October 12, 2015

Mindless, Useful Idiot Officials Make Propaganda Into Law and Public Policy




Misguided narrative of white privilege is pervasive. At a Cambridge, MA School Committee candidate panel, October 2015 one new woman candidate said the city must work to end white racism. This is a combination of progressive propaganda and useful idiots repeating the message. Propaganda must be exposed as Flaherty does in this piece. 


 

[From article]
The great and powerful Leo Strine figured it all out: Too many black people are spending too much time in prison.
Strine should know: He is Chief Justice of the Delaware Supreme Court. Strine is heading a commission of black history professors, public defenders, diversity officers, ACLU staffers and others to set this right.



Their mission: Figure out why cops keep arresting, prosecutors keep prosecuting, juries keep convicting, and judges keep sending so many black people to prison for No Reason What So Ever.
And why black people keep returning to prison once they are let out.
Not just in Delaware but around the country.
[. . .]
In Strine’s world, black people are relentless victims of relentless white racism. All the time. Everywhere. And that explains everything.
That is the greatest lie of our generation.
[. . .]



There are lots more cases of witness intimidation in Delaware. If Judge Strine needs details, he only has to ask the lawyers on his panel who defend them.
Witness intimidation is now at epidemic levels around the country. In Philadelphia over a recent two-year period, the district attorney charged 2600 people with that crime.
[. . .]



Here is a piece of truth for Strine and his band of apologists to choke on: Crime and violence in Wilmington is a black thing. That’s why more black people are in prison.
Strine knows that. So do his acolytes. The only question is why he and his crew are working so hard to avoid it.

http://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2015/10/too_many_black_people_in_prison__and_other_fairy_tales.html

October 12, 2015
Too Many Black People in Prison -- And Other Fairy Tales
By Colin Flaherty

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