Police just executed an unarmed 17 yr old brotha (shot 10 times)

Take control of their community and vote.

Rest assured on that. Not only is voter information and registration being shared and promoted, there also may be a special election to replace some of the elected officials in Ferguson.

No..can you explain it?

Yes, brother BKF.

The criminal is being called by the STL county prosecutor as a currently employed Law Enforcement witness of credibility to his own criminal actions.

Here's the real kicker, he's probably testified in front of this Grand Jury before in the last 4 months.

See how important it was to get the STL county prosecutor out of there.
 
Rest assured on that. Not only is voter information and registration being shared and promoted, there also may be a special election to replace some of the elected officials in Ferguson.

That's just one part. I hoping that they economically take control as well.
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" lang="en"><p>How the New York Times described <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/MichaelBrown?src=hash">#MichaelBrown</a> compared to Ted Bundy. <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/Ferguson?src=hash">#Ferguson</a> <a href="http://t.co/VH0Q9euWew">pic.twitter.com/VH0Q9euWew</a></p>&mdash; Sean McElwee (@SeanMcElwee) <a href="https://twitter.com/SeanMcElwee/statuses/503942799306543104">August 25, 2014</a></blockquote>
<script async src="//platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>


<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" lang="en"><p>Here's the NYT description of Eric Harris (Columbine shooter) compared with <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/MichaelBrown?src=hash">#MichaelBrown</a>. <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/Ferguson?src=hash">#Ferguson</a> <a href="http://t.co/bFVlNvIFvn">pic.twitter.com/bFVlNvIFvn</a></p>&mdash; Sean McElwee (@SeanMcElwee) <a href="https://twitter.com/SeanMcElwee/statuses/503936107999166464">August 25, 2014</a></blockquote>
<script async src="//platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
Officer Darren Wilson Began Career At Disgraced Police Department: Report

n-DARREN-WILSON-large.jpg


The Ferguson police officer who shot unarmed teen Michael Brown had worked at a department that was disbanded by authorities over racial tensions, the Washington Post reports.
Darren Wilson and the other officers at the Jennings, Missouri, police department lost their jobs three years ago. Wilson was a rookie cop at the time.

The newspaper described the old Jennings Police Department as "a mainly white department mired in controversy and notorious for its fraught relationship with residents, especially the African American majority... not an ideal place to learn how to police."


The city council deemed tensions between officers and black residents so bad that it was necessary to fire everyone and build a new, more credible department from scratch.

Some officers from the disgraced department reapplied for their jobs. Wilson got a job in Ferguson, where he kept a clean disciplinary record and even earned a commendation. But that was all before the events that transpired earlier this month.

Brown's death sparked days of protest and drew national attention. Since the shooting, Wilson has kept out of the public eye. An incident report of the shooting has raised more questions than it has answered.

The Washington Post report comes amid disturbing stories of alleged police misconduct from neighboring departments have come to light.

Just days after Brown was killed, another black man in north St. Louis, Kajieme Powell, was fatally shot in a barrage of police gunfire after allegedly stealing energy drinks and donuts from a convenience store. St. Louis Police said the man was armed with a knife, but raw video of the incident appears to contradict that.

Later last week, Lieutenant Ray Albers of the St. Ann Police was suspended after being filmed pointing a semi-automatic rifle at a protester and threatening to kill him.

On Aug. 22, St. Louis County officer Dan Page was removed from duty after a video of him making bigoted comments was released.
 
Why Was Mike Brown "No Angel" but Darren Wilson Is Just "Low-Profile"?

Anyone unfamiliar with*the way the U.S. treats dead young black men*should take a look at*today's*New York Times*front-page mini-profile of Michael Brown, the unarmed 18-year-old who was shot and killed by a police officer in Ferguson, Mo. earlier this month. It's headlined "Michael Brown Spent Last Weeks Grappling With Problems and Promise"—problems, you say?

Michael Brown, 18, due to be buried on Monday, was no angel, with public records and interviews with friends and family revealing both problems and promise in his young life. Shortly before his encounter with Officer Wilson, the police say he was caught on a security camera stealing a box of cigars, pushing the clerk of a convenience store into a display case. He lived in a community that had rough patches, and he dabbled in drugs and alcohol. He had taken to rapping in recent months, producing lyrics that were by turns contemplative and vulgar. He got into at least one scuffle with a neighbor. [...]

As a boy, Michael was a handful. When his parents put up a security gate, he would try to climb it. When they left out pens and pencils, he would use them to write on the wall. He used to tap on the ground, so his parents got him a drum set; his father played the drums. He grew into a reserved young man around people he did not know, but joking and outgoing with those close to him.


Is the*Times*cryptically gesturing at some unpublishable knowledge of Brown's behavior or juvenile record? Or has no one at the paper ever met a teenager before? "Michael Brown Spent Entire Life Being Pretty Normal Child, Teenager" is, admittedly, a less interesting angle. Maybe, given this telling detail—

In the ninth grade at McCluer High School in Florissant, Mr. Brown was accused of stealing an iPod. His mother said she went to the school, eventually showing a receipt to prove the iPod was his.

—we could settle for "Despite Facing Discrimination and Suspicion, Young Man Looked Forward to Future Before Police Killed Him."

Also gracing the front page of the paper of record is*a mini-profile of Brown's killer, Officer Darren Wilson:

As a teenager, Darren Wilson lived in St. Peters, Mo., a mostly white city of 54,000 about 20 miles west of Ferguson, where his environment was chaotic. He was the eldest of three children of Tonya Dee Durso, who, records show, carried out financial crimes, including against Sandra Lee Finney, who lived across the street and had believed they were friends.

"It's a terrible thing that has happened now, but he did have a troubled childhood," Ms. Finney said in an interview, adding that Officer Wilson's family had somewhat awkwardly stayed in the neighborhood — moving just one door down — even after his mother was convicted of stealing and forgery in 2001. [...]

Officer Wilson's formative experiences in policing came in a department that wrestled historically with issues of racial tension, mismanagement and turmoil. During Officer Wilson's brief tenure, another officer was fired for a wrongful shooting, and a lieutenant was accused of stealing federal funds. In 2011, in the wake of federal and state investigations into the misuse of grant money, the department closed, and the city entered into a contract to be policed by the county. The department was found to have used grant money to pay overtime for D.W.I. checkpoints that never took place.


If Mike Brown "liv[ing] in a community that had rough patches" made him "no angel," what did growing up in a household with a convicted criminal and learning how to police in a corrupt racist department make Darren Wilson? A "Low-Profile Officer With Unsettled Early Days," apparently.


http://gawker.com/times-mike-brown-had-problems-wilson-had-unsettled-1626427885


I'm glad to see others are starting to see the media bias in their stories that we've been screaming about for so long
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" lang="en"><p>How the New York Times described <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/MichaelBrown?src=hash">#MichaelBrown</a> compared to Ted Bundy. <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/Ferguson?src=hash">#Ferguson</a> <a href="http://t.co/VH0Q9euWew">pic.twitter.com/VH0Q9euWew</a></p>&mdash; Sean McElwee (@SeanMcElwee) <a href="https://twitter.com/SeanMcElwee/statuses/503942799306543104">August 25, 2014</a></blockquote>
<script async src="//platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>


<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" lang="en"><p>Here's the NYT description of Eric Harris (Columbine shooter) compared with <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/MichaelBrown?src=hash">#MichaelBrown</a>. <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/Ferguson?src=hash">#Ferguson</a> <a href="http://t.co/bFVlNvIFvn">pic.twitter.com/bFVlNvIFvn</a></p>&mdash; Sean McElwee (@SeanMcElwee) <a href="https://twitter.com/SeanMcElwee/statuses/503936107999166464">August 25, 2014</a></blockquote>
<script async src="//platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

The playing field is not even.....cotdamn man...one dude is shot dead by his government.....compared with mass murderers....:smh:
 
Fox cac hoe trying to get the pastor to shit on Al Sharpton, cut off when he doesn't fall for the okie doke

<iframe title="VideoBam video player" type="text/html" frameborder="0" scrolling="no" width="480" height="324" src="http://videobam.com/widget/obepK" allowFullScreen></iframe>

Im in no way a fan of Al or Jesse.....but i would never allow ANYONE to make me direct my anger, energy, etc toward a pawn. The goal should be to go after those that produce and fund the bs.....no the bs itself.

Anyways.....


Notice how they made a quick cut from the Brother speaking to some propaganda "violent protests in Ferguson" bs.

Foxnews has a large fanbase...remember that.
They exploit feeble minded WHite folks that cant separate myth from reality. Shit is dangerous......
 
Take control of their community and vote.

You can say I'm drinking the Kool aid but I swear that voting does not work for black people. We vote for Democratic just to be voting and don't put any money behind our votes.Too many Black people for whatever reason believe that these politicians actually are "for the people". I would say that putting money behind a few politicians that really are going to help us build will help but the powers that be will just have them assassinated
 
Im in no way a fan of Al or Jesse.....but i would never allow ANYONE to make me direct my anger, energy, etc toward a pawn. The goal should be to go after those that produce and fund the bs.....no the bs itself.

Anyways.....


Notice how they made a quick cut from the Brother speaking to some propaganda "violent protests in Ferguson" bs.

Foxnews has a large fanbase...remember that.
They exploit feeble minded WHite folks that cant separate myth from reality. Shit is dangerous......


That's not totally true. There are those who can indeed separate myth from reality. They simple choose not to for many reasons including raising money. Plus many are just so hate filled.
 
Rest assured on that. Not only is voter information and registration being shared and promoted, there also may be a special election to replace some of the elected officials in Ferguson.



Yes, brother BKF.

The criminal is being called by the STL county prosecutor as a currently employed Law Enforcement witness of credibility to his own criminal actions.

Here's the real kicker, he's probably testified in front of this Grand Jury before in the last 4 months.

See how important it was to get the STL county prosecutor out of there.

So did the DA get kicked off this case?
 
Why Was Mike Brown "No Angel" but Darren Wilson Is Just "Low-Profile"?

Anyone unfamiliar with*the way the U.S. treats dead young black men*should take a look at*today's*New York Times*front-page mini-profile of Michael Brown, the unarmed 18-year-old who was shot and killed by a police officer in Ferguson, Mo. earlier this month. It's headlined "Michael Brown Spent Last Weeks Grappling With Problems and Promise"—problems, you say?

Michael Brown, 18, due to be buried on Monday, was no angel, with public records and interviews with friends and family revealing both problems and promise in his young life. Shortly before his encounter with Officer Wilson, the police say he was caught on a security camera stealing a box of cigars, pushing the clerk of a convenience store into a display case. He lived in a community that had rough patches, and he dabbled in drugs and alcohol. He had taken to rapping in recent months, producing lyrics that were by turns contemplative and vulgar. He got into at least one scuffle with a neighbor. [...]

As a boy, Michael was a handful. When his parents put up a security gate, he would try to climb it. When they left out pens and pencils, he would use them to write on the wall. He used to tap on the ground, so his parents got him a drum set; his father played the drums. He grew into a reserved young man around people he did not know, but joking and outgoing with those close to him.


Is the*Times*cryptically gesturing at some unpublishable knowledge of Brown's behavior or juvenile record? Or has no one at the paper ever met a teenager before? "Michael Brown Spent Entire Life Being Pretty Normal Child, Teenager" is, admittedly, a less interesting angle. Maybe, given this telling detail—

In the ninth grade at McCluer High School in Florissant, Mr. Brown was accused of stealing an iPod. His mother said she went to the school, eventually showing a receipt to prove the iPod was his.

—we could settle for "Despite Facing Discrimination and Suspicion, Young Man Looked Forward to Future Before Police Killed Him."

Also gracing the front page of the paper of record is*a mini-profile of Brown's killer, Officer Darren Wilson:

As a teenager, Darren Wilson lived in St. Peters, Mo., a mostly white city of 54,000 about 20 miles west of Ferguson, where his environment was chaotic. He was the eldest of three children of Tonya Dee Durso, who, records show, carried out financial crimes, including against Sandra Lee Finney, who lived across the street and had believed they were friends.

"It's a terrible thing that has happened now, but he did have a troubled childhood," Ms. Finney said in an interview, adding that Officer Wilson's family had somewhat awkwardly stayed in the neighborhood — moving just one door down — even after his mother was convicted of stealing and forgery in 2001. [...]

Officer Wilson's formative experiences in policing came in a department that wrestled historically with issues of racial tension, mismanagement and turmoil. During Officer Wilson's brief tenure, another officer was fired for a wrongful shooting, and a lieutenant was accused of stealing federal funds. In 2011, in the wake of federal and state investigations into the misuse of grant money, the department closed, and the city entered into a contract to be policed by the county. The department was found to have used grant money to pay overtime for D.W.I. checkpoints that never took place.


If Mike Brown "liv[ing] in a community that had rough patches" made him "no angel," what did growing up in a household with a convicted criminal and learning how to police in a corrupt racist department make Darren Wilson? A "Low-Profile Officer With Unsettled Early Days," apparently.


http://gawker.com/times-mike-brown-had-problems-wilson-had-unsettled-1626427885


I'm glad to see others are starting to see the media bias in their stories that we've been screaming about for so long

f*ck...we just can't get a win...

This needs to go viral. Because all of these so called responsible new organizations are getting worse then these damn blogs.

No wonder they are being made obsolete.

They lack any type of integrity or respect for what the RESPONSIBILITY of the media truly is to the people it is SUPPOSED to serve.
 
So did the DA get kicked off this case?

No.

Politics. bob bcculloch put it to a secret Grand Jury to control it, he presents the evidence and witnesses he chooses, darren wilson. An either way it goes, he can say it's not his fault.

The jury is not however sequestered, but by oath not to talk about it.

bob mcculloch challenged Gov. jay nixon twice concerning removing him. jay did nothing. He doesn't want to lose votes.



Sen. Jamilah Nasheed, we, were barely allowed to present the petition's over 70K signatures.

img_7463.jpg

http://stlouis.cbslocal.com/2014/08...ith-police-in-clayton-over-ferguson-shooting/

BTW:
The non capitals I used concerning certain names are purposeful and in full disrespect.
 
Besides Michael Brown, Whom Else Does The New York Times Call “No Angel”?

.i.2.s-mike-brown-no-angel.jpg


On Monday, the same day Michael Brown’s family members took to the podium at his funeral, The New York Times considered Brown’s life in a profile of sorts. In the piece, titled “Michael Brown Spent Last Weeks Grappling With Problems and Promise,” John Eligon wrote that Brown “was no angel.”

Here’s the full context:

Michael Brown, 18, due to be buried on Monday, was no angel, with public records and interviews with friends and family revealing both problems and promise in his young life. Shortly before his encounter with Officer Wilson, the police say he was caught on a security camera stealing a box of cigars, pushing the clerk of a convenience store into a display case. He lived in a community that had rough patches, and he dabbled in drugs and alcohol. He had taken to rapping in recent months, producing lyrics that were by turns contemplative and vulgar. He got into at least one scuffle with a neighbor.
Prosecutors across America have, for years, turned to the presence of rap lyrics as evidence of moral failing and/or criminal intent. It’s a racially charged version of blaming video games for Columbine. But let’s leave that aside, and instead consider the benchmark a subject must meet before the editors of The New York Times decide that the person being written about is “no angel.”

The following Times passages are what resulted from a query for the phrase “no angel” in the digital pages of the paper. We’ve excluded reviews of pieces of fictional entertainment, and this list is not exhaustive. However, when looking at the paper’s usage of the phrase when describing people of note, a pattern emerges. “No angel” seems to most commonly describe either hardened white criminals, or men of color.

Before he went on to be a notorious mob boss, Al Capone was no angel:

Still, Mr. Bergreen said, the Al Capone of Garfield Place was no angel. He was often truant from Public School 133 on Butler Street, and he was finally kicked out of school for hitting a teacher (as the story goes, she hit him first). He also picked up a case of syphilis that incapacitated him later in life, probably while hanging out by the Brooklyn docks.

The Times paraphrased a defense of James “Whitey” Bulger, a convicted murderer, as “no angel,” but the description only made it into the article’s U.R.L.

Donald Manuel Paradis, the leader of a motorcycle gang who was on death row until he was freed in 2001, is no angel. Paradis did not murder the two people he was convicted of killing, but did help dispose of their bodies.

Don Paradis was no angel. He was a leader of the Gypsy Jokers motorcycle gang back in 1980 and he allowed any number of nefarious types to have the run of his home in Spokane. On June 21, 1980, two people were killed in his house. Ms. Palmer was strangled, and her boyfriend, Scott Currier, was beaten to death.

In 2006, the Times admitted that Nazi Field Marshal Erwin Rommel is “no angel.”

“Field Marshal Erwin Rommel, no angel, but an eventual enemy of Hitler whom the Führer allowed to kill himself with a poison capsule.”
Convicted murderer and rapist Clayton Lockett is also, to be sure, “no angel.”

“To be sure, Lockett was no angel. He was convicted of first-degree murder for shooting a young woman, Stephanie Neiman, and watching as accomplices buried her alive.”

Describing a scene from a biopic of Larry Flint, the Times surmised that the Hustler mogul is “no angel.”

Larry next throws a jug at his sleeping father, accusing him of drinking up the profits. He's no angel.
According to the Times, the parents of one of the Columbine killers realized their son was “no angel.”

Eric’s parents knew their son was no angel — he broke into a van, he was found making pipe bombs and setting them off for fun — and they took steps to address this.

Magic Johnson was “no angel” in 1996.

Maybe Magic’s quitting to run for President. The speculation that he couldn't take playing with the likes of Cedric Ceballos and Nick Van Exel isn’t totally fair. Magic was no angel, either. But that’s what people were saying here last night, and that's what Jordan was thinking.

DeWitt Garrison is one of the five boys charged in 1994 with the murder of a police officer who died during a police-vehicle accident that occurred while officers pursued the boys. His mother was quoted in the Times as describing him as “no angel.”

Mr. Garrison's mother, Patricia Garrison, 40, said yesterday at the courthouse in Brooklyn that her son “likes to run in the streets. He's no angel.” But, she insisted: “They're railroading those boys. That body don’t belong to them. That’s a lack of communication between the police.”

In 1992, the Times interviewed Tina Spencer, the mother of an unarmed black boy who was killed in 1986 by four white men. Her son, according to the Times, was “no angel.”

“My son's death was racial,” says Tina Spencer, a bookkeeper. “I want people to know.” Her boy was no angel, she admits. He’d been arrested several times for stealing, convicted once, “but he was young and I had hopes for him.”

In May of this year, a Times reporter covered the story of a man named Unique Smith. Smith, who had served jail time in his youth, was in the news again because he had been accused of plotting to rob a drug dealer (the Times inserts some skepticism: “Mr. Smith’s family has far more questions than facts about that night”). Mr. Smith, of course, is “no angel.”

Days earlier, Mr. Smith had spoken hopefully of an upcoming job interview. Sure, he was no angel. But robbery? In Manhattan?

Michael Jackson, who stood trial for child molestation, was “no angel.” But he didn’t earn that Times-ian distinction for his alleged crimes against children.

Michael was no angel on stage at the Rose Bowl; he grabbed his crotch repeatedly, especially as he sang “Billie Jean.’’

A sample of the white folks the Times has called “no angel” includes infamous mobsters, murderers, a pornographer, and a Nazi. Black Americans described similarly by the paper include a basketball player, a singer, criminal suspects, and unarmed men killed by white people.

In a piece on Darren Wilson, also published Monday, the white officer who shot and killed Brown on August 9 is described as having a “troubled childhood,” and learned policing in a department plagued by racial tensions between its cops and the community they served, a police force that was eventually disbanded.

The headline of the Times piece on Wilson: “Darren Wilson Was Low-Profile Officer With Unsettled Early Days”. Wilson left a “muted, barely noticeable trail,” and was “a well-mannered, relatively soft-spoken, even bland person who seemed, if anything, to seek out a low profile.” The article’s Web address describes Wilson’s past as “unremarkable.” It seems the officer is lucky that he didn’t have a documented interest in rap music.
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" lang="en"><p>How the New York Times described <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/MichaelBrown?src=hash">#MichaelBrown</a> compared to Ted Bundy. <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/Ferguson?src=hash">#Ferguson</a> <a href="http://t.co/VH0Q9euWew">pic.twitter.com/VH0Q9euWew</a></p>&mdash; Sean McElwee (@SeanMcElwee) <a href="https://twitter.com/SeanMcElwee/statuses/503942799306543104">August 25, 2014</a></blockquote>
<script async src="//platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>


<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" lang="en"><p>Here's the NYT description of Eric Harris (Columbine shooter) compared with <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/MichaelBrown?src=hash">#MichaelBrown</a>. <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/Ferguson?src=hash">#Ferguson</a> <a href="http://t.co/bFVlNvIFvn">pic.twitter.com/bFVlNvIFvn</a></p>&mdash; Sean McElwee (@SeanMcElwee) <a href="https://twitter.com/SeanMcElwee/statuses/503936107999166464">August 25, 2014</a></blockquote>
<script async src="//platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

That white boy is dropping some knowledge on his twitter feed, this one below is more telling how the media frames the narrative against black men

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" lang="en"><p>For Anders Breivik, hip-hop was a sign of youthful innocence, for <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/MichaelBrown?src=hash">#MichaelBrown</a>, it's a sign of violence. <a href="http://t.co/pbF85GI5yZ">pic.twitter.com/pbF85GI5yZ</a></p>&mdash; Sean McElwee (@SeanMcElwee) <a href="https://twitter.com/SeanMcElwee/statuses/503972637710618624">August 25, 2014</a></blockquote>
<script async src="//platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
That white boy is dropping some knowledge on his twitter feed, this one below is more telling how the media frames the narrative against black men

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" lang="en"><p>For Anders Breivik, hip-hop was a sign of youthful innocence, for <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/MichaelBrown?src=hash">#MichaelBrown</a>, it's a sign of violence. <a href="http://t.co/pbF85GI5yZ">pic.twitter.com/pbF85GI5yZ</a></p>— Sean McElwee (@SeanMcElwee) <a href="https://twitter.com/SeanMcElwee/statuses/503972637710618624">August 25, 2014</a></blockquote>
<script async src="//platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

Yo that dude is going HAM!

he running all kinds of NYT articles next to their description of Michael Brown. He's handing out cups of ETHER like it's bottles of water

I’m just out here working hard every single day, just trying to be the best poster I can be....
 
The New York Times does realize that three out of three of our last presidents have "dabbled in drugs and alcohol," right?— Sean McElwee (@SeanMcElwee) August 25, 2014






I’m just out here working hard every single day, just trying to be the best poster I can be....
 
<iframe width="560" height="315" src="//www.youtube.com/embed/3MOKRwan2Kc" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>​
 
You can say I'm drinking the Kool aid but I swear that voting does not work for black people. We vote for Democratic just to be voting and don't put any money behind our votes.Too many Black people for whatever reason believe that these politicians actually are "for the people". I would say that putting money behind a few politicians that really are going to help us build will help but the powers that be will just have them assassinated

Then you're a fool. Ferguson is a perfect example of what happens when you don't vote. They got a 70% Black town with a white mayor, while city council and white education board. That's the type of local shit you can change by voting in who YOU want.

Sent from my Nexus 5
 
You can say I'm drinking the Kool aid but I swear that voting does not work for black people. We vote for Democratic just to be voting and don't put any money behind our votes.Too many Black people for whatever reason believe that these politicians actually are "for the people". I would say that putting money behind a few politicians that really are going to help us build will help but the powers that be will just have them assassinated

Then you're a fool. Ferguson is a perfect example of what happens when you don't vote. They got a 70% Black town with a white mayor, while city council and white education board. That's the type of local shit you can change by voting in who YOU want.

Sent from my Nexus 5

and if the people are engaged. They can overcome the money in politic issue. Politicians can't get elected/reelected without votes. They can be removed from office by the people (if they are engaged). Money works best when the people are not engaged and the voter turnout is low.
 
and if the people are engaged. They can overcome the money in politic issue. Politicians can't get elected/reelected without votes. They can be removed from office by the people (if they are engaged). Money works best when the people are not engaged and the voter turnout is low.

Then you're a fool. Ferguson is a perfect example of what happens when you don't vote. They got a 70% Black town with a white mayor, while city council and white education board. That's the type of local shit you can change by voting in who YOU want.

Sent from my Nexus 5
:mad: they don't here u bro.... Time after time I can't tell you how often I run into Negros proud to tell you " Nigga I don't vote" ... Smh
 
fox cac hoe trying to get the pastor to shit on al sharpton, cut off when he doesn't fall for the okie doke

<iframe title="videobam video player" type="text/html" frameborder="0" scrolling="no" width="480" height="324" src="http://videobam.com/widget/obepk" allowfullscreen></iframe>

fukkin cunt
 
Why Was Mike Brown "No Angel" but Darren Wilson Is Just "Low-Profile"?

Anyone unfamiliar with*the way the U.S. treats dead young black men*should take a look at*today's*New York Times*front-page mini-profile of Michael Brown, the unarmed 18-year-old who was shot and killed by a police officer in Ferguson, Mo. earlier this month. It's headlined "Michael Brown Spent Last Weeks Grappling With Problems and Promise"—problems, you say?

Michael Brown, 18, due to be buried on Monday, was no angel, with public records and interviews with friends and family revealing both problems and promise in his young life. Shortly before his encounter with Officer Wilson, the police say he was caught on a security camera stealing a box of cigars, pushing the clerk of a convenience store into a display case. He lived in a community that had rough patches, and he dabbled in drugs and alcohol. He had taken to rapping in recent months, producing lyrics that were by turns contemplative and vulgar. He got into at least one scuffle with a neighbor. [...]

As a boy, Michael was a handful. When his parents put up a security gate, he would try to climb it. When they left out pens and pencils, he would use them to write on the wall. He used to tap on the ground, so his parents got him a drum set; his father played the drums. He grew into a reserved young man around people he did not know, but joking and outgoing with those close to him.


Is the*Times*cryptically gesturing at some unpublishable knowledge of Brown's behavior or juvenile record? Or has no one at the paper ever met a teenager before? "Michael Brown Spent Entire Life Being Pretty Normal Child, Teenager" is, admittedly, a less interesting angle. Maybe, given this telling detail—

In the ninth grade at McCluer High School in Florissant, Mr. Brown was accused of stealing an iPod. His mother said she went to the school, eventually showing a receipt to prove the iPod was his.

—we could settle for "Despite Facing Discrimination and Suspicion, Young Man Looked Forward to Future Before Police Killed Him."

Also gracing the front page of the paper of record is*a mini-profile of Brown's killer, Officer Darren Wilson:

As a teenager, Darren Wilson lived in St. Peters, Mo., a mostly white city of 54,000 about 20 miles west of Ferguson, where his environment was chaotic. He was the eldest of three children of Tonya Dee Durso, who, records show, carried out financial crimes, including against Sandra Lee Finney, who lived across the street and had believed they were friends.

"It's a terrible thing that has happened now, but he did have a troubled childhood," Ms. Finney said in an interview, adding that Officer Wilson's family had somewhat awkwardly stayed in the neighborhood — moving just one door down — even after his mother was convicted of stealing and forgery in 2001. [...]

Officer Wilson's formative experiences in policing came in a department that wrestled historically with issues of racial tension, mismanagement and turmoil. During Officer Wilson's brief tenure, another officer was fired for a wrongful shooting, and a lieutenant was accused of stealing federal funds. In 2011, in the wake of federal and state investigations into the misuse of grant money, the department closed, and the city entered into a contract to be policed by the county. The department was found to have used grant money to pay overtime for D.W.I. checkpoints that never took place.


If Mike Brown "liv[ing] in a community that had rough patches" made him "no angel," what did growing up in a household with a convicted criminal and learning how to police in a corrupt racist department make Darren Wilson? A "Low-Profile Officer With Unsettled Early Days," apparently.


http://gawker.com/times-mike-brown-had-problems-wilson-had-unsettled-1626427885


I'm glad to see others are starting to see the media bias in their stories that we've been screaming about for so long


This is absolutely bananas.
 
I've been registered for years and haven't been called.

They won't put me on a jury neither. Guess they feel like my run ins w/da law voids that. :dunno:

I've never been selected

Never even been asked a question when I do have to go to jury duty

The lawyers see me and be like nah this nigga ain't being on my jury

That's on purpose man. We can't get a fair trial on purpose.

Closes I got was a call back based on the paper they fill out.

I walked in both attorney's looked at me..as i was the only black dude in there and nodded like...yea no time homie. i was the 1st person excused.


Been called three times,

All for traffic bs

All three times the defendant was black, I gave not guilty for all 3

1 was but I didn't give a fuck, fuck HPD :lol:

Exactly they know what's gonna happen. I'm gonna do what that bitch did for Zimmerman.
 
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