Activists Press Congress to Help Black Communities Fight Climate Change
4:34
Advocates of man-made climate change believe that it causes strong storms, rising tides, and hot temperatures, and that black communities are disproportionately hurt by the effects of “global warming.”
That was the topic at a recent roundtable discussion in Washington, DC, where Bloomberg Environment reported that activists at the event said Congress needed to take action.
“People of color have always been on the front line of this movement,” Alaina Beverly, a former Obama White House urban affairs official who is now vice president for urban affairs at the University of Chicago’s Office of Federal Relations in Washington, said at the event. “We’re hit first and hit worst.”
“This is our issue,” Beverly said.
Bloomberg Environment reported on how blacks are allegedly suffering from climate change-related hardships:
Most of the worst effects of climate change are hitting—and lingering in—poor black neighborhoods in the South, according to the Rev. Leo Woodberry, executive director of the New Alpha Community Development Corporation in Florence, S.C.In coastal South Carolina, for example, residents in largely black towns have been told they won’t be eligible for flood insurance if they don’t elevate their homes; but a survey of local engineering groups showed the cost starts at $20,000 for a 900-square-foot house, Woodberry said.In New York City, many residents who die from heat stroke are African American, Peggy Shepard, executive director of West Harlem Environmental Action Inc., also known as WE ACT for Environmental Justice, said at a Sept. 12 roundtable hosted by the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation, where Beverly and Woodberry also spoke.
“This is about social disruption,” Shepard said. “Extreme heat is killing thousands every year.”
Bloomberg Environment cited a University of California at Berkeley study that said blacks are 52 percent more likely than whites to live in so-called “urban heat islands,” where the sun beams down on brick, concrete and asphalt.
“There’s no question that this is a topic area that black politicians, including the CBC [Congressional Black Caucus], have not focused on as much,” Thomas A. LaVeist, dean of Tulane University’s School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine, said in an interview. “And I think it’s because the stereotype is that the environment is about tree hugging or saving exotic birds.”
“Members of the Congressional Black Caucus say they’ve heard the call and are working on solutions,” Bloomberg Environment reported. “The caucus is made up of 55 African American members of the House and Senate.”
“I think we’re going to be energetic in supporting any legislation that is aimed at improving the environment, but I also have to tell you how congested the major issues have become,” Rep. Emanuel Cleaver (D-MO) said in the Bloomberg Environment article.
Cleaver said lawmakers could add language to the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s (FEMA) budget to put resources in poor black communities, and the National Flood Insurance Program could add more protections for black communities.
Bloomberg Environment reported that some are already putting out legislation with this goal in mind, including Reps. Maxine Waters (D-CA), Raul Grijalva (D-AZ) and A. Donald McEachin (D-VA).
“For African Americans and people living in urban poor communities, it provides them with an empowerment tool to enforce the law, to demand action, and to try to get remediation done,” Grijalva told Bloomberg Environment.
“Separately, Rep. Kathy Castor (D-Fla.), chairwoman of the House Select Committee on the Climate Crisis, is working on a climate bill to be rolled out in March that, among other things, will aim to help communities of color living near pollution sources,” Bloomberg Environment reported. “Many House Democrats think there’s value in putting these measures up for a vote, even if they have little chance in the Senate now, to send a message.”
The article also quoted Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) about her Green New Deal resolution that puts social justice even above climate change.
“I think it’s backwards and shortsighted to say, ‘Well, let’s just throw a bunch of solar panels on everyone’s roof and call it a day,’” Ocasio-Cortez said. “Because you cannot build a winning political coalition to fight climate change on just technocratic solutions.”
“By fighting for the actual justice and livelihood of working people, you are going to create the political energy to actually address climate change,” she said.
Behavior MattersBE
Chart
by Alberto Mena
Police: Man Released from Ohio Jail Immediately Robs Bank Across
Street
A man released from a Dayton, Ohio, jail allegedly tried to rob the
bank across the street only minutes later, police said upon his rearrest.
Pregnant mother charged with murder
after her bruised, malnourished two-year-old boy son was found dead with
ligature marks on his arm
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Police: Group of Teens Attack Family After Cutting the Line at
Six Flags
A group of teens attacked a family of three over a line-cutting dispute
during Fright Fest at Six Flags Great America in Illinois, police said.
Blacks, Crime, and the
Bended Knee
In her book The
War on Cops: How the New Attack on Law and Order Makes Everyone Less Safe, Heather
McDonald documents the inner city warfare committed by black males against
other black males. In Chicago,76
percent of all homicides are committed by blacks and 78 percent of all juvenile
arrests involve blacks.
Womb-raiding childhood friend 'cut
mother-to-be's throat on her wedding day so she couldn't scream before cutting
out her whole uterus, stealing her baby and dumping deflated organ on bathroom
floor'
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4921550/Woman-accused-murdering-pregnant-friend.html#ixzz4tohZK4ko
Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook
Eight-year-old boy is 'beaten to
death with a hammer by his mom's ex as he tries to stop him sexually assaulting
his younger sister'
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Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4915300/Boy-8-beaten-death-hammer-mom-ex-boyfriend.html#ixzz4tdqZIEBl
Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook
Cousins 'shot and killed a pizza delivery man and then ate the
pie as he bled to death on their doorstep'
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ARTICLE
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4911520/Cousins-shot-killed-pizza-delivery-man-ate-pie.html#ixzz4tS2kYVJE
Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook
Boy
Dies from Hammer Beating After He Tried to Protect Sister from Sex Attack
A California boy who was trying to protect his younger sister from
being sexually attacked died after the suspect beat him with a hammer
during the incident.
JESSICA
CHAMBERS: Teen Murdered Immediately After Local Blacks Called For Rape &
Burning Of White Women
Behavior MattersBE
Why some people spend their live
Bs in poverty and social dysfunction
BEHAVIOR MATTERS
The Social Order
More than 50 years of
social-sciences evidence demonstrates that behavior is highly predictive of
many important life outcomes. Children who are temperamental, fussy, and
aggressive often cause their parents to withdraw affection and to limit
supervision, which leads to further bad behavior later on, along with
subsequent struggles and frustration. Adolescents who verbally accost or
threaten their schoolteachers are more likely to be suspended or expelled, as
well as to spend less time studying, working on homework, and attending
classes. And adults who engage in crime are the same ones who not only
frequently end up in jail and prison, of course, but also remain voluntarily
unemployed, and often find themselves at the bottom of the economic ladder.
Behavior is predictive from one setting to the next, and consequences snowball.
The body of research linking bad behavior to negative and cumulative
consequences is remarkably robust, extends across countries, and has been
replicated across academic disciplines with diverse samples, methodologies, and
analytical techniques. These findings provide the basis for a range of policies
and cultural narratives that could, if embraced, help people avoid many of
life’s costly pitfalls.
Many
thinkers and activists on the left, however, prefer to disconnect an
individual’s behavior from his lot in life—whether it’s by obscuring the
violence committed by criminals or blaming it on external forces, downplaying
the aggression of problem students in public schools when they’re minorities
and talking instead about the “school-to-prison pipeline,” or suggesting that
the vagaries of chance explain individual success and failure. In this way of
thinking, implicit bias is invariably to blame for police conflicts with
minority communities, rather than uncooperative or violent arrestees, and the
“prison-industrial complex,” not chronic felonious behavior, explains why 2
million Americans are behind bars. From the Left’s point of view, bad behavior,
at least by certain favored groups, should be ignored, or, if not ignored, then
explained away by diabolical social forces—poverty, in particular—that cause
the bad behavior. This harms society and does nothing to help the people whom
the Left claims to want to help, especially since its explanation is backward:
poverty is far more often the outcome of bad behavior, not the cause of it.
The contention that
behavior matters, that it has profound effects on individual lives, is what got
law professors Amy Wax and Larry Alexander in trouble with left-leaning colleagues.
In a 2017 op-ed defending “bourgeois culture,” Wax and Alexander argued that
traditional social norms provided people with the values and ways of acting
that ultimately improved their lives. What were these recommended behaviors? To
get married before having children and to stay married, to get an education, to
be a good employee, to serve one’s country, to be neighborly and charitable, to
avoid lewd public language, to respect authority, and to avoid crime and drug
abuse. This is the same kind of advice offered to most young people by their
parents. Even so, Wax and Alexander committed a sin in the Left’s eyes: they
made the connection between behavior and life outcomes explicit and thereby
rejected the narrative that unjust social structures, not individual choices,
block people from reaching their potential.
By the
same token, what we could call behavioral poverty helps explain how some
individuals spend their lives mired in poverty and social dysfunction.
Behavioral poverty is reflected in the attitudes, values, and beliefs that
justify entitlement thinking, the spurning of personal responsibility, and the
rejection of traditional social mechanisms of advancement. It is characterized
by high self-indulgence, low self-regulation, exploitation of others, and
limited motivation and effort. It can be correlated with a range of antisocial,
immoral, and imprudent behaviors, including substance abuse, gambling,
insolvency, poor health habits, and crime.
While
behavioral poverty’s causes are likely complex—involving the interplay between
parents, genes, and culture—understanding its consequences is not complex: they
are depressingly predictable. Because behavioral poverty can emerge early in
life and remain stable over time, it’s not uncommon to see behaviorally poor
children perform badly at school, compile arrest records as juveniles, and
transition into adulthood with few or any skills outside those valued on the
street. Few who work in the juvenile-justice system, for example, are surprised
to find out that former clients get arrested as adults, or involved with drugs,
or pregnant with no means of support.
Behavioral
poverty helps us see why those caught up in the criminal-justice system often
struggle in many areas of life, whether it’s the squalor of their lifestyle,
their seeming imperviousness to correctional interventions designed to improve
their lives, or their often-obstinate refusal to engage in productive adult
conduct. Though many sociologists and criminologists would be reluctant to
invoke a concept like this because it “blames the victim”—in this case,
criminals—for their life circumstances, extensive work in the social sciences
over the past half-century provides compelling evidence for it.
One of the first scholars
to document the continuity in antisocial conduct over an individual’s life was
Lee Robins, a versatile social scientist whose work includes seminal research
on antisocial personality disorder. In one of her landmark papers, Robins
compared developmental trajectories of prosocial and antisocial behavior, using
data from various samples—some composed entirely of whites, some entirely of
blacks, and some racially representative of the U.S. population. Robins found
that behavior was the foremost predictor of subsequent conduct and life circumstances
and that social class or poverty played little role. This finding was
particularly pronounced for pathological criminal behavior—environmental
conditions, such as poverty, had relatively little effect in explaining such
behavior. Poverty, Robins found, was often a result—not a precipitating
cause—of the behavioral repertoire that produced relationship strife, school
dropout, chronic unemployment, substance problems, and transiency. The same
characterological deficiencies that plagued the research subjects as children
in Robins’s work remained evident decades later, when they were adults.
Sociologist
Elijah Anderson’s award-winning 1999 book, Code of the Street: Decency, Violence, and the Moral Life of the
Inner City,
has enjoyed popular and academic praise for its insights about impoverished
African-American neighborhoods in Philadelphia. He, too, keys in on the
importance of behavior. Anderson identified two types of residents in these
neighborhoods: those who self-identified as “decent” and led conventional,
law-abiding lives; and those who self-identified as “street” and led antisocial
lives, where violence was accepted. Street-code subscribers—overwhelmingly,
young males—were fatalistic, irresponsible, hedonistic, and obsessed with
“respect.” If another person “disrespected” them, which could involve something
as trivial as maintaining eye contact for a few seconds, violence was the only
acceptable response. And since many street-code youths carried illegal firearms,
the response usually manifested itself as an attempted or completed murder.
Street-code people, Anderson reported, usually terminate their educations
voluntarily by dropping out, or involuntarily by expulsion or incarceration;
they are chronically unemployed and depend on welfare or on women for
subsistence; and they accumulate no wealth or assets. They are inured to vice
and failure. They gain status through violence and other criminal acts.
Though
Anderson found evidence of “code-switching,” where otherwise decent people
would make aggressive displays to prevent being victimized themselves, the
approach to life of decent and street people could not be more different,
despite their similarities in terms of race, socioeconomic status, and
geographic location. Anderson’s interviews revealed that decent people have a
strong belief in the future—and that this entails working hard, saving money,
and investing in raising one’s kids. Decent people draw strength from
traditional institutions, such as school and church, and are inclined to
develop and maintain traditional nuclear-family arrangements. The connections
with traditional social institutions facilitated lawful, moral behavior.
“Extremely aware of the problematic and often dangerous environment in which they
reside,” Anderson writes, “decent parents tend to be strict in their
child-rearing practices, encouraging children to respect authority and walk a
straight moral line. They sometimes display an almost obsessive concern about
trouble of any kind and encourage their children to avoid people and situations
that might lead to it.” Decency structured their existence in accordance with a
stable ethos, irrespective of the squalor that often surrounded them.
Other
scholars have documented similar stories in impoverished neighborhoods in
Chicago and Denver. Delbert Elliott, William Julius Wilson, and colleagues
studied behavioral development in their 2006 book Good Kids from Bad Neighborhoods: Successful Development in Social
Context.
The authors observed strong behavioral differences that distinguished good kids
from bad kids living in the same material conditions. These included, on the
“good kid” side, personal competence, which encompassed school attachment,
future educational expectations, perceived future opportunities, and higher
self-esteem; and prosocial competence, which included personal efficacy,
educational expectations, commitment to conventionality, and involvement in
conventional activity. Those exhibiting such character traits tended to excel
in school and internalize the notion that a moral life marked by
self-discipline and self-regulation would yield benefits—not only in the
present but also in the future.
Researchers in the United
States, Europe, and Asia have led longitudinal studies examining how various
features of an individual’s life are associated with conduct problems. These
studies also have shed light on various protective factors that appear to
buffer youth from antisocial behavior, even in negative environments. Chief
among these factors are higher intelligence (especially verbal intelligence),
better self-regulation, a long-term time horizon with expectations for future
achievement, and greater parental investment.
Protective
factors and risk factors both have compelling predictive power well into
adulthood, as shown compellingly by findings from the Dunedin Multidisciplinary
Health and Development Study, which has tracked a birth cohort of 1,037
individuals in Dunedin, New Zealand, since 1972. Researchers found that just
four factors present as early as age three—maltreatment, low IQ, low
self-control, and low socioeconomic status—were significantly associated with
life outcomes four decades later. They also compared the 22 percent of the
cohort showing the greatest risk profiles with the 30 percent of the cohort
showing the lowest risk profiles. The comparisons starkly revealed the relative
societal burden that each group would go on to impose. The more severe 22
percent—those whom we assert exhibited behavioral poverty—accounted for 66
percent of the social-welfare spending, 77 percent of the prevalence of
fatherless children, 54 percent of the prevalence of smoking, 40 percent of the
prevalence of excess weight/obesity, 57 percent of hospital stays, 78 percent
of prescription fills, 36 percent of injury claims, and 81 percent of crime.
The lowest-risk 30 percent accounted for 6 percent of social-welfare spending,
3 percent of the prevalence of fatherless children, 7 percent of the prevalence
of smoking, 1 percent of the prevalence of excess weight/obesity, 7 percent of
hospital stays, 3 percent of prescription fills, 15 percent of injury
claims—and 0 percent of crime.
The
Dunedin data reveal the sprawling negative consequences of having poor
self-regulation and the equally versatile benefits of having good
self-regulation. Persons with behavioral poverty live moment to moment and give
little consideration to how their conduct affects others. What could be better
evidence of this than siring children, and then neither acknowledging nor
parenting them? Such individuals are likely to smoke, drink alcohol to excess,
and use drugs, and equally likely to drive recklessly, to play with loaded
firearms, to run from the police—and not to exercise, eat well, enjoy a regular
sleep schedule, or take their health seriously. Given these behaviors, they
often rely on the emergency room for medical care. Their actions too often come
at others’ expense, in terms of the victimization and criminal-justice system
expenditures that arise from their criminal offending and in their reliance on
welfare programs.
Behavioral
poverty is perhaps most vividly illustrated in the lives of drug addicts. Here,
adult responsibilities and even basic human needs, such as eating and sleeping,
are subordinated to the compulsive ingestion of alcohol, cocaine,
methamphetamine, heroin, or a mixture of these substances. We’ve interviewed
offenders who reported staying mostly awake for ten to 20 days while on a
binge. When drugs are not available, the addicts usually resort to crime. Drug
offenders commit offenses at rates several times higher than their
non-drug-using peers. Much of the incidence of crime, particularly burglary and
theft, is tied to drug use.
Criminological
research demonstrates the failure of many offenders to turn their lives around.
Using data from the Northwestern Juvenile Project, a longitudinal study of
1,829 juveniles detained at the Cook County Juvenile Temporary Detention Center
in Chicago, with follow-ups after release, Feinberg School of Medicine
professor Karen Abram and her colleagues examined positive outcomes in eight
areas: educational attainment, residential independence, gainful activity,
interpersonal functioning, parenting responsibility, desistance from criminal
activity, abstaining from substance abuse, and mental health—the basic
responsibilities of adult life. Only 55 percent of the female delinquents and
22 percent of the males achieved more than half of the positive outcomes. These
findings were largely reaffirmed by a series of studies on the Second Chance
Act, where offenders reentering society were provided with a wide range of
social, psychological, and employment services. All these services and support
systems had almost no effect and, in some cases, were associated with worse
outcomes. When considering the recipients’ behavioral poverty, these results
are not surprising.
Behavioral poverty makes
compliance with the criminal-justice system highly unlikely. First, except for
incarceration—where a sedentary lifestyle is somewhat possible—other forms of
criminal punishment, such as probation or parole, impose requirements on
correctional clients that many find challenging to meet. They must work or
provide evidence that they are seeking employment; they must abstain from
alcohol and drugs; they must attend various treatment programs; they must avoid
associating with victims in their case or with categories of people who share
their victims’ characteristics—for instance, sexual offenders must stay away
from children—and with other offenders, felons, or gang members. They must pay
fines and restitution, meet with their probation or parole officer at scheduled
times, and cooperate with correctional officers conducting home visits. The
correctional system accommodates many technical violations and even many
substantive-law violations and continued substance use while an offender is
under supervision. Extensive criminal-justice system data indicate that many
offenders lack the wherewithal to succeed, and this dismal assessment is
intensified for the behaviorally poor. A recent Bureau of Justice Statistics
report on recidivism among more than 400,000 offenders released from prison
showed that nine years after release, only 18 percent remained arrest-free.
“The ingredients to living a meaningful life involve
self-restraint, tenacity, and personal responsibility.”
Second,
many criminal offenders have no desire to engage in conventional, productive
adult conduct. In our experience as criminal-justice practitioners,
researchers, and clinicians, thousands of offenders have told us as much. All
the rigors and responsibilities of adulthood—from paying rent and utilities to
maintaining relationships—are fulfilled, free of charge, by the
criminal-justice system. Conventional adults are horrified by the idea of
imprisonment, but many offenders view jail as a refuge from the demands of
life. And, given the Left’s efforts, incarceration is increasingly devoid of
stigma. Studies suggest that, when given the choice of freedom versus confinement,
offenders with more extensive incarceration histories and greater behavioral
pathology choose confinement. Some inmates even refuse parole and serve their
entire criminal sentence to expiration.
Some
offenders eventually embrace adult responsibilities, building better lives for
themselves, but most will remain on the bottom of the economic ladder. Criminal
behavior is a powerful predictor of poverty—not because offenders encounter
such harsh social and legal sanctions but because their actions remain consistently
antisocial. Contrary to depictions that portray offenders as victims of a
punitive criminal-justice system that cuts off their opportunities for a stable
life, a good job, and healthy relationships, the truth is that many don’t seek
these goals, and even more lack the habits to achieve them.
If we
know how people fail, though, we also know how others get ahead—how they
navigate life’s stresses while remaining employed, married, and free from crime
and drug abuse. While material success is never guaranteed, the ingredients to
living a meaningful life involve self-restraint, tenacity, personal
responsibility, and the rejection of behaviors that violate moral and legal
standards. Using data from a sample of adolescents who grew up during the Great
Depression and whose lives were followed for over six decades, sociologist John
Clausen documented the powerful impact of what he termed “planful competence.”
Youths who showed this trait—that is, who were self-confident and rejected
victimization thinking, who invested in their intellect, and who were
dependable—were more successful as adults. “Their competence,” Clausen found,
“led to superior opportunities and superior achievements.” By contrast, Clausen
found that people lacking planful competence often invited hardship and harm
into their lives—and into those of others.
Inevitably, of course,
some people do deviate from these values. Too often, the Left’s answer is to
remove the negative consequences of these choices. The Left’s current
enthusiasm for large-scale release of offenders from prison is a good example.
Its wrongheadedness is made clear by the Bureau of Justice Statistics’
recidivism data and the utter failure of reentry efforts—to say nothing of the
deteriorating conditions and rising crime rates in cities like San Francisco,
Seattle, Baltimore, and others, in considerable part because of their political
leaders’ unwillingness to apply consequences to everything from disorderly
behavior and vagrancy to violent crime. Admittedly, changing behavior is
difficult, but robbing people of the motive to change by removing consequences
also removes accountability. That some are unaffected by negative consequences
is not evidence that consequences don’t matter but that some individuals are
immune to social sanctions.
“The
vision of the Left, full of envy and resentment, takes its worst toll on those
at the bottom—whether black or white—who find in that paranoid vision an excuse
for counterproductive and ultimately self-destructive attitudes and behavior,” economist
and social thinker Thomas Sowell observed. Put more simply: behavior is what
makes a society.
Police: Man Released from Ohio Jail Immediately Robs Bank Across
Street
7 Jan 201915
2:02
A man released from a Dayton, Ohio, jail allegedly tried to rob the
bank across the street only minutes later, police said upon his rearrest.
Karsten
Hardeman, 20, of Dayton, Ohio, was released from lockup on the afternoon of
January 2 after having been arrested on a misdemeanor drug charge. But only
about an hour later, he was taken back
into custody, officers said, according to the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
Wentzville
Police was called about a robbery at the 1st Financial Federal Credit Union at
1232 Wentzville Parkway. An officer responded on foot because the bank was on
the same block as the police station.
Breitbart TV
The
officer reported that as he approached the bank, he observed Hardeman sitting
on the curb nearby. He ordered the man to raise his hands., and when he did, he
observed several $100 bills fall from the man’s pockets.
The
policeman found that Hardeman fit the description of the robbery suspect.
A
large amount of cash was found in Hardeman’s possession. Additionally, in his
car, police found two masks, a computer, and a cell phone. He was then
rearrested.
“I
have no idea what he was thinking or why he decided that would be a good place
to go,” Officer Jacob Schmidt told the media.
Police
also discovered that Hardeman has a history of being connected to bank
robberies, having been suspected in thefts in Kansas and Texas. Hardeman had
not been charged in the earlier cases, but he was charged in Ohio.
The
Wentzville Police Department is also now cooperating with
the FBI and agencies in Texas and Kansas to investigate the previous incidents.
The
suspect was booked on charges of first-degree robbery and is being held in the
St. Charles County jail on a cash-only bail of $100,000.
Pregnant mother charged with murder
after her bruised, malnourished two-year-old boy son was found dead with
ligature marks on his arm
·
Twyena Thomas, 27, was booked on a count of
second-degree murder in connection with the death of Chase Thomas, two
·
Police said Thomas admitted to hitting Chase
and tying him up when she felt he deserved punishment
·
Cops initially arrested her on allegations of
cruelty to a juvenile, but upgraded the count against her after an
autopsy
·
She faces mandatory life imprisonment if
convicted of second-degree murder
·
Three of her other children have gone into
care, while she is pregnant with a fifth
·
+1
·
Police in Louisiana have arrested the mother of an 'extremely
malnourished' two-year-old boy who was found dead.
Kenner police initially charged Twyena Thomas, 27, with
cruelty to a juvenile.
But an autopsy revealed the toddler, who was called Chase, died
due to 'blunt trauma and abuse'.
The toddler's arms and legs were covered with bruises. Many of the
marks suggested that he had been tied up at some point.
Jefferson Parish Coroner's Office has classified the boy's death
as a homicide and Thomas has now been charged with second degree murder.
'The child had multiple marks and bruising,' said Lt. Brian
McGregor, spokesman for the Kenner Police Department. 'There's other things
that we saw that lead us to believe there was abuse and neglect. '
Officers were called to Thomas' home after receiving reports of a
two-year-old having 'difficulty breathing,' authorities said.
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By the time the emergency services had arrived, the boy was
unresponsive and cold to the touch.
Paramedics tried to revive him, but he was pronounced dead at the
scene, authorities said.
According
to Nola.com, authorities noted he
seemed 'extremely malnourished' and had bruising around both eyes.
Officers also witnessed bruising along the entire length of the
boy's arms and legs.
The boy had 'ligature marks' on his left forearm which led
investigators to believe the little boy may have been tied up at some point.
The youngster also had several scratches and marks on his back and
buttocks.
Thomas admitted that she was the only one who looked after the boy
and that she had hit him several times with a slipper as punishment.
She also told officers that she used a cloth-like material to
restrain him when he was misbehaving.
Three other children, aged one, four and nine were also taken into
care. Thomas is currently pregnant.
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4945096/Mother-charged-neglected-two-year-old-boy-died.html#ixzz4uTP5sHb6
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Police: Group of Teens Attack Family After Cutting the Line at
Six Flags
A group of teens attacked a family of three over a line-cutting dispute
during Fright Fest at Six Flags Great America in Illinois, police said.
The Chicago
Sun-Times reported that the rambunctious teens cut in front
of a 50-year-old woman, her 51-year-old husband, and their 12-year-old son
standing in line at the amusement park in Gurnee on Saturday.
The woman asked the teens to stop swearing, and one of the teens
“sucker-punched” her son, Gurnee Deputy Police Chief Brian Smith said.
Moments later, the teens allegedly pummeled the family to the
ground.
Smith said Wednesday the family suffered “significant injuries”
and were taken to a hospital where they were treated and later released.
Police arrested Gregory Battle, 18, and charged him with
aggravated battery causing great bodily harm, aggravated battery in a public
place, and mob action.
Battle
was released after posting $20,000 bond before his initial appearance
Wednesday in Lake County Court, the Chicago
Tribune said.
Smith told
the New
York Post that although Battle allegedly took part in the assault,
he did not throw the first punch. The police chief added that he believed one
of the juvenile suspects was responsible for throwing the first punch.
The Tribune reported that eight
other teen suspects, ranging in age from 15 to 17, have been charged as
juveniles for mob action and are being held at a juvenile detention complex in
Vernon Hills.
A spokesperson for the amusement park called the alleged attack
an “isolated” incident and noted that security personnel responded
appropriately.
“The safety
of our guests and team members is always our highest priority and we have zero
tolerance for any unlawful behavior,” park officials said in a statement to
the Post,
adding, “We continually adjust our security measures to maintain guest
safety and well-being. We partner with local police as well as staff our own
robust security team and work in unison with other entities to maintain a safe
environment.”
Police are asking anyone who has video footage of the incident
to notify the authorities.
September 29, 2017
Blacks, Crime, and the
Bended Knee
Fresh off the heels of the march
on Charlottesville and the destruction of historical monuments in the
South by Black Lives Matter, protests are occurring; this time it is against
our National Anthem and our flag in stadiums across our country. “Taking the
knee“ was first introduced by former 49ers quarterback
Colin Kaepernick about a year ago, but has since gained in momentum
as many other black athletes with million-dollar salaries have joined in
solidarity with demonstrations against white oppression and racism.
Whites comprise about 75 percent of
America's population and they have had just about enough of the offensive
accusations, protests, and moral outrage directed at them. Yes, blacks were
brought here centuries ago as slaves, but America did not originate slavery nor
do we still practice slavery, as do parts of Africa and Muslim nations today.
In fact, America fought a civil war to end slavery. It's been over 150 years
since the Emancipation Proclamation, thus, the fate of today's blacks rests not
upon yesterday's slaveholders, but upon today's failed black leadership
who have intentionally kept America's blacks on an imaginary plantation through
the indoctrination of victimhood. By instilling the notion that blacks
today are the victims of white racism and "white privilege", black
leadership (Al Sharpton, Jesse Jackson, Louis Farrakhan, and Maxine
Waters, to name a few) have created not only an entitlement mentality, but a
dependency and helplessness prevalent among young blacks in inner cities
throughout the country.
It is not “whitey” who is
committing 62 percent of robberies, 57 percent of murders, 45 percent of
assaults in the 75 biggest counties throughout the United States. Despite
comprising only about 15 percent of the population in those counties. 91 percent
of blacks are murdered by other blacks. Blacks comprise 10 percent of the population, but commit 42
percent of the robberies and 34 percent of felonies. In a report from the
Department of Justice, over a 30-year period between 1980 and 2008, blacks
committed half of all homicides in the United States despite comprising only 13
percent of the population. https://www.channel4.com/news/factcheck/factcheck-black-americans-commit-crime
Furthermore, a 2007 FBI file reports there
were 433,934 single-offender victimization crimes against whites by blacks
compared to 55,685 crimes committed by whites against blacks -- eight times as
many more crimes committed against whites by blacks. Interracial rape is almost
exclusively a black on white crime with 14,000 assaults on white woman but not
one case of a white sexual assault on a black female.
Black educational statistics are dismal
when compared to whites. In a 2012-2013 report by
the Schott Foundation titled "Black Lives Matter:
The Schott 50 State Report on Public Education and Black
Males" it was reported that only 59 percent of black males graduate from high school compared to 65 percent
for Latinos and 80 percent for whites. In Detroit, a city governed by black
leadership for decades, only 20 percent of black males graduate from high
school. What an indictment and disgrace!
Nor are whites responsible for the huge
increase in out-of-wedlock births. In 2013, 71 percent of black births were born to black unwed mothers.
These children were born into a life of
poverty without the benefit of a father in the home. The norm for these kids is
to drop out, use drugs, become unemployed, commit crimes, and become imprisoned
at many more times the rate of whites, Asian, and Hispanics.
Yes, the black community has a problem,
but it is of its own making, and too often whites are the victims of a
dysfunctional black community. America has lavishly poured billions of
taxpayer’s dollars in recent decades to improve public education, outreach, and
equal opportunity programs such as Affirmative Action for blacks in
inner cities, but to what avail? We have stepped aside and watched silently as
city after city, once safe and prosperous, became Third World outposts after
decades of corrupt black Democratic leadership. They enriched themselves with
unkept promises while the rest of the population floundered.
For decades, beginning with the 60s, white
guilt was kept alive by a civil rights revolution that swept the nation.
Many blacks found success in the media, the press, education, sports, law
enforcement, the halls of government, culminating in the election of the first
black President, Barack Hussein Obama. Many whites, eager to
assuage their guilt after many years of playing defense, voted not for the best
man to fill the office, but for a symbol they hoped would end the racial
conflict once and for all. Contrarily, the election of Obama only
served to exacerbate tension between whites and blacks. Many blacks
felt emboldened and protected in their demands and racist protests against
police are now commonplace. Chants by Black Lives Matter "What do we want?
Dead cops! When do we want it? Now!" were frequently heard at protests.
The result is a war on cops with numerous officers killed in the line of duty
in NYC, Dallas, Baton Rouge, San Antonio, and other cities throughout the land.
It is not you who needs
protection from us. It is we who need protection from you.
Black problems are self-created, and history has proven that no amount of money
thrown at them will solve the problem. Scapegoating is getting tiresome
and dangerous. Do not lecture us about social injustice and the debt owed to
you. The only thing we owe you and what is owed to any of us is equal
opportunity. We have more than given that to you. It is high time for the black
community to look inwards, and when it does it will discover the problem is not
a lack of opportunities, but a lack of values. Education, self-reliance,
delayed gratification, responsibility, hard work, ambition, and an intact
family are values incorporated and ingrained within those who lead productive
decent lives. It is lacking within a large segment of the black community.
Shame on those who display ingratitude and dishonor America, a country that has
given black athletes the opportunity to make millions playing a sport that
young men in Africa can only dream about, a country that has given blacks
liberty and opportunity. Shame on you and those who kneel with you.
Shari Goodman is an educator, political
activist, public speaker, and journalist. Her articles can be found in American Thinker, World Net
Daily, and Israel Today among others.
CITY JOURNAL
BLACK ON BLACK VIOLENCE Data,
of crime and policing than this weekend’s demonstrations suggest.
September 25, 2017
Public safety
The FBI released its official crime tally for 2016 today, and the data
flies in the face of the rhetoric that professional athletes rehearsed in
revived Black Lives Matter protests over the weekend. Nearly 900
additional blacks were killed in 2016 compared with 2015, bringing the black
homicide-victim total to 7,881. Those 7,881 “black bodies,” in the parlance of
Ta-Nehisi Coates, are 1,305 more than the number of white victims (which in
this case includes most Hispanics) for the same period, though blacks are
only 13 percent of the nation’s population. The increase in black homicide
deaths last year comes on top of a previous 900-victim increase between 2014
and 2015.
Who is
killing these black victims? Not whites, and not the police, but other blacks.
In 2016, the police fatally shot 233 blacks, the vast majority armed and
dangerous, according to the Washington Post. The Post categorized only 16 black male victims of police shootings
as “unarmed.” That classification masks assaults against officers and violent
resistance to arrest. Contrary to the Black Lives Matter narrative, the police
have much more to fear from black males than black males have to fear from the
police. In 2015, a police officer was 18.5 times more likely to be killed by a
black male than an unarmed black male was to be killed by a police officer.
Black males have made up 42 percent of all cop-killers over the last decade,
though they are only 6 percent of the population. That 18.5 ratio undoubtedly
worsened in 2016, in light of the 53 percent increase in gun murders of
officers—committed vastly and disproportionately by black males. Among all
homicide suspects whose race was known, white killers of blacks numbered only
243.
Violent
crime has now risen by a significant amount for two consecutive years. The
total number of violent crimes rose 4.1 percent in 2016, and estimated
homicides rose 8.6 percent. In 2015, violent crime rose by nearly 4 percent and
estimated homicides by nearly 11 percent. The last time violence rose two years
in a row was 2005–06. The reason for the current increase is what I have
called the Ferguson Effect. Cops are backing off of proactive policing in
high-crime minority neighborhoods, and criminals are becoming emboldened.
Having been told incessantly by politicians, the media, and Black Lives Matter activists
that they are bigoted for getting out of their cars and questioning someone
loitering on a known drug corner at 2 AM, many officers are
instead just driving by. Such stops are discretionary; cops don’t have to make
them. And when political elites demonize the police for just such proactive
policing, we shouldn’t be surprised when cops get the message and do less of
it. Seventy-two percent of the nation’s officers say that they and their
colleagues are now less willing to stop and question suspicious persons,
according to a Pew Research poll released in January 2016. The reason is the persistent
anti-cop climate.
Four
studies came out in 2016 alone rebutting the charge that police shootings are racially biased.
If there is a bias in police shootings, it works in favor of blacks and against
whites. That truth has not stopped the ongoing demonization of the
police—including, now, by many of the country’s ignorant professional athletes.
The toll will be felt, as always, in the inner city, by the thousands of
law-abiding people there who desperately want more police protection.
*
Womb-raiding childhood friend 'cut
mother-to-be's throat on her wedding day so she couldn't scream before cutting
out her whole uterus, stealing her baby and dumping deflated organ on bathroom
floor'
·
Ashleigh Wade is accused of murdering her
pregnant friend Angelikque Sutton, on her wedding day in 2015
·
Wade allegedly cut Sutton's throat so she
couldn't scream before cutting her entire uterus out to steal her baby
girl
·
Police say Wade was screaming 'It’s my baby!'
while holding the baby, named Jenasis, near Sutton's body and deflated uterus
on the bathroom floor
·
Wade's first day of the murder trial began
Monday and she's pleaded not guilty
·
Prosecutors say Wade told friends and family
member she was pregnant and needed Sutton's baby to carry on the lie
·
·
·
·
·
129shares
A Bronx woman is accused of methodically cutting her childhood
friend's throat on her wedding day so she couldn't scream before cutting her
entire uterus out to steal her baby girl before dumping the deflated organ on
the bathroom floor.
Angelikque Sutton, 22, was nearly nine months pregnant and on her
way to the courthouse to marry Patrick Bradley when she stopped by the Bronx
home of her friend, Ashleigh Wade in 2015.
But Wade, who unsuspectingly lured Sutton to the apartment by
promising her a gift, had other plans for Sutton, prosecutors said during the
opening statements of her first-degree murder trial on Monday.
Wade allegedly cut Sutton's throat, preventing her to scream
before cutting her baby girl from her womb.
'This was an attack that took place in stages,' Assistant Bronx DA
Meredith Holtzman told the jury during Wade's trial.
+5
·
+5
·
+5
·
She said Wade had feigned pregnancy in the months prior to the
horrific murder.
'The defendant attacked Ms. Sutton by stabbing and slashing her
repeatedly in the face and neck,” Holtzman said.
'The defendant cut Ms. Sutton's larynx — her voice box. Ms.
Sutton could not scream, could not say a word. She cut her major blood vessels.
'What the defendant did to her next is almost unspeakable.
'Because after she had rendered Ms. Sutton unable to scream,
unable to move, the defendant took a kitchen paring knife and sliced Ms.
Sutton's abdomen open at the bottom half.
'Once she had cut Ms. Sutton's abdomen open, the defendant cut Ms.
Sutton's uterus entirely out. She cut that uterus open, took baby Jenasis out,
and discarded that uterus on the bathroom floor.'
Jurors were shown grisly photos of the bloody crime scene along
with Sutton's butchered remains and her deflated uterus that was left on the
bathroom floor.
Amazingly, Sutton's daughter survived the vicious attack and is
now a thriving 22-month-old.
+5
·
Holtzman called the girl's survival'proof of the calculation and
precision of the attack.'
'The defendant needed for Ms. Sutton to die, and she needed for
Jenasis to live,' Holtzman said, as she later explained how Wade told friends
and family members she was pregnant.
'She had baby clothes, baby shoes, diapers, formula, a crib,
everything that an expectant mother would need, except a baby.
'She didn't have a baby. For that she needed Angelikque Sutton.'
Wade's defense attorney, Amy Attias, said that her client did not
'intentionally' kill Sutton and that 'something could have gone horribly and
terribly and tragically wrong within Ms. Wade's own mind.'
Police arrived at the crime scene in Wakefield roughly 30 minutes
after the November 2015 killing.
+5
·
Wade was found by her boyfriend cradling Jenasis next to her
mother's body.
She also screamed at police 'It's my baby!' as they took her into
custody.
NYPD office Jonathan Polanco Ortiz who had arrived to the crime
scene in 2015 testified on Monday that it 'left a mark on his soul.'
Ortiz said that Wade confessed to the grisly murder when she saw
police.
When asked how many times she knifed Sutton, Ortiz said Wade
responded, 'As many times as I could.'
During the opening day of the trial, Sutton's father testified
that he and his wife had first heard about the viscous attack on the news, but
did not know it was their daughter.
'We saw on television that there had been a young lady who was
attacked, and we were saying how terrible it was — not knowing that was our
daughter,' Bishop William Sutton told the jury as his wife, Deborah, cried in
the audience.
Sutton's husband-to-be and father of her child, sat and listened
to the horrific details in court.
Bradley, who had been dating Sutton for eight years at the time
she was killed, posts photos of his daughter on Facebook showing she is happy
and even learning how to box.
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4921550/Woman-accused-murdering-pregnant-friend.html#ixzz4tohZK4ko
Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook
Eight-year-old boy is 'beaten to
death with a hammer by his mom's ex as he tries to stop him sexually assaulting
his younger sister'
·
Dante Daniels, eight, was killed by
Deandre Chaney Jr., 23, with a hammer on September 1st in South Sacremento,
California, while trying to protect his sister
·
According to a criminal report,
Chaney Jr. was engaged in the crime of committing a lewd act on Danae, Dante's
seven-year-old sister
·
·
The suspect also used a hammer and
knife on Danae, as well as their mother, 28-year-old Elizabeth Salone
·
Both his sister and mother
survived, but grandmother Monique has said that Elizabeth won't be able to see
out her left eye and Danae will need a lot of help
·
Along with murder and attempted
murder charges, Chaney Jr. also faces a charge for lewd acts with a child under
14
·
PUBLISHED: 13:41
EDT, 24 September 2017 | UPDATED: 16:55
EDT, 24 September 2017
·
·
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e-mail
·
3.1kshares
A Californian eight-year-old
boy was beaten to death by his mother's ex-boyfriend while he was trying to
protect his younger sister from molestation.
Dante Daniels was attacked
by Deandre Chaney Jr., 23, with a hammer on September 1st in South
Sacremento, California. He never made it to his
second day of third grade.
According to a criminal
report, Chaney Jr. was engaged in the crime of committing a lewd act on Danae,
Dante's seven-year-old sister.
+7
·
+7
·
Dante Daniels, eight,
was attacked by Deandre Chaney Jr., 23, with a hammer on September 1st in
South Sacremento, California, while trying to protect his sister
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'Trying to save his sister
from this child molester, and that's why he was beat the worst,' said Dante's
grandmother, Monique Brown, to KFVS 12.
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The suspect also used a
hammer and knife on Danae, as well as their mother, 28-year-old Elizabeth
Salone.
He is also said to have used
lighter fluid.
+7
·
According to a criminal
report, Chaney Jr. was engaged in the crime of committing a lewd act on Danae,
Dante's seven-year-old sister
+7
·
'Trying to save his sister
from this child molester, and that's why he was beat the worst,' said Dante's
grandmother, Monique Brown, to KFVS 12
+7
·
+7
·
The suspect also used a hammer
and knife on Danae, as well as their mother, 28-year-old Elizabeth Salone
Dante was declared brain
dead following the attack and died six days later.
Both his sister and mother
survived, but Brown has said that Monique won't be able to see out her left eye
and Danae will need a lot of help.
And the grandmother believes
her little one is a hero, even after death.
+7
·
Along with murder and
attempted murder charges, Chaney Jr. also faces a charge for lewd acts with a
child under 14
'Dante gave his heart to a
4-year-old In Southern California, so a 4-year-old lives because of [him],'
Brown added.
Along with murder and
attempted murder charges, Chaney Jr. also faces a charge for lewd acts with a
child under 14.
A Gofundme has
been set up to raise money for the family.
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4915300/Boy-8-beaten-death-hammer-mom-ex-boyfriend.html#ixzz4tdqZIEBl
Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook
LET US STOP THE POLITICALLY CORRECT CRAP ABOUT THE
VIOLENCE OF GHETTO BLACKS IN THIS COUNTRY.
DID WHITEY CAUSE THESE APES TO MURDER A PIZZA MAN IN
COLD BLOOD?
CHICAGO’S BLACK GANG LAND…. Is what happens when
bankster Rahm Emanuel and his corrupt Obama party turned the city under!
BLACK LIVES MATTER???
American Blacks have run out of excuses!
LIFE DOES NOT MATTER TO GHETTO BLACKS
ANYWHERE!
They’re the ones that murder each other
when they’re not aborting!
Cousins 'shot and killed a pizza delivery man and then ate the
pie as he bled to death on their doorstep'
·
Cousins have been charged in the
murder of pizza delivery driver Clarence Taper, 60
·
Mekael Kennedy, 17, from and his
cousin D'Andre Kennedy, 25, robbed and shot the driver on Monday
·
·
After the alleged killing, the
pair took the pizza Taper was delivering and ate it
·
Kennedy told police he had his
safety on and didn't know why the gun went off
·
He now faces up to 95 years in
jail if found guilty of the crime
·
Cousins allegedly shot and
killed a pizza deliveryman in Wisconsin before eating the pie from his bag
while it was still warm.
Mekael Kennedy, 17, and his
cousin D'Andre Kennedy, 25, of Milwaukee, have been charged in connection to
the murder of 60-year-old Clarence Taper, a grandfather.
Taper worked for Buddy's
Pizza and Steak in Milwaukee, was killed September 11 while delivering a pie to
the apartment where the cousins were, according to TMJ4.com.
+5
·
+5
·
Mekael Kennedy, 17,
left, allegedly shot and killed a pizza deliveryman along with his cousin
and D'Andre Kennedy, 25, on September 11th
+5
·
Pizza deliveryman
Clarence Taper, who worked for Buddy's Pizza and Steak in Milwaukee, was
killed while delivering a pie to the apartment where the cousins were
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Mekael worse a hockey mask
and allegedly took D'Andre's gun before demanding Taper's money when he came to
the door with the pizza delivery.
+5
·
Clarence Taper, 60,
worked for Buddy's Pizza and Steak in Milwaukee and was shot to death
A police report states how a
gun was fired hitting Taper, however Mekael protested to police that he thought
he had the safety on and did not know why the weapon fired.
Despite allegedly shooting
and killing the deliveryman, the cousins still ended up eating the pizza that
was being delivered to their door.
Mekael claimed Taper had
lunged at him before the shooting.
D'Andre also colluded with
his cousin telling cops that Mekael shot Taper because he attempted to take
Mekael's hockey mask off.
During interviews with
police, Mekael admitted he had also robbed a Papa John's delivery driver
earlier that week.
The teen has been charged as
an adult with armed robbery and murder. He now faces up to 95 years in prison.
D'Andre was charged with
harboring a felon and obstructing an officer and could face four years behind
bars.
+5
·
Taper was a father,
grandfather and dedicated employee at Buddy's Pizza and Steak. His manager said
he's heartbroken and furious about what happened
Taper was a father,
grandfather and dedicated employee at Buddy's Pizza and Steak. His manager said
he's heartbroken and furious about what happened.
'I'm very sorry it happened.
He's a good friend of mine and one of the best employees we have here. It makes
me very angry and frustrated because they could have just taken his money. They
didn't have to shoot him dead. They didn't have to kill him. He didn't deserve
to die like that. Nobody does,' Taper's manager said.
His daughter offered a
statement on behalf of the family earlier this week to Fox6: 'Our family is so
relieved. We are just so happy an arrest has been made and now we can lay my
father to rest knowing justice will be served for him.'
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4911520/Cousins-shot-killed-pizza-delivery-man-ate-pie.html#ixzz4tS2kYVJE
Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook
Boy
Dies from Hammer Beating After He Tried to Protect Sister from Sex Attack
Screenshot
A California boy who was trying to protect his younger sister from
being sexually attacked died after the suspect beat him with a hammer
during the incident.
Eight-year-old
Dante Daniels suffered massive trauma after being beaten with a hammer on
September 1. The child died less than a week later, according to Fox
40.
Police say he was attacked and beaten while trying to protect
his 7-year-old sister from sexual abuse.
Sacramento Police charged Deandre Chaney Jr., 23, with murder
and a list of sexual charges after being found by police in Nevada where he had
fled after his alleged part in the crime.
The suspect was the ex-boyfriend of the children’s mother,
Elizabeth Salone.
Court records also accused Chaney of hitting Salone with the
hammer causing permanent blindness in one eye.
Little Dante’s grandmother, Monique Brown, told the media that
the 7-year-old sexual abuse victim “will need a lot of help” to get over her
trauma.
Brown said doctors were able to harvest the little boy’s
heart and that the organ went to save the life of a 4-year-old child in
Southern California.
The suspect had a long history of sexual abuse charges and was
charged with failing to register as a sex offender in 2014.
“The children will never be the same from this tragedy nor will
their mother. They will be traumatized from such vicious crime. They will need
to start over from the ground up. Anything helps pray, share, a small
donation,” the page reads.
Follow
Warner Todd Huston on Twitter @warnerthuston
JESSICA
CHAMBERS: Teen Murdered Immediately After Local Blacks Called For Rape &
Burning Of White Women
|
Posted: Dec 21, 2014 12:01 AM
This is a powerful piece by Donald Joy, that originally appeared on my
website ClashDaily.com, about the brutal murder/burning of
Jessica Chambers. I decided to run it in place of my column because this case
seems to have escaped the notice of Lame Stream Media, Al Sharpton and Eric
Holder. It also seems as if various bloggers, like Mr. Joy, are more dialed in
to this horrendous crime than the Barney Fifes over in Panola County,
Mississippi.
Herewith is Joy's column regarding this heinous murder of a 19-year-old white cheerleader. Please e-blast it and Facebook and Tweet it to everybody and their dog until we see #justiceforjessica:
The truth about murder and race in Mississippi may prove reducible to black and white after all, as with fifty years ago in the infamous "Mississippi Burning" case. Breaking, bombshell social media evidence in the Jessica Chambers case suggests the dynamic is reversed, but similar.
Herewith is Joy's column regarding this heinous murder of a 19-year-old white cheerleader. Please e-blast it and Facebook and Tweet it to everybody and their dog until we see #justiceforjessica:
The truth about murder and race in Mississippi may prove reducible to black and white after all, as with fifty years ago in the infamous "Mississippi Burning" case. Breaking, bombshell social media evidence in the Jessica Chambers case suggests the dynamic is reversed, but similar.
In trying to follow and sort out
the details surrounding the grisly immolation death of the white former
cheerleader two weeks ago, one encounters a cast of very shady characters a
country mile long and wide, with the sordid backstory of small-town police
corruption in Panola County, and a troubled family tale, all of it murky and
convoluted almost beyond belief.
Nailing the actual guilty party,
however, could turn out to be not all that complicated. That's because some
black terrorists in the victim's immediate circle have left a rather obvious
trail of specific, racially-oriented murder threats.
For readers familiar with the
concept of Occam's Razor, what seems to be an incredibly tangled mystery might
instead just fit the boilerplate template of what I'm calling Occam's race war.
One week before, and on
just the day before Jessica Chambers was carjacked and burned to death, certain
blacks among her intimate circle and acquaintance were involved in Facebook
exchanges wherein calls for the rape and burnings of white women and
children, especially the families of white police officers, were posted.
Although not a police officer
himself, Jessica Chambers' father is an employee of the Panola County sheriff's
department, in the vehicle maintenance section.
You'll need to grab a cup of coffee
or an energy drink to slurp on, while you try to get a grip on what follows.
In the first Facebook comment in
question, on November 30th, a woman using the name "Teapooh
Itiswatitis Latrice" reacts to a fake news story carrying the
headline "Cop Shoots 1Yr Old Black Baby After Mistaking Pacifier For
Gun."
"Teapooh,"
apparently not being very bright, looks to have shared the story without
realizing it was actually absurd satire, typical of incendiary internet hoax
sites. In sharing the bogus article, "Teapooh" typed
the comment, "Somebody
need to rape all his kids in front of him then sit(sic) the house on fire an watch
them burn....i bet he was a white man SAD".
She shared it via the Facebook
timeline of a woman named Sandy
Rudd (now please bear with me for a minute while I outline
some crucial connections before giving you the rest of the specific, criminal
threat).
Sandy Rudd is the aunt of Bryan Rudd,
Jessica's abusive, criminal ex-boyfriend and local gang member. Sandy, who gave
the false name of "Cassandra Market" to a reporter in an interview,
is herself alleged to be a member of at least one notorious criminal gang --
she denies it, even though at least one picture of her has surfaced showing her
making gang signs in a group picture with others, all of them defiantly
throwing gang signs.
Sandy Rudd acknowledges that she is
the one at the gas station who asked Jessica Chambers for a cigarette, when
Jessica is seen on the store surveillance video walking over to someone who is
off-camera.
Jessica lived with Bryan Rudd and
his mother, Theresa
Rudd Fleming, for two years in the period leading up to her
murder, before a brief stay in a Christian-run rehab/shelter for troubled
women. Bryan Rudd has since moved away, to Iowa.
Now get this: "Teapooh" is,
according to the "hacktivists" who have accessed various social media
accounts of the people involved, actually Teanna Rudd, the wife or live-in
girlfriend of a man named Brejuan
Buyers.
Brejuan Buyers is the man seen on
the gas station's surveillance video with the gas can in
the hours just prior to Jessica being burned over 98% of her body. He rode with
Sandy Rudd in her car to the gas station, on that same night the murder victim
is seen at the store -- while he is filling the gas can at the pump -- only 90 minutes
before she is found burned.
"Teapooh" made
more than just that one murderous comment on Facebook. On the day before
Jessica's murder, on December 5th,she shared a video via someone posting
as "Derrick Jaxn" (Jessica's last word, uttered to
a first responder, is reported to have been "Eric" or
"Derrick"). The post was accompanied by her comment, "Somebody needs to rape all
they(sic) kids
in front of them then set them on fire there(sic) learn then white bitches
need to be dead".
The clock is ticking, and the FBI
was brought in to work on the case as of a few days ago. Many persons of
interest have been interviewed, and no arrests have been made.
Brejuan Buyers, the gangsta
"gas can man," can also be seen in two homemade videos here and here,
getting high and hurling angry obscenities at whoever watches.
Incidentally, just because
whichever authority initially declares some person to have been interviewed and
"cleared" doesn't necessarily mean that they won't be implicated
later on, upon further investigation/developments.
Gas station "owner" Ali
Alsanai, about whom I've previously written, has now been said by the local
District Attorney to be not officially suspected of any direct involvement in
the case. However he remains a very suspicious figure in all of this, to those
who pay close attention to his story's inconsistencies, his body language,
outward displays, mannerisms, and deceptive speech patterns (for one thing,
honest people don't constantly use the phrase "to be honest with you"
when answering questions). In spite of his openly flashy gangsta-jihad persona,
he's definitely covering up some kind of illegal activity in and/or around the
store.
In one interview, Alsanai blatantly
and very casually contradicts himself on timeline details, and says that
pictures of himself posing with powerful guns are "photoshopped."
At the 11:48 mark of that same
interview video, the reporter asks him about the small bags being dealt out to
people from inside and in front of the store by a black woman (seen carrying
and handing out the packets on the CCTV recording on the night of the murder).
Alsanai has claimed that the bags contain "chicken" -- some say
"chicken" is street slang for methamphetamine or cocaine. Yet when
the interviewer brings them up as supposedly being "chicken," Alsanai
completely blows the straight face he'd been making an attempt to maintain,
and starts laughing, obviously breaking up at how preposterous a lie he is
telling.
Just prior to her demise, Jessica
Chambers is reported by numerous sources as having been trying to leave the
gang and move on with her life, and had been telling people she was planning to
write a book about having survived the gang lifestyle. She is also reported to
have been in an altercation with someone at the same gas station a week before
her murder.
Many blacks and even some whites on
social media are accusing Jessica's father of her murder, for no other reason
than her having intimate relationships with dangerous and abusive black men.
After police officers Darren Wilson
and Daniel Pantaleo were recently exonerated by grand juries in the deaths of
black criminals Michael Brown and Eric Garner, and when George Zimmerman was
acquitted last year in the Trayvon Martin case, blacks rioted, looted, burned,
and murdered random whites, just as they did after the initial acquittals of
the white cops in the Rodney King case in 1992. It's plain to every honest
person that blacks wantonly and savagely attack and murder whites all the time
throughout the country, often for no reason at all except the thrill of
racially-motivated malicious mayhem. Particularly, we have just seen and heard
Michael Brown's mother's boyfriend, repeat felon Louis Head, violently
screaming "burn this bitch down!!!" over and over again, accompanied
by blacks rampaging, burning, looting, and attacking -- sometimes fatally, with
hammers or other deadly means -- random, innocent whites in St. Louis and
elsewhere.
Speaking of Louises, Farrakhan just
recently stood before a crowd of cheering blacks at a prominent Maryland
college and renewed his nationwide public exhortations for blacks to
mass-murder whites, whenever and wherever.
In philosophy and problem solving,
there's the principle of reasoning known as Occam's (or Okham's) Razor, which
goes like this: Among multiple alternative explanations, all of which require
various assumptions in order to arrive at possible solutions, often the
simplest and plainest answer -- involving the least number of assumptions --
turns out to be the right one.
So, we have local black gang associates posting
terror threats on social media -- threats of murder, by burning, directed at
the women and children family members of white police employees -- immediately
before the murder, by burning, of the white teenage daughter of a local police
department employee. Plus, the killing took place only minutes after the victim
was seen on video at the same location as the husband or boyfriend of the
person who posted the threats, as he was filling a handheld can with gasoline.
The entire case could simply be one
more incident in the modern, one-sided race war of black on white; a war which
is never talked about in the mainstream media. Or, it could be more complicated
than just black and white.
The evidence so far suggests that,
despite the murkiness of elements and complicated roster of suspicious players,
the truth in Courtland, Mississppi might come with the simplest and most
obvious explanation.
Expect things to blow wide open
very soon. The blogosphere's best and the brightest are all over this caper
like George Zimmerman on a Chipotle burrito bowl.
#JusticeforJessica
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