Page 27 of 153 FirstFirst ... 172324252627282930313777127 ... LastLast
Results 651 to 675 of 3802
  1. #651
    Veteran
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Mar 2009
    Post Count
    97,536
    Black Arizona churches reject racial profiling sheriff Joe Arpaio’s armed posses

    Joe Arpaio, the Maricopa County sheriff infamous for racial profiling, is sending an armed posse of volunteers into black churches for the nominal purpose of protection. Many are not pleased.

    Arpaio was asked for the protection by Baptist preacher Rev. Jarrett Maupin on Friday after a gunman killed nine in a racist attack on Charleston’s landmark Emanuel AME. But the request was quickly condemned by other black church leaders, who said Maupin doesn’t represent the community.

    “[H]is partnership with Sheriff Arpaio is an affront to all who oppose civil-rights violations,” reverends Reginald Walton and Warren Stewart Jr. and Angeles Maldonado said in a statement, reported by the Arizona Republic. “The Maricopa County sheriff has been adjudicated as a racial profiler. He is the last person we would look to for help.”

    http://www.rawstory.com/2015/06/blac...e+Raw+Story%29


    JA always ready to help non-EAs.




  2. #652
    Veteran
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Mar 2009
    Post Count
    97,536
    Watchdog: Is DPS ‘surveillance detection’ just plain spying?

    Is the Texas Department of Public Safety spying on law-abiding Texans?

    The surveillance detection program is run by TrapWire, a Virginia-based company that is a key player in DPS’ intelligence operations.

    WikiLeaks revealed that TrapWire paid Stratfor an 8 percent commission to help it sign the Texas account in 2010.


    TrapWire president Dan Botsch told me his program is designed “to help detect indicators and patterns of an attack, enabling security and law enforcement to prevent terror and criminal acts.”


    As best I can tell, the way it works is like this: Surveillance cameras placed around vulnerable locales such as the State Capitol Complex, the Governor’s Mansion, possibly the Houston Ship Channel and other unknown places look for potential terrorists who may be scoping out targets for attacks.


    TrapWire, which also employs former CIA agents, doesn’t run the cameras. State and local law enforcement does. But if someone shows up at a protected location and appears to be studying a target, the system will capture that and report it to TrapWire, which conducts deeper analysis and shares the information with appropriate law enforcement.


    Botsch, the TrapWire president, said, “Our entire program is based on the fact that terrorists, including professional organizations and those described as ‘lone wolves,’ conduct extensive surveillance of their targets prior to an attack.”


    Clients such as DPS, he said, use his system “to detect surveillance and criminal activity, not to conduct surveillance.”


    You can see what a thin line this is, and how easy it would be to cross it and look at innocent people. Tourists taking photographs, for example, could be confused with potential criminal activity.


    If that were to happen, Botsch says, “any report can later be deleted if the incident is determined to be nonthreatening.”


    Who deletes? Who decides?


    DPS spokesman Tom Vinger referred me to his department’s 27-page privacy policy as its guidepost.


    “TrapWire does not perform surveillance,” Vinger said. “The system does not have cameras. And it does not target individuals or groups. Anything that goes into TrapWire has to be entered manually by DPS.”


    He added, “It also helps identify patterns that might suggest pre-surveillance of DPS facilities. And it ties into data from other users on the TrapWire system.”


    In Texas, Vinger said, TrapWire led to 44 arrests. He did not answer my question about how much money is spent on the program.


    DPS personnel praise TrapWire. A vendor performance report states that TrapWire “is used every day to help protect our State and its citizens from terrorism. The staff is always clear on instruction and they answer questions very quick. They are a great company to work with.”

    http://www.dallasnews.com/investigat...ain-spying.ece

    44 arrests? how many convictions?




  3. #653
    Veteran
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Mar 2009
    Post Count
    97,536
    Protesters block Louisville police station after union letter threatening ‘race-baiters’

    Dozens of demonstrators forced the temporary closure of the Louisville Metro Police headquarters on Monday afternoon in a protest that sought the firing of the local police union leader for his reaction to an officer-involved fatal shooting.

    “Your idiocy and lies are what caused the destruction in Ferguson and other cities around our country and we won’t be tolerating that here,” the letter from FOP local 614 said.

    http://www.rawstory.com/2015/06/protesters-block-louisville-police-station-after-union-letter-threatening-race-baiters/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaig n=Feed%3A+TheRawStory+%28The+Raw+Story%29




  4. #654
    Veteran
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Mar 2009
    Post Count
    97,536
    Concocting a Crime-Ageddon to Promote Police Power

    The New York Post, the notorious right-wing tabloid owned by Rupert Murdoch, inspired a media stampede of stories highlighting increases in New York City’s crime statistics. The hysterical headline “You’re 45% More Likely to Be Murdered in de Blasio’s Manhattan” (5/26/15) served as a springboard for other local media outlets to question if the city was suddenly a crime-ridden hole under Mayor Bill de Blasio–presented by the Post as a liberal on policing.

    The Post's story reported that there had been 16 murders so far this year in Manhattan, one of New York City’s five boroughs, versus 11 during the same time period in 2014 (when, the Post failed to note, de Blasio was also mayor—he took office on January 1, 2014).
    An increase of 45 percent naturally sounds much more alarming than the flat numerical increase: five more.

    These homicide figures are actually so low historically in the city that you’d have to go back to the 1960s for comparable numbers. For a city that once had upwards of 1,000 and sometime 2,000 murders a year, a time from the 1970s into the ’90s often referred to as “the bad old days,” 16 in Manhattan in five months is remarkably low.

    If instead of comparing de Blasio’s second year in office to his first year, the Posthad compared the rate of killing so far this year to the 102 Manhattan homicides (not counting 9/11) in 2001–the last full year of the mayoralty of Rudy Giuliani, celebrated by the Post for his crime-fighting triumphs–the headline would have had to read,

    “You’re 63% Less Likely to Be Murdered in de Blasio’s Manhattan Than in Giuliani’s”–but that’s a framing that you’re never going to see in the New York Post.

    A Wall Street Journal story in May demonstrated that the only proof reporters need to confirm the notion that de Blasio is dangerously soft on crime are opinion polls showing New Yorkers are worried about crime (FAIR Blog, 5/15/15).

    But opinion polling shows that public perceptions of crime have little to do with actual crime rates, as a majority of respondents nearly always tell Gallup that crime is rising, even as crime rates have fallen dramatically over the past 20 years.

    Commenting on this phenomenon, Lauren-Brooke Eisen and Oliver Roeder of the Brennan Center (Huffington Post, 3/16/15) suggest that “sensationalist coverage of isolated crimes has contributed to the public misperception that crime is increasing.”

    Again, the underlying truth that media take for granted is that more police = less crime.

    But is that true? As even Bratton himself has been forced to admit,
    all sorts of serious crime was much higher when stop & frisk was at its peak in 2011 (at nearly 700,000 stops) than this year (which probably won’t crack 50,000 recorded stops).

    The tactic’s correlation with crime would suggest, if anything, an inverse relationship—the opposite of what the front page of the Post would have its readers believe.

    As the size of the NYPD has dropped from an all-time high of about 41,000 cops in 2001 to just under 35,000 today, crime has also dropped—dramatically. Again, if the popular notion is that more cops make us safer, then the reality, it seems, is counterintuitive.


    the “crime wave” politics being carried by right-wing and corporate centrist media outlets are a classic response to a political movement that takes on racist policing in America:

    The point of the “Ferguson effect,” though, is not to be accurate.

    It is instead to distract us from the growing evidence about the magnitude and extent of police use of lethal violence in the United States — as powerfully do ented just this week by the Guardian and the Washington Post — and to besmirch the #BlackLivesMatter movement.


    It’s a strategy that Republican presidential candidate Barry Goldwater inaugurated in his campaign in 1964, almost single-handedly turning crime into a political weapon against the civil rights movement. ( but we Repugs aren't racists! )

    the Broken Windows theory that was popularized in the ’90s under New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani and a younger Bratton. The theory, a target of protesters from Ferguson to New York, is a fundamental cornerstone of policing in America. Its success is self-evident, as politicians and media pundits tell it.

    But as Harcourt and others have pointed out, its supposed causal relationship with diminishing crime simply isn’t supported by research.

    Other social factors (economic shifts, the end of the crack era, etc.) that seem to explain an international phenomenon of declining crime that began in the ’90s, and occurred in cities whether or not they subscribed to the Broken Windows theory, are seldom mentioned when media tackles the issue of crime.

    That more complicated picture, of course, will likely never make for a good front page.

    http://www.truth-out.org/news/item/3...e-police-power



  5. #655
    Veteran
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Mar 2009
    Post Count
    97,536
    Washington state cop caught on tape shooting and killing Mexican farmworker quits

    One of three police officers who shot dead an unarmed Mexican farmworker in Washington state, triggering protests akin to those after police slayings in other U.S. cities, has resigned from his job amid an investigation into the videotaped struggle.

    Pasco Police Department officer Ryan Flanagan was one of three patrolmen who shot and killed farmworker Antonio Zambrano-Montes at a busy intersection in the southeastern agricultural city on Feb. 10 after police said the undo ented immigrant threw rocks at the officers.

    Zambrano-Montes’ death was captured on video and the majority Latino community has likened it to police slayings of unarmed black men in Ferguson, Missouri, and New York. Hundreds took to the streets to demonstrate against policing tactics in the town more than 200 miles (322 km) southeast of Seattle.

    Flanagan had come under scrutiny for his patrol tactics before. In 2012 ,Pasco settled a 2012 lawsuit for $100,000 brought by a woman who said Flanagan and another officer shoved her face against a patrol car and twisted her arms behind.

    http://www.rawstory.com/2015/06/wash...e+Raw+Story%29

    Police see rock throwing as imminent, unavoidable, mortal danger to themselves and others, so they immediately shoot you dead.

    More likely than danger, the cops feel their tiny s under their pot bellies have been insulted by mere rock throwing. As Travis Bickle would say, "You throwin rocks at ME?"



  6. #656
    Savvy Veteran spurraider21's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Apr 2012
    Post Count
    100,825
    Now that he's dead, you will whine about police brutality. If he was brought in alive, you'd complain because " if he was black they'd have killed him. look how they deal with white suspects "




    https://gma.yahoo.com/escaped-york-i...opstories.html

  7. #657
    Veteran
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Mar 2009
    Post Count
    97,536
    "you will whine about police brutality"

    I don't whine, I slap. cops killing armed criminals is totally different cops killing unarmed innocents, but I realize that distinction will be hard for you to understand.



  8. #658
    Believe.
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Jul 2005
    Post Count
    22,886
    Now that he's dead, you will whine about police brutality. If he was brought in alive, you'd complain because " if he was black they'd have killed him. look how they deal with white suspects "




    https://gma.yahoo.com/escaped-york-i...opstories.html
    We weren't racist here! Give me a gold star too!

  9. #659
    Savvy Veteran spurraider21's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Apr 2012
    Post Count
    100,825
    "you will whine about police brutality"

    I don't whine, I slap. cops killing armed criminals is totally different cops killing unarmed innocents, but I realize that distinction will be hard for you to understand.


    my point is some people such as yourself will find a way to whine about a story no matter how it turns out

    if they did kill him: police brutality!
    if they didn't kill him: its because he's white!

    there is literally no way they could have dealt with this guy on the manhunt that would please you

  10. #660
    Veteran cd021's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Aug 2012
    Post Count
    9,873
    Now that he's dead, you will whine about police brutality. If he was brought in alive, you'd complain because " if he was black they'd have killed him. look how they deal with white suspects "




    https://gma.yahoo.com/escaped-york-i...opstories.html
    A terrorist walked into a church and an hour later murdered 9 people because they were black, he then fled police and was captured peacefully in another state.

    What did the cops do? They took him to Burger King.



    "Roof complained he was hungry, cops went to a nearby Burger King and bought the accused mass murderer a meal while he was in custody."

    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/0...n_7645216.html
    Burger King.

    Good try Raider

  11. #661
    Veteran cd021's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Aug 2012
    Post Count
    9,873
    my point is some people such as yourself will find a way to whine about a story no matter how it turns out

    if they did kill him: police brutality!
    if they didn't kill him: its because he's white!

    there is literally no way they could have dealt with this guy on the manhunt that would please you
    Both men were in prison for murder, broke out and were on the run, I have no problem with how it ended. But keep in mind that Roof and The Aurura shooter were peacefully taken into custody after mass murdering people while Freddy Grey, Eric Garner, Walter Scott and John Crawford were all unarmed when they were confronted by police, all ended up dead.

    Not to mention two unarmed black people shot 130 times by 12 cops and they all walked without prison time. One cop jumped on to the hood and fired 15 rounds, despite "fearing for his life".

  12. #662
    Savvy Veteran spurraider21's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Apr 2012
    Post Count
    100,825
    You're just proving my point

  13. #663
    Veteran cd021's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Aug 2012
    Post Count
    9,873
    You're just proving my point
    I didn't prove you're point. You randomly brought race into the fact a murder, was killed by the police after escaping from prison.

    I responded with the fact that I have no problem with what went down but pointed out in recent cases there have been radically different outcomes based on race. Lanza and Roof murdered at least 7 people
    and were peacefully taken into custody.

  14. #664
    Savvy Veteran spurraider21's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Apr 2012
    Post Count
    100,825
    I didn't prove you're point. You randomly brought race into the fact a murder, was killed by the police after escaping from prison.

    I responded with the fact that I have no problem with what went down but pointed out in recent cases there have been radically different outcomes based on race. Lanza and Roof murdered at least 7 people
    and were peacefully taken into custody.
    When people surrender to the police without struggle, no matter what crime they committed, their chances of getting hurt and killed are slim to none. Garner didn't deserve death, but the situation escalated because he resisted arrest, and didn't allow them to cuff him. It's not an excuse for the outcome, but resisting initially only makes for a worse and more dangerous situation. When roof was pulled over in Florida, he identified himself and gave himself up

  15. #665
    Believe.
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Jul 2005
    Post Count
    22,886
    When people surrender to the police without struggle, no matter what crime they committed, their chances of getting hurt and killed are slim to none. Garner didn't deserve death, but the situation escalated because he resisted arrest, and didn't allow them to cuff him. It's not an excuse for the outcome, but resisting initially only makes for a worse and more dangerous situation. When roof was pulled over in Florida, he identified himself and gave himself up
    How the would you know if that were the case? You glean that from your interactions with campus police?

  16. #666
    Savvy Veteran spurraider21's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Apr 2012
    Post Count
    100,825
    How the would you know if that were the case? You glean that from your interactions with campus police?
    I've never interacted with campus police, only LAPD and CHP

  17. #667
    Believe.
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Jul 2005
    Post Count
    22,886
    I've never interacted with campus police, only LAPD and CHP
    And that makes you qualified to speak for police behavior across the country with a blanket statement?

    wishful thinking for the police state. good minion.

  18. #668
    Savvy Veteran spurraider21's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Apr 2012
    Post Count
    100,825
    And that makes you qualified to speak for police behavior across the country with a blanket statement?

    wishful thinking for the police state. good minion.
    what is the % of people killed by police vs people arrested by police

  19. #669
    Veteran cd021's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Aug 2012
    Post Count
    9,873
    When people surrender to the police without struggle, no matter what crime they committed, their chances of getting hurt and killed are slim to none. Garner didn't deserve death, but the situation escalated because he resisted arrest, and didn't allow them to cuff him. It's not an excuse for the outcome, but resisting initially only makes for a worse and more dangerous situation. When roof was pulled over in Florida, he identified himself and gave himself up
    Crawford was shot without warning by a plain clothes cop. He didn't even know what was going on. Garner wasn't resisting arrest, because he wasn't actually committing a crime (despite reports that he was illegally selling cigarettes, none were found on him), Are you saying Walter Scott deserved to be shot 8 times because he ran away from a cop?

    Roof still murdered 9 people and was considered armed and extremely dangerous, he fled the state not just the scene. He was rewarded with a trip to Burger King. If unarmed people who didn't committ major (or any crimes) get killed without warning or because they fled why wasn't Roof?

  20. #670
    Believe.
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Jul 2005
    Post Count
    22,886
    what is the % of people killed by police vs people arrested by police
    Begging the question? Supposed 2nd year law student and that is the best argument you can come up with?

    Let me help. An argument would go something along these lines:

    The % of people killed by police per arrest is X. Because X is <insert argument> then <insert conclusion>.

    You not having an answer to an arbitrary question is not an argument. Wishful thinking is for the stupid.
    Last edited by FuzzyLumpkins; 06-28-2015 at 02:18 AM. Reason: I said in english motherfucker

  21. #671
    Savvy Veteran spurraider21's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Apr 2012
    Post Count
    100,825
    Begging the question? Supposed 2nd year law student and that is the best argument you can come up with?

    Let me help. An argument would go something along these lines:

    The % of people killed by police per arrest is X. Because X is <insert argument> then <insert conclusion>.

    You not having an answer to an arbitrary question is not an argument. Wishful thinking is for the stupid.
    I asked a question. Wasn't an argument in itself. But you can keep tossing out names of fallacies as your primary method of argument. It's funny

  22. #672
    Savvy Veteran spurraider21's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Apr 2012
    Post Count
    100,825
    Crawford was shot without warning by a plain clothes cop. He didn't even know what was going on. Garner wasn't resisting arrest, because he wasn't actually committing a crime (despite reports that he was illegally selling cigarettes, none were found on him), Are you saying Walter Scott deserved to be shot 8 times because he ran away from a cop?

    Roof still murdered 9 people and was considered armed and extremely dangerous, he fled the state not just the scene. He was rewarded with a trip to Burger King. If unarmed people who didn't committ major (or any crimes) get killed without warning or because they fled why wasn't Roof?
    I never said any of them deserved death. In threads discussing those victims, I've said the opposite

  23. #673
    Believe.
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Jul 2005
    Post Count
    22,886
    I asked a question. Wasn't an argument in itself. But you can keep tossing out names of fallacies as your primary method of argument. It's funny
    My argument was that you have no basis to make a generalization about police behavior.

    Your response was to beg a question. It is either a fallacy or it is not. You trying to ridicule me into ignoring your illogical bull ? We both understand objectively why you are wrong.

  24. #674
    Kang Trill Clinton's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Jun 2010
    Post Count
    20,741
    the k9 shouldn't have resisted


  25. #675
    Believe.
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Jul 2005
    Post Count
    22,886

Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 2 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 2 guests)

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •