The Silent Majority Wants An End To Crime: The Elites In Kingston Are Fueling The Crime Wave.…

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 about this, our warn­ings fell on deaf years.

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.

Terrence Williams

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.