Sheriff’s Capt. Thomas J. Flanders (Montgomery County Sheriff’s Department)
Five Montgomery County, Ohio, sheriff’s deputies allegedly sent racist text messages both on and off duty, sparking a sweeping internal investigation, according to Talking Points Memo, citing reports at WDTN and WKEF television news stations.
Montgomery County Sheriff’s Department Capt. Thomas Flanders (pictured) and detectiveMichael Sollenberger, both suspended on paid administrative leave, were just two names listed in a complaint filed by the NAACP Dayton, Ohio unit, WDTN reported this week. The three other deputies were not publicly named, the report says.
Montgomery County Sheriff Phil Plummer addressed the disturbing texts on Tuesday, which were sent on personal cell phones between November 2011 and January 2013, the news station writes. Two read: “I hate N**gers. That is all,” and “What do apples and black people have in common? They both hang from trees.”
He also identified Sollenberger as part of the department’s internal affairs team and Flanders as head of the Montgomery County Jail, the station reported. “I will not tolerate racism in this department,” Plummer told WTND.
The investigation began after Dayton Unit NAACP President Derrick L. Foward received an anonymous tip about the messages in August, and reported it to the department. Officials said that they conducted a three-month investigation, and met with the NAACP national office before going public with the allegations, Raw Story reports.
Foward expected the deputies to be fired if the internal investigation concluded that they sent the messages.
Civil rights leaders have long complained about police violence against Blacks, especially unarmed men. The texts provide a sobering glimpse into the mindset of some White law enforcement officers, an issue that has moved to the forefront nationwide as protesters demonstrate against grand jury decisions not to indict two White officers in the arresting deaths of two unarmed Black men.
Widespread and ongoing protests broke out last week after a St. Louis County grand jury declined to indict then-Ferguson, Mo., police officer Darren Wilson in the shooting death of Michael Brown. And this week, a Staten Island, N.Y., grand jury refused to indict a NYPD officer Daniel Pantaleo in the chokehold death of Eric Garner.
The deputies appeared shocked by the allegations, but “did not apologize,” Plummer told WKEF. It’s just another striking example of how some White law enforcement officers are used to operating unchecked as they violate and disrespect Blacks. http://newsone.com/3075654/i‑hate-niggers-text-montgomery-county-sheriffs/
Barkley: Ghetto Would Be Like ‘Wild, Wild West’ if it Wasn’t for Police
Charles Barkley
“The notion that white cops are out there just killing black people – that’s ridiculous. That’s just flat-out ridiculous,” the TNT basketball analyst told CNN. “I challenge any black person to try to make that point. Cops are actually awesome. They are the only thing in the ghetto between this place being the wild, wild west. So this notion that cops are out there just killing black men is ridiculous and I hate that narrative coming out of this entire situation.”Barkley previously had strong words about the violent protesters in Ferguson, calling them “scumbags”.
I am extremely reluctant to respond to someone, whose vocabulary’s extent is the word stupid. Mister Barkley like many others have grown fat and comfy on the backs of countless moral and intellectual heavyweights who have gone on before us. Such is life that an intellectual imbecile like Barkley can sit in a television studio and make disparaging uninformed statements about his own people, when the likes of King,Malcolm, DuBois, Douglas, Evers and countless others paid the price so that he may do so. I though that I would address at length the contradiction which is Charles Barkley but it’s not necessary . One of his former colleagues have done a masterful job in addressing mister Barkley , better than I ever could. I will just hasten to ask that we do not quickly characterize mister Barkley as a house negro. You see, we miss a fundamental truth about the house negro. History is not kind to him/her. With all of the negative connotations attached to the house negro, one fundamental fact eludes us. The house negro was a conduit which provided the field negro with valuable information on the who, when where, and how. So as we seek to place Charles Barkley let us not misplace him in that all important category of house negro.
It’s important that Charles Barkley be informed /reminded the reason they place a microphone in front of him is so he can continue to make a buffoon of himself. It’s time mister Barkley understands he is a mere caricature of their most base racist and ignorant narrative. It’s time someone tell the Emperor he is naked.….…..
They did it in the Trayvon Martin trial and now with Mike Brown and the decision in Ferguson. It’s not that you shouldn’t ever
Kenny Smith
have an opinion, but you are often quoted alongside the likes of Al Sharpton and even President Obama. I would hope that Sharpton or President Obama would never be referenced with you when picking the next NBA Champs!
The body of work that our Black Civil Rights leaders put in by planning, executing and activating does not justify you being in the conversation. While your body of work on the court very few compare to nor should be mentioned when you are giving your expert analysis. Again, I respect that you have an opinion on Ferguson. And here’s mine.
“The question must be asked: Why is there so much distrust in the police and the legal system from the African-American community? Without manifesting what the effects of slavery still have today, Dec 1st still marks only 59 years since Rosa Parks sat on that memorable bus. Many of our parents and grandparents have lived through those times and have passed those stories on to all of us. Those civil rights changes were at one time the law! They were not illegal.”
“So did the protection of the law by the courts and police make it right? Obviously not, so as African-Americans we still know and feel that there are laws and jurisdictions that severely penalize the poor and, most importantly, African-Americans greater than any other group. Some laws were initially made without us as equals in mind; that’s just the facts. So the thought process that it’s not for us or by us will unfortunately lead to distrust.”
“When someone is in “the struggle,” which many of our black communities are in, they are living with a lack of educational facilities, high unemployment and poor recreational facilities. The masses involved in “the struggle” will react in several ways. They can overcome it, challenge it, live in it, or fall victim to it … For those of us who are decades removed from “the struggle” because of our life through sports or business, we now have to acknowledge that every option listed exists. If not, then we are the ignorant ones.”
“That leads me to the looters and civilians burning buildings which you referred to as “scumbags.” Here’s an analogy: If you put 100 people on an island with no food, no water, no hope of a ship coming, then some will overcome it and be resourceful, some will live in it, others will panic and others will show horrific character, which is wrong. But not to understand that all alternatives are possible is wrong as well. I was also disheartened to see the reaction of burning buildings and looters by some. However, when you are in “The Struggle” to not expect that that potential reaction is foolish on our part.”
“When someone is in “the struggle,” which many of our black communities are in, they are living with a lack of educational facilities, high unemployment and poor recreational facilities. The masses involved in “the struggle” will react in several ways. They can overcome it, challenge it, live in it, or fall victim to it … For those of us who are decades removed from “the struggle” because of our life through sports or business, we now have to acknowledge that every option listed exists. If not, then we are the ignorant ones.”
“That leads me to the looters and civilians burning buildings which you referred to as “scumbags.” Here’s an analogy: If you put 100 people on an island with no food, no water, no hope of a ship coming, then some will overcome it and be resourceful, some will live in it, others will panic and others will show horrific character, which is wrong. But not to understand that all alternatives are possible is wrong as well. I was also disheartened to see the reaction of burning buildings and looters by some. However, when you are in “The Struggle” to not expect that that potential reaction is foolish on our part.”
Others have responded to Barkley , today we feature Kenny Smith. Wow !!!!!
It has been clear since slavery that blacks were not going to receive anything in America they are not prepared to fight and die for. For several years now I have been lamenting that the sacrifices made by great Martyrs like Malcolm X and King among others are being squandered. I theorized that this would come back to haunt Black-America. Unfortunately that time is here. President Obama wants cops to wear body camera, as a way for America to see what Police officers are doing in their name. As much as I support the president’s initiative, I wonder what effect it will have when Prosecutors and Grand Juries take it upon themselves to circumvent the law. Eric Garner was killed on camera, in broad daylight. Daniel M. Donovan Jr. Staten Island District Attorney indicted the young man who recorded the killing on his cell-phone. Cops conveniently arrested him passing a gun to a woman. NYPD Officer Daniel Pantaleowho killed Eric Garner will not be asked to answer in a state court for his actions. Ramsey Orta, 22, was allegedly arrested outside a known drug location on Staten Island by narcotics officers who claimed Orta placed a handgun in his companion’s waistband, the New York Police Department said. Orta reportedly told cops “You’re just mad because I filmed your boy,”. Fast track to Ferguson Missouri, There was active talk about indicting the step-father of Michael Brown who was heard on tape saying “lets burn this B$#@!& down”, in response to the news that Darren Wilson would not be indicted. These are the characteristics of a Police-state. Whenever citizens are not allowed to question or otherwise demand answers of police, or hold them accountable, they are in a police state. Police departments are not laws onto themselves. They are duty bound to obey the laws, even as they enforce them. We are at critical mass when people who photograph or record police crimes and family members already in grieving are targeted while killer cops walk free.
At this time there is much emphasis on police departments and individual officers, the problem is much deeper than cops . There seem to be a systematic effort on the part of prosecutors to cover for cops. Some are convinced some Prosecutors are even criminally complicit in the way they handle prosecution evidence involving cops in the grand jury process. Prosecutors are supposed to be servants of the people. There is much talk about the grand jury process and what may have occurred or not in these secret proceedings. lost in this noise is the fact that prosecutors have the power and indeed a duty to prosecute crimes, irrespective of who the offender is separate from the grand jury process. When Prosecutors decide to go the route of the grand-jury in cases like the Eric Garner’s , they are abdicating their responsibility to their oath at best. Worse case they are doing all in their power in assisting cops who break the laws to escape prosecution. All Americans have a stake in what is happening presently. Blacks Whites and and everyone else.
There is much to be said about black leadership, or more importantly the absence of one. As young people take to the streets demanding a new direction for their country, old civil rights functionaries are still stuck using the old talking-points about jobs. This fight is not a fight about jobs right now, it is a fight for justice and fairness. In some cases it is an existential fight. Lets fight this fight and not confuse this fight with other issues.
Judge Andrew Napolitano, the senior judicial analyst for Fox News, said Wednesday that he was shocked by a grand jury’s decision not to indict a New York City police officer in the chokehold death of Eric Garner, describing Garner’s death as “criminally negligent homicide.”
“I think it is clearly a case for criminally negligent homicide,” Napolitano said during a Wednesday segment of “The Hugh Hewitt Show.”
“This is not Ferguson, Missouri,” Napolitano continued. “This is not somebody wrestling for your gun, this is not where you shoot or be shot at. This is choking to death a mentally impaired, grossly obese person whose only crime was selling cigarettes without collecting taxes on them. This does not call for deadly force by any stretch of the imagination.” (It was not clear why Napolitano described Garner as “mentally impaired.”)
Napolitano said he was taken aback by the grand jury’s decision, which was made public on Wednesday. He added that the decision suggests Staten Island District Attorney Daniel Donovan never wanted an indictment to happen.
“If any DA wants an indictment, he can get one,” Napolitano said. “The cliché is that a grand jury would indict a ham sandwich.”
Garner, 43, died July 17 in Staten Island, New York while he was being arrested for selling untaxed cigarettes. A bystander’s video of the arrest shows New York City police Officer Daniel Pantaleo appearing to put Garner in a chokehold, a move that isprohibited under NYPD policy. In the video, Garner screams “I can’t breathe!” multiple times before his body goes limp. A medical examiner later ruled his death a homicide.
This is the second recent high-profile case in which a grand jury declined to indict a white police officer in the killing of an unarmed black civilian, following last week’s decision in the case of 18-year-old Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri.
A nationwide series of protests erupted immediately following the grand jury’s decision not to indict Ferguson police Officer Darren Wilson, who fatally shot an unarmed Brown on Aug. 9. New York officials braced for similar protests on Wednesday.
While the reaction to the Ferguson grand jury decision largely broke down along party lines, with many conservatives agreeing that Wilson should not have faced trial, Napolitano, a libertarian, is one of a number of conservatives who have expressed outrage at the grand jury’s decision in the Garner case, The Huffington Post’s Ryan Reilly reports.
Garner’s family plans to file a wrongful death lawsuit against the city seeking $75 million in damages.
National statistics show that hundreds of homicides committed by law-enforcement officers between 2007 and 2012 were not recorded in the FBI’s Uniform Crime Report, the Wall Street Journal reports.
More than 550 homicides committed by police during that period were missing, the paper reports. The lack of complete data makes it impossible to accurately determine how many people police kill each year.
Demands for more transparency on such killings have been shoved into the spotlight after the August shooting death of 18-year-old Michael Brown by officer Darren Wilson in Ferguson. The Ferguson police department has only recorded one justifiable homicide between 1976 and 2012, according to statistics.
Local police departments are not required to participate in the FBI’s uniform crime reporting program.
Some agencies tend to not report the killings, Bureau of Justice statistician Alexia Cooper told the journal. Nearly 800 agencies reported about 2,400 killings by police, while more than 18,000 other departments did not report any.
Some entities in the reports said they did not view justifiable homicides by law-enforcement officers as something that should be reported. Some agencies did not consider the events to be actual offenses.
In certain cases, if an officer killed someone in a city or town out of its jurisdiction believed that particular town would handle the report, by they had not done so.
In recent years, police have tried to rely on the data to develop better tactics in policing.
A particular alarming report came as recently in Washington D.C.
Police in Washington did not report any details about any homicides to the FBI for an entire decade starting in 1998; the same year the Washington Post revealed the city had one of the highest officer-involved killings in the country.
The city reported five killings by police in 2011, but zero in the following year after 24-year-old Albert Payton was killed by police while wielding a knife.
Significant increases in officer-involved killings can spark questions about management within the police department, Mike, a criminologist at Arizona State told the journal. “Sometimes that can be tied to poor leadership and problems with accountability.”
New York City police arrest a young woman on a shutdown portion of the Westside Highway during a protest against the decision of a grand jury not to indict a police officer involved in the death of Eric Garner in New York, New York, December 3, 2014. (EPA/PETER FOLEY)A man is taken into custody after protesting the announcement that the New York City police officer involved in the death of Eric Garner was not indicted, Wednesday, Dec. 3, 2014, in New York. (AP Photo/Julio Cortez)Demonstrators block the West Side Highway during a protest against the grand jury decision on the death of Eric Garner, in New York December 3, 2014. (REUTERS/Adrees Latif)NYPD officers stand on West Side Highway during a protest to a non indictment against a police officer in the death of Eric Garner, Wednesday Dec. 3, 2014, in New York. (David Handschuh/Yahoo News)Protesters hold up signs across the street from Radio City Music Hall in a protest to a non indictment against a police officer in the death of Eric Garner, Wednesday Dec. 3, 2014, in New York. (David Handschuh/Yahoo News)Protesters on Sixth Ave. raise their hands and chant while carrying signs in reaction to a non indictment against a police officer in the death of Eric Garner, Wednesday Dec. 3, 2014, in New York. (David Handschuh/Yahoo News)A man stands with his hands raised in front of a line of police officers during a protest after it was announced that the New York City police officer involved in the death of Eric Garner was not indicted, Wednesday, Dec. 3, 2014, in New York. (AP Photo/Julio Cortez)A man yells at a police officer as he takes part during a protest on 6th Avenue in Manhattan after a grand jury decided not to indict New York Police Officer Daniel Pantaleo in Eric Garner’s death on December 3, 2014 in New York City. (Kena Betancur/Getty Images)A woman lies down in the street as she takes part of a protest on 6th Avenue in Manhattan after a grand jury decided not to indict New York Police Officer Daniel Pantaleo in Eric Garner’s death on December 3, 2014 in New York City. (Kena Betancur/Getty Images)People lie down in the street as they take part of a protest on 6th Avenue in Manhattan after a grand jury decided not to indict New York Police Officer Daniel Pantaleo in Eric Garner’s death on December 3, 2014 in New York City. (Kena Betancur/Getty Images)People take part in a protest against the grand jury decision on the death of Eric Garner in midtown Manhattan in New York December 3, 2014. (REUTERS/Eric Thayer)A man is arrested by police as he takes part in a protest on 6th Avenue in Manhattan after a grand jury decided not to indict New York Police Officer Daniel Pantaleo in Eric Garner’s death on December 3, 2014 in New York City. (Kena Betancur/Getty Images)A demonstrator holds her hands up during a protest against the grand jury decision in the Eric Garner case, in Times Square in New York December 3, 2014. (REUTERS/Brendan McDermid)A police officer stands over activists, demanding justice for the death of Eric Garner, as they stage a ‘die-in’ during rush hour at Grand Central Terminal in the Manhattan borough of New York on December 3, 2014. (REUTERS/Adrees Latif)People holds a banners as they take part during a protest in support of Eric Garner at Union Square on December 3, 2014 in New York City. (Photo by Kena Betancur/Getty Images)A man holds a banner as he takes part during a protest in support of Eric Garner at Union Square on December 3, 2014 in New York City. (Kena Betancur/Getty Images)
So let me get this straight the St. Louis Police was considering prosecuting the
Darren Wilson
step-father of slain teen Michael Brown for shouting “lets burn this *&^$# down” after the non-indictment but killer cop Darren Wilson is walking around free? What am I missing here? What power does this man have to influence the actions of a mob ? How do they prove this? The Police brass and the entire system of IN-justice in that state cannot control it’s killers in uniform but wants to use the very same system to prosecute people for utilizing their free speech in a highly charged environment .
We understand Michael Brown’s stepfather, Louis Head, apologized Wednesday.
“Something came over me as I watched and listened to my wife, the mother of Michael Brown Jr., react to the gut-wrenching news that the cop who killed her son wouldn’t be charged with a crime,”Head said in a statement to CNN. “My emotions admittedly got the best of me.
“This is my family,” Head said.“I was so angry and full of raw emotions, as so many others were, and granted I screamed out words I shouldn’t have screamed in the heat of the moment. I was wrong, and I humbly apologize to all those who read my anger and my pain as a true desire for what I want for the community.”
We will await the apology from the real criminals in all this, the system which had it’s Agent kill an-unarmed man,then pull out all the stops to make sure he doesn’t even have to answer for his actions. Always remember that a black man has no rights a white man is bound to respect. I would not hold my breath if I were you. They have no shame, no conscience , no humanity.
INTHEMEANTIME:
Louis Rams Players ‘Hands Up, Don’t Shoot’ Gesture
Some St. Louis Rams players exercised their constitutionally guaranteed right to free speech Sunday when they came out with “hands up don’t shoot” hand-signs in support of murdered Michael Brown. This of course drew the ire of the bullying boys in blue in the St Louis Police Officers Association . The association issued a release
NYPD Officer Daniel Pantaleo
pressing the NFL do quote discipline the players who exercised their right. Who discipline cops when they murder citizens
But I digress, as I write this a secret Staten Island Grand Jury decided the murdering cop Pantaleo who choked Eric Garner to death would not face charges.
Back to the statement of the Saint Louis police officers Association.
The St. Louis Police Officers Association is profoundly disappointed with the members of the St. Louis Rams football team who chose to ignore the mountains of evidence released from the St. Louis County Grand Jury this week and engage in a display that police officers around the nation found tasteless, offensive and inflammatory. Five members of the Rams enIered the field today exhibiting the “hands-up-don’t‑shoot” pose that has been adopted by protestors who accused Ferguson Police Officer Darren Wilson of murdering Michael Brown. The gesture has become synonymous with assertions that Michael Brown was innocent of any wrongdoing and attempting to surrender peacefully when Wilson, according to some now-discredited witnesses, gunned him down in cold blood.
SLPOA Business Manager Jeff Roorda said, “now that the evidence is in and Officer Wilson’s account has been verified by physical and ballistic evidence as well as eye-witness testimony, which led the grand jury to conclude that no probable cause existed that Wilson engaged in any wrongdoing, it is unthinkable that hometown athletes would so publicly perpetuate a narrative that has been disproven over-and-over again.”
Roorda was incensed that the Rams and the NFL would tolerate such behavior and called it remarkably hypocritical. “All week long, the Rams and the NFL were on the phone with the St. Louis Police Department asking for assurances that the players and the fans would be kept safe from the violent protesters who had rioted, looted, and burned buildings in Ferguson. Our officers have been working 12 hour shifts for over a week, they had days off including Thanksgiving cancelled so that they could defend this community from those on the streets that perpetuate this myth that Michael Brown was executed by a brother police officer and then, as the players and their fans sit safely in their dome under the watchful protection of hundreds of St. Louis’s finest, they take to the turf to call a now-exonerated officer a murderer, that is way out-of-bounds, to put it in football parlance,” Roorda said.
The SLPOA is calling for the players involved to be disciplined and for the Rams and the NFL to deliver a very public apology. Roorda said he planned to speak to the NFL and the Rams to voice his organization’s displeasure tomorrow. He also plans to reach out to other police organizations in St. Louis and around the country to enlist their input on what the appropriate response from law enforcement should be. Roorda warned, “I know that there are those that will say that these players are simply exercising their First Amendment rights. Well I’ve got news for people who think that way, cops have first amendment rights too, and we plan to exercise ours. I’d remind the NFL and their players that it is not the violent thugs burning down buildings that buy their advertiser’s products. It’s cops and the good people of St. Louis and other NFL towns that do. Somebody needs to throw a flag on this play. If it’s not the NFL and the Rams, then it’ll be cops and their supporters.”
The statement started out reasonable it did not take long however for the true mindset of the Organization to become clear. Bully-ish, Thuggish, threatening, entitled, above being questioned. I never quite understood their claim that they provide security so that citizens can operate in safety> Here’s a clue, People pay you to ensure their safety and security, if you feel above doing what they pay you for give up the job and find another job that you are qualified to do. You do not have a right to being a Police Officer.
There is also a growing sense that in far two many cases Police officers actions are indistinguishable from the actions of the KKK. There is also a crystal-clear perception that a certain section of the Caucasian community is quite pleased with the actions of killer cops, Irrespective of their actions. In the 60’s it was admitted that many Police Departments like the LAPD and others had large amounts of members who were active members of the Klan. If this was true for PD’s like the LAPD and other large departments what do you think is the case in small Lilly-white communities with all white police departments and corrupt justice systems still invested in the concept of racial superiority?
There were supposed attempts to change the make up of some of those Departments, better educated officers and in some cases diversity. What they were not able to do is to remove the scourge of racism from the hearts of many who are still joining the ranks of police departments.
Protesters demonstrating after the bar posted that it would no longer support the St. Louis Rams.
On Monday, Time Out Sports Bar & Grill posted on its Facebook page that it would no longer support the football team “due to the bone headed ‘hands up, don’t shoot’ act by the number of Rams players.” The post said all signs and photos of the Rams would be removed from the walls. “We need to stand up to thugs who destroy our community and burn down local businesses, and boycott the other thugs/organizations who support them,” the post read. The restaurant later posted again, saying it was “not taking sides in the Ferguson tragedy” and supports peaceful protest and free speech, but disagreed with the Rams “bringing the protest to a nationwide professional sporting event.” A few dozen protesters gathered at around 6 p.m. on Tuesday outside one of Time Out’s locations in St. Louis. Wearing Rams jerseys and hats, the protesters chanted “We are Rams fans” and “We want service.” Protesters said a man who identified himself as a co-owner of the bar came to the door during the demonstration. http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/12/03/protest-st-louis-rams_n_6258582.html
As President Obama asks Congress for funds to kick off a campaign for body cameras for cops, I am not sure what cameras will do to reduce this problem of police abuse and extra-judicial killings. The entire killing of Eric Garner was captured on Camera. Garner could clearly be heard on Camera saying “I can’t breathe< I can’t breathe” I can’t breathe”. Daniel Pantaleo did not think of releasing his death-grip on the man until the life drained out of him. White Staten Island residents to whom cops can do no wrong, decided not to break their tradition of protecting killer cops. They supposedly looked at the evidence of the case on the basis that there was no intent to kill, despite the Medical Examiner, ruling the death a homicide. Even though the grand jury’s job is not to decide innocence or guilt the Staten Island Jury decided to literally try the case and decided there was no case to answer. No “probable cause”, no murder, no manslaughter, no assault, no strangulation, no nothing.….….….
After Eric Garner stopped moving they all stood around, they took no steps to render CPR or any other life saving procedure. They knew they had killed him. They did nothing because they knew they did not need to. There was no reason to care. No reason to worry about consequence.
In the ongoing debate after the death of Michael Brown the 18 year old Ferguson youth and other killings of black men by police, everyone seem to have taken sides based on color and or life experiences. Many blacks who are exposed to the daily abuse and disrespect of Police are enraged by the fact that yet another unarmed black man was killed by a white police officer and the officer was not even made to defend his actions in a court of law. Many including this writer fervently believe that St. Louis County Prosecutor Robert McCulloch used his office and bent over backwards to ensure that the cop in question, Darren Wilson would face no charges , at least at the State level. Many are pinning their hopes to a possible Federal Indictment of Wilson. Of course that indictment would have to come from new evidence yet unheard. The standard for a Federal Indictment is much higher than at the state level. Of course McCulloch has already poisoned that well with his pre-verdict press diatribe. Federal Prosecutors would have to prove that Wilson killed Brown because he was black or any other Federally prescribed characteristic that would necessitate an indictment. An uphill task at best.
I thought I would talk about the rash of killings by police, of largely, but not totally confined to unarmed black men. Years ago despite what many thought were worse times for race relations, it was rare to hear of a police officer killing someone, black or white. This leads us to wonder at the reason for this rash of aggressive behavior on the part of police. Once even an armed suspect would be given multiple chances to drop his weapon, sometimes police would spend hours negotiating with armed assailants , hoping to have a bloodless resolution. Many will argue officers were never that lenient with black offenders, I disagree. Yes race does play a part in how some cops behave but there are times depending on the officers of course,in which situations involving black assailants are resolved without lethal forced being employed. However the sooner people come to the realization that there are some really bad actors out there wearing police uniforms the closer we are to fixing this problem. Unless of course some do not want a fix. For some apologists cops can do no wrong, regardless of the glaring abuse of power some cops commit against citizens. There are those who find ways to rationalize away their criminal actions. You know for some they are the buffer between the big bad black-man, and the white race. Just ask FOX television.
Which brings us to why cops are so quick on the trigger today ?
♦If officers know they will be held accountable for their actions, they would be much more circumspect in the way they carry out their duties ♦The militarization of police departments have created modern day Rombos who gets to act out their blood-lust fantasies with the toys given them.
Cops these days are dressed like soldiers prepared for battle, full military regalia in too many instances and semi-automatic weapons. They have become soldiers looking for war. To understand this phenomenon we must first look at the ill-advised war on drugs waged by this country, a war which has cost the lives of thousands, devastated the lives of countless others, hundreds of thousands incarcerated and trillions of dollars spent in what is widely believed to be a losing effort.
Ever politician running for office wants to be a big shot so he/she runs on law and order. Don’t get me wrong I fundamentally believe in the rule of law, notwithstanding, this posturing has created a scenario in which we are now wound into a cocoon-like police state , one from which we do not have the will to extricate ourselves. Politicians from the Alderman to the President are beholding to law enforcement and their Unions. Some are petrified of even criticizing outright police abuse out of fear of police back-lash. This creates even worse behavior by police. Unfortunately this is where we now find ourselves.
Twelve-year-oldTamir Ricewas killed by a Cleveland police officer responding to a 911 call several days ago. The 12 year-old was killed just seconds after police drove up. The cop driving did not even have a chance to exit the vehicle before his trigger-happy partner gunned down the 12 years old child who was armed with a pellet gun. What little 12 year old boy does not play with fake guns? What little boy does not fantasize that he is a cowboy, or cop? Who knows what young Tamir was thinking as he played in the park by himself ? maybe, just maybe he was fantasizing he was a cop before he was gunned down two bullets to his tarso.
Kajieme Powell …A 25 year-old St. Louis man was killed 23 seconds after police arrived .Powellwho had a small knife was walking around on the pavement and on a grassy embankment , hands swinging at his side, he ignored police commands to dropthe small knife he had in his hands.Powellwas more of a comic spectacle to passers-by than a threat. Seconds later Powell lay dead 9 police bullets puncturing his body, some as he lay dying on the ground.
Is it a‑okay to kill someone simply because you know the elements are there to guarantee that you will not be held accountable? He had a knife.… He refused our commands to drop the knife»… He was moving toward us»> He was swinging his arms in a threatening way»> He was shouting shoot me now, kill me now.….
The elements are there for you to kill, yes, but did you have to use lethal force. When questioned the St Louis Police Chief said cops want to go home to their families. Pressed further on the possible use ofTasershe came up with the lame excuse that Powell was wearing a Jacket so Tasers may not have worked. Hockey great Wayne Gretskyfamously said “you miss a hundred percent of the shots you do not take” . Of course we will never know whether it would have worked, the two cops couldn’t bother using non-lethal force , why should they ‚who was going to defend this mentally impaired black man with a knife ?
Do you kill simply because you are told you are going on a gun run ? Police Brass in Cleveland said there was no confrontation between 12-year-old Tamir Rce and cops who arrived on the scene after someone called that the youngster was waving around a gun. The caller twice told the dispatcher that the gun may have been a fake, she was however too busy asking whether the kid was black or white to assimilate that little nuisance. Arriving cops did not bother to stop with weapons drawn from a safe distance. Observe the sequence of events as the car raced up to the little boy and instantly he was laying on the ground two bullets in his body. It almost seem that some cops are looking for reasons to kill rather than enforce the laws.
♦Militarization of police departments have made cops overly aggressive. ♦Heavy weapons and equipment makes them believe they are at war. ♦Not prosecuting them vigorously when they break the law,emboldens them to be more disrespectful and abusive. ♦Blind support and cover-ups perpetuates and encourages bad behavior.
Some communities are at war with the police which is supposed to service their needs. There are Fergusons all across America. In far too many communities police are not servants of the people but oppressors. Police Oppression may not be in the form of killings but in false ticketing and arrests on concocted rolling stops by Police in the Town of Poughkeepsie New York, and myriad other localities. In many localities people just keep their mouths shut and pay the fines, while police lie to fill quotas and the coffers fill up so the Politicians can spend and spend some more, all too often using the ill-gotten monies to hire more police and the cycle continues.
Vassar ProfessorKiese Laymon in a brilliant piece written for Ghawker titled My Vassar College Faculty ID Makes Everything OK Wrote: I was driving down Hooker Avenue. When the white police officer, whose head was way too small for his neck, asked if my truck was stolen, I laughed, said no, and shamefully showed him my license and my ID, just like Lanre Akinsiku. The ID, which ensures that I can spend the rest of my life in a lush state park with fat fearless squirrels, surrounded by enlightened white folks who love talking about Jon Stewart, Obama, and civility, has been washed so many times it doesn’t lie flat. After taking my license and ID back to his car, the police officer came to me with a ticket and two lessons. “Looks like you got a good thing going on over there at Vassar College,” he said. “You don’t wanna it ruin it by rolling through stop signs, do you?” I sucked my teeth, shook my head, kept my right hand visibly on my right thigh, rolled my window up, and headed back to campus. One more ticket. Two more condescending lessons from a lame armed with white racial supremacy, anti-blackness, a gun, and a badge. But at least I didn’t get arrested. Or shot six times. Rolling stops, ha,ha , I was not amused when a cop pulled me over near my home right there in the Town of Poughkeepsie a few years ago, driving my older but shiny black Mazda Mellinia to work. I drove the same route to work everyday, that route took me to Dunkin Donuts where they made my large regular as soon as I walked in. I was a regular and my order was the same, they all knew it. The Young cop who shall remain nameless for this article was sitting at the stop sign in the squad-car ‚there was no way to miss him , there was nowhere for him to hide. I came to a stop and continued on my way as soon as it was safe. Even if I was pre-disposed to rolling through it would have been a bad idea that morning with a cop sitting right there. Knowing I had done nothing wrong I was mystified when his lights came on and he pulled up behind me. I asked him what the stop was for? He responded that I had crept through the stop sign ! Stunned I asked whether he was serious? Why the hell would I have rolled through the stop sign when you are sitting right there? By this time you could see he was uncomfortable in the lie, he said nothing further. Thankfully the Judge listened when I explained it was a blatant lie and threw out the ticket. Whether it was the quota system or the black man driving a shiny car , I may never know , what I do know as a former cop is that it was wrong. I have had several experiences with them all of which convinced me they are really not very bright. Yet they are really quick on the lights. On another occasion a cop was at a dead stop at a traffic light , the right filter lane has a yield sign to traffic heading in the direction he was headed. I drove through while he sat at the red, in a matter of seconds he pulled me over. I asked him what was the reason for the stop? , He said quote “you did not stop” , I asked him “why should I have stopped”? He pointed to the yield sign, I dutifully informed him the sign read yield , not stop. He said “you did not yield”! I asked him who should I yield to? He said me you should yield to me ! I asked him why should I yield to you when you are at a dead stop at a red light? He looked at me then broke into a stupid grin then told me “you have good night sir”. There are so many stories I could relate and everyone left a bitter taste in my mouth. Imagine the experiences others have had all across America at the hands of these weak minded people with guns and badges.
In my next Article I will attempt to address some of the things Police and other people face from black thugs.
A video of a man being detained by a Michigan police officer on Thanksgiving Day because he was “making people nervous” by walking with his hands in his pocket in near freezing temperature has gone viral and stoked afresh passions over racial profiling.
Brandon McKean, the man who was detained noted in the video which he posted to his Facebook page on Thanksgiving Day, said he recorded the incident for his protection. It has since been viewed on Facebook more than 3 million times and shared more than 80,000 times. The Pontiac Tribune reported that the incident occurred around 4:30 p.m. in Pontiac while McKean was walking on Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard and Michigan Avenue. The temperature had reached a high of 33 degrees Fahrenheit that day — just one degree shy of the freezing point of water. The video, which is just over a minute, begins with the officer telling McKean that he was making people nervous, and he asks the officer “why?”
And this is how the rest of it went:
“You were walking by,” the officer responds. “Walking by and doing what?” asks McKean. “Well, you were making people nervous.” “By walking by?” “Yeah, they said you had your hands in your pockets.” “Wow. Walking by with your hands in your pockets makes people nervous to call the police when it’s snowing outside?” “It is,” responded the officer nonchalantly before asking McKean “so, are you OK?” “I’m fine, how about you?” McKean replied. “What are you up to today?” asked the officer. “Walking. With my hands in my pocket, walking.” “Is it an inconvenience to talk to me right now?”
“Hell yeah, just because of the whole police situation going on across the country. This is outrageous that you would let somebody tell you, ‘Oh there’s somebody walking down the street with their hands in their pockets. There’s 10,000 people in Pontiac right now with their hands in their pockets …” noted an irritated McKean.
“You’re right, but we do have a lot of robberies, so I’m just checking on you,” replied the officer.
Once again here is a situation which could have careened out of control real fast with devastating consequences for this man, or the officer. I congratulate this young man on the way he stood his ground, did not abuse the officer> I congratulate the officer on the way he handled it to a point , by pulling out a camera phone to record the encounter. Even though he could have done a far better job of explaining why he had to approach the man who clearly was doing nothing wrong. The man later commented on his social media page that he was stopped for walking with his hands in his pockets,ending with police state. Which leads us to venture that the Police state created by GW Bush is having devastating consequences for Americans, the Patriot Act, and other laws designed supposedly to protect America , are making a mockery of the American Democracy. Remember “if you see something say something”? What the hell is something in this context? Is “something” as grey as a black man walking with his hands in his pockets in near freezing temperature? I am beginning to conclude that there are racial elements which are directly stirring up and fomenting racial hatred. I believe there are people out there who are directly using the police to target black people. The police for it’s part is not above using illegal tactics to subvert the process. Just recently they had cops in plainclothes throwing stones at police from the back of a peaceful Ferguson crowd of demonstrators.
What the hell is making people nervous? If you are nervous of people in public spaces with their hands in their pockets, then you need to stay in your home. Some of this is being stirred up by talk radio and more effectively FOX’s Fascist-Xenophobic rhetoric has done a lot to stir up racial angst across the country. What are the chances the same caller/callers would have called the police and reported that a white man was walking along with his hands in his pockets? We have a very big problem !
As photos around the web show images of nationwide protests in reaction to the events in Ferguson, Missouri, one particular image has received widespread attention. Earlier this week, freelance photographer Johnny Nguyen captured a photo of 12-year-old Devonte Hart during a Ferguson-related rally in Portland, Oregon. Hart, an African-American boy, was holding a sign that read “Free Hugs,” and the image Nguyen took shows Hart with tears streaming down his face while in a heartfelt hug with a white police officer.
“It was an interesting juxtaposition that had to be captured. It fired me up,” Nguyen told The Huffington Post on Sunday. “I started shooting and before I knew it, they were hugging it out. I knew I had something special, something powerful.”
Nguyen said the photo has since been shared more than 400,000 times on Facebook and reposted on more than 68,000 Tumblr accounts.
According to The Oregonian, which was the first outlet to publish the photo, the officer pictured in the image is Portland Police Sgt. Bret Barnum, who reportedly saw Hart holding his sign and called him over to engage in a quick conversation about the protest, school and life.
Jordan Johnson, left, 8, from Washington, Camille Chrysostom of Bowie, Md., and Jaimee Swift of Philadelphia, observe a moment of silence at Meridian Hill Park, also known as Malcom X Park, Thursday, Aug. 14, 2014 in Washington, to protest the fatal shooting of Michael Brown by police in Ferguson, Mo. Vigils were held across the country for people organizers say died at the hands of police brutality. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)
Barnum then asked Hart for a hug — and it was during this moment that Nguyen captured the touching photo that he shared with the world.
“I’ve been told this photo has become an icon of hope in regards to race in America,” Nguyen said.
“Prior to that day, I would scroll through the Internet and see the photos of images out of Ferguson, which all showed some violence and anger — some even to the point of hatred and destruction. This was the first photo I saw that showed something positive. It showed humanity.”
Following the protest, Hart’s parents — Sarah and Jen Hart — wrote a Facebook postthat detailed more about their son and the events that led to the moment captured in the photo.
“My son has a heart of a gold, compassion beyond anything I’ve ever experienced, yet struggles with living fearlessly when it comes to the police and people that don’t understand the complexity of racism that is prevalent in our society,” the post read. “It was one of the most emotionally charged experiences I’ve had as a mother.”
As the photo continues to spread across the web, Nguyen said he hopes it will provide some people with a sense of peace along with a message of love and compassion.
“In order to move on and progress toward real change, we need every reason for hope that can be garnered,” he said.
“We all have hurt in our heart but we have to turn that hurt into hope, hope for humanity. We need to find a way to come together and find a common ground and find peace.”
In doing so, Nguyen reflects on one particular quote from civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. that he believes really drives the message home.
“MLK once said: ‘Darkness cannot drive out darkness; only light can do that. Hate cannot drive out hate; only love can do that.’ ” Nguyen recited. “I think that’s what my photo has done.“Huffingtonpost.com
Early discounting, more online shopping and a mixed economy meant fewer people shopped over Thanksgiving weekend, the National Retail Federation said Sunday. Overall, 133.7 million people shopped in stores and online over the four-day weekend, down 5.2 percent from last year, according to a survey of 4,631 people conducted by Prosper Insights & Analytics for the trade group.
Total spending for the weekend is expected to fall 11 percent to $50.9 billion from an estimated $57.4 billion last year, the trade group estimated. Part of the reason is that Target, J.C. Penney, Macy’s, Wal-Mart and other major retailers pushed fat discounts as early as Halloween. Some opened stores even earlier on Thanksgiving. All that stole some thunder from Black Friday and the rest of the weekend.
Still, the preliminary data makes retailers worried that shoppers remain frugal despite improving employment and falling gas prices. Matt Shay, the trade group’s CEO, said he thinks people benefiting from the recovery may not feel the need to fight crowds to get the deepest discount on a TV or toaster. And those who feel like the recession never ended may not have the money and will stretch out what they spend through Christmas. And shoppers are still feeling the effects of high food prices and stagnant wages.
“While they’re more optimistic, they’re very cautious,” Shay said. “If the deals are not right for them, they’re not going to spend.”
Bottom line: Expect more deep discounts, all season long. “Every day will be Black Friday. Every minute will be Cyber Monday,” he said. That could be what it takes to get shoppers to open their wallets for the holiday shopping season, which accounts for about 20 percent of annual retail sales. Besides economic factors, people are becoming more discerning when they shop. Armed with smartphones and price-comparison apps, they know what’s a good deal — and what’s not.
Kimani Brown, 39, of New York City, was among the Black Friday defectors. After four years of braving the crowds, the sales failed to lurehim out this year. “I consider myself a smart shopper. And it’s not as alluring as it used to be,” Brown said. “It’s a marketing tool, and I don’t want to be pulled into it.” He also said the frenzy pushed him to overspend, and he paid the price in January on his credit card statement. Instead, he said he will look online Monday, the online shopping day often called Cyber Monday. Some who went shopping on Thanksgiving felt they were doing it against their will. Cathyliz Lopez of New York City said she felt forced to shop on the holiday. “It’s ruining the spirit of Thanksgiving,” the 20-year-old said Thursday. “But I was checking all the ads, and the best deals were today.”
The National Retail Federation is still predicting a 4.1 percent increase in sales for the season. That would be the highest increase since the 4.8 percent gain in 2011. Some stores and malls had reason to be optimistic. Dan Jasper, a spokesman at Mall of America in Bloomington, Minnesota, said customer counts are up 5 to 6 percent for the four-day weekend. One plus: Shoppers were buying more for themselves, a sign of optimism. “They felt confident in the economy,” he said.
CEOs at Target and Toys R Us said they saw shoppers not just focusing on the doorbuster deals but throwing extra items in their carts. Macy’s CEO Terry Lundgren told The Associated Press on Friday that he’s hoping lower gas prices will help spending.
“There’s reason to believe that confidence should continue to grow. That should be good for discretionary spending,” he said.
Some of those discretionary dollars are migrating online.
Target said Thanksgiving saw a 40 percent surge in online sales and was its biggest online sales day ever. And Wal-Mart reported Thanksgiving was its second-highest online day ever, topped only by Cyber Monday last year.
From Nov. 1 through Friday, $22.7 billion has been spent online, a 15 percent increase from last year, according to research firm comScore. On Thanksgiving, online sales surged 32 percent, while Black Friday online sales jumped 26 percent. In stores, shoppers spent $9.1 billion on Black Friday, according to research firm ShopperTrak, down 7 percent from last year. That was partly due to a 24 percent surge in Thanksgiving sales, to $3.2 billion.
I spent 10 years of my life as a front line Police Officer in Jamaica, one of the toughest Countries to Police in the world. Tough because the framework for the rule of law is not clearly established. The Island Nation is still making baby steps toward moving toward a system of laws, even as it holds on tenaciously to the system of the big-man which has characterized it’s existence since it’s Independence in 1962.
Jamaica has a record of Police extra-judicial killings as determined by the United States, Britain and Canada. Western countries with the worst history and record of state abuse of their ethnic minorities, yet the most vocal and demonstrative finger pointers on the issue..
I have been shot at on more occasions than I care to remember, I have been shot once, yet I have never killed another human being. I have recovered countless weapons and yes, that includes taking illegal weapons from the person of known criminals without firing a single shot. Which brings us to the issue on the minds of most blacks and conscientious others. I refer to the on-going issue of Police killing of unharmed black men. We begin on the premise that Police Officers are hired to protect the public not to intimidate and or kill members of the public.
Unless of course there are issues far deeper and much more sinister influencing the way Cops approach their jobs across America. Issues like Race, or that certain sections of the population has no rights they have to respect. How about an amalgamation of both? It must be understood that not all Police Officers are bad, not by any stretch of the imagination. As human beings we have a natural predisposition to circle the wagons when we feel challenged, attacked or criticized. I challenge my family members, friends and all good Police officers not to feel besieged when the police come under scrutiny. I was one of those people who would get highly indignant when we were criticized, even years after I left law-enforcement. I still jump to the defense of police officers when criticisms come from some quarters. Some people will criticize law enforcement just for the sake of doing so.
Police officers are trained to save lives. Police officers are trained to be restrained when it comes to the use of force. On the instances a police officer is forced to use force to effect an arrest, the level of force employed must not exceed the level of resistance which necessitated the force. Since it is not always easy or practical for a correct assessment of force level employed to be done, Police officers are given wide latitude to complete an arrest. The use of lethal force may only be used when an officer reasonably believes his/her life, or that of another is in imminent danger. The fear must be reasonable. It cannot be fear concocted to cover up the killing of an innocent person. It is not unreasonable to assume that for many police officers there may not be a need to un-holster a weapon for the duration of their service. I have spoken to many officers from different departments, particularly in New York State, a racially diverse state,who have never pointed their weapon at anyone.
The latitude given cops seem to get wider and less distinguishable when Police come in contact with African-Americans. Of late there is a long list of unarmed black men killed by police. In literally all of those cases no cop have been held accountable. Have the laws governing the use of lethal force changed? If so ‚who changed them? If they haven’t been changed how come killer cops are not held accountable? Trey Ellis Novelist, Screenwriter, and Associate Professor at Columbia University sums it up this way. Quote:
In the 1970s, when I was first learning this lesson, the spilt blood of the Civil Rights movement
Trey Ellis Novelist, Screenwriter, and Associate Professor at Columbia University
was still fresh. Today, in a world of black presidents, electric cars and talking iPhones, it’s so hard to convince young black men, like my 13-year-old son, that if a police officer merely perceives you are a lethal threat, he is explicitly allowed to shoot you dead. However, since the mere combination of your sex, race and age ensures that you are perceived as a threat, police officers are authorized to kill you Q.E.D. So what I have to drill into him, since I want him to continue to live, is to listen to his Guardian Slave and be preternaturally polite and respectful no matter how ugly and unreasonable the policeman’s demand. Then at least he’ll probably only be tased. Huffingtnpost.com
Professor Ellis’ prescription for his 13 year-old son is one of survival.Why should this be, 50 years after Dr, King, Malcolm X and others fought and paid the ultimate price for this land? This land their ancestors slaved in and died for. This land that is inherently and exclusively theirs. Why should a black man now have to teach his son how to stay alive after all the black blood which has drenched and fertilized these soils?
The first order of business for Blacks is that they take ownership of their country. That comes with responsibilities. I have spoken at length about those responsibilities here. I will continue to expand on those responsibilities . That may include but not confined to dropping the idiom African-American. How about American? The term African-American gives others the belief you are not an equal owner here! They do not go around calling themselves Dutch, Irish, British, Spanish or any other type of American. Why do you? No race has more right to this land than you, except Native Americans of course. No race have paid even close to the price you have paid for this land. When the Criminal Columbus came here our ancestors were already here , over two hundred years prior to them realizing they would not fall off the face of what they believed was a flat earth.
When your Ancestors got here they never claimed to discover a place people had settled hundreds, maybe thousands of years before they arrived. Once you have dispelled that mythical lie, now stand tall and take charge of your own destiny.
There are some who have never walked in the shoes of a black person, never been exposed to the indignities and the disrespect experienced by black people. Disrespect at the hands of people they pay a salary to. Whatever you say about the responsibilities blacks have to undertake, no one deserves to be killed because a cop feels he/she can get away with it.
In this photo released by the White House, President Obama speaks on the phone with Missouri Gov. Jay Nixon about the situation in Ferguson, Missouri, …
Whatever Michael Brown may have done previously, the fact is he did not deserve to have 12 bullets flying toward him . He absolutely did not deserve to have the system rape and dehumanize him with a faux investigation, the outcome of which was predetermined before it began. How stupid do they really believe we are? It was the same Faux-investigation/prosecution they did in the Trayvon Martin case. An indictment done solely to quell public outcry. Never mind that Zimmerman was no cop, but a vigilante wannabe cop. If the system cannot or more precisely, will not convict a non-cop-vigilante how can the black community trust that same system to prosecute it’s own functionaries?
How much more black blood do they need? How much longer will the black community fight over lingerie on black Fridays while in the streets black-blood is being washed from pavement after pavement, after pavement?
Lets listen to what Melissa Harris Perry ‚professor of politics and international affairs atWake Forest University, and a plethora of other distinctions including Host of her own show on MSNBC and others, have to say.
As a New York grand-jury goes over the evidence in the Police killing of Eric Garner, news Organizations report that they jury is nearing a decision. I never quite understood what that meant. Is nearing a decision based on the length of time they have been impaneled? Is it based on revealing a pre-determined verdict, as the one in Ferguson was. Done at night, after thousands of cops and National Guards-men were first strategically placed to stifle the people’s outrage? I never quite understood what it meant.It is either you have reached a verdict or you haven’t . I stand to be informed and educated on this.
As a trained officer I never quite figured out how I would explain killing an unarmed suspect. I do understand that each case is different. I do understood that officers must have some leeway when we ask them to bring dangerous offenders to justice. Giving cops carte-blanche to kill members of one community we hate is dangerous and untenable. Make no mistake about it that is what’s at issue here. Whether you feel comfortable with my assessment is of no concern to me.
U.S. President Barack Obama speaks as his daughters Sasha and Malia look on before pardoning ‘Cheese’ and his alternate Mac both, 20-week old 48-pound Turkeys, during a ceremony at the White House November 26, 2014 in Washington, DC. The Presidential pardon of a turkey has been a long time Thanksgiving tradition that dates back to the Harry Truman administration.(Photo by Mark Wilson/Getty Images) | Mark Wilson via Getty Images
A Republican staffer on Friday apologized for a Facebook post that criticized Malia and Sasha Obama’s appearance at the annual White House turkey pardon ceremony, one of America’s silliest holiday traditions.
Elizabeth Lauten, the communications director for Rep. Stephen Fincher (R‑Tenn.), wrote that the two teenagers should “try showing a little class,” “dress like you deserve respect, not a spot at a bar,” and, most of all, “don’t make faces” at Very Serious public events.
Elizabeth Lauten
Dear Sasha and Malia, I get you’re both in those awful teen years, but you’re a part of the First Family, try showing a little class. At least respect the part you play. Then again your mother and father don’t respect their positions very much, or the nation for that matter, so I’m guessing you’re coming up a little short in the ‘good role model’ department. Nevertheless, stretch yourself. Rise to the occasion. Act like being in the White House matters to you. Dress like you deserve respect, not a spot at a bar. And certainly don’t make faces during televised public events.
The First Daughters join President Obama at the ceremony every year, where they can hardly contain their disdain for the lame dad jokes that predictably follow. Before approaching Mac and Cheese, the two turkeys, the president remarked that it was “puzzling that I do this every year.” Malia even declined her father’s offer to pet one of the pardoned turkeys with a nonchalant, “Nah.”
Lauten later apologized for rushing to judgment on Facebook.
“I reacted to an article and quickly judged the two young ladies in a way that I would never have wanted to be judged myself as a teenager,” she said. “After many hours of prayer, talking to my parents and re-reading my words online, I can see more clearly how hurtful my words were. Please know that these judgmental feelings truly have no pace in my heart. Furthermore, I’d like to apologize to all of those who I have hurt and offended with my words, and pledge to learn and grow (and I assure you I have) from this experience.”
Publishers note.
Just when you thought that certain people could not be any more class-less they burrow down into deeper depths. Makes you just stand there and well , stare in utter disbelief.
shoppers race in under grill gates to get bargains
With the so-called Black Friday sales concluded, I took the liberty to reflect a little on what it meant for the average person.
My first inclination was disdain, as a small business owner I offer my customers a fair price all year round. I hate to haggle back and forth over prices, I have always believed it demeans me, demeans the customer and well,.…… my business.
So I looked at some of the people who own large corporations, like Wal-Mart, Best ‑Buy, Sears, to name a few . These are people who are really wealthy, making money is a game to them. A recent expose revealed that each of Sam Walton’s four children give to charity, the equivalence of a single penny, when their wealth is compared to the Average American.
people stand in line to enter Target store
Why then would these people pay their workers minimum wage salaries and run phony sales which shoppers can only access immediately after they have swallowed the last bit of Thanksgiving Turkey ? Or worse yet, being made to stand in line at un-Godly hours of the night/morning to get a price discount.
Where are these filthy rich owners at that time of the night/morning while people are camped out waiting to be fed a bone? Then I had a change of thinking. What would happen if these stores offered these deals and no one showed up to their stores at 2:am in the morning? Is it at all possible that they would have to revert to respecting their customers ?
girls fight over lingerie
How can the majority 99% allows itself to be manipulated in this way ? Then it occurred to me that they basically get some of us to vote against our own self- interest among other things, so why not insult us with these false sales attainable only in the dead of night and at great peril to life and limb. If we are stupid enough to leave our families to stand in line in the dead of night to save a few bucks then maybe we deserve the disdain and disrespect their market research suggest they heap on us.
I would guess that the wealthy 1% and their families were comfortably tucked away in warm beds at the time these people are waiting patiently in sub zero temperatures or fighting with their fellow citizens over something as trivial as a piece of garment.
Despite my disgust on Friday one woman actually made my day . She was my first customer, she walked in and wanted to know about the deals my business had for black Friday. I lovingly told her I respected her too much to play numbers games with her. We had a good laugh, then she told me she had visited and seen a phone which she wanted . The price in my store was $189.00 so she admitted that she was on QVC shopping and the price of the phone was $189.00 for a few hours, after which the price went back to .….… Wait for it.….…. $279.00, wow ! She asked to purchase the phone. I thanked her for her honesty and gave her an extra $20 off.
I do agree that as a small business owner I am biased against the large box stores. Nothing that I said however is meant to be injurious, they are just factual statements. It’s time that we the 99% stop allowing the 1% to manipulate us like string puppets.
St Louis County prosecutor Robert McCulloch pulled off one of the biggest three-card*monty on the Justice system in America in modern history. McCulloch was able to defy community calls to step aside in the Michael Brown murder outrage stay on and subvert the course of justice. Robert McCulloch used and abused the prosecutorial powers vested in him turning those powers on the very people who empowered him. The charade of a Grand-jury investigations staged my McCulloch fooled only those who wanted to be fooled. The Prosecutor’s office was counsel for Darren Wilson. His actions were so egregious it was shameful that in a country which claim to have the best justice system, this kind of banana-republic theatrics could be perpetuated, in a homicide case no less.
Case in point. McCulloch’s prosecutors Kathi Alizadeh and Sheila Whirley made no bones about being defense attorneys for Darren Wilson. The entire Transcript of the proceedings are so disgusting it is beyond me that this could pass without McCulloch and the two lackeys not prosecuted for perpetuating fraud. One does not need to be a lawyer to come to terms with the enormity and the magnitude of the fraud they pulled off on the family of Michael Brown, Brown’s memory, and on the criminal justice system.
Michael Brown was on trial. There was no attempt to indict Darren Wilson.
Here is how Lisa Bloom saw it.
A cursory read of the questions posed to Dorian Johnson by Whirley the Prosecutor , reveals Whirley the wolf in sheep clothing acting on Darren Wilson’s behalf. The Transcript made me sick to my stomach. As a former police officer who spent untold hours in courtrooms listening to evidence and giving evidence, I was stunned that this kind of thing could happen. It made me angry. It made me sad for humanity. It filled me with rage that any person. Any system. Anyone with a shred of decency , a shred of humanity ‚could be that hateful of it’s own citizens that it would go to such lengths to cover for their murderers. http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2014/11/25/us/evidence-released-in-michael-brown-case.html?module=Search&mabReward=relbias%3Ar
FERGUSON, Mo. (Reuters) — Tensions eased in the St Louis suburb of Ferguson on Thursday after two nights of violence and looting sparked by racially charged anger over a grand jury’s decision not to charge a white police officer for fatally shooting an unarmed black teenager.
Demonstrators take part in a “mock trial” of Darren Wilson as they protest the decision of a grand jury regarding the death of Michael Brown in St. Louis, Missouri November 26, 2014. REUTERS/Lucas Jackson
Protests also dwindled elsewhere in the United States as the Thanksgiving Day holiday and wintry weather kept many indoors. In New York, where protesters had vowed on social media to disrupt the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade through Manhattan, at least seven people were arrested during the event, police said.In California, about 500 people were arrested in rallies on Tuesday and Wednesday that shut highways in major cities.About 90 of those protesters who were still in jail in Los Angeles on Thursday were ordered released by the city’s police chief in time for Thanksgiving dinner, a police spokesman said, as long as they promised to appear in court.The order did not apply to anyone with an outstanding warrant, nor to one protester who was arrested on Wednesday night for assault with a deadly weapon, the spokesman said. Ferguson became the focal point of a national debate on race relations after officer Darren Wilson shot dead Michael Brown on Aug. 9. The U.S. Justice Department is probing possible civil rights abuses, and President Barack Obama has called for reflection on the difficulties minorities face in the country. http://news.yahoo.com/more-400-arrested-ferguson-protests-spread-other-u-002149048.html
A National outcry erupted in the black community after Darren Wilson fired 12 shots at 18 year-old Michael Brown killing him on the spot in Ferguson Missouri. A Federal inquiry was commenced, parallel local investigations were supposedly underway. Now I am not a Lawyer,so I defer to the legal luminaries on this, but I do believe local and federal authorities do share what information they gather.
I also believe that both federal and local should be after the same thing, justice. You see I ask these questions because at the offset one of the Ferguson community’s complaint was that they wanted St Louis County Prosecutor Bob McCulloch off the case. Several elected representatives and regular residents of the community argued that McCulloch had a record of partiality toward the police.
In fact they argued that he was overly chummy and deferential to law enforcement. They pointed to the fact that. (1 Robert McCulloch’s father was a police Officer. (2 That his father was killed, allegedly by a black assailant. (3 That there are several other glaring instances where Police have killed or otherwise abused members of the black community and McCulloch has been negligent in prosecuting any officer.
Michael Brown
As a result of the foregone they stated he could not be trusted to be fair, impartial or diligent in bringing justice to this case, in which they thought clearly, a criminal act was committed by the cop. Bob McCulloch refused to recuse himself from the process, a move which would have paved the way for an independent prosecutor to collect, Marshall and present the evidence to an impartial grand jury, so that justice would be served.
Such a move would have taken from the community any potential allegations of impropriety, negligence or lack of due diligence it would level at prosecutors pursuing the Investigations. Residents demanded that Governor , Jay Nixon step in and remove McCulloch in order that there may be transparency and more importantly confidence in the process. Jay Nixon cowardly or duplicitous refused to remove McCulloch.
Bob McCulloch openly criticized Jay Nixon the Governor for bringing in a State Police Captain to take over security after violence erupted over the shooting. He openly challenged the Governor to remove him and replace him with a special prosecutor. McCulloch must have known that the Governor did not have the balls to do whats right. He must have calculated that Nixon’s cowardice would grant him cover to do what he wanted. McCulloch commenced the process, then dumped all of the crap he collected at the feet of the 12 person grand-jury.
It should be noted that it required 9 members of the 12 person jury to indict. Quite by coincidence McCulloch’s grand-jury just happened to have had a veto-proof 9 whites and 3 token blacks [sic]. McCulloch has always maintained that he was impartial, that he would collect the evidence and present it all to a grand jury so the jury could make a decision which would absolve him of any wrongdoing. The only problem with McCulloch’s assertions is, that is not what is required of a competent prosecutor who wants an indictment.
Grand jury proceedings are much more relaxed than normal court room proceedings. There is no judge present and frequently there are no lawyers except for the prosecutor. The prosecutor will explain the law to the jury and work with them to gather evidence and hear testimony. Under normal courtroom rules of evidence, exhibits and other testimony must adhere to strict rules before admission. However, a grand jury has broad power to see and hear almost anything they would like.
It should also be noted, that it is purely up to the prosecutor what he/she presents to the grand-jury. Grand jury proceedings are kept in strict confidence. (1 It encourages witnesses to speak freely and without fear of retaliation. (2 It protects the potential defendant’s reputation in case the jury does not decide to indict. So we are good right? A Prosecutor who wants a potential killer brought to justice is going to actively pursue a path with the grad-jury that will give him/her the best chance at an indictment right? But what if the Prosecutor really only want the appearance that he/she is doing his/her job? What is the format, how is evidence , arguments , testimonies presented? Is it done in a way that makes it impossible for the grand ‑jury to indict? Remember that the grand ‑jury process is supposed to be secret for the reasons laid out above. So what made Bob McCulloch decide to do a document dump on the public by releasing all of the testimonies to the public? In fact with a Federal investigations ongoing why would the prosecutor come out and berate the very witnesses who he as the prosecuting Attorney depended on to gain an indictment? To gain a Federal Indictment the standard is even higher than that which a local grand-jury needed to indict. So why did Bob McCulloch come out lampooning the very witnesses both his office and the Feds needed for a potential prosecution. Well let me allow you to listen to Bob McCulloch in person then we continue.
You see there are times when people do things and they pretend that all is above board. It’s not too difficult to miss things if you aren’t paying attention. Here’s the truth, these people have zero respect for the black community. They control power, this is institutionalized racist power which allows them to game the system while making it seem to an unsuspecting section of the population that they are doing all they can to deliver justice when they are actually doing the exact opposite.
The Prosecutor in the case has a duty to present the evidence which will lead the grand ‑jury to the result he/she wants. If however the Prosecutor does not really want an offender indicted the prosecutor can present the evidence in a way that cast doubt on the witnesses and even present an inordinate amount of what appears to be exculpatory evidence. Let me pause here because the legal hawks are going to jump in and remind me that it is only fair that exculpatory evidence is presented. I agree , in the interest of justice it should be presented. However the duty of the grand-jury is not to decide innocence or guilt, it is merely to decide that a defendant has a case to answer.
Darren Wilson
When asked whether there was anything he could have done differently that would have prevented that killing from happening? Darren Wilson repeatedly said . No. I did my job! No emotions, no remorse,no sorrow, cold dispatch. Yet revealing. This is the way they are trained nowadays it appears, weapon or not , lethal force is justified.
Justice cannot be one-sided, or lopsided. It cannot be what you say it is , it must be what all people say it is. It cannot be that a white man pre-meditatedly ambush cops, killing one and injuring another, at a Barrack in Pennsylvanian and is arrested without being shot or otherwise harmed 6 weeks later. While Christopher Dorner,ex military, ex-cop who did basically the same thing was burned to a cinder in the California mountains.
There are just too many instances of this for people of sound mind to turn away any longer. As my nephew a young police officer said recently. Quote Not all cops are bad. Not all whites are racist. Not all black people are criminals. There are some people who speak about these issues without the benefit of knowing what it feels like to be black in America. This is not a problem created by black people. It is a problem created and perpetuated by wicked and ignorant people for over four hundred years. The end of that era of un-earned privilege and oppression is coming to an end. Before you speak on these issues walk awhile in a black man’s shoes.
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