May 9, 2015

Police As Surrogate Parent to Misguided Youth




[From article]
The rage of Baltimore's ghetto boys against cops is not due to an epidemic of police killing black men. That's a big lie of the left wing. It is mainly caused by brainwashing black youth to hate the only effective discipline they have had in their lives. Subjecting ghetto youth to any discipline is a threat to the idea that they cannot be responsible citizens. Law enforcement in the ghetto is a threat to the creed of victimization, which wealthy, privileged black leaders use to subjugate and control people.
[. . .]
Even though you don't like the way he looks you over, po-po has always been the only reliable male authority in your life who upholds rules and answers his phone. You can't deny he is the only one with the physical courage to take down out-of-control people with his own hands.
[. . .]
Three black mommas failed to enforce the law and appealed to the lowest instincts of the mob. Momma #1, Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake, said, “If three black women can't bring healing... I don't know who will.” She doesn’t know much. After fifty years of affirmative action in education, which has ultimately helped make fathers irrelevant, it is questionable if the mayor understands that black skin and female sex are not the answers to the terrible problems of the Baltimore ghetto. She clearly doesn't know she entered into a criminal conspiracy with a violent mob by ordering the police to give it “space to destroy.” Momma is there to heal. How many of the reportedly 100 injured police officers are fathers? She served them up like meat to the mob.
[. . .]
Momma #2, Baltimore State's Attorney Marilyn J. Mosby, raised without a father, promised the mob the revenge it wanted. It is dreadful to hear a state's attorney circumvent the protections of a grand jury and fulminate about “No justice, no peace.” I will get you payback, said Momma #2, who in a matter of hours speed-dialed a list of charges to gratify the mob. What's next? The guillotine?
[. . .]
Momma #3, Attorney General Loretta Lynch, went to Baltimore on May 5 and said, “We're here to hold your hands.” [. . .] What a dereliction for the nation's top law enforcement officer to offer emotional support for lawbreakers at a massive crime scene. It sets the stage for her department to fail to prosecute crimes committed by black people, just like Eric Holder's dereliction. Lynch visited the deceased heroin dealer's family. His is the only name that suits her politics. Nobody knows how he died. Everybody knows what caused the death of the NYC cop the same day as Lynch's healing. But Momma #3 didn't think he was worth mentioning by name.
[. . .]
It is in the nature of men who are not respected in their home to leave. It was essential that fatherhood be destroyed for ghetto life to sink to its current level of crime and dependency. But rudimentary behavioral control functions that are essential for survival were going to be provided somehow. Police are described as a thin blue line against violence.
[. . .]
With the moral code destroyed, the po-po are the most important group still acting as if young people there are capable of obeying a legal code. Police do the work of behavioral control that should be done by fathers. They are the ghost of fatherhood lost, the last group of public workers who don't have to submit to the vast victimization hoax that whitey hasn't sent enough money for you to learn how to read; whitey hasn't come across enough for you to control your own breeding; and especially, that in your downtrodden state you can't be expected to obey the law.
But good cops cannot replace good dads. Here is an axiom for human relationships: if you do the work you get the blame. Urban police, many of whom are black, do the dangerous work of protecting black people from each other. They absorb the misdirected rage of young people who have been exploited, deceived and dehumanized by their own leaders, and abandoned by their own fathers.

http://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2015/05/popo_and_the_missing_papas.html

May 8, 2015
Po-Po and the Missing Papas
By Deborah C. Tyler

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