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Author Topic: 2 snipers shoot 11 cops in Dallas, 4 dead
Ish Geber
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Lioness, is BLM an organization based in Dallas?
Posts: 22234 | From: האם אינכם כילדי הכרית אלי בני ישראל | Registered: Nov 2010  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
kdolo
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Solution:

It is obvious that Albinos have neuroses and psychological problems which make them a manifest threat to Black life.

Therefore: Whites cannot be left alone in the policing, prosecuting, judging , and incarceration of Blacks.

In any areas where there are Blacks, the police, prosecutors, judges, and corrections force must be staffed in equivalence to the black population.

--------------------
Keldal

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zarahan aka Enrique Cardova
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quote:
Originally posted by Ish Gebor:
Report of The Sentencing Project to the United Nations
Human Rights Committee Regarding Racial Disparities in the United States Criminal Justice System, August 2013


http://sentencingproject.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/12/Race-and-Justice-Shadow-Report-ICCPR.pdf


Black Americans Incarcerated Five Times More Than White People

JUNE 18, 2016

Black Americans were incarcerated in state prisons at an average rate of 5.1 times that of white Americans in 2014. In some states that rate was 10 times or more, reports The Guardian.

http://www.sentencingproject.org

The standard explanation by "HBD" and right wingers is that
the disparity is right, because blacks "commit more crime."
But this doesn't explain why blacks who commit the SAME crime as
whites, get more prison time than whites who commit the
same offense. Why the double standard? And why has the Supreme Court
in some instances shut down challenges to this double standard by
denying black defendants access to statistics collected by
the criminal justice system on race- per Michelle Alexander in
The New Jim Crow I think is the reference. They usually
run away from this key question.

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kdolo
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Albinos have mental issues...congenital in nature when dealing with Blacks.

As such,

They can not be trusted to 'enforce law' over Blacks.

All police forces in Black areas must have hard quotas !

This includes also prosecutors and judges.

Hard quotas !

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mena7
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 -
It is foolish for somebody for somebody to participate in a peaceful protest walking with an assault weapon. You are inviting yourself to being set up by some agent provocator and you are putting the life of other protesters in danger.

After that foolish ex Black soldier killed five innocent police officers I think some government agency is going to classify some Black people organizations and some Black individual as terrorist and treat them and spy on them like the treat the Arab and Muslim population in the USA. The Patriot Act is probably going to be use against some Black non mainstream organizations. I remember an Hebrew Israelite saying in a video that the FBI secretly classified them as a terrorist group. I dont know if it is true or not. My condolence for the death of the five Dallas police officers

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the lioness,
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quote:
Originally posted by Ish Gebor:
Lioness, is BLM an organization based in Dallas?

BLM just stands for Black Lives Matter. The organization has no base and no hierarchy. It's more of a social network. They have 30 or more chapters in various states. The founder is a woman named Alicia Garza
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the lioness,
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Suspect now dead Identified, one shooter, mobile tactics
-he claimed to have no affiliation to militant groups and acted alone

http://abcnews.go.com/US/dallas-shooting-suspect-wanted-kill-white-people-white/story?id=40431306

Dallas Shooting Suspect Micah Xavier Johnson Had Rifles, Bomb Making Materials in His Home, Police Say
ABC News

Micah Xavier Johnson

 -

 -

The suspected gunman in an attack on police officers in Dallas -- which left five cops dead and seven injured -- had bomb-making materials, ballistic vests and rifles in his house, police said.

The news from police came as police pieced together the background on the suspect, 25-year-old Micah Xavier Johnson, in the ambush-style shooting Thursday night.

Detectives are also analyzing information in a "personal journal of combat tactics" they recovered, Dallas police said.

Officials said this afternoon it appears that Johnson was the lone shooter. Dallas Mayor Mike Rawlings described the gunman as a "mobile shooter" who wrote manifestos on how to shoot and move.

Johnson, who was killed by police when they detonated a bomb delivered by robot, served as a U.S. Army reservist until April 2015. He was trained and served in the Army Reserve as a carpentry and masonry specialist, defense officials said.

Johnson, a private first class, was deployed to Afghanistan from November 2013 to July 2014, according to his service record. His former employer, Jeppi Carnegie, CFO of Touch of Kindness LLC, said Johnson had worked for the residential health care company since January 2015. He worked from his mother's home in Mesquite and cared for his 21-year-old brother, Carnegie told ABC News.

Carnegie described Johnson as a "good employee" and a "family man" who loved his younger brother. The company never had any issues with Johnson and was always volunteering to work more hours.

Although Carnegie said it was aware that Johnson was very "pro-black," he said he wasn't militant and wasn't aware of any of his personal beliefs or affiliations he had with potentially had with pro-black groups, he said, adding that he was "surprised and disappointed" when he found out Johnson was a suspect in the Dallas ambush.

Carnegie was on duty as a fireman at last night's protests in Dallas, he said, and didn't find out Johnson was a suspect until Johnson's mother called him Friday morning.

"That could've easily been me," Carnegie said. "He could've mistaken me for a cop, as a first responder on the scene."

Dallas police said in a statement this afternoon that Johnson's Facebook account: "included the following names and information: Fahed Hassen, Richard GRIFFIN aka Professor Griff, GRIFFIN embraces a radical form of Afrocentrism, and GRIFFIN wrote a book A Warriors Tapestry."

Further details were not immediately available.

________________________


http://www.cnn.com/2016/07/08/us/philando-castile-alton-sterling-protests/index.html


(CNN)The ambush began with gunshots that killed five officers and sent screaming crowds scrambling for cover. It ended when a Dallas police bomb squad robot killed a gunman after negotiations failed.

Investigators identified the dead attacker as 25-year-old Micah Xavier Johnson of Mesquite, Texas, a military veteran who'd served in Afghanistan.
Police said they searched his home Friday afternoon and found bomb-making materials, ballistic vests, rifles, ammunition and a personal journal of combat tactics. Investigators are analyzing information in the journal, a police statement said.
Dallas Mayor Mike Rawlings said Friday afternoon that investigators determined Johnson was "the lone shooter in this incident," confirming what federal officials had told CNN.
"This was a mobile shooter who had written manifestos on how to shoot and move, shoot and move, and that's what he did," Rawlings said at a news conference. "As we've started to unravel this fishing knot, we've come to realize this shooting came from one building at different levels."
Rawlings stressed that other people may have been involved in planning the attack. He said there was confusion about the number of shooters at first because there were about 20 protesters dressed in camouflage and carrying rifles, and they scattered when the shooting started.
Dallas police Chief David Brown spoke at a prayer rally on Friday and said: "Through our investigation of some of the suspects, it's revealed to us that this was a well-planned, well-thought-out, evil tragedy by these suspects."
Nobody has been charged, Gov. Greg Abbott said, but police want to make sure every lead is investigated.
The deadly gunfire erupted in Dallas after videos showing two African-American men shot by police in Louisiana and Minnesota spurred protests and debate over police use of force across the country.

Five police officers were killed and seven others were wounded in the ambush. It was the deadliest single incident for U.S. law enforcement since September 11, 2001. Two civilians were hurt, the Dallas mayor's office said.

As officials condemned the attack, details emerged about the man who died after a lengthy standoff with police in a parking garage.
Johnson told police negotiators that he was upset about recent police shootings, that he wanted to kill white people -- especially white officers -- and that he acted alone, the city's police chief told reporters Friday.


"We saw no other option but to use our bomb robot and place a device on its extension for it to detonate where the suspect was," Brown said. "Other options would have exposed our officers to grave danger. The suspect is deceased as a result of detonating the bomb."
Johnson had no criminal record or known terror ties, a law enforcement official said.
He served in the U.S. Army Reserve from March 2009 to April 2015, training as a carpentry and masonry specialist, according to records released by the Pentagon. Johnson was deployed for about seven months in Afghanistan, from late 2013 to mid-2014, and recevied an honorary discharge.
Wayne Bynoe, a neighbor, said police cars were outside Johnson's home Friday. Johnson lived with his mother and kept to himself, Bynoe said.
Johnson had at least two weapons with him -- a rifle and a handgun, two law enforcement officials said.
One of the officials, familiar with the latest information from the Dallas police investigation, said the rifle was an SKS semi-automatic. The other official said Johnson legally bought multiple firearms in the past.
Dallas police said in a statement Friday that investigators discovered rifles and ammunition in Johnson's house.
He was the "lone gunman," Secretary of Homeland Security Jeh Johnson said.

The attack
Witnesses said protesters were marching peacefully in downtown Dallas when the gunfire started Thursday night.
The Rev. Jeff Hood, one of the protest organizers, said he saw two officers go down, then watched a sergeant running toward the gunfire.
"I ran the opposite direction. I was concerned about the 700 or 800 people behind me," he said. "I was screaming, 'Run! Run! Active shooter! Run!' And I was trying to get folks out as fast as I could."
Crowds ran into a parking garage, witnesses said, and spilled out after word spread a sniper was nearby.

"Everyone was screaming, people were running," said witness Clarissa Myles. "I saw at least probably 30 shots go off."
Police have said at least two snipers fired "ambush-style" from an "elevated position." Then police exchanged gunfire and negotiated with a suspect for hours at a parking garage in downtown Dallas.
Before authorities killed him with an explosive, Johnson told negotiators more officers were going to get hurt, and that bombs had been planted all over downtown.
Police found no explosives during sweeps of the area, Dallas Police Maj. Max Geron said Friday morning on Twitter.
The victims
The five slain officers were identified on Friday.
Dallas Police Officer Lorne Ahrens was killed in last night's ambush in downtown Dallas, according to The Washington Post and local media reports. Ahrens was a 14-year veteran of the Dallas Police Department, according to media reports.
Dallas Police Officer Michael Smith was also killed in last night's ambush, according to CNN affiliate KFDM and local media reports. Smith joined the Dallas Police Department in 1989, according to his sister, who spoke to CNN affiliate KFDM.
CNN affiliate WDIV said Dallas officer Michael Krol was killed. The last two officers were Dallas officer Patrick Zamarripa and DART Police officer Brent Thompson.
Police have said at least 10 officers were shot by a sniper and one officer was shot in a shootout at the parking garage. It's not clear where the 12th officer was shot.
Who are the slain officers?
A few of the wounded officers remain hospitalized, police said. Brown called for the community to support them.
"We don't feel much support most days. Let's not make today most days," Brown said. "Please, we need your support to be able to protect you from men like these, who carried out this tragic, tragic event."

 -

victims

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zarahan aka Enrique Cardova
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Agreed, and condolences likewise. This incident seems
to only help the right wing, who can now start beating
the "law and order" drum. A bunch of cops will appear at
the Republican convention, Trump will "stand up for our officers",
unlike the "weak" Democrats and so on.

And killing these officers barely makes a dent in a well armed,
well-organized paramilitary formation like the Dallas PD,
who, like other police depts nationwide, have had fulsome access
to heavy military hardware, including advanced tech like the robot
used in Dallas. As a "gesture" some find it thrilling, but
ultimately its just a gesture, like the romanticized but
ineffectual Black Panther confrontations with well armed police,
that usually saw mostly Panthers dead. David Hilliard,
top ex Panther official, once attended a party given by white
leftists in the late 1960s and while some made some supportive
noises, he found that most didn't give a damn about the young men being
gunned down, and sought to "distance" themselves instead.
When trouble hit, the affluent whites could comfortably
afford lawyers, bail, white network support etc but the brothas
languished at the mercy of those targeting them.

He watched the whites as they slurped down on hors d'oeuvres and wine
while the brothas moldered in dank "safe" houses, awaiting the next
police raid as they hunkered down. Meanwhile informers
and provocateurs within the ranks stoked the fires,
set up the brothas, and ran rampant.


Furthermore the police are a hardened target - the next set
of shootings will not come off with such a high body count.
Drills, new weapons including improved body armor and drones
will be deployed. And aside from whatever damage an incident accomplishes
all that will have been accomplished is a stalemate against
a strong, repressive force, that will have suffered minimal
or moderate damage at best- basically diminishing returns.
The usual reply is that such incidents "raise consciousness."
But we already have plenty of "consciousness" WITHOUT any murders.
And without allowing right wingers to profit by whipping up
the faithful into paroxysms "agin" the "black menace."

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the lioness,
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http://www.usatoday.com/story/life/music/2016/07/08/public-enemy-member-professor-griff-denies-ties-to-dallas-shooter/86879416/

Public Enemy's Professor Griff denies ties to Dallas shooter
Jayme Deerwester, USA TODAY


Police combed through Dallas shooter Micah Xavier Johnson's social media account Friday to try to understand his actions, a move that's now custom after a mass shooting.

Johnson's Facebook page, which has since been deactivated, bore a selfie taken with Richard "Professor Griff" Griffin, 55, a member of the influential rap group Public Enemy. The photo has since been disseminated by media outlets.

The band, whose heyday was in the late '80s and early '90s, was fronted by Chuck D. (Carlton Ridenhour) and Flavor Flav (William Drayton Jr.). It was controversial for its political, pro-black political stance and backing Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan.

A statement from the Dallas Police Department said Johnson's Facebook page mentioned Griff. In the statement, police said he "embraces a radical form of Afrocentrism" and is the author of a book called Warriors Tapestry. (Editor's note: It is actually an audiobook.)

Afterward, Griff issued a flurry of tweets in which he stressed, "I do not know the shooter" and "I do not advocate killing cops." He also claimed he was being monitored by the police and FBI. One bore the hashtag #HANDSOFFGRIFF.

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CelticWarrioress
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Zarahan,

Come off it. Your's,Troll Patrol's,Mena7's,Kdolo's White people hating butts have no condolences or sympathy for the lives & families of these officers so don't act like you do. Truth be told you & the rest of your ilk are more than likely very happy these officers are dead and are probably celebrating their deaths, yay 5 less crackas on the planet.

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Ish Geber
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quote:
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:
Originally posted by Ish Gebor:
Lioness, is BLM an organization based in Dallas?

BLM just stands for Black Lives Matter. The organization has no base and no hierarchy. It's more of a social network. They have 30 or more chapters in various states. The founder is a woman named Alicia Garza
lol smh So what does that tell you? Because I am wondering, do you actually truly understand what this is about. lol smh

Noam Chomsky at Hotel Vancouver, 1996, talks about the strategical tactic of black men imprisonment.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XivlW1gOzAs


The Injustice System In America (2007), public defender Jeff Adachi addresses a critical point.

http://www.dailymotion.com/video/xxyya7_the-injustice-system-in-america_shortfilms

Posts: 22234 | From: האם אינכם כילדי הכרית אלי בני ישראל | Registered: Nov 2010  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
Ish Geber
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quote:
Originally posted by zarahan- aka Enrique Cardova:
quote:
Originally posted by Ish Gebor:
Report of The Sentencing Project to the United Nations
Human Rights Committee Regarding Racial Disparities in the United States Criminal Justice System, August 2013


http://sentencingproject.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/12/Race-and-Justice-Shadow-Report-ICCPR.pdf


Black Americans Incarcerated Five Times More Than White People

JUNE 18, 2016

Black Americans were incarcerated in state prisons at an average rate of 5.1 times that of white Americans in 2014. In some states that rate was 10 times or more, reports The Guardian.

http://www.sentencingproject.org

The standard explanation by "HBD" and right wingers is that
the disparity is right, because blacks "commit more crime."
But this doesn't explain why blacks who commit the SAME crime as
whites, get more prison time than whites who commit the
same offense. Why the double standard? And why has the Supreme Court
in some instances shut down challenges to this double standard by
denying black defendants access to statistics collected by
the criminal justice system on race- per Michelle Alexander in
The New Jim Crow I think is the reference. They usually
run away from this key question.

Yes Zarahan, these are the real issues that need to be addressed/ discussed. And these keep being overlooked, as irrelevant. Which shows that the "entire justice system" is crooked.

quote:
Black Americans Given Longer Sentences than White Americans for Same Crimes

A new academic study of 58,000 federal criminal cases has found significant disparities in sentencing for blacks and whites arrested for the same crimes. The research led to the conclusion that African-Americans’ jail time was almost 60% longer than white sentences.

According to M. Marit Rehavi of the University of British Columbia and Sonja B. Starr, who teaches criminal law at the University of Michigan Law School, the racial disparities can be explained “in a single prosecutorial decision: whether to file a charge carrying a mandatory minimum sentence….Black men were on average more than twice as likely to face a mandatory minimum charge as white men were, holding arrest offense as well as age and location constant.” Prosecutors are about twice as likely to impose mandatory minimums on black defendants as on white defendants.

In federal cases, black defendants faced average sentences of 60 months, while the average for white defendants was only 38 months.

The report concludes that sentence disparities “can be almost completely explained by three factors: the original arrest offense, the defendant’s criminal history, and the prosecutor’s initial choice of charges.”



-David Wallechinsky, Noel Brinkerhoff
http://www.allgov.com/news/top-stories/black-americans-given-longer-sentences-than-white-americans-for-same-crimes?news=843984

quote:
Racial Gap in Men's Sentencing

Prison sentences of black men were nearly 20% longer than those of white men for similar crimes in recent years, an analysis by the U.S. Sentencing Commission found.

That racial gap has widened since the Supreme Court restored judicial discretion in sentencing in 2005, according to the Sentencing Commission's findings, which were submitted to Congress last month and released publicly this week.

In its report, the commission recommended that federal judges give sentencing guidelines more weight, and that appeals courts more closely scrutinize sentences that fall beyond them.

The commission, which is part of the judicial branch, was careful to avoid the implication of racism among federal judges, acknowledging that they "make sentencing decisions based on many legitimate considerations that are not or cannot be measured."

Still, the findings drew criticism from advocacy groups and researchers, who said the commission's focus on the very end of the criminal-justice process ignored possible bias at earlier stages, such as when a person is arrested and charged, or enters into a plea deal with prosecutors.

"They've only got data on this final slice of the process, but they are still missing crucial parts of the criminal-justice process," said Sonja Starr, a law professor at the University of Michigan, who has analyzed sentencing and arrest data and found no marked increase in racial disparity since 2005.

Douglas A. Berman, a law professor at the Ohio State University who studies sentencing, said, "It's not surprising that the commission that's in charge of both monitoring and amending the guidelines has a general affinity for the guidelines."

The Sentencing Commission didn't return requests for comment.

The Supreme Court, in the 2005 case U.S. v. Booker, struck down a 1984 law that required federal district judges to impose a sentence within the range of the federal sentencing guidelines, which are set by the commission.

The law was meant to alleviate the disparity in federal sentences, but critics say placing restrictions on judges can exacerbate the problem by rendering them powerless to deviate from guidelines and laws that are inherently biased. An often-cited example is a federal law that created steeper penalties for crack-cocaine offenses, which are committed by blacks more frequently than whites, than for powder-cocaine offenses. Congress reduced the disparity in 2010.

In the two years after the Booker ruling, sentences of blacks were on average 15.2% longer than the sentences of similarly situated whites, according to the Sentencing Commission report. Between December 2007 and September 2011, the most recent period covered in the report, sentences of black males were 19.5% longer than those for whites. The analysis also found that black males were 25% less likely than whites in the same period to receive a sentence below the guidelines' range.

The Sentencing Commission released a similar report in 2010. Researchers criticized its analysis for including sentences of probation, which they argued amplified the demographic differences.

In the new study, the Sentencing Commission conducted a separate analysis that excluded sentences of probation. It yielded the same pattern, but the racial disparity was less pronounced. Sentences of black males were 14.5% longer than whites, rather than nearly 20%.

Jeff Ulmer, a sociology professor at Pennsylvania State University, described the commission's latest report as an improvement but said it was "a long way from proving that [judicial discretion] has caused greater black-white federal sentencing disparity."

--Joe Palazzolo


http://www.wsj.com/articles/SB10001424127887324432004578304463789858002


 -

http://newjimcrow.com

Posts: 22234 | From: האם אינכם כילדי הכרית אלי בני ישראל | Registered: Nov 2010  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
Ish Geber
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quote:
Originally posted by the lioness,:
http://www.usatoday.com/story/life/music/2016/07/08/public-enemy-member-professor-griff-denies-ties-to-dallas-shooter/86879416/

Public Enemy's Professor Griff denies ties to Dallas shooter
Jayme Deerwester, USA TODAY


Police combed through Dallas shooter Micah Xavier Johnson's social media account Friday to try to understand his actions, a move that's now custom after a mass shooting.

Johnson's Facebook page, which has since been deactivated, bore a selfie taken with Richard "Professor Griff" Griffin, 55, a member of the influential rap group Public Enemy. The photo has since been disseminated by media outlets.

The band, whose heyday was in the late '80s and early '90s, was fronted by Chuck D. (Carlton Ridenhour) and Flavor Flav (William Drayton Jr.). It was controversial for its political, pro-black political stance and backing Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan.

A statement from the Dallas Police Department said Johnson's Facebook page mentioned Griff. In the statement, police said he "embraces a radical form of Afrocentrism" and is the author of a book called Warriors Tapestry. (Editor's note: It is actually an audiobook.)

Afterward, Griff issued a flurry of tweets in which he stressed, "I do not know the shooter" and "I do not advocate killing cops." He also claimed he was being monitored by the police and FBI. One bore the hashtag #HANDSOFFGRIFF.

"Professor Griff" has taken a lot of pictures with people all over the globe, I am sure. Since he is a popular figure in the black community and was part of the international rap group. How does this connect him to these killings committed by Micah Xavier Johnson? SMH


Your article says: "It was controversial for its political, pro-black political stance and backing Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan."


When are they going to address the controversial "gangster rap", which influences black youth and caused high crime rates amongst black youth? While conscious rap was a positive stimulus for black youth.

When are the real issues going to be addressed. Louis Farrakhan has been addressing socioeconomic disparities for over four decades. As if that is a crime.

What needs to discussed is, was has led to "a radical form of Afrocentrism"?


From what I understand is that all political conscious rappers or rap groups have been monitored by the organizations mentioned previously. Gangster rap however never has been a problem. In fact private prisons have become a lucrative business.

Posts: 22234 | From: האם אינכם כילדי הכרית אלי בני ישראל | Registered: Nov 2010  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
Ish Geber
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quote:
Originally posted by CelticWarrioress:
Zarahan,

Come off it. Your's,Troll Patrol's,Mena7's,Kdolo's White people hating butts have no condolences or sympathy for the lives & families of these officers so don't act like you do.

There is no start and end to the stupidity of this individual. It is just an endless cycle of stupidity. I have tried to talk commonsense into this individual. But the radicle racist white winger(-s) can't be helped. They made up their mind. And rationalize the dead of blacks as being justified by all means. And will blame every back person on the globe for the act of one black individual. Which brings us to the actual core of this matter, which is PREJUDICE and the DOUBLE STANDARDS!

These officers didn't have to die, but the question is, what frustrated this man, he decided to go this extreme. As I said, I don't condone it, but I do understand it.


quote:
Originally posted by CelticWarrioress:
Zarahan,

Truth be told you & the rest of your ilk are more than likely very happy these officers are dead and are probably celebrating their deaths, yay 5 less crackas on the planet.

All this is imaginary nonsense from your part, as usually.

See, what you're doing is actually what has been the tradition in the South. Which is blaming blacks randomly and making FALSE accusations on them. This was the basis for the high rate of blacks being imprisoned. Lie about blacks, criminalize them demonize them. What you're doing is your cultural venue.

This was the precursor for racial profiling, yes it goes back that far.

Doxie, was Patrick Zamarripa white?

Posts: 22234 | From: האם אינכם כילדי הכרית אלי בני ישראל | Registered: Nov 2010  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
zarahan aka Enrique Cardova
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There is no start and end to the stupidity of this individual. It is just an endless cycle of stupidity.

LOL the racist Warrioress has often in the past supported skinhead and
neo-Nazi claims. And while me and several here have expressed condolences
with the families of the officers, as shown above before the
racist even posted, the racist hypocrite has not done so, and has
remained silent on showing any sympathy or understanding
to the black families re the deaths in Minnesota and Louisiana.

--------------------
Note: I am not an "Egyptologist" as claimed by some still bitter, defeated, trolls creating fake profiles and posts elsewhere. Hapless losers, you still fail. My output of hard data debunking racist nonsense has actually INCREASED since you began..

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Ish Geber
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quote:
Originally posted by zarahan- aka Enrique Cardova:
There is no start and end to the stupidity of this individual. It is just an endless cycle of stupidity.

LOL the racist Warrioress has often in the past supported skinhead and
neo-Nazi claims. And while me and several here have expressed condolences
with the families of the officers, as shown above before the
racist even posted, the racist hypocrite has not done so, and has
remained silent on showing any sympathy or understanding
to the black families re the deaths in Minnesota and Louisiana.

Doxie supports extreme rightwing divisiveness. The false accusations are typical of Southern tradition. The more Doxie types, the better I am starting to understand this Southern culture and history. These rightwing groups you've mentioned are associated with militia troops. And have in mind to take down the government, i.e. police officers etc... So Doxie makes no sense, again.


http://racialinjustice.eji.org/timeline/1930s/


Ex-Rep. Joe Walsh deletes tweet threatening 'war' on Obama

Former Rep. Joe Walsh is under fire after deleting a tweet saying "This is now war" against President Barack Obama and Black Lives Matter protesters following the killing of Dallas police officers.

"3 Dallas Cops killed, 7 wounded. This is now war. Watch out Obama. Watch out black lives matter punks. Real America is coming after you," tweeted Walsh, a former tea party congressman from Illinois and now a conservative talk radio host.

New York Times reporter Matthew Rosenberg spotted the deletion early Friday morning and urged people to retweet it.

http://edition.cnn.com/2016/07/08/politics/joe-walsh-obama-war-tweet/

Posts: 22234 | From: האם אינכם כילדי הכרית אלי בני ישראל | Registered: Nov 2010  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
lamin
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quote:
These things are shocking and disturbing.
If after centuries of living together the couple is still not getting along, with one member of the couple complaining of constant abuse and violence then what should be done?

Originally, the couple got together through a kidnapping and forced marriage under a master-slave arrangement.

What would a sensible lawyer say?

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the lioness,
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quote:
Originally posted by lamin:
quote:
These things are shocking and disturbing.
If after centuries of living together the couple is still not getting along, with one member of the couple complaining of constant abuse and violence then what should be done?

Originally, the couple got together through a kidnapping and forced marriage under a master-slave arrangement.

What would a sensible lawyer say?

Again, go to what country?
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Ish Geber
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quote:
Originally posted by lamin:
quote:
These things are shocking and disturbing.
If after centuries of living together the couple is still not getting along, with one member of the couple complaining of constant abuse and violence then what should be done?

Originally, the couple got together through a kidnapping and forced marriage under a master-slave arrangement.

What would a sensible lawyer say?

Just saw this cold hard discussion. They go to the core of the kidnapping and forced arranged marriage. Click the link below, and watch the discussion.

quote:
US police killings: What role does prejudice play?

This week's fatal shootings by police in the US have restarted national outrage about the treatment of African Americans.

And highlighted once more, the racial disparities in America's criminal justice system.

Alton Sterling was pinned to the ground and shot at close range by police in Louisiana on Tuesday.

A day later in Minnesota, Philando Castile was shot by police in his car, with his girlfriend and her daughter in the backseat.

That was followed by targeted shootings on police officers at a rally against police brutality in Dallas, on Thursday night.

One of the suspects said he was upset about the recent police shootings and wanted to kill white police officers.

Inside Story looks at how we make sense of bias against minorities. And asks, is it a bias we all carry?

Presenter: Martine Dennis

Guests:

Rashawn Ray - Assistant Professor of Sociology at the University of Maryland.

Simon Woolley - Director of Operation Black Vote - an organisation that strives for racial justice and equality in the UK.

Howard Ross - Founding partner of consulting firm Cook Ross Incorporated, which works on diversity, inclusion and cultural competency.

Source: Al Jazeera

http://www.aljazeera.com/programmes/insidestory/2016/07/police-killings-role-prejudice-play-160708162355692.html

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Ish Geber
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 -

http://www.counter-racism.com/analysis/analysis/40_acres/index.html

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lamin
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Lioness,

Your last question: that's for you to decide.

Obviously, making the same pleas for 400 years expecting the lion not to eat the lamb is a form of insanity.

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CelticWarrioress
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Troll Patrol,Zarahan,

Sorry poor wittle special snowflakes, I'm simply telling the truth about your Anti-White butts & what you are thinking. Yeah you gave your fake condolences and that's just what they are fake, we all know your crew hates Whites. BTW troll Patrol nope he wasn't White but was Hispanic.

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Ish Geber
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quote:
Originally posted by CelticWarrioress:
Troll Patrol,Zarahan,

Sorry poor wittle special snowflakes, I'm simply telling the truth about your Anti-White butts & what you are thinking. Yeah you gave your fake condolences and that's just what they are fake, we all know your crew hates Whites. BTW troll Patrol nope he wasn't White but was Hispanic.

At least one thing you said was true, he was Hispanic. The remaining part was a lie, a Southern white lie, typical Southern white lie! This way of lying was also how your ancestors managed to lynch black males left and right. Because of YOUR typical white lies, on which you insist founded on your myths.

Truth be told, and the world will know about it.

This is the origin of racial profiling:


quote:
"Slavery by Another Name is a 90-minute documentary that challenges one of Americans’ most cherished assumptions: the belief that slavery in this country ended with the Emancipation Proclamation. The film tells how even as chattel slavery came to an end in the South in 1865, thousands of African Americans were pulled back into forced labor with shocking force and brutality. It was a system in which men, often guilty of no crime at all, were arrested, compelled to work without pay, repeatedly bought and sold, and coerced to do the bidding of masters. Tolerated by both the North and South, forced labor lasted well into the 20th century.

For most Americans this is entirely new history. Slavery by Another Name gives voice to the largely forgotten victims and perpetrators of forced labor and features their descendants living today."

http://www.pbs.org/tpt/slavery-by-another-name/home/

http://www.pbs.org/show/slavery-another-name/


Kentucky Town Re-Examines Its Racial History

quote:
In 1919, more than 200 black men worked in Corbin, expanding the railroad yard and paving streets.

But racial violence and labor strife were rampant across the country as soldiers streamed home from World War I.

In what came to be known as Red Summer, white mobs shot and lynched dozens of blacks in more than two dozen locales from Chicago to the Mississippi Delta.

[...]

I stared at the will and as the shock drained away, a question began to form. I had been in the area for several days. For the first time it occurred to me that, in all the time I had been there, I had not seen a single African-American. Yet here in front of me was proof that at one time blacks had lived here. Were they still here? If not, when had they left and why? I walked out of the museum with the questions nagging me.

Over the next few days as I drove to my different appointments, I kept searching for even one black face. Tourism was one of the pillars of the local economy and the area was dotted with hotels, restaurants, and concert halls for country music fans. The people shopping in the stores were white. The people behind the counters were white. The people working in the motels were white. I began checking the people in cars as they passed. All white.

On my last day, I finally asked the person I was interviewing if there were any blacks in the area. "Oh no," she said, "the Klan keeps them out."


When I got back to Washington, D.C., I decided to take a closer look. Using 1990 census data I had downloaded from the Internet, I sorted the information from Arkansas to see how many counties had a black population of less than one percent. I soon had a list that included about a third of all Arkansas counties. I thought that Arkansas, as a slave-holding state, would have a more even distribution of its black population. Perhaps I had been mistaken.

I collected census data for other southern states. Tennessee. Georgia. North Carolina. Kentucky. Texas. Each time I found some counties that were either all white or populated by so few blacks as to be virtually all white. This was not what I had expected.

It was pure coincidence that, on one of the days that I was going over the census data in my office at Cox Newspapers in Washington, a woman from the Atlanta bureau was visiting. As we chatted I told her about the odd distribution of blacks in some southern states. She launched into a story about her brother, who is a cook. He had been recently hired as a chef in a restaurant in Forsyth County just outside of Atlanta. On the day she visited him there, she said the Klan was holding a rally on the courthouse lawn. She explained how all the blacks had been run out of the county around the turn of the century and had been kept out ever since. I went back to my census tables and found Forsyth County. In 1990, there were twelve blacks living in a county of over 40,000 people.

[...]


http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=7772527
Posts: 22234 | From: האם אינכם כילדי הכרית אלי בני ישראל | Registered: Nov 2010  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
mena7
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 -
Because this foolish mass murder wear an Afro Dashiki shirt and do the Black power sign some people will use it as an excuse to say some Afrocentric people are terrorist and we must treat them like the Arab and Muslims who do 90% of the terrorist attacks.

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Ish Geber
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^ 100% Correct!
Posts: 22234 | From: האם אינכם כילדי הכרית אלי בני ישראל | Registered: Nov 2010  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
Clyde Winters
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quote:
Originally posted by mena7:
 -
Because this foolish mass murder wear an Afro Dashiki shirt and do the Black power sign some people will use it as an excuse to say some Afrocentric people are terrorist and we must treat them like the Arab and Muslims who do 90% of the terrorist attacks.

Are you sure about this? I do not feel it is right to kill anyone unless they are trying to kill you. But what do you call the many Black men who had fought in Europe during WWI , that during the 1919 Chicago Race Riots that used their military training to protect Blacks through use of arms, or the Black Nationalists in the 1960's who fought the police and National Guard in the Ghettos and died trying to get Afro-Americans their rights? Were these men terrorists?
.
 -

.

What do you call the Pequot,Tuscarora, Yamasee and other Black Native Americans who killed whites after whites killed and raped their people? Were the Black Native Americans terrorists?

This man was not an Afrocentrist. Afrocentrists do research and write papers and Books on the contributions of Black and African people in World History.

His fist indicate that he believed in Black power. Black power and Afrocentrism are two different things. Black power people believe in Black Nationalism the idea that Black People in the U.S., are part of a " separate nation".

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Mike111
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^It seems that after all of this time, there are still some who do not understand the issues. You should thank Clyde for trying to explain it to you.
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the lioness,
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quote:
Originally posted by Ish Gebor:
quote:
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:
Originally posted by Ish Gebor:
[qb] Lioness, is BLM an organization based in Dallas?

BLM just stands for Black Lives Matter. The organization has no base and no hierarchy. It's more of a social network. They have 30 or more chapters in various states. The founder is a woman named Alicia Garza

lol smh So what does that tell you? Because I am wondering, do you actually truly understand what this is about. lol smh


You didn't know who the BLM was. I told you what the letters stand for. Now you are "lol smh"

at who , yourself ??

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Ish Geber
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quote:
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:
Originally posted by Ish Gebor:
quote:
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:
Originally posted by Ish Gebor:
[qb] Lioness, is BLM an organization based in Dallas?

BLM just stands for Black Lives Matter. The organization has no base and no hierarchy. It's more of a social network. They have 30 or more chapters in various states. The founder is a woman named Alicia Garza

lol smh So what does that tell you? Because I am wondering, do you actually truly understand what this is about. lol smh


You didn't know who the BLM was. I told you what the letters stand for. Now you are "lol smh"

at who , yourself ??

Good grief you're so stupid. I didn't know who the BLM was? LOL

THEY HAVE A WEBSITE YOU DUMBO!

I asked so, because of your stupid insertions. "posting stuff that has nothing to do with Dallas". LOL SMH

BLM, is a national manifest, not regional or local. What I posted in the thread is national, and goes beyond regional or local.

"Black Lives Matter is a unique contribution that goes beyond extrajudicial killings of Black people by police and vigilantes."

http://blacklivesmatter.com

http://blacklivesmatter.com/about/


What I have addressed deals with; from where does racial profiling, police harassment and police brutally come. Knowing this and understanding this helps to solve problems and issues. You have to go to the root of the problem. Not use a bandage for as a cover up for supposed healing, while the victim is still bleeding. The bleeding has to stop first.

A lot has to do with sublimely being unaware of this history. This is why whites can't, won't and refuse to see black people pain and grief. But this is also why blacks think all whites are the same, racist. While some white racists are victims of the unconscious and subliminal racism.

In the end, white supremacy is the cause. Since whites faithfully protect this white domination. Which equals power, hence white-power.

All you can do is joke around. While these are serious issues. Let's see, who else jokes around on these issues, white racist yep.

Posts: 22234 | From: האם אינכם כילדי הכרית אלי בני ישראל | Registered: Nov 2010  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
Ish Geber
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quote:
A Brief History of Slavery and the Origins of American Policing

Written by Victor E. Kappeler, Ph.D.


The birth and development of the American police can be traced to a multitude of historical, legal and political-economic conditions. The institution of slavery and the control of minorities, however, were two of the more formidable historic features of American society shaping early policing. Slave patrols and Night Watches, which later became modern police departments, were both designed to control the behaviors of minorities. For example, New England settlers appointed Indian Constables to police Native Americans (National Constable Association, 1995), the St. Louis police were founded to protect residents from Native Americans in that frontier city, and many southern police departments began as slave patrols. In 1704, the colony of Carolina developed the nation's first slave patrol. Slave patrols helped to maintain the economic order and to assist the wealthy landowners in recovering and punishing slaves who essentially were considered property.

Policing was not the only social institution enmeshed in slavery. Slavery was fully institutionalized in the American economic and legal order with laws being enacted at both the state and national divisions of government. Virginia, for example, enacted more than 130 slave statutes between 1689 and 1865. Slavery and the abuse of people of color, however, was not merely a southern affair as many have been taught to believe. Connecticut, New York and other colonies enacted laws to criminalize and control slaves. Congress also passed fugitive Slave Laws, laws allowing the detention and return of escaped slaves, in 1793 and 1850. As Turner, Giacopassi and Vandiver (2006:186) remark, “the literature clearly establishes that a legally sanctioned law enforcement system existed in America before the Civil War for the express purpose of controlling the slave population and protecting the interests of slave owners. The similarities between the slave patrols and modern American policing are too salient to dismiss or ignore. Hence, the slave patrol should be considered a forerunner of modern American law enforcement.”

The legacy of slavery and racism did not end after the Civil War. In fact it can be argued that extreme violence against people of color became even worse with the rise of vigilante groups who resisted Reconstruction. Because vigilantes, by definition, have no external restraints, lynch mobs had a justified reputation for hanging minorities first and asking questions later. Because of its tradition of slavery, which rested on the racist rationalization that Blacks were sub-human, America had a long and shameful history of mistreating people of color, long after the end of the Civil War. Perhaps the most infamous American vigilante group, the Ku Klux Klan started in the 1860s, was notorious for assaulting and lynching Black men for transgressions that would not be considered crimes at all, had a White man committed them. Lynching occurred across the entire county not just in the South. Finally, in 1871 Congress passed the Ku Klux Klan Act, which prohibited state actors from violating the Civil Rights of all citizens in part because of law enforcements’ involvement with the infamous group. This legislation, however, did not stem the tide of racial or ethnic abuse that persisted well into the 1960s.

Though having white skin did not prevent discrimination in America, being White undoubtedly made it easier for ethnic minorities to assimilate into the mainstream of America. The additional burden of racism has made that transition much more difficult for those whose skin is black, brown, red, or yellow. In no small part because of the tradition of slavery, Blacks have long been targets of abuse. The use of patrols to capture runaway slaves was one of the precursors of formal police forces, especially in the South. This disastrous legacy persisted as an element of the police role even after the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. In some cases, police harassment simply meant people of African descent were more likely to be stopped and questioned by the police, while at the other extreme, they have suffered beatings, and even murder, at the hands of White police. Questions still arise today about the disproportionately high numbers of people of African descent killed, beaten, and arrested by police in major urban cities of America.


--Victor E. Kappeler, Ph.D.
Associate Dean and Foundation Professor
School of Justice Studies
Eastern Kentucky University

References

National Constables Association (1995). Constable. In W. G. Bailey (Ed.), The Encyclopedia of Police Science (2nd ed., pp. 114–114). New York, NY: Garland Press.

Turner, K. B. , Giacopassi , D. , & Vandiver , M. (2006) . Ignoring the Past: Coverage of Slavery and Slave Patrols in Criminal Justice Texts. Journal of Criminal Justice Education, 17: (1), 181–195.

Download a free eBook of The History of Policing in the United States

Published on January 07, 2014

http://plsonline.eku.edu/insidelook/brief-history-slavery-and-origins-american-policing

Posts: 22234 | From: האם אינכם כילדי הכרית אלי בני ישראל | Registered: Nov 2010  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
the lioness,
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quote:
Originally posted by Ish Gebor:
quote:
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:
Originally posted by Ish Gebor:
quote:
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:
Originally posted by Ish Gebor:
[qb] Lioness, is BLM an organization based in Dallas?

BLM just stands for Black Lives Matter. The organization has no base and no hierarchy. It's more of a social network. They have 30 or more chapters in various states. The founder is a woman named Alicia Garza

lol smh So what does that tell you? Because I am wondering, do you actually truly understand what this is about. lol smh


You didn't know who the BLM was. I told you what the letters stand for. Now you are "lol smh"

at who , yourself ??

Good grief you're so stupid. I didn't know who the BLM was? LOL

THEY HAVE A WEBSITE YOU DUMBO!

I asked so, because of your stupid insertions. "posting stuff that has nothing to do with Dallas". LOL SMH

BLM, is a national manifest, not regional or local. What I posted in the thread is national, and goes beyond regional or local.

"Black Lives Matter is a unique contribution that goes beyond extrajudicial killings of Black people by police and vigilantes."

http://blacklivesmatter.com

http://blacklivesmatter.com/about/


What I have addressed deals with; from where does racial profiling, police harassment and police brutally come. Knowing this and understanding this helps to solve problems and issues. You have to go to the root of the problem. Not use a bandage for as a cover up for supposed healing, while the victim is still bleeding. The bleeding has to stop first.

A lot has to do with sublimely being unaware of this history. This is why whites can't, won't and refuse to see black people pain and grief. But this is also why blacks think all whites are the same, racist. While some white racists are victims of the unconscious and subliminal racism.

In the end, white supremacy is the cause. Since whites faithfully protect this white domination. Which equals power, hence white-power.

All you can do is joke around. While these are serious issues. Let's see, who else jokes around on these issues, white racist yep.

I'm not joking about anything. The topic of this thread is a very unique racially motivated shooting of five police officers by someone who was highly trained.

That is what you are not getting the importance of.

This is very different form the BLM protests or even Ferguson riots.

If other people start doing more of these military type ambushes on police that is going to create a reaction.

Even though the BLM seems to to be involved they will be affected by this on a political level.
You don't understand the seriousness of these tactics. It is taking things to much more violent level and if it keeps happening the results could be scary. None of this is funny to me.

You however live a few thousand miles away across an ocean

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CelticWarrioress
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Troll Patrol,

HAHAHA, I see Black Lies Matter is still trying to push that they aren't saying only Black lives matter, that's exactly what they are saying. They are saying primarily White lives don't matter which is true. To you White lives don't matter, White children don't matter. It was BLM who tried to incite the killing of White people & cops. After all it was you who stated Whites should be bred out of existence (genocide). You & your ilk condone the abuse of White children.

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Ish Geber
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quote:
Originally posted by CelticWarrioress:
Troll Patrol,

HAHAHA, I see Black Lies Matter is still trying to push that they aren't saying only Black lives matter, that's exactly what they are saying. They are saying primarily White lives don't matter which is true. To you White lives don't matter, White children don't matter. It was BLM who tried to incite the killing of White people & cops. After all it was you who stated Whites should be bred out of existence (genocide). You & your ilk condone the abuse of White children.

They are saying black lives matter, because blacks are being shot and killed by the police when it's completely unnecessary.

Do I expect you to understand this? No, not really!


In the meanwhile your friend Dylan Roof was taken into custody and received a Mc Donald meal.

The remaining part what you wrote, is rubbish as usually.


So, let's talk about white lies, since these matter. HAHAHAHA


quote:
Report: Aide says Nixon's war on drugs targeted blacks, hippies


Ehrlichman said. "We could arrest their leaders. raid their homes, break up their meetings, and vilify them night after night on the evening news. Did we know we were lying about the drugs? Of course we did."

http://edition.cnn.com/2016/03/23/politics/john-ehrlichman-richard-nixon-drug-war-blacks-hippie/
Posts: 22234 | From: האם אינכם כילדי הכרית אלי בני ישראל | Registered: Nov 2010  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
Ish Geber
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quote:
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:
Originally posted by Ish Gebor:
quote:
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:
Originally posted by Ish Gebor:
quote:
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:
Originally posted by Ish Gebor:
[qb] Lioness, is BLM an organization based in Dallas?

BLM just stands for Black Lives Matter. The organization has no base and no hierarchy. It's more of a social network. They have 30 or more chapters in various states. The founder is a woman named Alicia Garza

lol smh So what does that tell you? Because I am wondering, do you actually truly understand what this is about. lol smh


You didn't know who the BLM was. I told you what the letters stand for. Now you are "lol smh"

at who , yourself ??

Good grief you're so stupid. I didn't know who the BLM was? LOL

THEY HAVE A WEBSITE YOU DUMBO!

I asked so, because of your stupid insertions. "posting stuff that has nothing to do with Dallas". LOL SMH

BLM, is a national manifest, not regional or local. What I posted in the thread is national, and goes beyond regional or local.

"Black Lives Matter is a unique contribution that goes beyond extrajudicial killings of Black people by police and vigilantes."

http://blacklivesmatter.com

http://blacklivesmatter.com/about/


What I have addressed deals with; from where does racial profiling, police harassment and police brutally come. Knowing this and understanding this helps to solve problems and issues. You have to go to the root of the problem. Not use a bandage for as a cover up for supposed healing, while the victim is still bleeding. The bleeding has to stop first.

A lot has to do with sublimely being unaware of this history. This is why whites can't, won't and refuse to see black people pain and grief. But this is also why blacks think all whites are the same, racist. While some white racists are victims of the unconscious and subliminal racism.

In the end, white supremacy is the cause. Since whites faithfully protect this white domination. Which equals power, hence white-power.

All you can do is joke around. While these are serious issues. Let's see, who else jokes around on these issues, white racist yep.

I'm not joking about anything. The topic of this thread is a very unique racially motivated shooting of five police officers by someone who was highly trained.

That is what you are not getting the importance of.

This is very different form the BLM protests or even Ferguson riots.

If other people start doing more of these military type ambushes on police that is going to create a reaction.

Even though the BLM seems to to be involved they will be affected by this on a political level.
You don't understand the seriousness of these tactics. It is taking things to much more violent level and if it keeps happening the results could be scary. None of this is funny to me.

You however live a few thousand miles away across an ocean

As I said, I don't condone his actions, but I do understand his frustrations. The question is, do you understand his frustrations? What are the historical motifs of this frustration?
Posts: 22234 | From: האם אינכם כילדי הכרית אלי בני ישראל | Registered: Nov 2010  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
the lioness,
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quote:
Originally posted by Ish Gebor:
As I said, I don't condone his actions, but I do understand his frustrations. The question is, do you understand his frustrations? What are the historical motifs of this frustration? [/QB]

He was frustrated with white police killing black people but he wasn't frustrated with black people killing other black people which is more common.
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the lioness,
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VIDEO, Obama

http://www.breitbart.com/video/2016/07/09/obama-very-hard-to-untangle-the-motives-of-dallas-shooter-may-have-used-anger-at-police-as-an-excuse/

During a speech in Warsaw, Poland on Saturday, President Obama stated that “it’s very hard to untangle the motives” of the shooter who shot at police in Dallas, and that while, “he may have used as an excuse, his anger about previous incidents…in no way does that represent what the overwhelming majority of Americans think.”

Obama said, “I think it’s very hard to untangle the motives of this shooter. As we’ve seen, in a whole range of incidents with mass shooters, they are, by definition, troubled. By definition, if you shoot people who pose no threat to you, strangers, you have a troubled mind. What triggers that, what feeds it, what sets it off, you know, I’ll leave that to the psychologists and people who study these kinds of incidents. What I can say is that, although, he may have used as an excuse, his anger about previous incidents, as has been indicated, at least in the press, and as Chief Brown I think indicated, in no way does that represent what the overwhelming majority of Americans think.”

He later argued, “I think the danger, as I said, is, that we somehow, suggest that, the act of a troubled individual speaks to some larger political statement across the country. It doesn’t.”

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Ish Geber
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quote:
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:
Originally posted by Ish Gebor:
As I said, I don't condone his actions, but I do understand his frustrations. The question is, do you understand his frustrations? What are the historical motifs of this frustration?

He was frustrated with white police killing black people but he wasn't frustrated with black people killing other black people which is more common. [/QB]
He perhaps was frustrated with black killing blacks as well. You and I don't know. The killing of blacks amongst backs in most parts of the U.S. is rooted in socioeconomic conditions, as I have posted for occasional reasons. See, Nixon et al.

But the police force is an governmental institution. They are to serve and protect. The numbers and conditions show something different. It's more like serve to attack., as I have posted for occasional reasons

Black people, from all walks of life, all across America feel this. As I have posted for occasional reasons. And this has been like this a long time, as I have posted as well for occasional reasons. Black people all across America want it to stop for obvious reasons.

Keep clowning, keep joking around, keep trolling around. lol

I find it amusing you know so little about African Americans. Yet, you claim to be one. LOL (arc)


quote:
Michigan Judge Vonda Evans went off on the now former Inkster police officer, William Mendez, who was being sentenced for beating up a black man. The judge — visibly upset about what occurred — let Mendez know that he and his cohorts were a bunch of racist cops. She laid into him for about 20 minutes as court observers watched on. The former cop kept his head down for some of it.

Mendez was sentenced Tuesday morning for his involvement in a police brutality case. He was found guilty of misconduct of office and assault with intent to do bodily harm.

The charges stem from an incident which happened last January when he pulled over 58-year-old Floyd Dent for a minor traffic violation.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EbdZ8x6nc1k

quote:
Retired Superior Court Judge Eugene Hyman, of Santa Clara, California, talks with the Family Law Channel about a recent report suggesting the gap is widening when it comes to racial differences in sentencing.
https://vimeo.com/60583011

quote:
Conservatives are demagoguing the ‘Black Lives Matter’ movement after the attack in Dallas. Rudy Giuliani blames BLM for the attack, while Tomi Lahren says they’re the new KKK. Cenk Uygur, Ana Kasparian, and Ben Gleib, hosts of The Young Turks, break it down. Tell us what you think in the comment section below.

“In the minutes following the first reports of the murders of multiple Dallas police officers, The Blaze‘s Tomi Lahren became one of the nation’s top trending topics on Twitter after she took to social media to blame Black Lives Matter demonstrators for “openly applauding this war on cops.”

In one now deleted tweet, Lahren compared BLM to the Ku Klux Klan.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JadtzDXdzuw
Posts: 22234 | From: האם אינכם כילדי הכרית אלי בני ישראל | Registered: Nov 2010  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
zarahan aka Enrique Cardova
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Gabor says:
Conservatives are demagoguing the ‘Black Lives Matter’ movement after the attack in Dallas. Rudy Giuliani blames BLM for the attack, while Tomi Lahren says they’re the new KKK. Cenk Uygur, Ana Kasparian, and Ben Gleib, hosts of The Young Turks, break it down. Tell us what you think in the comment section below.

“In the minutes following the first reports of the murders of multiple Dallas police officers, The Blaze‘s Tomi Lahren became one of the nation’s top trending topics on Twitter after she took to social media to blame Black Lives Matter demonstrators for “openly applauding this war on cops.”

In one now deleted tweet, Lahren compared BLM to the Ku Klux Klan.”


Of course.Its ll part of the right wing propaganda machine, so they
can dismiss or downplay legitimate concerns of black
people over police conduct and practice. It[s a another
calculated action of the propaganda mills. The dinosaur Guillani
in New York has chimed in, right on cue...


quote:
Originally posted by xyyman:
Never knew all of this. 3 marriages and a Catholic to add to that? How do these people get away with that. Corrupt and unethical yet has the audacity and balls to be the face of "values".


Indeed. Let's look at the statement of "America's mayor"..

==================================================

Rudy says:
[the slogan Black Lives Matter] "It's inherently racist because, number one, it divides us. ... All lives matter: White lives, black lives, all lives,"

Baloney from a deceptive dinosaur who himself ignored, downplayed
or provided cover for racism in the NY Police Dept.
Of course "all lives matter." Whoever said they didn't? This is
the kind of simplistic right-wing pablum and strawman "spin" Giulanni
trades in. Its primary purpose is to dismiss and disparage
the legitimate concerns of black citizens over police conduct
and practice. That is Giulani's and the right wing's real
propaganda objective. They can dismiss and wave away embarrassing
questions about policies they helped support and implement that violate
civil liberties and unfairly harass a segment of the
population significantly based on what race they are.

If all lives matter as "Rudy" claims why did he show consistently
a callous attitude towards the black victims of police brutality,
or refuse to rein in the policies and practices he supported and touted
until not only black folk but a broad coalition of New Yorkers
took to the street in large numbers to embarrass him and drop
his poll numbers? The fallout of the Diallo slayings illustrates
the point. But not just Diallo, There were several police killings
some involving the "cowboys" of the plain-clothes unit that illustrated
that something was terribly wrong with aspects of Giuliani's police regime.
The Patrick Baley killing where prosecutors seemed to dawdle,
refusing to interview several witnesses to the police slaying
of the black man- a tactic critics said, designed to stymie the
investigation and shield racist cops- is yet another in a long
line of cases in point. Time and time again black parents and
relatives of victims of police misconduct met callous and contemptuous
treatment by Giulanni's henchmen in the system. Time and again
they were sandbagged and sidetracked, while the wrongdoers who killed
their children cruised comfortably on. Not my mere opinion-
such books as Why Blacks Fear 'America's Mayor" gives the ugly
details, and they are very ugly.

 -



"Number two: Black Lives Matter never protests when every 14 hours somebody is killed in Chicago, probably 70-80% of the time (by) a black person. Where are they then? Where are they when a young black child is killed?"
“The real danger to them — 99 out of 100 times — is other black kids who are going to kill them,” the Republican ex-mayor added, citing a fake statistic.

“That’s the way they’re gonna die,” he added.


This is partially a fair criticism of BLM, the amount of time they
SOMETIMES spend on media stunts rather than organizing within the black
community to help stem violence. But the same criticism can
be leveled at "Rudy." Why is it that he too spends so little
time criticizing racist practices, attitudes and personnel
under his administration, that demonized or victimized thousands of law abiding black people?


If he “were a black father,” he said, he’d warn his son to “be very careful of those kids in the neighborhood and don’t get involved with them because, son, there’s a 99% chance they’re going to kill you — not the police!”

Sounds so pious, but the statistic is fake. About 8 percent
of blacks murders nationwide are caused by white people (FBI stats 2013).
And how come "Rudy" doesn't likewise advise his police not to
constantly harass innocent young people, giving them arrest records
on various pretexts or saddling them with a record for
minor violations- in percentages way disproportionate compared
to white youth? For example black drug use is LESS than white drug
use, but its blacks more often singled out for targeting and
harassment than whites. The same pattern shows up in sentencing.
How come "America's mayor" seldom talks about such things?
Could it be that he himself is complicit in helping to intensify
that pattern in NYC? ANd not just the among police but prosecutors as
well that consistently refuse to vigorously prosecute police misconduct?
Again, "Rudy" has little to say about such things- they were
part and parcel of his administration.


If he “were a black father,”

The irony of this hypocrite's statement is that if he were a black
father whose son was killed by police in circumstances that
seemed to indicate the full story was not being told or worse about
his son's death, then said black father would be treated contemptuously
and callously by "Rudy" and his henchmen within the system, as if
the black father himself was a criminal.

 -
^^"Rudy" briefs Donald on black fathers..

--------------------
Note: I am not an "Egyptologist" as claimed by some still bitter, defeated, trolls creating fake profiles and posts elsewhere. Hapless losers, you still fail. My output of hard data debunking racist nonsense has actually INCREASED since you began..

Posts: 5905 | From: The Hammer | Registered: Aug 2008  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
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