INTENSITY²
Start here => What's your crime? Basic Discussion => Topic started by: Yuri Bezmenov on April 27, 2015, 06:49:56 PM
-
(http://data.boomerang.nl/a/ard/image/officer-barbrady-works-in-china/s600/officer-barbrady.jpg)
-
(http://bbsimg.ngfiles.com/1/4892000/ngbbs425dc441ee6be.jpg)
-
http://www.intensitysquared.com/index.php/topic,23089.0.html (http://www.intensitysquared.com/index.php/topic,23089.0.html)
-
http://www.intensitysquared.com/index.php/topic,23089.0.html (http://www.intensitysquared.com/index.php/topic,23089.0.html)
It's not stupid people; it's very intelligent people, paving the road to a nationalized police force.
-
http://www.intensitysquared.com/index.php/topic,23089.0.html (http://www.intensitysquared.com/index.php/topic,23089.0.html)
It's not stupid people; it's very intelligent people, paving the road to a nationalized police force.
no more in dark poetic humor expressing my disgust...and yes they are foolish not stupid no, but acting and choosing to be ignorant and subject to a police state...it's so predictable that it's almost sadly funny... :facepalm2: if my head didn't hurt so much from the idiocy
-
I remember mapping the route to Ocean City...everyone said the same two words about planning a route.
Avoid Baltimore. :zombiefuck:
Sad.
-
http://www.intensitysquared.com/index.php/topic,23089.0.html (http://www.intensitysquared.com/index.php/topic,23089.0.html)
It's not stupid people; it's very intelligent people, paving the road to a nationalized police force.
no more in dark poetic humor expressing my disgust...and yes they are foolish not stupid no, but acting and choosing to be ignorant and subject to a police state...it's so predictable that it's almost sadly funny... :facepalm2: if my head didn't hurt so much from the idiocy
They're not foolish or idiots either; they're ordinary people and there's something huge happening here. Last month, six cities were chosen by the federal government to be pilot cities for nationalized police forces. The mayor of Baltimore is a member of that national task force. These are the first footstones to a national police force. Take a moment to look at anything at all official happening around the shiny stupid media frenzy of the riot. Stop looking at the citizens and look at what the official are doing. History is being made.
-
http://www.intensitysquared.com/index.php/topic,23089.0.html (http://www.intensitysquared.com/index.php/topic,23089.0.html)
It's not stupid people; it's very intelligent people, paving the road to a nationalized police force.
no more in dark poetic humor expressing my disgust...and yes they are foolish not stupid no, but acting and choosing to be ignorant and subject to a police state...it's so predictable that it's almost sadly funny... :facepalm2: if my head didn't hurt so much from the idiocy
They're not foolish or idiots either; they're ordinary people and there's something huge happening here. Last month, six cities were chosen by the federal government to be pilot cities for nationalized police forces. The mayor of Baltimore is a member of that national task force. These are the first footstones to a national police force. Take a moment to look at anything at all official happening around the shiny stupid media frenzy of the riot. Stop looking at the citizens and look at what the official are doing. History is being made.
Interesting. What are the names of the other five cities?
-
Baltimore isn't one of them. Fort Worth, Texas; Gary, Indiana; Stockton, California; Birmingham, Alabama; Minneapolis, Minnesota; and Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
-
The mayor of Baltimore is a member of that national task force.
Wherever reading that was incorrect; she was an advisor, not a task force member. The article of that information made the connection to the task force, due to a recent application for federal funding to put body cameras on police in Baltimore, and the body camera being task force supported idea. http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/maryland/politics/bs-md-mayor-testimony-20150113-story.html (http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/maryland/politics/bs-md-mayor-testimony-20150113-story.html)
Interesting.
My reading for this week... :laugh: http://www.cops.usdoj.gov/pdf/taskforce/Interim_TF_Report.pdf (http://www.cops.usdoj.gov/pdf/taskforce/Interim_TF_Report.pdf)
-
The mayor of Baltimore is a member of that national task force.
Wherever reading that was incorrect; she was an advisor, not a task force member. The article of that information made the connection to the task force, due to a recent application for federal funding to put body cameras on police in Baltimore, and the body camera being task force supported idea. http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/maryland/politics/bs-md-mayor-testimony-20150113-story.html (http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/maryland/politics/bs-md-mayor-testimony-20150113-story.html)
Interesting.
My reading for this week... :laugh: http://www.cops.usdoj.gov/pdf/taskforce/Interim_TF_Report.pdf (http://www.cops.usdoj.gov/pdf/taskforce/Interim_TF_Report.pdf)
wow thanks for the info...the poem applies to those in leadership and lack of it...pretty much just tired of the tired if you get me...blah, news is not news any longer it's all the same under the sun...live long enough and you'll see the same patterns...
-
http://www.intensitysquared.com/index.php/topic,23089.0.html (http://www.intensitysquared.com/index.php/topic,23089.0.html)
It's not stupid people; it's very intelligent people, paving the road to a nationalized police force.
Which would be a horrible idea the only people who would benefit are the feds and at the expense of the states and local governments.
-
I'm going crazy from the bad TV, the tiny sounding ad's... an ear ache from hell, and andd CNN halp! oh lordy help me, I am so out of ittttttttttttttttttttttttttttttt :headhurts:
-
http://www.intensitysquared.com/index.php/topic,23089.0.html (http://www.intensitysquared.com/index.php/topic,23089.0.html)
It's not stupid people; it's very intelligent people, paving the road to a nationalized police force.
Which would be a horrible idea the only people who would benefit are the feds and at the expense of the states and local governments.
Nationalizing the police would make law enforcement personnel simply another government branch of armed services; like another military force but with a different focus. Right now, the government might have a difficult time imposing martial law on the entire country, though no so with a national police having standardized training and directives of the federal government. Good idea or bad, do see it happening regardless and the platform of racial tension is an extremely intelligent way to promote the first stages. First start with the most dissatisfied, then it will take a different turn with the media not only focusing on police brutality of minorities, but rather misconduct in general, to affect the attitudes of the rest of the public. The current administration's agenda of a national police standard isn't a new idea, but the actual implementation certainly is new. Something clicked for me yesterday. About a month ago, was thinking to myself, haven't noticed a traffic cop in months. The ones who sit by the side of the road with their radar going, the ones who patrol around neighborhoods and business areas just patrolling, the ones with the random person pulled over on the side of the road for whatever reason, haven't seen one in months, not one. That's the contact and perspective the general public have with the police, as serving the purpose of monitoring the public, watching and waiting to catch someone doing some petty something wrong. Thinking the tides are turning.
-
The mayor of Baltimore is a member of that national task force.
Wherever reading that was incorrect; she was an advisor, not a task force member. The article of that information made the connection to the task force, due to a recent application for federal funding to put body cameras on police in Baltimore, and the body camera being task force supported idea. http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/maryland/politics/bs-md-mayor-testimony-20150113-story.html (http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/maryland/politics/bs-md-mayor-testimony-20150113-story.html)
Interesting.
My reading for this week... :laugh: http://www.cops.usdoj.gov/pdf/taskforce/Interim_TF_Report.pdf (http://www.cops.usdoj.gov/pdf/taskforce/Interim_TF_Report.pdf)
wow thanks for the info...the poem applies to those in leadership and lack of it...pretty much just tired of the tired if you get me...blah, news is not news any longer it's all the same under the sun...live long enough and you'll see the same patterns...
Reading about the topic spun me off into reading quite a bit about the mayor, and the media scrutiny of inaction, with some of those articles drawing conspiratorial lines between that non-responsive behavior, the similar orders of the national guard to stand down during the Indiana riots, petitions for government grants, and the involvement of both mayors in the national task force. Oh my, certainly got my tin foil hat all warm and toasty. That link isn't really great or highly informative, but the first of what is assumed to be much more to come. It has my attention.
-
http://www.intensitysquared.com/index.php/topic,23089.0.html (http://www.intensitysquared.com/index.php/topic,23089.0.html)
It's not stupid people; it's very intelligent people, paving the road to a nationalized police force.
Which would be a horrible idea the only people who would benefit are the feds and at the expense of the states and local governments.
Nationalizing the police would make law enforcement personnel simply another government branch of armed services; like another military force but with a different focus. Right now, the government might have a difficult time imposing martial law on the entire country, though no so with a national police having standardized training and directives of the federal government. Good idea or bad, do see it happening regardless and the platform of racial tension is an extremely intelligent way to promote the first stages. First start with the most dissatisfied, then it will take a different turn with the media not only focusing on police brutality of minorities, but rather misconduct in general, to affect the attitudes of the rest of the public. The current administration's agenda of a national police standard isn't a new idea, but the actual implementation certainly is new. Something clicked for me yesterday. About a month ago, was thinking to myself, haven't noticed a traffic cop in months. The ones who sit by the side of the road with their radar going, the ones who patrol around neighborhoods and business areas just patrolling, the ones with the random person pulled over on the side of the road for whatever reason, haven't seen one in months, not one. That's the contact and perspective the general public have with the police, as serving the purpose of monitoring the public, watching and waiting to catch someone doing some petty something wrong. Thinking the tides are turning.
It's not just the imposition of martial law that would be easier, but any type of federal law or regulations that the states don't want to take the time an money to enforce could be fast tracked at the whim of who ever is in power. Federal law enforcement could be ordered to make pot arrests in states where it was legal then prosecute under federal law. As to the argument that it would help with any of the racial or brutality problems I just don't see how, it would still be the same cops and unions just different bosses who would not be under direct control of the local governments. Adding additional bureaucracy only tends to make things worse except for the box checking pencil pushing bureaucrats
-
As to the argument that it would help with any of the racial or brutality problems I just don't see how,
Absolutely agree, just saying it's a brilliant and ingenious public manipulation tactic. That level of government control is scary and easy to see the negative for the average citizen and city/state governments. Though don't see as being able to do anything other than observe and think about conspiracies and how interesting it is such large numbers of people are swept along by such things. The magnitude of idea is almost mind boggling to me. It's creating an enormous armed government force with almost no real cost or work; it already exist, it's already manned, armed, and fully operating; just a matter of implementing the standardizations and levels of control; just a matter of dangling grant money in front of mayors; mayors sign up and that makes it the public's choosing. There seems to be an underlying goal to raise the public respect of police officers to equal that of soldiers, trusted and honored protectors and servers, and the general public will think it's all grand as long as they don't come knocking on the door. Can you see it, Parts?
-
As to the argument that it would help with any of the racial or brutality problems I just don't see how,
Absolutely agree, just saying it's a brilliant and ingenious public manipulation tactic. That level of government control is scary and easy to see the negative for the average citizen and city/state governments. Though don't see as being able to do anything other than observe and think about conspiracies and how interesting it is such large numbers of people are swept along by such things. The magnitude of idea is almost mind boggling to me. It's creating an enormous armed government force with almost no real cost or work; it already exist, it's already manned, armed, and fully operating; just a matter of implementing the standardizations and levels of control; just a matter of dangling grant money in front of mayors; mayors sign up and that makes it the public's choosing. There seems to be an underlying goal to raise the public respect of police officers to equal that of soldiers, trusted and honored protectors and servers, and the general public will think it's all grand as long as they don't come knocking on the door. Can you see it, Parts?
Yes I see it , it's been going on for awhile 911 gave it a huge push making them all 'heroes' even if all they ever did was write parking tickets for twenty years then retired. I have also noticed grant money showing up locally too, after reading a story about money being given out to enforce the texting while driving laws I have noticed cops have been sitting near the end of my street looking down the main road with binoculars trying to catch people. Also notice how most new cop cars all have the same look it's due to the requirements of the Homeland security grants that helped pay for them. There is a lot of interesting stuff in Radley Balko's column in the Washington Post http://www.washingtonpost.com/people/radley-balko (http://www.washingtonpost.com/people/radley-balko)
-
As to the argument that it would help with any of the racial or brutality problems I just don't see how,
Absolutely agree, just saying it's a brilliant and ingenious public manipulation tactic. That level of government control is scary and easy to see the negative for the average citizen and city/state governments. Though don't see as being able to do anything other than observe and think about conspiracies and how interesting it is such large numbers of people are swept along by such things. The magnitude of idea is almost mind boggling to me. It's creating an enormous armed government force with almost no real cost or work; it already exist, it's already manned, armed, and fully operating; just a matter of implementing the standardizations and levels of control; just a matter of dangling grant money in front of mayors; mayors sign up and that makes it the public's choosing. There seems to be an underlying goal to raise the public respect of police officers to equal that of soldiers, trusted and honored protectors and servers, and the general public will think it's all grand as long as they don't come knocking on the door. Can you see it, Parts?
Yes I see it , it's been going on for awhile 911 gave it a huge push making them all 'heroes' even if all they ever did was write parking tickets for twenty years then retired. I have also noticed grant money showing up locally too, after reading a story about money being given out to enforce the texting while driving laws I have noticed cops have been sitting near the end of my street looking down the main road with binoculars trying to catch people. Also notice how most new cop cars all have the same look it's due to the requirements of the Homeland security grants that helped pay for them. There is a lot of interesting stuff in Radley Balko's column in the Washington Post http://www.washingtonpost.com/people/radley-balko (http://www.washingtonpost.com/people/radley-balko)
What makes it seem the most unavoidable, now that it's started, is the idea doesn't have a political slant in either direction. Could see it as appealing to any party in power, and certain to be perpetuated by any president in the next election. It can't be promoted as a racial issue forever though. It makes sense to believe there's negative racial bias in law enforcement, but crime statistics also make it sensible to understand why that's the case. So the white cop can't be the bad guy forever, in order for the idea to work for everyone, it has to be the police in general, and there's probably a lot more of that to come in the media. That's why that task force paper only touches on the issue of minorities a little bit, it's more about happy joy-joy improving community relationships with law officials and citizen. Look at the angry unhappy people, look at what this hand is doing, while the other hand builds an insurmountable army. I can lead a nation with a microphone~Flobots