Modern Day Judas’ Can Collect Their 30 Pieces Of Silver But They Cannot Claim They Did Not Know What They Were Doing.….

Everyone is absolute­ly free to sup­port the can­di­date of their choice that is how things work in a democracy.
Yet we are some­times left scratch­ing our heads when we hear the rea­sons some poten­tial vot­ers give for sup­port­ing a par­tic­u­lar candidate.
When CNN asked an African American woman in a depressed sec­tion of north east Ohio who she believe will fix up her neigh­bor­hood she said Donald Trump.
Now nei­ther Hillary Clinton nor Donald Trump will do a damn thing about that wom­an’s neigh­bor­hood , if it is going to be fixed it will be fixed by pri­vate enti­ties not some pres­i­dent or oth­er bureaucrat .

Which brings me to my most recent fix­a­tion, the black pas­tors whom have thrown their sup­port to the new york self-styled bil­lion­aire Donald J Trump .
Look the Democratic par­ty has­n’t exact­ly been a bas­tion of sup­port for it’s most loy­al vot­ing block.
In fact a lot of the poli­cies which have enhanced racial oppres­sion against black Americans have been poli­cies which the democ­rats either insti­tut­ed or signed onto with Republicans. We cer­tain­ly do not see many Democratic elect­ed offi­cials out there on the front lines with Black-lives-mat­ter activists.
Neither have we seen a leg­isla­tive agen­da which would rein in aggres­sive, overzeal­ous and abu­sive police tac­tics, which in many cas­es are esca­lat­ed from insignif­i­cant issues which need­ed no policing.
So Yes Democrats have been weasels, unde­serv­ing of the black vote , but even so, Blacks absolute­ly have to vote demo­c­ra­t­ic as a means of survival.
Republicans have been open­ly hos­tile and down­right dan­ger­ous to the well-being of blacks in America.

Republican sup­port for aggres­sive polic­ing , it’s poli­cies which open­ly dis­crim­i­nates against the com­mu­ni­ty on gen­er­al­ly all issues includ­ing the right to vote are well known.
In fact the par­ty does­n’t even both­er to pre­tend that it does­n’t hate blacks. The par­ty and It’s sup­port base active­ly pur­sue every­thing that is anti­thet­i­cal to the black community.
Which is why it is so stun­ning to see the list of black pas­tors who have lined up in sup­port of Trump.

Pastor Mark Burns
Pastor Mark Burns

James Davis pastor in Ohio, Another of the coons who would sell the black community back into slavery all for a chance to sit at a table with Donald Trump.
James Davis pas­tor in Ohio,

I could write an epis­tle on whether these so called pas­tors are real­ly called of God, but as the scrip­tures com­mand I am going to let the wheat and the tares grow togeth­er until the day of har­vest. I will always remem­ber that God is the ulti­mate judge.
When we look at the hos­til­i­ty of the Republican par­ty to the African American community,one has to won­der what exact­ly did Donald Trump give, or promise to give to these Pharisees?
Though Mark Burns and James Davis are not the only slave traders who are will­ing to sac­ri­fice their con­gre­ga­tion and as many oth­ers who are stu­pid enough to be influ­enced by them, they cer­tain­ly have been two of the most vocal, con­spic­u­ous, and even vit­ri­olic against the nation’s first African American President. They open­ly lie about his and his Administration’s record with­out bat­ting an eye, or be guid­ed by the con­straints which would nor­mal­ly influ­ence oth­er men of the cloth.
Again if you are a pas­tor and you allow your­self to per­pet­u­ate lies I have seri­ous doubts about your legit­i­ma­cy but once again I will not judge.

WHAT DID THEY GET ?

Sufficing to say I will allow anoth­er man of the cloth to char­ac­ter­ize the pas­tors who vis­it­ed Trump Tower in New York City and met with the devel­op­er turned repub­li­can nom­i­nee for president.
Reverend Jamal Bryant referred to them as pros­ti­tutes. Speaking to the media after the pas­tors sum­mit with Trump, Bryant and James Davis had a heat­ed back and forth on CNN.
Reverend Bryant labeled Davis a “pawn”.
I con­cur, I did too.
He labeled them pros­ti­tutes . So did I .

Davis insist­ed they had their voice heard plen­ty, dis­miss­ing Bryant’s con­cerns as just one of the lib­er­al “min­ions” telling African-Americans who are open to non-lib­er­al points of view to “get back on the plantation.”He even said Bryant should “prob­a­bly have his min­is­te­r­i­al cre­den­tials revoked. accord­ing to cnn​.com.
When Davis chal­lenged Reverend Bryant on the pros­ti­tute char­ac­ter­i­za­tion the good­ly rev­erend Bryant apol­o­gised stat­ing  “I want to apol­o­gize, because pros­ti­tutes get mon­ey. And the 100 that went in there walked away with noth­ing, they did it for free.”
Now the lat­ter part of Davis’ state­ment real­ly had me laugh­ing, the bow-tied enslaver wants the man who speak truth to be pun­ished . Yet he who is open­ly out there pol­i­tick­ing and try­ing to sell the gullible back into servi­tude shouldn’t ?
As a mat­ter of fact are their church­es still tax-exempt?

He he, I could­n’t agree with Reverend Bryant more . My only con­cern is, did they actu­al­ly allow them­selves to be used as props for a man who has a his­to­ry of racial ani­mus, big­otry and hos­til­i­ty toward African-Americans, includ­ing the nation’s first black pres­i­dent for free?
I mean even Judas Iscariot got him­self 30 pieces of sil­ver for betray­ing Jesus Christ .
Many Religious his­to­ri­ans argue that Judas saw Jesus work many mir­a­cles . As such they the­o­rize that Judas Iscariot expect­ed Jesus to com­mand legions of Angels to come to his defense against his captors.

They tell us when it became clear that that was not going to hap­pen Judas took the deci­sion to hang him­self out of guilt..
Jesus had super­nat­ur­al pow­ers which he chose not to use accord­ing to his father’s will.
Black ‑America has no super­nat­ur­al pow­ers, in fact it could rea­son­ably be argued that because of the com­mu­ni­ty’s splin­tered state it has no pow­er at all.
So it’s impor­tant that the mod­ern day Judas’ who would sell their con­gre­ga­tions and any­one stu­pid enough to be swayed by them under­stand that there are no legions of Angels to come to the res­cue of the peo­ple they are about to betray with a poten­tial pres­i­dent Trump.
Judas may not have known but these mod­ern day betray­ers can­not claim they did not know.
They know.….….….

Who Are You To Tell Others When And How To Protest …

mike

Nothing gets my blood boil­ing like when priv­i­leged white men, the likes of for­mer NFL quar­ter­back Boomer Esiason or NASCAR dri­ver Tony Stewart and oth­ers begin to tell Black peo­ple what they can and can­not do. It was that very same sense of author­i­ty, that sense of I am bet­ter than you, I have the right to dic­tate to you which cre­at­ed the igno­ble blight on mankind called slav­ery , and Jim Crow which has left a sear­ing scar on the char­ac­ter of America which refus­es to heal.

49ers-kaepernick-football
49ers QB- Colin kaepernick

San Francisco Fortyniners quar­ter­back Colin Kaepernick who refused to stand at the sign­ing of the nation­al anthem has drawn a flur­ry of crit­i­cism from priv­i­leged whites who have always tak­en it unto them­selves to tell oth­ers what they can and can­not do. They cre­at­ed onto them­selves a sense that they have the right to deter­mine what oth­er peo­ple do and how they do it.
Kaepernick argues he will con­tin­ue to sit while the anthem is played in protest over the con­tin­ued killing of unarmed black peo­ple by police with­out consequence.

Tony-Stewart

Tony Stewart Tweet

Stewart ran over a com­peti­tor, 20-year-old Kevin Ward Jr., dur­ing a con­fronta­tion at a sprint car race in 2014 at Canandaigua Motorsports Park in New York.
Ward was killed.
Of course this lit­tle mur­der­ing runt would sup­port police mur­der­ing black peo­ple . He com­mit­ted actu­al mur­der and the star struck police refused to inves­ti­gate the case prop­er­ly and place him in jail where he belong. Why would he not be in love with crim­i­nal cops?

For his part Esiason has the damn gall to say quote “I can­not say it in the strongest, most direct way, that it’s an embar­rass­ment and it’s about as dis­re­spect­ful as any ath­lete has ever been,”.
Embarrassment to whom?
Here’s the real embar­rass­ment. That Esiason Stewart and oth­ers, scum of the earth, in the year 2016 find it objec­tion­able that some­one refused to stand and place their hand over their heart as a song which cel­e­brates slav­ery is being sung, than deal with the clear and present moral dan­ger inher­ent in inno­cent lives being snuffed out with­out consequence.

Esiason
Esiason

But the men­tal midget was­n’t done he went on …“… if Carmelo Anthony walks on the court in a Knicks uni­form and starts in with this, I think it’s going to cre­ate a lot of prob­lems,” Esiason said.
Wait just a sec­ond there, is this min­ion threat­en­ing Carmelo Anthony? Who died and made him God ?
There is this notion by many that Black peo­ple should shut up and sit down, after all, they argue things are bet­ter than they once were.
♦Of course Blacks should be hap­py that mas­sa no longer works him like beasts of bur­den from sun-up till sun­down with­out pay.
♦Of course Blacks should be thank­ful to mas­sa for not rap­ing our women in view of their husbands.
♦We should be damn well glad that they no longer feed lit­tle black babies to alli­ga­tors as sport.
♦We must eter­nal­ly be grate­ful to these mon­sters that they no longer sodom­ize our men as a way of break­ing them and emas­cu­lat­ing them in front of their wives.
♦Yes we must shut up and be glad that they no longer make a spec­ta­cle of us by mass lynch­ing us for sport after Sunday services.

lynching2Yes of course we cer­tain­ly need to be qui­et, after all mas­sa Esiason and mas­sa Stewart don neva give us no right to speak no how !!!!
Here’s the prob­lem with the con­cept of grad­u­al­ism . Fifty plus years ago when Dr King and oth­ers marched for civ­il rights and social jus­tice the num­ber one prob­lem fac­ing African-Americans was police bru­tal­i­ty. Today the sin­gle largest prob­lem fac­ing the African-American com­mu­ni­ty is police bru­tal­i­ty. There is no tone deaf­ness on the part of Tony Stewart or Boomer Esiason their mega-phone Donald Trump or oth­er priv­i­leged whites, they sim­ply do not care to hear. The issue of police aggres­sion and mur­der with­in the Black com­mu­ni­ty serves their white suprema­cist inter­ests. Any seg­ment with­in the human species which val­ues tra­di­tion and sec­u­lar prac­tices over the moral­i­ty of human dig­ni­ty, human life and human exis­tence is indeed the worst and most base of that specie.

martin-luther-king-quote-a-riot-is-the-language-of-the-unheard

In order to ful­ly digest the out­ra­geous nature of the cheeky sense of deity of the self right­eous whites it is impor­tant to rec­og­nize the gall of their self- appoint­ed right over every­one else’s right to self determination.
Over fifty years ago these were the very same argu­ments com­ing from the[self-aggrandizing mas­ter race]sic. Unfortunately many illit­er­ate blacks gob­bled it up as they do today.
King specif­i­cal­ly warned not to accept it. In address­ing the issue Dr King said Quote .
“This is no time to engage in the lux­u­ry of cool­ing off or to take the tran­quil­iz­ing drug of gradualism.”

Yes this is an issue which real­ly gets me riled up . Who the hell are you to deter­mine how oth­ers, par­tic­u­lar­ly the oppressed behave?

Getting Away With Murder’ — The Four Words Colin Kaepernick’s Critics Won’t Tackle

A NOV. 8, 2015 FILE PHOTO

49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick is sitting during the national anthem.

(BEN MARGOT/​AP)

Colin Kaepernick’s delib­er­ate act of protest to sit out the nation­al anthem caught the nation’s atten­tion, and this ini­tial sen­tence framed most media head­lines: “I am not going to stand up to show pride in a flag for a coun­try that oppress­es Black peo­ple and peo­ple of color.”

But the meat of Kaepernick’s cause actu­al­ly came two sen­tences later:

There are bod­ies in the street and peo­ple get­ting paid leave and get­ting away with murder.”

Hold it right there:

Getting away with murder.”

That is the story.

There is no need to inter­pret why Kaepernick is not stand­ing for the anthem — he has told us.

In tak­ing a baton hand­off from Carmelo Anthony and the incred­i­bly under­rat­ed WNBA protests, Kaepernick has used the most spe­cif­ic lan­guage on police account­abil­i­ty of any recent athlete.

Kaepernick is recen­ter­ing police account­abil­i­ty with crys­tal clarity.

Accountability” is not the “mur­der” part, it’s the “get­ting away with” part.

Why is the word “account­abil­i­ty” so hard for Kaeper-crit­ics to understand?

Because crit­i­ciz­ing Kaepernick is depen­dent on not under­stand­ing it.

They can’t crit­i­cize lack of police account­abil­i­ty, so they change the subject.

So they bring up crime.

But civil­ians go to prison in droves while police who mur­der almost nev­er do.

So they bring up fall­en officers.

But the men who shot the offi­cers in Dallas and Baton Rouge were killed imme­di­ate­ly as cop killers often are. Finding a cop killer not dead or con­vict­ed is even rar­er than find­ing a killer cop arrest­ed at all.

Again, peo­ple aren’t just protest­ing police mur­der, they are protest­ing “get­ting away with” mur­der — the ulti­mate expres­sion on the non-val­ue of Black life in America.

And while a polit­i­cal con­ven­tion or pres­i­den­tial race pan­el won’t dare explain this super-sim­plis­tic point, Colin Kaepernick can.

A large American flag

A large American flag

(MATT SUMNER/​AP)

So instead, they change the sub­ject once more to imag­i­nary mil­i­tary slights he nev­er stated.

Last night, Kaepernick clar­i­fied that too: “I have great respect for the men and women that have fought for this coun­try. I have fam­i­ly, I have friends that have gone and fought for this country.”

And then, Kaepernick explained the trag­ic hypocrisy:

This coun­try isn’t hold­ing up their end of the bar­gain… men and women that have been in the mil­i­tary have come back and been treat­ed unjust­ly, and have been mur­dered by the coun­try they fought for, on our land. That’s not right.”

No. That’s not right. It’s criminal.

Walter Scott, killed by offi­cer Matthew Slager on video, was a US Veteran. So was India Kager, Kenneth Chamberlain and oth­ers. Scott was not only shot while run­ning away, but the orig­i­nal police report was fal­si­fied so Slager could “get away with murder.”

Slager, who is still await­ing tri­al, wasn’t just a “bad apple,” he was part of a police cov­er-up. Slager nev­er hon­ored Scott’s past mil­i­tary ser­vice. He mur­dered him.

A flag does not inher­ent­ly rep­re­sent sol­diers. That is a life­time of polit­i­cal brain­wash­ing talking.

Claiming Kaepernick’s act as an insult to sol­diers is as log­i­cal­ly twist­ed as claim­ing stand­ing up for the flag hon­ors Micah Johnson and Gavin Long — the two mil­i­tary vet­er­ans who killed police in Dallas and Baton Rouge.

Neither state­ment makes any damn sense.

And yet some peo­ple are actu­al­ly more offend­ed with Kaepernick protest­ing police get­ting away with mur­der than those “get­ting away with mur­der” itself?

Now THAT is offensive.

Why? Because what they’re real­ly say­ing is “White Feelings >Black Lives”

And this is what Kaepernick is real­ly try­ing to tell us (and by us, I real­ly mean white people).

While most sub­ject-chang­ing Kaeper-crit­ics avoid­ed his mes­sage for account­abil­i­ty, here is one rare excep­tion from a sports­writer who callsKaepernick a “f – king idiot”:

First, who is get­ting away with mur­der? That’s a strong accu­sa­tion. Who in par­tic­u­lar has com­mit­ted mur­der in this coun­try and not been charged with it? If you’re going to make this state­ment then you need to give us par­tic­u­lars that moti­vate your deci­sion and your beliefs. I don’t want bland gen­er­al­i­ties, I want specifics here.”

There is a lot of denial, priv­i­lege and enti­tle­ment to unpack here.

First, Colin Kaepernick owes you absolute­ly noth­ing. He is not respon­si­ble for your edu­ca­tion — which is only a mere web-click away. There is prac­ti­cal­ly a cop-killing web video library that has emerged in the last two years, and scores of oth­er reports and data. Research them.

People protest the recent police shootings of African American men in a march through Chicago.

(TANNEN MAURY/​EPA)

Second, after Alton Sterling was killed on a video last month, Kaepernick was actu­al­ly very spe­cif­ic. These were his remarks in an Instagram post:

This is what lynch­ings look like in 2016! Another mur­der in the streets because the col­or of a man’s skin, at the hands of the peo­ple who they say will pro­tect us. When will they be held account­able? or did he fear for his life as he exe­cut­ed this man?”

There is video from three dif­fer­ent angles of Sterling being shot while restrained on the ground, yet the offi­cer has still not even been arrested.

If those videos are not enough, if you want to “wait for all the facts” over your own eye­balls, then there is noth­ing to discuss.

If we also need Kaepernick to hold our hands through videos of Sterling, Natasha McKenna or Eric Garner, then there is noth­ing to discuss.

Hell, if the pre­req­ui­site for con­vict­ing a killer cop is a video, then that’s mere­ly a license to mur­der with­out one.

And if you believe Walter Scott was mur­dered (a point David Duke would sure­ly con­cede), but still would have believed the con­spir­a­to­r­i­al lies on the orig­i­nal police report, your con­ces­sion is use­less, not justice.

No more subject-changing.

Let’s break down Kaepernick’s com­ments on Sterling, line by line:

What lynch­ing looks like in 2016!”

Lynching was not just char­ac­ter­ized by rope, but by the abil­i­ty to avoid con­vic­tion in a court of law. Sunday was the 61st anniver­sary of Emmett Till’s his­toric mur­der. The 14-year-old Till is not only rel­e­vant because of his bru­tal mur­der, but also because a jury acquit­ted his mur­der­ers the next month.

Another mur­der in the streets because the col­or of a man’s skin, at the hands of the peo­ple who they say will pro­tect us.”

Kaepernick specif­i­cal­ly points out the high­er stan­dard police get sworn into as pub­lic ser­vants. While many whites are also trag­ic vic­tims of police vio­lence at low­er rates, there is a pat­tern of police behav­ior that val­ues white life and takes risks to save white life — even when white peo­ple are actu­al­ly point­ing gunsdirect­ly at police.

When will they be held account­able? or did he fear for his life as he exe­cut­ed this man?”

Again, Kaepernick specif­i­cal­ly used the word “account­able” with Alton Sterling — a delib­er­ate word he spoke again mul­ti­ple times last night.

He is also ques­tion­ing the absurd “fear for life” law that allows either the mur­der­ous or racial­ly irra­tional “fears” of (often) white offi­cers as a legal loop­hole. Ex-Seattle Police Comissioner Norm Stamper agrees. Chapter 5 of his book “Breaking Rank” is titled: “Why White Cops Kill Black Men.”

Stamper writes: “White cops are afraid of black men… We say that offi­cers treat black men the same way they treat white men. But that’s a lie. In fact, the big­ger, the dark­er the black man the greater the fear.”

Did the cop who exe­cut­ed Alton Sterling do so out of inten­tion­al mur­der or from a deep afflic­tion of hyper-irra­tional racial fear ignit­ed by a sim­ple twitch? It is doubt­ful that Sterling’s heart­bro­ken son cares.

Front page of the New York Daily News for Aug. 28, 2016.

Front page of the New York Daily News for Aug. 28, 2016.

And nei­ther should we. The offi­cer must be held accountable.

Or in Colin’s words, we must stop him from “get­ting away with murder.”

And in this era of increased incar­cer­a­tion and state vio­lence against of Black women, that also goes for Rekia Boyd, Sandra Bland, Aiyana Jones, etc.

Kaepernick is not say­ing any­thing new. The num­bers are absolute­ly stag­ger­ing. The Daily News’ own Shaun King writes:

When the offi­cers who killed Tamir Rice, Eric Garner, John Crawford, Mike Brown, or Natasha McKenna nev­er even go to tri­al for what they did, see­ing an offi­cer indict­ed and charged with manslaugh­ter or mur­der feels a lit­tle like fit­ting a camel through the eye of a nee­dle. Of the 1,200 peo­ple killed by American police in 2015, only sev­en cas­es result­ed in charges — a ridicu­lous­ly tiny num­ber… Not one sin­gle police offi­cer was con­vict­ed for an on-duty death in 2015.”

This is what an epi­dem­ic of “zero-account­abil­i­ty” looks like.

Do we need Kaepernick to crunch these num­bers for us too?

So far, the only num­bers Kaeper-crit­ics seem to care about is his salary. This was best sym­bol­ized in tweets like this from CBS sports jour­nal­ist Doug Gottlieb:

$61m guar­an­teed… Very oppressed #ColinKaepernick”

Gottlieb failed to state just how many mil­lions an ath­lete must make to stop police from per­son­al­ly assault­ing them (see: James Blake or Thabo Sefolosha) or to stop cops all around the coun­try from “get­ting away with murder.”

Of course, Kaepernick was ref­er­enc­ing all “peo­ple of col­or.” Last night he kind­ly elab­o­rat­ed that he was speak­ing for peo­ple that “don’t have a voice” and plat­form to “affect change.”

Said Kaepernick: “I’m going to con­tin­ue to stand with the peo­ple that are being oppressed.”

Critics, take note: stand WITH.

Not sure if Colin can be any clearer.

But valu­ing Black lives has nev­er real­ly been about read­ing com­pre­hen­sion, and Colin knows this.

Which is why he is stand­ing up by sit­ting down.

If you don’t like the mes­sen­ger, then take it from a more respectable sports icon and mil­i­tary vet­er­an Jackie Robinson who wrote in his auto­bi­og­ra­phy short­ly before his death (h/​t @profloumoore & @edgeofsports):

I can­not stand and sing the anthem, I can­not salute the flag. I know I am a black man in a white world in 1972 and 1947, at my birth in 1919, I know that I nev­er had it made.”

As long as we keep chang­ing the sub­ject from “get­ting away with mur­der,” Colin Kaepernick, and the oppressed peo­ple he stands with in 2016, do not have it made.

Send a Letter to the Editor Story orig­i­nat­ed here: http://www.nydailynews.com/sports/football/murder-4-words-kaeper-critics-won-tackle-article‑1.2769870

George Zimmerman Punched In The Face For ‘bragging’ At Restaurant About Killing Trayvon Martin

George Zimmerman was punched in the face at a Florida restau­rant by a man who accused him of brag­ging about killing Trayvon Martin, police said.

Zimmerman dialed 911 to report he had been punched in the face at the Sanford eatery Sunday, accord­ing to a Seminole County Sheriff’s Office report­ed cit­ed by WKMG-TV.

He told dis­patch­ers a man who rec­og­nized who he was walked up to his table and slugged him after ask­ing him “You’re brag­ging about that?”

Yet wit­ness­es ref­er­enced in the sher­if­f’s office report obtained by WFTV told inves­ti­ga­tors Zimmerman had vocal­ly announced him­self at Gators Riverside Grille as the man cleared on self-defense grounds in the 2012 killing of Martin. He even dis­played his ID card, they said.

UNDATED FILE FAMILY PHOTO. AP PROVIDES ACCESS TO THIS HANDOUT PHOTO TO BE USED SOLELY TO ILLUSTRATE NEWS REPORTING OR COMMENTARY ON THE FACTS OR EVENTS DEPICTED IN THIS IMAGE.

I love your tat­toos,” Zimmerman said to anoth­er din­er, accord­ing to the wit­ness­es. “My name is George Zimmerman, you know, that guy who killed Trayvon Martin?”

This sto­ry will be updated.
http://www.nydailynews.com/news/crime/zimmerman-punched-bragging-killing-trayvon-martin-article‑1.2739089

Historic Moment..

Congrats sec­re­tary Hillary Rodham Clinton on being the first woman ever to be nom­i­nat­ed by a major polit­i­cal par­ty for pres­i­dent of the United States.

AND WHY THE HELL NOT !!!!!!

The Shootings And Killings Have Grown From The Ridiculous And Absurd To The Grotesque.

10734218_10203187417145913_1187502936954276739_n-e1456464036486-64x90
As the Republican Convention came to a close people across the Globe had a chance to see what America will look like for the next four years if Donald J Trump is elected President.
On the day that the convention ended the so-called main-stream media was forced to pick up a story which has been trending for a couple of days prior, even as the media coalesce around the clown-show which was the republican convention.
Behavioral therapist Charles Kinsey was hospitalized after he was shot three times in the leg by a North Miami police officer, according to reports.
Behavioral ther­a­pist Charles Kinsey was hos­pi­tal­ized after he was shot three times in the leg by a North Miami police offi­cer, accord­ing to reports.

Even as the con­tin­ued killing of unarmed black Americans con­tin­ue to dom­i­nate the talk­ing points on social media and real America, the Republican nom­i­nee dou­bles down on defend­ing the police with not a sin­gle men­tion of the rea­sons which are fuel­ing the anger behind the assaults on police officers.

Donald Trump’s speech , dark ‚gloomy, fore­bod­ing and rid­dled with lies, opened up a win­dow into what a Trump Presidency would look like.
Many of the Republican pun­dits seek to make an equiv­a­lence between accep­tance speech­es giv­en by Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagan and the drea­ry ram­blings of Trump which passed as an accep­tance speech..
Ironically, the hyp­o­crit­i­cal evan­gel­i­cal hero-wor­ship of Ronald Reagan was not based on any­thing fac­tu­al, but on a myth­i­cal shin­ing city on a hill which exist­ed only in their warped imiginations..

People of col­or are left won­der­ing when was America great under Ronald Reagan ? If Ronald Reagan’s pres­i­den­cy is the high water mark of American great­ness they want to have none of it.
According to Policy.mic , Reagan’s trans­for­ma­tion from actor to seri­ous polit­i­cal fig­ure began in the 1960s, first with a nation­al­ly tele­vised speech on behalf of pres­i­den­tial can­di­date Barry Goldwater and then with his elec­tion as gov­er­nor of California. This was also the decade in which the civ­il rights bills that end­ed legal­ized racism were passed … and Reagan was on record oppos­ing all of them, includ­ing the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the Voting Rights Act of 1965 and the Fair Housing Act of 1968.
Reagan con­tin­ued this pat­tern as pres­i­dent by gut­ting the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC), fight­ing the exten­sion of the Voting Rights Act, veto­ing the Civil Rights Restoration Act (which required all recip­i­ents of fed­er­al funds to com­ply with civ­il rights laws) and ini­tial­ly oppos­ing the cre­ation of Martin Luther King, Jr. Day (he changed his tune when it passed Congress with a veto-proof majority). 

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Reagan vetoed an anti-apartheid bill. Reagan sup­port­ed the exploita­tion of Mexican-American farm work­ers. Reagan ille­gal­ly sold weapons to Iran and helped cre­ate the Taliban and Osama bin Laden régime. Reagan’s eco­nom­ic poli­cies caused a spike in unem­ploy­ment and led to severe income inequality.

None of these facts will have any impres­sion on the will­ful igno­rant and those who have no desire to know, nei­ther will the litany of oth­er transgressions.
Even Richard Nixon’s so-called law and order accep­tance speech of 1968 was far less omi­nous than Trumps and far less than some made it out to be . In fact that speech had a lot that peo­ple could look to hope­ful­ly. Find link here. http://​www​.pres​i​den​cy​.ucsb​.edu/​w​s​/​?​p​i​d​=​2​5​968 .

People around the world look on in hor­ror and dis­may as the bound­aries of log­ic are incred­u­lous­ly stretched in the mul­ti­plic­i­ty of police shoot­ings of African men and boys. Regardless of the inher­ent crim­i­nal con­duct of the offi­cers, police apol­o­gist and the American media cre­ate an alter­na­tive nar­ra­tive which shifts respon­si­bil­i­ty from the rogue offi­cers onto the inno­cent victims.
This is done using dif­fer­ent nar­ra­tives such as releas­ing the vic­tim’s crim­i­nal record. Demonizing the vic­tim. Or seek­ing to con­vince the pub­lic that what they wit­nessed in clear con­cise video record­ings can­not be trust­ed for authen­tic­i­ty. We are told that we do not know what tran­spired before the record­ing com­menced, even though the killings are usu­al­ly so grotesque that noth­ing could have pre­ced­ed them which could pos­si­bly jus­ti­fy the killing anyway.

Amadou Diallo,
Amadou Diallo,

I was shocked and appalled at the nar­ra­tive which was used to jus­ti­fy the alleged 41 bul­lets mem­bers of a NYPD unit fired at 22 year-old Amadou Diallo, in the Bronx in 1999.
Mister Diallo who hailed from west Africa was gunned down by four NYPD cops who alleged they thought he had a gun. They fired a report­ed forty one(41) bul­lets at the young man hit­ting him a total of nine­teen times(19) killing him on the spot.
The most appalling thing I heard from police and their apol­o­gists was a term I had nev­er heard pri­or relat­ing to police offi­cers killing mem­bers of the public.

INFECTIOUS FIRING.….

Even wars have rules of engage­ments. The Geneva Convention to which the United States is sig­na­to­ry pre­vents sol­diers from indis­crim­i­nate­ly killing even sol­diers who were just fir­ing at the vic­tor as long as they indi­cate they want to surrender.
I had nev­er before heard, nei­ther did I believe that police offi­cers and those who cov­er the wrongs they do could argue that they fired their ser­vice weapons because their col­leagues were firing.
I was trained to respect life and to under­stand that every round an offi­cer fired must be account­ed for. Not just for audit pur­pos­es but must be legal­ly and moral­ly jus­ti­fied. Under Rudolph Giuliani the seeds of police abuse were plant­ed in new York City.

Rudolph Giliuani
Rudolph Giliuani

Police offi­cers across the civ­i­lized world are gov­erned by a pro­to­col which is basi­cal­ly to pro­tect life . Under those rules an offi­cer must be total­ly jus­ti­fied and have exhaust­ed all non-lethal means pos­si­ble, where pos­si­ble, before using lethal force.
Notwithstanding, that was the expla­na­tion used for the reck­less, cal­lous and bla­tant dis­re­gard those cops dis­played for the life of mis­ter Diallo and any­one who may have been in the vicin­i­ty of their so called sphere of infec­tious firing.

Since the death of mis­ter Diallo the list of Americans killed indis­crim­i­nate­ly by police across the United States has increased exponentially.
As the num­ber of bod­ies increase the expla­na­tion and excus­es for the killings have grown from the ridicu­lous and absurd to the grotesque.
The sys­tem did not pun­ish any of the four cops for killing Amadou Diallo, they were all cleared of wrong doing. One, Kenneth Boss, was pro­mot­ed to sergeant, after the killing.

Donald J Trump
Donald J Trump

There was noth­ing in Donald Trumps speech which rec­og­nized this trav­es­ty hap­pen­ing across America. What Donald Trump promised the coun­try was that he would stand behind police with­out equivocation.
This is what’s in store for men and women of col­or under a Donald Trump administration.
This is fascism .…..

They Simply Cannot Say Michelle Obama Inspires Them.….

Michelle Obama the Princeton educated classy first lady went through hell when her husband Barack Hussein Obama announced as a candidate for the presidency of the United States in 2008.

Michelle was char­ac­ter­ized as a Terrorist and as Barack Obama’s Baby Ma-ma. She was depict­ed as an afro wear­ing rev­o­lu­tion­ary with a rifle on her back in the New Yorker mag­a­zine. Then pres­i­den­tial can­di­date, Illinois US Senator Barack Obama was por­trayed as an unpa­tri­ot­ic Muslim who could not be trust­ed with the Presidency.
Since then Barack Obama has won two pres­i­den­tial elec­tions saved America from finan­cial col­lapse and restored Americas image abroad.
He did it with blan­ket , wall to wall oppo­si­tion from Republicans.

Front and cen­ter of the dem­a­goguery against President Obama is the man run­ning for the pres­i­den­cy on the repub­li­can side Donald Trump. Trump is one of the peo­ple who came up with the birther issue which seeks to de-legit­imize Barack Obama’s can­di­da­cy and ulti­mate­ly his presidency.
Fittingly, the President has dis­missed the goofy orange faced repub­li­can as a car­ni­val bark­er unwor­thy of seri­ous consideration.

There is so much we can say about the way the Obama’s have ran their pres­i­den­cy with­out a sin­gle scan­dal, the first pres­i­den­cy in ages ever to do so.
There is so much to be said about their two beau­ti­ful well round­ed daugh­ters who grew up in front our eyes.
We could talk about the poise , grace, class, and intel­lect with which Michelle Obama has con­duct­ed her­self as first lady. Yet we can also high­light the vit­ri­olic hatred which has been direct­ed at her and her fam­i­ly all because of the col­or of her skin.

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Michelle Obama is cer­tain­ly a strong beau­ti­ful woman wor­thy of being copied. So it’s no won­der that Donald Trump’s wife would look up to our first lady and seek to pull from her speech parts of which she believed.
That’s not a prob­lem . The prob­lem is that they hate us so much that even when they are caught steal­ing from us they refuse to admit that they stole. That their hand is caught in the cook­ie-jar and is at risk, they dou­ble down and deny .
Because they can­not admit that they learn from us.

Even as they stood on their con­ven­tion stage and say peo­ple of col­or have not cre­at­ed any­thing last­ing, they were in the process of steal­ing from us .
How typ­i­cal is that ?

Calls For National Dialogue On Race Yet The Conversation Ignore The Realities.….

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It’s remarkable that many whites people in the United States do not find it objectionable when rogue elements in some police departments brutalize and kill Black citizens. It’s also tellin that they do not see those attacks as attacks on all Americans including themselves !!!
Yet when police are attacked they see those attacks as attacks on them .
Is it that they do not see Black citizens as citizens of America? Why does the corporate media mourn the lives of police officers but does not mourn the innocent lives taken by bad cops? Why can’t we do both ?

This phe­nom­e­non speaks vol­umes about race rela­tions in America . It also speaks loud­ly about the hypocrisy of that seg­ment of the soci­ety. Let’s be clear, not all police shoot­ings are bad shoot­ings . Lord knows I spend count­less hours writ­ing about that very fact. That each case is an indi­vid­ual case and has to be looked at as such.
What I find dis­tress­ing is that those peo­ple who say there is a war going on against police fail to real­ize that there are some bla­tant­ly bad police shoot­ings as well.

As I have said con­sis­tent­ly, it is rather sil­ly to demon­strate against police. Police only enforce laws . Police offi­cers are forced to enforce laws they some­times dis­agree with , but they are sworn to enforce those laws at the per­il of their lives and in many cas­es they end up giv­ing up their lives that way.
Anyone whom have ever tak­en the oath of a police offi­cer under­stands that police are usu­al­ly the scape­goats for politi­cians with bad inten­tions. People angry at gov­ern­ment take out their frus­tra­tions on the police. The police are seen as the per­son­i­fi­ca­tion of the evils of government.
That is why it is crit­i­cal that the judi­cial sys­tem do what it must to address the incred­i­ble dis­par­i­ty in the ways the laws are enforced from the least infrac­tion to the most seri­ous. People respect the rule of law when enforce­ment , pros­e­cu­tion and incar­cer­a­tion are seen as fair. No one can argue that any of this is true in the United States where count­less reports have point­ed to Black com­mu­ni­ties being over-policed.
Blacks are much more like­ly to be arrest­ed for using and deal­ing drugs, even though they do not con­sume or deal drugs more than white Americans.

Blacks are much more like­ly to be arrest­ed than their white coun­ter­parts for any range of crimes. They also get longer sen­tence for the same crime . These are not opin­ions they are irrefutable data sup­port­ed facts.
People do not have faith in the sys­tem when they wit­ness police killings on video which shocks our sen­si­bil­i­ties yet parts of the sys­tem does every­thing with­in it’s pow­er to pre­vent jus­tice from being done.
Police offi­cers are giv­en a lot of lat­i­tude but they can­not be giv­en free rein to kill with­out consequence.
Pretending that the data is unre­al, is unre­al. Blaming pro­test­ers who stand up for jus­tice only makes them more angry. White peo­ple Canonizing cops while ignor­ing the pain of the black and brown com­mu­ni­ty is a pre­scrip­tion for dis­as­ter. A Fascist right wing can­di­date seek­ing the pres­i­den­cy who declares him­self the law-and-order can­di­date does noth­ing to improve race rela­tions. It does noth­ing to bridge the gap between police and cit­i­zens it widens the breach.

Donald J Trump
Donald J Trump

There is dai­ly talk about hav­ing a nation­al con­ver­sa­tion. That con­ver­sa­tion must begin by rec­og­niz­ing that there is a seri­ous issue of police vio­lence and dis­re­spect against peo­ple of color.
As a for­mer police offi­cer who have been shot in the line of duty , I must reit­er­ate that even if the law gives police jus­ti­fi­ca­tion to use lethal or dead­ly force, that offi­cer must also be guid­ed by a greater moral jus­ti­fi­ca­tion. Don’t shoot at some­one if you don’t have to . Don’t shoot because you can kill and get away with it .
That’s the heart of the matter.

As we grapple for solutions in this renewed fight for social justice it is rather easy to go to our respective corners hardened and baked in our ideas of how just our own causes are and just how wrong the other side is.

As we seek the elu­sive goal of one com­mon human­i­ty, we can­not for­get that if we know bet­ter it is up to us to be bet­ter. By being bet­ter we demon­strate that when we speak about equal­i­ty and jus­tice we not only say it from our mouths we demon­strate it by our actions.

We must nev­er for­get the white peo­ple who aid­ed and shield­ed Harriet Tubman as she guid­ed thou­sands from the ghast­ly and hor­rif­ic bru­tal­i­ty of slav­ery to the promise of respite at the risk of their own peril.
When we hear the com­ments of some with dark pig­ment in their skin it bog­gles the mind. We know they igno­rant­ly hate them­selves but we must nev­er for­get that Harriet Tubman also said she freed thou­sands from servi­tude and could have freed thou­sands more , if only they knew they were slaves.

Goodman Chaney and Schwerner murdered in Mississippi...
Goodman. Chaney and Schwerner mur­dered in Mississippi…

We should nev­er for­get Michael Schwerner, Andrew Goodman, and James Chaney were killed by a Ku Klux Klan lynch mob near Meridian, Mississippi. The three young civ­il rights work­ers were work­ing to reg­is­ter black vot­ers in Mississippi, thus inspir­ing the ire of the local Klan. The deaths of Schwerner and Goodman, white Northerners and mem­bers of the Congress of Racial Equality caused a nation­al out­rage in 1964.

As con­sci­en­tious peo­ple of all col­or stood up to big­otry and vio­lence in the 60’s it is impor­tant that peo­ple of all col­or stand up and speak out against big­otry and the inequities with­ing the jus­tice system.
These prob­lems will not go away overnight but it behooves all Americans to speak out if they believe in equal­i­ty. We all have to live on this planet.
As some­one once said we may not have come over on the same ship but we are all in this boat together.

If You Can’t Say Black Lives Matter, You Do Not Believe They Do

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Why would any­one, black or white, be mad at a black per­son who says “BLACK LIVES MATTER”?
Here’s the truth, they are mad because they believe that black lives do not matter.
Some time ago back I wrote an arti­cle in which I allud­ed to a very sim­ple fact. That fact is that when black peo­ple say “black lives mat­ter,” they are sim­ply say­ing “(black lives mat­ter too)”.

So why would I, a black man be offend­ed if a white per­son says “white lives mat­ter”? It would not, because that per­son would be exact­ly cor­rect. But you see that is the way I was raised to believe in the sanc­ti­ty of all lives.
Oh, let me expound on that a lit­tle, that is my Christian upbring­ing. Not a so-called Judaeo Christian upbring­ing which advances an unin­tel­lec­tu­al & igno­rant con­cept that skin pig­men­ta­tion is some­how a sign of superiority.

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When I say I was raised to respect the sanc­ti­ty of life I did not mean black lives or white lives or brown or yel­low or what­ev­er. I meant all lives. Yes, the ani­mals that God cre­at­ed and placed in our care as well.
So you would nev­er see me buy­ing a gun to go out and kill Deer, strap it onto my car, take it home just so I can show off its antlers.
I am more respect­ful of my stew­ard­ship over God’s crea­tures. Sure I eat some meats but if I had to kill to eat, I would only kill what I need­ed, not kill for the sheer joy of it or sim­ply because I can.

You won’t ever see me arro­gant­ly killing ele­phants for their ivory, Lions just because, or any crea­ture under the sun just because I can, or feel that I some­how have the right.
I too love the crea­tures of this world, I sim­ply refuse to love them to death. I can­not kill some­thing I claim to love sim­ply to show them off as some sign of my masculinity.
Yes, I shoot ani­mals too, I just do it with my cam­era. Even the tini­est crea­ture has a right to its life, so I take care not to squish a bug when it gets into my house if I can extract it with­out killing it. That is the essence of my Christianity, not a dement­ed & twist­ed ver­sion of Christianity which fun­da­men­tal­ly believes in the [dom­i­na­tion] of God’s crea­tures much less any of his people.

The Hypocrisy Of The Harambe Objectors…

So when black peo­ple say “black lives mat­ter” those who oppose that con­cept, fun­da­men­tal­ly believe they don’t.
Period.
Here’s why.
Recently a black moth­er went through the anguish of deal­ing with over ten min­utes of heart-wrench­ing agony as her four-year-old black son fell into a Gorilla enclo­sure at an Ohio Zoo. Authorities were even­tu­al­ly forced to put the pri­mate down in order to save the boy’s life. They took the deci­sion after the Gorilla dragged the lit­tle boy around like a rag doll.
So-called ani­mal lovers rose up en-masse demand­ing an inves­ti­ga­tion of the moth­er’s con­duct and demand­ing her arrest for neglect­ing her child which result­ed in the ani­mal’s death.

The police inves­ti­gat­ed and turned over their find­ings to the pros­e­cu­tor who said the moth­er had done noth­ing wrong.
These same hyp­ocrites nev­er have a word of protest when ani­mals are slaugh­tered by white men and women for their fur, ivory, or oth­er body parts. They have a sick twist­ed and per­vert­ed idea that the plan­et is theirs to do with it what they want.
The words of the pros­e­cu­tor were par­tic­u­lar­ly poignant.”[To be frank, I am dis­gust­ed that some would seek to equate the lives of a human being with that of an ani­mal]”.
The pros­e­cu­tor is white.
Not long after­ward a white cou­ple lost their two-year-old son at a Walt Disney resort in Florida. At about 9:pm author­i­ties say the two-year-old was wad­ing in shal­low waters of a lagoon when an alli­ga­tor pulled the child under.

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Tragically the child did not sur­vive. I have no idea how many Alligators were killed to deter­mine if they had con­sumed the child, before the body of the child was even­tu­al­ly found intact.
What I do know is that there were no peti­tions demand­ing an inves­ti­ga­tion to deter­mine why a two-year-old child was in waters away from an adult which would have made this tragedy possible.
There were no calls for arrest­ing who­ev­er was in charge of the child (assum­ing that any­one was).
It is a hor­rif­ic tragedy for some­one to believe they are about to or to lose their child, speak­ing as a father who lost a child. That par­ent needs all of the love, care, atten­tion, coun­sel­ing, prayer, and good­will possible.
Yet the sanc­ti­mo­nious hyp­ocrites who demand­ed that the black moth­er be inves­ti­gat­ed and pros­e­cut­ed were duplic­i­tous but pre­dictably silent when the white fam­i­ly went through the very same horror.

All of a sud­den it was okay, the white fam­i­ly need all the love and prayers they could get..
The stark mes­sage in their evil protest was clear, the ani­mal should not be sac­ri­ficed to spare the black baby but all stops should be pulled out regard­less of the cost to save the white one.
Here’s a word to you hyp­ocrites you say “all lives mat­ter,” “yes damn you all lives mat­ter, not just yours”. In fact, the par­ents of the two-year-old baby had prob­a­bly twice the bur­den that the par­ent of the four-year-old had, sole­ly on the basis of its age.
Where is your outrage?

THE SUBVERSIVE CAMPAIGN WHICH IS BEING WAGED AGAINST BLACK LIVES MATTER

During the Civil Rights fights of the 1960s, lit­er­al­ly, every civ­il rights orga­ni­za­tion and indi­vid­u­als came under sur­veil­lance and seri­ous inves­ti­ga­tion by the FBI and oth­er Government Agencies.
I do not need to rehash that sor­did peri­od and the extent of the sub­ver­sive war­fare which was waged against those orga­ni­za­tions and indi­vid­u­als who dared to stand up for their right to be treat­ed as human beings.
Many of those peace­ful yet valiant war­riors were mur­dered by peo­ple who did not want them to have the right to speak out and defend their God-giv­en dignity.
What’s remark­able, is the fact that the Government itself was huge­ly com­plic­it in per­se­cut­ing them under the guise that they were communist.
Blacks who are unaware of these facts may very well have been born with­out sight because for all intents and pur­pos­es they were blind.

martin-luther-king-quote-a-riot-is-the-language-of-the-unheard

Dr. Martin Luther King, Nobel Peace Prize win­ner, whose name lit­er­al­ly every politi­cian black and white now invoke, was labeled a dan­ger­ous com­mu­nist by FBI direc­tor [J Edgar Hoover].
There is no dif­fer­ence today in what you hear from some of the Police offi­cials and the racial dem­a­gogues like Donald Trump.
No ratio­nal per­son believes that peo­ple march­ing for their rights & dig­ni­ty are ter­ror­ists. If this bla­tant attempt at crim­i­nal­iz­ing a legit­i­mate protest group stand, then the First Amendment to the con­sti­tu­tion means nothing.
The First Amendment (Amendment I) to the United States Constitution pro­hibits the mak­ing of any law respect­ing an estab­lish­ment of reli­gion, imped­ing the free exer­cise of reli­gion, abridg­ing the free­dom of speech, infring­ing on the free­dom of the press, inter­fer­ing with the right to peace­ably assem­ble, or pro­hibit­ing the peti­tion­ing for a gov­ern­men­tal redress of griev­ances.

Racial demagogues like Rudolph Giuliani seek to lecture black people on how to raise their children when he couldn't raise his..
Racial dem­a­gogues like Rudolph Giuliani seek to lec­ture black peo­ple on how to raise their chil­dren when he could­n’t raise his.. His own kids did not even speak to him, not sure they do now.

The actions of Dillon Roof the mur­der­ing mon­ster who killed nine (9) black mem­bers of Mother Emanuel AME Church in Charleston South Carolina is not the respon­si­bil­i­ty of decent white peo­ple. Neither are the actions of Micah Xavier Johnson the cop killer the respon­si­bil­i­ty of black lives mat­ter or black peo­ple for that matter.
Let us rec­og­nize these ped­dlers of race-bait­ing for what they are, they are racist ped­dlers of divi­sive­ness and demagoguery.
Whether it be the irrel­e­vant for­mer race baiter-in-chief of New York City Rudolph Giuliani, who pit­ted police against the sit­ting may­or David Dinkins to gain pow­er or any­one else, the strat­e­gy is the same.

Giuliani rode on the backs of police offi­cers into office. Once in office, he used the police in his strat­e­gy which divid­ed New York City in a way that was not seen before in mod­ern history.
He did that until the cops them­selves real­ized that he cared noth­ing about their inter­est. Giuliani is a nar­cis­sis­tic fraud on a per­son­al mis­sion of hate and per­son­al self-aggrandizement.
What is astound­ing, yet not total­ly un-expect­ed are the black police offi­cials who stu­pid­ly fall for that non­sense. None of these idiots were born police offi­cers but they were born with black skin.
Being a police offi­cer is some­thing you chose to do. Being black is who you are.

Bad police offi­cers are not only a dan­ger to the pub­lic they are a dan­ger to good police offi­cers. We have seen the evi­dence of that. Evil per­sists when good men/​women remain silent. We know our friends not just by what they say but by their silence. We also know them by what they refuse to say.
They refuse to say “BLACK LIVES MATTER” because they do not believe they do. They know damn well that when poor oppressed peo­ple say black lives mat­ter they are not say­ing white lives or any oth­er doesn’t.
So please do not accept these dem­a­gogues and their race-bait­ing when they argue all lives mat­ter. They do not believe it. They care more about the lives of Gorillas than they do that of black children.
They care about peace & order not about jus­tice and human dig­ni­ty. They care about bro­ken glass, not about bro­ken black bodies.
It is time for real black peo­ple to dis­en­tan­gle them­selves from those who con­tin­ue to demon­strate that they are not with us. We wel­come our white broth­ers and sis­ters who con­tin­ue to stand with us and move on from the others.
I will lead by exam­ple “WHITE LIVES MATTER”. If they believe “BLACK LIVES MATTER ” let’s hear them say it !!!
By their fruits, you shall know them.

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

Once You See It You Cannot Un-see It.….

Icon imagery of Leshia Evans before she was arrested in Baton Rouge Lousiiana.. Jonathan Bachman photo..
Iconic imagery of Leshia Evans before she was arrest­ed in Baton Rouge Lousiiana..
Jonathan Bachman photo..

The above pho­to was tak­en by Louisiana-based pho­tog­ra­ph­er Jonathan Bachman, work­ing for Reuters, over the week­end, dur­ing protests in Baton Rouge. Bachman snapped the pho­to just as Evans was being arrest­ed for stand­ing in the street.

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Many are call­ing the image a “Tiananmen Square Moment” in the protests. Some are liken­ing it to the imagery of the woman fac­ing down neo-nazi skin­heads in Europe.

One woman stood unafraid against neo-Nazi thugs...
One woman stood unafraid against neo-Nazi thugs… Tess Asplund 42 stand in front of neo-nazi thugs dur­ing Nordic resis­tance move­ment demon­stra­tion in Borlange Sweden on Sunday May 1st 2016..

There are many defin­ing moments in his­to­ry that once you wit­ness them you can­not un-see them.The image of the 35-year-old moth­er of a 5 year old son was astound­ing­ly powerful.
Ms Evans is report­ed to have said, I trav­eled to Baton Rouge “because I want­ed to look my son in the eyes and tell him I fought for his free­dom and rights,”.
She was booked on a charge of sim­ple obstruc­tion of a high­way and had been released from custody.

Over fifty years ago another beautiful and powerful black woman stood up to tyranny .....
Over fifty years ago anoth­er beau­ti­ful and pow­er­ful black woman Rosa Parks stood up to tyranny .….

It’s Difficult To Care About Your Pain When You Do Not Respect Me Enough To Acknowledge Mine.…

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Lets cut to the chase and be done with the bull, the reason police and black people are having conflicts is not because black people are acting crazy when confronted or stopped by police. It is not because they do not know how to act either, it has nothing to do with police lack of training, it’s not about people getting off protest lines to apply for the $40.000 a year job Dallas police chief David Brown condescendingly wants blacks to apply for.
It’s about a systematic lack of respect that too many police officers have for the black community.
Philando Castile
Philando Castile

Lets set aside the num­ber of cops whom have been fired or oth­er­wise dis­ci­plined of late for tex­ting deroga­to­ry and pejo­ra­tive con­tent to each oth­er about black Americans. Lets also set aside the num­ber of them whom are active mem­bers of hate groups like the Klu Klux Klan , the Aryan broth­er­hood and the pletho­ra of oth­er Neo-Nazi white hate groups which are a dime a dozen across America. And lets just ignore the rage with which they tell black men that they are going to kill them before they do just that.
You tell me what exact­ly do we have left?

Alton Sterling subdued by two Baton Rogue cops just before they decided to kill him ....
Alton Sterling sub­dued by two Baton Rogue cops just before they decid­ed to kill him .…

Dallas police chief David Brown who just hap­pen to wear black skin has him­self lost his own son to police bul­lets . With remark­able con­de­scen­sion Brown lec­tured pro­test­ers , telling them they should get off protest lines and apply to be cops . In his words “we are hir­ing “.
The very idea that Brown would sug­gest that join­ing the ranks of police depart­ments will fix the sys­tem­at­ic prob­lem of entrenched racial dis­par­i­ty demon­strates his woe­ful lack of depth and maybe even worse.
When a black man who hap­pen to lose his own son to police bul­lets can make those state­ments it demon­strates the uphill task the aver­age black in America faces against the tyran­ni­cal oppres­sion of bru­tal and bar­bar­ic killers in uni­form who pre­tend to be cops..
Of the 14,633 law enforce­ment agen­cies across the coun­ty and near­ly one mil­lion police offi­cers who staff those agen­cies there are some fine and exem­plary offi­cers , that does not need say­ing when­ev­er we broach the sub­ject of police wrongdoing.

What should not be allowed to stand how­ev­er is the con­stant chat­ter about the work offi­cers do to over­shad­ow the legit­i­mate cries for jus­tice against police bar­barism and tyranny.
It is illog­i­cal and immoral to argue about sup­port­ing law enforce­ment when there is a hun­dred years of unde­ni­able evi­dence that peo­ple of col­or are sys­tem­at­i­cal­ly bru­tal­ized and killed at the hands of police dis­pro­por­tion­ate to their num­bers in the society.
Fifty fours years ago Dr Martin Luther King said the great­est chal­lenge fac­ing black peo­ple in America was police abuse , today the great­est chal­lenge fac­ing black peo­ple in America is police abuse.
So what exact­ly has changed ?

We con­tin­ue to hear about the need to sup­port law-enforce­ment as if legit­i­mate con­cern and out­rage against police atroc­i­ties are tan­ta­mount to being anti-law enforcement.
It is a straw-man dis­trac­tion which is designed to deflect atten­tion from the real issue of police vio­lence against com­mu­ni­ties of color.
Many police offi­cers are black and Latino it is not about hat­ing law enforce­ment . People of col­or want police in their com­mu­ni­ties that is why they hire their fel­low cit­i­zens to do the job of pro­tect­ing them.
What has to change is the mis­guid­ed notion among many in the law enforce­ment com­mu­ni­ty that their role is an abstrac­tion divorced from the needs and dic­tates of the peo­ple they serve.
In essence police must see them­selves as ser­vants of all com­mu­ni­ties and not as agents of the state with a duty to keep cer­tain peo­ple in their place.

Sandra Bland..died under dubious circumstances while in police custody. Her crime failing to activate turn signal before turning.....
Sandra Bland..died under dubi­ous cir­cum­stances while in police cus­tody.
Her crime, fail­ing to acti­vate turn sig­nal before turning.….

Communities of col­or must endeav­or to lift them­selves out of the morass of con­stant vic­tim-hood., Not so that they may live up to the stan­dards of oth­ers but that they as com­mu­ni­ties may not be defined by others.
Black com­mu­ni­ties can­not con­tin­ue to com­pete on a play­ing field on which the goal-posts are con­stant­ly moved to adhere to the needs of one team. It’s unten­able to com­pete on a play­ing field on which the ref­er­ees and the oppos­ing team are one and the same.
Blacks can­not con­tin­ue to shuf­fle up to fit into the spaces defined by oth­ers, or to make oth­ers com­fort­able. This is their damn coun­try too.
If only he did not have a crim­i­nal record.
If only he did not run.
If only he did not talk back.
If only he did not ask questions.
If only he did not pull out his wallet.
If only he was­n’t dri­ving with a bust­ed tail-light.
If only he said yes sir , no sir.
If only he showed def­er­ence and respect.
If only he was­n’t in that neighborhood.
If only she had put out the cig­a­rette when told to despite being in her own car.

Police offi­cers can­not say they are good cops when they refuse to speak out against the actions of their col­leagues even when they know they are wrong.
Clearly it must be evi­dent to all that when bad police offi­cers are allowed to do the things they do with­out con­se­quences it endan­gers all includ­ing good cops.
How can cer­tain cit­i­zens expect to be lis­tened to when they refuse to acknowl­edge the pain of others?
When you refuse to speak out about the pain and the indig­ni­ties suf­fered by your neigh­bor you refuse to acknowl­edge their humanity .
How can you expect them to appre­ci­ate your pain when you deny them their basic humanity.

There is a shock­ing pat­tern by police in America when it comes to their con­duct, they fun­da­men­tal­ly believe they should not be ques­tioned . It has become clear that they now har­bor a sense of grandios­i­ty which is utter­ly stunning.
Police advo­cates argue that police are there pro­tect­ing peo­ple even when they demon­strate against them. I am a lit­tle per­plexed at that line of reasoning .
Exactly what are they sup­posed to do? Aren’t police offi­cers paid to pro­tect the pub­lic who pay their salaries?
Are we to believe that police should have the right while on the pub­lic’s pay­roll to decide what they will and will not do?

lynx

After mem­bers of the Minnesota Lynx wore T‑shirts Saturday night demand­ing “change” fol­low­ing two police-involved shoot­ings of black men, four off-duty Minneapolis cops report­ed­ly decid­ed to quit their jobs as are­na secu­ri­ty guards.The WNBA play­ers sport­ed black warmup shirts before a game against the Dallas Wings at Target Center that said “Change Starts with Us — Justice and Accountability” on the front; the names of Alton Sterling and Philandro Castile were on the back, along with the Dallas Police Department shield and “Black Lives Matter.”

The atti­tudes of these cops is on open dis­play , the arro­gance and the sense of deity they feel ‚only goes to demon­strate to the world why there are so many instances of abuse and exces­sive force lev­eled against mem­bers of the pub­lic but more-so against mem­bers of the minor­i­ty community.
Even though they were not on the pub­lic pay­roll and are total­ly with­ing their rights to decide to do secu­ri­ty work or not , their actions are a mir­ror into how they think and to some extent the rea­son why they abuse citizens.
They sim­ply have a God com­plex, its one born of dis­re­spect, and a sense that they are not only above the laws but they are above being crit­i­cized and there­in lies the problem.
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African-American Professor Carol Swain Slams Black Lives Matter

For those who heard the term( UNCLE TOM) but had no idea what it meant or what the face of it looks like here it is.

Carol Swain
Carol Swain

Carol Swain, a con­ser­v­a­tive African-American pro­fes­sor, slammed the Black Lives Matter move­ment Saturday, call­ing it a “very destruc­tive force” in America.

CNN’s Michael Smerconish asked Swain, along with civ­il rights attor­ney Areva Martin, to com­ment on the con­ser­v­a­tive web­site Drudge Report’s deci­sion to lead the home­page with the title “Black Lives Kill” fol­low­ing the shoot­ing of police offi­cers in Dallas. The head­line was quick­ly pulled down.
“Is this the end of the Black Lives Matter move­ment?” Smerconish asked.
“I cer­tain­ly hope so,” Swain, a law pro­fes­sor at Vanderbilt University, respond­ed on CNN’s “Smerconish.” “Because I believe that it’s been a very destruc­tive force in America, and I urge all of your view­ers to go to that web­site and look at what they’re real­ly about. It’s a Marxist orga­ni­za­tion all about black lib­er­a­tion. It’s not real­ly address­ing the real prob­lems affect­ing African-Americans and so it’s prob­lem­at­ic, it’s mis­lead­ing black peo­ple, it needs to go.”
Martin, who sup­ports the move­ment, jumped on Swain’s remarks.
“That is absolute­ly ridicu­lous,” she said. “Black Lives Matter has done more to move the nee­dle on reforms in the crim­i­nal jus­tice sys­tem than elect­ed offi­cials and com­mu­ni­ty lead­ers all over this country.”
http://​www​.cnn​.com/​2​0​1​6​/​0​7​/​0​9​/​p​o​l​i​t​i​c​s​/​c​a​r​o​l​-​s​w​a​i​n​-​b​l​a​c​k​-​l​i​v​e​s​-​m​a​t​t​e​r​-​s​m​e​r​c​o​n​i​sh/

According To The Guardian 567 Killed By American Police .…

Unofficially 567 peo­ple killed by American police , yet there is no uni­formed gath­er­ing of this data . Is there a rea­son that there is no uni­formed account­ing for the amount of peo­ple killed in the most sophis­ti­cat­ed Nation on Earth?
Or is there a will­ful desire to con­ceal these statistics?
As a for­mer Law-Enforcement offi­cers who served a full decade in a very vio­lent nation I cringe to see these images and the stag­ger­ing sta­tis­tics which seem to show police act­ing more like down­right dan­ger­ous thugs than law­ful offi­cers of the law.

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Minnesota Governor Blames Philando Castile Police Killing On Racial Bias

Mark Dayton says lev­el of force was ‘way in excess’ of what was nec­es­sary and demands jus­tice depart­ment inves­ti­ga­tion as Obama calls shoot­ings ‘a seri­ous problem’

The fatal shoot­ing of a black man by police in Minnesota was attrib­uted to racism by the state’s gov­er­nor on Thursday, as Barack Obama urged Americans to admit that the coun­try faced a “seri­ous prob­lem” of prej­u­dice in law enforcement.

Dispensing with the cau­tion typ­i­cal­ly shown by elect­ed lead­ers fol­low­ing shoot­ings by police, Governor Mark Dayton blamed the death of Philando Castile on racial bias and said the offi­cer involved used a lev­el of force “way in excess” of what was nec­es­sary. “Would this have hap­pened if the dri­ver and pas­sen­ger were white?” Dayton asked at a press con­fer­ence. “I don’t think it would have. So I’m forced to con­front, and I think all of Minnesota is forced to con­front, that this kind of racism exists.”

The killing of Castile, 32, is the lat­est to roil the US in the near­ly two years since the fatal shoot­ing by police of an unarmed black 18-year-old in Ferguson, Missouri, led to waves of unrest around the coun­try. Castile’s death was broad­cast live on Facebook by his girl­friend after he was shot by an offi­cer through the win­dow of their car dur­ing a traf­fic stop near St Paul on Wednesday evening. Castile had been reach­ing for iden­ti­fi­ca­tion after warn­ing the offi­cer that he was legal­ly car­ry­ing a hand­gun, accord­ing to his girl­friend. It was the sec­ond time this week that the killing by police of an African American was cap­tured on wide­ly shared cell­phone video. On Tuesday, 37-year-old Alton Sterling was shot dead dur­ing a strug­gle with two offi­cers in Baton Rouge,Louisiana. Sterling, who was sell­ing CDs out­side a shop, appeared to have a pis­tol in his pock­et. Obama said Americans “should be deeply trou­bled” by the two shoot­ings, as he sug­gest­ed it was nec­es­sary to “admit we’ve got a seri­ous prob­lem” with racial bias or its appear­ance among some police offi­cers. “We’ve seen such tragedies far too many times,” Obama said of the Sterling and Castile killings, in a Facebook post.

The two men were the 135th and 136th African Americans to be killed by police across the US in 2016, accord­ing to anongo­ing Guardian project to doc­u­ment every death caused by law enforce­ment offi­cers. In total, 561 peo­ple have been killed so far this year. Castile’s moth­er, Valerie, said she was out­raged by the death of the 32-year-old school cafe­te­ria work­er. “Every day you hear of anoth­er black per­son being shot down – gunned down – by the peo­ple who are sup­posed to pro­tect us,” she told CNN. Some of the country’s most promi­nent black cul­tur­al fig­ures also expressed anger over the shoot­ings. “We are sick and tired of the killings of young men and women in our com­mu­ni­ties,” the singer Beyoncé said in a state­ment on her web­site. “It is up to us to take a stand and demand that they ‘stop killing us’.” An exten­sive list of names of peo­ple killed by US police was pro­ject­ed as a back­drop to Beyoncé’s con­cert in Glasgow, Scotland, on Thursday evening.

Dayton, a Democrat, asked the US Department of Justice to inves­ti­gate Castile’s shoot­ing after pro­test­ers gath­ered out­side his man­sion overnight and wrapped his gates in crime-scene tape. The depart­ment is already review­ing the death of Sterling in Baton Rouge.

Philando Castile, left, and Alton Sterling.“I will do every­thing in my pow­er to help pro­tect the integri­ty of that inves­ti­ga­tion, to ensure a prop­er and just out­come for all involved,” Dayton said in a statement.

A Department of Justice spokesman said in an email that the depart­ment “stands ready to pro­vide assis­tance” to Minnesota author­i­ties in inves­ti­gat­ing the shoot­ing if required “and will inde­pen­dent­ly assess what fur­ther action may be war­rant­ed”. Officials said on Wednesday that they would open a fed­er­al civ­il rights inves­ti­ga­tion into Sterling’s death in Louisiana. That the shoot­ings were a cause for con­cern. Asked in a con­gres­sion­al hear­ing whether killings such as those of Castile and Sterling were “hap­pen­ing at an alarm­ing rate”, Comey replied: “‘Yes’ is the emphat­ic answer.” Comey had pre­vi­ous­ly stood out with­in theObama admin­is­tra­tion by focus­ing on con­cerns that protests against police shoot­ings may be caus­ing a rise in crime by prompt­ing offi­cers to hold back from con­fronta­tions. Castile and his girl­friend, Diamond Reynolds, were pulled over at about 9pm on Wednesday because their car had a bro­ken tail light, accord­ing to Reynolds. Quickly start­ing to film and broad­cast to Facebook’s live video fea­ture, Reynolds said to the cam­era that the offi­cer had just opened fire as Castile reached into his pocket.

He was try­ing to get out his ID and his wal­let out his pock­et and he let the offi­cer know that he was that he had a firearm,” she says in the video. “He was reach­ing for his wal­let and the offi­cer just shot him in his arm.” Reynolds esti­mat­ed that the offi­cer fired between three and five times. Castile is seen slumped across a front seat cov­ered in blood. He squirms with his eyes half-open. Reynolds says to cam­era: “Please don’t tell me that he’s gone. Please offi­cer, don’t tell me that you just did this to him.” As oth­er offi­cers arrive, Reynolds is instruct­ed to leave the vehi­cle. The phone con­tin­ues to film as it is laid on the ground. One dis­traught-sound­ing offi­cer, who has not been iden­ti­fied, can be heard shout­ing “Fuck” repeat­ed­ly. After Reynolds is detained, her four-year-old daugh­ter can be heard com­fort­ing her. “It’s OK mom­my,” she says The deaths of Sterling and Castile have revived protests about the treat­ment by offi­cers of black peo­ple who appear to be car­ry­ing firearms legal­ly or non-threat­en­ing­ly, as mil­lions of Americans do every day with­out incident.

Castile’s moth­er said her son was “try­ing to do the right things, and live accord­ing­ly by the law”. Minnesotans are enti­tled to car­ry a hand­gun if they obtain a per­mit from their local sher­iff after earn­ing a train­ing cer­tifi­cate. Reynolds said Castile was licensed to car­ry his gun. The offi­cer who shot Castile works for the small St Anthony police depart­ment, whose chief John Ohl said in his 2015 annu­al report that out­siders “can eas­i­ly over­look just how dif­fi­cult it can be to deal humane­ly, as cops must, even with the dregs of our soci­ety”. The report sug­gest­ed St Anthony’s 23 offi­cers each received an aver­age of 67 hours of train­ing last year, includ­ing on de-esca­la­tion, the use of force and firearms. In the Baton Rouge case, police con­front­ed Sterling because he matched the descrip­tion of a man report­ed to have threat­ened some­one with a gun. Two video clips of his strug­gle with police indi­cate, how­ev­er, that his pis­tol remained in his pock­et and was removed by offi­cers after he was shot. It was unclear from the footage whether Sterling tried to reach for the weapon.

On Thursday, it was announced that lawyers rep­re­sent­ing the fam­i­ly of Walter Scott, the 50-year-old African American killed by police in South Carolina in 2015, would now rep­re­sent mem­bers of Sterling’s fam­i­ly as well. “We will demand trans­paren­cy from the Baton Rouge police depart­ment and all oth­er agen­cies involved in this inves­ti­ga­tion. We will not stop until every ques­tion has been answered,” said attor­neys L. Chris Stewart and Justin Bamberg in a state­ment. Scott’s death, which was also cap­tured on video by a wit­ness, result­ed in a $6.5m set­tle­ment, and mur­der charges for the white offi­cer who opened fire. The cas­es joined a series of flash­points in recent years includ­ing those of Tamir Rice and John Crawford, two young African Americans who were sep­a­rate­ly shot dead by police in Ohio in 2014 while han­dling pel­let guns in a park and a Walmart store respec­tive­ly. In both cas­es, offi­cers fired with­in sec­onds of see­ing them. Campaigners said African Americans were treat­ed unfair­ly to dead­ly effect. “No mat­ter how well you fol­low the rules, you can still be dead because you’re black,” said Brittany Packnett, an activist and for­mer mem­ber of Obama’s White House polic­ing task­force. “Compliance has nev­er guar­an­teed our safe­ty.” Gun rights advo­cates who are typ­i­cal­ly forth­right in defend­ing firearms own­ers have been crit­i­cised for fail­ing to speak out in sup­port of black peo­ple tar­get­ed while armed. Asked about the Castile shoot­ing, Jennifer Baker, the National Rifle Association’s direc­tor of pub­lic affairs, said only on Thursday: “We have not issued a state­ment.” Larry Pratt, the exec­u­tive direc­tor emer­i­tus of Gun Owners of America, bris­tled at the sug­ges­tion that race made a dif­fer­ence. “We don’t speak out for black American nor white America or any oth­er kinds of racial posi­tion. That is an obnox­ious ques­tion. Keep ask­ing ques­tions like that and you’re going to get hung up on, like right now,” he said, then dis­con­nect­ed the line. https://​www​.the​guardian​.com/​u​s​-​n​e​w​s​/​2​0​1​6​/​j​u​l​/​0​7​/​p​h​i​l​a​n​d​o​-​c​a​s​t​i​l​e​-​p​o​l​i​c​e​-​s​h​o​o​t​i​n​g​-​c​a​l​l​s​-​j​u​s​t​i​c​e​-​d​e​p​a​r​t​m​e​n​t​-​i​n​q​u​i​r​y​-​f​b​i​-​m​i​n​n​e​s​o​t​a​-​o​f​f​i​c​ers

The Same Hypocrites Who Condemn The Security Forces For Tivoli Gardens Are Now Calling For Another State Of Emergency.…

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An announced SOE will result in less homi­cides and oth­er crimes where secu­ri­ty per­son­nel are posi­tioned but will have almost zero effect in remov­ing guns and crim­i­nals from the streets.
The killers will sim­ply move to oth­er areas.
A SOE will have the effect of a plas­tic bag half filled with air , squeeze one end and the air goes to the oth­er end.
The Commissioner of Police is no stranger to these facts , that is the rea­son he is hes­i­tant , he under­stands that it’s effect will be neg­li­gi­ble and poten­tial­ly could be disastrous.
Many of the hyp­ocrites now call­ing for SOE are the very ones call­ing for pros­e­cu­tion of mem­bers of the secu­ri­ty forces for the Tivoli gar­dens incur­sion of 2010.
They only need the police and the mil­i­tary when their ass­es are caught in a vice.
Other parish­es can look for an upsurge in crime in their com­mu­ni­ties dur­ing the time a state of emer­gency is insti­tut­ed were one to be instituted.
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We can do a lot by.…
(1) Empowering our police leg­isla­tive­ly, that means debat­ing and pass­ing tough new anti-crime laws which pros­e­cutes crim­i­nals oper­at­ing in the lot­to-scam and oth­er gangs as crim­i­nals oper­at­ing togeth­er as crim­i­nal empires as the America Rico statute does.
(2) Understanding that police killings have gone down not because they were killing inno­cents but because they stopped engag­ing ruth­less gun­men. The killing of civil­ians have gone up exponentially.
(3) Those who seek to deceive you into believ­ing that INDECOM is a suc­cess will not tell you that they base their met­ric on the fact that police are killing less mur­der­ers , and that-that is the met­ric INDECOM is using to deceive Jamaicans into believ­ing his agency is reap­ing success.
If that is the mea­sure­ment of suc­cess then it is a Pyrrhic vic­to­ry for the Jamaican peo­ple who are opposed to crime.
(4) What they will not tell you is that police are no longer active­ly engag­ing and killing hard­ened crim­i­nals, but hard­ened crim­i­nals are killing inno­cent people.
(5) That in the five years INDECOM the agency even at it’s most zeal­ous, has man­aged to inves­ti­gate and con­vict less cor­rupt cops than the CCRB or any of the oth­er agen­cies of the past which inves­ti­gat­ed police officers. 
(6) A SOE is not sus­tain­able , a con­tin­ued SOE is an occu­pa­tion. Occupations are fes­ter­ing breed­ing ‑grounds of resent­ment toward those who occupy.
The police com­mis­sion­er can­not be unin­formed about these realities.
(7) Revamping and re doing the Bail Act.
The Act has empow­ered the Island’s left­ist crim­i­nal lov­ing judges , giv­ing them the loop-holes they desired to release crim­i­nals back onto the streets as soon as they are arrest­ed , even for com­mit­ting sev­er­al sep­a­rate case of the most vio­lent and egre­gious murders.
(8) Repealing the INDECOM Act , debate com­pre­hen­sive­ly a replace­ment piece of Legislation which has no dog in the fight when it goes in to investigate.
An Agency which does not man­u­fac­ture and nur­ture ani­mos­i­ty with the Agencies it is empow­ered to investigate.
(9) Rapidly begin the work of train­ing Detectives and under­cov­er police offi­cers who can infil­trate Gangs and crim­i­nal networks.
(10) Stop look­ing at crime fight­ing the way gov­ern­ments have done before , it is a dif­fer­ent ballgame.
In no oth­er nation are killers grant­ed bail after they are arrested .
In Jamaica they are giv­en bail no mat­ter how many peo­ple they kill or the amounts of times they kill.
Between the Judges on the bench the crim­i­nal defense lawyers and the street thugs there exist an unof­fi­cial con­spir­a­cy aid­ed and sup­port­ed by Government .
Criminals sub­vert the process by chang­ing their lawyers when­ev­er their case comes up for tri­al. This forces adjourn­ments yet nei­ther the past admin­is­tra­tion nor this one has done any­thing about it legislatively.
Dragging out cas­es has been a tac­tic of crim­i­nals and their defense lawyers for decades. In Jamaica’s case defense lawyers are poor excus­es as offi­cers of the courts but in many cas­es are them­selves active criminals.
This strat­e­gy allows the most vio­lent crim­i­nals the lux­u­ry of being on the streets with pre­cious lit­tle fear that they will pay for the egre­gious crimes they com­mit. It also gives them the oppor­tu­ni­ties they need to ter­mi­nate wit­ness­es and kill wit­ness­es they do.
Additionally when wit­ness­es are killed the loop-hole per­sists which allows killers to walk free with­out con­se­quence. The most hard­ened and vio­lent killers in the Island lit­er­al­ly under­stand that the sys­tem aides them in their nefar­i­ous activ­i­ties. There is noth­ing which pre­vent­ed the for­mer admin­is­tra­tion nor this one from doing some­thing about it .
What is unde­ni­able is that the past PNP Government was nev­er desirous of doing any­thing about crime , a large swath of their sup­port comes from crim­i­nals and the gen­er­al con­sen­sus among the mass­es that the par­ty allows peo­ple to do as they please.
Their record stays in office and the nation’s crime sit­u­a­tion gives cred­i­bil­i­ty to that consensus..
The PNP spent hun­dreds of mil­lions of dol­lars on the Tivoli witch-hunt as a polit­i­cal strat­e­gy it failed mis­er­ably. They did it with much sup­port from the anti-police antag­o­nists in both polit­i­cal par­ties yet many of these same hyp­ocrites are now clam­or­ing for anoth­er state of emergency.
What exact­ly will it accom­plish in real terms ? Sure there will be a tem­po­rary lull in crime in the areas in which the police and mil­i­tary are giv­en addi­tion­al pow­ers. Conversely there will be mas­sive howls of con­dem­na­tions com­ing from the very same peo­ple any poten­tial SOE is sup­posed to benefit.
Will the killers sit around with their guns wait­ing for the secu­ri­ty forces to come and take them ?
No ‚like air in the plas­tic bag they will sim­ply move to dif­fer­ent spaces.
The killers will have been gone and behind will remain inno­cent young men and boys . Also remain­ing are the duplic­i­tous and con­niv­ing women who pro­vide aid , com­fort, cov­er and sex­u­al favors to the blood-thirsty killers. They will be the ones com­plain­ing the loud­est about abuse .
They always are.

Jumeka Nice Nu Raas; Just Don’t Look Under The Rug.……

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Yesterday I wrote on the continued transformation of terrorism internationally and even by local criminals when they are allowed to operate in spaces they shouldn’t and in ways they ought not be allowed.
To some degree it may reasonably be said that when it comes to local or home grown criminals who would terrorize the innocent, some degree of political correctness have actually allowed the growth and brazenness of these criminals.
https://​mike​beck​les​.com/​c​a​r​e​-​p​r​e​p​a​r​e​-​h​e​l​p​-​s​e​c​u​r​i​t​y​-​o​t​h​e​r​s​-​f​o​o​l​i​s​h​l​y​-​l​i​v​e​-​d​e​n​i​a​l​-​v​u​l​n​e​r​a​b​i​l​i​ty/

It’s impor­tant to under­stand that we will most like­ly nev­er live as free peo­ple in soci­eties which are free from crime any­time soon .
I believe we are faced with two choic­es going for­ward (1) being free cit­i­zens of this plan­et who help in our own secu­ri­ty by doing what we can per­son­al­ly to ensure that crim­i­nal behav­ior is not allowed to devel­op in our homes , our com­mu­ni­ties and in our countries.
Or (2) peo­ple suc­cumb to strict reg­i­ment­ed gov­ern­men­tal con­trol of our lives , ced­ing all free­doms to states in which we live .
I would argue that ced­ing free­doms to Government is prob­a­bly where we are head­ed as a specie. We have all giv­en up mas­sive chunks of our indi­vid­ual lib­er­ties since the events of September 11th 2001 .
Ironically since then ‚despite con­tin­ued ero­sion of our rights and priv­i­leges we have not attained the secu­ri­ty we seek , If fact we have become expo­nen­tial­ly less safe.

Regardless of where we live we are affect­ed by events which tran­spired on that morn­ing in 2001 . Air trav­el has lit­er­al­ly become and exer­cise in debase­ment. We are sub­ject­ed to being herd­ed togeth­er in lines, forced to deal with police dogs sniff­ing our per­sons and our per­son­al belong­ings. People we don’t know are allowed to grope and fon­dle us to their sat­is­fac­tion just so that we can get on a flight crammed togeth­er like sar­dines with oth­ers who have like­wise sur­ren­dered their dig­ni­ties. As I inti­mat­ed yes­ter­day this is the new nor­mal for the fore­see­able future , these con­di­tions are not about to sub­side or go away. The way things used to be ‚sim­ply used to be .……They are no more.

During the 1980’s to ear­ly 1990’s I was a law enforce­ment offi­cer in Jamaica dur­ing my tenure which began in 1982 and end­ed in 1991 the coun­try was awash in ille­gal guns . Most of the weapon­ry we faced then were M16 assault rifles, the AR 15’s and a slew of semi-auto­mat­ic hand­guns. Intelligence sug­gest­ed then that many of those weapons were dumped on the island by American drug run­ners who flew light air­craft from Florida to the Island on Ganja runs. It was rumored that much of the cocaine which del­uged our streets at the time also came into the island that way.

Despite work­ing with lit­er­al­ly no, sup­port, equip­ment, or oth­er resources the hard work and resilience of Jamaican police offi­cers man­aged to put a siz­able dent into the drug trade. Unfortunately many also suc­cumbed to the lure of easy dirty mon­ey. The sheer mass of weapon­ry which was in the hands of crim­i­nals at that time was sig­nif­i­cant­ly less that it is today over two decades later.
With the excep­tion of the tremen­dous loss of life lead­ing up to the gen­er­al elec­tions of 1980 , mur­ders and oth­er crimes com­mit­ted with the use of firearms were high but for the most part the hard work­ing mem­bers of the JCF kept a lid on things. I believe many Jamaicans would be pre­pared to go back to 300 plus homi­cides annu­al­ly as com­pared to the over 1200 the Island aver­ages annu­al­ly today.
Crime does not increase by 300% between the ear­ly 90′ and present day with­out atten­dant fac­tors dri­ving it’s growth.
Whether or not the nation wants to con­cede that the rel­a­tive­ly safe­ty it enjoyed was a result of the no non­sense approach police took in going after crim­i­nals does not change the fact that we were reg­is­ter­ing around 300 homi­cides annu­al­ly as a result of that strategy.

The many offi­cers in the NYPD with whom I spoke con­fessed that by the time the show­er posse , span­glers and oth­er Jamaican crim­i­nal enter­pris­es came to their atten­tion they were already well estab­lished from the east coast of the United States to California and as far away as Alaska. They were also large­ly oper­at­ing in coun­tries like Great Britain and Canada .
Law enforce­ment offi­cials in the United States said it was­n’t the drug deal­ing which star­tled them as much as the lev­el of vio­lence Jamaican gang­sters employed in an attempt to dri­ve fear into their adversaries.
They also found out in no uncer­tain terms that the lev­el of respect they received from American crim­i­nals who gen­er­al­ly avoid­ed killing cops did not extend to Jamaican criminals.
Jamaicans have no com­punc­tion about killing police offi­cers and they did. The dif­fer­ence is that when they did they brought down the wrath and pow­er of the entire American gov­ern­ment on their heads.
It would not be busi­ness as usu­al in the United States when they killed police offi­cers as it is in Jamaica where they are cod­dled, loved and adored.
They would not be released on bail because some lit­tle anti-police judge decides to turn them loose.

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Today when I speak to police offi­cers in Jamaica they tell me they are not get­ting involved as there is no rea­son to .
Criminals open­ly brag that INDECOM pro­tects them from the police . Visitors to the Island speak of men walk­ing around with guns as if they have not a care in the world .
This is what Jamaica has come to, but if you are walk­ing around in the gan­ja fog, just had some jerk chick­en or pork , or enjoyed a drink of our world renowned white rum none of this mat­ter to you.
Because con­trary to the mas­sive and uncon­strained blood-let­ting, “Jumeka nice nu rass.”

Freddie Gray Verdict: Baltimore Officer Who Drove Van Not Guilty On All Charges…

Gray, who was 25, suf­fered a dev­as­tat­ing spinal injury and died in April 2015, about a week after he was arrest­ed and placed into a pris­on­er van that Goodson was driving.
Of the six offi­cers arrest­ed in the case, Goodson faced the most seri­ous charges. The sec­ond-degree depraved heart mur­der is a charge unique to a few states that implies that the defen­dant acts with extreme indif­fer­ence with regard to the human con­se­quences and per­ils of their actions.
The ver­dict is anoth­er set­back for State’s Attorney Marilyn Mosby, who dra­mat­i­cal­ly announced the charges against the six offi­cer last year from the broad steps of the down­town War Memorial.

The ‘rough ride’

Prosecutors alleged that after Gray was arrest­ed on a weapons charge, Goodson took him on a “rough ride” in a pris­on­er van — a puni­tive mea­sure police used against unruly subjects.
Freddie Gray
They said Goodson drove so rad­i­cal­ly that he blew through a stop sign and veered into anoth­er lane of traf­fic because of the speed he was trav­el­ing, which pros­e­cu­tors said would have tossed Gray around in the van. This is the point in the ride that pros­e­cu­tors think Gray sus­tained his fatal spinal injury.
The pros­e­cu­tion argued that Goodson failed on two accounts: fail­ing to put a seat belt on Gray when he was in the back of the van and neglect­ing to pro­vide Gray with prop­er med­ical assis­tance after Gray indi­cat­ed that he want­ed to go to the hospital.
Goodson was also charged with sec­ond-degree assault, mis­con­duct in office, invol­un­tary manslaugh­ter, manslaugh­ter by vehi­cles (gross neg­li­gence), manslaugh­ter by vehi­cle (crim­i­nal neg­li­gence) and reck­less endangerment.

Goodson’s defense

Defense attor­neys for Goodson argued that there is no evi­dence of that rough ride and that Gray’s injuries were caused in part by his own agi­ta­tion and thrash­ing around in the van.
Officer: Van driver was responsible for Freddie Gray
Officer: Van dri­ver was respon­si­ble for Freddie Gray 01:45
They said Gray was com­bat­ive and unco­op­er­a­tive and that Goodson used his judg­ment to not put a seat belt on Gray because he felt it was­n’t safe.
“We cer­tain­ly don’t want to speak poor­ly about the deceased, but Mr. Gray cre­at­ed the high-degree of risk,” defense attor­ney Matthew Fraling said dur­ing the bench trial.
The defense added that, although he asked to go to the hos­pi­tal, Gray nev­er showed symp­toms that would have called for imme­di­ate med­ical atten­tion, such as bleed­ing, bruis­ing or bro­ken limbs.
Over the sev­en-day tes­ti­mo­ny, the state called 21 wit­ness­es; the defense called on nine. Goodson did­n’t testify.