State of the Union is Flammable: The Execution of Christopher Dorner

CounterPunch

by GEORGE CICCARIELLO-MAHER and MIKE KING

If the murder of Oscar Grant on an Oakland transit platform marked the dawn of the Obama era, the cold-blooded murder of former Naval reservist and Los Angeles Police officer Christopher Dorner might just mark the end of whatever optimistic hope people can muster in his administration. Whether an innocent young man just trying to get home, shot in the back after being racially profiled and slurred, or a man driven to his breaking point after being fired from a similar police force that operates according to its own warped morality and overarching objectives, the state of the union is a powder keg whose wick has gotten shorter due to decades of looking the other way.

Just minutes before Barack Obama began his state of the union address, San Bernardino County Sheriffs, knowing full well what they were doing, burned Christopher Dorner to death. From police brutality and racism to political unaccountability, from lack of economic opportunities to the extrajudicial murder of anyone deemed an enemy of the state, Dorner’s life and death offers us a much clearer picture of the state of this union than last night’s speech or media commentary.

In the years between the murder of Oscar Grant and Dorner’s last stand, March of 2009 to be specific, we were among those observing the case of Lovelle Mixon in Oakland, a parolee who decided he was not going to return to prison, opening fire on police at a traffic stop, killing two. Police went in to execute Mixon, not expecting that he would be holding an SKS. Two more cops died as a result. The logic of Dorner’s desperation, and the chain of events that led to his ultimate death, parallels Mixon’s; proud men without hope, cornered, deciding to go out fighting.

Neither man was a self-understood revolutionary and it would be inaccurate (or perhaps too accurate a reflection of the dearth of revolutionary activity in contemporary society) to try and declare otherwise. However, the material conditions that produced Dorner, as with Mixon, are not uncommon. The meaning and the effects of their actions speak volumes about the depth of racialization, criminalization and hopelessness in Obama’s supposed “post-racial” America.

LAPD Endgame: Street Justice on a Snow-Capped Mountain

The scene could not be more surreal: the remains of a cabin south of Big Bear still smoldering, the President delivered his State of the Union Address. To be fair, they had yet to confirm that the person they were incinerating in a cabin near Big Bear actually was Dorner. Earlier in the day, San Bernardino County Sheriffs received a call reporting a stolen vehicle driven by someone matching a description of Dorner. If the experience of the past five days is any indication, this narrowed it down to Black men, Asian women, and skinny white men.  The $1 million dollar reward offered for information leading to Dorner’s capture or death, also offered a measurable rubric for the value of the lives of police officers, as traditionally rewards in homicide cases are closer to $20,000.    

In the gathering of hurried interviews some interesting truths from the public made it into the TV news. An MSNBC reporter asked a witness: “Where you worried when you learned that Christopher Dorner was so close to your house?” But the witness responded “Actually, I was just afraid of the cops.” Given the unrestrained violence unleashed in recent days by the LAPD, this sentiment is perhaps unsurprising, but demonstrating a degree of hubris matched only by an utter absence of ironic intent, LAPD chief Charlie Beck said, evidently with a straight face, “To be targeted because of what you are… that is absolutely terrifying.” To which many nationwide responded with an audible guffaw: welcome to the club.

An interview with the man who was allegedly carjacked by Dorner said that, while police had told the man not to tell the whole story, he reported that Dorner had simply said “I don’t want to hurt, take your dog and go.” When sheriff’s deputies found the

vehicle yesterday, the driver allegedly retreated into a cabin, at one point re-emerging amid the smoke of a diversionary device to exchange more than 100 rounds of fire with deputies. Two police were injured, with one later dying. Police quickly established a large perimeter, closing highways around Seven Oaks, south of Big Bear up to twenty miles away.

Establishing the perimeter also seemed to mean keeping the media at an arm’s length. While press helicopters had been providing live shots of the cabin in which Dorner was allegedly holed-up, the SBSD quickly requested that media withdraw to roadblocks miles away and that news choppers cease to transmit live video for fear of providing strategic information to Dorner himself. The San Bernardino Sheriff’s Department requested that media outlets and individuals cease and desist from even tweeting about the manhunt and shootout.

Even more astonishing than the request was the immediate compliance: press outlets abruptly ceased to tweet about the developing story, and duly retreating to the roadblocks, abandoned their task of reporting the news and waited for it to be fed to them. To paraphrase but one of many incredulous observers, we speak of press blackouts in China, but all the police had to do here was ask nicely and the press complied without batting an eyelash.

With a voluntary media blackout in effect, the Twittersphere, punctuated with a plethora of indignant and sharply worded refusals to comply with the police, became one of the only sources of developing news. What we know about what happened thereafter owes almost entirely to those who scoured the web for scanner feeds from the San Bernardino Sheriff’s Department and intently followed the story these feeds told.

“The Burn Plan”

Shortly after 4pm Pacific Standard Time, the cabin was engulfed in flames, with CNN helicopters broadcasting plumes of black smoke from a distance of five miles. A single gunshot is reported from within the house. A narrative quickly emerged among the mainstream media, which we should recall was conspicuously absent from the scene, that police agencies had only deployed tear gas, and that perhaps Dorner himself had set the fire. Soon, what seems to be a cache of ammunition is exploding sporadically.

But for those of us listening to the San Bernardino Sheriff’s Department radio frequency, there was little question what had occurred. Nearly a half hour prior, officers had referred to “going ahead with the plan with the burner,” with another adding that the plan was to “back the Bear down and deploy the burner through the turret.” (Live audio during the preceding shootout seems to confirm this intention). Soon, the message was straightforward and expected: “Seven burners have deployed and we have a fire.” No surprised tones, no suggestion that the fire be extinguished.

In fact, there was the exact opposite: a female voice on the scanner repeatedly asks if the fire crews should be allowed to approach, and is told that it’s not time yet, that we need to wait until all four corners are engulfed, then that we need to wait until the roof collapses. At one particularly repulsive point, those on the scene realize that the house has a basement, and an authoritative male voice indicates that the fire crew would not be called until the fire had “burned through the basement.” They were going to let him die.

References to the 1993 massacre at Waco, Texas, the murderous 1985 bombing of the MOVE Organization in Philadelphia were immediate, and will serve as opposing frames for Dorner’s death in the days and weeks to come.

A murder? An assassination? A lynching? An execution.

State of the Union: Flammable

This is a day of a million possible metaphors, but central among these should be the image of the burning house. In an effort to distinguish what he called the “house negro” from the “field negro,” Malcolm X had once observed that the two responded differently when the master’s house caught fire: “But that field negro, remember, they were in the majority, and they hated their master. When the house caught on fire, he didn’t try to put it out, that field negro prayed for a wind.” While the metaphor may seem a strange one, given the fiery death of a man some have compared to a runaway slave. But as many Americans choose to gaze, mesmerized, at the glowing embers of the Dorner saga rather than watching the State of the Union, it’s worth wondering: whose house is really on fire? And who is praying for wind?

The eclipsing of the State of the Union, with some networks airing a split screen of the President’s speech alongside images from Southern California, or omitting pre- and post- speech coverage to report on Dorner’s likely death (a speech given in the context of ongoing war and occupation, unending recession and social crisis and a heated debate about, well, gun control) speaks volumes about our society, the conditions which produced Dorner and has helped produced a surge in mass killings generally. Persistent racist policies couched in the language of security, and failed imperial ventures with war tactics re-imported into American policing, are routinely covered over by the trite conflicts of celebrities, whether they be Kardashians or Congressmen.

Dorner was not just a product of a racist police department, he also no doubt adored his ‘fifteen minutes,’ stealing time from the President he nevertheless supported during the biggest planned speech of the year. Although Dorner’s actions were not driven by a radical consciousness, they are ‘as American as cherry pie’ in an apolitical vacuum that (at least on the surface) resembles Oliver Stone’s Natural Born Killers far more than the political contexts of the 1960s.

As Obama was taking to the lectern, police agencies were insisting that they had not set the fire that killed Christopher Dorner, and the compliant media were parroting this clearly implausible message. As members of Congress stood and sat on cue to rapturously applaud the Commander-in-Chief, more than 14,000 people have liked just one of the Facebook pages in support of Dorner, some because they know what racist policing is like, some because ours is a time of resisting injustice by any means, and some simply for the joy of backing an outlaw to the grisly end.

Dorner was not a radical, but his short war was not simply the story of broken man or of individualistic vengeance. The issues of brutality and racism perpetually covered up by a corrupt police department created the insurgent Dorner and resonated with many people who endure the reality of urban policing on a daily basis. The sympathy and the support Dorner received is a clear indicator of the very real and deep structural inequalities that helped forge the path of Dorner’s life and his fiery death. The great radical historian Mike Davis concluded a recent article on Dorner with a peculiar question: “Does anyone cheer Dorner?” What is peculiar is that, for better or worse, there’s no denying that the answer is “yes.”

There’s no telling what sort of a fire they could start tomorrow.

George Ciccariello-Maher is assistant professor of political science at Drexel University. He is the author of We Created Chávez: A People’s History of the Venezuelan Revolution and can be reached at gjcm(at)drexel.edu.

Mike King is a Ph.D candidate in sociology at UC Santa Cruz, and can be reached at mikeking0101(at)gmail.com. Both study policing and counterinsurgency.

White Man suffering from narcissistic personality disorder yelled racist comments at Quincy KFC, cops say

Screen shot 2013-02-13 at 10.11.15 AM.png

According to police, officers were dispatched to the KFC on Hancock Street at around 12:45 a.m. Wednesday on report of a disturbance.

When officers arrived, the man was sitting in his white Ford Taurus parked in the drive-through. As the police walked up to the car, the man became enraged and screamed that all he wanted was some food, police said.

The manager of the restaurant told police that the storm had prevented some shipments of food, and some of the man’s orders could not be filled.

When the manager tried to explain this to the man, he allegedly became verbally abusive, screaming racist comments at the staff. The manager told the man he would have to leave, but he refused.

Police also asked the man to leave but he would not. According to police, officers noticed that he had bloodshot, glassy eyes and smelled of alcohol.

The officer asked if the man had been drinking, and the man became angry again, police said. Though the suspect initially would not get out of the car, he eventually complied. Police said he was unsteady on his feet and he refused to take any sobriety tests. Paul Robert Phinney, Jr., 27, from Quincy was arrested and charged with operating under the influence of alcohol and disorderly person.

According to the third Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (1980), published by the American Psychiatric Association, contains a description of the narcissistic personality disorder, with the following stated criteria:

A. Grandiose sense of self importance or uniqueness

B. Preoccupation with fantasies of unlimited success, power, brilliance, beauty, or ideal love

C. Exhibitionistic: Requires constant attention and admiration

D. Responds to criticism, indifference of others, or defeat with either cool indifference or with marked

feelings of rage, inferiority, shame, humiliation, or emptiness

E. Two of the following:

1. Lack of empathy: Inability to recognize how others feel

2. Entitlement: Expectation of special favors with reactions or surprise and anger when others don't comply

3. Interpersonal exploitiveness: Takes advantage of others to indulge his own desires or for self-aggrandizement, with disregard for the personal integrity and rights of others

4. Relationships characteristically vacillate between the extremes of over-idealization and devaluation.

According to Dr. Welsing [HERE] "any non-white person who has had extensive experience with whites, collectively or as individuals, will find in the above a description of those relationships. At a superficial level, it seems ironic that those responsible for including this disorder in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual have failed to recognize this as a statement that characterizes the global relationship of whites to non-whites, a description of the dynamic (racism)."

Fixed Sports: ND suspends boxer for diving against Ray Edwards

wahpetondailynews

North Dakota's fight commissioner has suspended an Iowa boxer for allegedly taking a dive 13 seconds into a bout against former Minnesota Vikings and Atlanta Falcons defensive end Ray Edwards.

Al Jaeger, the secretary of state and overseer of combative sports events in North Dakota, said it's clear from video of Saturday's fight that Nicholas Capes wasn't hit before he dropped to the canvas soon after the opening bell.

"As we move ahead, we'll take appropriate action as the investigation review unfolds," Jaeger told The Forum.

Event promoter Cory Rapacz said Capes — a cruiserweight — was a last-minute replacement for a couple of no-show boxers and didn't realize what he was getting into before stepping into the ring with the much larger Edwards, who fights as a heavyweight.

"I feel terrible for him," Rapacz told WDAY-TV. "(Capes) got scared and looked for a way out."

Edwards was a fourth-round draft choice of the Vikings in 2006. He had nearly 30 sacks in five seasons with the team, and signed as a free agent with the Falcons in July 2011. The team released him last November.

Rapacz told KVLY-TV officials expected Capes to try, but he said the backlash against the boxer is unfair. A telephone listing for Capes in Cedar Falls, Iowa, could not immediately be found.

The event also included a victory by heavyweight Aaron Green, a former North Dakota State basketball player, and an appearance by former world champion Virgil Hill, a North Dakota native, Rapacz told The Forum.

The incident angered some fans, including Bryan Domholt.

"Tickets were 50 bucks apiece. That's a lot of money to spend on a fake sanctioned event," he said.

Kentucky lawmakers set to again consider restoration of voting rights

The Sentencing Project 

Nearly a quarter-million people in Kentucky are denied voting rights due to prior felony convictions, ranking among the highest disenfranchisement rates in the country, according to a new report released Tuesday by the League of Women Voters of Kentucky. The findings come as Kentucky lawmakers again consider legislation that would restore voting rights to people with felony convictions.  With an estimated 243,842 of its adults barred from voting, Kentucky has the nation's third-highest disenfranchisement rate, behind Florida and Mississippi, the report said. Re-enfranchisement proposals have been stymied for years in the General Assembly.

Nation’s Criminal Defense Bar Strongly Supports Maryland Effort to Repeal the Death Penalty

NACDL

The National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers (NACDL) today submitted testimony to the Maryland Senate and House of Delegates in support of SB276/HB295, legislation to repeal the death penalty in Maryland. Hearings on the legislation are scheduled to take place tomorrow, February 14, in both the state House and Senate.

As NACDL President Steven D. Benjamin explains in his testimony on behalf of the Association, “NACDL has been an outspoken critic of the death penalty system, which countless studies have shown to be arbitrary, discriminatory, costly, and fraught with error. Because we believe that no amount of tinkering will save the death penalty from its inherent flaws, NACDL supports abolition.”

Since the reinstatement of the death penalty in the United States, 141 individuals sentenced to death have been exonerated. Among them is Kirk Bloodsworth, a former marine and Maryland death row inmate who in 1993 became the first person in the nation whose death sentence was overturned as a result of DNA evidence, but tragically not before spending nearly a decade in prison.

NACDL is pleased that the State of Maryland appears poised to join the increasing number of states that have abolished the death penalty in recent years. And NACDL will continue to work tirelessly until capital punishment is a thing of the past throughout the nation.

A copy of the complete testimony submitted today by NACDL President Steven D. Benjamin is linked here.

Contact: Ivan J. Dominguez, Director of Public Affairs & Communications, (202) 465-7662 or idominguez@nacdl.org

The National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers is the preeminent organization advancing the mission of the criminal defense bar to ensure justice and due process for persons accused of crime or wrongdoing. A professional bar association founded in 1958, NACDL's approximately 10,000 direct members in 28 countries – and 90 state, provincial and local affiliate organizations totaling up to 40,000 attorneys – include private criminal defense lawyers, public defenders, military defense counsel, law professors and judges committed to preserving fairness and promoting a rational and humane criminal justice system.

Bill Gates Dodges Questions on Why He Owns 500,000 Shares of Monsanto

BlackListedNews

It should come as no surprise, then, that Gates owns 500,000 shares worth 23 million US dollars (or more) of Monsanto stock. The very same company that has been caught running slave rings in Argentina in which workers were forced to work 14+ hours a day while withholding payment, has used their massive finances to fund organizations that literally fake FDA quotes to support GMOs, and of course peddling through GMOs that have been linked to numerous health concerns.

Rare media articles expose how the mass media manipulate public opinion (sheeple)

BlackListedNews

"Media manipulation currently shapes everything you read, hear and watch online. Everything."

-- Forbes magazine article on mass media influence, 7/16/2012

The influence of the mass media on public perception is widely acknowledged, yet few know the incredible degree to which this occurs. Key excerpts from the rare, revealing mass media news articles below show how blatantly the media sometimes distort critical facts, omit vital stories, and work hand in hand with the military-industrial complex to keep their secrets safe and promote greedy and manipulative corporate agendas.

Once acclaimed as the watchdog of democracy and the political process, these riveting articles clearly show that the major media can no longer be trusted to side with the people over business and military interests. For ideas on how you can further educate yourself and what you can do to change all this, see the "What you can do" section below the article summaries. Together, we can make a difference.

'Illegal Immigrant Hunting Permit' Stickers Sold in Colorado Gas Stations

Colorlines

Colorado's 9News reporter Jeremy Jojola purchased an offensive anti-immigrant sticker at a Cenex gas station in Eaton, Colo., about 60 miles north of Denver.

The green sticker includes an outline of the continental United States with the words "ILLEGAL IMMIGRANT HUNTING PERMIT" printed in large bold letters. The small rectangular sticker also includes includes a fake permit number.

The stickers were distributed by the Central States Novelty company. They describe themselves as the "largest, wholesale supplier of novelties, gifts, and general merchandise for the convenience store and truck stop industry in the Midwest."

They say all of their products are "guaranteed against defects, and our Mercandisers [sic] that service our customers' stores are the Best in the Business."

However, they say nothing about being offensive.

LatinoRebels.com also point out the "immigrant hunting permit" isn't a new concept, they've seen at least two other versions of the same sticker.

Jose Antonio Vargas at Senate Immigration Hearing: We're Not 'Alien People From Mars'

ThinkProgress

On Wednesday, Jose Antonio Vargas spoke at the Senate Judiciary Committee's hearing on immigration.

Vargas told the panel that immigrants "dream of not being seperated from our families and our loved ones, regardless of sexual orientation, no matter our skill set." He went on to remind them that "this government has deported more than 1.6 million people, fathers and mothers, sons and daughters in the past four years."

At one point Vargas just had to brake it down for the committee made up of 18-members and remind them immigrants aren't "alien people from Mars."

"We talk about immigration and enforcement as if we're talking about alien people from Mars and not people whose lives and families are being torn apart everyday."

Term 'African-American' is remnant of Jim Crow attitudes that perpetuate racial stereotypes, segregation

Cleveland.com

By Charles Mosley

By using the term "African-American" to refer to black people and using it as a synonym for black people, writers, columnists, readers, TV hosts and commentators perpetuate and embrace Jim Crow racial stereotypes, segregation and historical distortions. African-American is a late 1960s Madison Avenue term created to give a glitzy advertising name for marketing to the emerging and newly appreciated economic power of black people. But there were no black people on Madison Avenue in the late '60s giving input -- only sweeping floors. So the term has no historical accuracy, social relevance or meaning.

The term African-American is a false, divisive racial identifier. It is as empty and nebulous as the outdated identifier "colored," which at least was inclusive. African-American refers only to American descendants of black slaves, but even then it fails to accomplish its purpose as a racial identity. Africa is not a racial or ethnic identity. Africa is a geographic identity. There is no country or commonality of Africa. Africa is a continent with 53 different countries, each with different peoples -- many of them white -- languages, religions, cultures, political systems and histories. Many of these countries and tribes are enemies and resent being stereotyped into a monolithic group. Africans identify themselves by the country they come from or the tribe to which they belong: Egyptian, Liberian, Zulu, Kenyan, Ethiopian, Hutu, South African, etc. African-American is as meaningless and wrong as identifying someone from South America as American.

African-American is used to falsify, distort, mislead and sanitize the harsh truths of American history. You hear and read references to African-American slaves. Slaves had no rights and privileges, so what was "American" about a slave? References are made about black World War II soldiers as African-American soldiers. What was American about the strict and demeaning racial segregation of the military? Even libraries and museums that should know better fall victim to these distortions and sanitizations. The Smithsonian opened an African-American museum and exhibits artifacts of the strictly segregated Tuskegee Airmen and shards of glass from the 16th Street Baptist Church in Birmingham where four black girls were killed by a bomb. The ludicrous contradiction of associating American with either of these speaks for itself. No official or unofficial historical record, document, newspaper story, book, court record or any written or oral evidence refers to black people by any identifier other than Negro, colored or black. From Crispus Attucks to George Washington Carver to Jackie Robinson to James Baldwin to Dorothy Height, we were never referred to as African-American.

The term African-American segregates and divides brown and black people in America. Since the term refers only to American descendants of black slaves, it carries all the tortured history and negative stereotypes associated. Use of the term excludes brown and black Americans who originate from India, Cuba, Haiti, Saudi Arabia, Pacific Islands, Jamaica, France, Spain, Mexico, Egypt and many other countries. These brown and black people who are not descendants of black slaves reject and resent being referred to as African-American but fully accept being black. Here are two examples. Brown and black kids from Mexico and Central America are waging a race war in Los Angeles against so-called African-American kids. Massachusetts and Louisiana have brown-skinned governors, but only Massachusett's governor is referred to as an African-American. So this sets up the illogic of having two black governors but only one African-American governor. This linguistic Jim Crow is real, exploited and serves to prevent what should be a natural, mutual and strong social and political cohesion among all brown and black peoples in America.

Frederick Douglass, W.E.B. DuBois, Buck O'Neil, Lena Horne, Martin Luther King Jr. and Malcolm X referred to themselves as Negroes or blacks, not African-Americans. James Brown's song was "Black and Proud," not African-American and proud. Stokely Carmichael preached "black power," not African-American power. Huey Newton formed the Black Panther Party, not the African-American Panther Party. There were no African-American sections in the holds of slavers, on the train Plessy rode or on the busses the Freedom Riders rode!

Use the unity, genius and correctness of their simplicity.

Charles Mosley, of Thibodaux, La., was an East Cleveland councilman from 1971 to 1976 and is a past president of the Lafourche Parish NAACP in Louisiana.

Who's in the House? Source: Suspect didn’t leave burning cabin. No Effort Made to Put Out Fire. LAPD Still Shook

Boston.com

The man believed to be fugitive ex-cop Christopher Dorner never came out of a California mountain cabin, and a single shot was heard inside before the cabin was engulfed in flames, a law enforcement official told The Associated Press. The law enforcement official requested anonymity because of the ongoing investigation (more secrets).

An alleged fourth person — a deputy — died earlier in the latest confrontation with America’s most-wanted man, which seemed to be coming to an end.

Officials were waiting for the fire to burn out before approaching the ruins to search for a body. “We have reason to believe that it is him,” San Bernardino County sheriff’s spokeswoman Cynthia Bachman said.

Read More

Showcase N*****s at Grammys Promote White Supremacy

video platformvideo managementvideo solutionsvideo player

Hitfix notes, nothing elicited more self-conscious laughter from a live audience at the 2013 Grammy Awards than during the pre-telecast ceremony, when Jay-Z and Kanye West's Watch the Throne won two honors for the song "Niggas in Paris." As is his custom at the Grammys, West was absent. But so was another element to this winner's circle: the full name of the song itself. As it was announced, the term "Niggas" was bleeped out, as the censors would "f*ck" or "sh*t," and it sounded awkwardly funny, especially considering the accolade.

In the absence of white supremacy, niggers would not exist. [MORE]

According to Neely Fuller "many non-white people spend much time/energy/money "showing-off" to each other. They do this as a means of trying to make the overall effects of Racism (White Supremacy) on their personal affairs seem unimportant and/or non-existent.

This show-offism serves no constructive purpose. It only helps non-white people to become more pitiful, primitive, stupid, and/or silly in comparison to the activities of White Supremacists, and/or in comparison to white people in general." [theCode]

According to Anon: "the term "Showcase Blacks," coined by Mr. Neely Fuller, Jr. refers to the high-profile blacks that are constantly paraded before the public. They may be political dignitaries, pro athletes, entertainers, educators, business people, Supreme Court justices, and even US Secretary of States.

However, their real purpose is to mask the REALITY of being black in America. These anointed black leaders and role models give license to the voices of exaggeration and deception via the media, and all the conservative right-wing talk show hosts, agitators, columnists, and pundits who cry:

"Look at all these successful blacks on C-Span, NBC, ABC, CNN, and ESPN! Blacks are sitting at the table in executive boardrooms and city halls all across the nation! They're in the NBA, MLB, and NFL! Two blacks even won an Academy Award the same year!

"If America was as racist as these (ungrateful) blacks say it is, would a black woman be the queen of the talk shows? Would a black man and a black woman have been the Secretary of State, or a black man have won the 2008 Democratic Presidential Iowa Caucus?"

Absolutely - If The Goal Was To Fool The Population

Showcasing Prominent Blacks Accomplishes Several Things:

•    It deceives the black collective about the realities of racism.

•    It neutralizes the legitimate claims of racism by blacks.

•    It offers a pressure relief valve for the explosive build-up of frustration and rage within the black collective. If blacks believed they had nothing to gain, the nation would be at risk from millions of blacks who had nothing to lose.

 In reality, the high visibility of Showcase Blacks actually confirms just the opposite. The more prominent the Showcase Blacks — who are just a tiny percentage of the black population — the worse things are getting for the black masses. In other words, the need to increase deception should serve as a warning to the black collective. [MORE]

We Are Very Proud to Be Called Redskins’

NYTimes

That’s the headline for an article posted on the Washington Redskins’ Web site on Monday afternoon, apparently in response to recent criticism.

On Thursday in Washington, a symposium at the Smithsonian Institution on racial stereotypes in sports nicknames focused much of its attention on the Redskins. The symposium’s organizers said the Redskins did not respond to an invitation to participate.

From The Associated Press:

“I can only imagine what it would be like to be at a football game at FedEx Field in a crowd of close to 90,000, all screaming at the top of their lungs, when what they are screaming is a racial slur,” said Judith Bartnoff, a deputy presiding judge in District of Columbia Superior Court.

Suzan Shown Harjo, president of the Washington-based Morning Star Institute, an advocacy group, said there are some 900 troublesome nicknames and mascots across the country, down from a peak of more than 3,000 when “Little Red” was taken off the field in the early 1970s.

“We consider it racial profiling,” former Colorado Sen. Ben Nighthorse Campbell said. “I think more and more people are recognizing it.”

The Redskins’ Web site noted that “70 different high schools in 25 states are known as the Redskins.”

Redskins.com found that there are almost as many schools using the name Redskins as Cowboys, as only 75 schools use the name Cowboys, and interestingly just 19 use the name Giants. These schools’ athletes have a deep connection, just as the Washington Redskins alumni, and many high school student-athletes have pride in calling themselves Redskins.

Dallas police to get written or recorded acknowledgment before Consensual Searches

CrimeReport

A new Dallas police policy that requires officers to obtain recorded or written consent for consensual searches could be in place within two weeks, Chief David Brown said Monday, according to the Dallas Morning News. The policy is one of several initiatives that Brown announced last summer after a string of shootings involving police, including a fatal shooting of a suspected drug dealer that nearly sparked a riot.

Brown told a City Council Public Safety Committee meeting yesterday that many of the racial profiling complaints the department receives each year are tied to traffic stops involving a search. He said that even though fewer than 5 percent of all traffic stops result in a search, “perception-wise, racial profiling really boils down to a person wanting to know, ‘Why did I have to be searched given I was just stopped for a traffic stop?’” The policy will apply to all forms of consensual searches without warrants, though it is likely that it will more commonly come into play in cases involving vehicle searches. Officers do not need a person’s consent to search under certain circumstances. For example, in cases involving vehicles, they can search if they smell marijuana or see a gun, or in cases in which there is a warrant for the person’s arrest and the vehicle is impounded.

"Evangelism"/the religious right organized to perpetuate racial discrimination

The right-wing evangelical movement was not an immediate backlash to Roe v. Wade. The evangelical community, unlike Roman Catholicism, showed little interest in combating abortion until almost 1980. As Jerry Falwell lamented in 1979, “The Roman Catholic Church for many years has stood virtually alone against abortion. I think it’s an indictment against the rest of us that we’ve allowed them to stand alone.”

Although evangelicals were mostly silent on abortion after Roe v. Wade, they were not silent on other political issues. Paul Weyrich, one of the evangelical right’s most influential founders, recalls that the movement initially emerged to defend racially segregated Christian schools from government intrusion:

[W]hat galvanized the Christian community was not abortion, school prayer, or the ERA [Equal Rights Amendment]. I am living witness to that because I was trying to get those people interested in those issues and I utterly failed. What changed their minds was Jimmy Carter’s intervention against the Christian schools, trying to deny them tax-exempt status on the basis of so-called de facto segregation.

In other words, as Randall Balmer has succinctly put it: “the religious right of the late twentieth century organized to perpetuate racial discrimination.”

Only after the movement was underway did it begin advocacy on abortion. It did so, in large part, based on highly dubious arguments advanced by the popular writer Francis Schaeffer.

Read More

New White Party (GOP) Character, Jack Swagger Makes WWE debut on Monday Night Raw - feels threatened by being outnumbered by Non-Whites & being color deficient

Examiner

During this week's broadcast of WWE "Monday Night Raw," a new character appeared on the program. The character's name is "Zebekiah Culter," who claims that America has changed and he doesn't recognize the country anymore. Culter was brought in as the new manager and mouthpiece for a younger wrestler named Jack Swagger, who goes by the nickname "A real American." Culter went on a borderline racist Tea Party like promo, where the crowd in Nashville, Tennessee didn't know what to make of him.

"Fellow Americans, I got a question for ya. What is wrong with America? Zeb Culter knows what's wrong. Jack Swagger knows what's wrong. But I think most Americans have forgotten hats wrong with America. Years ago, me and this man's daddy laid in a jungle in Vietnam with bullets whizzing by our heads. You know why? Because we were real patriots, we were real Americans. And now, I look around and I see a country I don't even recognize. I see people with faces, not like mine, I see people I don't even know what they're saying. They can't even talk to me. And I look around and think, "Where did all of the people come from"? But most importantly I think, "how do we get rid of them?" We the people. Americans, real Americans know the truth. Zeb Culter knows the truth, Jack Swagger knows the truth because this is "the land of the free and the home of the brave." Not the "land of the free and the home to whoever wants to cross our borders." This is real America, it's out country, it's our land. To protect and defend because we are real patriots, real Americans. And remember, "we the people."

Western academics get offended when Palestinians use terms like “colonialism.”

ElectronicIntifada 

A new report on Palestinian and Israeli school books has elicited much debate (“Israel shoots back: ‘Look beyond the textbooks,’” The Times of Israel, 6 February).

The report — by academics in Tel Aviv, Bethlehem and the American university Yale — is short. Yet it raises some poignant questions (“Victims of our own narratives? Portrayal of the other in Israeli and Palestinian school books,” Council of Religious Institutions of the Holy Land, 4 February [PDF]).

Israeli educators who hastened to pronounce it biased were quite right. Such a study cannot be symmetrical, for it examines two education systems, one of which is entirely subjugated to the other. A reminder of this situation is found in the introduction of the report. It notes that the Wye River Memorandum — signed between Israel and the Palestinian Authority in 1998 — included an “explicit statement about incitement.”

The agreement states that “the Palestinian side would issue a decree prohibiting all forms of incitement to violence or terror, and establishing mechanisms for acting systematically against all expressions or threats of violence or terror. This decree would be comparable to the existing Israeli legislation which deals with the same subject.”

No such caution is mentioned with regard to the Israeli regime of occupation, even though Israel is regularly taken to task by the United Nations for its aggressive behavior.

As textbook researcher Samira Alayan from the Georg Eckert Institute for the Study of Textbooks has shown, Palestinian textbooks are severely controlled and censored not only by Israel but also by European and American bodies that finance their production (see an abstract of the book: “Images of identity: Self and other in school text books of the Palestinian Authority,” June 2011 [PDF]).

Objective?

Nevertheless, the new report prides itself for having engaged “objective” evaluators who come from the US and Europe, although the US denies tourist visas to most Palestinians — including the ambassador of the PA to the European Union, Leila Shahid, who was not allowed to attend the New York session of the Russell Tribunal on Palestine in October last year — and many European states and companies profit from the occupation of Palestine. Why not recruit evaluators from Pakistan or South Africa?

The report relies on content analysis but neglects the ways in which the content — both visual and written — is used to persuade readers of its ideological message. For instance, it praises Israeli textbooks for relating the details of massacres but does not discuss how these books try to legitimize the massacres as part of the “big picture” — to Israel’s benefit.

One Israeli textbook, we are told, acknowledges that most of the Palestinians killed by Zionist forces in the village of Deir Yassin, near Jerusalem, in 1948 were women, children or elderly. Yet the book cites claims that the victims died because they refused to leave their homes and that the massacre “still serves as an excuse for Arab propaganda against Israel.”

This excuse bears a chilling similarity to the one used by Israel when it subjected Gaza to a three-week bombing campaign in late 2008 and early 2009. And this excuse is not confined to one work. The 2009 book Israeli Nationalism and Nation: Building a State in the Middle East — by Eyal Naveh, Naomi Vered and David Shahar — stated that the residents of Deir Yassin failed to evacuate their village because the loud-speaker from which they were supposed to receive a warning was not functioning properly.

The Redskins are defending their racist nickname again - Not About 'Dishonerment' or Skin Colorationism

From Redskins.com:

Gary Hodde has served as the high school athletic director in McLoud for the last 31 years, and spoke with Redskins.comTV about the honor that is shown to and by all residents of the close-knit community.

“We have a large Native American population at our school,” he said. “I’m not sure if they know the whole history behind the nickname ‘Redskins,’ but our athletes are no different from any other schools. We are known as the McLoud Redskins, and that’s what we proudly display on our jerseys and cheers.

“No one has ever been dishonored at our school with that Redskins nickname.”

[...]

“A few years back, there was a movement of a group that attempted to change our name from the Redskins,” he said. “Many of the Native Americans in our community stepped forward and said ‘No, we’re not going to do that. We are proud of being the Redskins.’”

Dorner gun battle: 2 officers shot, 'deputies are everywhere' - Definitely was not a white guy this time

LA Times

Fugitive former police officer Christopher Dorner allegedly shot and wounded at least two San Bernardino County sheriff's deputies during a shootout with authorities in the Big Bear area Tuesday afternoon, sources said.

Dozens of law enforcement officers were racing to the last reported scene of a gun battle near the 7 Oaks cabin area near Big Bear.

“There are deputies everywhere on the ground and on foot," said Cindy Bachman, a San Bernardino County sheriff's spokeswoman.

From their perspective, the population exists to protect and serve the LAPD, rather than the reverse

LewRockwell

The intrepid Captain Phillip Tingirides of the Los Angeles Police Department has come down with a sudden case of "Blue Flu." This is an oddly selective malady, one that only afflicts police officers. "Sick-outs" are a common police union tactic in contract disputes with municipal governments. In this case, the epidemic appears to be contained in the Tigirides household, where the bold and valiant captain is cowering in fear of his former comrade, Christopher Dorner.

"This month, it will be 33 years on the Los Angeles Police Department," Tingirides told the Orange County Register. "I have had a number of threats and very rarely do I take them seriously. In this case… I’m taking it very seriously…. I recognize I am susceptible to his violence."

Little in Tingirides’s official bio would suggest that danger has been his constant companion. Early in his career he patrolled such grim and forbidding territories as Wilshire and Hollywood before being promoted to such assignments as Prostitution Enforcement Detail, Community Relations, and the Vice Unit. 

His career has been devoid of measurable peril, even by the standards of law enforcement – which is one of the least risk-laden occupations in contemporary life. This helps explain why Tingirides has been hiding out in his home, surrounded by a phalanx of timid and trigger-happy police bodyguards who are entirely willing to open fire on innocent people if they come within eyeshot. 

"I haven’t been able for the last few days to go outside my house," whined Tingirides to the Register. "Am I afraid? Well, I hesitate to use that word – but I saw what he did to his attorney." The attorney to whom he referred was Randy Quan, who represented Dorner during the 2008 disciplinary hearings that resulted in Dorner’s dismissal from the LAPD for supposedly lying about abusive conduct by another officer. Lying about a Mundane is part of a police officer’s job description; lying about a fellow officer is simply impermissible.

Dorner is believed to be the assailant who shot Quan’s 28-year-old daughter, Monica. That young woman was apparently killed for the same reason the Obama Regime murdered 16-year-old Abdel al-Awalki: Someone habituated to criminal violence decided that the child was guilty of having an irresponsible parent. 

Tingirides was chairman of the three-officer "board of rights" that upheld the decision to terminate Dorner’s employment, and the stalwart captain was mentioned by name in the vengeful ex-cop’s online "manifesto." 

 Back in August 2011, Captain Tingirides was interviewed on the beach near Torrance to promote a youth "Surf Camp" program. Despite the fact that he had grown up within easy distance of the shore, that interview represented the first time he had ever attempted to surf. 

The time devoted by Captain Tingirides to producing that PR spot for the LAPD constituted the most danger-intensive hour of his career. Surfing is a far riskier activity than working as a law enforcement officer. The risks are particularly acute for surfers who have the misfortune of encountering police, as David Perdue can testify.

Last Thursday, as the LAPD’s institutional panic escalated, Perdue visited a beach near the site of Tingirides’s 2011 press stunt to enjoy some early morning surfing. He happened to be driving a pickup truck that resembled the vehicle being driven by Dorner. Two officers flagged Perdue down, determined that he wasn’t the suspect, and then let him go. Scant seconds later, two other officers rammed their vehicle into Perdue’s truck and opened fire.

It was Perdue’s immense good fortune that the assailants were police officers – which means that their marksmanship was poor enough to make the typical Imperial Stormtrooper from Star Wars look like William Tell. Although he wasn’t shot, Perdue suffered a concussion and a shoulder injury.

Robert Sheahen, Perdue’s attorney, described the episode as one of "unbridled police lawlessness." The Department offered Perdue the same perfunctory apology it had issued to two women who were shot at by another security detail guarding the home of another LAPD luminary. The LAPD has thus established itself as a greater threat to public safety than the "rogue" cop they are pursuing: While Dorner’s alleged crime spree targeted a narrow cohort – police officials and their families – the police have engaged in indiscriminate violence against innocent citizens.

The manhunt for Dorner has involved the deployment of thousands of police personnel and the use of unmanned aerial drones. It will cost tax victims in Los Angeles and elsewhere millions of dollars in overtime. This means that the police involved in the pursuit – who are already trained to be risk-aversive – will have a financial incentive to prolong the exercise as long as possible. So it shouldn’t surprise us that the police, who are preoccupied with the sacred imperative of "officer safety," have turned to the public for help in solving the crime.

LA Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa has offered a $1 million reward – provided by private interests; all the available public money will probably be devoured by police overtime – for information leading to the arrest and capture of Dorner.

"We will not tolerate anyone undermining the security of this community," mewled Villaraigosa. "We will not tolerate this reign of terror." LAPD Chief Charlie Beck also characterized Dorner’s shooting rampage, as "domestic terrorism."

Who, exactly, is being "terrorized"? The productive public at large has been going about its business without facing any discernible risks from Dorner, whose only identified would-be victims are either police officers or their families (who have done nothing to injure anybody, of course).

The only way that private citizens could collect the reward for Dorner’s capture would be for them to take risks that police aren’t willing to run. For example: A citizen or privately employed security guard wouldn’t be able to ram an unidentified truck and open fire on its driver, or spray gunfire in a residential neighborhood, without facing criminal charges.

 

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In the official reaction to Dorner’s rampage, we see an unusually candid manifestation of the "Officer Safety Uber Alles" mentality that defines police work. From their perspective, the population exists to protect and serve the police, rather than the reverse. This brings to mind the concept of Rickover’s Paradox, which I encountered in a science fiction novel decades ago. According to author Vonda McIntyre, was used to test the moral attitudes of officer candidates at the U.S. Naval Academy.

The most famous version of this conundrum is the following:

Two individuals, the only survivors of a tragic shipwreck, are adrift in a small, damaged lifeboat. The water is pitilessly cold and infested with ravenous sharks. The boat itself is irreparably damaged in such a way that it will only be able to carry one of its occupants. If nothing is done, both occupants will perish. But whichever is cast into the sea will die very quickly.

One of those aboard the stricken lifeboat is a highly trained officer with valuable – perhaps irreplaceable – technical skills. A huge sum has been spent on his training, which makes him all but irreplaceable.

The other refugee is an innocent and law-abiding person of no particular achievements or aptitudes. Few if any would notice that person's absence, and the community at large would be impoverished in no discernible way if he were thrown overboard.

Since only one can be saved, which of the two should it be?

The only morally sound answer to this predicament – assuming that the military is actually the institution it pretends to be – would be for the officer to sacrifice himself on behalf of the civilian. This isn’t because there is a natural duty on the part of any individual to sacrifice himself for another, but rather because the officer had freely chosen that duty, and refusing to carry it out would invalidate the entire stated purpose of having a military establishment in the first place. Any other course of action would be based on the assumption that the civilian population exists to defend the military, rather than the reverse.

 

Although this parable is supposed to instill an attitude of chivalry on the part of military officers, it actually underscores the uselessness of the state as a protective institution, because human beings are not wired to sacrifice themselves on behalf of strangers – and the state is structured in such a way that those who work on its behalf always place individual and institutional self-preservation above every other consideration.

This is why tax-subsidized cowards like Phillip Tingirides are cowering behind both their tax-funded bodyguards and the public the police supposedly serves, while someone who was once a part of the state’s punitive priesthood carries out a mission of revenge against his erstwhile comrades in officially sanctioned violence and plunder

If the police are reduced to puddles of panic at the thought of dealing with one of their own, why should the public trust them – or countenance their institutional existence at all?