Showing posts with label crime. Show all posts
Showing posts with label crime. Show all posts

Tuesday, 19 August 2014

How many black boys have to die? (Berkeley)

CC Liu, Crystal Quintero (eds.), Wisdom Quarterly; Assistant Director Stephen Menendian, Haas Institute for a Fair and Inclusive Society (berkeley.edu, August. 14, 2014)
UC Berkeley campus tower overlooking San Francisco and Bay Bridge (berkeleyside.com)
 
How Many Black Boys Have to Die? Berkeley Faculty weigh in
Stephen Menendian
Menendian
Although the “facts” are still coming out [and the police cover up is well underway], we can add Michael Brown of Ferguson, Missouri to the list of young black men and boys killed by overzealous police or armed civilians:
 
Trayvon Martin, Eric Garner, Sean Bell, Amadou Diallo, Oscar Grant, Jordan Davis, and so many more, including young women like Renisha McBride.
 
The ultimate tragedy is that each of these deaths seems to have done little to prevent the next [senseless police killing]. As I wrote two years ago, each death reopens a conversation on race framed to ask all of the wrong questions.
 
I predicted that “until we start asking the right questions, I fear there will be more Trayvon Martins.”
 
This list reminds us that these deaths are not isolated incidents, but part of a larger pattern -- a picture we can only make out if we step back for a broader view. A series of similar incidents occurred across the nation in the late 1960s, triggering the “urban disturbances” that were the focus of the famous “Kerner Commission” Report on Civil Disorders.”
 
The report is as startling in its description and analysis of events that parallel today as it is in the relevance of the recommendations it advanced.
 
The Commission was established for the specific purpose of investigating the causes of the late 1960s riots, and the Report is a comprehensive analysis of both the specific incidents at issue and the more general conditions that led to the combustible environment.
 

 
Policing
Consider the chapter dedicated to the issue of policing and the community, described as a “primary cause” of the “disorders” surveyed in the Report. The Report observed that “[t]he patrolman comes to see the city through a windshield and hear about it over a police radio. To him, the area increasingly comes to consist only of law breakers. To the ghetto resident, the policeman comes increasingly to be only an enforcer.”
 
The Kerner Commission Report expressed concern that many police neither reside nor grew up in these environments, widening the gulf between police and the communities they serve.
 
This remains the case today, with no more vivid an illustration that Ferguson, Missouri. Ferguson is a predominantly black community, and yet just three of the fifty-three police officers on the municipal force are African-American.
 
Consider, especially, the remarks of the 1968 authors of the Report when they assert that the incidents it documented were not “the crude acts of an earlier time,” alluding to explicitly racist police behavior, but that police misconduct -- whether described as brutality, harassment, or merely verbal abuse and discourtesy -- was a motivating factor that contributed to the civil disorders of that decade.
 
Protests in Ferguson, MO after an unarmed black teenager, Michael Brown, was shot and killed by Ferguson police. Photo credit: Southern Poverty Law Center
Line of peaceful protesters in Ferguson, MO, after an unarmed black teenager, Michael Brown, was shot to death by Ferguson police (Southern Poverty Law Center).
 
In the context of the era of stop-and-frisk (83 percent stopped were black or Hispanic), and the criminalization of poverty, it’s worth considering the applicability Commission’s observation, nearly 50 years later, that “Negroes firmly believe that police brutality and harassment occur repeatedly in Negro neighborhoods.”
 
The explanation for what’s happening is not a secret, but it doesn’t seem to have seeped into the broader consciousness.
 
In his 2005 book Blink, Malcolm Gladwell deconstructed the shooting of the unarmed Amadou Diallo in New York City, and explained the critical causal force, implicit or unconscious bias, as measured by the implicit association test.
 
Most Americans, even those who embrace egalitarian norms, harbor unconscious negative associations with black bodies. It is on account of these pervasive and yet unconscious, culturally embedded associations that black boys are not only automatically viewed with suspicion, but as criminals, regardless of who they are. The Internet meme #iftheygunnedmedown not only illustrates the portrayal of black men and boys, but the perception as well.
 
We need to begin by addressing the pervasiveness of these unconscious biases, first by acknowledging them, and secondly by working to reduce them or ameliorate their impact. Police academies and law enforcement agencies not only need more diverse staff, but they need implicit bias training for officers. They need to measure, track and address implicit bias, enhance officer supervision and create accountability measures.
 
Only efforts like these can repair and strengthen the relationship between law enforcement and communities of color that will ultimately prevent the senseless deaths of boys like Michael Brown and more, I fear, to come. More (comments)

Thursday, 12 June 2014

7 Ancient Pyramids of Crimea, Ukraine (video)

Amber Larson, Dhr. Seven, Pat Macpherson, Wisdom Quarterly
Jurassic Era pyramids resembling Egypt's and Mexico's found buried in Crimea, Ukraine
(Dahboo77, Spartakus90000) What is the real cause of the war? The oldest pyramids on Earth, a distinction formerly reserved for Bosnia and Egypt, found buried in Crimea?

Wheel-turning monarch (chakravartin)
The world is full of pyramids because there used to be world-cultures and world-rulers (chakravartins) with very advanced technology (anti-gravity vimanas, akasha-ships in the shape of wheels or chakras) usually arriving from the air or emerging from within the planet, according to ancient lore not just of India.

Indeed, India has a long history of life on Earth recorded in its sacred Vedic texts from the Indus Valley Civilization that preceded it. Sumerians, Egyptians, Near Easterners (now part of the geopolitical Middle East). There have been civilizations that ruled the globe at times, as suggested by Dr. Michael Cremo's "forbidden archeology." Investigative journalist Linda Moulton Howe confirmed the existence of an underground pyramid/power station in the U.S. state of Alaska.

War, prehistoric pyramids, inexplicable mummies, UFOs, and more all going on concurrently in Crimea. World leaders are desperate to keep it concealed in Ukraine.
 
Saka/Scythian/Shakyan princess draped in gold
This will blow minds. While empires face off, we have to wonder why. What could be so important to risk war? Pyramids have been uncovered in Crimea (QHA/ICTV), which is connected to Ukraine and the Central Asian 'stans where the Buddha, possibly a Scythian (Saka or Shakya), was born. The pyramids are there, and so are the Russians, who will not be ransacked by the West without a fight.

Friday, 28 February 2014

Living arguments on gun control (comedy)


No walk on the beach
I'll kill ya...for pointing that at me
The sun had already started setting by the time a former girlfriend and I arrived at Will Rogers State Beach in Pacific Palisades one night...
 
We were going to have dinner at nearby Gladstone’s Restaurant, where Sunset Boulevard ends at Pacific Coast Highway, but decided to first grab a blanket from the car and head down to the sand to watch the sun go down...
 
It was chilly that night, and few people were out there with us, except for one young man who stood just where the sand turned into parking lot, seemingly watching our every move.


(Comedy Central) We the U.S. are the problem, not our guns, as Canada demonstrates.
 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1ZkZqRM4934
After a [while] I didn’t really think much of the guy, but I looked around just the same, to see exactly how alone we really were out there.
 
Looking back over my right shoulder, my eyes scanned the rest of the parking lot, then north, along the sand. That’s when I saw another young man, this one a short distance from us, walking slowly on the beach, not along the surf but toward the parking lot, all while looking intently at the two of us.

Tea Party Republican Libertarian Na...
He made some motions with his head toward the guy in the parking lot, who by this time was joined by a third man, and those two started making their way into the sand to meet their associate.

Gladstone’s was only about an eighth of a mile away, but it might as well have been miles if we had to run to it in the deep sand in order to get away. By this time, we had finished..., my friend seemingly oblivious to what was going on around us.

(Comedy Central, Daily Show, Part II) John Oliver vows that never again
will a political career end in a senseless act of meaningful legislation.
Let us prevent political suicide in the face of NRA lobbyists.

“C’mon, I think we better go,” I said, grasping the slender neck of the bottle, preparing myself to smash it across one of their heads, if necessary.

“What’s the matter?” she asked before turning around and suddenly realizing that our new friends were actually about to try something.
 
Guns don't kill people; bullets kill people.
With that, she stood up, faced the three guys and placed her hand inside of her purse, which she then raised up slightly at arm’s length with her other hand. A look of deadly earnestness crossed her face, but she didn’t say a word. They all seemed to understand that my girlfriend was armed with a gun, and, even better, that she at least appeared prepared to use it if need be.

(Comedy Central, Daily Show, Part III) John Oliver: it's pointless for US to
study Australian gun control because the situations are just too similar.
 
I gathered up our stuff and headed toward the car as she turned toward our potential assailants, never once taking her eyes off of them. They stood there frozen, apparently knowing better than to make any kind of move as we hustled back to the car, got in, and drove away. We never did go to dinner at Gladstone’s. More

My government killing me
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1ZkZqRM4934
Democide is a term revived and redefined by the political scientist R.J. Rummel as the murder of people by their government, including genocide, politicide, and mass murder." He created the term as an extended concept to include forms of government-murder that are not covered by the term "genocide," and it has become accepted among other scholars in spite of the fact that the term democide was defined and used in English more than 40 years earlier by Theodore Abel. In the 20th century democide surpassed war as the leading cause of non-natural death... More

Guns: Are we pro or con?
Wisdom Quarterly (EDITORIAL)
Like Budai, let's throw away the AKs (CC)
We unanimously agree. Our position on guns is that they should ALL be gotten rid of. We cannot have police, the paramilitary, and military retain firearms and expect that citizens, protesters, and advocates of civil liberties would be safe from these deadly agents, who in the past have done so much to violate the Constitution, our rights, and the laws of the land with tacit approval of the court and manipulated juries. It would be Martial Law and oppression that perhaps is only staved off because the two sides, ordinary second-class citizens versus elites and their soldiers, have guns. So they should have access to the same terrible guns.

Killing is unskillful, unwholesome karma. And what excuses we make for this intentional action will do little to alter the bitter fruit of our deeds. Many are willing to kill -- whether motivated by fear, greed, delusion, or hatred. Because that is the subtle underlying motivation, the harm is there. Rationalizations that it is "self" defense or patriotism or attacking one group to defend another group does not change the personally verifiable fact that when it is being done, one of these for motivations is at work.

Nothing good will come of it when that karma ripens. Yet, there are many people willing to shoot and kill for pay, for pleasure, for peer pressure, or simply not knowing and not understanding karma.
 
We stand for life and for the right of living beings to live oppression-free. Guns are not the way to life or beneficial karmic results. Say no to guns in the hands of authorities or in the hands of second-class citizens. But when they are in the hands of one, it seems they have to be in the hands of the other. Put the guns down.


(Mental Floss) Don't expect "science" to solve the issue
U.S. Government vs. Jon Stewart's Daily Show claim. See 5:10.

    Thursday, 27 February 2014

    Bikram Yoga founder sued for sex crimes

    Editors, Wisdom Quarterly; Ben Newman and Karin Weinberg, Nightline (ABC News, "Women Suing Hot Yoga Guru for Alleged Sexual Assault Come Forward," Feb. 26, 2014)
    PHOTO: Bikram Choudhury developed Bikrams Beginning Yoga Class, which requires participants to perform 26 poses over the course of 90 minutes in a room heated to 105 degrees, in the 1970s, and has since turned it into a wildly successful business model.
    Multi-millionaire "Bikram Yoga" founder Bikram Choudhury accused of sexual assault

    ABC Entertainment News|ABC Business News
      
    Bikram is a business not a yoga.
    The pioneer of "hot yoga" [his first customer being Pres. Richard Nixon] Mr. Bikram Choudhury is now under fire himself, defending his yoga empire against lawsuits brought by women claiming sexual misconduct.
     
    In the last year, five women have filed civil lawsuits against Bikram, one of the richest, most successful yoga gurus in the world. All five of them accuse Bikram of sexually assaulting them. Four of the women accuse him of rape.

    “He’s a sick man,” plaintiff Sarah Baughn told ABC News' "Nightline" correspondent David Wright. “I hope he gets some help.” 
     
    Don't stare at Sofia Vergara
    Baughn was the first alleged victim to speak up, recently telling her story to Vanity Fair magazine. Her appearance on "Nightline" along with two other women pursuing lawsuits against Bikram and his Yoga College of India in Los Angeles is the first time the alleged victims have detailed their claims on camera. 
     
    Baughn, a former yoga champion, told "Nightline" she met Bikram in 2005 when she attended his teacher training course. The grueling nine-week course, which costs thousands of dollars, is led by Bikram and is the only way to become a Bikram Yoga teacher.
     
    Try actual yoga at YogaWorks
    Baughn, 20 at the time, said Bikram took an immediate interest in her.

    “He told me there was a connection between the two of us that he had never felt before,” Baughn said, adding he claimed to have known her in a past life. More

    Sunday, 2 February 2014

    THE FIX IS IN: professional sports (video)

    Pat Macpherson, Pfc. Sandoval, CC Liu, Wisdom Quarterly; Brian Tuohy (thefixisin.net)
    It is not just football but professional sports worldwide -- futbol (soccer), cricket, baseball...
    (Brian Tuohy) The Fix Is In -- professional sports matches are rigged for billions in profit. Our sports are Larceny Games: Sports Gambling, Game Fixing, and the FBI
      
    The Fix Is In (Brian Tuohy)
    Brian Tuohy (thefixisin.net) is a frequent contributor to the CBS Sports website (bleacherreport.com), where he chronicles sports scandals and conspiracies as stories break. Tuohy has been interviewed by The New York Times, ESPN, Fox Sports, and The Power Hour radio program.
     
    How much of our lives have we spent watching televised sports, attending games, talking (useless babble) about sports, listening to sports radio, checking websites for updated scores and statistics, then taking in SportsCenter or another highlight show at the end of the day?

    How much of our thoughts have been consumed with the big upcoming game? How many nights have we stayed awake wondering how "our team" blew that huge lead? How often have we reminisced about that impossible comeback win as if we had played in the game?

    How much money have we emptied from our pockets on tickets, DirectTV packages, bets, jerseys, hats, trading cards, autographs, and overpriced salted junk food and beers over the course of our lifetimes?

    Rabid Alex Jones talks with author Brian Tuohy about his latest book,
    The Fix Is In: The Showbiz Manipulations of the NFL, MLB, NBA, NHL & NASCAR,
    which delves into the dark underbelly of professional sports.
     
    What if all that time, emotion, and money was wasted on a lie?
    Gambling, Game Fixing, and the FBI
    What if the action on the field isn’t what it appears to be? What if we, and millions others like us, have been duped -- outright lied to -- by those franchises we hold so dear to our hearts, all in the name of greedily making an easy buck?
     
    Well, it has been happening. And although our name might not be “Mark,” we have certainly become marks to those running the carnival known as professional sports.

    When a win seems too good to be true -- it is too good to be true. When an impossible turn of events changes the course of a game -- it is an impossibility. When an improbable underdog rises to the top like some sort of Hollywood screenplay -- it is a screenplay.
     
    The leagues, hand-in-hand with the TV networks, which pour billions of dollars into professional sports, have fixed their own games to squeeze every ounce of drama they can out of each season and to ensure we remain committed to our sport and glued to our TVs.
     
    TheFixIsIn.net is dedicated to shining a light into those dark corners and exposing professional sports leagues and their athletes for the money-grubbing hypocrites they are. Some may call these sports conspiracy theories. Brian Tuohy calls them the truth. More

    Classic East Coast punk rock from VOID: "Organized Sports"

    Saturday, 18 January 2014

    Opposing SEX, promoting violence (video)

    "Lone Survivor" - a Hollywood war glorification propaganda reel about the US invasion and occupation of Afghanistan based but not telling the actual story of Operation Red Wing.
      
    Stop resisting me, stop resisting me (BS)
    Torrance, Los Angeles LAPD Officer Brian McGee will not be charged for attempting to murder a white surfer after ramming his vehicle during the dramatic "manhunt" for accused black ex-LAPD Officer Dorner, who allegedly went on a rampage against other members of the LAPD.

    Better wrong doing right than right doing wrong
    That is the allegation, but we will never know because Dorner was summarily executed by fellow police who turned SoCal into an obvious police state. (Usually it is just a covert one).
    Israeli war criminal Sharon dies (TYT)
    This was done to prevent an adequate investigation that may have turned up damning evidence against the Department. "Shoot first, ask questions later." You may not get many answers but, hey, that's how it goes when working in a violent culture of killer cops.

    (TYT) Ana Kasparian and John Iadarola break down some criminal police 
    Citizens can now police the police (ACLU)
    Fullerton, Orange County Officer Joe Wolfe, who helped fellow gang members bash in the face of a schizophrenic homeless man before beating him to death, had all charges against him dropped after fellow killers Manny Ramos and Jay Cicinelli were acquitted during their separate trial.
     
    Tampa, Florida's retired policeman Curtis Reeves, former Chief of Security for Busch Gardens, murdered a man for having the audacity to text before the movie "Lone Survivor" (see above).
     
    Said it about health plans, said it about NSA
    He also shot a woman after popcorn was allegedly thrown in his direction, which may have touched his large toe. Reeves says that this gave him the right to shoot the couple, given that he could (later) say he felt "threatened" and thereby go scot-free for his crimes.
     
    That's funny! NSA surveillance? "If you like your freedom, you can keep your freedom" is the best summary of President Obama's false speech about "reforming" USA/NSA spying.

    The precept against killing
    Buddha and aum (Brooke Montes/flickr)
    Our world is plagued by conflicts, economic and ethnic, racial and religious, political and ideological, planned and carried out by the military-industrial complex.

    "Terrorism" serves as the great pretext to launch all manner of state-sponsored terror thanks to the CIA, NSA, NSC, FBI, DHS, and other spies.
      
    Israel's illegal Jewish settlements (DN)
    Wars, "low-level kinetic actions" (a euphemism for bloody battles, invasions, and massacres), and genocides are more than just a looming threat. They are an active reality all over the globe.
     
    No sex, please, just killing (govexec.com)
    The threat of nuclear weapons being used causes worldwide anxiety. The manufacture and sale of weaponry is a thriving industry. So are there wars because there are weapons, or are there weapons because there are  wars? Who manufactures industrial-scale conflicts?

    Monday, 13 January 2014

    Orange County fails to convict its killer cops

    "Ask Mister Republican Man" (Tom Tomorrow/thismodernworld.com)


    Pro-Kelly Thomas demonstration (AmberJamie)
    As further proof that police cannot be held accountable by our biased (in)justice system: Two of the gang of five murderous Orange County officers who assaulted, threatened, held down, repeatedly beat, Tasered, and finally murdered a helpless, white, mentally disabled, homeless man (Kelly Thomas) were acquitted today.
    Jay Cicinelli and Manuel Ramo (OCR)
    Plans to try a third officer involved in the gang killing are being aborted. Former Fullerton PD Officer Manuel Ramos was the first active duty officer to ever be charged with murder in the line of duty. With his acquittal -- even after many protests by concerned citizens and the victim's father, Ron Thomas, a former police officer who advocated for his dead son. Were it not for the father's advocacy, the case would have likely been swept under the rug. It is likely no charges would have ever been brought against him or fellow killers (former Officer Jay Cicinelli and Officer Joseph Wolfe) beyond the Office of Internal Affairs in the Department (where they were slapped on the backs in the locker room and called macho by fellow cops for killing a hapless, schizophrenic "bum").
     
    Kelly Thomas after police gang beating (FF)
    Even right wing radio hosts thought this beating and murder was excessive by their pro-police standards of vigilante justice. This is to say nothing of the police killings of Latins around Disneyland and other ongoing abuses in Anahiemstan, like police shootings at Occupy sites.

    apd
    Welcome to Anaheimstan: the police state around "the Happiest Place on Earth"
     
    Equality before the cops?
    Chase Madar ("Afraid in America," PasadenaWeekly.com, 12-17-13)
    apd protest new
     Anaheim, Orange County protests over police killings spark unrest
     
    It will surprise no one that Americans are treated unequally by the police. Law enforcement picks on kids more than adults, the gay more than the straight, Muslims more than Methodists (a lot more than Methodists), antiwar activists more than cowering conformists.

    Above all, our punitive police state targets the poor more than the wealthy and blacks and Latinos more than white people.

    A case in point: After the 1999 massacre at Columbine High School, a police presence -- including surveillance cameras and metal detectors -- was ratcheted up at schools around the country, particularly in urban areas with largely working-class black and Latin students. It was all to “protect” the kids, it was said.

    But at Columbine itself, no metal detector was installed and no heavy police presence intruded on students, no lock downs, no extra guards. The reason was simple. At that high school in the Colorado suburb of Littleton, the mostly well-heeled white families did not want their kids treated like potential felons.
     
    And they had the status and political power to get their way and protect the civil rights of their children. But communities without such clout were less able protect their children from police, less able to push back against the encroachments of police state powers-that-be and their plans. More

    Wednesday, 4 December 2013

    Spooky: corporations spy on non-profits

    Wisdom Quarterly; Gary Ruskin (CorporatePolicy.org, Nov. 20, 2013), "Spooky Business: A New Report on Corporate Espionage Against Non-profits"
    Giant corporations are employing highly unethical or illegal tools of espionage against nonprofit organizations with near impunity, according to a new report by Essential Information. 

    The report, titled Spooky Business, documents how corporations hire shady investigative firms staffed with former employees of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), National Security Agency (NSA), US military, Federal Bureau of Investigations (FBI), Secret Service, and local police departments to target nonprofit organizations.
     
    “Corporate espionage against nonprofit organizations is an egregious abuse of corporate power that is subverting democracy,” said Gary Ruskin, author of Spooky Business. “Who will rein in the forces of corporate lawlessness as they bear down upon nonprofit defenders of justice?”

    Many of the world’s largest corporations and their trade associations -- including the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, Walmart, Monsanto, Bank of America, Dow Chemical, Kraft, Coca-Cola, Chevron, Burger King, McDonald’s, Shell, BP, BAE, Sasol, Brown & Williamson, and E.ON -- have been linked to espionage or planned espionage against nonprofit organizations, activists, and whistleblowers.

     
    Many different types of nonprofit organizations have been targeted with corporate espionage, including environmental, anti-war, public interest, consumer, food safety, pesticide reform, nursing home reform, gun control, social justice, animal rights, and arms control groups. More