Law enforcement

Robert
David STEELE Vivas
Killing Cops – The
Canary Dies Too
I am troubled by the
platitudes and ignorance surrounding the murder of two New York police
officers. I am a son of New York and my uncle was a member of the Nassau County
police force back in the day when non-judicial punishment kept people out of
jail and got them back on track with tough love.
The death of these two
officers is the equivalent of the canary in the coal mine dying. They have died
because the USA is on the verge of a revolution. Apart from concentrated wealth,
loss of faith in government, and tens of millions of unemployed college
graduates, we have an unemployment rate closer to 22.4% (see Shadow
Stats), with 22 veterans committing suicide every single
day.
For over a decade I have
been sounding the alarm on “cognitive dissonance.” Above (and below) is the core
chart from my 1976 graduate thesis on preconditions of
revolution, color-coded to show the preconditions of revolution existing now in
the USA, in my view. A simplified short paper covering the basics is available
as Thinking About
Revolution, this was used in a course I taught at
Marine Corps Command & Staff College.
The militarization of
the police is one more rotting plank in the sinking ship of state. Coming as it
does on top of the legalization of all forms of crime including the infamous CITIZENS UNITED judgment of the
Supreme Court that confirmed our fascist tendencies, the militarization of the
police is the final precondition for revolution.
Preconditions, however,
are not sufficient. Revolutions also need precipitants. Rosa Parks was a
precipitant. The Tunesian fruit seller was a precipitant. Burning monks in
Viet-Nam — I lived through ten of them — were precipitants. These are incidents
— the Ferguson shooting and the New York choke hold could have been but were
not precipitants — capable of inspiring a rush to the streets and a mass
mobilization.
Beyond precipitants
comes mobilization. For mobilization to be effective one needs leaders of
integrity ready to step forward and displace the leaders in power who lack
integrity. Sadly I see no one in the wings. I ran for President, briefly,
accepted as a candidate for the Reform Party nomination, and stopped as soon as
had achieved my personal goals (putting the best core ideas in one place, at We the People Reform
Coalition, and communicating personally with every other
Presidential candidate, inviting them to come together in support of an
Electoral Reform Summit).
What I learned in that
six-week campaign is a story told in How
I Tested the Boundaries of the Two-Party Tyranny (Reality
Sandwich) and still with me today. From Ron Paul to Dennis Kucinich to Jill
Stein to Gary Johnson to Rocky Anderson to all the others — Jesse Ventura, BIll
DeBlasio, Michael Bloomberg did not receive letters but their apathy is equally
predictable — no one — not a single one of them — was willing to talk about
Electoral Reform.
The USA is on the verge
of Watts riots with a difference — this time it is the white people, most of
them armed, who are angry. A few people of color may break first and murder the
occasional police officer, but it is the white, armed, mob — led by
combat-experienced veterans who understand more deeply than most the true cost
of the hundreds of lies our government has been telling — that will burn the
place down. They will be joined by the blue collar master class, the soccer
moms whose white collar dream has turned into a nightmare, and the 30 million
recent college graduates living at home again because they cannot find work.
In my view, an Electoral
Reform Summit no later than early March, and an Electoral
Reform Act of 2015 no later than 4 July 2015 and in
time to allow an honest government to be elected in November 2016, is the one
sane non-violent option that we might consider. Nothing else will do, in my view.
Law enforcement works
when 90% of the people believe in law enforcement. That allows law enforcement
to focus on the 10% that are legitimate threats. When the government itself is
the threat, with Congress passing laws written by lobbyists, laws it does not
even read (as it does not read emails from constituents), then law enforcement
no longer has the support of the vast majority of the public. My personal
estimate is that roughly 70% of us support law enforcement today. The
militarization of law enforcement has been a horrible wrong turn, but law
enforcement is paying for sins it has not committed — the larger more pervasive
sins of constant betrayal of the public trust at the federal and state levels.
The murder of the two
officers in New York is our canary in the coal mine. I have not read or heard a
single intelligent comment to this effect from any spokesperson or pundit.
Those officers died because they were the low-hanging fruit on a tree of
government that is rotten to the core.
More officers will die if We the People
do not come to grips with that fact.
Semper Fidelis,
Robert David Steele
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