The following is a snippet of the way real Jamaicans are feeling about their communities and their country in general.
It is important that as you watch and listen you appreciate the palpable fear these ordinary Jamaicans feel, and the genuine concern they have about not even appearing on camera out of fear of reprisal from cronies of the six urban terrorists who were extinguished by the security forces two nights ago.
(courtesy of cvm television.)
The Jamaican people are a decent law abiding people.
This writer has spoken to this for years, about the goodness and kindness of these people.
I understood fundamentally that the elites who define and dominate our culture are totally unconcerned about the people like the folks in this video.
Ordinary people are the one’s who allow their sons and daughters to place their lives on the line as police officers and soldiers.
Outside the elitist bubble , these people are ordinary people whom have contributed much toward the development of our country.
More than anything else they have sent their sons and daughters to put themselves in harms way for all Jamaicans , none more so than their greatest enemies who walk the halls of academia, sit in the media houses and the other places where elitism grow and thrive.
These, the above Cross Roads crowd, receive much from our country without risking anything.
They are given powerful positions in Government and the diplomatic services, they receive national honors they do not deserve, and haven’t earned.
The elitist media and their friends above Cross Roads have systematically used the story line of these, the least productive, most criminally complicit elements in our country to shape national security policy.
The people who give the most, their sons and daughters to die receives nothing in return.
The despicable perpetuation of the victim-hood mentality has been dutifully and gleefully enhanced by the lame stream cheer-leading media which unwittingly allowed inner city allegations of abuse to determine how crime is approached.
This has not only shaped local policy but has impacted international perceptions about local law-enforcement practices.
A google search bears that out.
The time has come for real Jamaicans. Real people like the people in this video to make it known that they will not tolerate this kind of criminality in their communities.
I will say this again , the vast majority of the rural folks are decent good people.
I call on all Jamaicans in every nook and cranny of our beautiful country to stand against the elites in Kingston.
Tell them where they can go with (indecom) and Terrence Williams.
For years we warned against the lying charlatan Carolyn Gomes’ .
Many accused me of taking the side of police because I am a former police officer.
It was only after they had already bestowed a national honor on Gomes that she showed who she truly was.
And what her campaign about human rights was truly about.
We have been warning about Terrence Williams for awhile now .
The idea of an oversight Agency to look at allegations of security forces excess and abuse is a must.
In this day and age there must be safeguards , checks and balances against state power.
However that check against the power of Government must be balanced with the Government’s primary role and prerogative to provide a secure environment for the nation.
It can be done.
It must be done, the two are not mutually exclusive. and are inextricably linked.
With that said, our country must move from being a country of men, to becoming a country of laws.
This transition effectively removes the ability for little men with grandiose ideas and over inflated sense of their own importance to cause harm to many.
The silent majority of Jamaicans want a peaceful place to live and raise their families .
I call on the Administration to ignore the noise of the Kingston crowd , both those in the ghetto and those above Cross Roads who enhances, support and defend criminality in our country
The silent majority of Jamaicans do not support criminals .
The elitists do.