No Old Tun-back Rasta Peter Phillips,name Brand Cops Were Not Violent:tireless, Fearless, Selfless, Yes.…

Peter Phillips the recent­ly installed leader of the Opposition in Jamaica real­ly has noth­ing going for him so he decid­ed he will sim­ply oppose any and every­thing that the Government does or says.
Now, to be fair to the People’s National Party no one could rea­son­ably accuse them of being any­thing close to a law and order party.
In fact, under their longest serv­ing and the Island’s most destruc­tive Prime Minister Percival James Patterson, the mantra was “anyt­ing a anyt­ing”, a clas­sic wink and nod to crim­i­nals to run-wid-it, do what they wanted.

Peter Phillips oppo­si­tion leader

So it came as no sur­prise that the old tun back ras­ta Peter Phillips would be opposed to the idea of rein­ing in INDECOM.
Now, grant­ed that Prime Minister Andrew Holness does not have clean hands, or more like clean con­science in this, he at least has a dis­grun­tled Police Force on his hands, angry about the lack of progress with wage negotiations.
With over 500 cops walk­ing away each year and the JCF unable to reach recruit­ment tar­gets Holness has no choice but to kiss some asses.
So he arrived at his come to Jesus moment at the National Arena a few days ago telling sup­port­ers that the police are afraid to do their jobs because of an overzeal­ous INDECOM.
No shit !!!

It fol­lows that Peter Phillips with no plan of his own or any inten­tion of hav­ing a plan for crime, except to watch it esca­late would oppose what Holness said. It made good pol­i­tics for the brain-dead cool-aid drinkers who blind­ly fol­low Phillips cult par­ty but is his posi­tion sound policy?
Peter Phillips went on to argue that since he was a boy he heard about name brand cops and that their claim to fame was because they were violent.

No Peter, you troll, the name brand cops of whom you speak were in fact not vio­lent at all con­trary to pop­u­lar perceptions.
Ask around about Keith Trinity Gardiner, Dick Hibbert, the dear­ly depart­ed Tony Hewitt, (Cornwall Bigga Ford one of yours) and a long list of oth­ers and peo­ple will tell you they were effec­tive because they were fear­less, self­less and tire­less, some­thing you would not know about as a politi­cian you are the oppo­site, sim­ply cow­ard­ly, lazy and selfish.
Ask them how many times they have been shot and shot at, rest in peace Anthony Hewitt?
Your fee­ble attempt at rewrit­ing his­to­ry shows you for the rapa­cious grace­less punk that you are, just anoth­er greasy despi­ca­ble pow­er hun­gry troll.

Which brings me to why the PNP would have you as their leader when you already betrayed the par­ty and indeed our coun­try to for­eign powers.
Come on Peter Phillips do you think we have forgotten?
Remember those MOU’s you signed?
The high­ly clas­si­fied MOUs, which involve Jamaica, the United States (US), and the United Kingdom (UK), were signed by Phillips in 2004.
Though Phillips argued that he had author­i­ty to sign the MOU’s Deputy Director of Public Prosecutions Jeremy Taylor at the time under cross-exam­i­na­tion, tes­ti­fied that the MOUs involved the mil­i­tary and should have had the sig­na­ture of the then min­is­ter of defense, P.J. Patterson, and not Phillips.

Have PNP sup­port­ers for­got­ten this lit­tle incident?
You see Mister Phillips you can­not be trust­ed and every­one knows this, so let’s be clear, you have zero cred­i­bil­i­ty on National Security or on crime for that matter.
You sold the coun­try down the riv­er before, so no one is sur­prised that you would take a raw polit­i­cal stance on a mat­ter this impor­tant again.

This Is A Constitutional Crisis

Trump’s move to displace the legitimate head of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau assaults consumers — and violates the rule of law.

Jordan Peele Says Tiger Woods Is ‘In The Sunken Place’

By Angela Helm

My ques­tion is – has Tiger Woods ever not been in the sunken place?

This is the man who was so non-black iden­ti­fied that he made up his own race (includ­ing giv­ing Caucasian and American Indian equal foot­ing to black and Asian with an African-American father from Kansas and a moth­er from Thailand.) Then he turned out to be just nasty with his pro­lif­ic dick slang­ing in his now-defunct mar­riage to a nan­ny. And now, the 41-year-old who has a mug shot float­ing around with a face and hair­line that makes him look like a baby boomer is going to play golf with Donald Trump, the pres­i­dent who loves to malign black athletes.

This Thanksgiving After Dinner There Will Be No Football For Me…

I haven’t watched a sin­gle pre-sea­son or reg­u­lar sea­son NFL game this year and trust me I love football.
Nevertheless, I made the deci­sion not to ever turn anoth­er Television set on to anoth­er NFL game for one reason.
The league black­list­ing of Colin Kaepernick.

Kaepernick

Whenever I say I will nev­er watch anoth­er NFL game, my white asso­ciates, nod in agree­ment obvi­ous­ly believ­ing that I am mad that a few NFL play­ers led by Kaepernick dared to kneel for what they believe.
I nev­er missed a chance to quick­ly explain to them that I haven’t stopped watch­ing because I believe that kneel­ing dur­ing the National anthem is a sign of dis­re­spect to the flag or worse is some kind of con­vo­lut­ed dis­re­gard for the Military.
They gen­er­al­ly nod “oh I see” and that’s the end of that.
A sil­ly lit­tle restau­rant in La Grange Ville has a sign dis­played [No foot­ball games here] obvi­ous­ly a way of say­ing they stand with the Military.
I have nev­er been there to spend a pen­ny and will nev­er ever set foot in there. You see it’s only in cas­es like these that you get to see the true char­ac­ter of people.
Unfortunately, African-Americans large­ly have no con­cept of the strength they wield through the pow­er of their wal­lets and pocketbooks.

President George W. Bush award­ed Ali the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2005.

The fact of the mat­ter is that there is absolute­ly no con­nec­tion between the Military, the National Anthem, and foot­ball, out­side the spon­sor­ship the NFL receives from the Defense Department.
There’s nei­ther a con­sti­tu­tion­al or moral require­ment to stand for the nation­al anthem, it is sim­ply some­thing peo­ple do out of love of country.
Nevertheless, there are sev­er­al ways to love coun­try out­side get­ting liquored up at a foot­ball game wrapped in the flag and pre­tend­ing that the mil­i­tary is next to God.
We can begin by lov­ing and car­ing for our fel­low man regard­less of who they are, what col­or they have or what their sex­u­al ori­en­ta­tion is.
We can begin by shed­ding hatred and the awful igno­rance which caus­es the igno­ble char­ac­ter flaw called racism with­in us.

Rosa Parks

Many who wrap them­selves in the flag and pre­tend to have a monop­oly on patri­o­tism would nev­er sign up to serve their coun­try. Others in high offices found myr­i­ad excus­es to avoid fight­ing for the very coun­try they now claim to love.
So lets cut to the chase Colin Kaepernick is no vil­lain for kneel­ing nei­ther was Rosa Parks a vil­lain on December 1, 1955, in Montgomery, Alabama when she was arrest­ed for refus­ing to give up her seat to a white man.

Muhhamed Ali was no vil­lain when he refused Army induc­tion on Apr 28, 1967. and nei­ther were Tommy Smith and John Carlos’ when they made the black pow­er salute at the 1968 Olympics in Mexico City.
The unde­ni­able truth of the mat­ter is that more than a half a cen­tu­ry after Jim Crow, Segregation, the march on Washington, sep­a­rate but equal and the assas­si­na­tion of Dr. Martin Luther King there is a stub­born per­cent­age of white America which igno­rant­ly believes that blacks should be rel­e­gat­ed to the back of the Bus.

They fun­da­men­tal­ly believe in social order but cares noth­ing about jus­tice for the downtrodden.
These are they who decry bro­ken win­dows and civ­il dis­obe­di­ence but does not bat an eye at the bla­tan­cy and the vicious­ness of state sanc­tioned oppres­sion of mar­gin­al­ized com­mu­ni­ties of color.
This kind of bla­tant oppres­sion and racial supe­ri­or­i­ty is now giv­en new life when out of the high­est office comes the call to black­list and pun­ish cit­i­zens who dare to stand up or in this case kneel to bring atten­tion to sys­temic racial oppression.

Writing for (the Nation​.com) Dave Zirin said :
This NFL sea­son has blazed new polit­i­cal trails as play­ers have used their plat­form to stand up to racism in the face of a fero­cious back­lash. It has tru­ly been a sea­son of firsts. But there is anoth­er “first” on the imme­di­ate hori­zon that speaks to the league’s bald­ly reac­tionary his­to­ry in regards to race.

The NFL — for all their cor­po­rate rhetoric about being some­thing that “brings the coun­try togeth­er” — of course, has a team named after a Native American racial slur in the nation’s cap­i­tal. That’s not news. What is news is that on Thanksgiving, for the first time in league his­to­ry, this team in Washington will be play­ing host. That means as we fin­ish our food, slip into sweat­pants, and to gath­er around the tele­vi­sion to watch NFL foot­ball, a tra­di­tion only slight­ly less ubiq­ui­tous than pump­kin pie, the R*dskins slur— a name that exists only because of geno­cide and dis­place­ment—will have cen­ter stage.

For many in the Black Community at all lev­els of the spec­trum none of this mat­ters, they will con­tin­ue watch­ing the games and hoot­ing and hol­ler­ing because after all , miss­ing the game is not an option.
For a cou­ple hours of enter­tain­ment, they are quite will­ing to con­tin­ue to sup­port the per­pet­u­a­tion of a sys­tem which will con­tin­ue to enslave their chil­dren and grand­chil­dren in perpetuity.

After all, in the African-American com­mu­ni­ty, noth­ing [trumps] enter­tain­ment, not even the future of gen­er­a­tions to come.

Robert Mugabe In Detention After Military Takes Control Of Zimbabwe

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Liberian-American Candidate Becomes First Black Mayor In Montana History

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A for­mer refugee who came to Montana more than 20 years ago was elect­ed to lead its cap­i­tal city, Helena, becom­ing the first black per­son to become may­or in the state’s history.

Wilmot Collins oust­ed four-term Jim Smith in Tuesday night’s may­oral race, cap­ping off a night of his­toric firsts through­out the country.

After last night’s his­toric firsts for many lead­ers across the coun­try, Wilmot is con­fi­dent that the future of this coun­try favors a union of peo­ple from all dif­fer­ent walks of life,” a cam­paign spokesper­son told the Daily News in a statement.

Most impor­tant­ly, Wilmot is hon­ored to be grant­ed the oppor­tu­ni­ty to go to work for the hard­work­ing and inspir­ing cit­i­zens of Helena!”

The spokesper­son con­firmed he’ll be the first black can­di­date in Montana’s his­to­ry to win a may­oral election.

Collins came to the U.S. 23 years ago, flee­ing civ­il war in his native Liberia. He went on to become an American cit­i­zen and worked in the state’s Department of Health and Human Services, spe­cial­iz­ing in child protection.

But he wasn’t the lone new­ly elect­ed offi­cial to make his­to­ry Tuesday night.

Ravinder Bhalla

Voters in Hoboken select­ed Ravinder Bhalla as the city’s first Sikh may­or, beat­ing out five oppo­nents to lead the New Jersey city.

First open­ly trans­gen­der African American woman elected

His vic­to­ry Tuesday night end­ed a cam­paign marred in the last few days by racist fly­ers that accused the cur­rent coun­cil­man of being a terrorist.

We’ve been through a bruis­ing campaign…but now is the time we come togeth­er and see who we can work with to bring this city for­ward,” the Garden State native said Tuesday night.

MANDATORY CREDIT; WASHINGTON TIMES OUT; NEW YORK TIMES OUT; THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER OUT; USA TODAY OUT; NO LICENSING EXCEPT BY AP COOPERATIVE MEMBERS

Danica Roem became the first openly transgender woman to win a seat in Virginia’s legislature.

(JAHI CHIKWENDIU/​AP)

Danica Roem

Danica Roem became the first open trans­gen­der per­son to win a seat in Virginia’s House of Delegates.

The for­mer reporter defeat­ed 13-term incum­bent Del. Bob Marshall.

Democrat Ralph Northam elect­ed gov­er­nor of Virginia

She faced a tough run as Marshall’s cam­paign attacked her gen­der iden­ti­ty along the trail.

MANDATORY CREDIT; ST. PAUL PIONEER PRESS OUT; KARE11/TENGA AND NBC AFFILIATES OUT; WCCO AND CBS AFFILIATES OUT; KMSP AND FOX AFFILIATES OUT; KSTP AND ABC AFFILIATES OUT; TPT AND PBS AFFILIATES OUT

Andrea Jenkins is the first transgender black woman to win an election in the U.S.

(CARLOS GONZALEZ/​AP)

Andrea Jenkins

Andrea Jenkins also made his­to­ry, becom­ing the first black trans­gen­der woman elect­ed in the United States.

She won a seat on the Minneapolis City Council, col­lect­ing 73% of the Eighth Ward’s votes.

As an African American trans-iden­ti­fied woman, I know first­hand the feel­ing of being mar­gin­al­ized, left out, thrown under the bus,” she report­ed­ly said Tuesday night. “Those days are over. We don’t just want a seat at the table, we want to set the table.”

Mayor de Blasio defeats Malliotakis to earn sec­ond term

Durkan is the first woman to become mayor in Seattle in more than 90 years.

Durkan is the first woman to become mayor in Seattle in more than 90 years.

(ELAINE THOMPSON/​AP)

Jenny Durkan

Seattle on Tuesday elect­ed a woman as may­or for the first time since the 1920s — and just the sec­ond in the Coffee City’s history.

That was a giv­en, how­ev­er, since her oppo­nent was also a woman. But she also made his­to­ry as Seattle’s first open­ly les­bian mayor.

Twenty-one can­di­dates ini­tial­ly ran for may­or ear­li­er this year fol­low­ing the res­ig­na­tion of embat­tled Mayor Ed Murray. Read more @ http://www.nydailynews.com/news/politics/liberian-american-candidate-black-mayor-montana-article‑1.3619163

Dan Rather On Trump: “It’s Never Been This Bad”

The journalism legend is fed up with Donald Trump and says the office of the presidency has zero nobility left

We’re bet­ter than this,” jour­nal­ist Dan Rather told Salon’s Andrew O’Hehir on “Salon Talks,” refer­ring to President Donald Trump and the deep divi­sions in American pol­i­tics today.

The leg­endary inves­tiga­tive jour­nal­ist and anchor has inter­viewed every pres­i­dent since Eisenhower and cov­ered near­ly every major polit­i­cal event in recent U.S. his­to­ry: Watergate, President John F. Kennedy’s assas­si­na­tion, 911, the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, the jail­ing of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. The list goes on.

Rather occu­pied the anchor chair at “CBS Evening News” for 24 years. Now 86, he is the author of the new book “What Unites Us: Reflections on Patriotism,” which is out this week.

What’s miss­ing from the pres­i­den­cy today is “nobil­i­ty,” Rather said. “Our great pres­i­dents, the best pres­i­dents,” he added, “Washington, Lincoln, Teddy Rosevelt, right on through, had a cer­tain noble approach to the office, which we have zero of that now.”

Rather, who calls him­self an “opti­mist by nature,” remains hope­ful that America will get through these dark times. “While we’re in an extreme­ly dif­fi­cult peri­od now, a per­ilous time for the coun­try,” he said. “We need to remind our­selves, we’ve come through a lot worse before.”

But, Rather cau­tioned, change won’t hap­pen mag­i­cal­ly. Read more @ : https://​www​.salon​.com/​2​0​1​7​/​1​1​/​0​8​/​d​a​n​-​r​a​t​h​e​r​-​o​n​-​t​r​u​m​p​-​i​t​s​-​n​e​v​e​r​-​b​e​e​n​-​t​h​i​s​-​b​ad/

Two Take-aways From The Elections Yesterday

TWO CRUCIAL ISSUES IN THE BY ELECTIONS HELD YESTERDAY IN JAMAICA

Dunn the JLP’s candidate

Issue #1

The elec­tion of Dr. Norman Dunn a son of south-east Saint Mary sends a strong mes­sage to those in the lead­er­ship of both polit­i­cal par­ties who would para­chute can­di­dates into con­stituen­cies and force them onto vot­er that this prac­tice will not be tolerated.
Bringing in can­di­dates and ask­ing peo­ple to vote for them is not democ­ra­cy, allow­ing cit­i­zens to chose their own rep­re­sen­ta­tives is the begin­ning of the demo­c­ra­t­ic process.

Channelling the 1970’s George Nooks song “my father born ya” a pejo­ra­tive pop­u­lar­ized against Edward Seaga by the PNP, it should be stan­dard pro­to­col cod­i­fied in law, that only Jamaicans who live in Jamaica for a pre­scribed peri­od of time may be elect­ed to the Parliament.

The JLP though offend­ed by the 1970’s dis­par­age­ment of Edward Seaga, [a true son of Jamaica in every sense except by birth]by the Manley cam­paign , made the very same mis­take neces­si­tat­ing a by-elec­tion in 2009 for can­di­dates Vaz, Mair, Stern and Robinson.
It’s time now for the Legislature to act deci­sive­ly to fix this loop-hole in the laws so that there are no ambi­gu­i­ties as to who qual­i­fies to sit in the nation’s parliament.

Dr. Shane Alexis

Dunn’s roots in the Parish will not make him a good rep­re­sen­ta­tive of the peo­ple, that rests with Dunn and Dunn alone.
The man­date giv­en him as a son of the soil is a sol­id repu­di­a­tion of Dr. Shane Alexis, a Canadian cit­i­zen who has a Grenadian pass­port but could­n’t both­er get­ting a Jamaican Passport.
It should be remem­bered that this imbroglio may have cost the PNP that seat, as that seat has been a depend­able PNP seat for a long time.
Moving from a one-seat major­i­ty 32 – 31 to 33 – 30 gives the gov­ern­ing JLP the nec­es­sary breath­ing room it need­ed to push its agenda.
That breath­ing room, how­ev­er, should be used to imme­di­ate­ly put the ped­al to the met­al in erad­i­cat­ing vio­lent crime.
The JLP sim­ply can­not expect to con­tin­ue to talk about what crime used to be under the PNP, they took over the reins of gov­ern­ment in March of 2016.

Issue #2

Mark Golding

The oth­er chal­lenge to our demo­c­ra­t­ic process is the fact that there were elec­tions process­es in three con­stituen­cies but essen­tial­ly there was only a sin­gle elec­tion which had any credibility.
By-elec­tions held in the St. Andrew Southwestern seat made vacant by the for­mer par­ty leader Portia Simpson Miller and the Southern St. Andrew seat vacat­ed by Omar Davies due to retire­ment were the two seats also being com­pet­ed for as well.

Angela Brown-Burke

The ele­va­tion of Mark Golding and Angella Brown Burke to these seats should give nei­ther of these two indi­vid­u­als any sense of accom­plish­ment in these heav­i­ly gar­risoned constituencies.
Regardless of what they have to say they ought to be ever mind­ful that they are line-bene­fac­tors of two con­stituen­cies which were stacked with PNP sup­port­ers years ago at the expense of oth­er voters.
Those who occu­py these be they JLP or PNP ought to take no pride in rep­re­sent­ing those con­stituen­cies, the peo­ple who live in com­mu­ni­ties which are zones of polit­i­cal exclu­sions are worse for where they live.
Garrison com­mu­ni­ties are usu­al­ly more impov­er­ished and under­served than oth­er constituencies.

It was refresh­ing to hear Prime Minister Andrew Holness pro­claim in 2014,“Zones of polit­i­cal exclu­sion are incom­pat­i­ble with free­dom and aspects of our pol­i­tics are an affront to lib­er­ty.” “It is time to end gar­ri­son pol­i­tics now”. 
Since then not much has hap­pened toward the process of dis­man­tling the gar­risons, the time is now for those com­mu­ni­ties to be opened up so that the lives of all Jamaicans can be better.

Failing to do so leaves large swaths of the Jamaican peo­ple slaves of the polit­i­cal par­ties. Failing to do so erodes our democ­ra­cy and make the result of elec­tions an exer­cise in pro­vid­ing answers we already have.
It dimin­ish­es our coun­try and our insti­tu­tions and ulti­mate­ly ren­ders us all slaves to the very insti­tu­tions we cre­at­ed and the peo­ple we ele­vate to serve us.
 

After The Campaigning “Dunn”

On Monday, October 30th vot­ers in the St.Mary South East Constituency will go to the polls to chose a mem­ber of Parliament to rep­re­sent them in the House of Representatives.
The seat became vacant after the sit­ting People’s National Party Member of Parliament Dr. Winston Green passed away. Green had won the seat against the Jamaica Labor Party chal­lenger Dr.Norman Dunn by a mere five(5) votes on the last go around.
This elec­tion has much sig­nif­i­cance for both polit­i­cal par­ties. At issue is a sig­nif­i­cant fact that the Governing JLP would like a bit of breath­ing room over and above the one seat it has in the 63 seat Legislature.
At present, the JLP has 32 seats to the PNP’s 31, win­ning the St Mary South East seat would be a tremen­dous boost to the Andrew Holness led JLP which would be up 33 seats to the PNP’s 30.

Norman Dunn the JLP’s candidate

Conversely, was the PNP to retain that seat the par­ty would retain the sta­tus quo and retain a sit­u­a­tion which keeps Andrew Holness and the JLP look­ing over their shoulders.
Retaining the seat would mean that vot­ers want the PNP to be strong and vig­i­lant in Opposition. Winning that seat would indi­cate a will­ing­ness on the part of at least the peo­ple in that con­stituen­cy to give Holness some lever­age to advance his agenda.

In the 26 years since I left Jamaica not much has changed for the better.
Politics is con­duct­ed the very same way, parochial­ly, and appeal­ing to the most base instincts of the poor­est of our people.
Patching roads by the light of trucks at the last moment, hand­ing out box lunch­es and red stripe beer ‚de-bush­ing exer­cis­es, due to the upcom­ing elec­tions is an insult to the intel­li­gence of the peo­ple, yet those prac­tices form part of the real­i­ty of elec­tion­eer­ing Jamaica style.

Dr. Shane Alexis of the PNP

Positively, it is wor­thy of note that polit­i­cal killings are a thing of the past although mur­der has gone up overall.
The trav­el­ing motor­cades and rev­el­ry asso­ci­at­ed with the cam­paigns lend a bit of nos­tal­gia, a feel­ing rem­i­nis­cent of a sim­pler space in time.
Yet despite the pas­sage of time, it appears that not much has changed since the first nation­al elec­tions were held on the Island.

PM Holness walks bar feet with supporters.

Patronage, Poverty, and Puffery seem to dom­i­nate, despite the pas­sage of time. In the end, the Jamaican peo­ple are still where Jamaica start­ed in 1962 when the nation was first giv­en its independence.
Bad roads, no roads, no lights, no potable water, yet ever the polit­i­cal junkies’ peo­ple flock to cam­paign events hang­ing from the sides and steps of vehi­cles, endan­ger­ing their lives for a few moments of an adren­a­line rush.

On Tuesday they go back to their lives as they were before, gone will be the long line of cam­paign vehi­cles, bod­ies hang­ing off with total oblivion.
Gone will be the horns and loud music one man will be the win­ner, the oth­er the los­er, what will be left is the hor­rid defac­ing imagery of orange and green paint splashed crude­ly on build­ings and walls and even trees to make their point.
Stacks of stick­ers, flags, and cam­paign posters will remain, the only reminder of the cam­paign past.

Phillips a dinosaur of pol­i­tics must take some of the blame for the state of affairs not just in that con­stituen­cy but Island-wide.

The images of our nation’s chief exec­u­tive and the can­di­date walk­ing bare feet across streams is not an endear­ing image as I believe they were intend­ed, rather they rep­re­sent the lack of atten­tion which has been placed on the peo­ple’s busi­ness since 1962.
In fair­ness to the Prime Minister, this can­not be laid at his or Dunn’s bare feet.[no pun intended]
What kind of real pro­tec­tion are those bare feet offi­cers able to give to the Prime Minister con­sid­er­ing the weapons in the hands of ordi­nary crim­i­nals and their brazen­ness today?
There need to be change rem­i­nis­cent of where we are in time, none of this is it and the Jamaican peo­ple are worse off for it.

Government Finally Grows A Pair By Not Attending IACHR Kangaroo Conference

I applaud the Jamaican Government for not send­ing rep­re­sen­ta­tives to a con­fer­ence con­vened in Uraguay by the Inter American Conference on Human Rights.
According to local report­ing, the Government of Prime Minister Andrew Holness object­ed to the con­fer­ence because of it’s des­ig­nat­ed heading.

Reports of Extrajudicial Executions and Excessive Use of Preventive Detention against Afro-descen­dants in Jamaica”.

The Jamaican Government has object­ed claim­ing that the term afro-descen­dants sug­gests that these per­sons are being tar­get­ed by the police while more than 90 per­cent of Jamaicans are Afro-descendants.

The Jamaican Government also con­tends that it has no rep­re­sen­ta­tives in Uruguay where the con­fer­ence is convened.
Though this writer total­ly agrees with the posi­tion of the gov­ern­ment I do not agree with the stat­ed rea­sons it has cit­ed for not attending.

President of the com­mis­sion, Francisco Eguiguren, through an inter­preter, said he did not under­stand the refusal of Government rep­re­sen­ta­tives to attend, he argued it would have been more help­ful if the Jamaican gov­ern­ment had attend­ed to clar­i­fy its posi­tion:[jamaica​glean​er​.com]

The chair­per­son speak­ing through an inter­preter lament­ed that the Jamaican Government did not show up to the talk fest to hear the state­ments made against it and there they could have basi­cal­ly debunked the charges if it did not agree with them.

In essence what he wants is what they have always done, con­vene con­fer­ences across the globe to accuse poor devel­op­ing states of human rights abus­es in their fight against dan­ger­ous criminals.
They love to hear them­selves talk yet they nev­er have the courage to chal­lenge the large indus­tri­al pow­ers for their sys­temic racism and geno­cide against indige­nous peo­ple of color.

Jamaica is awash in crime and it’s secu­ri­ty forces are strug­gling to cope, the last thing this admin­is­tra­tion needs is to give rel­e­vance to the per­cep­tion that police offi­cers are engag­ing in extra-judi­cial killings.
There are more than enough good that the IACHR can do in the world and so they must tar­get where they can be thor­ough­ly and real­is­ti­cal­ly effective.

On that basis, I salute the Jamaican Government for not wast­ing a pen­ny of tax-pay­ers mon­ey to attend this Kangaroo con­fer­ence. They are cheap talk fests that demor­al­ize local law enforce­ment and embold­ens criminals.
I wish the Jamaican Government had the cajones to tell them to go to hell and stay there with their fraud­u­lent conference.
The Jamaican peo­ple have no more tol­er­ance for these for­eign­ers telling us how to run our affairs.

Full Text From Arizona Senator Jeff Flake That He Will Not Seek Re-election

FULL TEXT OF SPEECH GIVEN ON THE SENTAE FLOOR BY ARIZONA SENATOR JEFF FLAKE

Mr. President, I rise today to address a mat­ter that has been much on my mind, at a moment when it seems that our democ­ra­cy is more defined by our dis­cord and our dys­func­tion than it is by our val­ues and our prin­ci­ples. Let me begin by not­ing a some­what obvi­ous point that these offices that we hold are not ours to hold indef­i­nite­ly. We are not here sim­ply to mark time. Sustained incum­ben­cy is cer­tain­ly not the point of seek­ing office. And there are times when we must risk our careers in favor of our principles.

Now is such a time.
It must also be said that I rise today with no small mea­sure of regret. Regret, because of the state of our dis­union, regret because of the dis­re­pair and destruc­tive­ness of our pol­i­tics, regret because of the inde­cen­cy of our dis­course, regret because of the coarse­ness of our lead­er­ship, regret for the com­pro­mise of our moral author­i­ty, and by our — all of our — com­plic­i­ty in this alarm­ing and dan­ger­ous state of affairs. It is time for our com­plic­i­ty and our accom­mo­da­tion of the unac­cept­able to end.
In this cen­tu­ry, a new phrase has entered the lan­guage to describe the accom­mo­da­tion of a new and unde­sir­able order — that phrase being “the new nor­mal.” But we must nev­er adjust to the present coarse­ness of our nation­al dia­logue — with the tone set at the top.
We must nev­er regard as “nor­mal” the reg­u­lar and casu­al under­min­ing of our demo­c­ra­t­ic norms and ideals. We must nev­er meek­ly accept the dai­ly sun­der­ing of our coun­try — the per­son­al attacks, the threats against prin­ci­ples, free­doms, and insti­tu­tions, the fla­grant dis­re­gard for truth or decen­cy, the reck­less provo­ca­tions, most often for the pet­ti­est and most per­son­al rea­sons, rea­sons hav­ing noth­ing what­so­ev­er to do with the for­tunes of the peo­ple that we have all been elect­ed to serve.
None of these appalling fea­tures of our cur­rent pol­i­tics should ever be regard­ed as nor­mal. We must nev­er allow our­selves to lapse into think­ing that this is just the way things are now. If we sim­ply become inured to this con­di­tion, think­ing that this is just pol­i­tics as usu­al, then heav­en help us. Without fear of the con­se­quences, and with­out con­sid­er­a­tion of the rules of what is polit­i­cal­ly safe or palat­able, we must stop pre­tend­ing that the degra­da­tion of our pol­i­tics and the con­duct of some in our exec­u­tive branch are nor­mal. They are not normal.
Reckless, out­ra­geous, and undig­ni­fied behav­ior has become excused and coun­te­nanced as “telling it like it is,” when it is actu­al­ly just reck­less, out­ra­geous, and undignified.
And when such behav­ior emanates from the top of our gov­ern­ment, it is some­thing else: It is dan­ger­ous to a democ­ra­cy. Such behav­ior does not project strength — because our strength comes from our val­ues. It instead projects a cor­rup­tion of the spir­it, and weakness.
It is often said that chil­dren are watch­ing. Well, they are. And what are we going to do about that? When the next gen­er­a­tion asks us, Why did­n’t you do some­thing? Why did­n’t you speak up? — what are we going to say?
Mr. President, I rise today to say: Enough. We must ded­i­cate our­selves to mak­ing sure that the anom­alous nev­er becomes nor­mal. With respect and humil­i­ty, I must say that we have fooled our­selves for long enough that a piv­ot to gov­ern­ing is right around the cor­ner, a return to civil­i­ty and sta­bil­i­ty right behind it. We know bet­ter than that. By now, we all know bet­ter than that.
Here, today, I stand to say that we would bet­ter serve the coun­try and bet­ter ful­fill our oblig­a­tions under the con­sti­tu­tion by adher­ing to our Article 1 “old nor­mal” — Mr. Madison’s doc­trine of the sep­a­ra­tion of pow­ers. This genius inno­va­tion which affirms Madison’s sta­tus as a true vision­ary and for which Madison argued in Federalist 51 — held that the equal branch­es of our gov­ern­ment would bal­ance and coun­ter­act each oth­er when nec­es­sary. “Ambition coun­ter­acts ambi­tion,” he wrote.
But what hap­pens if ambi­tion fails to coun­ter­act ambi­tion? What hap­pens if sta­bil­i­ty fails to assert itself in the face of chaos and insta­bil­i­ty? If decen­cy fails to call out inde­cen­cy? Were the shoe on the oth­er foot, would we Republicans meek­ly accept such behav­ior on dis­play from dom­i­nant Democrats? Of course not, and we would be wrong if we did.
When we remain silent and fail to act when we know that that silence and inac­tion is the wrong thing to do — because of polit­i­cal con­sid­er­a­tions, because we might make ene­mies, because we might alien­ate the base, because we might pro­voke a pri­ma­ry chal­lenge, because ad infini­tum, ad nau­se­um — when we suc­cumb to those con­sid­er­a­tions in spite of what should be greater con­sid­er­a­tions and imper­a­tives in defense of the insti­tu­tions of our lib­er­ty, then we dis­hon­or our prin­ci­ples and for­sake our oblig­a­tions. Those things are far more impor­tant than politics.
Now, I am aware that more polit­i­cal­ly savvy peo­ple than I cau­tion against such talk. I am aware that a seg­ment of my par­ty believes that any­thing short of com­plete and unques­tion­ing loy­al­ty to a pres­i­dent who belongs to my par­ty is unac­cept­able and suspect.
If I have been crit­i­cal, it not because I rel­ish crit­i­ciz­ing the behav­ior of the pres­i­dent of the United States. If I have been crit­i­cal, it is because I believe that it is my oblig­a­tion to do so, as a mat­ter of duty and con­science. The notion that one should stay silent as the norms and val­ues that keep America strong are under­mined and as the alliances and agree­ments that ensure the sta­bil­i­ty of the entire world are rou­tine­ly threat­ened by the lev­el of thought that goes into 140 char­ac­ters — the notion that one should say and do noth­ing in the face of such mer­cu­r­ial behav­ior is ahis­toric and, I believe, pro­found­ly misguided.
A Republican pres­i­dent named Roosevelt had this to say about the pres­i­dent and a cit­i­zen’s rela­tion­ship to the office:
“The President is mere­ly the most impor­tant among a large num­ber of pub­lic ser­vants. He should be sup­port­ed or opposed exact­ly to the degree which is war­rant­ed by his good con­duct or bad con­duct, his effi­cien­cy or inef­fi­cien­cy in ren­der­ing loy­al, able, and dis­in­ter­est­ed ser­vice to the nation as a whole. Therefore, it is absolute­ly nec­es­sary that there should be full lib­er­ty to tell the truth about his acts, and this means that it is exact­ly as nec­es­sary to blame him when he does wrong as to praise him when he does right. Any oth­er atti­tude in an American cit­i­zen is both base and servile.” President Roosevelt con­tin­ued. “To announce that there must be no crit­i­cism of the President, or that we are to stand by the President, right or wrong, is not only unpa­tri­ot­ic and servile, but is moral­ly trea­son­able to the American public.”
Acting on con­science and prin­ci­ple is the man­ner in which we express our moral selves, and as such, loy­al­ty to con­science and prin­ci­ple should super­sede loy­al­ty to any man or par­ty. We can all be for­giv­en for fail­ing in that mea­sure from time to time. I cer­tain­ly put myself at the top of the list of those who fall short in that regard. I am holi­er-than-none. But too often, we rush not to sal­vage prin­ci­ple but to for­give and excuse our fail­ures so that we might accom­mo­date them and go right on fail­ing — until the accom­mo­da­tion itself becomes our principle.
In that way and over time, we can jus­ti­fy almost any behav­ior and sac­ri­fice almost any prin­ci­ple. I’m afraid that is where we now find ourselves.
When a leader cor­rect­ly iden­ti­fies real hurt and inse­cu­ri­ty in our coun­try and instead of address­ing it goes look­ing for some­body to blame, there is per­haps noth­ing more dev­as­tat­ing to a plu­ral­is­tic soci­ety. Leadership knows that most often a good place to start in assign­ing blame is to first look some­what clos­er to home. Leadership knows where the buck stops. Humility helps. Character counts. Leadership does not know­ing­ly encour­age or feed ugly and debased appetites in us.
Leadership lives by the American creed: E Pluribus Unum. From many, one. American lead­er­ship looks to the world, and just as Lincoln did, sees the fam­i­ly of man. Humanity is not a zero-sum game. When we have been at our most pros­per­ous, we have also been at our most prin­ci­pled. And when we do well, the rest of the world also does well.
These arti­cles of civic faith have been cen­tral to the American iden­ti­ty for as long as we have all been alive. They are our birthright and our oblig­a­tion. We must guard them jeal­ous­ly, and pass them on for as long as the cal­en­dar has days. To betray them, or to be unse­ri­ous in their defense is a betray­al of the fun­da­men­tal oblig­a­tions of American lead­er­ship. And to behave as if they don’t mat­ter is sim­ply not who we are.
Now, the effi­ca­cy of American lead­er­ship around the globe has come into ques­tion. When the United States emerged from World War II we con­tributed about half of the world’s eco­nom­ic activ­i­ty. It would have been easy to secure our dom­i­nance, keep­ing the coun­tries that had been defeat­ed or great­ly weak­ened dur­ing the war in their place. We did­n’t do that. It would have been easy to focus inward. We resist­ed those impuls­es. Instead, we financed recon­struc­tion of shat­tered coun­tries and cre­at­ed inter­na­tion­al orga­ni­za­tions and insti­tu­tions that have helped pro­vide secu­ri­ty and fos­ter pros­per­i­ty around the world for more than 70 years.
Now, it seems that we, the archi­tects of this vision­ary rules-based world order that has brought so much free­dom and pros­per­i­ty, are the ones most eager to aban­don it.
The impli­ca­tions of this aban­don­ment are pro­found. And the ben­e­fi­cia­ries of this rather rad­i­cal depar­ture in the American approach to the world are the ide­o­log­i­cal ene­mies of our val­ues. Despotism loves a vac­u­um. And our allies are now look­ing else­where for lead­er­ship. Why are they doing this? None of this is nor­mal. And what do we as United States Senators have to say about it?
The prin­ci­ples that under­lie our pol­i­tics, the val­ues of our found­ing, are too vital to our iden­ti­ty and to our sur­vival to allow them to be com­pro­mised by the require­ments of pol­i­tics. Because pol­i­tics can make us silent when we should speak, and silence can equal complicity.
I have chil­dren and grand­chil­dren to answer to, and so, Mr. President, I will not be complicit.
I have decid­ed that I will be bet­ter able to rep­re­sent the peo­ple of Arizona and to bet­ter serve my coun­try and my con­science by free­ing myself from the polit­i­cal con­sid­er­a­tions that con­sume far too much band­width and would cause me to com­pro­mise far too many principles.
To that end, I am announc­ing today that my ser­vice in the Senate will con­clude at the end of my term in ear­ly January 2019.
It is clear at this moment that a tra­di­tion­al con­ser­v­a­tive who believes in lim­it­ed gov­ern­ment and free mar­kets, who is devot­ed to free trade, and who is pro-immi­gra­tion, has a nar­row­er and nar­row­er path to nom­i­na­tion in the Republican par­ty — the par­ty that for so long has defined itself by belief in those things. It is also clear to me for the moment we have giv­en in or giv­en up on those core prin­ci­ples in favor of the more vis­cer­al­ly sat­is­fy­ing anger and resent­ment. To be clear, the anger and resent­ment that the peo­ple feel at the roy­al mess we have cre­at­ed are jus­ti­fied. But anger and resent­ment are not a gov­ern­ing philosophy.
There is an unde­ni­able poten­cy to a pop­ulist appeal — but mis­char­ac­ter­iz­ing or mis­un­der­stand­ing our prob­lems and giv­ing in to the impulse to scape­goat and belit­tle threat­ens to turn us into a fear­ful, back­ward-look­ing peo­ple. In the case of the Republican par­ty, those things also threat­en to turn us into a fear­ful, back­ward-look­ing minor­i­ty party.
We were not made great as a coun­try by indulging or even exalt­ing our worst impuls­es, turn­ing against our­selves, glo­ry­ing in the things which divide us, and call­ing fake things true and true things fake. And we did not become the bea­con of free­dom in the dark­est cor­ners of the world by flout­ing our insti­tu­tions and fail­ing to under­stand just how hard-won and vul­ner­a­ble they are.
This spell will even­tu­al­ly break. That is my belief. We will return to our­selves once more, and I say the soon­er the bet­ter. Because to have a heathy gov­ern­ment we must have healthy and func­tion­ing par­ties. We must respect each oth­er again in an atmos­phere of shared facts and shared val­ues, comi­ty and good faith. We must argue our posi­tions fer­vent­ly, and nev­er be afraid to com­pro­mise. We must assume the best of our fel­low man, and always look for the good. Until that days comes, we must be unafraid to stand up and speak out as if our coun­try depends on it. Because it does.
I plan to spend the remain­ing four­teen months of my sen­ate term doing just that.
Mr. President, the grave­yard is full of indis­pens­able men and women — none of us here is indis­pens­able. Nor were even the great fig­ures from his­to­ry who toiled at these very desks in this very cham­ber to shape this coun­try that we have inher­it­ed. What is indis­pens­able are the val­ues that they con­se­crat­ed in Philadelphia and in this place, val­ues which have endured and will endure for so long as men and women wish to remain free. What is indis­pens­able is what we do here in defense of those val­ues. A polit­i­cal career does­n’t mean much if we are com­plic­it in under­min­ing those values.
I thank my col­leagues for indulging me here today, and will close by bor­row­ing the words of President Lincoln, who knew more about heal­ing enmi­ty and pre­serv­ing our found­ing val­ues than any oth­er American who has ever lived. His words from his first inau­gur­al were a prayer in his time, and are no less so in ours:
“We are not ene­mies, but friends. We must not be ene­mies. Though pas­sion may have strained, it must not break our bonds of affec­tion. The mys­tic chords of mem­o­ry will swell when again touched, as sure­ly they will be, by the bet­ter angels of our nature.”
Thank you, Mr. President. I yield the floor.

Michelle Obama Says Expectations Of The Presidency Have Cratered Since Trump Took Office

Former First Lady Michelle Obama spoke about the weight of the office of President of the United States Tuesday at the Pennsylvania Conference for Women.

Obama addressed the recent mass shoot­ing in Las Vegas and spoke about how her hus­band far too often had to address the nation after tragedies like this one because part of his role was “over­see­ing that kind of loss and real­ly not hav­ing a solu­tion to offer fam­i­lies when you com­fort them.”

That’s the kind of stuff that you’re deal­ing with on a day-to-day basis, and you open the news­pa­per, and every­thing in it is your husband’s respon­si­bil­i­ty and indi­rect­ly, yours,” she continued.

She also spoke about how her life feels much more open now that she is no longer liv­ing in the White House and sug­gest­ed that President Donald Trump is not giv­ing the prop­er weight to the office of president.

We sort of had a stan­dard of ethics, and there were things we wouldn’t do — you know — so there were a lot of con­straints under the Obama admin­is­tra­tion,” Obama said. “There was a cer­tain expec­ta­tion, so there was a lot that we couldn’t do and we didn’t do because of our respect for the posi­tion and what it means to the coun­try to have a com­man­der-in-chief that actu­al­ly upholds and hon­ors the office, so def­i­nite­ly, life is freer now.”

Obama also sug­gest­ed that the dete­ri­o­ra­tion of stan­dards and expec­ta­tion is “what hap­pens when we don’t stand up,” telling women that it is more impor­tant than ever to have a “seat at the table.”http://​the​grio​.com/​2​0​1​7​/​1​0​/​0​4​/​m​i​c​h​e​l​l​e​-​o​b​a​m​a​-​p​r​e​s​i​d​e​n​c​y​-​s​t​a​n​d​a​r​d​-​b​a​r​-​l​ow/

Michelle Obama says expec­ta­tions of the pres­i­den­cy have cratered since Trump took office

All 5 Living Former U.S. Presidents To Attend Hurricane Relief Concert

All 5 Living Former U.S. Presidents To Attend Hurricane Relief Concert

Former pres­i­dents Jimmy Carter, George H.W. Bush, Bill Clinton, George W. Bush and Barack Obama plan to attend a hur­ri­cane relief con­cert at Texas A&M University lat­er this month, fol­low­ing a dev­as­tat­ing string of storms that has affect­ed mil­lions across Texas, Florida and the Caribbean.

The event, called “Deep from the Heart: The One America Appeal Concert,” will be host­ed by the George H.W. Bush Presidential Library and fea­ture per­for­mances from musi­cians includ­ing Alabama, The Gatlin Brothers, Lyle Lovett and Cassadee Pope. All funds raised from tick­et sales will go to help storm victims.

This cat­a­stroph­ic hur­ri­cane sea­son has already caused hun­dreds of bil­lions of dol­lars in prop­er­ty dam­age, dis­placed mil­lions and destroyed entire com­mu­ni­ties,” a press release announc­ing the event said. “As a result, our fel­low Americans are fac­ing over­whelm­ing chal­lenges. The stag­ger­ing, urgent need is sim­ply beyond the capac­i­ty of gov­ern­ment alone to address.”

In a state­ment, George H.W. Bush said the con­cert would empha­size that those affect­ed by hur­ri­canes Harvey, Maria and Irma would be tak­en care of “for the long haul,” say­ing such effort would con­tin­ue “even if the path to recov­ery feels like a road that goes on forever.”

The 43rd pres­i­dent and I, and our dis­tin­guished col­leagues in this ‘One America Appeal,’ are very grate­ful to these won­der­ful per­form­ers — some of them old friends, some of them new — for giv­ing their time and tal­ent to help the urgent cause of hur­ri­cane recov­ery in Texas, Florida, and the Caribbean,” the elder Bush said in a state­ment.

Donald Trump is unaf­fil­i­at­ed with the cam­paign, but has trav­eled to TexasFlorida and most recent­ly Puerto Rico after the storms passed. Trump came under fire on Tuesday for throw­ing paper tow­els at sur­vivors of Hurricane Maria and say­ing the storm wasn’t a “real cat­a­stro­phe” like Hurricane Katrina, even though 3 mil­lion res­i­dents were with­out pow­er at the time.

The White House on Wednesday asked Congress for an addi­tion­al $29 bil­lion in aid to help Puerto Rico and oth­er areas recov­er from the storms, includ­ing near­ly $13 bil­lion for FEMA.

Las Vegas Attack Update: The Ones Who Were Lost

Las Vegas Attack Update: The Ones Who Were Lost

A 20-year-old aspir­ing nurse who fell into her high school sweet­heart’s arms. A Navy vet­er­an haunt­ed by the mem­o­ries of war. A mechan­ic who loved the out­doors and held a stranger’s hand as he died. A mom of four with a new­born at home, still out on mater­ni­ty leave. A hus­band cel­e­brat­ing his anniver­sary, tak­ing a bul­let for his wife.

Fifty-eight peo­ple died in the Sunday night attack on a coun­try music con­cert on the Las Vegas Strip, not count­ing the shoot­er, and more than 500 were injured. It was the worst mass shoot­ing in mod­ern U.S. his­to­ry.

Not every vic­tim has been named. “It’s a long, labo­ri­ous process to iden­ti­fy the vic­tims and reunite them with the fam­i­ly mem­bers,” said Clark County Sheriff Joe Lombardo. But dozens of vic­tims have already been iden­ti­fied, and across the coun­try, fam­i­lies, friends and entire com­mu­ni­ties are griev­ing their loss­es. http://​www​.npr​.org/​s​e​c​t​i​o​n​s​/​t​h​e​t​w​o​-​w​a​y​/​2​0​1​7​/​1​0​/​0​2​/​5​5​5​0​1​8​6​6​5​/​l​a​s​-​v​e​g​a​s​-​m​a​s​s​-​s​h​o​o​t​i​n​g​-​l​a​t​e​s​t​-​w​h​o​-​a​r​e​-​t​h​e​-​v​i​c​t​ims

As Threats To National Security Intensifies Govt Policies Walk Us Backwards Into The 20th Century

Back in the day polic­ing was aid­ed and enhanced by two crit­i­cal com­po­nents which worked rel­a­tive­ly well .
These two com­po­nents have out­lived their use­ful­ness and should be dis­card­ed as the coun­try strive for a more sci­en­tif­ic and intel­li­gence based form of polic­ing and dis­pen­sa­tion of jus­tice com­men­su­rate with the 21st century.

DISTRICT CONSTABLES


District con­sta­bles are an aux­il­iary of the Jamaica Constabulary Force (JCF) they are appoint­ed by the Commissioner of Police and are assigned to the com­mu­ni­ties in which they live.
District Constables once offered valu­able ser­vice to the police depart­ment and the nation.
Traditionally, reg­u­lar­ly police offi­cers relied on District Constables to act as a kind of walk­ing warrant.

It was gen­er­al­ly accept­ed that as long as a dis­trict con­sta­ble was present police could enter a dwelling with­out a war­rant and search for want­ed crim­i­nals and or contraband.
Today as the job of law enforce­ment becomes a lot more chal­leng­ing it may be time to dis­pense with the DC as we affec­tion­ate­ly ref­er­eed to those loy­al men and women who have risked much and may not have got­ten the recog­ni­tion they deserve for their ser­vice and sacrifice.

Once upon a time District Constables were mere­ly appoint­ed but received no train­ing, they learned on the job.
Today they receive four to six weeks train­ing at the Jamaica Police Academy and are now assigned uniforms.
Their train­ing includes Laws and Police Duties. Community Policing. Use and Care of Firearms. Defense Tactics and Drills.
As the nation move to mod­ern­ize the force into a twen­ty first cen­tu­ry depart­ment it may be time for the DC’s to go and the fund­ing allo­cat­ed them be used toward mod­ern­iz­ing the force. .

JUSTICES OF THE PEACE(JP)

A group of lay magistrates

Justices of the peace have giv­en invalu­able ser­vice to our nation , effec­tive­ly oper­at­ing as qua­si mag­is­trates in the absence of real magistrates.
In oth­er cas­es Magistrates have not made them­selves avail­able so that the wheels of jus­tice can turn effec­tive­ly and efficiently.
Despite the qual­i­ty ser­vices lay mag­is­trates (JP’s) have giv­en over the years politi­cians have effec­tive­ly cor­rupt­ed and cor­rod­ed the lay mag­is­trates process.
Political plants and oper­a­tives have made a mock­ery of the func­tions they per­formed in the process of the dis­pen­sa­tion of justice.
For decades the two polit­i­cal par­ties have so cor­rupt­ed this process that many who are lay mag­is­trates are active criminals.

It is because of this con­t­a­m­i­na­tion that the push by jus­tice Minister Delroy Chuck to broad­en the scope of this pro­gram should be of grave con­cern to all Jamaicans.
For exam­ple under the new [Zones Of Special Operations Act] (ZOSO), It is the respon­si­bil­i­ty of the JP’s to be present when the secu­ri­ty forces are con­duct­ing searches.

In addi­tion, peo­ple detained or arrest­ed must imme­di­ate­ly be brought before a JP, who will deter­mine whether there are rea­son­able grounds for the arrest or detention.
If the JP is sat­is­fied that the arrest or deten­tion is jus­ti­fied, the per­son shall be remand­ed in cus­tody for not more than 24 hours, after which he must be brought before the judge of a parish court.
If the JP is not sat­is­fied that the arrest or deten­tion is jus­ti­fied, “he shall order that the per­son be released forthwith.”
So many fac­tors with­in this are wrong, fear ‚col­lu­sion are just two of the com­po­nents which could ren­der this process a dud, yet it is what has been foist­ed on the police and the nation by the Holness administration.

In oth­er words the fun­da­men­tal author­i­ty of the Police is abro­gat­ed and abridged ‚sup­plant­ed by and with the author­i­ty of poten­tial untrained polit­i­cal hacks.
At a time when the nation is under threat from well orga­nized and heav­i­ly armed gangs and mili­tias the Government’s push is to walk the coun­try back into the ves­tiges of our colo­nial past.
This is what is being cod­i­fied into law even as the coun­try grap­ple with exis­ten­tial threats to human life and nation­al secu­ri­ty on a broad­er scale.

Govts Strategic Approach To Crime More Like Strategic Cowardice…

If you are Jamaican you will be no stranger to the old say­ing that “while the grass a grow di horse a starve.”
Pretty self-explana­to­ry stuff right?
Well, I thought that this old Jamaican proverb appro­pri­ate­ly sums up the cur­rent Jamaican Prime Minister’s state­ment on crime.
On the one hand, I want to give him ground and tag him as sim­ply naive and woe­ful­ly in a bubble.
On the oth­er hand, each day close to [sev­en] peo­ple are shot and killed or decapitated.
Additionally, many are shot and stabbed who man­age to sur­vive, so I have no grace to offer the Prime Minister for his gross elit­ism and mis­in­formed perspective.

Said Holness when asked about crime yesterday…

PM Andrew Holness

The gov­ern­ment is try­ing to take a more strate­gic approach over time rather than a solu­tion that will yield “imme­di­ate results” as that route might cause “imme­di­ate prob­lems”.

That trans­lates into I am afraid of tri­al lawyers and the pha­lanx of crim­i­nal rights lob­by oper­at­ing in Jamaica.
Who would­n’t want imme­di­ate success?
Why are imme­di­ate suc­cess and long term suc­cess mutu­al­ly exclusive?

We’ve learned that les­son already and we’re not going back to those measures,” 
“We’re going to focus on build­ing pub­lic trust and build­ing the con­fi­dence of the secu­ri­ty forces so that they can apply mod­ern polic­ing meth­ods that respect the rights of cit­i­zens.

What absolute nonsense!
The notion that cit­i­zens rights are abridged because law enforce­ment aggres­sive­ly goes after mur­der­ers stinks of either igno­rance or blow­ing smoke up peo­ple’s ass.
At the rate, peo­ple are being killed by the time his strate­gic approach begins to bear fruit if at all, there will be no one left but the killers to see it.

On a note to the igno­rant polit­i­cal hacks who engage in ad hominem attacks, you must know I do not care about your opinions.
Neither do I need your per­mis­sion to be crit­i­cal of the government.
Not that it mat­ters, but the PNP is not in Government so it would be stu­pid of me to engage the PNP who is out of office.
The JLP is the par­ty in pow­er this is their problem.

Surely the Prime Minister’s state­ments must be music to the ears of the mur­der­ers and rapists, includ­ing those who gunned down Constable Nicaldo Green, in his own home in Portmore Saint Catherine, as well as the two masked men who shot and injured a police cor­po­ral at his house inside a gat­ed com­mu­ni­ty in the parish of Trelawny recently.

Let me say this once again to the Prime Minister; ” you keep say­ing that the police were used to using tac­tics and we are not going back to those tactics.”
Let me divest you of that lofty and igno­rant point of view.
Here are the mur­der sta­tis­tics between 1970 and 2016.

Year # of Murders
1970 152
1971 145
1972 170
1973 227
1974 195
1975 266
1976 367
1977 409
1978 381
1979 351
1980 899
1981 490
1982 405
1983 424
1984 484
1986 449
1987 442
1988 414
1989 439
1990 543
1991 561
1992 629
1994 690
1995 780
1998 953
1999 849
2000 887
2002 1045
2003 975
2004 1471
2005 1674
2006 1340
2007 1574
2008 1601
2009 1680
2010 1428
2011 1125
2012 1097
2013 1200
2014 1005
2015 1192
2016 1350

Thus far for 2017 over a thou­sand Jamaicans have been slaugh­tered at the hands of Jamaica’s empow­ered and unen­cum­bered killers.
Please pray tell, if you care about dead Jamaicans where would you rather be on this scale?

The very hard-nosed ded­i­cat­ed polic­ing you have been dem­a­gogu­ing for years clear­ly did not fail as you like to tell those who do not know the truth.
It was politi­cians who failed the Jamaican people.

In fact, it was the ded­i­cat­ed hard-nosed polic­ing which kept the shit out of the fan for years until you, your par­ty and the oth­er crim­i­nals sup­port­ing par­ty now in oppo­si­tion which com­plete­ly demor­al­ized and destroyed the police force.
Now crim­i­nals real­ize they have true friends in Jamaica house who care about their rights over the rights of the vic­tims they slaugh­ter daily.

Let me be absolute­ly clear, it was the PNP and JLP to the extent it was trust­ed with state pow­er, which failed to divest them­selves of crim­i­nal con­nec­tion and support.
It has been the two polit­i­cal par­ties which failed to apply social inter­ven­tion meth­ods in the urban com­mu­ni­ties which They them­selves cre­at­ed and militarized.

The Police did not cre­ate Arnett Gardens nei­ther did they cre­ate Tivoli Gardens. The JCF did not cre­ate any of the dozens of polit­i­cal gar­risons across the Island.
It was crim­i­nal politi­cians who brought our coun­try to this.
Let it be under­stood, at the time politi­cians were hand­ing out guns to young unem­ployed and impres­sion­able youths to kill each oth­er over pol­i­tics, police offi­cers were los­ing their lives try­ing to remove those very guns from the streets.
I am one of those police offi­cers so I know what the f**k I’m talk­ing about.

Imagine if the police weren’t tak­ing it to the scum­bags who want­ed to turn Jamaica into a nar­co-crim­i­nals state in the late 80’s through the ear­ly 1990’s?
It was because we did not accept any shit from them that they ran to Cananda the United States and England, spon­sored of course by politicians.
Many also ran away to Cuba. Let’s not have selec­tive amne­sia about the sequence of events which got us here.
The United States used the Rico statute to pros­e­cute and put away Jamaican gang­sters. Gangsters Jamaica refused to pros­e­cute then and still refuse to pros­e­cute today.

It is only when forced that Jamaican polit­i­cal lead­ers have no choice but to give up for pros­e­cu­tion the most vio­lent despi­ca­ble killers oper­at­ing in Jamaica.
I will not, to the best of abil­i­ties allow the nar­ra­tive to be changed, and the blame for what hap­pened to my coun­try to be mis­placed by politi­cians and the sheep who fol­low them blind­ly. I will not allow his­to­ry to be rewrit­ten by politi­cians and their lap­dog fol­low­ers who are too stu­pid to think for themselves.

Obama On Health Care: “People Are Alive Today” Because Of Obamacare

Former President Barack Obama deliv­ered a speech on Wednesday in which he paint­ed a pic­ture of opti­mism in the wake of chal­lenges the nation faces, even if it “does­n’t seem to jibe with the steady stream of bad news and cyn­i­cism we’re fed on tele­vi­sion and Twitter.” The for­mer pres­i­dent added that the key to these chal­lenges is “engage­ment.”

Obama deliv­ered the keynote address at the Gates Foundation, spon­sored by Bill and Melinda Gates. He spoke of chal­lenges the nation faces, and how he felt they should be addressed.

Yes, we face some extra­or­di­nary chal­lenges,” Obama said. “Economic inequal­i­ty and a chang­ing cli­mate. Terrorism and mass migra­tion. The rise of nation­al­ist thought, xeno­pho­bic sen­ti­ment, and a pop­ulist pol­i­tics that too often pits ‘us’ against ‘them’ — a pol­i­tics that threat­ens to turn good peo­ple away from the kind of col­lec­tive action that has always dri­ven human progress.”

He added that what’s need­ed “more than any­thing” was “the engage­ment of every­one who wants to see a bet­ter future for our children.”

http://​www​.salon​.com/​2​0​1​7​/​0​9​/​2​0​/​o​b​a​m​a​-​o​n​-​h​e​a​l​t​h​-​c​a​r​e​-​p​e​o​p​l​e​-​a​r​e​-​a​l​i​v​e​-​t​o​d​a​y​-​b​e​c​a​u​s​e​-​o​f​-​o​b​a​m​a​c​a​re/

International Donors Who Give Money To INDECOM Are Strategic In Their Intent…

International Donors who give mon­ey to INDECOM are strate­gic in their intent…

I receive much feed­back from social media, some indi­cate that I point out the prob­lems with our secu­ri­ty sit­u­a­tion in Jamaica with­out offer­ing solutions.
In def­er­ence to those read­ers, I do under­stand your point 
I gen­er­al­ly search the archives of this medi­um with a view to pro­vid­ing you solu­tions on the sub­ject and make them avail­able to you my friends as best I can.
I thank those who both­er to take the time to let me know how you feel and we will con­tin­ue to do what we can to pro­vide the infor­ma­tion you seek.

I total­ly under­stand why many of you my friends and even my detrac­tors would not know about some of the solu­tions I have offered over the years.
It is extreme­ly dif­fi­cult and bor­ing to spend time dig­ging through thou­sands of arti­cles to deter­mine if we indeed offer solutions.
As such as that occur we take full respon­si­bil­i­ty with the under­stand­ing that it is up to us to make the infor­ma­tion avail­able and eas­i­ly sourceable.

My IT spe­cial­ist says ” video blogs are the way to go, peo­ple don’t want to spend time reading,“I agree so we will see where we go with that.
Thank you. signed mb…

.….….….….….….….….….….….….….….….….….….….….….….….….….….….….….

Today I want to talk a lit­tle about why I am dri­ven to talk about crime as they occur, and respond to why our con­stant harp­ing on it may be seen as a negative.
Crime is a neg­a­tive phe­nom­e­non which takes away from all our lives, it makes us all poor­er with the excep­tion of those who engage in it.

Over the last five decades, the two major polit­i­cal par­ties in our coun­try have gov­erned our coun­try by divid­ing our peo­ple into two hard­ened camp­sof PNP and JLP not Jamaicans.

A street in Arnett Gardens St Andrew a PNP Garrison

Scarce resources, jobs, hous­ing, pro­mo­tions, and even food are made avail­able through polit­i­cal affiliations.
Both par­ties did their best to lump their sup­port­ers into areas known local­ly as gar­risons. They also cre­at­ed enforcers with­in those com­mu­ni­ties who whip sup­port­ers into shape, keep them in line and deliv­er the votes for the [big man], the polit­i­cal representative.

Every Jamaican is famil­iar with life in these zones of polit­i­cal exclusions.
None more so than those whose jobs it is to police them, know­ing that they all have their own mili­tias with polit­i­cal backing.
The moth­er and father of the gar­risons, Tivoli and Arnett Gardens, for the JLP and PNP respec­tive­ly are par­ents to an ever bur­geon­ing out­growth of off­springs across the Island.

Today there are dozens of Garrisons across the coun­try of 2.8 mil­lion peo­ple, they ren­der the elec­toral process a sham in many respects.
Because of the vote pack­ing in these gar­ri­son com­mu­ni­ties, the results are well known before a sin­gle vote is cast.
Elections are decid­ed on the few con­stituen­cies which have not been ger­ry­man­dered into zones of exclu­sions as yet.

A street in Tivoli Gardens a JLP gar­ri­son, right after the 2010 incur­sion: adapted…

The par­ty with the most gar­risons gets to con­trol state power.
The longer that par­ty holds pow­er it’s the more it gets to solid­i­fy its posi­tion and hold on power.
The PNP has more gar­risons, they have had the lion’s share of state power.
The con­se­quences for the coun­try has been utter dev­as­ta­tion and stag­na­tion as a result of the see-saw bat­tle to gain and hold state power.
In the peri­od lead­ing up to the 1980 gen­er­al elec­tions over a thou­sand Jamaicans lost their lives in the polit­i­cal vio­lence which ensued.

The coun­try has well over a thou­sand homi­cides annu­al­ly, cul­mi­na­tion in over 1600 homi­cides in 2005.
These num­bers pale the fear­some 1000 num­ber of peo­ple who lost their lives at the hands of their own coun­try men, in the unde­clared civ­il war cre­at­ed by the Island’s two polit­i­cal parties.

In order to under­stand how we got here, we must go back and look at the garrisons.
It is impos­si­ble to keep peo­ple loy­al and sub­servient unless you offer them induce­ments and or keep them fear­ful of you or both.

Both the JLP and the PNP are guilty of not only hand­ing out good­ies at the expense of the tax­pay­ers to their loy­al­ists, they are also guilty of import­ing and dis­trib­ut­ing guns and ammu­ni­tion to young unem­ployed men to do their bidding.
This process essen­tial­ly result­ed in the cre­ation of myr­i­ad mili­tias across the coun­try for polit­i­cal purposes.

TWO FOLD

The cre­ation of these polit­i­cal mili­tias could not be suc­cess­ful despite the guns and suc­cor pro­vid­ed them by their polit­i­cal bosses.
There need­ed to be anoth­er com­po­nent to exert the kind of con­trol they desired and that came in the emas­cu­la­tion of the police department.

Vale Royal res­i­dence of the Prime Minister.

An effi­cient effec­tive police depart­ment is a threat to crim­i­nals whether they live in Arnett Gardens or Vale Royal.
In order to ren­der the police depart­ment use­less, the two polit­i­cal par­ties embarked on a process of politi­ciz­ing it.
Commissioners and senior offi­cers were hand-picked lack­eys, advance­ment to senior ranks depend­ed on what par­ty you belonged to, who you knew, or whose yard boy you were.
As retired SSP Adams assert­ed recent­ly it also meant who female offi­cers were sleep­ing with.

In addi­tion, they starved the depart­ment of resources, train­ing and pay, this result­ed in high attri­tion and low morale.
Today we have the coun­try we have not because of the police or any­thing they did. We have the coun­try cre­at­ed by the PNP and JLP.
Any agency or fly by night who formed a group to mil­i­tate against the police is auto­mat­i­cal­ly grant­ed a seat at the table and their twist­ed views ingrained in policy.

Denham Town Police station

In order to pro­tect crim­i­nals from cops, politi­cians have to take police pow­ers away. They have done so with pre­ci­sion type effectiveness.
Both polit­i­cal par­ties have waged war on the police because it suit­ed their polit­i­cal goals. They need­ed to have a boogey­man to point to, the police is that bogeyman.
The gullible, indoc­tri­nat­ed and the balka­nized pop­u­la­tion is all too hap­py to exon­er­ate the cul­prits and indict those who are vic­tims themselves.

That divide and con­quer strat­e­gy is as old as racial exploita­tion has been to cap­i­tal­ism in the United States for over four hun­dred years through slav­ery, Jim crow to present day.

LET’S APPORTION BLAME WHERE IT BELONG

Let’s get some­thing real straight here, lit­er­al­ly, every suc­cess­ful west­ern nation has a func­tion­al­ly work­ing jus­tice sys­tem which is built on effec­tive and inspired law enforcement.
In 2016 the Commissioner of INDECOM Terrence Williams told the media that the com­mis­sion depends to a great extent on over­seas fund­ing to finance sig­nif­i­cant aspects of its operations.

Terrence Williams

The Government of Jamaica pays most of the salaries and the rent, but most of every­thing else is done with donor sup­port, even some salaries are paid for with donor-agency sup­port”.

There are some areas of our oper­a­tions which, because the Government’s sup­port is so low, we are con­strained to take out of the DFID sup­port. For exam­ple, secu­ri­ty for our premis­es and some of our legal fees are paid for out of that. 

Any adver­tis­ing that we are going to do will be paid for by EU cam­paign. We have hired some inves­ti­ga­tors and lawyers based upon EU fund­ing and DFID fund­ing, so the fund­ing is cru­cial to the work of INDECOM.” Said Williams

You know what suc­cess­ful coun­tries are built on?
The rule of law.
Not on Police oversight.
Police over­sight is nec­es­sary for all inter­est­ed par­ties, how­ev­er, Jamaicans need to ask them­selves whether these shad­ow donors to INDECOM have their real inter­est at heart?
If you want to help a coun­try you don’t give mon­ey to a group which seeks to indict law enforcement.

If you give mon­ey to INDECOM you are say­ing I am com­fort­able with the killing of inno­cent Jamaicans, what I want you to do with this mon­ey is to apply pres­sure on those who go after the murderers.
What greater way to keep the coun­try impov­er­ished and on its knees beg­ging for IMF mon­ey than to have a coun­try inun­dat­ed with crime?

If these donors want­ed to help Jamaica and the cause of Justice they would offer to build us court hous­es, give mon­ey to train and pay pros­e­cu­tors, train detec­tives and oth­er crit­i­cal-area tech­ni­cians to inves­ti­gate mur­ders and oth­er seri­ous crimes.

They would offer us help to build last­ing 21 st cen­tu­ry police sta­tions and help us to secure our bor­ders in effec­tive ways which would pre­vent their guns com­ing into the Island in tidal waves.
That’s how you advance the process of build­ing a sus­tain­able soci­ety not by aid­ing and abet­ting dis­sent and dem­a­goguery against law enforcement.

The two polit­i­cal par­ties are equal par­tic­i­pants in this trick­ery being per­pe­trat­ed on the unsus­pect­ing Jamaican peo­ple most of whom have nev­er had the ben­e­fits of the rule of law explained to them.
For those on the out­side feed­ing the cam­paign against the police, it is a strate­gic invest­ment in the chaos which is nec­es­sary to keep our coun­try impoverished.

For the politi­cians at home it works in their favor to keep the crime sta­tis­tics high and the peo­ple misinformed.
They built their two par­ties on divid­ing the peo­ple coun­try be damned.