Hey, they like killing people. Everybody’s got their thing, you know.
Blog
Bad Things in the SOTU
I’m blogging it here …
What now? Oh I see Nancy and all the Dems finally jump up to clap at the introduction of Juan Guiado. What a joke.
Brags he’s spent trillions on the military in conspiracy with the assembled.
Brags about the new Space Force. There goes your money, flying away…
That’s pretty cool about the 100 year old Tuskegee airman though.
Blah blah something something. Oh no, charter schools and vouchers. …
Sorry, I spaced out. Let me know when he gets to the stealing from Palestinians and starving Iranians part.
Out of Afghanistan? Yeah, I’ll believe it when I see it.
End.
Police: The Bad Guys
How can any proud American [East German] love and trust police at this point [1986]?
Zerohedge’s CoronaVirus Twitter Ban
Zerohedge, a famous financial news site, was banned from Twitter for posting “conspiracy theories” about the true cause of the Coronavirus. What proof did they have? Is the ban justified? Tune in!
Supply and Demand
Cops Mistake Autistic Child’s Seizure For Drug Use, Beat And Handcuff Him
But don’t worry, if we build more prisons and keep voting, we’ll have freedom some day.
“Cops Mistake Autistic Child’s Seizure For Drug Use, Beat And Handcuff Him”
How About Some Accountability
For cops that break the law and send innocent people to jail.
Jason Arbeeny, a fourteen-year veteran of the NYPD, was convicted of planting crack on a innocent couple, but avoided jail yesterday with a teary apology. “I can’t look at myself in the mirror anymore,”
Arbeeny’s attorney blamed his action on the “enormous pressure” of arrest quotas. It’s called flaking by the cops – planting drugs on innocent people to pump their arrest stats.
A former detective cooperating with prosecutors detailed in court the practice of “flaking,” or planting drugs on innocent people, which he admitted to doing in order to help a fellow officer whose buy-and-bust stats had been low. “As a detective, you still have a number to reach while you are in the narcotics division,” Stephen Anderson explained, admitting that “multiple times” he’d observed the practice of “taking someone who was seemingly not guilty of a crime and laying the drugs on them.” Asked about the damage inflicted on the victim, Anderson said, “It was something I was seeing a lot of, whether it was from supervisors or undercovers and even investigators,” and added callously, “It’s almost like you have no emotion with it, that they attach the bodies to it, they’re going to be out of jail tomorrow anyway; nothing is going to happen to them anyway.” Eight cops were busted in Brooklyn and Queens for such arrests, leading a federal judge to call out “widespread falsification” at the hands of the NYPD.
Cry me a river for these corrupt cops.
Take Some Responsibility
It’s widespread citizen support for the War on Drugs that makes this possible in the first place.