Sunday, May 31, 2015

Congrats Black Baltimore! May was the most Violent Month EVER in Baltimore History

Will Marilyn Mosby personally lead the riots in Baltimore when the six Baltimore Police officers she indicted walk?

Or will it be Stephanie Rawlings-Blake?

Perhaps Councilman Nick Mosby or Baltimore City Council President Jack Young?

Because there can be no doubt the actions of this individuals during the black riots in Baltimore helped pave the way (and provide motivation) for the most violent month in the city's history.

Of course, this violence was nothing more than an aggregation of individual decisions by black people to use a gun (or knife) in a criminal act, so it would be foolish to assign any blame to the white minority of Baltimore who had virtually nothing to do with any of the fatal or nonfatal shootings in the city.

It's just the blacks. [Baltimore records deadliest month in more than 40 years, Baltimore Sun, 5-31-15]:
 With three men killed in eastside shootings on Sunday, Baltimore recorded its deadliest month in more than 40 years. The 43 killings in May surpassed the 42 homicides the city saw in August 1990, and left Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake defending police and her administration. 
Speaking at a morning ceremony to honor McKenzie Elliott, the 3-year-old killed by a stray bullet in August, Rawlings-Blake said it's time to stop finger-pointing and assigning blame for the recent violence. 
The killing of African-Americans in Baltimore has to stop, she said, noting that 189 of the 208 killed last year were black men. For the city to improve, all homicides need to drop, she added. "We have to do better," the mayor said. 
"We have to want more." City Councilman Brandon Scott, vice chair of the public safety committee, echoed that theme, saying it's time for all Baltimoreans to have honest conversations about ways to stop the violence. There isn't one solution or one person who shoulders the blame, he said, adding that homicides affect all residents in the city, not just those in the poorest neighborhoods. 
"Too many people have died in our town," he said Sunday afternoon. "Don't point fingers or go to social media. Everybody has to look in the mirror and ask, 'What are they doing?'"
Funny, in 1970, Baltimore had a population of 906,244 people (dropping 30 percent by 2015 to 622,104), and white people were a still a majority. High rates of black crime then were convincing  whites the city was no longer a place for those capable of maintaing western civilization, so they left and allowed the Africanization of Baltimore to proceed unimpeded.

Again: the white minority in 2015 Baltimore has NOTHING to do with the crime-wave capsizing what is left of western civilization in the city; it's simply black individuals collectively engaging in crimes making large portions of the city uninhabitable.

Police have nothing to do with the rise in homicides or nonfatal shootings either (though the libertarian view of a society free of state agents - police - being peaceful and harmonious is dying a fast death courtesy of the Visible Black Hand of Economics), for it's not their duty to ensure citizens of Baltimore act in a peaceful manner; it's the duty of every citizen of Baltimore to abide by the laws established to govern society.

However, black elected officials in Baltimore sacrificed the last vestiges of western civilization (law and order; innocent until proven guilty) when they allowed blacks space to destroy private property in the city and then when Marilyn Mosby acted on behalf of those preaching "no justice, no peace" and indicted six police officers whose offense was killing a convicted heroin dealer.

Never forget Freddie Gray dealt death to members of the black community in Baltimore, and in his death, these same members of the black community decided to riot/loot/burn on his behalf.

A heroin dealer deserves to be publicly executed; in the case of Freddie Gray, the black community of Baltimore decided to publicly execute the remaining vestiges of western civilization in Baltimore, with black elected officials standing idly by (in some cases, like Councilman Mosby, telling police to stand down from arresting the looters)... all in the name of Justice for Freddie Gray.

So with the body count piling up, and the near Africanization of Baltimore complete, is there any doubt black elected officials in Baltimore will be forced to condemn the coming acquittal of the six Baltimore police officers and then proceed to lead the riots ultimately consuming the city in an orgy of black violence?

All of this, mind you, being done in the name of a convicted heroin dealer.

Saturday, May 30, 2015

The Rapture Already Happened... Proof You've Been Left Behind is the Insanity in Baltimore

Forty homicides and more than 100 shootings in the month of May

Welcome to life in 65 percent black Baltimore, where programs designed to convince blacks to put their guns down have failed
100 percent certain the apocalypse has happened now...


A city where the black state's attorney proudly transitioned her three-ring circus act in city hall to the UniverSoul Circus as a guest ringmaster

A city where the same black state's attorney has been caught "favoriting" tweets sent to her on Twitter with a clear anti-cop and anti-white message (in 140 characters or less!). [Marilyn Mosby Sticks To Twitter Hack Claim, Says She Does Not Endorse Anti-Cop, Anti-White Tweets, Daily Caller, 5-29-15]:
Despite growing skepticism that her personal Twitter account was hacked by someone who randomly “favorited” two controversial tweets, the office of Baltimore City state’s attorney Marilyn Mosby is sticking to its story. 
“She said she did not favorite those, so she took the necessary measures to make sure her account is secure,” Mosby spokeswoman Rochelle Ritchie told The Daily Caller on Friday. 
On Wednesday, TheDC reported that Mosby seemingly favorited two May 6 tweets from her personal Twitter account. One tweet called the officers charged in the Freddie Gray case “those 6 THUG cops.” The other tweet praised Mosby’s handling of the case and asserted that she “INFURIATES a certain kind of white person.” 
Favoriting the tweets was seen as another example of Mosby’s bias against the charged cops, her critics argued. Mosby has been slammed by some observers for injecting activist rhetoric into the case. 
After TheDC’s report, Fox’s Megyn Kelly reported that Mosby claimed she did not favorite the tweets and instead that her account was hacked. 
Mosby has no solid evidence that her account was hacked, and she has been able to access her account without a hitch. She apparently assumed that a hack occurred because the tweets had been favorited and also because the Baltimore City state’s attorney Twitter account was hacked last week. 

“We don’t know exactly when the account was hacked,” Ritchie told TheDC of Mosby’s personal account. 
Mosby sent a tweet on May 23 from her personal account stating that the official account had been hacked. No mention was made at the time that her personal account was breached.
No, the account of Baltimore State's Attorney Marilyn Mosby wasn't hacked. Those two tweets she favorited (one calling the police of Baltimore thugs and other saying her actions of listening to the "calls of no justice, no peace" pissed of white people) are a window into her soul, and a reminder of the hatred she has for western civilization. 

More importantly... of even upholding law and order when it gets in the way of the never-ending promotion of blacks. 

The apocalypse has happened and we're all under the big top now... a big top with resentful black women like Mosby serving as ringmaster. 

Friday, May 29, 2015

Liberal Icon in 2011: "Baltimore was hell. The worst of it was on the streets, but the rest of it was pretty bad too."

Renowned liberal crime-fighter David M. Kennedy (director of the Center for Crime Prevention and Control and a professor of criminal justice at John Jay College) dubbed majority black Baltimore “hell.”
Hell.
The sign will one day go up in Baltimore: Abandon all hope ye who enter here...

In his book Don't Shoot: One Man, A Street Fellowship, and the End of Violence in Inner-City America  (purported to the Bible on how liberals should combat black crime in urban America) writes of his efforts to lower crime in Baltimore:

Baltimore was hell. The worst of it was on the streets, but the rest of it was pretty bad too. (p. 107)  
The result made your blood run cold: gangs and drug markets and homicides everywhere. When we looked at a year’s worth of homicides, it was 303 victims and 210 suspects… Three quarters of victims and almost 90 percent of offenders had criminal records, the highest we’d ever seen, averaging 8.5 and 9.6 priors respectively. Nearly 60 percent of the killings happened in or near a street drug market. Despite the superheated street drug scene, only about 20 percent of killings had to do with drug business; the usual beefs, vendettas, and respect killings were the order of the day. (p. 108) 
Hell. 

When the police department in Baltimore is tasked with, "Working to rebuild and strengthen relationships between police and communities is not a short-term goal; it is a long-term lasting relationship," you know those trying to keep alive civilization in the majority black city are stuck in a layer of hell Dante and Virgil dared never enter. 


Hell.



It's still listed as "Baltimore" on most maps, but in reality it's hell. 

Hell.

And as long as the police are tasked with building trust with the black community, then the hellish conditions will only get worse.   [DEA: Gangs targeted pharmacies to loot during riots: DEA, ATF working to solve robberies, arsons at pharmacies, WBALTV, May 28, 2015]:
A recent increase in crime in Baltimore can be traced to gang activity, a Drug Enforcement Administration official told the WBAL-TV 11 News I-Team. 
Violence and drugs go hand in hand, authorities say. The DEA's focus is to get illegal drugs off the streets, but it has been a challenge in Baltimore with a sense of lawlessness on the streets. 
Gary Tuggle, assistant special agent in charge of the DEA's Baltimore District Office, is a native of Baltimore who was a city police officer in the Western District. He said gang members and so-called independent drug dealers are fueling much of the violence in the city. 
"The uptick we are seeing, quite honestly, is the fact that they have space now and they are out and they've got the ability to deal drugs, and some feel they can deal with impunity," Tuggle said. 
Tuggle said police are concerned about self-preservation and retribution when they're doing their jobs, which also leads to the violence. 
"If folks, particularly gang leaders and drug dealers, aren't challenged on the street, they'll continue to deal drugs and the violence will increase," Tuggle said. 
Tuggle said there is a large supply of drugs on the street. He said 17 pharmacies were looted during last month's civil unrest and that most were targeted by gangs. 
He said the DEA is working with the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives to identify the people who stole from the pharmacies. He said a number of the arsons were set to cover up the theft of narcotics from the stores.
Hell.

Well, if this hell was a place where there isn't just one devil, but hundreds of thousands of them...

And now with the black violence rising in Baltimore (and police pulling back from arresting anyone, for fear of being sacrificed to the black mob demanding "No Justice, No Peace"), the police in Baltimore are pointing out the "kind and gentler" agenda of community relations strengthening is finally working. 

The police are letting the very people who are creating hell in Baltimore have the freedom to engage in sin and vice without fear of being arrested. [Baltimore Cops On Why They Took Over, And Why They're Now Gone, Deadspin, May 29, 2015]:

“See all these bodies dropping?” a Baltimore police officer asked me when we spoke earlier this week. “People wanted a kind and gentler police department. Well, they’re receiving a kind and gentler police department.” He sighs before continuing. “That’s basically it. For real.” 
Elsewhere, the Fraternal Order of Police released another statement, claiming that police are “under siege”: 
  • The criminals are taking advantage of the situation in Baltimore since the unrest. Criminals feel empowered now. There is no respect. Police are under siege in every quarter. They are more afraid of going to jail for doing their jobs properly than they are of getting shot on duty. Right now they can go to jail for following Supreme Court decisions such as Illinois v. Wardlow. The Baltimore States Attorney’s Office essentially overturned the Supreme Court’s decision. We hope that all leadership will come together to support the police to move the community forward. 
The memo was perfectly timed, as more and more police officers have begun to talk to the press. The ever-conservative Sean Hannity interviewed an anonymous police officer on his FOX show, while GQEsquire, and other culture magazines have recently interviewed former BCPD officers about the current turn of events. A non-profit called Police Organization Providing Peer Assistance (POPPA!) has even sent NYPD officers to Baltimore over the past few days to help them get through this ... difficult time. 
The BCPD officer I spoke with warns that people from within the department flip-flopping so regularly will only increase tension. “[Officers] are like, ‘Man, fuck this place!’ You know what I mean? People are just doing what they gotta do,” he says. “Officers think, ‘We got to take care of our own. We got to take care of each other.’ The mayor and State’s Attorney are the first to sell us out to the press. It’s like, c’mon. I know you had to charge [the officers involved with Gray’s death], but at least defend us on TV and shit. I get it. I get the charges. But if they can’t pay us and are also on TV fucking us, making our jobs harder, fuck that.” 
I ask the mother I had been speaking to what she thought about this—the behind-the-scenes tension between cops and the mayor’s office, between cops and citizens, between citizens and the media. “Let me be clear, this is nothing new,” she says in a serious tone. “Who knows what will happen next? We just live our lives every day, we protect our kids. The rest of this? Who knows. It’s good now but here we’re always living one senseless death away from it all going to hell.”
"... always living one senseless death away from it all going to hell."

No. 

Baltimore is already hell. 

Dante's Inferno had 9 circles in hell... if he could see what majority black Baltimore is like in 2015, he'd see a circle of hell far worse than any he encountered with Virgil. 

The police have pulled back and let the black citizens of Baltimore police themselves: in reality, just as Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake gave blacks "who wished to destroy space to do that as well," the police have simply given blacks the keys to the city to police themselves. 

And all they are doing is what Rawlings-Blake let them do: those who wished to destroy have the space to do that... [Rash of homicides in West Baltimore have residents asking: Where are police?, CBSNews, 5-28-15]:
Antoinette Perrine has barricaded her front door since her brother was killed three weeks ago on a basketball court near her home in the Harlem Park neighborhood of West Baltimore. She already has iron bars outside her windows and added metal slabs on the inside to deflect the gunfire. 
"I'm afraid to go outside," said Perrine, 47. "It's so bad, people are afraid to let their kids outside. People wake up with shots through their windows. Police used to sit on every corner, on the top of the block. These days? They're nowhere." 
Now West Baltimore residents worry they've been abandoned by the officers they once accused of harassing them. In recent weeks, some neighborhoods have become like the Wild West without a lawman around, residents said. 
"Before it was over-policing. Now there's no police," said Donnail "Dreads" Lee, 34, who lives in the Gilmor Homes, the public housing complex where Gray, 25, was arrested. 
"I haven't seen the police since the riots," Lee said. "People feel as though they can do things and get away with it. I see people walking with guns almost every single day, because they know the police aren't pulling them up like they used to."
The police, by not policing, are giving blacks the ability to either destroy or prosper in Baltimore, and the black population seems intent to ensure the sign goes up soon: Abandon all hope Ye who enter here.


Thursday, May 28, 2015

While Western Civilization Collapses in Black Baltimore, Marilyn Mosby Named Guest Ringmaster at UniverSoul Circus

The number and popularity of young adult novels dealing with a dystopian is staggering, when these fictionalized worlds have nothing on the horrors of life in present-day 65 percent black Baltimore. 

Divergent? Hunger Games? The Maze Runner? 
Sometimes, you have to wonder if the rapture already happened...


Sorry, but the grim future foretold in these books (all popular movie franchises now) look like a walk in paradise compared to hell on earth found in the rapidly nightmarish conditions of Baltimore. 


On May 5, members of the almost all-black Baltimore City Council wrote a letter to the Department of Justice, basically accusing the Baltimore Police Department of harboring racists

"...the systemic mistreatment of members of the African-American community by some officers within the Baltimore Police Department helped contribute to a strained relationship between police and the citizens who depend on them for protection and service."
So what did the Baltimore Police Department do? They gave up, turning over the keys of upholding law and order to the very people who took the streets to honor Freddie Gray and protest the perceived injustices committed by the police against blacks. [Baltimore Residents Fearful Amid Rash Of Homicides, CBS Baltimore, 5-28-15]:
Antoinette Perrine has barricaded her front door since her brother was killed three weeks ago on a basketball court near her home in the Harlem Park neighborhood of West Baltimore. 
She already has iron bars outside her windows and added metal slabs on the inside to deflect the gunfire. 
“I’m afraid to go outside,” said Perrine, 47. “It’s so bad, people are afraid to let their kids outside. People wake up with shots through their windows. Police used to sit on every corner, on the top of the block. These days? They’re nowhere.” 
Perrine’s brother is one of 36 people killed in Baltimore so far this month, already the highest homicide count for May since 1999. But while homicides are spiking, arrests have plunged more than 50 percent compared to last year. 
The drop in arrests followed the death of Freddie Gray from injuries he suffered in police custody. Gray’s death sparked protests against the police and some rioting, and led to the indictment of six officers. 
Now West Baltimore residents worry they’ve been abandoned by the officers they once accused of harassing them. In recent weeks, some neighborhoods have become like the Wild West without a lawman around, residents said. 
“Before it was over-policing. Now there’s no police,” said Donnail “Dreads” Lee, 34, who lives in the Gilmor Homes, the public housing complex where Gray, 25, was arrested. 
“I haven’t seen the police since the riots,” Lee said. “People feel as though they can do things and get away with it. I see people walking with guns almost every single day, because they know the police aren’t pulling them up like they used to.” 
Police Commissioner Anthony Batts said last week his officers “are not holding back” from policing tough neighborhoods, but they are encountering dangerous hostility in the Western District. 
“Our officers tell me that when officers pull up, they have 30 to 50 people surrounding them at any time,” Batts said. 
At a City Council meeting Wednesday, Batts said officers have expressed concern they could be arrested for making mistakes. 
“What is happening, there is a lot of levels of confusion in the police organization. 
There are people who have pain, there are people who are hurt, there are people who are frustrated, there are people who are angry,” Batts said. “There are people, and they’ve said this to me, `If I get out of my car and make a stop for a reasonable suspicion that leads to probable cause but I make a mistake on it, will I be arrested?’ They pull up to a scene and another officer has done something that they don’t know, it may be illegal, will they be arrested for it? Those are things they are asking.” 
Black elected officials, from Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake to City Councilman Nick Mosby and his utterly incompetent wife, State's Attorney Marilyn Mosby, have made it quite clear they stand with the black mob chanting "no justice, no peace" instead of behind the Baltimore Police Department.

The President of the City Council, Jack Young (also black), stood by violent black gang members following the riots in Baltimore, a clear sign the line dividing the state and those vying for power in the streets was no longer clear.


Black Police Commissioner Anthony Batts (perhaps the most incompetent public employee in Baltimore, and that's saying something!) whined that the people of Baltimore "are giving up on us," when the mayor of the city already gave up on upholding law and order when she famously said "we also gave those who wished to destroy space to do that as well."


Marilyn Mosby, of course, "heard your [blacks] calls of no justice, no peace" and fed six members of the Baltimore Police to the wolves, sacrificial lambs so the riots could momentarily end.


But with this act, Mosby made it clear to all Baltimore police that they would also be sacrificed if they dared harm a black person during an arrest. She "empowered" the madness of unleashing the black genome on Baltimore, without police oversight.[Baltimore police union: Cops more afraid of going to jail than getting shot, Baltimore Sun, 5-28-15]:

The president of the Baltimore police union on Thursday said that criminals have become "empowered" following the recent unrest and that, with six officers charged in Freddie Gray's death, city police are more "afraid" of being arrested than shot on duty.  
 Gray, 25, died a week after suffering a severed spinal cord and other injuries in police custody. His death led to more than a week of protests and later rioting, that prompted a citywide curfew and the deployment of the National Guard. 
"The criminals are taking advantage of the situation in Baltimore since the unrest," said Gene Ryan, president of the Fraternal Order of Police Lodge 3. "Criminals feel empowered now. There is no respect. Police are under siege in every quarter. They are more afraid of going to jail for doing their jobs properly than they are of getting shot on duty."
Mosby - who said "so we will pursue justice, by any and all means necessary"when it comes to exacting revenge on the heroin dealers murderers - and other black elected/appointed leaders (sic) have unleashed Africa on what is left of western civilization in Baltimore.

And in a tribute fitting to hard racial truths captured in Birth of a Nation, Marilyn and Nick Mosby will be the guest ringmasters of the UniverSoul Circus in Baltimore. [Marilyn Mosby, Nick Mosby to serve as circus ringmasters, Baltimore Sun, 5-28-15]:
 What a busy few weeks Baltimore City State's Attorney Marilyn Mosby has had. She appeared onstage with Prince. Sat down for an interview with Vogue. 
And, of course, she made national news by pressing charges against six officers in the death of Freddie Gray, who suffered a severe spinal injury while in police custody. 
Now Mosby and her husband, City Councilman Nick Mosby, are about to be guest ringmasters for the UniverSoul Circus. 
The couple is also slated to accept the "UniverSoul Circus Community Service Award for their commitment to the well-being of the Baltimore community" at Friday afternoon's performance, according to a press release from the circus. 
The theme for this year's performance is "Your life matters." The circus opens today and runs through June 7 at Security Square Mall. 
"She's doing positive things in the community," said Hank Ernest, a spokesman for UniverSoul Circus. He said the circus chose the couple, in part, because they are the parents of two young daughters.

Positive things in the community?  Name one.

Please.

Name one.

Somewhere, H.L. Mencken is sharing a drink with D.W. Griffith, laughing about the scene in Birth of a Nation depicting blacks in power (the "black congress" scene) and realizing life in 2015 Baltimore under black-rule is far worse: because as the state of the black-dominated shows, truth is far stranger than fiction.

Wednesday, May 27, 2015

What if the Baltimore Police Department Just Stopped Patrolling the Streets of 65% Black Baltimore?

Beloved (by Disingenuous White Liberals everywhere) black "intellectual" Ta-Nehisi Coates described the black insurrection in Baltimore as a war. Strangely, he failed to point out the nearly all-black elected/appointed leadership of Baltimore is on the side of those black insurrectionaries, most notably State's Attorney Marilyn "I heard your cries of no justice, no peace" Mosby, who has endorsed calling Baltimore Police "thugs." 
Blacks in Baltimore seem to try and make this Hollywood movie an everyday reality

With black church leaders in Baltimore marching - and blocking traffic - to stop the building of a $30 million youth jail (instead, they wants the already vastly overfunded Baltimore City School system to get more money),  the first of "10 biblical plagues" has been unleashed on white suburban commuters trying to get to work in the downtown area. 


Baltimore's black residents complain the Baltimore Police Department has stopped doing its job of patrolling the streets, but when this same police force does its job and arrests a known heroin dealer this same black population riots/loots/attacks cops/and burns buildings. 


So murders are way up (almost every one committed by a black individual) and arrests are way down; four members of the the Baltimore Mayor's Office on Criminal Justice - including the highest-ranking remaining members - have resigned. 


The incompetence of Baltimore's black elected (blaming this on Democrats does a disservice to those Democrat-elected/appointed officials helping lead Denver, Seattle, Portland, Austin, and Pittsburgh... those cities aren't burned with larger percentages of blacks as Baltimore is) is on display when you have black city council members worried about arresting too many black people, instead of working to make the city safer. 


When a society's goal is exclusively the betterment of blacks, all of society suffers. Police in Baltimore know one wrong encounter with a black individual will unleash an aggressive (and sympathetic to black criminals) state's attorney on them, turning them instantly into a pariah like Officer Darren Wilson. 


When the law is no longer blind but dedicated to protecting black criminals, it's time for a cop to find a donut shop and a warm cup of coffee. [Batts apologizes to Baltimore officers at union meeting, Baltimore Sun, 5-27-15]:


Baltimore Police Commissioner Anthony Batts apologized to the city's officers Tuesday night, saying he put them in harm's way during the Freddie Gray unrest last month. 
The Baltimore Sun has obtained an audio recording of his comments, which he made during a meeting with members of the police union. Batts said he failed to follow his "intuition" that problems were coming, and said officers got hurt as a result. 
He concluded his comments, which lasted about four minutes, by urging officers to stay focused on fighting crime. 
"We had a 9-year-old kid shot yesterday by these knuckleheads, gangsters, thugs, whatever you want to call them," he said. 
"We have innocent people getting shot on the streets of Baltimore. "People think we're down. People are giving up on us," Batts said. "I mean this with all my heart: we need to show how f-----g good we are. … I stand ready to lead you out of this." 
Batts spoke four weeks after the city erupted in riots. On the day of Gray's funeral, people threw rocks at police and looted and burned businesses. Officials said more than 100 police officers were injured.
 "People are giving up on us," Batts said. "I mean this with all my heart: we need to show how fucking good we are..." Police Commissioner Batts is a joke, but these quotes resemble a halftime pep talk from a coach whose team is down 56-0.

The black elected/appointed leaders of Baltimore sided with the black gangs, black youth, black thugs, and black criminals who forced Major League Baseball to keep fans out of Camden Yards and the Baltimore Orioles to play the first ever empty stadium game in America's Pastime history....

And Commissioner Batts has been on those of those appointed black leaders (appointed by Mayor Stephanie Rawlings) who has stood by and thrown his police under the bus and allowed the black gangs to take control of the city. 

Back in 1998, the Wall Street Journal ran an important article, showcasing Baltimore as a poster child for the failed post-World War II egalitarian policies promulgated by virtually every individual who is in (or earns) a position of power in politics, academia, journalism, entertainment, science, or diplomacy. It noted
As the prisons flow into the neighborhood, so does the neighborhood flow into the prisons. In Baltimore, more than half of black men age 18 to 34 are tethered to the criminal-justice system -- behind bars, on probation or being sought on a warrant.  
In Baltimore, the state recently assigned probation officers to 11 schools where as many as 40% of the students have already served time somewhere, in the hope that the officers can help, and control, the students better than teachers.
Midnight Basketball, enterprise zones, more funding for public schools, free breakfast and lunches at the public schools, EBT/Food Stamps... every program designed to help blacks reach some level of the minimal standards set by whites has FAILED. 

Failed miserably. 

What's more, those Baltimore Police know the harsh racial truths of Baltimore (and by extension, all of America) better than most of the race realists who anonymously post on conservative sites and then sheepishly go vote for a Republican Party that hates them more than the blacks hate the police in Charm City.

Peter Moskos is a Harvard-trained sociologist who spent a year as a cop trying to bring law and order to the 65 percent black dystopia that is Baltimore. He wrote a book about his experience, Cop in the Hood: My Year Policing Baltimore’s Eastern District. The book offers one excuse for  black dysfunction  after another, all but placing the blame for black criminality on the absence of whites in Baltimore (paradoxically, it was black crime that drove white flight in the first place). But there’s one fantastic, illuminating portion of the book deserving republishing:
Thug Life  
 While poverty is unquestionably rampant, many police (often using their own economically poor upbringing as evidence) are convinced the poverty does not create the ghetto. Rather, a ghetto culture of violence, sex, and drug use creates poverty. One officer told me, “You’ve seen what it’s like. Can you imagine what it would be like if your professors knew what really goes on here? I don’t see them walking down these alleys or spending time in one of these houses. They read about 280 murders, but they don’t know about the thousand shootings, the cuttings, the assaults where people don’t die. Those don’t make the papers. If people saw how fucked-up everything is, they’d stop blaming poverty or racism and just want the whole place torn down.”  
 Most police, both white and black, believe that the social problems in the Eastern District  are hopeless. One black officer said, “It’s hard not to think that this is a jungle here. People running around in the street at all hours. Getting high, acting like fools… They ought to tear everything down. All of it!” A white officer echoed this belief: “I’d like to napalm the whole area. Wouldn’t that be beautiful? Just come in with air strikes and watch the whole thing go up in flames… I don’t know what else you can do. If people want to live this way, I say fuck’em.” 
 A black officer proposed similar ends through different means. “If it were up to me,” he said, “I’d build walls and just flood the place, biblical-like. Flood the place and start afresh. I think that’s all you can do.” When I asked this officer how his belief that the entire area should be flooded differed from the attitudes of white police, he responded, “Naw, I’m not like that because I’d let the good people build an ark and float out. Old people, working people, line’em up, two by two. White cops will be standing on the walls with big poles pushing people back in.” (p. 39-40)
 Police Commissioner Batts said (of the Baltimore Police Department), "we need to show how fucking good we are..."

He's right.

The Baltimore Police Department should just stop patrolling the streets, specifically those white officers who constitute a minority of officers in command positions (The Daily Caller notes four of the top six commanders are either black or latino, with 60 percent of the incumbents at the highest command level being from non-white communities and 54 percent of those officers with a rank of captain or above being non-white as well).

The black population of Baltimore seems intent on replicating the plot of the movie The Purge, and with black elected leaders/appointed leaders having already publicly sided with the black gangs/insurrectionaries (what Mr. Coates dubbed "war" combatants), it's time the police find a good donut shop and call it a day.

The civilization whites long ago established in Baltimore, only to abandon to rising levels of black crime, is dead; what has risen in majority black Baltimore is a reflection of the type of community black individuals can create in the absence of whites.


Tuesday, May 26, 2015

When Jim Crow and Segregation Made Baltimore Safe for White People (and Western Civilization), Were Memorial Day Weekends Bloodbaths for Blacks?

Memorial Day Weekend 2015 in the city where Francis Scott Key found the motivation to write in 1814 what would become our National Anthem (the Star Spangled Banner). 

The regression to the mean, courtesy of black individuals collectively working to chase away what  remains of western civilization there, is occurring before our eyes in 65 percent black Baltimore. 

Once the black riots/looting/anarchy ended in Baltimore, the REAL fun was just beginning. [Baltimore crime surging: Police investigating 25 killings, 43 non-fatal shootings since riots, ABC 2 Baltimore, 5-14-15]
Courtesy of black individuals, the black community of Baltimore has collectively made the birthplace of the national anthem of the United States of America the equivalent of the Heart of Darkness


On a Tuesday night/Wednesday morning, the violence in Baltimore resembled a horror or slasher flick. [2 dead overnight, 14 shot in 24 hours as Baltimore violence continues, Baltimore Sun, 5-20-15]
It took until July of 2014 for Baltimore to tally up 100 homicides; in 2015, it only 46 days fewer. [Baltimore reaches 100 homicides for year with overnight shootings, Baltimore Sun, 5-21-15]

But it was Memorial Day Weekend 2015 in Baltimore where the true Heart of Darkness beat loudly for all those willing to listen. [Baltimore Bloodshed Continues; 29 Shot, 9 Dead Over Holiday Weekend, CBS Baltimore, May 26, 2015]:


One of those include a double shooting in which a 9-year-old boy was found shot in the leg and a man who suffered a grazed wound to his head. 
 “It’s disturbing because you have the kids playing here and you know, bullets don’t have any names on them,” one man said. 
Neighbors who spoke to WJZ didn’t want to be identified for fear of retaliation.“If you say something to these young people they’re ready to take your head off,” one person said.
Twenty-nine shot, nine dead over Memorial Day weekend in the city that gave birth to the same Star-Spangled Banner playing at funerals and memorials for the U.S. Military Veterans who gave their lives to defend a country vastly different than the one found in 2015 Baltimore. 

The Baltimore of 2015 is a city in name only, when it fact the incredible levels of black violence there long ago convinced those white people capable of keeping alive the flame of western civilization to seek new territory to safeguard the fire. 

Darkness is now the reality in 65 percent black Baltimore, with police no longer the respected authority. [Batts: Police having trouble policing West Baltimore, Baltimore Sun, May 20, 2015] 
Police are struggling to stop violence in West Baltimore, where officers have been routinely surrounded by dozens of people, video cameras and hostility while doing basic police work since the death of Freddie Gray, Baltimore Police Commissioner Anthony W. Batts said Wednesday. 
The Western District, the site of Gray’s arrest and the epicenter of the protests and rioting that followed his death, has seen the majority of the city’s recent shootings and homicides, which are coming faster than they have in eight years. 
In response, Batts said, police are taking measures to re-establish relationships with West Baltimore neighborhoods still angry over Gray’s death April 19, Batts said. 
Police have sent in commanders from other districts with experience and contacts in West Baltimore. Backup officers are being sent to routine calls to help protect officers. 
“Officers tell me and their supervisors, any time they pull up to respond to a call, they have 30 to 50 people surrounding them,” Batts said. “We have to send in multiple units just to do basic police work, which says we have to work on community engagement.”
Remember: Jack Young, the president of the Baltimore City Council, already publicly sided with black gangs and apologized for calling them "thugs" and instead branded them "misdirected... because they see hopelessness."

The hopeless is a creation of individual black people collectively incapable of sustaining a civilization whites abandoned after the 1968 black riots in Baltimore. 

Councilman Nick Mosby, husband to woefully incompetent State's Attorney Marilyn Mosby, admitted to a Fox News interviewer he had worked to get police to back off arresting black rioters/looters during the April 27th insurrection, but
Asked if the grievances stem from police treatment or poverty, Mosby said it's "a lot of different things." 
"You know, decades-old of failed policies, you know, decades old of lack of development for these communities. I mean, it's a lot that pours into it and these young boys are speaking tonight unfortunately in a very wrong way." 
Mosby said he and other men in the community came together, talked to police and asked them to back off: "We told them would be able to kind of talk to the young guys out here. And we asked them to back up, and they did it. It worked out," he said, even as television footage showed people looting a liquor store.
The majority non-white Baltimore Police Department did back off, and allowed the combined forces of the Nation of Islam and the various black gangs in the city (Bloods, Crips, and Black Guerrilla Family) to take control of Baltimore. 

Malik Shabazz did call the Bloods and Crips the "new generation of defenders and protectors" of Baltimore, saying, we "don't need police."

During the evil days of segregation, when Baltimore was still a part of Western Civilization and an American city, what was life like for blacks?

When residential segregation, restrictive covenants, and Jim Crow reigned in still-majority white Baltimore (the city was 86 percent white in 1915), were Memorial Day weekends in the city a bloodbath as was witnessed - courtesy of blacks - in 2015? 

 Just remember life in nearly 100 percent black sections of Baltimore are compared to being New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina everyday. [In Baltimore’s Sandtown-Winchester, ‘every day is Katrina’, Baltimore Sun, 5-19-15]:
The brightly painted cart, with its singing custodian, is a vestige of the city’s old “arabber” merchant tradition. The wagons look quaint when they’re spotted near the gleaming new developments of Baltimore’s downtown. Here in Sandtown, though, where there are no real grocery stores, the people who emerge from crumbling row houses for a few tomatoes or bananas are buying out of need rather than nostalgia. 
A “farmer’s market for the ‘hood,” one longtime resident cracked. 
Life here is a study in the juxtaposition of rich history and impoverished reality. 
Teachers remind their students that Thurgood Marshall, the first black Supreme Court justice, graduated from a high school in Sandtown, which now leads all of Maryland in the number of residents who are in prison. A nearby statue of the jazz great Billie Holiday, who grew up around here, is etched with a crow to honor the struggle under Jim Crow laws; studies show that Baltimore remains one of the nation’s most segregated cities. 
Given the grim statistics people in Sandtown will make less money and die younger than residents anywhere else in Maryland it didn’t sound hyperbolic when a resident, gesturing toward the condemned buildings that serve as the backdrop for daily life, invoked a national tragedy when he yelled, “Every day is Katrina! Every day is a Katrina here!” 
The West Baltimore that 80-year-old Helena Hicks knew as a girl was a lively enclave of black homeowners forced to live together because of segregation. Even then, before anyone called it Sandtown-Winchester, Hicks said, the area was so overcrowded and under-served that children went to high school in shifts. Hers was 12:30 to 5 p.m. 
Despite the indignities of segregation, she said, there was a strong sense of community. Some of the police lived in the neighborhood; Hicks doesn’t remember seeing them carry guns. Everything residents needed was within walking distance, she recalled: dry cleaners, a library, a funeral home, a pediatrician, the Jewish butcher who accepted ration cards. 
At the site of the CVS that was torched and looted during the Freddie Gray riots, she said, there stood a movie theater that blacks in her day had to picket for entrance. Hicks became a local civil rights icon herself when, in 1955, she and six other college students staged an impromptu sit-in at Read’s Drug Store, a move that would help pave the way for the official desegregation of Baltimore. 
But there was an unforeseen drawback to desegregation. Under the more permissive housing rules of the civil rights era, Hicks said, black families who could afford to leave Sandtown did, en masse. In the years that followed, she recalled, homeowners turned into renters, whites disappeared, businesses closed, the words “food desert” entered the local lexicon, drug kingpins took control of the streets and the cops were outsiders whose response was to treat everyone as a potential security threat. 
“It’s a humiliating atmosphere,” Hicks said of the heavy surveillance and bulletproof barriers of today’s Sandtown. “It assumes everyone is a criminal and has to be watched.”
With apologizes to Helena Hicks, the Baltimore of 2015 is 100 percent the fault of individual blacks collectively converting the civilization they inherited via white flight into an African-level community/society.

It was once safe to go to Baltimore and visit Fort McHenry, and see the very spot where Key saw the American still flying... but this was during the days of segregation, Jim Crow, before the first black insurrection of 1968 in Charm City.

Now, 65 percent black Baltimore isn't safe for anyone.

Monday, May 25, 2015

So Now a Major League Baseball (MLB) Mascot Holding a Sign Reading "Police Lives Matter" is Racist...

"In every moment there's a possibility of a better future, but you people won't believe it. And because you won't believe it you won't do what is necessary to make it a reality." - Tomorrowland

It was in late November 2014 when five black members of the St. Louis Rams emerged from the locker room with their hands up, showing their solidarity with the "Hands Up, Don't Shoot" movement.

The National Football League (NFL) decided not to suspend the players, whose unity with black anarchists holding numerous American cities hostage drew far less concern from league offices than a deflated football.
Only in a world as profound sick and decadent as ours would saying police officers - dedicated to upholding the laws governing the very society making it possible for black dysfunction and criminality to be protected - lives be construed as racism and cause a controversy 


Thankfully Jeff Roorda, the unflappable St. Louis Police Officers Association business manager, didn't find this seditious act one to take lightly
 "St. Louis, Missouri (November 30, 2014) – The St. Louis Police Officers Association is profoundly disappointed with the members of the St. Louis Rams football team who chose to ignore the mountains of evidence released from the St. Louis County Grand Jury this week and engage in a display that police officers around the nation found tasteless, offensive and inflammatory. 
"Five members of the Rams entered the field today exhibiting the "hands-up-don't-shoot" pose that has been adopted by protestors who accused Ferguson Police Officer Darren Wilson of murdering Michael Brown. 
The gesture has become synonymous with assertions that Michael Brown was innocent of any wrongdoing and attempting to surrender peacefully when Wilson, according to some now-discredited witnesses, gunned him down in cold blood. 
"SLPOA Business Manager Jeff Roorda said, "now that the evidence is in and Officer Wilson's account has been verified by physical and ballistic evidence as well as eye-witness testimony, which led the grand jury to conclude that no probable cause existed that Wilson engaged in any wrongdoing, it is unthinkable that hometown athletes would so publicly perpetuate a narrative that has been disproven over-and-over again."
Many, many people besides those five black members of St. Louis Rams have decided to damn the facts surrounding the August 9 attack on Officer Darren Wilson by Michael Brown (in which Brown tried to kill Wilson) and accept a false-narrative more in line with their hatred of white people and western civilization. 

You could show these people raw video footage of Brown attacking Wilson in his police cruiser and charging at him (if time travel were possible, you could even offer to transport them to Canfield Drive in Ferguson to the fateful day so they could be a silent witness to Brown's attack on Wilson), but still these would be insufficient evidence to change their mind. 

Well, those accepting the "Hands Up, Don't Shoot" fabrication have birthed a monster they may very well end up wishing had never been born, for this Frankenstein won't voluntarily build a funeral pyre in the mountains when it has accomplished its goal. 

It would be unwise to stand in the way of movement now actively working to remove sympathy from the state and alienate police officers who dare put their life on the line to defend it: for the state still is Black Run-America (BRA), but in a powerful paradox, we must see the current hatred for those sworn to serve and protect an ally in our quest to see the end of this unholy paradigm.
The lies propelling the Black Lives Matter movement could very well be the fuel finally burning away white guilt... forever


And so it's come to this. [Cardinals Mascot Comes Under Fire For Holding ‘Police Lives Matter’ Sign, CBS St. Louis, 5-25-15]:
A photo of St. Louis Cardinals mascot Fredbird holding a “police lives matter” sign was posted to a police association Facebook page before the team asked that it be taken down. 
The St. Louis Post-Dispatch reports sports website Deadspin took aim at the mascot last week after the photo was posted to the St. Louis Police Officers Association Facebook page. 
Deadspin titled the post: “Your Racist Uncle Will Love This Picture Of The Cardinals’ Mascot.” 
Cardinals spokesman Ron Watermon says the photo was taken at Busch Stadium after a couple asked Fredbird for a photo. Watermon says Fredbird didn’t know what was on the sign and when the team learned it was on the association website, the team asked for the photo to come down. 
“A man and a woman stopped Fredbird to request a quick photograph. While the man was taking the picture, the woman standing next to Fredbird asked him to hold up the sign. Fredbird was unaware of the content of the sign,” Watermon explained to the Post-Dispatch. 
He continued, “On Monday, the photograph was posted to the Facebook page of St. Louis Police Officers Association with the woman cropped out of the image. 
“When the Cardinals became aware of the photograph on Tuesday, we asked our friends at the police association to take it down, and they graciously accommodated our request.” 
“Black lives matter” and “Police lives matter” were used on social media after the shooting death of Michael Brown.
So the writers/editors of Deadspin believe anyone who holds up a sign stating "Police Lives Matter" is an avuncular racist?  The white dweebs at Deadspin who write quasi-homoerotic articles lauding black athletes would be the first to cry out for police protection if one of their beloved pets who never made it as a professional athlete robbed them, and it's my hope the police would simply respond "no."

We move closer and closer to a world where the lessons discussed in the fictional classroom of Mr. Dubois lesson of History and Moral Philosophy become a reality.

Our job was always to survive, not to change an ideology heading full-speed ahead directly in the path of an iceberg. This time, the ship won't have a band to play while it sinks to the bottom of the ocean, but the captain will proudly play Michael Brown's raps over the loud speaker until the rising water shorts the circuits out.


Sunday, May 24, 2015

Curators of the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of African American History & Culture Hope to Acquire "Artifacts" from the 2015 Black Riots in Baltimore

Back in 2013, Lonnie Bunch - the director of the Smithsonian - "said Mr. Martin’s hoodie, the one he was wearing the night of his death on Feb. 26, 2012, represents a unique opportunity to further the discussion about race in America."[Smithsonian director wants Trayvon Martin’s hoodie, Washington Times, July 31, 2013] 
Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of African American History & Culture wants to put together an exhibit basically condoning the actions of blacks in the 2015 black Baltimore riots
Now, curators at the Smithsonian are looking to enshrine the black rioters/looters/arsonists/don't call them thugs misguided youths of Baltimore by including mementos of the recent black uprising with an exhibit at soon-to-be-opened Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of African American History & Culture.[Smithsonian curators chase history in search of items from Baltimore unrest, Baltimore Sun, 5-22-15]:
 As Aaron Bryant walked along North Avenue on the night of Freddie Gray's funeral, his photographer's eye noted how the rising flames framed the "waves of police in riot gear" and the wall of ministers calling for calm. 
Instinctively, the Baltimore man says, he began mentally cataloging the most evocative "visual cues" around him. He knew they would help inform his work chronicling the moment as a photography curator at the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of African American History & Culture, now under construction on the National Mall in Washington. 
As he surveyed the unrest on the evening of April 27, Bryant asked himself a series of questions. "Who's in the photograph and what is the impact they're having on the people around them?" asked Bryant, 50. "Why are they here? Why are these people in front? Who are the people behind them?" 
Later, when colleague Tulani Salahu-Din  ooked at an image Bryant had snapped of a burning car on North Avenue, her eyes immediately zeroed in on a single object: the overturned bar stool in the front seat that had been used to smash the car's windshield. 
In the bar stool, Salahu-Din saw an item the museum "might be able to salvage" in the days or months after the unrest, to help tell the human story of the clashes as part of a future exhibit. 
"What did it mean to the person who threw it?" asked Salahu-Din, 55, a content development and three-dimensional object collection specialist at the museum. 
"What did it mean to the shopkeeper who lost it?" 
As Bryant and Salahu-Din see it, the protests and unrest in Baltimore last month left an indelible mark on the conscience of a major American and historically African-American city — reason enough for a closer look by museum staff. 
But they also see the events as part of a broader cultural force writ large across the African-American community nationwide, one that has spread from the Florida neighborhood where Trayvon Martin was killed by a neighborhood watch volunteer to Ferguson, Mo., where Michael Brown was shot by police. 
They describe the Black Lives Matter movement as a modern manifestation of the civil rights struggle — and say it must be documented as such. "We're bearing witness and documenting the events that are going on," said Salahu-Din, a former director of the Great Blacks in Wax Museum in Baltimore who lives in Owings Mills. 
"Many of the issues focus on police brutality, but it's also bigger than that," she said. "It focuses also on the social, political and economic injustices that have been with us for quite some time." "As a history museum, it's important for us within this moment to put it within a historical context," said Bryant, who grew up and still lives in the Forest Park neighborhood of Northwest Baltimore. 
"Black Lives Matter is part of a continuum that has been a part of the African-American community, whether it's going back to the 1960s, looking at what happened in Watts [the Los Angeles neighborhood that erupted in riots in 1965] or in other cities across the country and even farther back," he said. 
"There are always going to be some social, economic ties or strings that connect what's happening today with what happened years ago." It will include space for events since 1968 — when the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated and riots broke out in cities across the country, including Baltimore. 
Plans are for the post-1968 section to mention Trayvon Martin and the Black Lives Matter movement without going into depth on the subject. But that could change. Beyond the permanent exhibits, staff have been directed to take the pulse of the nation so as not to miss opportunities to collect important items from history as it unfolds. 
Contemporary items could become part of temporary exhibits in the museum, inform academic publications, be featured on the museum's website or get wrapped into educational programs, said Bill Pretzer, the museum's senior curator for history. 
As a child, Bryant often went to the corner of Pennsylvania and North avenues, the center of the recent rioting. His mother worked for the city health department in an office there, and both his parents' family churches were nearby. Salahu-Din was born in East Baltimore but moved to Salisbury as a child. 
She returned to Baltimore in 1977, attended and taught at Coppin State University, and directed the Great Blacks in Wax Museum on North Avenue. She also was a consultant on the design of the Reginald F. Lewis Museum of Maryland African-American History & Culture in Baltimore. Pretzer said Bryant's and Salahu-Din's connections to Baltimore will serve the new Smithsonian museum well — as will Baltimore's proximity to Washington. 
"We have a close-by laboratory where we can look at the variety of things that are part and parcel of this larger moment, and we can examine it in some great detail because we have staff members who are so familiar with the community," Pretzer said. 
"One can imagine that we will end up doing a more thorough job of examining the events in Baltimore — both the short-term and long-term, just as we would try to do with [events in] Washington, D.C. — than we might with a city elsewhere." 
The curators said they could not discuss items they are pursuing from the Baltimore events, in part because the Smithsonian maintains strict rules on collections. But they say they will be looking for all sorts of things — from mass-produced buttons and signs to items that tell a more personal story. 
"We look for public expression," Pretzer said. "We look for artifacts that are evocative of events, so something that has emotional power, something that may have been attacked or destroyed, something that was damaged in the process." They will also be looking for items that show "multiple points of view," he said, including those of law enforcement and government officials. 
Salahu-Din wants artifacts that show "the dynamics of the people in the community," from the roles of women and men to the involvement of students. She wants to show "the spirit of change" and the sense of hope that she says she felt on the corner of Pennsylvania and North on the day the six officers involved in Gray's arrest were charged. 
Bryant hopes to capture the leadership role of young people and online activists. "They weren't the head of some big national organization, but they had a camera phone, and that allowed them to create a different kind of mobilization," he said. 
"We're starting to see a maturation of that today, which is another reason why Ferguson and Baltimore are historically significant."
No, this isn't a parody.

This is an actual article from The Baltimore Sun.

One of the museum's curators actually believes the barstool used to destroy a Baltimore Police Department cruiser is worthy of exhibiting in the soon-to-be-opened Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of African American History & Culture.
Can the remains of the Baltimore Police Department van be used in the exhibit?


In reality, the barstool should be in a museum to condemn black people (and showcase their TRUE contributions to society), instead of condoning black people's actions in destroying private and public property in the 65 percent black city of Baltimore. 


With the riots over and the majority non-white Baltimore Police Department pulling back and letting the natives run the city, black-on-black violence and black depravity/dysfunction is turning the city into a warzone Tulani Salahu-Din would never admit is entirely a problem because of blacks. 

But blacks will always support black elected/appointed officials, because if they failed to then they'd no longer be advanced the interests of colored people over white people and the civilization only they can birth (and maintain).  And those black elected/appointed officials will always double-down on protecting their black constituents... right City Council President Bernard "Jack" Young[Baltimore police, city and community concerned over surge in violence, Baltimore Sun, 5-18-15]:
Meanwhile, the Baltimore chapter of the NAACP said Monday that the Baltimore police union's rhetoric against Rawlings-Blake and Baltimore State's Attorney Marilyn Mosby has been "distasteful and disrespectful" and "borderline racist." 
In a letter to police union president Gene Ryan, the NAACP said that Baltimore needs to unite to fight the surging violence. 
The police union has criticized Rawlings-Blake for poor leadership in recent weeks and Mosby for over-reaching in the charges she has filed. Prosecutors said officers refused Gray medical help multiple times, and charges range from misconduct in office to second-degree murder. 
"It bothers us greatly to have the integrity of these strong African-American female leaders questioned by someone who has never served a day in elective office, and yet is pushing a personal agenda in the face of clear injustice, regardless of the possible irreparable harm it may have on our city in the long run — especially during this time of extreme peril in our city," the NAACP said in the letter. 
Ryan did not return a call seeking comment. 
The NAACP plans to launch a #BmoreCIVIL social media campaign and scheduled a "Stop the Violence 'By Any Means Necessary' rally" on Tuesday to coincide with the 90th birthday of late civil rights leader Malcolm X. 
Munir Bahar, one of the founders of the 300 Men March, is calling for 30 men in 10 Baltimore neighborhoods to become block leaders in the crime fight. He said his group plans to train new volunteers and will hold an "Occupy Our Corners" anti-violence rally on Thursday. 
"We always love to blame somebody else. It's always the police's fault. How is it the police's problem that 'Mike' kills 'Mike?'" Bahar said. 
While he looked to residents for change, he said, city leaders are not exempt from the blame. The shootings, riots and protests have exposed the failures of elected leaders for not providing youth with the tools they need to succeed and escape a violent street life, Bahar said.
Trayvon Martin's Hoodie is a holy relic, but it be pushed out of prime real estate at the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of African American History & Culture if plenty of artifacts from the black riot/looting/insurrection in 65 percent black Baltimore can be acquired.

Tears for Fears once sang "It's a Mad World"... they seriously misunderstood the insanity of modernity.