A More Rational View of the Police and Racism Allegations

by Jack

Every year police interact with the public about 350 million times.  In 2017 there were 721 officer involved shootings.   The majority were with an armed and violent suspect, but the use of justified lethal force does not always have to involve a firearm.

In 2018 there were 1175 fatal shootings by police and on average, statistics provided by the FBI show there are about 1000 fatal shootings each year.  About 250 involve a black male on average.

About 50 police officers are killed each year.   The evidence shows a police officer is 18.5 times more likely to be killed by a black male than a black male is to be killed by an officer.

In 2017 black males accounted for 53% of all murders,  54.3% of all robberies, 29.8% of all burglaries, 28.7% of all rapes, and 37.5% of all violent crimes… where there is an identified offender.

For homicides committed under the age of 18, black offenders accounted for 60.1%, 66.6% of all robberies and 31.1% of all rapes.  Source (https://ucr.fbi.gov/crime-in-the-u.s/2017/crime-in-the-u.s.-2017/tables/table-43)

The black population in the US is about 13% of the total population.   If we have a systemic violence problem it overwhelmingly coming from within the black community against blacks.

In 2017, Walter Williams wrote, “Here are the Chicago numbers for the ignored deaths.

So far in 2017, there have been 533 murders and 2,880 shootings. On average, a person is shot every two hours and 17 minutes and murdered every 12 and a half hours. In 2016, when Colin Kaepernick started taking a knee, Chicago witnessed 806 murders and 4,379 shootings.

It turns out that most of the murder victims are black. Adding to the tragedy is the fact that Chicago has a 12.7 percent murder clearance rate. That means that when a black person is murdered, his perpetrator is found and charged with his murder less than 13 percent of the time.

Similar statistics regarding police killing blacks versus blacks killing blacks apply to many of our predominantly black urban centers, such as Philadelphia, Baltimore, New Orleans, St. Louis, and Oakland.”

Mr. Williams concludes, “Black support tends to go toward the criminals in the community rather than to the overwhelming number of people in the community who are law-abiding. That needs to end.

What also needs to end is the lack of respect for and cooperation with police officers. Some police are crooked, but black people are likelier to be victims of violent confrontations with police officers than whites simply because blacks commit more violent crimes than whites per capita.

For a race of people, these crime statistics are by no means flattering, but if something good is to be done about it, we cannot fall prey to the blame games that black politicians, black NFL players, civil rights leaders, and white liberals want to play.”

Post Scripts can’t guarantee every single statistical fact posted here is 100% accurate, because there is often a slight disagreement even within government reporting agencies.  However, the statistics noted are generally consistent with the FBI’s Uniform Crime Reports and they appear accurate within a plus or minus a 2% error rate.  

 

 

 

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Seeking Truth About Systemic Racism in Cops!

Defiantly reposted by Jack Lee because the truth needs to said….

Two years of corrosive rhetoric about racist cops, based on falsehoods — with disastrous effects.

For two years American police departments have endured relentless attacks from the Obama administration, its media allies and the Black Lives Matter movement alleging that U.S. law enforcement is a racist, deadly threat to African-Americans. A handful of disturbing videos depicting police shootings helped galvanize widespread hostility to law-enforcement officers, and cops began backing away from the proactive policing that stops crime but has been repeatedly denounced as racial oppression.

It bears repeating: Unjustified shootings by police officers are an aberration, not the norm, and there is no evidence that racism drives police actions. 

Make no mistake: Assertions about systemic, deadly police racism are false. That has been true throughout the period following the shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Mo., in 2014; recall that the cop involved was ultimately exonerated by the Justice Department. But no number of studies debunking this fiction has penetrated the conventional story line.

A “deadly force” lab study at Washington State University by researcher Lois James found that participants were biased in favor of black suspects, over white or Hispanic ones, in simulated threat scenarios. The research, published in 2014 in the Journal of Experimental Criminology, confirmed what Ms. James had found previously in studying active police officers, military personnel and the general public.

In 2015 a Justice Department analysis of the Philadelphia Police Department found that white police officers were less likely than black or Hispanic officers to shoot unarmed black suspects. And this month “An Empirical Analysis of Racial Differences in Police Use of Force” by Harvard economics professor Roland G. Fryer Jr., analyzing more than 1,000 officer-involved shootings across the country, reports that there is zero evidence of racial bias in police shootings.

All of which brings us to President Obama’s extraordinary statement last week alleging systemic racism in American law enforcement. He was speaking in the aftermath of two highly publicized fatal police shootings. Viral video captured the shooting of Alton Sterling in Baton Rouge, La., as officers attempted to disarm him, and the aftermath of the shooting of Philando Castile during a car stop outside St. Paul, Minn.

Those shootings look horribly unjustified based on the videos alone; but information may emerge to explain the officers’ belief that the victims were reaching for a gun.

A few hours after President Obama made his remarks, the Dallas gunman assassinated five police officers, in a rampage that police officials later reported was driven by hatred of white officers and white people generally.

Mr. Obama’s statement undoubtedly had no causal relationship to the Dallas slaughter. But it certainly added to the record of distortion and falsehood that has stoked widespread animus toward the police.

It bears repeating: Unjustified shootings by police officers are an aberration, not the norm, and there is no evidence that racism drives police actions.

Every year, officers confront tens of thousands of armed felons without using lethal force. According to the Washington Post, police officers fatally shot 987 people in the U.S. last year; the overwhelming majority were armed or threatening deadly force.

Blacks made up a lower percentage of those police-shooting victims—26%—than would be predicted by the higher black involvement in violent crime. Whites made up 50% of police shooting victims, but you would never know it from media coverage. Note also that police officers face an 18.5 times greater chance of being killed by a black male than an unarmed black male has of being killed by a police officer.

Indifferent to these facts, President Obama on Thursday, referring to the police killings in Baton Rouge and St. Paul, said: “[T]hese are not isolated incidents. They’re symptomatic of a broader set of racial disparities that exist in our criminal justice system.” He made another sweeping allegation of law-enforcement racism, saying that there “are problems across our criminal justice system, there are biases—some conscious and unconscious—that have to be rooted out.” And he claimed that higher rates of arrests and stops among blacks reflect police discrimination; naturally, Mr. Obama remained silent about blacks’ far higher rates of crime.

Such corrosive rhetoric about the nation’s police officers and criminal-justice system is unsettling coming from the president of the United States, but it reflects how thoroughly the misinformation propagated by Black Lives Matter and the media has taken hold. Last month Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor, dissenting in a case about police searches, wrote that blacks are “routinely targeted” by law enforcement, adding that “Until their voices matter, too, our justice system will continue to be anything but.”

Hillary Clinton has also taken up this warped cause. On CNN Friday, she decried “systemic” and “implicit bias” in police departments. She also called on “white people” to better understand blacks “who fear every time their children go somewhere.”

Mrs. Clinton ought to take a look at Chicago. Through July 9,  2,090 people have been shot this year, including a 3-year-old boy shot on Father’s Day who will be paralyzed for life, an 11-year-old boy wounded on the Fourth of July, and a 4-year-old boy wounded last week. How many of the 2,090 victims in Chicago were shot by cops? Nine.

Meanwhile, Donald Trump emphasized “law and order” in a video released Friday, saying: “We must stand in solidarity with law enforcement, which we must remember is the force between civilization and total chaos.”

Given the nightmarish events of the past several days, Mr. Trump could do worse than making this presidential campaign one about that line between civilization and anarchy.

This piece originally appeared in The Wall Street Journal by Heather MacDonald

Post Scripts can’t guarantee every single statistical fact posted here is 100% accurate, because there is often a slight disagreement even within government reporting agencies.  However, the statistics noted are generally consistent with the FBI’s Uniform Crime Reports and they appear accurate within a plus or minus a 2% error rate.  

Posted in Police, Crime, Security | Tagged , , | 17 Comments

What You Should Know if You are Being an Honest Protester

posted proudly by Jack Lee

Posted in Police, Crime, Security | Tagged , , | 10 Comments

They’re Here in Chico

by Jack

A modest, but enthusiastic crowd of anti-police protesters gather on the sidewalk next to the City Council Chambers in downtown Chico.  There were probably 60% girls between 15 and 25 with a slightly older mix of males and females.  In other words mostly thrill seekers.  The typical protester chants were heard and at one point everyone took a knee, a symbolic gesture that has been spreading from one protest group to another.

The crowd marched once around Plaza Park then back to their original spot for more cliché’ slogans, leader: Whatta we want?  Crowd: Justice!  Leader:  When do we want it?  Crowd: Now!”    Boring…    Probably only 5 or 6 black people were in attendance, maybe not even that.  I got the feeling tonight was a dress rehearsal… the big event is scheduled for the weekend.

Signs carried by the protesters tonight were exactly what you might expect, “F— the cops”, was a popular one, they even wore tee shirts with that bit of wisdom on it.  One young girl carries a sign calling for the police to be disbanded.  That was brilliant.  I wanted to quiz her about how her idea, but didn’t get the chance.  Too bad, because I had my facts, but I doubt she did.  For instance, 2-3 questionable or unjustifiable in-custody deaths per year for the last decade, does not an epidemic make.

I can see how this crowd size could start growing and perhaps by Friday they could be a problem.  I notice a number of downtown businesses  had their plate glass windows  boarded with sheets of particle board like you might see before a hurricane.   (see Tres Hombres on right)

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HOW To Be a WELL PREPARED PROTESTER (Friday… ANTIFA and others gather in Chico)

by Jack

Check this out, and don’t worry about the bad guys getting tips here, I got it from the internet where anyone can get it 24/7.  There’s a lot worse info out here too… I got more coming later today, it’s pretty shocking.  So stay tuned.

Protesting for fun and profit….

From the vantage point of a passerby or TV-news consumer, walking around in a crowd with a sign for a couple hours is a piece of cake. But let’s face it: Asking nicely for change doesn’t always work. To be effective, protesters must sometimes force a crisis—that is, interrupt some vital piece of social machinery like a highway or place of business, so that leaders are unable to ignore their demands. The squeaky wheel gets the grease, as the saying goes. Recent Seattle protest have included sit-ins and blocked intersections, as well as some targeted property destruction by radicals and some not-particularly-targeted pepper spray from police.

So if street protest is a way of renegotiating the social contract—the basic, shared norms of behavior that are the difference between a random collection of people and a society—how, exactly, do you do it? Seattle Weekly‘s got your back. Based on our reporters’ experiences covering protests and interviews with veteran activists, here are ten tips for anyone stepping onto the street with a heart the size of a fist, ready to love and fight.

1. Buddy Up

Street protests aren’t necessarily dangerous, but they certainly can be. Just ask Sam Levine, an independent journalist who was filming the conflict between police and the black bloc on May Day last year when shrapnel from a crowd-control grenade, launched by an officer of the Seattle Police Department, tore a penny-sized hole in his left cheek. “Is my face gone?” he asked the strangers who surrounded him. It wasn’t, but it was permanently altered; nine months later, his left cheek slumps a bit, as though he’d had a stroke.

Instead of a buddy, Levine had luck: the luck to remain conscious and be surrounded by level-headed observers, who helped him until an officer allowed Levine to walk to an ambulance behind police lines.

Don’t count on luck. In case your face gets punctured by police shrapnel or doused in pepper spray, or you find yourself panicking and unable to think clearly, have help at hand. Protest with a buddy. Watch each other’s backs. Be ready to ride to the hospital with your buddy or procure medicine and/or bail money if they end up in jail. (Bail in Washington is typically $500 for misdemeanors and $1,000 for gross misdemeanors, but arrested protesters who live in the area are usually released on their own recognizance once they see a judge.)

Also be ready to share water and snacks, strategize about what kind of action you want to take, and debrief afterwards. Practice rinsing one another’s eyes for pepper spray beforehand. Be ready, together.

2. Have a Plan

“In preparing for battle,” Ike Eisenhower once said, “I have always found that plans are useless, but planning is indispensable.”

These are words to live by. Go into protests with at least a rough idea of where you’re going and what you’re going to do there. Follow activists and journalists on Twitter to stay apprised of upcoming protest events, and contact protest organizers through social media if you have specific questions for them, like: When and where? What transportation is available? How confrontational will the march be? Is there a leadership structure? Have contingencies in mind in case something goes wrong, including one or more rendezvous points and times arranged with your buddy in case your cell phone dies. Talk with your buddy about how much tolerance for risk you each have. If one of you does get arrested or hospitalized, there should be a plan to help care for children, pets, or plants.

Maybe you want to plan your own protest.Thanks to the First Amendment, you do not need a permit to do so, but police can intervene and arrest if you block traffic or damage property. If you want to coordinate with the city and have police clear a route for your march, you can apply for a permit through the Special Events Office.

3. Be Prepared

Do you have water? Medication? A half-and-half mix of water and alcohol-free Maalox? This last item is for rinsing pepper spray (oleoresin capsicum, or “OC”) from your eyes and other mucous membranes. Hopefully you won’t need it, but maybe you will. See our checklist below this story for more stuff you will want to bring—but also remember that every item adds to the weight you’ll have to carry during the march. So pack light, as you would for a hike across the city, because that’s exactly what often happens in protests, except with cops in Darth Vader gear spraying hot sauce into your eyes, sometimes. Also, there is usually nowhere to poop.

If you’re on your period, consider a reusable “Diva Cup” instead of a tampon in case you get arrested and are unable to change menstrual products for a while (and also so that OC doesn’t wick its way up a tampon into your mucous membranes—ouch!). Wear eyeglasses instead of contacts, strap on some good walking shoes, and dress in layers of weather-appropriate clothing. Write the following phone number in permanent marker on your upper arm so that it doesn’t get wiped off in the process of arrest: 206-422-4663. It’s a demonstration support line run by the National Lawyer’s Guild that is staffed by attorneys and tracks arrestees and witnesses.

4. Deploy Strategically

Some claim that simply venting rage at injustice is a good-enough reason to take to the streets. There’s certainly something to be said for collectively expressing shared emotion, but on the other hand there’s a lot to be said for not screwing up traffic just because you feel like it.

In any event, this guide is addressed to protesters with an agenda—that is, specific goals and a plan for effecting them. So what is your agenda? How will your actions advance it? In 1999, protesters interrupted a World Trade Organization summit in Seattle by strategically blocking traffic. Yet not all strategies need be so overtly tactical. Plenty of successful protests have had a simple strategy of presence, showing solidarity with an arrested peer so the detained resister doesn’t think she or he is forgotten.

Remember to identify and appeal to a specific audience. In contrast to sabotage or private correspondence, protest is by definition a kind of political theater. It addresses someone about something. Often that someone is an elected leader or a private-business boss, but protest can also address the public at large or members of a particular group. For example, Black Lives Matter marchers have sometimes snubbed the media—not because they don’t understand how publicity works, but because mainstream America isn’t necessarily their target audience. Peers on social media are, according to several local BLM activists. May Day anti-capitalist marchers often damage, or try to damage, property in an overtly symbolic way—for instance, smashing a window on a building owned and operated by a corporation that has relied on child sweatshop labor. This kind of property damage is less of a threat to the one percent and more of a rallying cry—“Smash capitalism!”—to the 99 percent.

While protests, civil disobedience, and other conflicts with authorities always make a statement, that doesn’t have to be their main purpose. These situations can also teach people how to rebel together and how to live together. For example, Occupy Wall Street is memorable in part for its experiments in non-capitalist living, and ongoing organizing for Black Lives Matter has engendered a new generation of political leaders in the struggle for social justice. This kind of learning is strategically valuable in its own right. A word to the wise, though: Be conscious about what you’re learning, what kind of culture of resistance you’re building. Is it just? Is it effective? Is it sustainable? Does it value life and consent? Is it kind? As you fight the status quo, what new reality are you creating?

5. Do No (Unnecessary) Harm

When you protest, you are, among other things, acknowledging the moral fact that humans are responsible for one another. Otherwise there would be no point to your protest. You cannot effectively object to injustice without tacitly endorsing justice.

Your responsibilities as a protester don’t extend only to causes like black lives or the environment; they also extend to the individuals around you, including fellow protesters, passersby, and cops. Exactly what those responsibilities are is open to debate. Respecting a police officer’s humanity doesn’t imply submission or deference. Resist as you see fit. But don’t forget that beneath that riot gear is a human being, warts and all.

[Note to Seattle’s Finest: You might want to keep the same thing in mind the next time you reach for the pepper spray.]

6. Protect Your Tech

In 2008 the Tacoma Police Department secretly bought a “Stingray” device that physically tracks people via their cell phones by pretending to be a cell-phone tower, according to the Tacoma News Tribune. Here in Seattle, police pay for a web service that monitors activists’ social-media accounts. As whistleblower Edward Snowden revealed, the National Security Agency is collecting all the telephone data it can get its hands on. It also has the ability not only to tap your cell phone, but also to turn it on remotely.

If you’re effective at changing the status quo, there’s a fair chance the minders of the status quo will take an interest in you. The simplest way to prevent the kind of snooping described above is restraint: Take the battery out of your smartphone, or leave it at home, if you don’t want to be tracked, and remember that someone may be watching when you post on social-media platforms like Twitter. Of course, these precautions can make it more difficult to communicate clearly with other activists, which can reduce your effectiveness. The trade-off between security and efficacy is one you’ll have to manage for yourself.

Another tool you can use to protect your privacy is encryption—in other words, turning your messages into code that can be deciphered only by someone with the right key. For text messages, you can use Signal, which automatically encrypts messages sent to other Signal users (but is still able to send and receive normal text messages with those not on Signal). For e-mail, you can use a tool called Pretty Good Privacy, which comes in a bunch of free services including the Gmail add-on CryptUP. If you want to hide your web browsing from voyeurs, consider Tor, a browser that routes your Internet traffic through a global relay system to anonymize it.

Two warnings. First, no security is perfect, so don’t expect it to be. You can make it harder to get snooped, but not impossible. Second, the very act of taking e-security measures is itself a red flag to government watchers. For instance, documents released by Snowden and others have shown that the NSA automatically tracks people who even just read about Tor online.

7. Beware of Moles

“John Jacob” was a well-known radical activist in Olympia for years, until Evergreen State College student Brendan Maslauskas Dunn and police accountability activist Drew Hendricks got suspicious. After discovering through a public-records request that they and other radical activists in Olympia were being surveilled by several police agencies and the military, the pair gradually suspected, then confirmed, that the man they knew as John Jacob was actually John Towery, a civilian employee of the Army who was passing information to the military and local police agencies. Towery’s leaked information appears to have led to the false arrests of several activists who’d been working to stop military equipment from being shipped through regional ports.

“They gathered [the evidence against Towery] piece by piece,” says Larry Hildes, the attorney who represents Dunn and other activists in a lawsuit against Towery and the government. “They very systematically checked out who he was … and very methodically and quietly gathered the evidence until they had incontrovertible proof.” It later came out that Towery tried to persuade at least one antiwar activist to buy guns.

Hildes’ advice for activists worried about similar infiltration? “Don’t get paranoid,” he says. “Be careful what you say and who you say it to, but don’t let the threat of surveillance prevent you from organizing and speaking out. If you have suspicions about someone, don’t start announcing them. Talk to someone you trust and sort of feel them out little by little.

“The easiest way to destroy a group is to have everyone calling each other an infiltrator,” Hildes adds. “If you have real proof, then do something about it. But assume that there are people attending meetings that are not friendly; assume you may have an infiltrator.”

It’s hard to say how common Towery’s kind of spying is, but it’s not unheard of. In 2003, members of the group Peace Fresno learned they’d been infiltrated by an undercover detective. From 2004 to 2006, the FBI paid an informant named “Anna” to entrap eco activists into bombing “the Nimbus Dam in California, cellphone towers, science labs, and other targets,” according to The Guardian‘s Ed Pilkington.

“This surveillance is no error,” writes journalist Will Potter in Green Is the New Red, his book on how the federal government uses terrorism legislation to target environmental and animal-rights activists. “It is systemic.” Bottom line: the government spies on and infiltrates activist groups, and sometimes tries to goad activists into committing felonies. This is a real thing. It actually happens. That’s why, Hildes says, it’s essential to know when to say no. “If someone starts pushing you to take action that doesn’t make sense,” he says, “don’t do it.”

8. Don’t Panic

Jorge Torres didn’t expect to spend a night in jail in December 2014. But after police arrested him at a street protest for pedestrian interference and reckless endangerment, that’s exactly what happened.

According to Torres, whose charges were later dismissed with prejudice, guards at the county jail went out of their way to try and scare him about a night in the clink, saying things like, “This is your first time here, isn’t it? You don’t know what you’re getting into. Don’t get beat up here tonight!”

“My stay overnight there with about 19 other prisoners was just fine,” Torres told us afterwards. “Everybody there was very polite to me. It’s amazing how far giving your food away can go.”

The lesson to take from this: whatever happens, don’t panic. As Portland’s Rosehip Medic Collective (which among other things provides emergency healthcare to injured protesters) puts it in one of its training manuals, “The number-one weapon of the police is fear.” Your number-one defense against that weapon is calm. If you are arrested, do not resist, but also don’t volunteer any information. A partial caveat to this rule: “If the officer believes the person is committing a criminal act and asks for name and address with the intention of citing the person,” says Doug Honig, spokesperson for the state ACLU, “refusing to provide that name and address can be grounds for arresting the person because failure to provide that info makes it impossible for the officer to write a citation.”

Other than possibly giving your name and address, do not talk to police without a lawyer. Ascertain that you’re actually under arrest, ask why you’re under arrest, note the officer’s name and badge number, and say “I wish to remain silent and I want to talk to a lawyer” over and over again, as many times as you need to. Remember that you are Constitutionally entitled to an attorney, regardless of your ability to pay. All this is doubly important if you are an undocumented immigrant or have other legal troubles hanging over your head. Seattle employees, including police, are typically barred from asking people about their immigration status, but there are exceptions.

9. Debrief

As soon as possible following any protest, document any injuries, even if they seem like they’re not a big deal. Take well-lit photographs with a coin or some other object to indicate the size of the injury. This isn’t just about you: Publicly documenting physical harm caused by police or others makes it harder for them to justify that harm next time around. Remember: pics, or it didn’t happen.

Whether you post those pics on social media is up to you. On the one hand, a picture of a blastball bruise is worth more than a thousand-word essay on police brutality. On the other hand, you may want to keep those photos to yourself at first if you plan to use them in a lawsuit or complaint.

Debrief with someone you trust and who ideally was also present at the protest. Most protests are fairly boring. But protests can be traumatic, filled with explosions, pepper spray, and rage, and talking through your feelings can be healing. Some symptoms of trauma to watch for include feeling numb or disconnected from your body, staring into space, and feelings of hopelessness or desperation. Take time to care for yourself, alone or with friends and family. Sleep and exercise. Journal.

If you’re contaminated with OC, drink lots of water to clear it from your system. Put your contaminated clothes in a plastic bag to be cleaned separately from other laundry. Shower in cool water to clear OC from your body without opening the pores of your skin to chemical attack.

10. Keep Pushing

“Being an activist is not about promoting absolute solutions, which stirs passions while obstructing logic,” writes former Seattle City Councilmember Nick Licata in his book Becoming a Citizen Activist. “It’s about addressing people’s anger by giving them some control over their lives.” Taking to the streets is certainly one way to address anger and seize control, but it’s temporary. By itself, street protest accomplishes little more than yelling. Lasting change requires the boring work of building alternatives.

One way to build such alternatives is disciplined lobbying of elected officials, who, thanks to a kind of natural selection, tend to care about getting re-elected more than about any particular issue. With a handful of fellow constituents, politely but inexorably hound officials (your officials—they don’t care what you think if you’re not voting in their re-election) with specific, factual questions and requests at town halls, photo ops, public meetings, and their offices. Make it easy for them to say “Yes” and hard to say “No.”

Another approach is simply to bypass the authorities by finding a problem and fixing it yourself. That’s how we in the Seattle area got homeless encampments and clean-needle exchanges: A couple of local activists got tired of watching their friends die from exposure and AIDS, respectively, so they found the best solutions available and made them happen, saving countless lives in the process.

There’s a saying among anarchists that bears repeating at the beginning of this new chapter in American history: diversity of tactics. No one approach will protect our neighbors and safeguard our future. But our collective power as citizens to claim the streets is a tool that should not go wasted.

Knowing Seattle, it probably won’t be.

cjaywork@seattleweekly.com

This post has been edited to correctly spell the name of Brendan Maslauskas Dunn.

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Magic Show Makes Reality Disappear!

By Jack

There’s a smoke and mirrors magic show in town and it has the best trick in the world.  It’s going to take all the racial violence and criminality that exists in the black community and make you think the police are the problem!

And this grand illusion is going to make a fortune by fooling people into believing its absolutely true!  As comical as this may seem, the joke is on you and you will soon be paying dearly for the privilege of being tricked.

9 Comments

George Floyd Autopsy Report Results

Posted by Jack

Warning – this news may be incredibly distressing if you are a member of Black Lives Matters or a dingbat liberal.  

The medical examiner’s report has been released and it concluded a number a of very important things about the death of George Floyd.  Number 1 on the list is, George Floyd did not die from something the police did.   

George Floyd died from complications brought on by a mix of intoxicants and a heart condition known as coronary artery disease.  When Floyd resisted arrest and over stressed his sick heart, he set himself up for the heart attack that followed.  He did not die because a cop’s knee was placed on his neck to hold him down.  The medical report made it clear, there was no blocked airway, no strangulation, in fact the witnesses all said Floyd was able to yell the whole time.  How can you do that if your airway is blocked, if you are being strangled, if you are being asphyxiated?  You can’t and I’m surprised nobody picked up on this from the start.

So, there’s the bad news… there was no asphyxiation, no strangulation – sorry to disappoint.   Furthermore, even if the cops were trained EMT’s, which they are not,  its doubtful they could have saved him.  They did not  recognize his heart attack in part because of the mans intoxicated behavior.

FACTS:  Witnesses and officers all concluded Floyd was under the influence of intoxicants.  The medical examiner said so too.  Witnesses have said Floyd was trying to pass a counterfeit $20 bill, twice.  The medical examiner said Floyd had coronary artery disease.

The police responded to a 911 call resulting from Floyd’s behavior.  They found Floyd sitting on the mall sidewalk leaning against a wall.  They took him into custody and helped him to his feet.  Then while walking him to a nearby patrol vehicle, Floyd started struggling, this frequently happens when a drunk realizes he is about to go to jail.  None of this was on CNN or ABC.

Even now, right this minute, there is a CNN female news anchor declaring to her viewers that Floyd was “killed after an officer placed his knee on the victims neck.”   Guess she knows more than the Medical Examiner.

The MSM and the lynch mob have really overshot the truth this time and caused  tremendous damage.

New York Post:  “An autopsy found “no physical findings that support a diagnosis of traumatic asphyxia or strangulation” of Floyd, but revealed “underlying health conditions including coronary artery disease and hypertensive heart disease,” the complaint says.

“The combined effects of Mr. Floyd being restrained by the police, is underlying health conditions and any potential intoxicants in his system likely contributed to his death,” the document adds.” 

My guess is the cop with his knee on Floyd’s neck might be charged with using an unauthorized control hold, but a charge of involuntary manslaughter will never stick, it lacks the elements.

There’s very little to blame the cops for, but Floyd’s action were way out of line.  But, that’s not what the haters want to hear is it?  This doesn’t fit what they thought they saw in 5 seconds of video.  The quote, “I can’t breath” was likely due to his heart, not what the police were doing.   George Floyd Didn’t Die of Strangulation/Asphyxiation, He Died of Heart Condition Complicated by Intoxicants in His Body

A “Statement of Probable Cause” of the death of George Floyd has been released by the City of Minneapolis, and it concludes that Floyd’s death was due to underlying health conditions, not strangulation.  BET

“The autopsy revealed no physical findings that support a diagnosis of traumatic asphyxia or strangulation,” the statement reads, according to CNN. 

“Mr. Floyd had underlying health conditions including coronary artery disease and hypertensive heart disease. The combined effects of Mr. Floyd being restrained by police, his underlying health conditions and any potential intoxicants in his system likely contributed to his death.”

You can armchair quarterback everything the cops did, but it won’t change the reality.  This was not a homicide.  It may not even be a chargeable offense.  This was another sad case where too many people rushed to the wrong conclusions and started a series of tragic events among those with a lynch mob mentality.

Do you think the hatemongers and loots will feel guilty and return the millions in stolen property?  Will they help rebuild and replace what they destroyed and burned?  Will they even mourn for the murder of the Oakland officer they shot to death and the other officer that they wounded?   You know the answer.

This is not about THEIR personal responsibility for creating an injustice – it’s only about the police responsibility.   The mob has never been held accountable for anything.  There’s your great injustice.   The berated and abused police and all the innocent Americans that don’t rush to judge, that don’t loot and don’t act like A- H’s, they are the real victims once again.

Sources:

https://www.sciencetimes.com/articles/25881/20200530/autopsy-report-george-floyd-died-asphyxia.htm

https://www.nydailynews.com/news/national/ny-meghan-mccain-george-floyd-autopsy-20200530-nu2bhgq3vzaldbulvdeoxbmspu-story.html

https://www.news4jax.com/news/national/2020/05/30/complaint-autopsy-reveals-nothing-to-support-strangulation-as-cause-of-george-floyds-death/

https://www.bet.com/news/national/2020/05/29/george-floyd-autopsy-claims-no-findings-of–traumatic-asphyxia-o.html

 

 

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Minneapolis Looting and Arsons

by Jack

Speaking as a witness to a number of major riots including the Watts Riot, and also as a retired police officer,  what I see happening in Minneapolis is sickening, but it is also part of a bigger picture that is even more disturbing.

“President Donald Trump on Friday threatened to take action to bring the city of Minneapolis “under control,” calling violent protesters outraged by the death of a black man in police custody “thugs” and saying that “when the looting starts, the shooting starts.”  I agree with Trump, because the rioters are taking advantage of a tragic death, using it as a pretext to loot and burn.

It makes me wonder, are these looter really citizens of America, because they sure don’t act like it?   They show absolutely no respect for the things that makes a society function.  Their actions speak more like backward, primitive people, completely devoid of social and moral responsibility.   I think… Americans, real Americans would stand up for justice.  Sure they would protest loudly and demonstrate their concerns, but they would never be part of the smash and grab mob.  I wonder…. how have we devolved to this low conduct?

Intelligent, adult Americans don’t behave like thugs.  We have too much respect for ourselves and for the rule of law.  What we are seeing now is an abomination, a cancer in our society and they should be dealt with severely, just as Trump says.

We should meet this challenge head on and put it down quickly, because our thin blue line that keeps society civil will not be able to contain the growing threats much longer.  Our lives depend on the police to be able to maintain order.  When they are outnumbered a 100 to one they can’t.   The liberal mayor of Minneapolis has orders to restrain his officers just like our gang of four in Chico have done.  This is no good – it doesn’t work.  Appeasement is not the way to regain control after the burning has started.

We established a criminal justice that is second to none.  It may have it’s flaws, but compared to all the rest, its still the best in the world.  What kind of people would not respect that?  Who would turn away from that system to pursue mob violence?   Only, fools and criminals.  We owe these people nothing, except a jail cell.  WE DON’T NEED LYNCH MOBS burning AutoZone to get attention.  NOTHING THAT HAPPENED between one cop and one suspect that could justify that.

How does stealing connect to anything the cops may or may not have done? It doesn’t!    Make no mistake, there is a larger agenda in play here.  This crowd and others like them are not guilty of a simple riot, of cause and effect.  No, this is another major attack on civilized society and its happen too often with increasing violence.

This has happened so many times in America it has become a learned behavior spread across generations.   And in all these examples shown below at least 98% of the responsibles got away with it and profited too.  Let me remind everyone now how many times they’ve played the same old race card; check this out:

The evidence (show above) makes it quite clear – we have a growing problem within our society that must come to an end soon or it will end us.

Mobs don’t care about laws, they don’t care about evidence, right or wrong, they only care about their own self-centered narrative.  And anything like the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis,  that supports the theory of their wholesale victimization at the hands of rogue police everywhere is all they want to hear.  But, the facts don’t support them.  The facts say they are completely wrong – its statistically provable!

Regarding this Minneapolis riot, what allegedly triggered the violence was video crafted to fit the race-baiters narrative.  It was edited to show only a white cop kneeling into the neck of a handcuffed black man.  We saw a cop’s knee pressed into the black guys neck and nothing else.  An autopsy is still pending, but the media claims this black man died of his injuries caused by the misapplied force by a cop.   Maybe it was, but we don’t know that for sure yet.  Look, I’m not defending the cop, but I am also not willing to get out in front of the truth and jump to conclusions like our mainstream media.

There’s a lot of questions to be answered before anyone should join the liberals and the lynch the cop mob.  For example, did the man die from asphyxiation or something else?  Was the man resisting arrest up until the time the office held him down with his knee?  Why did he continue to hold him in this manner?  What kind of training did the officer/s have in order to safely handle arrested persons?  There’s a ton of questions that need to be answered that are not available at this time.  So we need to chill and let the system do what it is intended to do.  (I’m speaking to the nation at large not our PS readers – you guys are already chill! )

All that we know at this time is the cop seems to holding the man down with his knee on the man’s neck.  That’s bad, I admit, but there is so much more we need to know before we form a verdict.  We don’t see the cop/s trying to beat him, shoot him,  we only see a knee in the guys neck.  We did see several cops walking the suspect, that was ok.  So, that’s it.  If this knee was really the cause of death, then it was not a clear cut case of anything, certainly murder or even deliberate malice.  If that is the case, then at worst this is a case of involuntary manslaughter, its not a case of crazed cops out to kill black people as Black Lives Matters and every liberal on earth would have us believe.

We only are allowed to seeing the image of the white cop on the black man, because that  fits the liberal narrative perfectly.  This is all that the race baiters, the radical progressives and agitators want to you to see, and then they fill in the blanks, the rest of the story, for you.   Why this is a clear cut case of a brutal, racist cop killing a black man.  A black man who was a pillar of society, a gentle giant and would never do a thing wrong or harm a fly! He was murdered by white cops for absolutely no reason.  And this is what they have played 24/7 since it started.   This is like pouring gasoline on smoldering embers.

Now enter the “ready to riot people.” They could care less about the cause of death of George Floyd.  They are not out for justice -  not when they could be looting a department store.  Not when they could steal whatever they could carry away!   Remember New Orleans after Katrina?  Sure looks familiar.   It was looting time and this is what they do.  Could happen in any big city and we’ve got a long list lootings to prove it!   These ready-to- riot types are always looking for an excuse and get their 10 seconds of fame on the news.

The big question America should be asking is, why?  The looting of stores and arson all went down with scripted precision.   But, why, these places had absolutely nothing to do with the original incident?  They were simply places of opportunity for the flash mob to do what they always do.  This is always what happens – but why?

In my opinion, there are thousands of people in every state, ready to riot right now and we need to do some major soul searching, because the direction we are headed is unacceptable.

I never again want to hear…  the rioting and damage was “understandable given the circumstances.”  No it is not!   It is not understandable, its not justifiable and it is being done for reasons we need to address – now!

Over the years I’ve read a lot about the causes of social unrest and rioting.  One of the main causes may surprise you, because it goes back long before America.  It originated in Africa about the dawn of mankind.  And it has lasted in various forms and by various names until the present time.  This is a cultural thing among blacks now and  specifically its called tribalism.  Even though the black community may not recognize it, they are certainly influenced by it.

The dictionary says, tribalism is the state of being organized by, or advocating for, tribes or tribal lifestyles. Human evolution has primarily occurred in small groups, as opposed to mass societies, and humans naturally maintain a social network. In popular culture, tribalism may also refer to a way of thinking or behaving in which people are loyal to their social group above all else, or, derogatorily, a type of discrimination or animosity based upon group differences.  This area is best handled by historians and sociologists, but its worth looking into and maybe we’ll open some minds in the process?

Another ingredient to social unrest is a carry over from the old cold war days.  The anti-American rhetoric of the 1950’s lives on in the talking points of socialists (progressives) today.  Liberals took the lessons from the communists and use the same tactics to undermine our value and idealism and attack everything we hold as dear.   Their objective is power and control.  They need to make us hate our own country and our own moral principles.  They need to control how we see things through their blinders. This is taking place in institutions of higher learning everywhere.

Stay with me just a bit more and I’ll wrap it up as quick as I can.   One of the leading progressive tactics to gain control is instilling class warfare among our minorities.  You can read this in works by Karl Marx and his theories about society, economics and politics - collectively understood as Marxism.  He holds that human societies develop through class conflict and this can be exploited.  Class conflict really resonates with tribalism, its a perfect fit for our race baiters.   Then we have the media feeding frenzy that fuels the flames and helps coordinate the next rampage.  There’s a lot more to this, but I’m not writing a book.

In closing, if you can just step back from headlines, away from the incident du jur that provoked a riot you will see the bigger picture.   It is so obvious what’s going on, yet so few people seem to be aware of it.  We headed for a revolution, a social and political revolution inspired by progressives, socialism and racism.

If we don’t figure it out soon and have the guts to resist the subversions… its over.

 

26 Comments

It’s a Great Time to Chill

by Jack

Another long hot summer approaches and once again the headlines are filled with racist stories, from coat to coast.  Doesn’t matter to the headline if it was an unbelievably trivial incident in Central Park over a dog running without a leash or something much more serious, like a black man dying after he was handcuffed.  Headlines are designed to draw you in and sell papers or air time.  The reporters will then craft the their story in a way to fit the popular narrative.  And these days racism is still ranked among the top topics to write about, a carry-over from the Obama years.

Look how one reported punch up her story about white parents who adopted two black children….no facts, just propaganda.

  • Kimberly Witt and her husband adopted their two sons from Ethiopia when the boys were eight and nine.
  • After enduring instances of racism, the Witts moved from their small Iowa town to St. Paul, Minnesota, but they were still targeted.
  • The recent racist incident in Central Park in New York City and the death of a black man in Minneapolis, reminded Witt that her children won’t be safe anywhere they move.

WAIT, did you read what I just read?  Did she really say, the recent incidents mean they won’t be safe anywhere they move?  OMG…this means to me that cops must be lying in wait for a person of color to be ambushed!  That every single white person is a closeted member of the KKK, ready to lynch a black man at the first opportunity.

The reporter goes on the write, “It happened again. This time in Central Park in New York City. Amy Cooper, a white woman, called the police after a black man who was bird-watching asked her to leash her dog, which is the rule in that part of the park. In the now-famous video, Cooper called 911 and said an African American man was “threatening” her and her pet.”  Okay, so the lady was a kook, to that there is no question.  Was she feeling threatened or feeling that her dog was being threatened, only her psychiatrist knows for sure, but not the lame reporter trying to sell tabloid news.

Look folks, in the real word cops deal with kooks like this lady a thousand times a day all over America.  Ask any cop, he’ll tell you!   They can recite a dozen or so kook calls with no problem.  They are way too common.  One of the first things that cops learn is the world is filled with kooky people who say stupid, kooky things.  They usually vote democrat too, but I digress.

The main point here is, its time for everyone to chill out and realize how we are all being played by the news media.   The air across America is not thick with racial tension!  This is hype talk.  Fact is, racism was a nuthin burger, to quote Hillary, until Obama got it fired up again.  Even though he tried to support his belief of racism in America,  almost every incident he championed turned out to be a non-starter.  But, the results were still painful.

One can point out the last dozen race incidents that were pure fiction, but they are bull dozed over by that one anomaly, that one unusual case that wasn’t!   That one among the hundreds of faked incidents can cast a pall of suspicion over everything.   Remember, “Hands up don’t shoot?”  That was determined to be a fake years ago, yet it is almost as famous today as the MLK I have a dream speech.  It’s not fair!  If we don’t start sorting out the fact from fiction better we will have air thick with racial tensions come summer.

 

 

 

 

Posted in Behavior and Psychology, News Media, Police, Crime, Security | 12 Comments

Today’s Tidbits

The State of California is the nation’s largest employer. CA employs 233,551 full time and writes payroll checks to every month for well over 2.05 billion dollars. The represents an average paycheck, excluding benefits of $8777 monthly or annual salary of $105,000 (average) The benefit package, retirement and health insurance, represent about 38% of the monthly cost per employee.

SACRAMENTO county has 78,678 fulltime state workers. LOS ANGELES county has 20,501 full time state workers. Butte county has 1148 state worker, mostly in public safety and DMV. There are 14 employees that don’t fit into any county and apparently are just out here somewhere in the state floating around doing who knows what?

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