Saturday, November 2, 2019

Things Racist White Folks told us was real but was pure garbage pt. 2



Image result for white man's lies

By Xavier James




War on Drugs:

It was designed to  make you believe the government was looking out for your safety. In reality, they
were/ are bringing in drugs and locking you up for it. It was actually a war on black folks. White folks are the biggest drug addicts in America now; bar none. Has anyone declared war on drugs now and locked them up? No.

War in Iraq:

Look, if you went to Iraq and got a limb blown off behind those lies, I'm sorry. But you were lied to about WMD and the World Trade Center. 9-11 was an inside job and  the lack of accountability proves it. These wars are for resources; taking a smaller countries oil and other minerals.
 
Marijuana  is more Dangerous than Alcohol, Cocaine and Cigarettes:

B*llsh*t! Drunk Driving kills thousands annually. While weed kills no one. Unmixed marijuana actually has health benefits. Cocaine killed Len Bias back in the day. It overtook his heart. So, go back to the early 1950's when white folks said Marijuana makes white women want to have sex with black guys. That's why it was banned.


American Made Cars are Better:

Oh please. Name a car that lasts longer then Toyota? Name a Ford that the bumper didn't fall off ?


The Bible was Real

There isn't anyone white in the Bible but it was fed to all peoples of color; especially the slave.
The Bible is a book of stories about black that was stolen by Jews, propagated by whites and believed by N*ggas.


Greek Philosophy originated in Greece by Greeks:

Greek Philosophy is Stolen African Theology. Look up 'Stolen Legacy" By George GM James and find out the truth.





 

Wednesday, July 31, 2019

Things Racist White Folks Told Us were Real but was Actually Garbage! Part 1








By Xavier James




Popular culture can be like a zeitgeist; sucking up everything in its path. But some things are best exposed for what it is: B*llsh*t!



Al Qaeda/ISIS: Have you noticed that every terrorist attack that happened anytime and  anywhere we heard the words Al Qaeda or Al Qaeda affiliated. Now it's ISIS.  There's not that much Al Qaeda in the world!  And usually the only thing required  is that one of the members worships Allah. Now, they're (U.S. Government and their media controlled outlets) saying Nigerian terrorists who kidnapped those 250 girls are Al Qaeda associates....Please.  Now everything is ISIS, ISIS, ISIS. Sometimes brainwashed people get together and do things because they're stupid.



Mona Lisa: My God what an ugly broad! Only a white supremacist group can convince the world that the woman in that picture  was beautiful. A picture of Da vinci dressed like a woman must have really turned white men on. Why was she smiling? Because Davinci new American white males would fone over a picture of him in drag.





Bob Dylan was a singer: Bob Dylan is one of the worst singers in American history; and the most over rated. But the powers that be, who controlled the media, together pushed him to the top. I was listening to 'We Are the World' recently and every time his part comes up I cringe. He really f#*$s that song up! He had too much ego to bow out. He should have been thrown out of the studio.


A.I.D.S. Came From an African having Sex with a Monkey: Countless White owned and operated media outlets shamelessly spread that lie. And they poured it on thick,too. Fact is, bestiality not only originated with white societies but continues with white folks today. Furthermore, white folks were having so much sex with animals over the centuries that they had to make laws to stop it; damn. One white lady went off and lived with the gorillas and they found her stupid ass dead. Now, try and hold down a monkey and stick your penis in it. And see if it doesn't snap your damn *#@% off.


Skinny White Women were the Standard of Beauty: In what world would a boney, anorexic-bulimic white woman be any-bodies standard of beauty except in a white supremacist lie? All the other cultures around the world were solid, thick or lean, mean fighting machines. Once again white supremacists put out magazines and media which included modeling outlets telling the world that skin and bones was the ultimate woman. Oddly enough, behind closed doors most the men had black mistresses. Arnold swartszenigger and Strom Thurman had skinny bonny white women in public but behind closed doors they were both having unprotected sex with thick, black women. White women were so skinny and frail they couldn't even breast feed their own children years ago. They all had mammies to breast feed their children because their bodies were too frail and lacked proper nutrients. Today, toxic foods and steroids have made a lot  of white women overweight. And Julia Robert's skinny ass had to go somewhere and sit down. It's ironic don't you think?


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Thursday, April 25, 2019

An Important Message From USA Today

A USA Today Special Investigation


At least 85,000 law enforcement officers across the USA have been investigated or disciplined for misconduct over the past decade, an investigation by USA TODAY Network found.
Officers have beaten members of the public, planted evidence and used their badges to harass women. They have lied, stolen, dealt drugs, driven drunk and abused their spouses.


Despite their role as public servants, the men and women who swear an oath to keep communities safe can generally avoid public scrutiny for their misdeeds.
The records of their misconduct are filed away, rarely seen by anyone outside their departments. Police unions and their political allies have worked to put special protections in place ensuring some records are shielded from public view, or even destroyed.
Reporters from USA TODAY, its 100-plus affiliated newsrooms and the nonprofit Invisible Institute in Chicago have spent more than a year creating the biggest collection of police misconduct records
Obtained from thousands of state agencies, prosecutors, police departments and sheriffs, the records detail at least 200,000 incidents of alleged misconduct, much of it previously unreported. The records obtained include more than 110,000 internal affairs investigations by hundreds of individual departments and more than 30,000 officers who were decertified by 44 state oversight agencies.
Among the findings:
  • Most misconduct involves routine infractions, but the records reveal tens of thousands of cases of serious misconduct and abuse. They include 22,924 investigations of officers using excessive force, 3,145 allegations of rape, child molestation and other sexual misconduct and 2,307 cases of domestic violence by officers.
  • Dishonesty is a frequent problem. The records document at least 2,227 instances of perjury, tampering with evidence or witnesses or falsifying reports. There were 418 reports of officers obstructing investigations, most often when they or someone they knew were targets.
  • Less than 10% of officers in most police forces get investigated for misconduct. Yet some officers are consistently under investigation. Nearly 2,500 have been investigated on 10 or more charges. Twenty faced 100 or more allegations yet kept their badge for years.
The level of oversight varies widely from state to state. Georgia and Florida decertified thousands of police officers for everything from crimes to questions about their fitness to serve; other states banned almost none. That includes Maryland, home to the Baltimore Police Department, which regularly has been in the news for criminal behavior by police. Over nearly a decade, Maryland revoked the certifications of just four officers.


USA TODAY Network has gathered discipline and accountability records on more than 85,000 law enforcement officers and has started releasing them to the public. The first collection published is a list of more than 30,000 officers who have been decertified, essentially banned from the profession, in 44 states. Search our exclusive database by officer, department or state.   

We’re making those records public

The records USA TODAY and its partners gathered include tens of thousands of internal investigations, lawsuit settlements and secret separation deals.
They include names of at least 5,000 police officers whose credibility as witnesses has been called into question. These officers have been placed on Brady lists, created to track officers whose actions must be disclosed to defendants if their testimony is relied upon to prosecute someone.
USA TODAY plans to publish many of those records to give the public an opportunity to examine their police department and the broader issue of police misconduct, as well as to help identify decertified officers who continue to work in law enforcement.
Seth Stoughton, who worked as a police officer for 14 years and teaches law at the University of South Carolina, said expanding public access to those kinds of records is critical to keep good cops employed and bad cops unemployed.


“No one is in a position to assess whether an officer candidate can do the job well and the way that we expect the job to be done better than the officer’s former employer,” Stoughton said.
“Officers are public servants. They police in our name," he said. There is a "strong public interest in identifying how officers are using their public authority.”
Dan Hils, president of the Cincinnati Police Department’s branch of the Fraternal Order of Policemen union, said people should consider there are more than 750,000 law enforcement officers in the country when looking at individual misconduct data.
“The scrutiny is way tighter on police officers than most folks, and that’s why sometimes you see high numbers of misconduct cases,” Hils said. “But I believe that policemen tend to be more honest and more trustworthy than the average citizen.”
Hils said he has no issue with USA TODAY publishing public records of conduct, saying it is the news media’s “right and responsibility to investigate police and the authority of government. You’re supposed to be a watchdog.”
The first set of records USA TODAY is releasing is an exclusive nationwide database of about 30,000 people whom state governments banned from the profession by revoking their certification to be law enforcement officers.
For years, a private police organization has assembled such a list from more than 40 states and encourages police agencies to screen new hires. The list is kept secret from anyone outside law enforcement.
USA TODAY obtained the names of banned officers from 44 states by filing requests under state sunshine laws.


The information includes the officers’ names, the department they  worked for when the state revoked their certification and – in most cases – the reasons why.
The list is incomplete because of the absence of records from states such as California, which has the largest number of law enforcement officers in the USA.


a screenshot of a cell phone: 042219-banned-cops-charts_wide


Bringing important facts to policing debate

USA TODAY's collection of police misconduct records comes amid a nationwide debate over law enforcement tactics, including concern that some officers or agencies unfairly target minorities.
A series of killings of black people by police over the past five years in Ferguson, Missouri, Baltimore, Chicago, Sacramento, California, and elsewhere have sparked unrest and a reckoning that put pressure on cities and mayors to crack down on misconduct and abuses.
The Trump administration has backed away from more than a decade of Justice Department investigations and court actions against police departments it determined were deeply biased or corrupt.
In 2018, then-Attorney General Jeff Sessions said the Justice Department would leave policing the police to local authorities, saying federal investigations hurt crime fighting.
Laurie Robinson, co-chair of the 2014 White House Task Force on 21st Century Policing, said transparency about police conduct is critical to trust between police and residents.
“It’s about the people who you have hired to protect you,” she said. “Traditionally, we would say for sure that policing has not been a transparent entity in the U.S. Transparency is just a very key step along the way to repairing our relationships."

Help us investigate

The number of police agencies and officers in the USA is so large that the blind spots are vast. We need your help.
Though the records USA TODAY Network gathered are probably the most expansive ever collected, there is much more to be added. The collection includes several types of statewide data, but most misconduct is documented by individual departments.
Journalists obtained records from more than 700 law enforcement agencies, but the records are not complete for all of those agencies, and there are more than 18,000 police forces across the USA. The records requests were focused largely on the biggest 100 police agencies as well as clusters of smaller departments in surrounding areas, partly to examine movement of officers between departments in regions.


Share your stories of police misconduct with us

We want to hear from you if you believe you’ve encountered misconduct by a law enforcement officer or agency. You can send tips and records about an officer or agency to policetips@usatoday.com. Need anonymity or security? Send records and tips to us via SecureDrop.

USA TODAY aims to identify other media organizations willing to partner in gathering new records and sharing documents they've already gathered. The Invisible Institute, a journalism nonprofit in Chicago focused on police accountability, has done so for more than a year and contributed records from dozens of police departments.
Reporters need help getting documents – and other kinds of tips – from the public, watchdog groups, researchers and even officers and prosecutors themselves.
If you have access to citizen complaints about police, internal affairs investigation records, secret settlement deals between agencies and departing officers or anything that sheds light on how agencies police their officers, we want to hear from you.
Contributing: James Pilcher and Eric Litke.

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