­tion that Dorismond’s arrests for assault and weapon pos­ses­sion as an adult had been reduced to dis­or­der­ly con­duct, a vio­la­tion. In fact, Dorismond had nev­er been con­vict­ed of a crime On top of that, Dorismond actu­al­ly had been an altar boy, at Holy Cross Church in Brooklyn. As the Dailynews Michael Daly wrote then.

Jesus said, ‘He who is with­out sin, let him cast the first stone,’ ” the priest there said as he pre­pared for the funer­al. “Patrick’s dead and they’re still throw­ing stones at him.” Yet the racist, divi­sive hyp­ocrite Rudolph Giuliani had a com­plete turn­about when it was his daugh­ter under scruti­ny. “It’s a pri­vate mat­ter,” he said after his 20-year-old daugh­ter was arrest­ed for shoplift­ing. “And, it’s going to stay that way.”
These are the immoral hyp­ocrites who are crit­i­ciz­ing Al Sharpton and oth­ers who have the char­ac­ter to speak out against injus­tice. This hyp­ocrite is not con­tent with the dam­age he did to the city as a result of the seeds of hatred he sowed nor the dis­re­spect he nur­tured and encour­aged in the NYPD. He is now mis­chie­vous­ly play­ing Monday-morn­ing-quar­ter­back to every move the present Mayor makes. Giuliani is a pub­lic­i­ty hound whose own fam­i­ly can­not stand him and are alien­at­ed from him

The nar­ra­tive has been changed every­one is back in love with cops at least in some com­mu­ni­ties. News Networks are solic­it­ing dona­tions to pay off the mort­gage of the two slain offi­cers. Noble yes, these two cops were prob­a­bly good cops, we don’t know . Noble that their fam­i­lies should not be left des­ti­tute, that their chil­dren should not be left to suf­fer. Where is the same respect to the wife and chil­dren of Eric Garner. Where can peo­ple donate to the fund for the daugh­ter of Akai Ghurley ?
You see how hyp­o­crit­i­cal you are when you cry croc­o­dile tears for the lost lives of one set of peo­ple yet com­plete­ly ignore the suf­fer­ings of those you do not like?
It does not make you good, it does not make you human . It makes you sub-human hyp­ocrites. All lives are cre­at­ed by God Almighty, from the pres­i­dent to the pau­per. The blood of the inno­cents are on the heads of all of you , you should be ashamed but you are not. You are not ashamed about slav­ery. You are not ashamed about Jim Crow seg­re­ga­tion. You have no shame for the lynch­ings, nei­ther are you remorse­ful for over 400 years of geno­ci­dal pogrom which has dec­i­mat­ed a peo­ple whom you blame for what you have done to them. 
Why would any­one believe you would be ashamed of killing a few more ?.….….….…

Milwaukee Sheriff New Black Benedict Arnold

Milwaukee County Sheriff David Clarke
Milwaukee County Sheriff David Clarke

David Clarke, the African-American sher­iff of Milwaukee County, Wisconsin, says it is time to for­give white soci­ety for the sins of slav­ery. Clarke, a fre­quent crit­ic of President Barack Obama, said Thursday on Fox News Channel’s “The Kelly File” that Obama has done noth­ing to heal race rela­tions after his elec­tion as the first black pres­i­dent in 2008.
“Who would have thought that after the elec­tion of the first black pres­i­dent in the his­to­ry of the United States that we would need a peri­od of Reconstruction to try to put this coun­try back togeth­er?” Clarke said.
Rather than try to heal racial rifts, Obama has tak­en sides, the sher­iff said.
He not­ed that Attorney Gen. Eric Holder has said the coun­try is too cow­ard­ly to talk about race.
“Well, I’m not, and I’m ready to engage him in that con­ver­sa­tion,” Clarke said. “We have to begin to ask when white soci­ety is going to be through pay­ing for the sins of slav­ery. We’re now pun­ish­ing peo­ple for sins they did­n’t commit.”[newsmax.com]

Clarke who is of course a reg­u­lar on FOX is mar­ried to a white woman. He has wide and dis­parag­ing views on President Obama, Attorney General Eric Holder, The Reverend Al. Sharpton, and now New York City Mayor Bill deBlasio.
Despite the Tea-Party type invec­tive being hurled by this new Benedict Arnold David Clarke, both he and the men he has a prob­lem with are all reg­is­tered Democrats.
The truth is that Clarke is a wolf in sheep cloth­ing, he runs as a Democrat but is fact a water-boy for the right against President Obama. David Clarke has tak­en on the role once held by van­quished Florida’s Tea-Party oper­a­tive Allan West . Look for a lot more from this black Uncle Tom to con­tin­ue mak­ing out­ra­geous state­ments as the Right-wing estab­lish­ment ele­vates him as their new mon­key and feed him scraps from their table.

Respect Begets Respect.…

Cops turn away from Mayor de Blasio as he speaks at the funeral
Cops turn away from Mayor de Blasio as he speaks at the funeral

Once again mem­bers of the New York City Police Department demon­strat­ed for the World that con­trary to the con­trived hype about their Organization being the best, they are real­ly a bunch of dis­re­spect­ful thugs.

As they did when Mayor Bill deBlasio vis­it­ed Woodhull Hospital after two of their col­leagues Wenjian Liu and Rafael Ramos were alleged­ly killed by Ismaaiyl Brinsley, sup­pos­ed­ly as they sat in their patrol cars on a Brooklyn street. 
They once again demon­strat­ed the dis­re­spect they dish out to cit­i­zens daily. 
Once again to the Mayor, this time with the sup­port of oth­ers who trav­eled to the city to attend funer­al ser­vices for Ramos.
Even as they demon­strat­ed their rep­re­hen­si­ble dis­re­spect to the Mayor, they suc­ceed­ed in show­ing the world just how disrespectful,arrogant, and out of con­trol American cops tru­ly are.
Yes those who trav­eled from oth­er cities who joined in the shock­ing dis­play of dis­re­spect to the city’s Mayor also tar­nished the uni­forms of the cities and the States they came from. Ultimately they showed the rest of the world that in America the final author­i­ty is police author­i­ty . America is a total police state. A place now where even elect­ed offi­cials are afraid of the pow­er of the police.
If these police Agencies can behave this way to a Caucasian Mayor, a man of pow­er, what are their actions when they engage cit­i­zens in poor neigh­bor­hoods? Unfortunately that is the rea­son we are here, this is the full cir­cle response that brought us to this place of lamen­ta­tion and mourning.

Once again the chief archi­tect of NYPD dis­re­spect, Rudolph Giuliani insert­ed him­self into the brouha­ha by stat­ing on CBS face the Nation quote. 

Racialist , race baiter Rudolph Giuliani
Racialist , race baiter Rudolph Giuliani

As long as de Blasio con­tin­ues count­ing the Rev. Al Sharpton among his clos­est allies, he deserves cops’ dis­trust”, Giuliani said.“When he los­es Al Sharpton maybe then he can have a bet­ter rela­tion­ship with the New York City Police Department,” Giuliani said. “If you would like to have a poster boy for hat­ing the police, it’s Al Sharpton.” “Mayor de Blasio, please say you’re sor­ry,” Giuliani said on “Face the Nation.” “He cre­at­ed an impres­sion with the police that he was on the side of the protesters.”

Never once did El Deuce Giuliani men­tion that part of the rea­son the NYPD is such a dis­re­spect­ful bunch of thugs is because he led a drunk­en throng of them in 1992 onto the steps of city hall in an attempt to intim­i­date then Mayor David Dinkins ‚the city’s first African American Mayor. The divi­sive lit­tle self-serv­ing turd nev­er men­tioned that there he goad­ed them to dish out rep­re­hen­si­ble, racist invec­tive at Mayor Dinkins.
“He cre­at­ed the impres­sion with the police that he was on the side of the pro­test­ers” Eric Garner was choked to death in broad day­light by Daniel Pantaleo on a video which need­ed no enhanc­ing for clar­i­ty. Yet a police boot-lick­ing grand jury on Staten Island made the deci­sion that the black man’s life was not worth indict­ing one of their own. 
That is American Justice. 
On whose side should a con­sci­en­tious Mayor be? Shouldn’t any and every­one be on the side of fair­ness and justice.
How could a self pro­mot­ing Giuliani who is a lawyer by trade fail to make the con­nec­tion that jus­tice must be served for all if the sys­tem is to work? Or should the sys­tem only work for Giuliani and his Italian and oth­er European American friends? Is that what America is all about?
Or is that what America is all about?
To those hyp­ocrites in long robes who sup­pos­ed­ly rep­re­sent and preach God’s word, your hell will be worse than that of those who mur­der the innocent. 
You who stand there in front of a sea of cops and lament and thank the cops for what they do, yet nev­er have a word of kind­ness for the fam­i­lies of the under-served, the pow­er­less, the down-trodden.
You are Charlatans. 
You are Devils , wolves in sheep clothing. 
You who remain silent when the inno­cent lives of the poor and pow­er­less are being squeezed out of their very being, as they say with their last breath “I can’t breath”,I can’t breathe”” I can’t breathe”.
You remain silent.
Now you pon­tif­i­cate in front of a sea of blue !!!
Ask your­selves , what would Jesus do?
You are hea­thens who have no respect for human­i­ty. You are Pharisees, no won­der peo­ple are turn­ing from the Church, you are Impostors. !
Police have no more right to life than any­one else.
Police have no more right to respect than any­one else.
Police have no more right to thanks than any oth­er set of workers.
Police offi­cers are paid to do a job, those who fall over and pros­trate them­selves at the foot of police and their unions do so because they are not sub­ject to the harsh cru­el­ty of Police aggres­sion abuse and murder.

Commisioner William Bratton . lets see Bratton bring the same level of determination and fortitude to demanding that a Federal grand jury indict Pantaleo for killing Eric Garner
Commisioner William Bratton .

Are all police offi­cers bad ? 
No !
But police are sup­posed to police the rest of us thats the start­ing point, so they must be held to a high­er stan­dard. It fol­lows there­fore that when police com­mit atroc­i­ties against the very peo­ple they are sworn to pro­tect and their col­leagues do noth­ing it makes them all guilty. 
We must sup­port police to do the job we ask them to, and we must sub­ject them to the same laws that every­one else is sub­ject to.
Unless of course what they are asked to do is not the same for everyone.
As Commissioner Bill Bratton reit­er­at­ed part of his own eulo­gy, not­ing that cops need to have more empa­thy for con­cerns about police abuse, par­tic­u­lar­ly in black com­mu­ni­ties“I made com­ments yes­ter­day in my eulo­gy about see­ing each oth­er to under­stand,Bratton said. “When I say ‘see each oth­er,’ that means to not look past each oth­er, but to real­ly see what is moti­vat­ing what we’re experiencing.”

Yes what they are expe­ri­enc­ing is some blow-back from the pain of those who feel they can get no jus­tice. No jus­tice in the way Police treat them. No jus­tice in the way the crim­i­nal Justice System responds to their com­plaints. No jus­tice or empa­thy from those who sup­port those who abuse them. Maybe its time mem­bers of the NYPD chuck the Giuliani , Patrick Lynch approach and embrace the lat­est advice of Commissioner Bratton . This may save then a lot of heart-ache, it would save a lot of pain on both sides if they spend time re-train­ing and re-ori­ent­ing, rather than trolling social media look­ing for threats against them. Building bridges through respect is the best secu­ri­ty ‚not erect­ing more walls and look­ing over their shoulders.

Some Want To Divert Attention From The Real Cause Of Anger

James Woods
James Woods

Actor James Woods has tak­en to Twitter to lay blame at the feet of the Reverend Al

Rudolph Giuliani
Rudolph Giuliani

Sharpton for the killing of Rafael Ramos and Wenjian Liu,two NYPD cops.
Woods who is an admir­er of George W Bush and a groupie of for­mer New York City Mayor Rudolph Giuliani.
No sur­prise there, Giuliani went on FOX to declare that President Obama, Attorney General Eric Holder, and Mayor Bill deBalasio are respon­si­ble for the killing of the two cops.
The racist xeno­phobe Woods has blamed the President for every­thing since he took office includ­ing a claim that the President is athreat to the future and integri­ty of the repub­lic”.  It’s not clear what this hag­gard train-wreck is expect­ing from mak­ing these wild unfound­ed accu­sa­tions. He makes them any­way, even while he claims he may nev­er work in Hollywood again.
This Jack-ass who claims Reverend Al Sharpton is a pig would know the smell of pigs if you ask me . He seem to spend a lot of time in Pig-pens from his rants and gen­er­al appearance.

Number 99 jersey Pantaleo killing Eric Garner with an illegal choke-hold while the other killers aided and abetted in the murder
Number 99 jer­sey Pantaleo killing Eric Garner with an ille­gal choke-hold while the oth­er killers aid­ed and abet­ted in the murder

The lying racial­ist Giuliani lashed out at Bill de Blasio, President Barack Obama, and Attorney General Eric Holder. Speaking on Fox News, Giuliani said:We’ve had four

Number 99 Pantaleo never released his hold until Garner was dead.  Staten Island jury? No harm no foul, nothing to see here ...
Number 99 Pantaleo nev­er released his hold until Garner was dead.
Staten Island jury?
No harm no foul, noth­ing to see here ...

months of pro­pa­gan­da start­ing with the pres­i­dent that every­body should hate the police.“He added, “They have cre­at­ed an atmos­phere of severe, strong, anti-police hatred in cer­tain com­mu­ni­ties, and for that, they should be ashamed of them­selves.

New York’s black com­mu­ni­ty and many who love jus­tice have demon­strat­ed their dis­gust for the un-just sys­tem which con­tin­ue to have two sets of rules , one for white res­i­dents and police and anoth­er for blacks and lati­no residents.
The lat­est sequence of events being the chok­ing death of Eric Garner at the hands of Daniel Pantaleo and his friends. It was a shock­ing and unmit­i­gat­ed evi­dence that Black and Latino men are being sum­mar­i­ly killed by NYPD cops and the sys­tem refus­es to hold them accountable.
Conversely the same NYPD have arrest­ed a Baruch College Professor and oth­ers, on the alle­ga­tions that they assault­ed mem­bers of their department.
The video used in that instance have been shaky and far less clear than that in the Garner case..
Despite the clar­i­ty of the video and the fact that the choke-hold has been banned for 20 years the cop has not been indicted.
That choke-hold was banned when anoth­er cop Francis Livoti killed Anthony Baez using a choke-hold, sim­ply because a foot­ball had struck the patrol car Livoti was in. Despite the ille­gal­i­ty of the tech­nique used by Pantaleo and the fact that Eric Garner was not com­mit­ting a crime, a grand jury impan­eled by Staten Island DA Daniel Donovan refused to return an indict­ment on what is clear­ly a case of unlaw­ful police homicide.

Admitted felon Michael Grimm is still a sitting congressman from Staten Island
Admitted felon Michael Grimm is still a sit­ting con­gress­man from Staten Island

The irony of the Staten Island grand jury’s hypocrisy, is that Eric Garner was choked to death alleged­ly for sell­ing loose cig­a­rettes, a minor white col­lar tax misdemeanor.

While the Borough over­whelm­ing­ly re-elect­ed the white Michael Grimm to the US Congress while he was under Federal indict­ment on Felony Tax charges. Grimm has since plead­ed guilty to a sin­gle count of aid­ing in the prepa­ra­tion of a false tax return in 2009 and also agreed to pay an unde­ter­mined amount of resti­tu­tion to the IRS and New York State on tax returns dat­ing from 2007 to 2010. Grimm faces a max­i­mum sen­tence of three years in prison and is set to be sen­tenced on June 8 Grimm a for­mer FBI Agent once threat­ened to throw a reporter off a bal­cony sim­ply for ask­ing about his felo­nious activ­i­ties. Under House Rules Grim who has pledged not to resign under pres­sure from democ­rats may not be allowed to vote in the house, even if he is allowed to keep his job. Grim’s case is arguably the high­est-pro­file pub­lic cor­rup­tion case in New York in decades by some estimates.

Eric Frien
Eric Frien This is the face of a real criminal
What was his crime?
What was his crime?

The admit­ted Tea-Party Felon was re-elect­ed to Congress. Eric Garner was mur­dered for unproven un-taxed cig­a­rette sales. Yea to the good law abid­ing peo­ple of Richmond County and oth­er areas who re-elect­ed a crim­i­nal. You know we like our white criminals.
None of the racists both­ered to men­tion the shoot­ing ambush of two State Troopers over in the Poconos a cou­ple months ago . One troop­er was killed the oth­er seri­ous­ly wound­ed when Eric Frien ambushed them dur­ing a shift change at their barracks.
Was it Obama , Holder, and Sharpton who insti­gat­ed that, where was Giuliani and the oth­er jack-ass Woods then?

The web­site (moth­er­jones reports that FBI data shows that, though African Americans are arrest­ed and incar­cer­at­ed at a high­er rate than whites, the major­i­ty of assailants who felo­nious killed police offi­cers in the past year were white.

If the NYPD and its apologists like Lupica and others want to point fingers for the department's troubles , here is a good place to start.
If the NYPD and its apol­o­gists like Mike Lupica of the Daily News and oth­ers want to point fin­gers for the depart­men­t’s trou­bles , here is a good place to start.

This fact would be lost on the race-baiter Rudolph Giuliani and the jack-ass James

Sean Bell a young family man murdered on his wedding day < NYPD may look here for the reasons people believe they are murdering liars
Sean Bell a young fam­i­ly man mur­dered on his wed­ding day < NYPD may look here for the rea­sons peo­ple believe they are mur­der­ing liars

Woods and the oth­er right wing boot-lick­ers for whom cops can do no wrong. When you live in a soci­ety where you are auto­mat­i­cal­ly giv­en a pass based on the col­or of your skin of course you are going to defend those who enforce your right to that entitlement[sic.

Giuliani nev­er made any attempts to hide the fact that he is an ene­my of the black com­mu­ni­ty. Neither has he in the years when he was Mayor or since he left the Mayoralty pre­tend­ed to like us. That is per­fect­ly okay, I can­not for the life of me see any­thing I would per­son­al­ly want to do with a Rudolph Giuliani. What I cer­tain­ly will not have is Giuliani tell me who I should have rep­re­sent me, and I darn sure do not care about some drunk­en atten­tion-seek­ing actor named James Woods.

Anthony Baez choked to death by Livoti all because his football struck the cop car Livoti was in. NYPD can look here
Anthony Baez choked to death by Livoti all because his foot­ball struck the cop car Livoti was in.
NYPD can look here

The Reverend Al Sharpton has report­ed he has received death threats. Sharpton’s has always stood up for racial jus­tice and fair­ness. Much to the cha­grin of Giuliani and oth­er white Racists who ben­e­fit from white privilege.

The black com­mu­ni­ty dis­joint­ed, dis­il­lu­sioned, and uncon­cerned about it’s future, is not immune to falling once again for the divi­sive nar­ra­tive of those who prop­a­gate racial hatred like Rudolph Giuliani

Akai Gurley These lives matter as much as any other , cop or whomever...
Akai Gurley
These lives mat­ter as much as any oth­er , cop or whomev­er...

and oth­ers. Many have already bought into the anti Sharpton lie Giuliani and his friends at FOX has ped­dled for years.
Many who now use Dr. King’s name lav­ish­ly and shame­less­ly, want­ed him dead when he spoke up about the injus­tice they cre­at­ed and nurtured.
They hate Al Sharpton because he is effec­tive in shin­ing a light on their inequity. They would not wor­ry about Sharpton if no one lis­tened to him. They revile him because he has the gall and temer­i­ty to stand and shine a light on their immoral­i­ty. During Dr, King’s time they called him every deroga­to­ry name they could think of . Nigger,Communist, white-pros­ti­tute-lov­ing-fraud, and those were the good names. They demand­ed that he com­mit sui­cide. When their coer­cion to sui­cide did­n’t work , they put a bul­let in him. Unfortunately for them, Dr. King’s words con­vict them today more-so than it did while he yet lived.

Where Is The Love ?

An Ohio shopper shot 16-year-old Jawaad Jabbar dead Tuesday when the teen tried to steal the man's newly purchased, limited-edition Nike Air Jordans, cops said
An Ohio shop­per shot 16-year-old Jawaad Jabbar dead Tuesday when the teen tried to steal the man’s new­ly pur­chased, lim­it­ed-edi­tion Nike Air Jordans, cops said
Ohio shopper shoots teen dead outside mall for trying to steal newly bought Nike Air Jordans: cops. An Ohio shopper shot and killed a 16-year-old outside of a mall when the teen tried to steal his newly bought, limited-edition Nike Air Jordans. Jawaad Jabbar died Tuesday from a gunshot wound to his torso, police said.

An Ohio shop­per shot and killed a 16-year-old out­side of a mall when the teen tried to steal his new­ly bought, lim­it­ed-edi­tion Nike Air Jordans. Jawaad Jabbar died Tuesday from a gun­shot wound to his tor­so, police said. Miami Township police said two groups — three teens and two men — strug­gled on a side­walk out­side the Dayton Mall before the shoot­ing. All five peo­ple went to the mall on a mis­sion to buy the $200 Nikes, which quick­ly sold out.

The three teens left emp­ty-hand­ed, but at least one of the men got a pair. In front of the mall, the youths spot­ted the men with the shoes and con­front­ed them, police said. Jabbar pulled out a gun and demand­ed the men give them the sneak­ers. That’s when one of the men pulled out his own con­cealed weapon and shot the Middletown High School student.[NYdailynews.com]

Antonio Martin, 18, was shot and killed by a white police officer two miles west of Ferguson Tuesday.
Antonio Martin, 18, was shot and killed by a white police offi­cer two miles west of Ferguson Tuesday.

Antonio Martin, 18, was shot and killed by a white police offi­cer two miles west of Ferguson Tuesday.

Martin, who lived in Berkeley, was with an uniden­ti­fied man in the park­ing lot of a Mobil gas sta­tion when the cop pulled in about 11:15 p.m. to inves­ti­gate a shoplift­ing report. The cop got out of the car and ques­tioned them. The offi­cer talked to the duo briefly. Then, accord­ing to at least three sur­veil­lance videos tak­en from dif­fer­ent angles and released by police, Martin moved clos­er to the cop and raised his arm in an appar­ent effort to aim his gun at the offi­cer. Martin, armed with a loaded 9‑mm hand­gun, did not fire, but the offi­cer, who has six years on the force, squeezed off three rounds while run­ning back­wards, said St. Louis County Police Chief Jon Belmar. Martin was hit once. He died at the scene.

A distraught woman is comforted outside the food court entrance to the Oakwood Center in the New Orleans suburb of Gretna, La., on Wednesday.
A dis­traught woman is com­fort­ed out­side the food court entrance to the Oakwood Center in the New Orleans sub­urb of Gretna, La., on Wednesday.

A Christmas Eve shoot­ing left one per­son dead at the mall in sub­ur­ban New Orleans. Cops say it hap­pened about 4:21 p.m. Wednesday, less than two hours before the mall in Gretna was sched­uled to close for the holiday.

GRETNA, La. — A man who was shop­ping at a sub­ur­ban New Orleans mall on Christmas Eve was shot to death at close range and a sus­pect was in cus­tody, police said. The inci­dent hap­pened around 4:20 p.m. Wednesday, less than two hours before the Oakwood Center mall in Gretna was sched­uled to close for the hol­i­day, said Jefferson Parish Sheriff Newell Normand. The vic­tim had just pur­chased some­thing from Foot Locker and had turned from the cash reg­is­ter when a man walked with­in 3 or 4 feet of him and began shoot­ing, Normand said. No one else was injured.

Tragedies Also Offer A Second Chance For Us To Get It Right

th (3)It’s Christmas time, the time of year when Christians stop and embrace that warm feeling,..
The time we cel­e­brate the birth of Jesus Christ.
Many who nev­er set foot in a Church , syn­a­gogue, Cathedral, Mosque or any oth­er place of wor­ship still take time out to cel­e­brate the season.
Associated with the sea­son are protes­ta­tions of love and good­will to each oth­er. It’s a time when friends and fam­i­ly come togeth­er to fel­low­ship share and enjoy each oth­er’s company.

This Christmas like most is not with­out tri­als and tribu­la­tion. Of course as it was when Jesus was born tur­moil abounds.
Fast for­ward to this year and cir­cum­stances are not much dif­fer­ent. Families in New York and all across America are in mourn­ing for loved ones slain by police.
Police depart­ments are in mourn­ing for their com­rades killed by mem­bers of the public.
It was­n’t sup­posed to be this way.

As New York city gath­ers to mourn the two fall­en officers.
As peo­ple of all col­or and creed stopped to pay respects.
As peo­ple stop to place wreaths, light can­dles and lay bouquets.
As the Mayor falls all over him­self to ingra­ti­ate him­self with a Department long out of control.
As the Media falls all over itself with round-the-clock cov­er­age, just stand­ing in ran­dom places where noth­ing is occur­ring fil­ing reports th (2)which says noth­ing new.
I had this thought.

thWhy can’t all peo­ple share in the pain of others ?
Why do so many ridicule the pain and suf­fer­ing of oth­ers, even as they expect and demand that oth­ers share in the pain they feel for those they hold dear ?
Why not lis­ten to the con­cerns of oth­ers, as we ask that they lis­ten to our concerns ?
What gives us the right to believe we are some­how bet­ter than oth­ers, on the basis of skin col­or, finan­cial or soci­etal standing ?
As we mourn our own, those we revere and respect, what is it which keeps us for under­stand­ing the pain of those who lost their loved ones, those we deem beneath us ? Those we think unwor­thy of care, com­pas­sion, respect.
Whether it’s con­ve­nient, palat­able or not , whether we like the sound of it or not we reap what we sow.
The tragedy is that the evil sown by the wicked, does­n’t always come back to the sow­er, it some­times come back on the innocent. 
The rain falls on the just and the unjust.

Tragedies are also oppor­tu­ni­ties for sec­ond chances. 
God is a God of sec­ond chances.
This Christmas as some pre­tend to hon­or God for his son Jesus the light of the world. 
As we meet and greet those we love and cherish.
As we enjoy our beau­ti­ful homes , friends and loved ones.
As we enjoy sump­tu­ous din­ing and fine wine.
Let us take a moment to reflect and remem­ber those less fortunate.
Let us not judge their human­i­ty based on their sta­tion in life.
Let us all be less hyp­o­crit­i­cal to Jesus’ birth and remem­ber the way he lived his life, in ser­vice to oth­ers, with respect and ded­i­ca­tion to thoseth (5) out­cast from society.
Each and every one of you have it inside of you.
Just stop for a minute and reflect on the less pompous you.
Rip . Eric Garner .
RIP . Michael brown.
Rip . Rafael Ramos.
RIP. Wenjian Liu.
Rest in peace all those who lost their lives, you are all God’s children.
One and all.

An Opportunity For Healing Despite Pain On Both Sides

Commisioner William Bratton . lets see Bratton bring the same level of determination and fortitude to demanding that a Federal grand jury indict Pantaleo for killing Eric Garner
Commisioner William Bratton .

At a time when Rafael Ramos and Wenijian Liu should be prepar­ing to cel­e­brate the hol­i­day sea­son with their fam­i­lies and friends the two New York Police Department cops are dead at the hands of Ismaaiyl Brinsley who assas­si­nat­ed both offi­cers as they sat in their patrol cars in Bedford-Stuyvesant Brooklyn.
This is a tragedy both for the depart­ment they served and their fam­i­lies. One can only imag­ine the pain the fam­i­lies are feel­ing at this sud­den and trag­ic loss of their loved ones. I can relate to that pain both as a father who lost my 20-year-old son less than a year ago and as a for­mer police offi­cer who have lost many of my col­leagues at the hands of criminals.
This is a sober­ing moment for the New York Police Department, the city of New York and indeed the nation.
In the end we are peo­ple , we all bleed, we are all God’s children.When we give life-sav­ing blood all that mat­ters is the type of the blood not the col­or of the skin of the giver.

PBA president Patrick Lynch has lost all credibility , he blames Eric Garner for his own death. A regular loud-mouth no one takes him seriously on police issues, he is more harm than good to officers
PBA pres­i­dent Patrick Lynch encour­aged rank and file mem­bers to ban Mayor deBlasio from their funer­als should they die in the line of duty

This is an oppor­tu­ni­ty for those who demand jus­tice for their loved ones killed at the hands of police and police to come togeth­er to forge a way for­ward. Listening to the same old dividers like Rudolph Giuliani, Howard Safir , the felon Bernard Kerik and oth­ers will not cre­ate the atmos­phere for that dia­logue to happen.
Talking down to sec­tions of the black com­mu­ni­ty like Giuliani and Safir did does noth­ing but cre­ate more resent­ment. For too long poli­cies employed by the divi­sive Giuliani imple­ment­ed by Bratton , Safir, Kerik, and Kelly have alien­at­ed huge chunks of new York City’s black and Hispanic com­mu­ni­ties, and result­ed in nee­dles deaths and mis­trust on both sides.

Blaming Mayor deBlasio who cam­paigned on police reform for the killing of the two offi­cers is disin­gen­u­ous, self-serv­ing, dis­hon­est and dan­ger­ous. The NYPD must change to the demands of the peo­ple it serves, the peo­ple have no oblig­a­tion to change to suit the Police which works for them. The dis­re­spect­ful approach of Giuliani which has been con­tin­ued by Michael Bloomberg dic­tates that it knows best whats good for the black com­mu­ni­ty must end. You can­not adopt a pos­ture that peo­ple you believe beneath you should shut up as you know what’s best for them. You can­not legit­i­mate­ly tell a com­mu­ni­ty who should

A disrespectful   Ed Mullins calls the Mayor a Nincompoop , how do they treat people with no power is the real questions those who support everything cops do
A dis­re­spect­ful Ed Mullins calls the Mayor a Nincompoop ,

rep­re­sent them, or refuse to meet with that com­mu­ni­ty’s rep­re­sen­ta­tives because you have pet­ty jeal­ousies and dis­likes. That was the kind of New York Giuliani cre­at­ed. These events are the consequences.

The so-called bro­ken win­dows pol­i­cy insti­tut­ed by the NYPD has been a cause of con­cern for many in the black and lati­no com­mu­ni­ties who com­plain police tar­get them for stop and frisk which results in abuse of their per­sons and their con­sti­tu­tion­al rights.

The Police depart­ment main­tains if they are able to main­tain stop and frisk poli­cies peo­ple who are like­ly to com­mit vio­lent crimes will think twice about tak­ing a gun onto the streets. No gun , no shooting.
Both sides are correct.
If the num­bers indi­cate that the peo­ple who large­ly com­mit vio­lent gun crimes in the city are Blacks and Hispanics then nat­u­ral­ly those are

Detectives Endowment Association President Michael Palladino
Detectives Endowment Association President Michael Palladino

the demo­graph­ics which will invari­ably bear the brunt of the stops. There are parts of any strat­e­gy which will invari­ably not be pop­u­lar with cer­tain inter­est groups. What the Police depart­ment can ill afford is to employ a top down approach that does not include the input and par­tic­i­pa­tion of all stake-holders. 
Whether it is a func­tion of dis­re­spect or a fail­ure to com­mu­ni­cate may be open to who you talk to. What is clear is that large sec­tions of the city’s res­i­dents believe the police do not respect them, this is untenable.
In offer­ing his cri­tique of events for­mer Giuliani Commissioner Howard Safir claim he has spo­ken to many stake­hold­ers with­in the black com­mu­ni­ty and like every­one else these peo­ple want the same things every­one else wants. Well what do you know, I won­der how long it took Safir to fig­ure this out?
Safir’s com­ments ranked up there with right-wing talk­er Bill Reilly who was fas­ci­nat­ed when he went to the famous Sylvia’s restau­rant in Harlem and no one was behav­ing bad­ly or yelling and scream­ing curse words.
The police depart­ment failed dis­mal­ly to engage the com­mu­ni­ties who would be affect­ed most­ly by it’s stop and frisk pol­i­cy on the front end, but which may have ben­e­fit­ed also in the long run from reduced vio­lent crimes.
That is not the fault of the communities. 
That is not the fault of com­mu­ni­ty lead­ers who march and demand jus­tice for res­i­dents who are abused by police.

That is not the fault of a Mayor who seek to repair those breaches.
That must be placed square­ly at the feet of the Police department .
Try engag­ing the com­mu­ni­ty in a respect­ful man­ner and explain the num­bers. Explain that young black and brown men are com­mit­ting the most vio­lent crimes in the city and as such they of course will be stopped and frisked more than oth­er groups.Try explain­ing that it is not racism why they are tar­get­ed, just what the crime stats show.
Try explain­ing to the peo­ple you stop that you are not being mali­cious just doing what you must to keep the city and them safe. Try being less abra­sive. Try being less abu­sive when you stop peo­ple who are offend­ed by being restrained from free move­ment by your stops. Try a less con­fronta­tion­al approach and see if many of the peo­ple who you actu­al­ly stop and frisk will not be far less hos­tile to being approached.
Stop and frisk as it was con­sti­tut­ed cre­at­ed a lot of ani­mus between com­mu­ni­ties and the police, this occurred because the police failed at it’s imple­men­ta­tion and it’s exe­cu­tion. Police offi­cers are not sup­posed to esca­late sit­u­a­tions so they may make arrests. The duty of cops is to main­tain peace and good order . Prevent crimes from being com­mit­ted and inves­ti­gate where crimes have been committed.

In new York City blacks arrest­ed for low lev­el drug offences like mar­i­jua­na pos­ses­sion are far more like­ly to be slapped with resist­ing arrest charges which is a class A mis­de­meanor and car­ries a stiffer penal­ty than the ini­tial offense. City-wide data shows that blacks are twice more like­ly to be charged with resist­ing arrest than their white coun­ter­parts for the same low lev­el drug offence. On Staten Island,blacks are almost two-and-a-half times more like­ly to be accused of resist­ing arrest.

Whats even more trou­bling is the fact that most of those charges can­not be sub­stan­ti­at­ed in a court of law and are even­tu­al­ly thrown out of court. Which sup­ports the the­o­ry they were unfair­ly trumped up for per­son­al reasons.

Looking for scape­goats to blame as many sup­port­ers and the depart­ment has, will not fix things. Turning their backs on the Chief exec­u­tive Officer as some of them has done, only solid­i­fy what many already know, that there are sys­tem­at­ic prob­lems of account­abil­i­ty and respect with­ing the department.
The NYPDPBA and the SBA through their respec­tive lead­ers Patrick Lynch and Ed Mullins have demon­stra­bly shown that rela­tions between the depart­ment and mem­bers of the pub­lic as well as that of the depart­ment and City Hall will not be fixed any time soon. 

cops close to where their colleagues were brutally slaughtered
Cops close to where their col­leagues were bru­tal­ly slaughtered

Ed Mullins dis­re­spect­ful­ly ref­er­eed to the Mayor as a “Nincompoop”. Lynch the loud-mouth rab­ble-rouser encour­aged rank and file cops to sign a peti­tion ban­ning the Mayor from their funer­als should they die in the line of duty. The NYPD may con­tin­ue to bury it’s head in the sand and lis­ten only to it’s chief boot-lick­ers, con­tin­u­ing the per­cep­tion it is a law-less agency or it may look to change and be respect­ed once again. Those are the choic­es which the depart­ment faces.
Mayor deBlasio is try­ing to undo two decades of testos­terone-based polic­ing which has caused the un-nec­es­sary loss of numer­ous lives, and hefty finan­cial payouts.
Bloomberg News report­ed that in 2011, Los Angeles paid out $54 mil­lion, while New York paid out a whop­ping $735 mil­lion, although those fig­ures include neg­li­gence and oth­er claims unre­lat­ed to police abuse. Oakland Police Beat report­ed in April that the city had paid out $74 mil­lion to set­tle 417 law­suits since 1990. That’s a lit­tle more than $3 mil­lion per year. The Denver Post report­ed in August that the Mile High City paid $13 mil­lion over 10 years. The Dallas Morning News report­ed in May that the city has forked over $6 mil­lion since 2011. And last month, Minneapolis Public Radio put that city’s pay­out at $21 mil­lion since 2003.
In many cas­es pay­out could have been much high­er were there not caps in place which pre­vent larg­er payouts.
Clearly the prob­lem of police abuse of cit­i­zens is not con­fined to New York City, Ferguson Missouri , or Cleveland Ohio. Citizens are made to pay for these pay­outs even as schools are starved of cash to edu­cate chil­dren. This cre­ates a dan­ger­ous cycle which requires more law-enforce­ment, more abuse alle­ga­tions and more payouts.
Cops them­selves are pre­clud­ed from hav­ing to pay when a judge­ment is made against them under the doc­trine qual­i­fied immu­ni­ty. States would much rather cap abuse pay­out than force­ful­ly deal with abuse by police of cit­i­zens. Some inter­est groups have sug­gest­ed mak­ing indi­vid­ual offi­cers who breach their oath to serve and pro­tect assume some of the pay­ments . In oth­er cas­es some even sug­gest­ed those pay­outs should come from police pen­sion funds as a deterrent.
Democratic and Republican Legislatures and Governors are too tight­ly woven into the hero wor­ship of law-enforce­ment to untan­gle this sor­did mess. In the mean­time the ani­mos­i­ty which killed Eric Garner. Tamir Rice, John Crawford, Rafael Ramos, Wenijian Liu and count­less oth­ers will con­tin­ue with no end in sight.