LeBron James Staying In Cleveland, Says He Doesn’t Have Plans To Leave Cleveland ‘at This Point’

LeBron James is stay­ing in Cleveland.

Just before he got on a float for the Cavaliers’ parade through down­town Cleveland, James told reporters that he has “no plans to go nowhere at this point.”

At. This. Point.

James said that he loves being in Cleveland — his sec­ond tour in the city — and will defend the franchise’s first NBA cham­pi­onship next season.

I love it here. I love being here. I love my team­mates,” James told cleve​land​.com. “Obviously my agent will take care of all the logis­ti­cal things but, I’m hap­py. I’ve got no plans to go nowhere at this point.”

Committing to Cleveland doesn’t mean that James won’t opt-out of his con­tract, of course. He has a one-year, $24 mil­lion option for next sea­son but can make north of $30 mil­lion if he opts out.
http://www.nydailynews.com/sports/basketball/lebron-james-coming-back-cavaliers-article‑1.2683633

Cavaliers Defeat Warriors In Game 7 Of NBA Finals To Win First Championship

LeBron James cra­dled the shiny gold tro­phy and strug­gled to sum up what might be his sweet­est cham­pi­onship yet, the one he is so proud­ly bring­ing home to his native north­east Ohio just as he promised to do when he returned to the Cavaliers two sum­mers ago.

James and his relent­less, nev­er-count-them-out Cavs pulled off an improb­a­ble NBA Finals come­back, and Cleveland is title town again at long last.

Unfazed by the crit­i­cism and chat­ter all series, James deliv­ered on a vow to his home state and brought the Cavs back as they became the first team to ral­ly from a 3 – 1 finals deficit, beat­ing the defend­ing cham­pi­on Golden State Warriors 93 – 89 on Sunday night to end a 52-year major sports cham­pi­onship drought in Cleveland.

I’m hap­py to be a part of his­to­ry,” James said, then added, “I’m home. I’m home. … I’m at a loss for words. This is unbelievable.”

In a testy series of blowouts — and a few blowups — the win­ner-take-all Game 7 pro­vid­ed the thrilling finale with James as the finals MVP dis­arm­ing two-time reign­ing MVP Stephen Curry and his record-set­ting Warriors.

Playing his sixth straight finals, James almost sin­gle-hand­ed­ly car­ried the Cavs back into this series and fin­ished with 27 points, 11 assists and 11 rebounds as the Cavs cap­tured their first cham­pi­onship in fran­chise his­to­ry and gave their city its first major sports win­ner since the Browns won the NFL title in 1964. He also had three blocked shots and two steals, over­com­ing five turnovers.

CLEVELAND! This is for you!” James bel­lowed in his postgame inter­view before being announced as finals MVP.

An emo­tion­al James fell to the floor when this one end­ed with a sec­ond win in six days on Golden State’s impos­ing home floor, sur­round­ed by his team­mates. Only sec­onds ear­li­er, he went down in pain with 10.6 sec­onds left after being fouled by Draymond Green while going for a dunk, then came back out to make the sec­ond of two free throws.

After four suc­cess­ful sea­sons in Miami and two titles with the Heat, James came back to the Cavs in hopes of win­ning the title this fran­chise and cham­pi­onship-starved city so cov­et­ed. It took a sec­ond try against Golden State after Cleveland lost to the Warriors in six games last year.

Cleveland did it after a coach­ing change, with Tyronn Lue tak­ing over in January for the fired David Blatt.

We made his­to­ry tonight,” Lue said. “Cleveland, Ohio, we’re com­ing back, baby!”

Kyrie Irving scored 26 points to cap his bril­liant finals, includ­ing a 3‑pointer over Curry with 53 sec­onds left.

It was a fairy­tale end­ing,” Irving said.

Curry sat briefly on the bench to take in the scene after the Warriors made their last bas­ket with 4:39 left.

It hurts, man,” Curry said. “I’m proud of every sin­gle guy that stepped foot on the floor for our team this year. … Hopefully we’ll have many more oppor­tu­ni­ties to fight for cham­pi­onships and be on this stage. This is what it’s all about.”

Green had 32 points, 15 rebounds and nine assists, but the Warriors’ record-set­ting sea­son end­ed with­out the only prize this close-knit “Strength In Numbers” crew cared about from way back in the begin­ning — through the record 24 – 0 start as Coach of the Year Steve Kerr was out, Curry’s sec­ond con­sec­u­tive MVP cam­paign, and the 73 reg­u­lar-sea­son wins to break the 1995 – 96 Chicago Bulls’ mark.

As Cleveland cel­e­brat­ed in the tro­phy cer­e­mo­ny, Green returned to the floor to con­grat­u­late the Cavs. He stopped by the win­ning lock­er room, too, and Warriors gen­er­al man­ag­er Bob Myers deliv­ered the win­ning nets fresh­ly cut down.

The Warriors might always be remem­bered as one of the best teams ever that could­n’t close it out, and Green is tak­ing at least a good share of the blame after he sat out Game 5 on Monday night sus­pend­ed for fla­grant fouls.

The Cavs staved off elim­i­na­tion twice to force Game 7 back at Oracle Arena, where the Warriors went up 2 – 0 with a pair of lop­sided wins to start this series.

This marked the first NBA game decid­ed by five points or few­er since May 11, Golden State’s 125 – 121 vic­to­ry over the Portland Trail Blazers in Game 5 of the sec­ond round.

With its 100th post­sea­son vic­to­ry, Cleveland became just the fourth team to win an NBA Finals Game 7 on the road.

Curry — who said before­hand he need­ed the best game of his career — scored 17 points on 6‑for-19 shoot­ing, while Splash Brother Klay Thompson added 14 points while mak­ing 6 of 17 shots.

”I did­n’t do enough to help my team win,” Curry said. “It will haunt me for a while.
Read more here. http://​www​.foxnews​.com/​s​p​o​r​t​s​/​2​0​1​6​/​0​6​/​2​0​/​c​a​v​a​l​i​e​r​s​-​d​e​f​e​a​t​-​w​a​r​r​i​o​r​s​-​i​n​-​g​a​m​e​-​7​-​n​b​a​-​f​i​n​a​l​s​-​t​o​-​w​i​n​-​f​i​r​s​t​-​c​h​a​m​p​i​o​n​s​h​i​p​.​h​tml

Briefs..

Illiteracy responsible for several St Ann crashes — Supt. Wayne Cameron

CAMERON... they (taxi drivers) only conform when they see the police present at a checkpoint or observe a police unit in traffic...
CAMERON… they (taxi dri­vers) only con­form when they see the police present at a check­point or observe a police unit in traffic…

St Ann has been under the micro­scope in recent times fol­low­ing sev­er­al road fatal­i­ties in the parish. The most recent inci­dent, which occurred in Llandovery, claimed the lives of five peo­ple, includ­ing a basic school prin­ci­pal, when the dri­ving shaft of the pub­lic pas­sen­ger bus they were trav­el­ling in broke, caus­ing the dri­ver to lose con­trol of the vehi­cle, which then col­lid­ed with the Toyota Rav4. It was then dis­cov­ered that the dri­ver of the bus was actu­al­ly the conductor.

The worst set of dri­vers I have seen in my many years as a police are the bus dri­vers who ply the route from Brown’s Town to Ocho Rios. They have absolute­ly no regard for the road traf­fic laws. They do not obey the stop­lights, they over­take on the con­tin­u­ous white lines, they over­take on the unel­e­vat­ed medi­ans, they over­take on inter­sec­tions, and they under­take on both soft and hard shoul­ders. “They only con­form when they see the police present at a check­point or observe a police unit in traf­fic,” Cameron told Jamaica Observer North East. Cameron said these oper­a­tors not only show dis­re­gard for the road traf­fic laws, “but that it is also a human fac­tor in that they have no dis­ci­pline at all”. “I’ve also recog­nised that many of the dri­vers can­not read or write and those who can are not so good at it. And I believe that this is a neces­si­ty in order to oper­ate vehi­cles. The dri­vers behave the same way they do on wet roads as they do on dry roads. There is no obser­vance or con­sid­er­a­tion on their part,” he lamented.

As a result, Cameron is urg­ing vehi­cle own­ers to “employ peo­ple who can at least read and write”. “Employ peo­ple who have devel­oped some amount of lit­er­a­cy, who not only use judge­ment, because it is not suf­fi­cient, espe­cial­ly as a pub­lic pas­sen­ger vehi­cle dri­ver,” he insist­ed. At the same time, Cameron said to mit­i­gate the prob­lem, focus will also be placed on own­ers. “I think the tar­get­ing will not just be about bus dri­vers, but also about own­ers. The own­ers are to use due dili­gence when hir­ing peo­ple to dri­ve and con­duct for them. “We have learnt that many times the con­duc­tors are the ones dri­ving the bus with­out the prop­er train­ing or licens­ing, and this is evi­dent in the last ill-fat­ed crash. We will have to start sanc­tion­ing the own­ers of buses.
Read more here: http://​www​.jamaicaob​serv​er​.com/​r​e​g​i​o​n​a​l​/​I​l​l​i​t​e​r​a​c​y​-​r​e​s​p​o​n​s​i​b​l​e​-​f​o​r​-​s​e​v​e​r​a​l​-​S​t​-​A​n​n​-​c​r​a​s​hes — Supt – Wayne-Cameron_64415

Three shot dead in Westmoreland, 8‑y-o injured

WESTMORELAND, Jamaica — Three men were yes­ter­day shot dead in sep­a­rate inci­dents in Whithorn, Westmoreland, mere min­utes apart. An eight-year-old boy was also shot and injured in one of the inci­dents. The first inci­dent occurred about 8:30 pm, while 22-year-old Gawayne Morris, 31-year-old Jason Wedderburn and the boy were at a shop in Lindos Hill. Reports from the police are that a motor car drove up and assailants dis­em­barked the vehi­cle then opened gun­fire at them. They all received gun­shot wounds. Morris and Wedderburn were pro­nounced dead at hos­pi­tal while the eight-year-old boy, whose injury is con­sid­ered minor, was treat­ed. Then at 9:00 pm, res­i­dents heard explo­sions in the Maxfield area and alert­ed the police. Stanford Anderson, a 59-year-old fruit ven­dor, was lat­er found dead close to his stall on the Maxfield main road. The police say inves­ti­ga­tions into both inci­dents are ongoing.

Gunmen videoed running through community, cops investigate

KINGSTON, Jamaica – OBSERVER ONLINE has obtained a video which shows five gun­men run­ning through a com­mu­ni­ty in broad day­light. Explosions can be heard as the men, dressed in pullovers and bran­dish­ing guns, make their way through a com­mu­ni­ty which sources say is Norwood, St James. Police in Montego Bay told OBSERVER ONLINE that they are aware of the video, but could not con­firm where or when the inci­dent occurred. Head of the St James Police Divison, Senior Superintendent Marlon Nesbeth, told OBSERVER ONLINE on Sunday that checks are being made and infor­ma­tion is being gath­ered as they con­tin­ue to look into the mat­ter. Reaad more @ http://​www​.jamaicaob​serv​er​.com/​n​e​w​s​/​G​u​n​m​e​n​-​v​i​d​e​o​e​d​-​r​u​n​n​i​n​g​-​t​h​r​o​u​g​h​-​c​o​m​m​u​n​ity – cops-investigate

Briefs…

POLICE TO PATROL IN NUMBERS.

Remarkably these sim­ply oper­a­tional details have to be announced by a min­is­ter. These sim­ple things are among the most mun­dane steps the police can take with­out a grand min­is­te­r­i­al announcement.
When did the police brass get this epiphany? I get crit­i­cized for chal­leng­ing the police to do bet­ter with what it has , this is one such moment in which the police must real­ly ask itself why is some­thing this sim­ple a part of any new strategy?

Patrolling in num­bers is cru­cial in light of the lawlessness,the propen­si­ty to resist arrest, and the lack of puni­tive sanc­tions for resist­ing arrest and assault­ing officers.
It also has the very real effect of reduc­ing if not total­ly elim­i­nat­ing the very real desire to fight with police officers.
As I have writ­ten over the years Jamaican peo­ple will means test their police offi­cers to ensure they are tough enough to be trust­ed to defend them.
Their meth­ods (usu­al­ly ill-advised con­fronta­tion with a young offi­cer ) was their crude yet not total­ly borne out of mal-intent was their way of decid­ing whetehr a cop was wor­thy of their respect.
Decisive actions by police in effec­tive­ly and prompt­ly exe­cut­ing arrest includ­ing any­one who inter­feres, is one of the best tools offi­cers have at their disposal.
Not just to deal with indi­vid­ual inci­dents but in elim­i­nat­ing future occurrences.
Patrolling in strength it is only one com­po­nent of what’s need­ed from the police. The police must show what they are taught in effec­tive­ly and deci­sive­ly exe­cut­ing arrest.
It is impor­tant to effec­tive­ly tar­get those who would intervene.
Most impor­tant of all is get­ting reinforcements(backup) to offi­cers in dis­tress in record time and ensur­ing that no one who attempt to inter­fere in an arrest is allowed to walk away with­out being arrested.

National Security Minister Robert Montague advised this week that cops will be patrolling in greater num­bers. Perhaps this gath­er­ing on West Street, down­town Kingston, is a show of that force.

Observer photo
Observer pho­to

More judges for parish courts

The Government is seek­ing to increase the num­ber of judges avail­able to serve in parish courts. “In the short term, we want to employ at least anoth­er 15 or 20 judges per­ma­nent­ly or on a part-time basis to deal with the back­log in the parish courts,” said Minister of Justice Delroy Chuck. He was mak­ing his con­tri­bu­tion to the 201617 Sectoral Debate in the House of Representatives on Wednesday. Minister Chuck not­ed that the parish courts are now over­bur­dened with civ­il and crim­i­nal cas­es and “it is impor­tant that we attend to them urgently”.
“This is where the aver­age man gets his jus­tice and we have to make sure more judges, pros­e­cu­tors and clerks of court are avail­able so that these mat­ters can be dealt with,” he point­ed out.

Meanwhile, the Justice Minister is encour­ag­ing Jamaicans to utilise alter­na­tive means such as arbi­tra­tion and restora­tive jus­tice to deal with dis­putes. He not­ed that the Restorative Justice Bill will be brought before Parliament short­ly. “If we can get the offend­er to admit that he has com­mit­ted the offence and the vic­tim to for­give, then we can say use restora­tive jus­tice to exer­cise mer­cy in the dis­pos­al of the mat­ter,” the Justice Minister said. As it relates to arbi­tra­tion, he informed that a bill is to be sub­mit­ted to Cabinet before tabling in Parliament. The Justice Minister not­ed that many coun­tries, such as Singapore, have been mak­ing use of arbi­tra­tion to set­tle com­mer­cial dis­putes. “When big mon­ey is in con­flict, many of the par­ties do not want to go to court; they want arbi­tra­tors to assist them in com­ing to a deci­sion. Singapore is now becom­ing the top place for arbi­tra­tion,” Chuck said. He said it is hoped that not only will Jamaica have a mod­ern leg­is­la­tion but that the coun­try will become an arbi­tra­tion cen­tre “for those big com­pa­nies that have dis­putes and want it to be dealt with not in the courts, but by arbitrators”.
http://​www​.jamaicaob​serv​er​.com/​n​e​w​s​/​P​o​l​ice – force-_64263
It appears that the Government is begin­ning to rec­og­nize that growth can­not hap­pen as it should in anarchy.We applaud these moves even as we ask the police to be a lot more proac­tive in how it approach­es it’s task.

Strike Up The Band Let The Party Begin…

THIS IS WHAT IT WAS ALWAYS ABOUT , GETTING TAX PAYERS MONEY THEN HAMSTRUNG THE SECURITY FORCES WORKS FOR BOTH POLITICAL PARTIES ON THE ISLAND..

Tivoli Enquiry commissioners make recommendation to Gov’t

The Commission of Enquiry into the May 2010 secu­ri­ty forces oper­a­tion in West Kingston has rec­om­mend­ed com­pen­sa­tion, with­out delay, and an apol­o­gy to res­i­dents for some actions of the State agents dur­ing the event.

We rec­om­mend that the Government of Jamaica apol­o­gis­es in Parliament to the peo­ple of West Kingston, and Jamaica as a whole, for the excess­es of the secu­ri­ty forces dur­ing the oper­a­tion,” the three-man com­mis­sion, chaired by Barbadian attor­ney Sir David Simmons, said in its report. In the report, which was tabled in the House of Representatives, yes­ter­day by Justice Minister Delroy Chuck, the com­mis­sion, which also includ­ed jurist Justice Hazel Harris and crim­i­nol­o­gist Professor Anthony Harriott, said that this should be done with a view to “assuag­ing the hurt feel­ings, bit­ter­ness and resent­ment of the peo­ple of West Kingston, and with a view to pro­mot­ing restora­tive jus­tice and bring­ing clo­sure to this sor­ry chap­ter in Jamaica’s his­to­ry”. But, accord­ing to the com­mis­sion­ers, even this would not be enough. They felt that there should also be prompt redress by way of com­pen­sa­tion for the victims.

While we recog­nise that there is a press­ing need to bring clo­sure to this mat­ter, and while we are con­scious of INDECOM’s con­tin­u­ing inves­ti­ga­tions, which must not be con­strict­ed, we are of the opin­ion that redress by way of com­pen­sa­tion should pro­ceed with­out delay,” they said. However, the com­mis­sion­ers admit­ted that they have been advised that for­mal legal claims against the State for com­pen­sa­tion in mat­ters involv­ing injury, loss of life and dam­age to prop­er­ty are barred after three years, in some cas­es of death, and after six years in all oth­er cas­es. This means that it would be too late for peo­ple to insti­tute lit­i­ga­tion against the State for com­pen­sa­tion for per­son­al injuries, death and loss and dam­age to prop­er­ty. In the cir­cum­stances, they rec­om­mend­ed that the State “waive its strict legal rights to all claims” and agree to set­tle com­pen­sa­tion on an ex gra­tia basis in respect of claims brought by aggriev­ed indi­vid­u­als, per­son­al rep­re­sen­ta­tives and/​or near rela­tions and/​or depen­dents of the deceased persons.

They said that they have an assur­ance from the Office of the Public Defender that it is “ready, will­ing and able” to facil­i­tate the pro­ce­dur­al require­ments to obtain grants of rep­re­sen­ta­tion. The com­mis­sion­ers, how­ev­er, made it clear that their rec­om­men­da­tion for a waiv­er also applies to claims for loss and dam­age to prop­er­ty and per­son­al injury. The com­mis­sion­ers said, how­ev­er, that the terms of ref­er­ence require the com­mis­sion to deter­mine the ade­qua­cy of com­pen­sa­tion to be paid to the vic­tims, and implies “a will­ing­ness on the part of the Government to ade­quate­ly com­pen­sate the vic­tims who suf­fered per­son­al injuries and prop­er­ty dam­age. “We find this pre­dis­po­si­tion of the Government to be admirable. It is the right thing to do. And it should be done fair­ly,” the report stat­ed. The report was reviewed by the Cabinet on Monday at its week­ly meet­ing at Jamaica House, lead­ing to a deci­sion by the Government to have it tabled by Chuck in the House of Representatives yes­ter­day. The delay was in order to give time to the min­istry to pre­pare copies for cir­cu­la­tion to par­lia­men­tar­i­ans, the press, and oth­er par­tic­i­pat­ing bod­ies. Chuck tabled it pri­or to mak­ing his pre­sen­ta­tion to the House in the annu­al Sectoral Debate, and com­pact discs of the 900-page doc­u­ment were circulated.

The min­is­ter said that despite Monday’s review, because of the length of the report, Cabinet has appoint­ed a sub­com­mit­tee to look at the find­ings and rec­om­men­da­tions in detail and to report back to the minister.Opposition spokesman on nation­al secu­ri­ty Peter Bunting not­ed that there were a num­ber of rec­om­men­da­tions relat­ing to the Defence Act and the Jamaica Defence Force (JDF) which ought to be stud­ied more closely.“I think that there are going to be some very impor­tant take-aways for this Parliament to look at amend­ing some of the leg­is­la­tion to reflect the real­i­ty of how our mil­i­tary oper­ates in sup­port of polic­ing in ways which were, per­haps, nev­er con­tem­plat­ed when it was estab­lished in 1962 and when the Defence Act was passed,” Bunting said.

He said that the Government could count on Opposition sup­port in pass­ing those amend­ments. He also said that the May 2010 activ­i­ty amount­ed to “almost an impos­si­ble sit­u­a­tion” for every­one involved. The com­mis­sion also con­clud­ed that a total of 69 peo­ple were killed dur­ing the oper­a­tion which was aimed at appre­hend­ing fugi­tive gang­ster Christopher ‘Dudus’ Coke, who was want­ed by the United States to face fed­er­al drug charges.The oper­a­tion was launched on May 24, 2010 after repeat­ed appeals by the author­i­ties for the dis­man­tling of block­ades mount­ed at the entrances to Tivoli Gardens were ignored. But police and sol­diers met resis­tance from gun­men loy­al to Coke, result­ing in the fatal­i­ties. During the fight­ing, Coke fled Tivoli Gardens, but was cap­tured weeks lat­er, on June 22, 2010, and waived his right to an extra­di­tion hear­ing. On June 24, 2010, he was flown to New York and was even­tu­al­ly sen­tenced to a 23-year prison term in June 2012 after plead­ing guilty to rack­e­teer­ing. Sticking to the sen­tenc­ing guide­lines under a plea bar­gain­ing arrange­ment reached between Coke’s defence team and pros­e­cu­tors in August 2011, Judge Robert P Patterson imposed the max­i­mum sen­tence, despite last-minute pleas for lenien­cy by Coke him­self and his attor­ney Stephen H Rosen.

AND THE VULTURES CIRC LE FOR THEIR SHARE OF THE PICKINGS..

JFJ demands action after Tivoli Enquiry report tabled

KINGSTON, Jamaica – Jamaicans for Justice (JFJ) are today demand­ing action from the Government, fol­low­ing the tabling of the West Kingston Commission of Enquiry report in Parliament yes­ter­day. In a news release, the JFJ said the commission’s report detailed some of the “great­est assaults on human rights in Jamaica’s mod­ern his­to­ry” and serves as a reminder of the dead­ly cost of a cul­ture of impuni­ty – one paid by the over 70 Jamaicans killed dur­ing the joint police-mil­i­tary oper­a­tion in 2010. However, JFJ point­ed out that the Commission’s report is not the end of the process but the begin­ning of anoth­er stage. “Now, the gov­ern­ment must com­mit to a seri­ous pro­gramme of reform that recog­nis­es, inter­rupts and pre­vents human rights vio­la­tions by the secu­ri­ty forces and strength­ens State organs capa­ble of pro­vid­ing effec­tive reme­dies,” the human rights group said. “Action is the only response that hon­ours the dig­ni­ty of vic­tims and secures jus­tice for those still harmed by State vio­lence across Jamaica.”
The group is there­fore call­ing on the gov­ern­ment to respond offi­cial­ly to the report’s find­ings and expe­di­tious­ly imple­ment its recommendations.

JFJ moved to iden­ti­fy some key rec­om­men­da­tions in the 900-page report, which it says needs to be addressed with­out delay.

The rec­om­men­da­tions are that: the Government apol­o­gise to and com­pen­sate res­i­dents for the “excess­es of the secu­ri­ty forces dur­ing the oper­a­tion”, affirm­ing Jamaica’s bind­ing human rights oblig­a­tions local­ly and inter­na­tion­al­ly; there be con­tin­ued crim­i­nal inves­ti­ga­tions into the killings of res­i­dents whom “all the evi­dence adduced strong­ly suggests…were unlaw­ful­ly killed by uniden­ti­fied police offi­cers”, plac­ing a bur­den on the Government to ensure that the Independent Commission of Investigations (INDECOM) is suf­fi­cient­ly equipped to con­duct impar­tial inves­ti­ga­tions, free from obsta­cles and frus­tra­tions; there be reforms of the secu­ri­ty forces that would improve their use of force, arms man­age­ment, and civil­ian over­sight – long­stand­ing issues raised repeat­ed­ly by civ­il soci­ety. “Starting the process on these pri­or­i­ty rec­om­men­da­tions does not require lengthy delib­er­a­tions – it only requires polit­i­cal will. On mat­ters of such impor­tance, fur­ther delay is not an option,” the JFJ said. http://​www​.jamaicaob​serv​er​.com/​n​e​w​s​/​J​F​J​-​d​e​m​a​n​d​s​-​a​c​t​i​o​n​-​a​f​t​e​r​-​T​i​v​o​l​i​-​E​n​q​u​i​r​y​-​r​e​p​o​r​t​-​t​a​b​led

What About Malahoo Forte’s Right To Free Speech.…..

10734218_10203187417145913_1187502936954276739_n-e1456464036486-64x90

It seem that Jamaica’s Attorney General Marlene Malahoo Forte,is hav­ing a dif­fi­cult time avoid­ing con­tro­ver­sy since tak­ing office. Immediately upon becom­ing Attorney General Forte speak­ing in St James told mem­bers of the secu­ri­ty forces that she will be pay­ing close atten­tion to ensure that they do not abuse the rights of civil­ians. Forte was speak­ing in Montego Bay Cultural Center in Sam Sharpe Square, Montego Bay, dur­ing the third in a series of island-wide town-hall meet­ings put on by Security Minister Robert Montague.
Said Malahoo Forte ,  “I assure you sir (secu­ri­ty min­is­ter) that in my role as mem­ber of Parliament I will ensure that all coöper­a­tion is pro­vid­ed to the secu­ri­ty forces. But I say to the secu­ri­ty forces also, in my role as mem­ber of Parliament and as attor­ney gen­er­al, I will be watch­ing vig­i­lant­ly how the secu­ri­ty forces car­ry out their work in this chal­leng­ing envi­ron­ment. “I know SSP (Steve) McGregor under­stands my own view that the police — and com­mis­sion­er, you may be hear­ing it for the first time – are not enti­tled to break the law in their efforts to uphold the law, not enti­tled to abuse the rights of our cit­i­zens, how­ev­er chal­leng­ing the cir­cum­stances will be,”.

Malahoo Forte’s state­ments were absolute­ly not unrea­son­able giv­en anoth­er forum but this writer thought that giv­en that forum which for all intents and pur­pos­es was geared at find­ing solu­tions to the nation’s crime prob­lem her rebuke were offen­sive, patron­iz­ing , dis­re­spect­ful and amount­ed to grandstanding.
This writer was cer­tain­ly not shy in call­ing her out for that blunder.
As did a host of online read­ers who felt sim­i­lar­ly as well.
https://​mike​beck​les​.com/​m​a​l​a​h​o​o​-​f​o​r​t​e​-​s​h​a​m​e​l​e​s​s​-​g​r​a​n​d​s​t​a​n​d​i​n​g​-​j​u​s​t​-​s​h​u​t​-​a​l​r​e​a​dy/

After the night­club shoot­ing in Orlando Florida a few nights ago the United States decid­ed to fly the Gay-pride rain­bow flag at half staff at all it’s embassies across the world. This prompt­ed Attorney General Malahoo Forte to tweet the following .
“I strong­ly con­demn #OrlandoNightClubShooting but find it dis­re­spect­ful of Jamaica’s laws to have #RainbowFlag flown here #MyPersonalView.
The United States Embassy in Kingston alleged­ly tweet­ed back .
“@mmalahooforte we’re lis­ten­ing. Explain the legal rea­son­ing? It [the Orlando shoot­ing] was an attack of ter­ror and hate, tar­get­ing the LGBT community!”

Since the tweet Attorney General Malahoo Forte has tak­en sig­nif­i­cant flack as is to be expect­ed with sen­si­tive issues as these.
The Opposition People’s National Party has since issued a state­ment over the sig­na­ture of Morais Guy .

The Jamaican Government has to be reminded that the conduct of business on premises on which embassies and high commissions are located must be regarded as business being conducted on foreign soil.“We believe there is a requirement for clarification and, if necessary, apology by our foreign ministry to the government and people of the United States consequent on the recent comments of the attorney general regarding business taking place on the grounds of their embassy in Kingston and which is consistent with business that is taking place at their embassies across the globe,”.

On the oth­er hand there has also been strong sup­port for Malahoo Forte com­ing from two Christian lob­bies, the Lawyers’ Christian Fellowship and the Jamaica Coalition for a Healthy Society (JCHS). In a state­ment the Organizations respond­ed con­demn­ing the killings while say­ing this.

The flying of the rainbow flag, a counter-cultural symbol of a movement dedicated to undermining Jamaica’s buggery and marriage laws, sends an overt symbol that the United States Embassy in Jamaica is aligned with those who would break our laws”. “Notwithstanding the fact that the embassy is considered American territory in international law, the LCF asks US Ambassador Luis G. Moreno to immediately take down the flag and, in so doing, eliminate potential misunderstanding and barriers to the natural outpouring of sympathy and support for the United States and those who have suffered.”

Meanwhile, the JCHS ques­tioned if the US Embassy had flown any school or mil­i­tary or church flags after pre­vi­ous mass killings in the US.

While the US Embassy in Kingston is con­sid­ered to be on US soil, the embassy is still a guest of the Jamaican Government and peo­ple and is expect­ed to con­duct its affairs in a respect­ful man­ner,” the JCHS said.
Of all the argu­ments raised since this non-sto­ry broke I believe the ques­tion com­ing from the JCHS is the most pro­found. Yesterday I wrote about the almost dai­ly mass killings across America and the clas­sic response by the media and politi­cians who fall over them­selves to claim Islamic Terrorism. Ironically most of the ter­ror attacks in the United States has been car­ried out by white male under 35 years old.
Ms Malahoo Forte has a right to her opin­ion as a pri­vate cit­i­zen, and she did say she was speak­ing per­son­al­ly not in her offi­cial capac­i­ty as Attorney General. Even if Ms Forte was speak­ing in her capac­i­ty as Attorney General she would be absolute­ly cor­rect in her statements.
I find the American Embassy’s response both patron­iz­ing and pater­nal­is­tic. Quote “@mmalahooforte we’re lis­ten­ing. Explain the legal reasoning?
Jamaica is a sov­er­eign nation , not a state of the United States. Jamaican laws make it a crime for it’s cit­i­zens to engage in bug­gery. On that basis any for­eign coun­try which is rep­re­sent­ed by a mis­sion or embassy must respect that nation’s laws .
No coun­try can be dis­re­spect­ful of American laws and tra­di­tions while main­tain­ing diplo­mat­ic mis­sions on American soil.
It is remark­able that rather than stand­ing with it’s own Government the People’s National Party sought to cur­ry favor and once again got it total­ly wrong.
The mas­sacre of those inno­cent souls must shake even the most soul­less indi­vid­u­als. Regardless of peo­ple’s sex­u­al ori­en­ta­tion, reli­gion , race, or any oth­er defin­ing char­ac­ter­is­tic peo­ple have a right to con­gre­gate with­out the expec­ta­tion that they will be sum­mar­i­ly gunned down in cold blood.
Yet there is no evi­dence that the vic­tims of the night­club shoot­ing were killed because they were Gay. Of course the clas­sic response from the pur­vey­ors of fear with their own per­son­al agen­das are nev­er con­strained by com­mon sense when they run ahead of law enforce­ment agen­cies to make state­ments which are not sup­port­ed or borne out by the evidence.
There is emerg­ing evi­dence with­in the pub­lic space which now indi­cate that the shoot­er may have been gay as well which if true dis­cred­its the notion that the vic­tims were mas­sa­cred because of their sex­u­al orientation.

Neither Jamaica nor Ms Malahoo Forte owes the American Embassy any oblig­a­tion to explain her state­ments. They were sound per­son­al­ly and pro­fes­sion­al­ly. It is sad that the oppo­si­tion par­ty and Gay sup­port­ers have allowed pol­i­tics and alle­giances to cloud their judgement.
Gays assume the role of vic­tims but are most intol­er­ant and vehe­ment­ly opposed to the rights of oth­ers to dis­agree with their lifestyles. Daring to dis­agree with them can get one black-list­ed , cost peo­ple their busi­ness­es, their jobs and ostra­cized from society.
Even as they claim to be seek­ing to live their lives the way they want like every­one else, their actions are dia­met­ri­cal­ly opposed to those protestations.
Their right to live their lives the way they chose can­not come at the expense of Ms Malahoo Forte’s right to free speech .
As such we stand with the Attorney General against this tyranny.

Worse Mass Killing In American History .…Not Even Close.

WORST MASS SHOOTING IN AMERICAN HISTORY.…

Ever since a shoot­er entered a Gay night­club in Orlando Florida killing 49 peo­ple and wound­ing 53 the mass media have engaged in a sys­tem­at­ic and seem­ing­ly coör­di­nat­ed attempt to paint this lat­est mass shoot­ing as the worst in American history.
The United States of America did not become a nation three days ago. Neither did it become a nation even 70 years ago. So in the inter­est of clar­i­ty I would pick one sto­ry out of the litany of sto­ries which puts this nar­ra­tive to a lie. Whether New York or Chicago, Greenwood Florida to Tulsa Oklahoma the instances are many.
We chose to use a sin­gle sto­ry this time.

Black History Month

The Tulsa Massacre, 1921

Revolutionary Worker #1043, February 20, 2000

On May 30, 1921, a rumor swept through the boom­ing west­ern oil town of Tulsa, Oklahoma that a young Black man had insult­ed a white woman in a down­town elevator.

According to the white suprema­cist rules of U.S. soci­ety, the accused man faced an imme­di­ate death sen­tence. Since the turn of the cen­tu­ry, many hun­dreds of Black men in the U.S. had been bru­tal­ly lynched and muti­lat­ed by vig­i­lante gangs – with­out tri­al or inves­ti­ga­tion – often for accu­sa­tions of “affronting white womanhood.”

But this time, in Tulsa, it was dif­fer­ent. This time there was resis­tance. Organized mil­i­tant forces in the Black com­mu­ni­ty stepped for­ward to defend Dick Rowland.

All the hate­ful forces of white suprema­cy in the area respond­ed to that resis­tance with two fever­ish days of mur­der and fire. The dead of Tulsa’s Black com­mu­ni­ty lay stacked in piles. And the cen­tral Black busi­ness dis­trict of North Tulsa was total­ly burned out.

Tulsa 1921 is a sto­ry of bru­tal “eth­nic cleans­ing” and geno­cide. This was the largest “civ­il dis­tur­bance” since the Civil War and the anti-Indian wars of the 1800s. It is a sto­ry that has been sys­tem­at­i­cal­ly cen­sored by the sys­tem – despite the repeat­ed efforts of the Black press, rev­o­lu­tion­ary forces and pro­gres­sive his­to­ri­ans to bring the facts to light.

Now, after almost 80 years, the truth about the Tulsa Massacre is final­ly break­ing into the pub­lic are­na, and the last sur­vivors are step­ping for­ward to tell the sto­ry that has been denied and suppressed.

Tulsa’s Little Africa

For decades, Black peo­ple flee­ing the hor­rors of the plan­ta­tion South had found their way west to North Tulsa and forged a new com­mu­ni­ty of 15,000 – togeth­er with Black Seminoles who arrived in Oklahoma a cen­tu­ry ear­li­er after the infa­mous “Trail of Tears.” This new com­mu­ni­ty was called the Greenwood dis­trict, or “Little Africa.”

Most of the peo­ple in this Black com­mu­ni­ty were wage work­ers – often cross­ing the rail­road tracks into South Tulsa for the worst jobs and domes­tic work. At the same time, the rigid seg­re­ga­tion of Tulsa meant that “Little Africa” cre­at­ed its own busi­ness dis­trict along Greenwood Avenue. Supporters of Black cap­i­tal­ism nick­named it “the Negro Wall Street.”

There were Black-owned movie the­aters, a news­pa­per, jew­el­ry stores, 15 doc­tors, three law offices, a school, three gro­cery stores, many restau­rants, church­es, and a Black-owned bus line.

But the Tulsa Tribune and white racists of South Tulsa just called it “N*ggertown.”

The inven­tion of cars and intense demands of World War 1 brought explo­sive growth to the petro­le­um fields and to the noto­ri­ous­ly cor­rupt and row­dy town of Tulsa. The local Tulsa own­ing class felt that their boom­ing down­town busi­ness dis­trict was hemmed in by the Black Greenwood com­mu­ni­ty. They want­ed Blacks moved out. Police Commissioner Adkison and the Tulsa Tribunecon­stant­ly accused Greenwood of being a cen­ter of pros­ti­tu­tion, drugs, liquor and gambling.

Meanwhile in “Little Africa,” like in oth­er Black com­mu­ni­ties, there was a deeply impa­tient new mood of resis­tance. Black vet­er­ans came back from World War 1 with pride and a fresh belief that they deserved respect and equal­i­ty. In urban areas, many Black peo­ple were bold­er in ques­tion­ing the lynch-law cus­toms of Jim Crow. The rev­o­lu­tion­ary storms of Europe and Russia after World War 1 inspired the new rev­o­lu­tion­ary and com­mu­nist orga­ni­za­tion among Black people.

The Call for Lynching

Dick Rowland, a young Black shoeshine man, knew the white ele­va­tor oper­a­tor Sarah Page. An inves­ti­ga­tor from the NAACP uncov­ered that Rowland had called for the ele­va­tor. Page had been angry to be called by a Black man and closed the doors while he was only halfway in. Thrown off bal­ance, he had stepped on her foot. As Rowland left that ele­va­tor, Page screamed that he had insult­ed her.

Rowland was arrest­ed and tak­en to the Tulsa County Courthouse. No charges were ever pressed, no evi­dence was ever presented.

The next morn­ing, the Tulsa Tribune print­ed a rabid edi­to­r­i­al with the head­line “To Lynch Negro Tonight.” That evening, an armed mob of white peo­ple gath­ered out­side the jail to lynch Dick Rowland.

A remark­able thing hap­pened: Suddenly an armed group of Black men (var­i­ous­ly report­ed at 50 to 75) arrived from Greenwood, dressed in World War 1 Army fatigues. With breath-tak­ing courage, they con­front­ed this grow­ing crowd of 2,000 racists – announc­ing that they would fight to pro­tect Rowland’s life and see that he got basic justice.

There were shouts back and forth between the two groups – then shots. Several men fell dead. Greatly out­num­bered, the Black mil­i­tants retreat­ed north, across the rail­road tracks into Greenwood.

The local police orga­nized a mur­der­ous attack on the Black com­mu­ni­ty. They dep­u­tized hun­dreds of men from the lynch mob and told them, “Now you can go out and shoot any n*gger you see, and the law’ll be behind you.” Groups of white men broke into down­town hard­ware stores, pawn­shops, and gun stores and took firearms and ammunition.

As the racist forces tried to cross the rail­road tracks, fight­ers with­in the Black com­mu­ni­ty held them off for hours with sniper fire. By dawn, huge num­bers of armed whites had gath­ered – as many as 10,000 – and at 5 a.m. they moved into “Little Africa.” It was a full mil­i­tary inva­sion – com­plete with machine guns.

A 1924 legal brief by the American Central Insurance Company would lat­er describe their “com­mon intent to exe­cute a com­mon plan, to-wit: the exter­mi­na­tion of the col­ored peo­ple of Tulsa and the destruc­tion of the col­ored set­tle­ment, homes, and build­ings, by fire.”

There was con­tin­u­ous resis­tance. Teams of Black fight­ers formed to fight for the lives of the peo­ple. The com­bat was house-to-house, and even hand-to-hand in some areas. A Black woman, Mary Jones Parrish, lat­er wrote: “Looking south out of the win­dow of what then was the Woods Building, we saw car loads of men with rifles unload­ing up near the gra­nary.… Then the truth dawned upon us that our men were fight­ing in vain to hold their dear Greenwood.”

The sur­vivors report­ed that their neigh­bor­hoods were strafed by air­planes. Explosives and fire­bombs were dropped. A Tulsa cop, Van B. Hurley, lat­er report­ed that sev­er­al promi­nent city offi­cials met with local plane own­ers in a down­town office and planned the air attack. It was one of the first report­ed uses of aer­i­al bombs in world history.

Fire and Mass Murder

They set our house on fire and we were up in the attic… five kids… We were able to get out with­out injury but bul­lets were zing­ing around there… But when we got down, the tele­phone poles were burned and falling and my poor sis­ter who was two years younger than I am said, ‘Kinney, is the world on fire?’ I said, ‘I don’t think so, but we are in deep trouble.“ ‘

Kinney Booker, who was 8
dur­ing the Massacre

The attack­ers imme­di­ate­ly set the Black com­mu­ni­ty on fire. A wall of flame swept through the Greenwood busi­ness dis­trict– burn­ing out every­thing in its path.

Meanwhile, gangs of heav­i­ly armed attack­ers went house-to-house – killing peo­ple, tak­ing away Black men in a sys­tem­at­ic roundup, steal­ing any­thing valu­able and light­ing Black homes on fire. Eyewitnesses report­ed that Sheriff’s deputies used kerosene to burn down the finest homes in the dis­trict. About 1,200 hous­es, hotels, and busi­ness­es were destroyed. Thirty-five blocks were a burnt-out waste­land. Charred bod­ies were found in the debris.

Regular infantry of the Oklahoma National Guard rushed in on a spe­cial train, arriv­ing June 1. The Guard’s com­man­der lat­er wrote, “Twenty-five thou­sand whites, armed to the teeth, were rang­ing the city in utter and ruth­less defi­ance of every con­cept of law and right­eous­ness. Motor cars bristling with guns swept through the city, their occu­pants fir­ing at will.” The Guard sol­diers were offi­cial­ly there to stop the “dis­tur­bance,” but they quick­ly went to work round­ing up Black peo­ple at bay­o­net point, wound­ing many in the process.

Behind the trees and walls near the foot of Standpipe Hill, the armed defense fight­ers of the Black com­mu­ni­ty made their last stand. The National Guard set up two machine guns and poured dead­ly fire into the area. The last Black fight­ers sur­ren­dered. They were dis­armed and marched in columns to four major intern­ment areas that had been set up at the city’s Convention Hall, McNulty Baseball Park, the Fairgrounds and the town’s airport.

The killing was sys­tem­at­ic and heart­less. Death squads of armed whites, many of them orga­nized Klansmen, went door-to-door in the burn­ing neigh­bor­hoods killing peo­ple. They shot any­one mov­ing in the streets. Black men were chained to cars and dragged to their deaths. In white areas, Black domes­tic work­ers were gunned down on their way home – with­out warn­ing. Dr. A. C. Jackson (who was described by a founder of the Mayo Clinic as “the most able Negro sur­geon in the coun­try”) was mur­dered after sur­ren­der­ing him­self to police.

The National Guard orga­nized teams to stack bod­ies and load them on wag­ons and trucks. The Red Cross report­ed treat­ing almost 1,000 wound­ed peo­ple – over­whelm­ing­ly Black. The local Black school, which escaped the fire, became a field hos­pi­tal. One observ­er wrote, “There were men wound­ed in every con­ceiv­able way, like sol­diers after a big bat­tle. Some with ampu­tat­ed limbs, burned faces, oth­ers minus an eye or with heads ban­daged. There were women who were ner­vous wrecks, and some con­fine­ment cas­es. Was I in a hos­pi­tal in France? No, in Tulsa.”

Many Black peo­ple fled the city com­plete­ly – into the Osage Hills and the many Black com­mu­ni­ties that dot­ted rur­al Oklahoma. Many thou­sands had been cap­tured at gun­point. Some were tak­en to killing fields and exe­cut­ed in cold blood. Others, includ­ing many chil­dren, were marched to the intern­ment cen­ters. At the entrance to the Tulsa Convention Center, a mur­dered Black man’s body was pub­licly dis­played as a tro­phy in the back of a truck. And columns of cap­tured Black peo­ple were forced to pass in front of it, on their way into the building.

Reporter Brent Staples describes the after­math (New York Times December 19, 1999): “Corpses stacked like cord­wood on street cor­ners, pho­tographed for keep­sakes. Corpses piled in the backs of wag­ons, dump trucks, and along rail­road sid­ings. Corpses buried in an under­ground tun­nel down­town, where one caller said 123 blacks had been clubbed to death. Corpses left to rot for days in a park under the blis­ter­ing Oklahoma sun. Corpses dumped in the Arkansas River and allowed to float away.”

By June 2, the fight­ing was over. The Black com­mu­ni­ty had been com­plete­ly burnt out — turned into a smok­ing waste­land. After being held in intern­ment, a thou­sand Black peo­ple were forced to spend the fol­low­ing win­ter in a refugee city of tents and board shacks under bit­ter con­di­tions. For months, Black peo­ple would see white peo­ple on Tulsa’s down­town streets wear­ing cloth­ing and jew­el­ry stolen dur­ing the pogrom.

The Fight for the Truth

The Black press in the U.S. fought hard to expose what had hap­pened in Tulsa.

The new­ly formed Communist Party (CP) print­ed hun­dreds of thou­sands of fly­ers enti­tled “The Tulsa Massacre.” The leaflet bold­ly sup­port­ed the armed self-defense of Black com­mu­ni­ties and called for the rev­o­lu­tion­ary over­throw of the cap­i­tal­ist sys­tem for its bru­tal white suprema­cy. Activists dis­trib­uted them very wide­ly across the coun­try – in fac­to­ry dis­tricts, Black com­mu­ni­ties and con­ven­tions of orga­ni­za­tions like the NAACP.

Government infor­mants report­ed that a ton of the fly­ers were dis­trib­uted in Chicago alone.

Revolutionaries and pro­gres­sive peo­ple orga­nized cam­paigns to aid the burned-out sur­vivors of this massacre.

In Tulsa itself, amid the hor­ror and sor­row, there was report­ed­ly tremen­dous pride that Rowland had gone free and that the com­mu­ni­ty had fought so fierce­ly with guns against racist attack.

Meanwhile, the U.S. pow­er struc­ture imme­di­ate­ly moved to white­wash this event, and to sup­press knowl­edge of it. A hasti­ly con­vened grand jury announced that the events were caused by the Black com­mu­ni­ty – specif­i­cal­ly blam­ing “an effort on the part of a cer­tain group of col­ored men who appeared at the cour­t­house…” In the sec­ond place they blamed the “agi­ta­tion among the negroes of the social equal­i­ty.” Local author­i­ties blamed a rev­o­lu­tion­ary orga­ni­za­tion, the African Blood Brotherhood, for insti­gat­ing the resis­tance. Leading fig­ures of the Black com­mu­ni­ty were indict­ed for “incit­ing” the events of May 31. Not one white per­son was ever arrest­ed or charged for the Tulsa Massacre.

Mayor Paul Brown report­ed that only 36 peo­ple died – 10 whites and 26 Black peo­ple. This fig­ure was repeat­ed in his­to­ry books and accounts – as an offi­cial account­ing of these so-called “Tulsa Race Riots.”

The head­lines of the Tulsa Tribune raged:

  • Propaganda of Negroes is Blamed”
  • Black Agitators Blamed for Riot, Plot by Negro Society?”
  • Bloodshed in Race War will Cleanse Tulsa”
  • Negro Section Abolished by City’s Order”

Local author­i­ties made sure “Little Africa” would nev­er be rebuilt – mon­ey was denied, new ordi­nances were passed.

The new­ly formed FBI focused much of its activ­i­ties dur­ing the sum­mer of 1921, iden­ti­fy­ing and harass­ing the forces cir­cu­lat­ing the CP’s “Tulsa Massacre” fliers. Insurance com­pa­nies refused to com­pen­sate the vic­tims of the Tulsa mas­sacre and fire.

And soon, this shame­ful Tulsa Massacre was sim­ply erased from offi­cial American his­to­ry and pub­lic dis­cus­sion. Most peo­ple have sim­ply nev­er heard of it. Someone at the Tulsa Tribuneremoved all records that their news­pa­per had called for the lynch­ing of Dick Rowland – no known copies of the inflam­ma­to­ry arti­cles exist today.

Over the years, there was an ongo­ing strug­gle to break through the silence. Survivors told of the air attacks and of bod­ies dumped in mine­shafts and the near­by riv­er. Officially, such reports were dis­missed as unfound­ed exag­ger­a­tions and lies. In the 1970s, thanks to the pow­er­ful Black Liberation move­ment, accounts of the Tulsa Massacre start­ed to appear in pro­gres­sive mag­a­zines, rad­i­cal his­to­ry books and the new cours­es on Black Studies.

Memory and Mass Graves

Six years ago, the world learned about the 1923 racist attack in Rosewood, Florida, through the movie and the court case where sur­vivors received $2 mil­lion in restitution.

Since 1997, a relent­less move­ment has emerged to demand an account­ing in Tulsa. Many par­tic­i­pants demand repa­ra­tions for the bru­tal­i­ty and destruc­tion. More than 150 wit­ness­es, includ­ing 60 sur­vivors, have tes­ti­fied at a “Tulsa Race Riot Commission” of the Oklahoma Legislature. And their pow­er­ful sto­ries have brought out the truth – after all these many years. People have stepped for­ward to iden­ti­fy three places in Tulsa where Black bod­ies were buried in mass graves. Excavations at one of the mass grave sites are sched­uled to begin this summer.

Historians gen­er­al­ly now esti­mate that at least 300 peo­ple died dur­ing this Massacre – over 90 per­cent of them Black. Some peo­ple sus­pect the num­ber was much high­er. In fact, the real num­ber of dead may nev­er be known.

*****

No force can undo the crimes of the Tulsa Massacre. But the strug­gle and deter­mi­na­tion of Black peo­ple has forced a pub­lic inves­ti­ga­tion of these events. Just demands are being made for a pub­lic account­ing and reparations.

At a time when offi­cial Amerikkka crude­ly denies the exis­tence of sys­tem­at­ic and insti­tu­tion­al racism – the real­i­ty of Black peo­ple’s lives and oppres­sion has been wrenched into the light of day.

This arti­cle is post­ed in English and Spanish on Revolutionary Worker Online
http://​rwor​.org
Write: Box 3486, Merchandise Mart, Chicago, IL 60654
Phone: 773−227−4066 Fax: 773−227−4497
(The RW Online does not cur­rent­ly com­mu­ni­cate via email.)

Most Mass Killers Are White Men.….

As a boy in school during the 70’s I absolutely fell in love with American R&B music, I thought it was the best sound I had ever heard. Today as a grown up I still play the Temptations, commodores , Dells , Stylistics, O‑Jays and the entire litany of acts which dominated that era .I also learned to love all kinds of music including classic reggae which has the Blues and Jazz sound to thank for it’s existence.

As a lit­tle boy I was con­stant­ly singing in my high falset­to which I copied from many of the acts like Eddie Kendrick and oth­ers like the Bee Gees..I always noticed that when­ev­er I sang even my fam­i­ly who loved me uncon­di­tion­al­ly either laughed or had a fun­ny look on their faces.
Not to be deterred I con­tin­ued singing until one day I decid­ed to record myself singing , I real­ly fan­cied myself a poten­tial rock star. After record­ing myself I decid­ed to lis­ten to my record­ing , I was about to show those fam­i­ly mem­bers that they had a real star singer in the family.
Then I heard the sound which was a cross between a cat whose tail got caught in a crack and the sound of a piece of met­al scrap­ing on con­crete. I real­ly want­ed to apol­o­gize to every­one whom I ever offend­ed with my singing.

Many years lat­er I was dri­ving up the Taconic Parkway with my wife we were lis­ten­ing to (you guessed it ) clas­sic R&B on the car radio. My wife is a ter­rif­ic singer who poten­tial­ly could have a suc­cess­ful career in the sec­u­lar music world if she so desired. Of course being the woman of God she is she does not see that as an option for her.
As we sang along I was embold­ened to sug­gest to her “hey babe we should sing togeth­er, I will sing back­up “. She being the sweet­heart she is said to me, “yes babe but can I tell you, you would have to sing way way back” .
We had a great time laugh­ing for the rest of our jour­ney, I could­n’t stop laugh­ing about the way she said it.

mcveighAs the mass shoot­ings across America seem to inten­si­fy I won­dered whether the peo­ple on the polit­i­cal right ever con­sid­ered record­ing them­selves and lis­ten­ing to the things they say?
Timothy Mc Veigh was a white Anglo-Saxon home grow ter­ror­ist he was American as they come. McVeigh and his accom­plice Terry Nichols det­o­nat­ed a truck bomb in front of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City on April 19, 1995.
According to his wikipedia page McVeigh McVeigh, a Persian Gulf War vet­er­an, sought revenge against the fed­er­al gov­ern­ment for its han­dling of the Waco siege, which end­ed in the deaths of 76 peo­ple exact­ly two years before the bomb­ing, as well as for the Ruby Ridge inci­dent in 1992. McVeigh hoped to inspire a revolt against what he con­sid­ered to be a tyran­ni­cal fed­er­al government.

Theodore_Kaczynski

Theodore JohnTedKaczynski the Una-bomber.. 

As a Harvard under­grad­u­ate, Kaczynski was among twen­ty-two stu­dents who were research sub­jects in eth­i­cal­ly ques­tion­able exper­i­ments con­duct­ed by psy­chol­o­gy pro­fes­sor Henry Murray from late 1959 to ear­ly 1962.[5][6][7] In 1971, he moved to a remote cab­in with­out elec­tric­i­ty or run­ning water, in Lincoln, Montana, where he lived as a recluse while learn­ing sur­vival skills in an attempt to become self-suf­fi­cient.[8] Seventeen years after begin­ning his mail bomb cam­paign, Kaczynski sent a let­ter to The New York Times on April 24, 1995 and promised “to desist from ter­ror­ism” if the Times or the Washington Post pub­lished his man­i­festo, Industrial Society and Its Future (the “Unabomber Manifesto”), in which he argued that his bomb­ings were extreme but nec­es­sary to attract atten­tion to the ero­sion of human free­dom neces­si­tat­ed by mod­ern tech­nolo­gies requir­ing large-scale organization.Wikipedia.

These two are just a cou­ple of the more recent white home grown ter­ror­ists which comes to mind when we con­sid­er ter­ror­ism in America , of course there has been a his­to­ry of local ter­ror­ism of all kinds in this coun­try includ­ing but not con­fined to those wrought on eth­nic minori­ties by oth­er groups as well as the United States Government.
It is per­haps too easy to for­get how many times this has happened.

THIS ACCORDING TO MOTHER JONES​.COM

The hor­rif­ic mas­sacre at a movie the­ater in Aurora, Colorado, in July 2012, anoth­er at a Sikh tem­ple in Wisconsin that August,anoth­er at a man­u­fac­tur­er in Minneapolis that September — and then the unthink­able night­mare at a Connecticut ele­men­tary school that December — were some of the lat­est in an epi­dem­ic of such gun vio­lence over the last three-plus decades. Since 1982, there have been at least 81 pub­lic mass shoot­ings across the coun­try, with the killings unfold­ing in 33 states from Massachusetts to Hawaii. Forty-four of these mass shoot­ings have occurred since 2006. Seven of them took place in 2012 alone, includ­ing Sandy Hook. A recent analy­sis of this data­base by researchers at Harvard University, fur­ther cor­rob­o­rat­ed by a recent FBI study, deter­mined that mass shoot­ings have been on the rise.
The per­pe­tra­tors: More than half of the cas­es involved school or work­place shoot­ings (12 and 20, respec­tive­ly); the oth­er 30 cas­es took place in loca­tions includ­ing shop­ping malls, restau­rants, and reli­gious and gov­ern­ment build­ings. Forty-four of the killers were white males. Only one was a woman. (See Goleta, Calif., in 2006.) The aver­age age of the killers was 35, though the youngest among them was a mere 11 years old. (See Jonesboro, Ark., in 1998.) A major­i­ty were men­tal­ly trou­bled—and many dis­played signs of men­tal health prob­lems before set­ting out to kill. Explore the map for fur­ther details — we do not con­sid­er it to be all-inclu­sive, but based on the cri­te­ria we used, we believe that we’ve pro­duced the most com­pre­hen­sive run­down avail­able on this par­tic­u­lar type of vio­lence. (Mass shoot­ings rep­re­sent only a sliv­er of America’s over­all gun vio­lence.) For the sto­ries of the 151 shoot­ing ram­page vic­tims of 2012, click here, and for our ground­break­ing inves­ti­ga­tion into the eco­nom­ic costs of the nation’s gun vio­lence, includ­ing mass shoot­ings. http://​www​.moth​er​jones​.com/​p​o​l​i​t​i​c​s​/​2​0​1​2​/​0​7​/​m​a​s​s​-​s​h​o​o​t​i​n​g​s​-​map.

Since the vast major­i­ty of shoot­ers are white Caucasian male who are con­ve­nient­ly labeled men­tal­ly ill when they go on their ter­ror spree, why is it that if a shoot­er hap­pen to have an Arabic sound­ing name the entire Religion of Islam is on trial?
This goes to the heart of what I intend­ed to con­vey with my lit­tle open­ing sto­ry. Does the polit­i­cal hawks on the right real­ize just how stu­pid they sound? Or do they even lis­ten to the igno­rant state­ments com­ing from their own mouths?

Dylan Roof
Dylan Roof

This mon­ster walked into the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston South Carolina where parish­ioners were engaged in Bible study he sum­mar­i­ly slaugh­tered nine and injured one .He was tak­en into cus­tody with­out receiv­ing a bruise on his per­son. We are told offi­cers stopped to get him ham­burg­ers after arrest­ing him . There is white priv­i­lege if ever there was any.

Major Nidal Hasan
Major Nidal Hasan

The num­ber of white mis­fits who sum­mar­i­ly plot and exe­cute ter­ror plots right here in the United States are too many to men­tion . On the con­trary there are a few instances where some­one with an Arabic sound­ing name like Nidal Hasan an American also com­mits acts of ter­ror. Hasan an American con­vict­ed of fatal­ly shoot­ing 13 peo­ple and injur­ing more than 30 oth­ers in the Fort Hood mass shoot­ing on November 5, 2009 was a United States Army Medical Corps psy­chi­a­trist who admit­ted to the shoot­ings at his court-mar­tial in August 2013.[3][4][5] A jury pan­el of 13 offi­cers con­vict­ed him of 13 counts of pre­med­i­tat­ed mur­der, 32 counts of attempt­ed mur­der, and unan­i­mous­ly rec­om­mend­ed he be dis­missed from the ser­vice andsen­tenced to death.

As the nation grap­ples with yet anoth­er mass shoot­ing , this time at a gay night­club in Florida the per­pe­tra­tor just hap­pen to have an Arab sound­ing name. Of course the nar­ra­tive rapid­ly defaults to Islam , and who should call Islam rad­i­cal and who is not doing so.
As the President said in his response to the Republican jack-ass of a pre­sump­tive Republican nom­i­nee ’ ”what dif­fer­ence it makes whether he calls it rad­i­cal Islam”? The fact is that the con­ver­sa­tion ought to be cen­tered around how to stem the spate of sense­less killings, instead it has become as always about begin­ning an unwinnable war with an entire reli­gion of over 2.8 bil­lion people.
Whether the ter­ror­ist act is com­mit­ted by some­one with an Arab sound­ing name or not the sit­u­a­tion is the same . America is made up of peo­ple from all over the world so of course there will be ter­ror sus­pects with Arab sound­ing names as there will be peo­ple of oth­er eth­nic­i­ty. The fact of the mat­ter is that in most cas­es where they have those eth­ic names they are not for­eign­ers at all but were born right here in America.

Republican presumptive nominee Donald Trump,
Republican pre­sump­tive nom­i­nee Donald Trump,

The prob­lem is when a polit­i­cal par­ty look­ing to replace the par­ty which con­trols the Executive branch of Government goes to the polls and elects as it’s pre­sump­tive nom­i­nee a car­ni­val bark­er and a total buf­foon. Out of a field of 17 can­di­dates this what they came up with ‚a racist xeno­phobe whose claim to fame is being a con artist. He has no idea about pol­i­cy and has no clue how his actions as com­man­der in chief of the world’s most pow­er­ful nation would impact the rest of the world.
This absolute igno­ra­mus could poten­tial­ly be elect­ed pres­i­dent while some nations are con­sid­er­ing ban­ning him from enter­ing their countries.
This is what the world faces, a con man with some mon­ey , brava­do , and a whole bunch of hatred for every­one else who is not white Anglo-Saxon.

Jamaica Got To Where It Is By Ignoring Facts And Embracing This.….

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Despite the crippling crime situation in Jamaica which is affecting every strata of the tiny society, how many of you have ever seen a contribution in any of the Nation’s silly little newspapers with a column from a Police Officer on the subject? I haven’t but some of you may have, so I stand to be corrected.…..

One of the things you who care about what I have to say on the sub­ject of crime may have read or heard me say is that crime is not being tack­led by peo­ple who know what to do about it.
I may take a lot of flack for say­ing this but who cares. There are signs every­where that crime is some­thing which politi­cians pay lip-ser­vice to but there is demon­stra­ble no will or intent to once and for all get seri­ous about it.
The appoint­ment of Robert Montague as Minister of National Security may prob­a­bly be seen in that very light.
Now for the hyper par­ti­sans who are unable to see the for­est for the trees , it has pre­cious lit­tle to do with Robert Montague’s abil­i­ty to get things done, but every­thing to do with know­ing what needs to be done craft­ing the nec­es­sary pol­i­cy and get­ting the sup­port for leg­is­la­tion which will ensure that that pol­i­cy become law. Even then it requires much more for it’s exe­cu­tion by the secu­ri­ty forces.

Having a nuclear sci­en­tist per­form trau­ma surgery is a recipe for dis­as­ter. Though supreme­ly edu­cat­ed, a nuclear sci­en­tists is not a trau­ma surgeon.
It fol­lows there­fore that in order to have the most effec­tive per­for­mance the per­son doing the admin­is­ter­ing should and must have some train­ing in the area he is being tasked with offer­ing administration.
The National secu­ri­ty port­fo­lio has being an unwant­ed step-child with­in the Jamaican polit­i­cal space for a long time. There has been rum­blings of sorts that some of the men who served as min­is­ters of nation­al secu­ri­ty have actu­al­ly seen the assign­ment as a kind of pun­ish­ment of sorts.
These men were cer­tain­ly not fools, irre­spec­tive of their polit­i­cal par­ty they knew there was no real plan of action to elim­i­nate crime with­in the con­text of the Island’s gar­ri­son cul­ture. Simply put they were being asked to take on a job in which they were guar­an­teed to fail.

Who wants that kind of a fail­ure on their resume’ ?
It has to be with­in that con­text that the pre­vi­ous min­is­ter of nation­al secu­ri­ty Peter Bunting called for divine inter­ven­tion a call the present Minister Robert Montague seem to endorse.
Over the years this port­fo­lio has been occu­pied by peo­ple of all dif­fer­ent dis­ci­pline except Security . Which begs the ques­tion why? I have my own opin­ions which will come as no sur­prise to anyone.
Logically speak­ing, it appears there were direct plans afoot to destroy the JCF when they placed retired mil­i­tary to head the police depart­ment. That worked out quite well for ruin­ing the morale of the police. Despite the abun­dance of qual­i­ty peo­ple who came up through the ranks of the JCF and exem­pli­fied them­selves when­ev­er they par­tic­i­pate in train­ing with offi­cers from oth­er coun­tries , even when they are held in high esteem across the region they are nev­er giv­en the respon­si­bil­i­ty to devel­op pol­i­cy as min­is­ter with secu­ri­ty responsibility.
This can­not be con­sumed with­in the con­text of pol­i­tics or even coin­ci­dence. The stark real­i­ty is that they do not want the per­spec­tive of law enforce­ment in draft­ing laws.
The INDECOM Act is a clas­sic exam­ple of an Ill-con­ceived reac­tionary bit of leg­is­la­tion that lacks bal­ance and as such is cost­ing count­less lives.
Unfortunately for the shrink­ing minor­i­ty of inno­cents on the Island the polit­i­cal class is beside them­selves with glee at this idi­ot­ic Law . Police shoot­ings have gone down.
What they will nev­er talk about when they talk about their ideas of suc­cess of that law is that more peo­ple are get­ting mur­dered while they crow about INDECOM.
Why ?
They take you for total fools.

Which brings me to my point.
The deni­a­bil­i­ty, ratio­nal­iz­ing and non­sen­si­cal brain-dead argu­ments we have heard about crime in Jamaica.
Of all of the argu­ments I have heard regard­ing crime on the Island this bunch of gib­ber­ish from the JAMAICA OBSERVER has got to take the cake.
Much of what we have heard over the years has large­ly been a bunch of hog­wash by wannabe secu­ri­ty experts who posi­tion them­selves as author­i­ty on secu­ri­ty even though they know noth­ing of which they speak.
Nevertheless none is more grotesque than the fol­low­ing bunch of horse manure which total­ly throws out proven estab­lished stan­dards while ask­ing us to con­sid­er a new mode of mea­sure­ment which defies all log­ic yet embraces a mirage which enforces a false sense of security.
The very foun­da­tion of this guys argu­ments are flawed , it does not war­rant a point by point de-con­struct save and except to dis­prove this bit of nonsense.
Quote : When you look at cities’ vio­lent crime rates per 100,000 peo­ple, the five cities with the high­est totals (New York City, Los Angeles, Chicago, Houston and Philadelphia) dis­ap­pear from the top of the list. They have the high­est crime rates, yet, con­sid­er­ing their pop­u­la­tions, have a low­er num­ber of vio­lent crime occur­rences than the cities with the high­est vio­lent crime rates (just because of the flawed use of rat­ing crime rates per 100,000 people).
New York City the world’s largest city has over 8 mil­lion cit­i­zens, not to men­tion those who are undoc­u­ment­ed. The city’s homi­cide rate stands at around 300 annually>
Jamaica a tiny pin-prick of a coun­try of 2.8 mil­lion which can fit twice into Connecticut one of the tini­est states in the United States, in 2005 record­ed over 1600 homi­cides alone.
Why would we even con­sid­er any­thing this guy has to say. It’s total­ly okay to make mis­takes, it is nev­er too late to make a fresh start. But when the nar­ra­tive is framed on Orwellian log­ic as the fol­low­ing is, there will sure­ly be extreme con­se­quences for that stupidity.
Surely what we need are char­tered accoun­tants inform­ing us on how we should not wor­ry about the mur­der sta­tis­tics but set­tle into a sense of “it’s not so bad”.

FROM THE JAMAICA OBSERVER

I will not, in any way what­so­ev­er, dis­count Jamaica’s crime prob­lem. However, it appears to me that many Jamaicans are mis­led by the usu­al­ly flawed crime rate reports pre­pared and pub­lished annu­al­ly by var­i­ous for­eign organisations.

For starters, because a report expressed “mur­der rates” based on per 100,000 cit­i­zens in a coun­try it does not mean that is a fair and accu­rate way to inform the world about all crimes com­mit­ted in a par­tic­u­lar coun­try and here is why: In the first place, any­one who under­stands the val­ue of fair and accu­rate quan­ti­ta­tive analy­sis will agree with me that when using a vari­able (such as the size of a country’s pop­u­la­tion) to express crime rate, coun­tries with small­er pop­u­la­tion will more like­ly than not be at a dis­ad­van­tage. Therefore, Third World coun­tries will more like­ly than not make the top 10 most dan­ger­ous coun­tries (seri­ous crimes com­mit­ted) than, say, the US with over 320 mil­lion peo­ple, or China and India with over 1 bil­lion peo­ple, respec­tive­ly. In fact, based on a recent FBI report on vio­lent crimes for every city in the US, when you look at cities’ vio­lent crime rates per 100,000 peo­ple, the five cities with the high­est totals (New York City, Los Angeles, Chicago, Houston and Philadelphia) dis­ap­pear from the top of the list. They have the high­est crime rates, yet, con­sid­er­ing their pop­u­la­tions, have a low­er num­ber of vio­lent crime occur­rences than the cities with the high­est vio­lent crime rates (just because of the flawed use of rat­ing crime rates per 100,000 people).

In my opin­ion, the fairest way to express the over­all crime rate of any coun­try is to use a standard/​fixed mea­sure (such as time). For exam­ple, if crime rates were expressed as crimes com­mit­ted per hour in a par­tic­u­lar coun­try, I think that would be a much fair­er way to express crime rates. Let us test this the­o­ry below:

In 2014, America had a vio­lent crime rate of 365.5 per 100,000 res­i­dents (a total of 1,158,635 vio­lent crimes — based on a pop­u­la­tion of 317 mil­lion peo­ple), and a mur­der rate of 4.5 per 100,000 res­i­dents (Source: FBI Report on Violent Crimes for Every City in the US). If we focused only on the mur­der rate for America, there were 14,265 mur­ders com­mit­ted in 2014 in America (based on 317 mil­lion res­i­dents). Given that there is 8,760 hours in a year, that means 1.628 mur­ders were com­mit­ted every hour in America in 2014. In 2014, Jamaica’s mur­der rate was 36 per 100,000 res­i­dents, or 1,005 mur­ders (Source: JIS, as report­ed by the Commissioner of Police). Again, if we focused only on the mur­der rate for Jamaica, and giv­en that there is 8,760 hours in a year, it means that 0.11473 (less than one) mur­der was com­mit­ted every hour in Jamaica in 2014. Therefore, based on a fair mea­sure (time), more mur­ders are com­mit­ted per hour in the US than Jamaica. I will fur­ther posit that if this fair mea­sure (time) was used to cal­cu­lat­ed the mur­der rates of the oth­er nine so-called most vio­lent coun­tries (Honduras, Venezuela, Belize, El Salvador, Guatemala, Swaziland, St Kitts and Nevis, South Africa & Colombia), the US would like­ly be the most vio­lent coun­try in the world (based on the most mur­ders com­mit­ted per hour). Trevor H Francis is a char­tered accoun­tant (JA) and cer­ti­fied pub­lic accoun­tant (US).
http://​www​.jamaicaob​serv​er​.com/​c​o​l​u​m​n​s​/​T​h​e​-​m​y​t​h​-​a​b​o​u​t​-​w​h​i​c​h​-​c​o​u​n​t​r​y​-​c​o​m​m​i​t​s​-​m​o​r​e​-​m​u​r​d​e​r​s​-​b​a​s​e​d​-​o​n​-​i​t​s​-​p​o​p​u​l​a​t​i​o​n​_​6​3​878http://​www​.jamaicaob​serv​er​.com/​c​o​l​u​m​n​s​/​T​h​e​-​m​y​t​h​-​a​b​o​u​t​-​w​h​i​c​h​-​c​o​u​n​t​r​y​-​c​o​m​m​i​t​s​-​m​o​r​e​-​m​u​r​d​e​r​s​-​b​a​s​e​d​-​o​n​-​i​t​s​-​p​o​p​u​l​a​t​i​o​n​_​6​3​878

Unfortunately Good People Are Dying Too.….

In 2011 a young man trav­el­ling in a taxi cab had his life snuffed out because the taxi-dri­ver and anoth­er motorist had a case of road-rage which went ter­ri­bly wrong.
According to reports at the time 17 years old school­boy Khajeel Mais an inno­cent vic­tim, rid­ing in the back of a cab to a fête at a high School, became the vic­tim of a ter­ri­ble case of road rage when the cab in which he was a pas­sen­ger alleged­ly ran into the back of a BMW-x6 sport util­i­ty vehicle.
Its is alleged that the dri­ver of the sport util­i­ty vehi­cle emerged from the vehi­cle fir­ing at the cab, the cab dri­ver it is report­ed turned his cab aroound and head­ed in the oppo­site direc­tion ‚with the x6 dri­ver still firing.

khajeel_mais_612x360c

I nev­er met young Khajeel Mais , nei­ther do I know his fam­i­ly . In the greater scheme of things his death was no dif­fer­ent than the hun­dreds , thou­sands even, of Jamaicans young and old who have their lives sum­mar­i­ly snuffed out.
I am not sure what it was about the killing of this young man which moved me so much that I need­ed to do some­thing about it. Out of that I decid­ed to cre­ate a blog to high­light the state of insan­i­ty in Jamaica as it relates to crime and violence.
I can just hear the naysay­ers now ” there is crime and vio­lence everywhere” .
True but I am talk­ing about Jamaica, you want to dis­cuss crime and vio­lence in the world and I am will­ing to talk about that too, just not now.

It is nev­er quite clear what trig­gers in us the desire to do some­thing when the issue we get aroused about have sim­i­lar occur­rences every­day with­out any­one even bat­ting an eye.
Many years ago while I was still serv­ing mem­ber of the force , I was asked by my sub-offi­cer in charge of crime Detective Sergeant Gerald Wallace to attend the Morgue at Maddens funer­al home and stand in on his behalf at a post Mortem Examination .
Wallace was the lead inves­ti­ga­tor in a knife mur­der of a young male on Red Hills Road . The deca­dent was stabbed in the neck right in the right angle where the kneck join the shoulder.
I did not know any of this at the time I told my sub-offi­cer I would have no prob­lem attend­ing the Post mortem , why should I it was some­thing I had done many times before?

Patrick Powell the alleged killer of Khajeel Mais...
Patrick Powell the alleged killer of Khajeel Mais…

I was one of those offi­cers who did not mind pitch­ing in when it involves murder.
I allud­ed to this fact in these blogs sev­er­al times before what I was taught while attend­ing basic crim­i­nal inves­ti­ga­tions course “no greater task can be giv­en any man than to bring the killer/​s of the inno­cent to jus­tice” . I did not mind tes­ti­fy­ing in court to put them away. Even though the laws and the courts refus­es to make an exam­ple out of killers.
As I matured as a police offi­cer on the Island I cer­tain­ly did not mind whether these mind­less killers were brought to jus­tice or whether based on their choic­es , jus­tice was brought to them.

This time was no dif­fer­ent except that on arriv­ing at the morgue I felt real­ly queazy. Anyone fami­lar with Maddens know you have to be the oppo­site of queazy to enter that place. But I had done it before , so why was I queazy?
I told the doc­tor I would be right back , ran to a lit­tle bar, by this time I was real­ly nau­seus. I swal­lowed down some white rum , no water, no ice and threw a cou­ple of icymint sweet­ies into my mouth and went back into the morgue.
The porter slit the corpse open and all hell broke loose.
Remember when I described where the deca­dent had been stabbed in the neck ? Well there was no out­ward bleed­ing all the blood stayed inside .
The porter opened him up, out spilled all the blood, out came my break­fast, and every bit of what­ev­er else was inside my stom­ach. That was my very last post-mortem.
To this day I have no idea what sep­a­rat­ed that one from all of the pre­vi­ous others.
That one was sim­ply the straw which broke the camel’s back. The killing of Khajeel Mias spurred me to do what I can to shine alight on whats going on in Jamaica.

I nev­er quite fig­ured out what made me vom­it, I nev­er fig­ured out what was dif­fer­ent about the killing of Khajeel Mais . What I do know is that I have writ­ten thou­sands of blogs, done tons of research and spo­ken to lots and lots of peo­ple sole­ly on the killings in my coun­try. I know it can be addressed , but sad­ly rather than tak­ing dras­tic steps to show crim­i­nals that their das­tard­ly deeds will not be tol­er­at­ed, the nation con­tin­ue to fool itself that all it has to do is be nicer to the killers.

Over the years I have heard an alpha­bet stew of sug­ges­tions from vil­lage lawyers , prog­nos­ti­ca­tors, and the mon­day-morn­ing quar­ter­backs about what to do about crime.
Nothing I have heard is worth squat as it relates to seri­ous­ly tack­ling the crime epi­dem­ic in our country.
I rue every day that I sit on my hands see­ing the spilt blood yet no one has the balls to say this stops now.

Community out­reach♦ Officers in schools ♦ Better com­mu­ni­ty rela­tions♦ More police oper­a­tions♦ Police offi­cers being more sweet and loving♦
This has been tried and proven to fail through­out the last forty years . How dumb can a nation be ? The def­i­n­i­tion of a fool is doing the same thing over and over again and expect­ing a dif­fer­ent result.
There has to be a rad­i­cal shift , it’s doable, but the Government must stop lis­ten­ing to the crim­i­nal lawyers and the host of leech­es and vul­tures who parade as human rights activists.

A heavy hand is exactly whats needed with really heavy handed laws....We are dealing with a new reality...
A heavy hand is exact­ly whats need­ed with real­ly heavy hand­ed laws.…We are deal­ing with a new reality…

To the peo­ple who say “Mike you are advo­cat­ing a heavy-hand­ed approach” !
To them I say Yaaaaaaaa !!!!
You real­ly get me !
You got­ta go after mur­der­ers with vengeance and fire, where the hell do you ever hear of beg­ging mass mur­der­ers to stop com­mit­ting crimes.
Jamaican crim­i­nals are some of the most vicious blood-thirsty killers any­where. They are not exact­ly dumb either.
They know they have the upper hand now and they are cap­i­tal­iz­ing on it.
Why ?
Because they know the peo­ple and their lead­ers are dumb ass­es who con­tin­ue to vac­il­late on what to do about their mur­der­ous escapades.

Sure people need jobs but not having a job is not a licence to murder and maim...
Sure peo­ple need jobs, but not hav­ing a job is not a licence to mur­der and maim…

During the late 1980’s we had noth­ing to fight crime , we had no com­put­ers, we had no bal­lis­tic vests, we had no social media , we had noth­ing yet mur­der hov­ered around 300 annu­al­ly. At that time we thought it was way too high.
To the shit-head bleed­ing hearts who talk about police tak­ing out crim­i­nals I seri­ous­ly want the killers to vis­it your damn doors.
There is a rea­son we had three hun­dred mur­ders dur­ing the late 80’s as against the over 1600 in 2005 .
Do the damn math, to you who say “we can­not just exter­mi­nate them” , “I say sit your ass down and wait for them to exter­mi­nate you. Unfortunately the killers who roam the streets seem to avoid the damn fools and get inno­cent people.

I read a post by one of my dear friends in a social medi­um just this morn­ing in which he mis­tak­en­ly said he does­n’t believe there are ser­i­al killers in Jamaica. I know my friend was not being thor­ough in his think­ing, as that state­ment was not the cen­tral theme of what he want­ed to con­vey, far from it.
Nevertheless he was wrong.
There are many young men walk­ing around who have killed over a dozen peo­ple. “Making dup­py is a badge of hon­or”. These creeps are ser­i­al killers and for these mur­der­ing ani­mals there is no reha­bil­i­ta­tion and there should be none.

There are oth­ers who are well dressed, they don’t stand on the street cor­ners crush­ing gan­ga in the mid­dle of their palms, pants hang­ing off their ass­es, Guinness stout in back-pock­et. But these are they who order hits(con­tract-killings) .They are no dif­fer­ent that they who pull the triggers.
Most poor inner-city youths have no means of bring­ing guns into the coun­ty by the boat-loads.
Lets stop with the bull-shit and the pussy-foot­ing .In 2010 they seri­ous­ly took on the state, but for the secu­ri­ty forces the coun­try would be Somalia today. Nevertheless the ungrate­ful crim­i­nal class ordered an inves­ti­ga­tion of the actions of the secu­ri­ty forces.
They brought in a colo­nial­ist for­eign­er to sit in judge­ment of our war­riors who risked their lives, even as some some paid the ulti­mate price to save our coun­try they sit in unright­eous judge­ment with dis­dain­ful elitism.

I will stop here by say­ing over five years after Khajeel Mais was killed, the accused is yet to be tried in the cor­rupt incom­pe­tent courts system.
When you talk about nuanced approach to crime, not that it ever worked any­where, be mind­ful that the courts do not work.
There is your answer.
Crime can only be reme­died if we make seri­ous laws and enforce them regard­less of the accused stand­ing in the society.
The Opposition par­ty has zero inter­est in assist­ing with solv­ing crime on the Island, the par­ty has way too many func­tionar­ies involved in seri­ous crim­i­nal con­duct. The oth­er par­ty also have peo­ple who are invest­ed in crime as well.
The crim­i­nal lawyers and the rights lob­by are hav­ing a field day while the bod­ies pile up local and for­eign now.
In the mean­time the politi­cians twid­dle their thumbs , smile and make announce­ments, all the time try­ing to con­vince every­one but them­selves that things are just fine.
Unfortunately some real­ly good peo­ple are dying as well .
Yes the rain does fall on the just and on the unjust.….….….….…..

Cincinnati Zoo’s Gorilla Exhibit Reopens

Cincinnati Zoo’s Gorilla Exhibit Reopens With New Protective Barrier

The Cincinnati Zoo reopened its Gorilla World exhib­it on Tuesday, more than a week after Harambe the goril­la was shot and killed to pro­tect a young boy who fell into the gorilla’s enclosure.

The exhib­it now fea­tures a new­ly con­struct­ed, taller bar­ri­er than the one the 3‑year-old boy was able to get through last month. The zoo built the new bar­ri­er to add anoth­er lay­er of pro­tec­tion to pre­vent the pub­lic from access­ing the goril­la habi­tat, which now also has new sur­veil­lance cameras.

The family including 3-year-old Isiah Gregg who was dragged around for 10 minutes by Harambe the Gorilla....
The fam­i­ly of 3‑year-old Isiah Gregg who was dragged around for 10 min­utes by Harambe the Gorilla.…

Our exhib­it goes above and beyond stan­dard safe­ty require­ments, but in light of what hap­pened, we have mod­i­fied the out­er pub­lic bar­ri­er to make entry even more dif­fi­cult,” Thane Maynard, direc­tor of the zoo, said in a statement.

The habitat’s reopen­ing comes a day after the Hamilton County Prosecutor’s Office announced it would not pur­sue charges against the young boy’s moth­er.

How The Pervasive Socialist Thinking Of The Upper St Andrew Crowd Damaged Our Country For Good.…

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Many of you who fol­low my blogs are prob­a­bly of the view that I have a unhealthy fix­a­tion with what I refer to as the above cross Roads crowd and the oth­er group from what the late Wilmott (Mutty) Perkins called the intel­lec­tu­al ghetto.
Let me be clear I have no quar­rel with any par­tic­u­lar insti­tu­tion of high­er learn­ing, I believe as President Barack Obama does that edu­ca­tion is the best tick­et out of poverty.
With that said, we also rec­og­nize just how dan­ger­ous one polit­i­cal ide­ol­o­gy can be to a coun­try when the high­est insti­tu­tions of intel­lec­tu­al thought is heav­i­ly invest­ed in ide­o­log­i­cal indoc­tri­na­tion of those who seek education.

Jamaica has suf­fered immense­ly because of the very nature of the ide­ol­o­gy which emanat­ed out of the University of the West Indies in the 70’s ad 80’s to present day . Indisputably the crim­i­nal jus­tice sys­tem has tak­en a tremen­dous beat­ing because of the insane­ly lib­er­al slant the politi­cians who came out of that Institution has foist­ed on the impres­sion­able devel­op­ing Island.
The judi­cia­ry and indeed the pri­vate bar from which many on the bench are farmed are large­ly and whol­ly shaped by the teach­ings and inter­pre­ta­tions of the law impart­ed to them at the Norman Manley Law School.

That polit­i­cal ide­ol­o­gy which nour­ished and nur­tured crime, foment­ed hatred for the rule of law , and wrecked the Island’s econ­o­my was vis­i­ble to me as a young man and was part of the rea­son I decid­ed to find a way to reach my goals elsewhere.
The gath­er­ing storm of eco­nom­ic decay , pover­ty and crime which should have been obvi­ous to every­one was ignored as Jamaicans inex­orably allowed them­selves to reck­less­ly indulge in the fal­la­cy of left­ist ide­ol­o­gy which began in the 70’s trans­form­ing the once bur­geon­ing econ­o­my into a depen­dent basket-case.

Ironically, as part of the post mortem fol­low­ing the lat­est loss some mem­bers of the oppo­si­tion par­ty have spo­ken quite can­did­ly about what the par­ty has been to the coun­try. Some have spo­ken truth­ful­ly that the par­ty’s hier­ar­chy used the Jamaican peo­ple to enrich them­selves. To get and keep polit­i­cal pow­er. Some argued the par­ty strayed from it’s social­ist roots.
Those who believe the par­ty has strayed too far from it’s roots con­tin­ue to be like blind and deaf mon­keys ‚hear no evil see no evil. All across the globe the decay­ing citadels of communism/​socialism has come crash­ing down with even the ini­tial archi­tects of Marxism/​Leninism eschew­ing that ide­ol­o­gy and latch­ing onto the freight train which is a free mar­ket sys­tem of government.
Those who blame the loss on the notion the par­ty strayed too far from it’s social­ist roots are stuck in a time-warp of clenched fists “com­rade asso­ciates ” and stu­pid­ly out­dat­ed berets.
For those the needs and aspi­ra­tions of a younger gen­er­a­tion who yearn to do for them­selves through entre­pre­neur­ship, sci­ence , tech­nol­o­gy and code-writ­ing is com­plete­ly lost.

For those dinosaurs the lure, appeal, impres­sion and pos­si­bil­i­ties of the inter­net and social media are as dis­tant as night and day.
For them the unmit­i­gat­ed free-spir­it of a younger gen­er­a­tion want­i­ng to do for them­selves rather than sub­ject them­selves to the con­fin­ing lim­its of gov­ern­ment largess is indiscernible.

The com­ments of for­mer jus­tice min­is­ter Mark Golding did not escape me as he sought to jus­ti­fy his street creds, beef up his bona-fides to rep­re­sent the moth­er of all PNP gar­risons Arnett Gardens . A com­mu­ni­ty in which each elec­tion cycle the num­ber of elec­tors who vote for the PNP alone, far exceed the num­ber of peo­ple liv­ing with­ing that enclave.
A com­mu­ni­ty which has oper­at­ed as a fief­dom sep­a­rate from the Jamaican state.
This is the com­mu­ni­ty which the Oxford edu­cat­ed uptown son of priv­i­lege want to rep­re­sent as he jock­ey to edge out Colin Campbell the epit­o­me of Garrison politics.
This is the very type of com­mu­ni­ty Golding’s edu­ca­tion and expo­sure should cause him to be revolt­ed by. The type of com­mu­ni­ty in which the state’s pow­er is sup­plant­ed by par­ty and under­world Don rule . A com­mu­ni­ty in which the forces of law and order comes from un-elect­ed, un-appoint­ed crim­i­nal under­world fig­ures who exact their own brand of jus­tice. This is the sys­tem the for­mer jus­tice min­is­ter is jock­ey­ing to head. 

Mark Golding
Mark Golding

Golding asked of him­self in rela­tion to a media question.

Can I han­dle the ‘Donman’ thing?”
“It’s impor­tant that the con­stituen­cy be run for the ben­e­fit of all con­stituents and all parts of the con­stituen­cy must feel that they have effec­tive rep­re­sen­ta­tion, and the sys­tem by which patron­age is dis­pensed through one or two indi­vid­u­als who con­trol a par­tic­u­lar com­mu­ni­ty is not one which I think is demo­c­ra­t­ic or which empow­ers peo­ple. It’s one that the peo­ple of South St Andrew want to move away from,”.

I am a for­tu­nate per­son. I was born to fam­i­ly that was rel­a­tive­ly well off in the con­text of Jamaica,”
“I have ben­e­fit­ed from excel­lent edu­ca­tion and all of that. In terms of my expe­ri­ence grow­ing up, I grew up on cam­pus (University of the West Indies, Mona) in the 1970s. My neigh­bours were peo­ple like (Professor of Economics) George Beckford and oth­er so-called rad­i­cals of the era. I was friends with their chil­dren — we are still friends, we have a cam­pus kids fra­ter­ni­ty or group that we stay in touch — and pro­gres­sive ideas I was exposed to through­out my upbring­ing,”.

Yes of course, a Campus which also had Trevor Monroe and his Worker’s Party of Jamaica and a slew of oth­er mis­guid­ed rad­i­cal ide­o­logues who had grandiose thoughts of rev­o­lu­tion influ­enc­ing our nations direc­tion. Look how well that turned out.[sic]
As I have con­sis­tent­ly said, our coun­try missed a tremen­dous oppor­tu­ni­ty to be great when we rolled over with­out fight­ing and allowed left­ist ide­ol­o­gy by half baked idiots to per­me­ate our civic and polit­i­cal dis­course with­out fight­ing back.
Today lit­er­al­ly every coun­try which adopt­ed that regres­sive way of think­ing has suf­fered extra­or­di­nary eco­nom­ic and cul­tur­al decay the lat­est being Venezuela.
Unfortunately those who are the most respon­si­ble for that social engi­neer­ing still wax nos­tal­gic in the pun­gent stench of it’s abject failures.
The likes of Mark Golding and oth­ers who were born with gold­en spoons in their mouths have con­tributed to those fail­ures yet today they still line up to have anoth­er go at polit­i­cal trough, only this time there is a lit­tle less of the ide­o­log­i­cal bull-shit, just more of the same ald style gar­ri­son politics
That should not be allowed any longer , the Jamaican peo­ple should wake up and tell them where to go.

The Hypocrisy Of The Harambe Objectors…

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The recent uproar over the killing of Harambe the Gorilla arguably before it killed a 4‑year-old boy expos­es the sick hypocrisy of the objectors.
Cincinnati Ohio Zoo offi­cials were forced to shoot the pri­mate after a 4‑year-old boy slipped away from his moth­er and fell into a moat which formed part of the Gorilla’s habitat.
Media report­ing on the inci­dent said the child’s moth­er was con­tend­ing with oth­er chil­dren when the lit­tle boy went through par­ti­tions and even­tu­al­ly fell into the moat where he was snatched and dragged around vio­lent­ly by the endan­gered Gorilla for almost 10 min­utes before author­i­ties were forced to take the nec­es­sary actions to save the young child’s life.

The child was report­ed­ly tak­en to area hos­pi­tal where he was treat­ed , his injuries were not con­sid­ered life threatening.
Since the inci­dent occurred hun­dreds of thou­sands of peo­ple have tak­en to social media to demand that the police take action over the death of the primate.
The ques­tion I have regard­ing the out­cry sur­round­ing the killing of the ani­mal is this , which person(term used loose­ly) among those who are com­plain­ing would not have want­ed offi­cials to shoot the ani­mal to save their child?

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What is the rea­son for the out­cry at the killing of the ani­mal when there were no alle­ga­tion of tar­di­ness or neg­li­gence by the mother?
When was the life of an ani­mal com­pa­ra­ble to that of a human being?
Was the author­i­ties sup­posed to allow the ani­mal to kill the lit­tle black boy because the child was a lit­tle black boy?
Or would things be dif­fer­ent if the child was a lit­tle blue-eyed , blond-haired Aryan?
The argu­ments about crim­i­nal­iz­ing the child’s moth­er has no basis in any reports of care­less­ness or neg­li­gence, so it has to be that the ones com­plain­ing believe the life of the child was not worth that of the gorilla.
What is the real basis for the ven­omous rage com­ing from the sanc­ti­mo­nious hyp­o­crit­i­cal lynch-mob .

A white woman who told the media she was stand­ing beside the moth­er of the lit­tle boy before he slipped away, said the lit­tle boy was the typ­i­cal lit­tle boy demand­ing he want­ed to do this and do that and the mom was very much a typ­i­cal mom say­ing ‘no you wont”. So what is the noise about ?
Many species of ani­mals prob­a­bly includ­ing the Gorilla in ques­tion are on the verge of extinc­tion because of the very same white peo­ple who took it upon them­selves to sum­mar­i­ly kill God’s crea­tures with reck­less aban­don and will­ful excess as if the earth and all in it is theirs to exploit as they see fit.
Where is their out­rage when killer-cops exe­cute human children?
Where are these vile crea­tures when the blood of inno­cent humans are being spilled using guns they refuse to keep out of the hands of deranged monsters ?

They are silent, and they are so because they have built for them­selves a false sense of moral­i­ty, a fraud­u­lent sense of right and wrong which has no basis in reality.
A val­ue sys­tem which is found­ed on a twist­ed inter­pre­ta­tion of moral­i­ty gen­e­sised in mur­der rape and geno­cide and a belief that some­how they have a right to this world which super­seded that of all others.

harambe

Nothing sums up the this faux indig­na­tion than the com­ment of a sin­gle “imbe­cile” respond­ing to one medi­um’s report­ing on the inci­dent, he said quote. “Just anoth­er father­less Black kid look­ing for his dad­dy”.
All across the Globe whites have dec­i­mat­ed the earth­’s nat­ur­al resources, to include human life with fright­en­ing cru­el­ty and aston­ish­ing brutality .
With brutish bar­barism they have ren­dered count­less species extinct dai­ly and in many cas­es for no good rea­son but because they can.

Where do they get the right to deter­mine when anoth­er ani­mal is killed, period?
Much less in a sit­u­a­tion where it is absolute­ly nec­es­sary to save human life?
These imbe­ciles have shown them­selves to be less than human, less than the Gorilla even.
Insofar as their evo­lu­tion is con­cerned the goril­la was far supe­ri­or to them.

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When We Can No Longer Trust The Referees It’s Time To Pick Up The Ball And Go Home…

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For years this lone voice has been shouting in the wilderness about the Jamaican judiciary and the pass that branch of government has gotten. The judiciary has literally escaped unscathed as it relates to the negative perceptions of corruption in government agencies. But does the judiciary pass the smell test, or is it just better at masking the smell of the filth.

There is pre­cious lit­tle if any ques­tion about my per­son­al dis­dain for the way Government con­ducts busi­ness in Jamaica . But it must also be under­stood that my dis­dain tran­scend the tra­di­tion­al two war­ring polit­i­cal par­ties which has done irrepara­ble harm to our beau­ti­ful island but extends to agen­cies like the judi­cia­ry which pre­tend to do the right thing but is equal­ly as cul­pa­ble for the morass in which our coun­try finds itself as any­one else.

Since 1983 I have watched the work of the judi­cia­ry with keen inter­est both as a police offi­cer view­ing from inside the court­rooms and with­out as an aver­age observ­er who fol­lows the through the courts own decisions.
I saw some of the most con­sum­mate pro­fes­sion­als, yet I also wit­nessed some of the most arro­gant abuse of pow­er and one-sided appli­ca­tion of jus­tice which can only be char­ac­ter­ized as injus­tice in those very courtrooms.
The pref­er­en­tial treat­ment and def­er­ence giv­en to cer­tain mem­bers of the pri­vate bar in many instances feeds the nar­ra­tive that if one has name recog­ni­tion, mon­ey and con­nec­tions no one can touch you in Jamaica.

The judi­cia­ry is sup­posed to be the ref­er­ee between cor­rupt gov­er­nance and the peo­ple ‚using the pow­er of law . When the lines are so blurred that they are no longer dis­cernible there are no rules any­more. Chaos become the order of the day when we can no longer trust the ref­er­ee. It may be time to pick up our ball and go home.
No longer can we look at the courts and pre­tend that the ran­cid stain of cor­rup­tion which has cor­rod­ed the nation total­ly eclipsed the courts to cor­rupt all else.
We have seen the way a sin­gle Resident Magistrate made a mock­ery of the entire crim­i­nal jus­tice sys­tem in order to pro­tect a sin­gle politi­cian from fac­ing justice .
We have wit­nessed the way cer­tain lawyers can have the most dan­ger­ous killers grant­ed bail over and over and over again regard­less of the num­ber of times they kill and are arrested.
We have wit­nessed the slap on the wrist giv­en to many whom they could not help but with a slap, because of the strength of the evidence.
We have wit­nessed the near impos­si­bil­i­ty of get­ting a case to move for­ward depend­ing on the sta­tus of the defendant.
Cases drag on for years on pro­ce­dur­al non­sense while they blame oth­ers for the back­log . This gives cre­dence for the less than noble of intent to demand we sim­ply throw out all the cas­es over five years old and sim­ply for­get the dead vic­tims . Forget their griev­ing fam­i­lies. Forget the police and the work they put into bring­ing the charges . Simply allow the mur­der­ers to walk free to kill again .
Those are they who would head min­istries of Justice .……If only the word jus­tice could choke them leav­ing them gasp­ing for breadth for dar­ing to use a word which their very exis­tence is anti­thet­i­cal to .

(TRAFIGURA)

Director of Public Prosecutions Paula Llewellyn said her office will now write to Dutch authorities outlining the decision of the Appeal Court and await their instructions.
Director of Public Prosecutions Paula Llewellyn said her office will now write to Dutch author­i­ties out­lin­ing the deci­sion of the Appeal Court and await their instructions.

Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) Paula Llewellyn says author­i­ties in The Netherlands have made their obser­va­tions about the Trafigura case and may have already drawn their own conclusions.

Llewellyn was speak­ing in an inter­view with The Gleaner/​Power 106 News Centrefol­low­ing a deci­sion by the Court of Appeal yes­ter­day to dis­miss an appli­ca­tion she filed to strike out an appeal by lawyers for People’s National Party (PNP) President Portia Simpson Miller and oth­er PNP func­tionar­ies. The rejec­tion of the appeal means a fur­ther delay in the Trafigura hear­ing to ques­tion Simpson Miller and oth­ers about a $31 mil­lion dona­tion to the PNP by Dutch firm Trafigura Beheer.

The case has been adjourned since November 2011 when the PNP lawyers obtained a court order that placed the pro­ceed­ings on hold until the hear­ing of an appeal ass to whether the mat­ter should hap­pen in open court. Llewellyn said her office will now write to Dutch author­i­ties out­lin­ing the deci­sion of the Appeal Court and await their instruc­tions. The DPP is the des­ig­nat­ed Central Authority under the Mutual Assistance Treaty that is act­ing on behalf of Dutch author­i­ties. Dutch author­i­ties want to ques­tion Simpson Miller, PNP chair­man Robert Pickersgill, the Party’s Region Three chair­man Phillip Paulwell, for­mer PNP gen­er­al sec­re­tary Colin Campbell and busi­ness­man Norton Hinds under oath about the $31 mil­lion dona­tion while Trafigura Beheer had a con­tract with the government.
http://​jamaica​glean​er​.com/​a​r​t​i​c​l​e​/​n​e​w​s​/​2​0​1​6​0​6​0​4​/​n​e​t​h​e​r​l​a​n​d​s​-​m​a​y​-​h​a​v​e​-​a​l​r​e​a​d​y​-​d​r​a​w​n​-​c​o​n​c​l​u​s​i​o​n​s​-​t​r​a​f​i​g​u​r​a​-​c​a​s​e​-​dpp

President of the Court of Appeal, Justice Cecil Dennis Morrison left ....
President of the Court of Appeal, Justice Cecil Dennis Morrison left .…

The Director of Public Prosecution laments the Dutch may have already formed their opin­ion , I have no idea what those opin­ions are , nei­ther do I know what her per­son­al feel­ings are but what I do believe is this.
The Mutual Assistance Treaty which exists between the Dutch Authorities and Jamaica is not worth the paper it is writ­ten on. Surely Dutch Authorities must smell the putrid stench of the cesspool which is the Island’s jus­tice sys­tem. A sys­tem ren­dered impo­tent by those who triple-dip as legislators,officers of the courts and as defense attorneys.
On that the Jamaican judi­cia­ry has sac­ri­ficed dig­ni­ty and hon­or on the altar of polit­i­cal expe­di­en­cy and for that we all should hang our heads in shame.

K D Knight heads PNP legal team......
K D Knight heads PNP legal team.…..

Dutch offi­cials act­ing through the ODPP under the Mutual Legal Assistance Treaty want to ques­tion Simpson Miller; Party chair­man Robert Pickergill; PNP Region Three chair­man Phillip Paulwell; and par­ty mem­ber Norton Hinds about a $31 mil­lion dona­tion to the PNP while the par­ty was in gov­ern­ment with an oil-lift­ing con­tract with the Dutch firm. In the mean­time, all pro­ceed­ings have been stayed. This means the mat­ter of the ques­tion­ing of the PNP offi­cials will not pro­ceed when it’s called up in court next week.(jamaicagleaner.com).

So there you have it.……

The Greatest Ever Muhammad Ali Dies.

He was fast of fist and foot — lip, too — a heavy­weight cham­pi­on who promised to shock the world and did. He float­ed. He stung. Mostly, he thrilled, even after the punch­es had tak­en their toll and his voice bare­ly rose above a whis­per. He was “The Greatest.” Muhammad Ali died Friday, accord­ing to a state­ment from his fam­i­ly. He was 74. “We lost a leg­end, a hero and a great man,” Floyd Mayweather told ESPN. Ali had been hos­pi­tal­ized in the Phoenix area this week with res­pi­ra­to­ry issues, and his chil­dren had flown in from around the coun­try. One of them, Rasheda Ali, took to Twitter ear­ly Saturday morn­ing to mourn her father.

Rashida Ali. The Greatest Man that ever lived. Daddy my best friend & my Hero You R no longer suffering & now in a better place..
Rashida Ali.
The Greatest Man that ever lived. Daddy my best friend & my Hero You R no longer suf­fer­ing & now in a bet­ter place..

The Paradise Valley Police Department told ABC News that an emer­gency med­ical ser­vices call was made from Ali’s address in the Phoenix area on Tuesday, and the Phoenix Fire Department con­firmed that it respond­ed at that time to a call for mutu­al aid for a 74-year-old male with res­pi­ra­to­ry issues.

Retired from box­ing since 1981, Ali had bat­tled Parkinson’s dis­ease for decades. He had been hos­pi­tal­ized a few oth­er times in recent years, includ­ing in ear­ly 2015 because of a severe uri­nary tract infec­tion ini­tial­ly diag­nosed as pneumonia.

Ali had looked increas­ing­ly frail in pub­lic appear­ances, the last com­ing April 9, when he wore sun­glass­es and was hunched over at the annu­al Celebrity Fight Night din­ner in Phoenix, which rais­es funds for treat­ment of Parkinson’s.
http://​espn​.go​.com/​b​o​x​i​n​g​/​s​t​o​r​y​/​_​/​i​d​/​1​5​9​3​9​9​3​3​/​m​u​h​a​m​m​a​d​-​a​l​i​-​d​i​e​s​-74

Marching For Peace Is A Good Thing If There Is War , The Problem Is Crime Not War.

Though receptive to any positive approach which has the potential to bring some semblance of security back to Jamaica, I still worry that certain approaches are avoidance mechanisms which can only have a net negligible effect.

According to the Jamaica Information Service a peace march through the com­mu­ni­ties of Salt Spring and Norwood in the Parish of Saint James attract­ed a sig­nif­i­cant crowd of sup­port­ers .Organizers which includ­ed the Police,the Religious min­is­ters fra­ter­nal the Peace man­age­ment Unit and oth­ers believe their efforts are being reward­ed by the size of the crowds par­tic­i­pat­ing in the marches.

Deputy Superintendent of Police Sharon Beeput of the St James Police Division said the mas­sive sup­port giv­en to the peace march­es is an indi­ca­tion that the res­i­dents have grown tired of crime and vio­lence and are now speak­ing out. She point­ed out that a joined-up approach to fight­ing crime and vio­lence has been adopt­ed, with the Jamaica Constabulary Force and the Jamaica Defence Force lead­ing the process. “The police and sol­diers are in the com­mu­ni­ties car­ry­ing out their duties dai­ly. We also have per­sons from the Community Safety and Security Department who are also in the com­mu­ni­ty and they intend to stay,” DSP Beeput said. She not­ed that they work along with per­sons from the Citizen Security and Justice Programme, the PMI, and the Community Development Committee.

Art some­times have the uncan­ny abil­i­ty of imi­tat­ing life on oth­er occa­sions life return the flattery.

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I recall the Jamaican film Third world cop , a film chock-full of local tal­ent which had as it’s lead Paul Campbell who was depict­ed as the erst­while loose can­non cop “Capone”.
Capone was no loose can­non , nei­ther had his brand of polic­ing become out­dat­ed, it was exact­ly what was need­ed to push back against the vis­cous crim­i­nals who had migrat­ed to the coun­try. Naturally always mak­ing the wrong deci­sions the police hier­ar­chy did not see it that way.
Capone’s seniors cer­tain­ly thought that though his results were unques­tioned his meth­ods were not sat­is­fac­to­ri­ly palatable.
Capone a no-non­sense Portland cop com­mit­ted the car­di­nal sin of killing a cop killer who came to kill him.
In the film anoth­er cop was kid­napped and used to direct the cop killer to Capone. Being the ladies man Capone was caught in a rather com­pro­mis­ing posi­tion with a lady friend.
The intend­ed killer told Capone “yu b***l cllat yu a yu mi cum fa”.!
Capone a street savvy cop was not going to roll over, he would have to go out fight­ing. No way would he capit­u­late to a com­mon punk who want­ed to take him out. Capone grad­u­al­ly eased his hand under the pil­low and clasped his depend­able 9mm Browning semi auto­mat­ic pis­tol, all the time telling the talk­a­tive cap­tive police ” sidung Floyd , sidung Floyd” so he could get a clear shot at his intend­ed killer.
Floyd hav­ing no clue about tactics,having no cop-sense con­tin­ued to blab­ber his mouth about how sor­ry he was to lead the killer to Capone..
Wanting to show his bru­tal­i­ty and desire to kill, the assailant stead­fast­ly put a bul­let in Floyd’s head stat­ing “yu b***d c***t yu, yu nu hea fi siddung”.
Knowing there would nev­er be anoth­er oppor­tu­ni­ty to act ‚Capone took the shot neu­tral­iz­ing his would-be killer.

Campbell in his role as Capone..
Campbell in his role as Capone..

The irony inher­ent in that sec­tion of the movie is that Capone was told by his com­mand­ing offi­cer a female super­in­ten­dent that he was bet­ter suit­ed for Kingston,his brand of polic­ing was no longer needed.
Capone was trans­ferred to Kingston where he con­tin­ued to do police work as the streets demand­ed , the crim­i­nal under­world feared and respect­ed him.
His brand of polic­ing had not seen the end of it’s time , his ass-kiss­ing lap dog boss­es act­ing on the dic­tates of their pre­ten­tious pup­peteers thought it’s time had come.
It’s rather telling that when one watch­es these films , be it third World Cop, shot­tas, the hard­er they come or any oth­er clas­sic, the writ­ers ade­quate­ly depict the streets and what is need­ed to fight back against hard­ened crim­i­nals yet the com­mu­ni­ty at large, polit­i­cal intel­lec­tu­al, reli­gious, and even police are unable to grasp what script writ­ers so eas­i­ly under­stand and so deft­ly portray..

Deputy Superintendent of Police Sharon Beeput
Deputy Superintendent of Police Sharon Beeput

I’m unsure whether what is hap­pen­ing in these com­mu­ni­ties are open war­fare between var­i­ous fac­tions and if so. Why ? Or whether what is hap­pen­ing is ram­pant crim­i­nal­i­ty which is some­thing total­ly dif­fer­ent than war­ring factions.
If the real life female super­in­ten­den­t’s word is to be believed quote: ” The mas­sive sup­port giv­en to the peace march­es is an indi­ca­tion that the res­i­dents have grown tired of crime and vio­lence and are now speak­ing out “.
Then it’s high time that the police step in using what­ev­er means they have at their dis­pos­al to bring the cit­i­zens over to their side. Educating them on ways they may safe­ly report sus­pi­cious or crim­i­nal activ­i­ties in con­fi­dence with­out fear the infor­ma­tion will be passed on to crim­i­nals there­by plac­ing them at risk.
A mis­di­ag­no­sis of the prob­lem elic­it an improp­er response which will not cure the situation.
I am inclined to believe the lat­ter is the case, for the most part the days of war­ring fac­tions in parts of Spanish Town Kingston and St Andrew and oth­er areas are large­ly things of the past.
I fear that rather than con­front the crime Monster author­i­ties are putting a band aid on a sore as well as mis­di­ag­nos­ing the con­di­tion in which case the rem­e­dy being applied will have no pos­i­tive effect.
Marching for peace is a good thing if there is war , the prob­lem is crime not war it seem to me.

Important Historical Facts…

When you con­tem­plate whether the civ­il war was fought because Lincoln want­ed to free the slaves, as against whether he made the Emancipation Declaration as a means of win­ning the war?
You decide.
In July 1862, Lincoln decid­ed on a major change in the nation­al strat­e­gy. Instead of defer­ring to the bor­der states and Northern Democrats, he would acti­vate the Northern anti­slav­ery major­i­ty that had elect­ed him and mobi­lize the poten­tial of black man­pow­er by issu­ing a procla­ma­tion of free­dom for slaves in rebel­lious states — the Emancipation Proclamation. “Decisive and extreme mea­sures must be adopt­ed,” Lincoln told mem­bers of his cab­i­net, accord­ing to Secretary of the Navy Gideon Welles. Emancipation was “a mil­i­tary neces­si­ty, absolute­ly nec­es­sary to the preser­va­tion of the Union. We must free the slaves or be our­selves subdued.”
Read more here: http://​www​.smith​so​ni​an​mag​.com/​h​i​s​t​o​r​y​/​l​i​n​c​o​l​n​-​a​s​-​c​o​m​m​a​n​d​e​r​-​i​n​-​c​h​i​e​f​-​1​3​1​3​2​2​8​19/

Lincoln Thought free­ing the slaves an extreme mea­sure, a move only nec­es­sary for the preser­va­tion of the Union.
“We must free the slaves or be our­selves subdued.”
Necessity not a conviction.