Sunday, August 28, 2011

Backpack Farms

Download Training Manual

More than 14 million people in the Horn of Africa are in need of international food aid. At the same time, Africa has the agricultural potential not only to feed the continent, but also the world.

During the 2010 World Food Confernece, Kofi Annan said "improving the productivity, profitability, and sustainability of smallholder farming is the main pathway out of poverty in using agriculture for development."

In response to these efforts, the Backpack Farm Agriculture Program (BPF) is designed as an all-in-one canvas backpack packaged with all the essential agriculture inputs needed for small landholders to standardize both the quality and quantity of agriculture production during an annual growing season, to mirror semi-commercial rates of production. Most important, farmers receive training on how best to use the backpack tools as well as build their core capacity.

The Backpack Farm Agricultural Program (BPF) provides not just biological farming supplements and training but a complete 5 phase program ensuring smallholder farmers to increase their harvests and improve their qualities of life. Together, it is possible to achieve sustainable linkages in food production, value chains, credible finance, income generation, social and ecological domains.

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An artist's incendiary painting is his bank statement

Bob Pool, Los Angeles Times, August 28, 2011:


Alex Schaefer's depiction of a Chase branch going up in flames drew the attention of L.A. police, who asked if he was a terrorist. He said the work was a metaphor for the havoc banking practices have caused the economy.

LA 167475.ME.0824.bank-painting.1.GEM.jpg


Standing before an easel on a Van Nuys sidewalk, Alex Schaefer dabbed paint onto a canvas.

"There you have it," he said. "Inflammatory art."

The 22-by-28-inch en plein air oil painting is certainly hot enough to inflame Los Angeles police.

Twice they've come to investigate why the 41-year-old Eagle Rock artist is painting an image of a bank building going up in flames.

Schaefer had barely added the orange-and-yellow depiction of fire shooting from the roof of a Chase Bank branch when police rolled up to the corner of Van Nuys Boulevard and Sylvan Street on July 30.

"They told me that somebody had called and said they felt threatened by my painting," Schaefer said.

"They said they had to find out my intention. They asked if I was a terrorist and was I going to follow through and do what I was painting."

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Latino-indigenous Mexican divide stirs Calif. town

GOSIA WOZNIACKA of AP, 8/13/11:



GREENFIELD, Calif. —Down wind-swept El Camino Real, where women in shawls push strollers and old men in cowboy hats linger on dusty benches, farmworkers spill from white contractor buses. From the main drag, it's only blocks to the fields and vineyards that sustain this peaceful town in the Salinas Valley, "the Salad Bowl of the World."

But there's tension in this part of John Steinbeck Country.

Nearly all of Greenfield's 16,300 people are Latino - and yet an ugly conflict has been brewing between longer-time residents and newcomers from another part of Mexico. Established residents say a massive influx of migrants from the Mexican state of Oaxaca has changed their city for the worse.

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Saturday, August 27, 2011

CONFIRMED: Libya War is CIA Op 30 Years in the Making

Tony Cartalucci at Prisonplanet.com, Aug 27, 2011:




Alternative media activist David Icke, who has been warning about the false nature of the “Arab Spring” since it began over six months ago, has pointed out an astounding “flashback” regarding an August 3, 1981 Newsweek article titled, “A Plan to Overthrow Kaddafi.”

‘The details of the plan were sketchy, but it seemed to be a classic CIA destabilization campaign. One element was a “disinformation” program designed to embarrass Kaddafi and his government. Another was the creation of a “counter government” to challenge his claim to national leadership. A third — potentially the most risky — was an escalating paramilitary campaign, probably by disaffected Libyan nationals, to blow up bridges, conduct small-scale guerrilla operations and demonstrate that Kaddafi was opposed by an indigenous political force.”

….

Quite obviously this plan has been executed verbatim with the necessary addition of a NATO intervention to rescue the above stated “paramilitary” campaign from Libyan security forces – a contigency plan explicitly spelled out in another Wall Street-London subsidized, signed confession, Brookings Institution’s “Which Path to Persia?”

Using Military Force to Assist Popular Revolutions, page 109-110 (page 122-123 of the PDF): ”Consequently, if the United States ever succeeds in sparking a revolt against the clerical regime, Washington may have to consider whether to provide it with some form of military support to prevent Tehran from crushing it.” ”This requirement means that a popular revolution in Iran does not seem to fit the model of the “velvet revolutions” that occurred elsewhere. The point is that the Iranian regime may not be willing to go gently into that good night; instead, and unlike so many Eastern European regimes, it may choose to fight to the death. In those circumstances, if there is not external military assistance to the revolutionaries, they might not just fail but be massacred.


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Saturday, August 20, 2011

Frénésie de pillages: En buvant une bière bon marché, je pensais à la Réserve Fédérale

Traduit par Dominique Muselet pour Le Grand Soir, 20 août 2011:



Allez, je vous emmène au McGlinchey, le bar le moins cher du centre ville. Quand j’y suis allé pour la première fois en 1982, je n’avais que 18 ans et pour avoir l’air d’avoir l’âge légal j’avais mis un vieux veston d’homme que j’avais payé deux dollars dans une solderie. Dans le bar, j’avais découvert avec émerveillement qu’une pression ne valait que 50 cents et un hotdog 25 cents. Aujourd’hui, ils coûtent respectivement 1,25 dollar et 75 cents. Le bar est toujours très bon marché comme je les aime, mais c’est l’inflation.

L’inflation est la déflation de vos dollars. Votre argent perd de la valeur encore, encore et encore et se déprécie au fur et à mesure que la Réserve Fédérale injecte plus de dollars dans le système bancaire. Et puisque les plus grandes banques sont propriétaires de la Réserve Fédérale, la Fed est le système bancaire. Chaque fois que ces banques se créent des liquidités en vous accordant des prêts à intérêts, vos dollars perdent un peu plus de valeur.

Bien qu’elle soit considérée par la plupart des Etasuniens comme une organisation gouvernementale, la Réserve fédérale reconnaît elle-même qu’elle est "une entité indépendante à l’intérieur du gouvernement qui a en même temps des objectifs publiques et des aspects privés." En tant que "entité indépendante" la Fed n’est contrôlée ni par la présidence ni par le Congrès. Pourtant son conseil d’administration est nommé par le président des Etats-Unis pour 14 ans (!), un de ses membres seulement étant remplacé tous les deux ans. Loin des projecteurs ces hommes de l’ombre restent en poste plus longtemps que tous nos présidents, sénateurs et membres du Congrès et sont certainement plus puissants puisqu’ils représentent les banques qui financent tous nos politiciens qui sont leur abjects serviteurs. La Fed a aussi le pouvoir de provoquer l’inflation et la déflation de l’économie mondiale, de l’étrangler, la violer et la saigner à mort. Avec un tel pouvoir, elle se moque pas mal qu’un audit du Congrès, le premier jamais effectué, ne dévoile qu’elle a prêté 16 100 milliards de dollars à Citigroup, Morgan Stanley, Merrill Lynch et Bank of America, ainsi qu’à des banques anglaises, allemandes, suisses, françaises et belges. La somme astronomique dépasse notre dette nationale et même notre PIB, alors de quelle partie des enfers ou de Foggy Bottom (*) venait-elle ? D’aucune ! Elle s’est matérialisée comme par miracle. Avec une puissance quasi-divine, la Fed peut faire apparaître des liquidités et donc à peu près tout ce qu’elle veut. Ici un domaine, là un yacht et aujourd’hui il suffit de frapper quelques touches sur un clavier pour engendrer un tout nouvel esclave ou beaucoup, beaucoup d’esclaves.

De manière subconsciente - Papa envoie-nous de l’argent - les personnes infantiles croient que chaque nouvelle injection de dollars dans le système profite à tous, mais si l’assouplissement quantitatif (**) était une solution magique, la république de Weimar et Zimbabwe seraient des exemples de réussite. Si on pouvait résoudre tous nos problèmes en créant de la monnaie, alors pourquoi ne pas rembourser toutes nos dettes tout de suite avec des billets tout neufs en s’épargnant le douloureux règlement des intérêts ? Pourquoi ne pas relancer l’économie en distribuant à chaque citoyen un gros chèque ? Pas 600 pauvres dollars comme a fait Bush, mais un milliard de dollars à chaque homme, femme, enfant et chien ? On ne peut pas le faire parce que nos créditeurs ne sont pas idiots. Comme l’a dit Vladimir Poutine en parlant de nous : "Ils vivent comme des parasites sur le dos de l’économie mondiale grâce au monopole du dollar." C’est pourquoi cela n’a ni rassuré ni amusé la Russie, la Chine, le Japon, le Brésil et tous nos autres créditeurs quand Allan Greenspan a dit que "les USA peuvent rembourser toutes leurs dettes parce qu’ils peuvent toujours imprimer de la monnaie pour le faire."

Avant la Réserve Fédérale nous disait combien de dollars étaient en circulation mais en mars 2006 ils ont arrêté de le faire. Un homme sain d’esprit en déduirait qu’ils veulent nous cacher le taux de l’inflation, mais pas du tout, cette soudaine opacité n’était qu’une mesure de réduction des coûts comme nous l’a expliqué la Fed, cette prodigue pompe à fric.

Pour vous rendre compte à quelle vitesse votre dollar se déprécie, regardez simplement le cours de l’or. En 1982 une once d’or valait 500 dollars. Aujourd’hui elle atteint 1800 dollars. La hausse du cours de l’or montre aussi que les gens perdent confiance dans leur système économique, politique et social et que le futur proche leur paraît incertain. Quand l’or grimpe, la valeur de cette maison baisse. Promenez-vous dans les quartiers vietnamiens et cambodgiens, vous verrez qu’un nombre incroyable de bijouteries vendent de l’or. Ceux qui ont été traumatisés par la guerre et la dictature ne font pas confiance aux banques ni même à la monnaie, mais croient que l’or seul leur permettra de survivre en cas de bouleversement sociétal.

Mais si le dollar sombre, pourquoi en faire des réserves ? D’abord les gouvernements étrangers doivent avoir des dollars pour acheter du pétrole car aucun pays ne peut vendre de pétrole autrement qu’en dollars. Les seuls à ne pas respecter cette règle sont l’Iran et le Venezuela. En acceptant des yuans chinois contre leur pétrole, ils vivent sous la menace perpétuelle des représailles de Washington. Si les euros, les yuans et les roubles étaient acceptés en paiement du pétrole, les USA ne seraient plus indispensables et plus personne ne serait obligé de nous donner de vraies marchandises en échange d’un papier-monnaie en perte de valeur constante.

L’arrangement des pétrodollars est imposé par l’armée étasunienne. Comme Saddam Hussein and Mouammar Kadhafi s’en sont aperçus, les USA font pleuvoir des bombes sur ceux qui essaient d’échapper à ce racket. Kadhafi voulait nationaliser les champs de pétrole de la Libye. Il proposait aussi une monnaie commune à l’Afrique pour que les nations africaines soient libérées de la tyrannie du dollar dans leur commerce entre elles, mais une telle insolence ne pouvait pas rester impunie. Les USA vont vous tenir un pistolet sur la tempe pour s’assurer que vous continuez à consommer ses dollars.

En faisant des profits avec les intérêts, les banques fabriquent de la dette pour vous et moi et pour le gouvernement lui-même. Le système surnage parce que nous nous noyons et pour que nous continuions à dépenser plus que nous gagnons, il suscite en nous des désirs fous. D’où la séduction qui nous assaille sans cesse de partout. Ne réfléchissez pas, ne pensez pas. Abandonnez-vous à la luxure. En 1982, il y avait seulement une télévision dans le bar McGlinchey, maintenant il y en a quatre. Au son d’une musique assourdissante, les réclames défilent en scintillant au dessus de nos têtes. Achetez ci, achetez ça, baise-moi ou plutôt fais l’amour au mirage que je suis.

Les vertus traditionnelles comme la prudence et le self-contrôle sont jetées par dessus bord et sont remplacées par un appétit insatiable qui engendre frustration, ennui, insensibilité et violence. En 2009, à cinq rues d’ici, une flash mob a attaqué un homme de 56 ans qui rentrait du travail à vélo. On l’a battu jusqu’à l’inconscience et on lui a volé sa carte de crédit. Un des coupables a alors acheté pour plus de 5000 dollars de produits Ralph Lauren, Giorgio Armani et autres marques à la mode. Il s’est fait livrer le butin chez lui et c’est ce qui a conduit à l’arrestation de Stephen Lyde, un jeune homme de 21 ans. Bien qu’il soit pauvre et ignore clairement comment fonctionne une carte de crédit, Lyde enviait toutes les belles choses que possèdent ceux qui sont en haut de l’échelle et comme beaucoup d’autres il était prêt à se les procurer par la violence. A la différence des escrocs en cols blancs cependant, Lyde, dépouillait ses victimes directement. Si les USA se lançaient dans une guerre de plus, la majorité des détenteurs d’actions ne se réjouiraient-ils pas ?

Notre système bancaire fait des profits à partir de rien, nous prête de l’argent qu’il n’a pas et avec le soutien de la force de frappe de Washington, fait en sorte que ce que nous possédons vaille de moins en moins cher pendant que nous travaillons de plus en plus pour rembourser et rembourser sans fin des prêts avec des intérêts composés, des pénalités, des honoraires et tout ce qu’ils ont envie d’y rajouter encore. La Réserve Fédérale n’est donc pas une institution avec "des objectifs publiques et des aspects privés", mais exactement le contraire. Comme notre gouvernement fédéral lui-même, c’est un cartel dont les impitoyables objectifs privés sont cachés derrière une façade publique.

La Fed a des objectifs privés et des aspects publiques et aussi longtemps que ce parasite contrôlera nos bourses et notre gouvernement, vous pouvez vous attendre à plus de guerres, plus de faillites et de saisies, à une inflation de plus en plus importante et à une intensification des frénésies de pillages de toutes sortes.






[Original]



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Friday, August 19, 2011

Pienso en la Reserva Federal de EE.UU. y me tomo una cerveza barata

Traducido del inglés para Rebelión por Germán Leyens:




Oye, vayamos a McGlinchey’s, el bar más barato en Center City. Cuando entré a ese lugar por primera vez en 1982 tenía solo 18 años, de modo que para parecer más legal, me puse una chaqueta de viejo, comprada en una tienda de segunda mano por dos dólares. Adentro, me encantó descubrir que un vaso de cerveza de barril Rolling Rock costaba solo 50 centavos, y un perrito caliente 25. Ahora valen 1,25 dólares y 75 centavos, respectivamente. Ese bar de mala muerte, mi clase, sigue siendo baratísimo, pero así es la inflación.

La inflación son tus dólares que se desvalorizan. Es tu dinero que cae, cae, cae, depreciándose a medida que la Reserva Federal inyecta más dólares a nuestro sistema bancario. Y ya que los mayores bancos son los dueños de la Reserva Federal, la Fed es el sistema bancario. Cada vez que esos bancos se otorgan dinero para prestártelo con intereses, tus dólares pierden un poco de valor.

Aunque es percibida por la mayoría de los estadounidenses como una agencia gubernamental, incluso la Reserva Federal admite que es “una entidad independiente dentro del gobierno, que tiene propósitos públicos y aspectos privados”. Como “entidad independiente” la Fed no sufre de control presidencial o de supervisión del Congreso. Aunque su Consejo de Gobernadores es nombrado por el presidente de EE.UU., cada uno de sus siete miembros sirve durante 14 años (¡!) y solo un miembro se reemplaza cada dos años. Ocultos de la atención pública, esos sospechosos señores son más durables que todos nuestros presidentes, senadores y congresistas, y ciertamente más poderosos, ya que representan a bancos que financian a todos nuestros políticos, sus abyectos sirvientes. La Fed también puede inflacionar, deflacionar, estrangular, violar o desangrar la economía global. Con tanta influencia, no le importa que una auditoría del Congreso en 2011, la primera, haya logrado descubrir que en menos de tres años la Fed prestó 16,1 billones [millones de millones] de dólares a Citygroup, Morgan Stanley, Merrill Lynch y Bank of America, así como a bancos del Reino Unido, Alemania, Suiza, Francia y Bélgica. Esta suma astronómica es mayor que nuestra deuda nacional o incluso que el PIB, de modo que, ¿de dónde diablos provino? De ninguna parte. Apareció sin rastro. Con poder divino, la Fed puede exorcizar la vida con dinero, y por lo tanto casi todo lo demás. Aquí una mansión, allí un yate, y ahora, con unas pocas pulsaciones en el teclado, un esclavo de primera mano, ¡o muchos, muchos esclavos!

Inconscientemente el pensamiento, papito, envíanos dinero, los infantiles ven cada gran aumento de suministro de dinero como dólares que se derraman por el sistema, beneficiando a todos, pero si la distensión cuantitativa fuera una bala mágica, Weimar y Zimbabue serían historias exitosas. Si pudiéramos monetizar un camino para salir de líos, ¿por qué no pagar todas nuestras deudas ahora mismo con dinero recién producido y evitar los dolorosos pagos de intereses? ¿Por qué no reanimar esta economía enviando un inmenso cheque a cada ciudadano? No unos miserables 600 dólares, como hizo Bush, ¿sino mil millones de dólares a cada hombre, mujer, niño y perro? No es posible porque nuestros acreedores no son tontos. Como dijo Vladimir Putin de nosotros: “Viven como parásitos de la economía global y su monopolio del dólar”. Por lo tanto Rusia, China, Japón, Brasil y los demás numerosos acreedores de nuestro país no se sintieron reasegurados ni divertidos cuando Allan Greenspan explicó que “EE.UU. puede pagar cualquier deuda que tiene porque siempre podemos imprimir dinero para hacerlo”.

La Reserva Federal solía decirnos cuántos dólares había en circulación, pero en marzo de 2006 dejó de hacerlo. Un hombre cuerdo deduciría que quería ocultar cuánta inflación estaba generando, pero no, esa repentina opacidad fue simplemente una medida de reducción de costes, explicó la Fed, la pródiga Fed que chorreaba dinero.

Para comprender de inmediato cuánto se ha depreciado tu dólar, basta con considerar el precio del oro. En 1982, una onza valía menos de 500 dólares. Ahora ha sobrepasado los 1.800. El aumento del precio del oro también indica que la gente está perdiendo confianza en su sistema económico, político y social, y que teme por el futuro inmediato. Cuando se dispara el oro, la casa se va cayendo. Id a algún vecindario vietnamita o camboyano y veréis una cantidad extraordinaria de negocios de joyería que venden oro. La gente traumatizada por la guerra y la dictadura no confía en los bancos o incluso en el dinero, sino solo en el oro para que le ayude a sobrevivir cualquier desorden social.

De modo que si el dólar está bajando, ¿para qué acumularlo? Ante todo, los gobiernos extranjeros tienen que tener dólares para comprar petróleo, porque ningún país puede vender petróleo por otra cosa que dólares. Los únicos renegados de esta regla son Irán y Venezuela. Al aceptar yuanes chinos por petróleo, han sido constantemente amenazados por Washington. Si euros, yuanes, yens, o rublos fueran generalmente aceptados por petróleo, EE.UU. se convertiría rápidamente en irrelevante y nadie tendría que enviarnos productos reales por nuestro papel cada vez más despreciable.

Este sistema del petrodólar ha sido impuesto por los militares de EE.UU. Como descubrieron Sadam Hussein y Muamar Gadafi, EE.UU. hará llover bombas sobre las cabezas de tu pueblo si tratas de escapar de este chanchullo. Gadafi quiso nacionalizar los campos petroleros de Libia. También propuso una moneda común para África. En su comercio entre ellos, los países africanos podrían entonces liberarse de la tiranía del dólar, pero una insolencia semejante no podía pasar sin castigo. EE.UU. te pondría una pistola en la sien para asegurarse de que sigas tragando su moneda.

Al ganar dinero con intereses, los bancos generan deuda para ti y para mí, y para el propio gobierno. El sistema se rescata para que no nos ahoguemos y para asegurar que sigamos gastando más allá de nuestros medios, tiene que hacer que deliremos con deseos. De ahí la interminable seducción por dondequiera se mire. No pienses o reflexiones. Deseo. En 1982, había solo un televisor en McGlinchey’s. Ahora hay cuatro. Mientras resuena la música, los incesantes señuelos parpadean sobre nuestras cabezas. Compra esto, compra eso, jódeme, o más bien, ama mi espejismo.

Virtudes tradicionales como prudencia y autocontrol han sido descartadas y reemplazadas por un apetito insaciable que alimenta la frustración, el aburrimiento, el adormecimiento y la violencia. En 2009, a cinco cuadras de aquí, una turba repentina atacó a un hombre de 56 años que iba del trabajo a su casa. Lo golpearon hasta dejarlo inconsciente y le robaron sus tarjetas de crédito. Uno de los perpetradores se compró entonces 5.000 dólares de mercancías de Ralph Lauren, Giorgio Armani y otras de lujo. Ordenó que el botín se entregases en su casa, y así capturaron a Stephen Lyde de veintiún años. Aunque pobre, y obviamente sin experiencia con una tarjeta de crédito, Lyde deseaba todas las cosas finas que poseían los de arriba, y exactamente como muchos de ellos, estaba dispuesto a la violencia. A diferencia de los pillos elegantes, sin embargo, Lyde golpeó directamente a su víctima. Si EE.UU. fuera a comenzar una guerra más, ¿cuántos accionistas se alegrarían?

Nuestro sistema bancarios gana dinero de la nada, nos presta dinero que ni siquiera tiene, y con Washington como su protector y vigilante, asegura que poseamos cada vez menos, mientras trabajamos más y más para hacer un pago tras otro interminable pago, con interés compuesto, multas, honorarios y todo lo demás que se le ocurre que puede seguir agregando. La Reserva Federal, por lo tanto, no es una institución con “propósitos públicos y aspectos privados”, sino todo lo contrario. Como nuestro propio gobierno federal, es un cártel con objetivos privados implacables ocultos tras una fachada pública.

La Fed tiene propósitos privados y aspectos públicos, y mientras ese parásito controle nuestras billeteras y nuestro gobierno, podemos contar con más guerras, bancarrota, embargos, una inflación cada vez más severa y frenéticos saqueos de todo tipo.






[Original]


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Thursday, August 18, 2011

An audio file

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of Ken Rose interviewing me on 8/15/11.


I highly urge you to check out all of Ken's interviews. With Tainter, Heinberg, Kunstler, Orlov, Zerzan and Zinn, et al, I can't think of a more impressive lineup, with yours truly merely a mushroom among oaks. Oh, well.





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Wednesday, August 17, 2011

Police Chief Confirms Detaining Photographers Within Departmental Policy

Greggory Moore in Long Beach Post, 8/15/11:




A photograph shot by Sander Roscoe Wolff on June 30 before he was detained by Long Beach Police


9:45am | Police Chief Jim McDonnell has confirmed that detaining photographers for taking pictures "with no apparent esthetic value" is within Long Beach Police Department policy.

McDonnell spoke for a follow-up story on a June 30 incident in which Sander Roscoe Wolff, a Long Beach resident and regular contributor to Long Beach Post, was detained by Officer Asif Kahn for taking pictures of a North Long Beach refinery.1

"If an officer sees someone taking pictures of something like a refinery," says McDonnell, "it is incumbent upon the officer to make contact with the individual." McDonnell went on to say that whether said contact becomes detainment depends on the circumstances the officer encounters.

McDonnell says that while there is no police training specific to determining whether a photographer's subject has "apparent esthetic value," officers make such judgments "based on their overall training and experience" and will generally approach photographers not engaging in "regular tourist behavior."

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Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Looting Frenzies

As published at OpEd News, Common Dreams, CounterPunch, Dissident Voice, Intrepid Report, Rebelión and Le Grand Soir, 8/16/11:






Hey, let’s go into McGlinchey’s, the cheapest bar in Center City. When I first entered this place in 1982, I was only 18, so to make myself look somewhat legal, I wore an old man jacket, bought at a thrift store for 2 bucks. Inside, I was thrilled to discover that a draft of Rolling Rock was only 50 cents, and a hotdog 25. Now they are $1.25 and 75 cents, respectively. This low life bar, my kind, is still dirt cheap, but that’s inflation for you.

Inflation is your dollars deflating. It’s your money going down, down, down, depreciating as the Federal Reserve injects more bucks into our banking system. And since the biggest banks own the Federal Reserve, the Fed is the banking system. Each time these banks give cash to themselves to be lent to you at interest, your dollars become a bit more worthless.

Though perceived by most Americans as a governmental agency, even the Federal Reserve admits that it is “an independent entity within the government, having both public purposes and private aspects.” As “an independent entity,” the Fed does not suffer from Presidential control or Congressional oversight. Though its Board of Governor is appointed by the President of the United States, each of its seven members serves for 14 years [!], with only one member replaced every two years. Out of the limelight, these shady gentlemen are more enduring than all of our Presidents, Senators and Congressmen, and certainly more powerful, since they represent banks that bankroll all of our politicians, who are their abject servants. The Fed can also inflate, deflate, strangle, rape or bleed dry the global economy. With such leverage, it does not care that a 2011 Congressional audit, the first ever, managed to discover that in less than three years the Fed lent $16.1 trillion to Citigroup, Morgan Stanley, Merrill Lynch and Bank of America, as well as banks in the U.K., Germany, Switzerland, France and Belgium. This astronomical sum is greater than our national debt or even the GDP, so where in hell or Foggy Bottom did it come from? Nowhere. From thin air. With Godlike power, the Fed can just conjure up cash, and thus just about everything else, into being. Here a mansion, there a yacht, and now, with a few keyboard strokes, a brand new slave, or many, many slaves!

Subconsciously thinking, Daddy, send us money, the infantile sees each gross increase in the money supply as dollars sloshing through the system, benefiting everyone, but if quantitative easing were a magic bullet, Weimar and Zimbabwe would be success stories. If we could just monetize our way out of trouble, then why not pay all of our debts right now with newly minted cash, and bypass the painful interest payments? Why not revive this economy by sending each citizen a huge check? Not 600 piddly bucks, like Bush did, but a billion dollars for each man, woman, child and dog? It can’t be done because our creditors aren’t dummies. As Vladimir Putin said about us, “They are living like parasites off the global economy and their monopoly of the dollar.” So Russia, China, Japan, Brazil and our many other creditors were neither reassured nor amused when Allan Greenspan explained that “the U.S. can pay any debt that it has because we can always print money to do that.”

The Federal Reserve used to tell us how many dollars were in circulation, but in March of 2006, it stopped. A sane man would deduce that it wanted to hide how much inflation it was generating, but, no, this sudden opacity was merely a cost cutting measure, so explained the Fed, the profligate, money pumping Fed.

To grasp immediately how much your dollar has depreciated, look no further than the price of gold. In 1982, an ounce was less than $500. Now it has breached $1,800. Surging gold price also indicates that people are losing faith in their economic, political and social system, and that they fear the immediate future. When gold shoots up, this house is coming down. Wander into any Vietnamese or Cambodian neighborhood, you’ll see an inordinate number of jewelry stores selling gold. People who have been traumatized by war and dictatorship don’t trust in banks or even money, but only gold to help them survive any societal upheaval.

So if the dollar is sinking, why accumulate it? First off, foreign governments must have dollars to buy oil, since no country can sell petroleum for anything but the dollar. The only renegades to this rule are Iran and Venezuela. Accepting Chinese yuans for oil, they have constantly been threatened by Washington. If euros, yens, yuans or rubles were generally accepted for oil, the United States would quickly become irrelevant and no one would have to send us real products for our increasingly worthless paper.

This petro dollar arrangement is enforced by the U.S. military. As Saddam Hussein and Muammar Gaddafi have found out, America will rain bombs on your people’s heads if you try to escape from this racket. Gaddafi wanted to nationalize Libya’s oil fields. He also proposed a common currency for Africa. In their trade with each other, African countries could then be free from the tyranny of the dollar, but such insolence could not go unpunished. America will hold a gun to your head to make sure you go on biting its bucks.

Making money on interest, banks generate debt for you and me, and for the government itself. This system is buoyed up from us drowning, and to keep us spending beyond our means, it must make us delirious with wants. Hence, this nonstop seduction everywhere you look. Don’t think or reflect. Lust. In 1982, there was only one television in McGlinchey’s. Now, there are four. As music blares, the unceasing come-ons flicker above our heads. Buy this, buy that, screw me, or rather, make love to my mirage.

Traditional virtues such as prudence and self control have been jettisoned, to be replaced by an insatiable appetite that breeds frustration, boredom, numbness and violence. In 2009, five blocks from here, a flash mob attacked a 56-year-old man riding home from work. They beat him unconscious and stole his credit cards. One of the perpetrators then bought over $5,000 of Ralph Lauren, Giorgio Armani and other high-end merchandises. He had the loot delivered to his front door, so that’s how twenty-one-year-old Stephen Lyde was caught. Though poor and obviously inexperienced with a credit card, Lyde was lusting after all the finer things possessed by those at the very top, and just like many of them, he was willing to commit violence. Unlike white collar crooks, however, Lyde pounced on his victim directly. If America were to start yet another war, how many stockholders would rejoice?

Our banking system makes money out of nothing, lends us cash that it doesn’t even have, and with Washington as its protector and enforcer, ensures that what we own is worth less and less, while we must work more and more to make payment after unending payment, with compounding interest, penalties, fees and whatever else it feels like tagging on at the end. The Federal Reserve, then, is not an institution with “public purposes and private aspects,” but exactly the opposite. Like our federal government itself, it is a cartel with ruthless, private objectives hidden behind a public façade.

The Fed has private purposes and public aspects, and as long as this parasite controls our wallets and government, you can count on more wars, bankruptcies, foreclosures, increasingly severe inflation and looting frenzies of every kind.






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Sunday, August 14, 2011

Riots and the Underclass

Alexander Cockburn in CounterPunch, 8/12/11:




What’s a riot without looting? We want it, they’ve got it! You’d think from the press that looting was alien to British tradition, imported by immigrants more recent than the Normans. Not so. Gavin Mortimer, author of The Blitz, had an amusing piece in the First Post about the conduct of Britons at the time of their Finest Hour:

“It didn't take long for a hardcore of opportunists to realise there were rich pickings available in the immediate aftermath of a raid – and the looting wasn't limited to civilians.

“In October 1940 Winston Churchill ordered the arrest and conviction of six London firemen caught looting from a burned-out shop to be hushed up by Herbert Morrison, his Home Secretary. The Prime Minister feared that if the story was made public it would further dishearten Londoners struggling to cope with the daily bombardments…

“The looting was often carried out by gangs of children organized by a Fagin figure; he would send them into bombed-out houses the morning after a raid with orders to target coins from gas meters and display cases containing First World War medals. In April 1941 Lambeth juvenile court dealt with 42 children in one day, from teenage girls caught stripping clothes from dead bodies to a seven-year-old boy who had stolen five shillings from the gas meter of a damaged house. In total, juvenile crime accounted for 48 per cent of all arrests in the nine months between September 1940 and May 1941 and there were 4,584 cases of looting.

“Joan Veazey, whose husband was a vicar in Kennington, south London, wrote in her diary after one raid in 1940: "The most sickening thing was to see people like vultures, picking up things and taking them away. I didn't like to feel that English people would do this, but they did."

“Perhaps the most shameful episode of the whole Blitz occurred on the evening of March 8 1941 when the Cafe de Paris in Piccadilly was hit by a German bomb. The cafe was one of the most glamorous night spots in London, the venue for off-duty officers to bring their wives and girlfriends, and within minutes of its destruction the looters moved in.

"Some of the looters in the Cafe de Paris cut off the people's fingers to get the rings," recalled Ballard Berkeley, a policeman during the Blitz who later found fame as the 'Major' in Fawlty Towers. Even the wounded in the Cafe de Paris were robbed of their jewellery amid the confusion and carnage.”

A revolution is not a tea party, sniffed Lenin, but he should have added that it often starts off with a big party. Perhaps he was acknowledging that when he said a revolution was “a festival of the oppressed.” After the storming of the Winter Palace in October 1917 everyone was drunk for three days, conduct of which the prissy Vladimir Illich no doubt heartily disapproved.

The riots in London last week started in Tottenham in an area with the highest unemployment in London, in response to the police shooting a young black man, in a country where black people are 26 times more likely to stopped and searched by the cops than whites. Stop-and-searches are allowed under Section 60 of the Criminal Justice and Public Order Act 1994, introduced to deal with football hooligans. It allows police to search anyone in a designated area without specific grounds for suspicion. Use of Section 60 has risen more than 300 per cent between 2005 and last year. In 1997/98 there were 7,970 stop-and-searches, increasing to 53,250 in 2007/08 and 149,955 in 2008/09. Between 2005/06 and 2008/09 the number of Section 60 searches of black people rose by more than 650 per cent.

The day after the heaviest night of rioting I saw Darcus Howe, originally from Trinidad and former editor of Race and Class, now a broadcaster and columnist, being questioned by a snotty BBC interviewer, Fiona Armstrong. We ran it last week as website of the day. Howe linked the riots to upsurges by the oppressed across the Middle East and then remarked that when he’d recently asked his son how many times he’d been stopped and searched by the police, his boy answered that it had happened too often for him to count. To which point Ms Armstrong, plainly irked by the trend in the conversation in which Howe was conspicuously failing in his assigned task – namely to denounce the rioters – said nastily, ““You are not a stranger to riots yourself I understand, are you? You have taken part in them yourself?”

“I have never taken part in a single riot. I've been on demonstrations that ended up in a conflict,” the 67-year old Howe answered indignantly. “Have some respect for an old West Indian negro and stop accusing me of being a rioter because you wanted for me to get abusive. You just sound idiotic — have some respect.” The BBC later apologized to those offended by what it agreed was “a poorly phrased question.”

Back in 1981, I interviewed Howe in his Race and Class office after the Brixton and Toxteth riots. Overweening police power and state racism were fuelling unofficial racism, with innumerable murderous attacks on blacks in a Britain ravaged by Margaret Thatcher’s economic policies. At the start of April, 1981, the police launched Operation Swamp 81 to combat street crime. More than 1,000 people were stopped and questioned in the first four days. The uprising in Brixton began on April 9 and lasted through April 11. There were 4,000 police in the area and 286 people arrested. By the weekend of July 10-12 riots were taking place in 30 towns and cities – black and white youths together and in some case white youths alone. They were scenes, as Lord Scarman said of Brixton, “of violence and disorder… the like of which had not previously been seen in this century in Britain.

“The riots opened up an entirely new political ethos,” Howe said to me back then. “To understand the organizational stages that we are moving to, it is essential to know that in the late 1960s there were black-power organizations in almost every city in this country. A combination of repression – not as sharp as in the United States – but repression British style and Harold Wilson’s political cynicism undermined that movement. What he did was offer a lot of money to the black community, which set up all kinds of advice centers and projects for this and projects for that. So, in some black communities, if you have a headache somebody is onto you saying, ‘Well, look, I have a project with blacks with headaches.’ That paralysed the political initiative of blacks. It was done for you by the state and, as you know, Britain is saturated with the concept of welfare.The riots have broken through that completely, smashed it to smithereens, indicating that it has no palliative, no cure for the cancer.”

AC: “You’re looking toward a black/white mass organization?”

“Black/white mass movement. But one must always point to what we are heading for. What are we aiming for? Are we aiming for the vulgarity of a better standard of living. I think a passion has arisen in the breasts of millions of people in the world for a kind of democratic form and shape which would equal parliamentary democracy in its creativity and innovation.”

AC: “Let’s look at a likely future for Britain: enormous structural unemployment, the creation of a permanent underclass..”

“Permanent unemployed, that is what is on the agenda, with the revolutionizing of production, with the microchip. Now what the British working class has to do is break out of this demand for jobs, which characterized the 1930s, the Jarrow marches, and so on. They will have to lift themselves to the new reality, which will of course call for the merciless shortening of the working day, the working week, and the working life, and a concentration on leisure and the quality of work… They say, ‘March for jobs.’ What jobs?”

AC: It’s stimulating to hear you say this, because the left seems to have a lot of illusions about this. The slogan should really be, ‘Less work,’ not ‘More work.’

“’Less work, more money.’ And that’s a vulgarity too. ‘Less work, more leisure.’ We have built up over the centuries the technological capacity to release people from that kind of servitude.”

AC: So then you have to talk about redistribution of wealth.

“Free distribution. A completely new ethos. And we are on the verge of it. “

AC: Don’t you think that pathological symptoms, including racism, will increase as people fight on the scrap heap, as the economy goes down?”

“I agree. Something else increases too. Side by side, living in the same atom as pathology, is the possibility to lift. You can’t reach the lifting stage without the pathological stage. Crabs in a barrel. Or you leap. The leap depends on what dominant political ideology is presented to the population.”

AC: You view the current decline of the Labour Party with considerable optimism?”

“Considerable optimism.”

It was six in the evening and outside the Race Today offices people were sloshing through the puddles on the way home from work, or standing about in doorways. Howe got up and stretched, then picked up a document.
“Listen to this,” he said. “After the uprising in Moss Side last July they appointed a local Manchester barrister called Hytner to enquire into what happened. Here’s what he writes:

“At about 10.20 pm a responsible and in our view reliable mature black citizen was in Moss Side East and observed a large number of black youths whom he recognized as having come from a club a mile away. At the same time a horde of white youths came up the road from the direction of Moss Side. He spoke to them and ascertained they were from Wythenshawe. The two groups met and joined. There was nothing in the manner of their meeting which in any way reflected a prearranged plan. There was a sudden shout and the mob stormed off in the direction of Moss Side police station. We are given an account by another witness who saw the mob approach the station, led, so it was claimed, by a nine-year-old boy with those with Liverpool accents in the van.’”

Howe smiled. “Whites from Wytheshawe, blacks from Moss Side, no prearranged plan. They gather. There was a shout. ‘On to Moss side police station.’ That gives you some indication. You must have a convergence of interests in order for that to happen.”

That was a interchange at the start of the Eighties. Here we are thirty years later, structural unemployment etched ever more deeply into the economy of Britain, now in a melding of Thatcherism and New Labor’s follow-on from Thatcherism, abysmal poverty and hopelessness in Tottenham and similar districts coexisting at close quarters with profligacy and corruption saturating the higher social tiers and the political sector in one of the most unequal, class-divided cities in Europe.

As the Daily Mash puts it: "Many of these kids are less then two miles away from people who get multi-million pound bonuses for catastrophic failure and live in a culture where the material excess of people who are famous for nothing is rammed relentlessly into their faces by middle-brow tabloid newspapers. And of course later today the looters will be condemned in Parliament by a bunch of people who stole money by accident.”

Bands of youths make for stores in Central London in part to exact revenge on places that contemptuously rejected their applications for a job. One group methodically worked its way through a tony restaurant in Notting Hill Gate, relieving the clientele of their wallets.

I’ve no idea what levels of political organization there are in the ghettoes, nor the possibility of unity, amid the stories of murderous racial clashes between blacks and Asians, with Turks and Sikhs arrayed in defense of their modest stores and temples.

On the state agenda of every advanced industrial nation, in the ebb from the great post World War 2 economic boom, is the simple question: amid vast structural unemployment and diminished social expectations how best to assuage the alarm expressed by James Anderton in 1980, when he was Chief Constable of Greater Manchester. Anderton gave it as his considered opinion that “from the police point of view … theft, burglary, even violent crime will not be the predominant police feature. What will be the matter of greatest concern will be the covert and ultimately overt attempts to overthrow democracy, to subvert the authority of the state.”

Britain had its Notting Hill Gate riots in 1958, and Justice Salmon sent nine white Teddy Boys to long terms in prison, saying, “We must establish the rights of everyone, irrespective of the color of their skin … to walk through our streets with their heads erect and free from fear.”

Twenty years later, in 1978 Judge McKinnon ruled that Kingsley Read, head of the fascist National Party, was not guilty of incitement to racial hatred when he said publicly of 18-year-old Gurdip Singh Chaggar, set upon by white youths and stabbed to death, “One down, one million to go.”

In the interval British governments, both Conservative and Labour, falteringly, with occasional remissions and bouts of bad conscience, proceeded down the path to racism. Pace David Cameron’s recent pronouncement of its death, between the late 1940s and the late 1960s the chance of establishing a multiracial society was squandered.

In the 1960s, America saw fearsome ghetto riots from Newark, to Detroit, to the city of Watts in Los Angeles The state’s response was a threefold strategy: first, buy your way out. Money sluiced into “urban renewal schemes” basically aimed as various forms of ethnic cleansing and wholesale destruction of black neighborhoods. Gentrification and deindustrialization assisted in this process. Across the next twenty years, for example, the manufacturing base of Los Angeles simply disappeared.

Since these shifts involved the creation of new ghettoes, the second strategy was ever more stringent policing, with federal money pouring into city law enforcement across the country, the creation of heavily armed SWAT teams, even in tiny communities. The third strategy was the conversion of a political threat – political activism by the Black Panthers and other national organizations (many of whose leaders were straightforwardly murdered by the police) – into a crime problem, a.k.a the “war on drugs,” launched in 1969 by Richard Nixon who emphasized to his chief aide, H.R. Haldeman, that the whole problem [drugs] was really the blacks. The key is to devise a system that recognizes this while not appearing to.”

There is plenty of evidence that the strategists of the state’s response to black political insurgency were far from unhappy to see poor neighborhoods demobilized by drugs, black-on-black violence, as gangs fought bloody turf wars for street corner concessions.

Across the next 35 years the U.S. prison population rose relentlessly, the cells disproportionately filled with blacks and Hispanics. The “system” had devised a useful differential in sentencing that saw blacks and other poor people serving vastly longer terms for possession of crack, rather than powder cocaine – a middle-class preference.

The last major race riot in America was in 1992, following the release of a video of a black man, Rodney King, being savagely beaten by Los Angeles cops. By the 1990s, the “buy-out” strategy had evolved into vast programs of prison construction, paralleling the rise of gated residential communities replete with walls and armed guards keeping the bad guts out.

America this year has been waking up to two increasingly self-evident truths: violent crime rates – for murder, robbery, aggravated assault and rape – have been falling, and are now at their lowest level for nearly 40 years. Fears that the 2008 crash and indisputably harsh economic times for poor people would produce a new crime wave have proved to be baseless. In 2010, New York saw 536 murders – 65 more than in 2009, which was the lowest since 1963.

All crime rates in Los Angeles have been dropping for two decades. Homicides plunged 18 percent last year. Violent crime is roughly the same in LA as in Portland, Oregon, the whitest major city in America, the same as it was in the lily-white LA of the early 1960s.The 1960s, when crime rates rose, had roughly the same unemployment rate as the late 1990s and early 2000s, when crime fell.

Twenty years ago, conservative criminologists here were drawing up graphic scenarios of cities held hostage by gangs of feral black youth. City police forces compiled vast computer data banks of “gangs,” and suspects linked to a gang drew heavier sentences, shoved into a penal system where remedial counseling, post release job training had vanished.

Did crime fall because all the bad guys were locked up? No one claims this beyond 25 percent of the reduction – itself a very high estimate. Another theory is that by the mid 1990s the crack wars were over, and the victors enjoying their hard-won monopolies under the overall supervision of the police. Other theories were recently explored by professor James Q. Wilson, an influential conservative sociologist:

"There may also be a medical reason for the decline in crime. For decades, doctors have known that children with lots of lead in their blood are much more likely to be aggressive, violent and delinquent. In 1974, the Environmental Protection Agency required oil companies to stop putting lead in gasoline. At the same time, lead in paint was banned for any new home (though old buildings still have lead paint, which children can absorb). Tests have shown that the amount of lead in Americans' blood fell by four-fifths between 1975 and 1991. A 2007 study by the economist Jessica Wolpaw Reyes contended that the reduction in gasoline lead produced more than half of the decline in violent crime during the 1990s in the U.S. and might bring about greater declines in the future."

Cocaine use has been declining. Wilson cites a study of13,000 people arrested in Manhattan between 1987 and 1997, a disproportionate number of whom were black: "Those born between 1948 and 1969 were heavily involved with crack cocaine, but those born after 1969 used very little crack and instead smoked marijuana. The reason was simple: the younger African Americans had known many people who used crack and other hard drugs and wound up in prisons, hospitals and morgues. The risks of using marijuana were far less serious. This shift in drug use, if the New York City experience is borne out in other locations, can help to explain the fall in black inner-city crime rates after the early 1990s."

Simultaneous to the drop in violent crime rates has come the discovery that America can’t afford to lock up 2.3 million people for years on end. It’s too expensive. When he’s not praying to a Christian God to save America, Gov. Perry of Texas is trying to save the state’s budget in part by getting convicts out of prisons and into various diversion programs.

So, by after a nearly 40-year detour into a gulag Republic, with 25 percent of the world’s prisoners, America is retrenching toward softer solutions. The War on Drugs and the War and Crime carry a heavy price tag. A generation's worth of "wars on crime" and of glor­ification of the men and women in blue have engendered a culture of law enforcement that is all too often vicious­ly violent, contemptuous of the law, morally corrupt, and confident of the credulity of the courts. In Chicago, police ignored witnesses, dis­counted testimony, as they bustled the innocent onto Death Row. In New York, a plain-clothes posse of heav­ily armed cops roamed the streets, justifiably confident that their lethal onslaught would receive official protec­tion, which it did until an unprecedented popular uproar brought the perpetrators to book.

These aren't isolated cases. There isn't a state in the union where cops aren't perjuring themselves, using excessive force, targeting minorities.

Those endless wars on crime and drugs – a staple of 90 percent of America's politicians these last thirty years – have engendered not merely 2.3 million prisoners but a vindictive hysteria that pulses on the threshold of homi­cide in the bosoms of many of our uniformed law enforcers. Time and again, one hears stories attesting to the fact that they are ready, at a moment's notice or a slender pretext, to blow someone away, beat him to a pulp, throw him in the slammer, sew him up with police perjuries and snitch-driven charges, and try to toss him in a dungeon for a quarter-century or more.

The price for decades of this mythmaking and cop boosterism? It was summed up in the absurdity of the declaration of the U.S. Supreme Court, in 2000, that flight from a police officer constitutes sound reason for arrest. Actually, it constitutes plain common sense.

Emergency laws, rushed through by panicked politicians, are always bad. It will take America many decades, if ever, to restore civil liberties, approach crime rationally – and this will only come with courageous and inventive political leadership in the poor communities. Britons should study carefully the lessons of Americans’ 40-year swerve.

Back in 1981 Howe put the right questions on the agenda. We’ve got further away from answering them, and in fact the left rarely asks them at all, bobbing along in the neoliberal backwash that began in the early 1970s.





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Friday, August 12, 2011

Some Looters

Andrew Gilligan in the Telegraph, 11 Aug 2011:





They were, some told us, the alienated poor, those without hope, lashing out in rage and despair. But as the accused London rioters started appearing in court they included university students, a rich businessman’s daughter and a boy of 11.

[...]

Among the accused was, for instance, Laura Johnson, the 19-year-old daughter of a successful company director. She lives in a detached converted farmhouse in Orpington, Kent, with extensive grounds and a tennis court.

She is an English and Italian undergraduate at Exeter, favourite of the Boden-wearing classes. Before that, she attended St Olave’s Grammar, the fourth-best state school in the country, and its sister school, Newstead Wood, gaining nine GCSE A grades and four A*s.

At St Olave’s, she studied A-levels in French, English literature, geography and classical civilisation. Yesterday, at Highbury, she was accused of something slightly less civilised – looting the Charlton Curry’s superstore of electrical goods worth £5,000.

The case was transferred to Bexleyheath magistrates where she was placed on bail with a strict curfew. Her parents, Robert and Lindsay, run Avongate, a direct marketing company, but Mr Johnson was also a director of a company that took over the Daily Sport and Sunday Sport newspapers in 2007. A neighbour, who asked not to be named, said: “I just wouldn’t expect someone from round here to be accused of this.”

Another defendant who could not have been motivated by need or despair was an 11-year-old child. When sitting down, the scrawny, rosy-cheeked little boy, who cannot be named for legal reasons, could barely be seen in the youth court’s high-security dock. In a smart blue adidas tracksuit, he bit his nails and shifted from foot to foot as he admitted looting a Debenhams in his home town of Romford, Essex. Charges of violent disorder were dropped. He was, it transpired, already on a “referral order” for another, unrelated offence.

He had been in custody since Monday, arrested at 10.30pm with a mob of 20 other children – though his offence, reaching through a broken window and stealing a waste paper basket on display, was hardly the crime of the century. The mother who had let him roam the streets was in court, angry and aggressive, refusing to talk to the press.

The judge, James Henderson, seemed as nonplussed as we were. “Eleven is too young for a tag, isn’t it?” he asked his clerk. “I can’t even detain someone who’s under 12.”

After being bailed to his family, and sent to his local court for sentencing, the boy set off alone down the street, before his aunt and mother chased after him, dragging him back by the scruff of his neck.

Most defendants conformed more closely to Mr Cameron’s “sick society” template. There was Richard Myles-Palmer, with a foot-long list of convictions, found wheeling a shopping trolley full of stolen power tools through south London. He and his co-defendant, Jason Gary White, pleaded guilty. Humble in the dock in their white issue T-shirts, they were transformed men when they emerged from court, masked up and making hand signals of defiance.

They may not have the last laugh, for they were referred to the Crown Court for sentence. The maximum penalty available at Highbury was six months. But most cases yesterday were referred to courts which can send you to prison for ten years.

At Highbury, only a minority had no record. Many seemed to be career criminals. Most were teenagers or in their twenties, but a surprising number were older. Most interestingly of all, they were predominantly white, and many had jobs.

Christopher James Harte, a 23-year-old scaffolder, pleaded guilty to taking a pair of Lacoste trainers and a bodywarmer from a sportswear shop in Hackney. “Sorry, I’m panicking,” he said, as he gave his address wrong. Anxious, wiping his eyes, he seemed the classic opportunistic looter who saw a chance and took it.

Alexis Bailey, 31, a worker at a primary school, admitted being part of a mob that tried to loot an electrical shop in Croydon. Bailey, who earns £1,000 a month at Stockwell Primary School, south London, left court with a newspaper over his face. A headline about “copycat cretins” covering his eyes, he walked into a lamp-post.

A postman and his A-level student nephew were caught by police in a Ford Focus full of stolen televisions and laptops outside a looted superstore, City of Westminster magistrates’ court heard. Jamal Ebanks, 18, and Jeffrey Ebanks, 32, were stopped outside PC World in Prospect Retail Park, Croydon, at about 9pm on Monday. Jamal admitted breaking into a nearby Comet and stealing two Acer laptops and a BlackBerry tablet worth £1,000 and handling a stolen 32in Toshiba television worth £700. Jeffrey, a postman since 2004, admitted dishonestly receiving a JVC flatscreen.

Samon Adesina, 23, a student, is said to have been one of the looters carrying a flatscreen television away from Surrey Quays shopping centre. He was remanded in custody for a week and will miss his final exam in electrical engineering at an unspecified university, Tower Bridge magistrates’ court heard. At Camberwell Green, an Essex University student, Banye Kenon, was accused of looting a Curry’s.

As one lawyer said, these defendants might well have been the second wave of looters: too old, slow or stupid to avoid getting caught. But yesterday at least, the underclass stereotype beloved of certain politicians simply did not apply.

And while the courtrooms, with their parade of defendants, felt more like railway stations, Mr Cameron’s other promise, of swift judicial retribution, was very much beginning to be achieved.





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Thursday, August 11, 2011

“Last Man Out” Makes Shocking 9/11 Disclosure

Richard Roepke at Veterans Today, August 10th, 2011:




“There was a huge explosion in the basement—several seconds BEFORE the plane hit the tower!”

William Rodriguez, 9/11 Hero and the last man out of the Towers, with President George W. Bush at White House award ceremony; with Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad at a private 9/11 presentation.






William “Willy” Rodriguez is the 9/11 hero who helped save hundreds of lives, and the last person to escape alive from the World Trade Center (WTC) Towers.

Although the thrust of this narrative is meant to be about the selflessness and nobleness of heroism, be forewarned.

In its effort to reveal the essential goodness that resides in the hearts of most human beings, it also inexorably exposes the vilest evil that festers in the minds of a few.

Once past the heroism, this story begins to slice through the slimy underbelly of a vile, pathological beast that controls our lives, and gives us glimpses of the innards of this creature that grins gleefully at our gullibility and simple innocence while trampling on our most basic human rights.

This story is a wake-up call to all citizens of planet Earth.

Decorated Hero

Employed at the WTC for 19 years as a maintenance worker, Rodriguez was responsible for the upkeep and safety of the stairwells within the 110-storey North Tower. On the morning of 9/11, Rodriguez was the only person at the WTC site with the master key to the North Tower stairwell doors. [For fire containment purposes, only doors on every fourth level were normally left unlocked.]

In the immediate aftermath of the attacks, Rodriguez personally rescued fifteen injured persons from the WTC by leading—often carrying—them to safety. Having evacuated the injured from the basement levels, he rushed back into the tower and led firefighters up the stairwells. Unlocking doors to various floors as they ascended, he aided in the successful evacuation of unknown hundreds of survivors.

At great risk to his own life, Rodriguez re-entered the structure three times, and even rescued people trapped between floors in elevator cars by lowering ladders down into shafts. Having helped lead everyone he could find to safety, he finally decided to exit the building.

Rodriguez is believed to be the last person to leave the collapsing North Tower alive.

He survived the building’s collapse by diving beneath a fire truck, where he lay trapped, completely buried in a mountain of dust and rubble for over two hours. Barely able to breathe, he thought he would “die for sure” under that truck where he was literally entombed.

An agnostic, he prayed for the first time in his adult life. As he now unshakably believes, God does listen to heartfelt prayers, and miracles do happen.

A policeman who had been standing across the street had caught a fleeting glimpse of Rodriguez as he leapt under the truck a split second before the tower collapsed in an avalanche of debris.

It was this officer who later returned with help believing that the man under that truck might still be alive.

Rodriguez has been spiritually transformed by this experience and has embraced his faith again with deep reverence.

For his outstanding heroism during America’s desperate hour, William Rodriguez received a special commendation for valor from President George W. Bush at a special White House ceremony.

And that is the extent of the official story as it pertains to William Rodriguez’s involvement relating to rescue efforts following the 9/11 attacks.

But, as you shall see, his incredible heroism was but the tip of the 9/11 iceberg.

“Bombs! Bombs!”

Heroism and accolades aside, what is truly incredible about Rodriguez’s story is a shocking fact that has been concealed from public knowledge, and remains largely unknown to this day.

Rodriguez and a handful of co-workers who were down in the basement at the time of the attack, actually heard and felt huge explosions beneath their feet in the lower basement levels.

While this anomaly in itself should have been cause for serious investigation, it is the timing of these explosions that is extremely troubling:

They occurred several seconds BEFORE the first airplane impacted the tower.

The first of these explosions, which occurred about 7-8 seconds before the plane struck the tower was so powerful it literally threw Rodriguez upwards, clean off the floor, as parts of the false ceiling collapsed onto and around him.

Rodriguez heard and felt at least three explosions going off down in the basement levels within seconds of each other.

Absolute pandemonium broke out, with screams of “Bombs! Bombs!” rising above the din as terrified workers scattered in all directions, frantically seeking ways to escape.

[NB: There were a total of six basement levels. Level-2, immediately below Rodriguez’s position and the apparent location of the first explosion, was a “Mechanical Floor”—a restricted access area.]

But the “bombs” were by no means confined to the basement levels.

During his subsequent rescue efforts on the upper floors, Rodriguez claims he heard explosions going off “all over the building.”

Felipe David, a colleague, who was working at the far end of basement Level-1 across from Rodriguez, fell victim to the second explosion. David was walking towards a supply room when the entire wall suddenly exploded in front of him.

Burned beyond recognition, David managed to stagger towards Rodriguez. Willy took one look at the man and froze.

The skin on his face had almost completely peeled away exposing raw, pink flesh, and the burnt skin of his outstretched arms was hanging horrifically, “like sheets of loose cloth.”

David was the first casualty whose life Rodriguez saved by carrying him up to paramedics at street level, after which he returned to the basement in spite of police orders.

The 9/11 Commission Hearing

At the closed-door 9/11 Commission hearing, Rodriguez testified under oath that explosions were going off in the basement of the North Tower before the first plane impacted the building.

He explained in great detail to the Commissioners the numerous cases of serious injuries he had personally witnessed that were caused by these explosions.

He even provided the panel with a list of firsthand witnesses to the explosions, people who were ready to testify under oath.

One of the individuals Rodriguez recommended the panel summon was his friend and fellow employee, John Mongello.

Mongello was in the lobby of the neighboring South Tower when the first aircraft plowed into the North Tower where Rodriguez was located.

It would be another sixteen minutes before the second aircraft would rip into the one Mongello was in.

Yet, within a minute of the first plane hitting the North Tower, an elevator in the SOUTH Tower exploded to smithereens right before his eyes!

Mongello and others were literally blown backwards by the blast, as people—many, horribly burned—began to run willy-nilly shrieking in pain, shock, and sheer terror. Thick, black smoke could be seen billowing out of the now exposed elevator shaft, and the pungent smell of “gunpowder” was very evident.

Again, just as with the North Tower, this explosion occurred inside a building that had NOT YET BEEN STRUCK BY A PLANE!

How could a plane crashing into the North Tower possibly have caused elevators in the SOUTH Tower to explode?

The esteemed 9/11 Commission never bothered to find out.

Worse, and to his utter disbelief, Rodriguez later discovered that his statements were completely omitted from the official record. As a result, not one word of this decorated hero’s startling testimony appeared in the much-ballyhooed 9/11 Commission Report, a document that continues to be touted as “the most detailed, definitive study of the events of 9/11.”


[...]






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Study points to benefits from Great Depression

CNN, September 29, 2009:




Americans appear to actually thrive on adversity, according to a study published this week that reached the conclusion after researching the nation's biggest economic downturn.

Life expectancy during the peak years of the Great Depression increased 6.2 years -- from 57.1 years in 1929 to 63.3 years in 1933 -- according to University of Michigan researchers Jose A. Tapia Granados and Ana Diez Roux. The increase applied to men and women, whites and non-whites.

The team crunched data from the federal government and concluded that "population health did not decline and indeed generally improved during the four years of the Great Depression, 1930-1933, with mortality decreasing for almost all ages, and life expectancy increasing by several years in males, females, whites, and non-whites."

For most age groups, "mortality tended to peak during years of strong economic expansion (such as 1923, 1926, 1929 and 1936-1937)," they wrote in the "Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences."

"The finding is strong and counterintuitive," said Tapia Granados, the lead author of the study. "Most people assume that periods of high unemployment are harmful to health."

The researchers used historical life expectancy and mortality data to examine the association between economic growth and population health from 1920 to 1940. Though population health improved during 1930-1933 and during the recessions of 1921 and 1938, mortality -- the death rate -- increased and life expectancy fell during times of economic expansion, such as 1923, 1926, 1929 and 1936-1937, they wrote.

The researchers looked at mortality rates due to six causes of death that made up two-thirds of total mortality in the 1930s: cardiovascular and kidney diseases, cancer, influenza and pneumonia, tuberculosis, motor vehicle injuries and suicide.

Only suicide went up during economic downturns, they said, citing the recession years 1921, 1932 and 1938, but suicides accounted for less than 2 percent of total deaths. Those years were marked by high unemployment; the nation experienced its highest unemployment rate of 22.9 percent in 1932, they wrote.

Yet from 1920 to 1940, life expectancy increased 8.8 years.

The authors speculated about possible explanations for why population health tends to improve during recessions but not expansions.

"During expansions, firms are very busy, and they typically demand a lot of effort from employees, who are required to work a lot of overtime, and to work at a fast pace," Tapia Granados said. "This can create stress, which is associated with more drinking and smoking."

In addition, new, inexperienced workers may be more likely to become injured; workers may sleep less and adopt less healthy eating habits, he said.

Further, boom times may translate into more industrial pollution, which can take a toll on populations' health, he said.

During recessions, with less work to do, employees may work slower, sleep longer and spend more time with family and friends, he said. With less money, they may spend less on alcohol and tobacco.

The researchers pointed out that their work looked at the relationship between recessions and mortality on a macro level and was not predictive for any one person.

The findings may apply to others, too. Tapia Granados, 53, whose work was self-funded, said he has carried out similar studies that looked at Japan, Spain and Sweden.

"In the three of them, it was the same," he said.





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Tuesday, August 9, 2011

Britain’s Riots: A Society In Denial Of The Burning Issues

Finian Cunningham at Global Research,8/9/11:



[...]

The distraught owner of the razed family business in Croydon struggled to comprehend why his 150-year-old furniture shop had been targeted. Nevertheless his few words of disbelief had a ring of truth that the politicians and media commentators seem oblivious to. “There must be something deeply wrong about the [political] system,” he said.

Police forces are seen to be struggling to contain the upsurge in street violence, with groups of youths appearing to go on the rampage at will, breaking into shop fronts and stealing goods. A real fear among the authorities is the spreading of disorder and violence to other cities, with reports emerging of similar disturbances in the centre of Birmingham in the British midlands, and further north in Nottingham, Liverpool and Manchester.

Inner-city deprived black communities in Britain complain of routine heavy-handed policing that is openly racist. Community leaders tell of aggressive stop-and-search methods by police that target black youths. The community leaders say that racist policing is as bad as it was during the 1980s when riots broke out in 1985 after a black woman, Cynthia Jarrett, died in a police raid on her home in Broadwater Farm, London.

In the latest spate of violence – on a much greater scale than in the 1980s – there is no suggestion that subsequent street disturbances to the initial Tottenham riots are racially motivated. The growing number of areas and youths involved in arson, rioting and looting do not appear to be driven merely out of solidarity for the young black victim of police violence last week, although that may be a factor for some. Many of the disturbances in London and elsewhere seem to be caused by white and black youths together and separately.

But there is one common factor in all of this that the politicians and media are studiously ignoring: the massive poverty, unemployment and social deprivation that are now the lot for so many of Britain’s communities.

Britain’s social decay has been seething over several decades, overseen by Conservative and Labour governments alike. As with other European countries and the United States, the social fabric of Britain has been torn asunder by economic policies that have deliberately widened the gap between rich and poor.

The collapse of manufacturing bases, the spawning of low-paid menial jobs, unemployment and cuts in public services and facilities have all been accompanied by systematic lowering of taxation on the rich elite. Britain’s national debt, as with that of the Europe and the US, can be attributed in large part to decades of pursuing neoliberal policies of prosperity for the rich and austerity for the poor – the burden of which is felt most keenly in inner-city neighbourhoods.

David Cameron’s Conservative-Liberal Coalition government has greatly magnified this debt burden on the poor with its swingeing austerity cuts since coming to office last year. Ironically, only days before the latest burnings and riots, British government spokesmen were congratulating themselves for “making the right decision” in driving through crippling economic austerity measures that have so far spared the United Kingdom from the overt fiscal woes seen elsewhere in Europe.

But as thousands of Britain’s youths now lash out at symbols of authority/austerity, breaking into shops to loot clothes and other consumer goods that they wouldn’t otherwise be able to afford, the social eruption may be just a sign of even greater woes to come for the Disunited Kingdom.






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Teen mob violence not a new problem

Philadelphia Inquirer, 8/9/11--Now we call them "flash mobs" or "teen mobs," but in the early 1980's Philadelphians called them a somewhat more indelicate term: "wolf packs." In 1981 and 1982, Philly struggled to deal with dozens of violent attacks and robberies committed by packs of marauding teens across the city: on the Market-Frankford EL; in Northern Liberties, in University City; and in Center City.

In Oct. 1980, according to Inquirer clippings, 49 young people were arrested in the aftermath of "wolf pack" raids on Super Sunday revelers. About 250 teens walked through the Benjamin Franklin Parkway crowds, punching and pouncing people, police said.

Two weeks later, during the Phillies World Series Parade, police arrested 226 purse snatchers and pick-pockets -- many of them working in "wolf packs," police said.

Today, as the Mayor announced a 9 p.m. weekend curfew for teens to deal with the recent violence, people rightfully worry that the next outburst could leave someone dead.

That's what happened back in the 80's.

In Dec. 1981, a pack of teens stomped a 59-year-old West Philly handyman named George Byrd to death for a six-pack of beer he was carrying.

And on Nov. 23 1980, around 2:30 a.m., ten teens pounced on a University of Pennsylvania student named Douglas Huffman. The teens had been trolling West Philly for hours when they spotted Huffman, 23, and his friend, Bruce McClellan, 23, getting out of a car near Huffman's apartment at 44th and Osage, police said.

McClellan would later testify that one of teens yelled, "Knockout," after another attacker, who was just 14, landed the blow that knocked Huffman temporarily unconscious.

McClellan helped his injured friend inside. He had bruises on his forehead and threw up, McClellan would later tell police.

"I don't feel well, my head hurts," McClellan remembered Huffman saying. A police officer encouraged Huffman to go to the hospital, but he refused, wanting to sleep instead. McClellan left Huffman in his bed, where he found him dead two days later. A coroner said he died from a brain hemorrhage brought on from the beating.

Huffman's Penn classmates and teachers gathered for a memorial service. Huffman was an idealistic student who studied city planning "and wanted to set cities straight," one teacher said in a eulogy.

Police quickly arrested all ten of the teens. A judge sentenced three of them to life in prison, including the 14-year-old.

The "defendants sat calmly at their defense tables with their lawyers showing no sign of emotion and actually appearing bored as the verdicts were read," the Inquirer reported.

Huffman's father traveled from Cincinnati to be the courtroom.

"We're here to see if Philadelphia feels sorry for itself - for having to be afraid to walk the streets at night," the grieving man said.




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For flash mobsters, crowd size a tempting cover

AP, 8/9/11--The July 4 fireworks display in the Cleveland suburb of Shaker Heights was anything but a family affair.

As many as 1,000 teenagers, mobilized through social networking sites, turned out and soon started fighting and disrupting the event.

Thanks to social networks like Twitter and Facebook, more and more so-called flash mobs are materializing across the globe, leaving police scrambling to keep tabs on the spontaneous assemblies.

"They're gathering with an intent behind it , not just to enjoy the event," Shaker Heights Police Chief D. Scott Lee said. "All too often, some of the intent is malicious."

Flash mobs started off in 2003 as peaceful and often humorous acts of public performance, such as mass dance routines or street pillow fights. But in recent years, the term has taken a darker twist as criminals exploit the anonymity of crowds, using social networking to coordinate everything from robberies to fights to general chaos.

In London, recent rioting and looting has been blamed in part on groups of youths using Twitter, mobile phone text messages and instant messaging on BlackBerry to organize and keep a step ahead of police.

And Sunday in Philadelphia, Mayor Michael Nutter condemned the behavior of teenagers involved in flash mobs that have left several people injured in recent weeks.

"What is making this unique today is the social media aspect," said Everett Gillison, Philadelphia's deputy mayor for public safety. "They can communicate and congregate at a moment's notice. That can overwhelm any municipality."

A Philadelphia man was assaulted by a group of about 30 people who were believed to have gotten together through Twitter. In 2009, crowds swelled along the trendy South Street shopping district and assaulted several people.

On June 23, a couple dozen youths arrived via subway in Upper Darby, outside Philadelphia, and looted several hundred dollars of sneakers, socks and wrist watches from a Sears store. Their haul wasn't especially impressive but the sheer size of the group and the speed of the roughly five-minute operation made them all but impossible to stop.

"The good thing is there were no weapons and nobody tried to stop them, either," Upper Darby Police Chief Michael Chitwood said. "The only people that tried to stop them were the police when they rounded them up."

Dubbed "flash mob robberies," the thefts are bedeviling both police and retailers, who say some of the heists were orchestrated or at least boasted about afterward on social networking sites.

In recognition of the problem, the National Retail Federation issued a report last week recommending steps stores can take to ward off the robberies. There have even been legislative efforts to criminalize flash mobs.

The Cleveland City Council passed a bill to make it illegal to use social media to organize a violent and disorderly flash mob, though the mayor vetoed the measure after the ACLU of Ohio promised it would be unconstitutional. The bill was at least partly inspired by the Shaker Heights disturbances on July 4.

Jonathan Taplin, director of the innovation lab at the University of Southern California's Annenberg School for Communication, said he was not surprised to see people using social media for organizing flash mob robberies.

"You are essentially having a world where you have 25 million people who are underemployed and 2 percent of the population doing better than they ever have," Taplin said. "Why wouldn't that lead to some sort of social unrest? Why wouldn't people use the latest technologies to effect that?"

In Los Angeles last month, thousands of ravers forced rush-hour street closures when they descended on a Hollywood cinema after a DJ tweeted he was holding a free block party. The sudden crowd dispersed only after police fired bean-bag bullets at the restive revelers and arrested three.

And in April, a man was shot when hundreds of rival gang members congregated along the Los Angeles seafront in Venice, sparking pandemonium as people scattered for cover. The group had gathered after some of them posted on Twitter and police were still strategizing their response to the huge crowd when shots rang out.

Los Angeles police Capt. Jon Peters said law enforcement's challenge is to try to sift the ocean of tweets and Facebook updates for signs of trouble.

"We need to be able to get better on the intelligence side to pick up on communications that are going on," he said.

Gillison, the deputy mayor from Philadelphia, said the police department there has reached out to younger community members and friended some of them on Facebook. This enables officers to monitor the traffic that could generate flash mobs and some have been prevented, he said.

In April, about 20 teenagers entered G-Star Raw, a high-end men's clothing store in the Dupont Circle neighborhood of the District of Columbia, and stole about $20,000 worth of merchandise despite employees' efforts to grab the apparel back, store manager Greg Lennon said. D.C. police have investigated leads but have not made arrests in the case.

Lennon said he later saw Twitter postings, apparently written after the robbery, that referenced the theft, with one person describing having been in the store and making plans to come back.

The National Retail Federation said 10 percent of 106 companies it surveyed reported being targeted in the last year by groups of thieves using flash mob tactics.

"Retailers are raising red flags about criminal flash mobs, which are wreaking havoc on their business, causing concerns about the safety of their customers and employees, and directly impacting their bottom line," the federation said in a report, which advises retailers to monitor social media networks and report planned heists to the police.

That's exactly what Lennon does. He says he checks his store's Facebook page to see who's visiting, and monitors Twitter for any reference to his store and its merchandise.

Gillison and others blame at least part of the problem on bad parenting.

"They're 12 years old and not around the corner from their home. Where's their parent?" said Chitwood, the Upper Darby police chief. "If they're out doing flash mob thefts when they're 12, what the hell are they going to be doing when they're 16?




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More on cowardly random attack in Philly

Mastery students suspected in Society Hill attack

Philadelphia Inquirer, 8/8/11--Some of the teens who beat a man near Independence Hall July 29 during an afternoon attack have been identified as Mastery Charter students, a school official said Monday.

Surveillance footage taken of the attack, which occurred around 2 p.m. -- hours before the Friday night teen mob violence in Center City, shows six male teens, some carrying back packs, walking north on Fourth Street, just below Walnut, when they come upon a man walking south.

The man, who police said is 36, gives the teens room to pass on the sidewalk when one of the teens, who is without a shirt, suddenly punches him in the head. Two others then join in, punching and kicking the man.

An eyewitness yelled out and the students fled. The victim was treated at a hospital for jaw injuries.

Four of the suspects have been identified as 8th and 9th graders at Mastery's Lenfest campus, which is located on Chestnut Street, a few blocks from the attack, said Mastery CEO, Scott Gordon.

In the days after the incident, school officials went door to door in Society Hill, requesting security camera footage, Gordon said.

The school has notified police of the students identities, Gordon said. The two other students in the video are also believed to be Mastery students, Gordon said, but have yet to be positively identified.

The students had completed their final summer school session about an hour and half before the attack and had been hanging out downtown, he said.

Police said they have additional - and better quality security footage that will help them make arrests.

None of the teens have been charged yet, but police expect arrests as early as Tuesday, said Lt. Ray Evers, a Police Department spokesman.

Mastery has won high praise in recent years for its ability to turn around once-troubled middle schools. In July 2010, President Obama singled out Mastery for dramatically boosting test scores and curbing school violence.

Oprah Winfrey gave Mastery a $1 million grant as part of her Angel Network program last year.

Mastery educational approach aims to prepare students for college with a strict behavior code. Over 90 percent of Lenfest students go onto college, Gordon said.

"We are horrified and shocked that our students were involved in this," he said. "This behavior is completely unacceptable and will not be tolerated."

All of the students involved in the incident face expulsion, he said.

School officials on Monday sent a letter to neighborhood residents and businesses, apologizing.

"Mastery now has work to do to repair the damage these students have done to the trust we have built," the letter read.

"Random violence has become a phenomenon amongst some teens recently," it continued. "This incident is making us reflect on what more we need to do to counter this trend."






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Monday, August 8, 2011

Flash mob robberies in Las Vegas, Washington DC and NYC

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Wisconsin State Fair mob attack 911 tapes released


Several black teens were involved in attacks on state fair goers





WITI-TV, MILWAUKEE—The Milwaukee County Sheriff's Department released 911 audio from the opening night of State Fair. These tapes display the graphic details of attacks, some of which were racially motivated. We also spoke with someone who could put that part of the story in perspective.

Most callers tell dispatchers they see a racially motivated melee. One caller told dispatchers, "A whole bunch of black dudes f----- jumped on me. I'm bleeding all over."

West Allis Police recently released a statement on what took place at State Fair on opening night. They say there are currently nine assaults, one robbery without a weapon and one attempted robbery with a weapon being investigated.

Investigators are cooperating with the Milwaukee Police Department to identify the people who perpetrated the opening night crimes. The suspects have been described as African Americans. The victims were either Caucasian or Hispanic.

[...]





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Video shows white teens driving over, killing black man, says DA

Jackson, Mississippi (CNN) -- On a recent Sunday morning just before dawn, two carloads of white teenagers drove to Jackson, Mississippi, on what the county district attorney says was a mission of hate: to find and hurt a black person.

In a parking lot on the western side of town they found their victim.

James Craig Anderson, a 49-year-old auto plant worker, was standing in a parking lot, near his car. The teens allegedly beat Anderson repeatedly, yelled racial epithets, including "White Power!" according to witnesses.

Hinds County District Attorney Robert Shuler Smith says a group of the teens then climbed into their large Ford F250 green pickup truck, floored the gas, and drove the truck right over Anderson, killing him instantly.

Mississippi officials say it was a racially motivated murder. What the gang of teens did not know was that a surveillance camera was focused on the parking lot that night, and many of the events, including the actual murder of Anderson, were captured live on videotape.

CNN has exclusively obtained that surveillance tape. The group of teens that night was led by 18-year-old Deryl Dedmon, Jr., of Brandon, Mississippi, according to police and officials.



[...]



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Deryl Dedmon, Jr., right, could face two life sentences in connection with the killing. John Aaron Rice, left, has been charged with simple assault.
Deryl Dedmon, Jr., right, could face two life sentences in connection with the killing. John Aaron Rice, left, has been charged with simple assault.

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