THIRD WORLD AMERICA: Class War Gets Violent In Chicago Read more: http://www.huffing

Discussion in 'Politics' started by Banjo, Jul 8, 2012.

  1. ammo

    ammo

    As long as they can afford to be bangers,..drugs...,they will always be back..education is one way out..but the odds for failure are probably quadruple those in less impoverished areas
     
    #71     Jul 9, 2012
  2. ammo

    ammo

    you could say the same about DC,as long as there are lobbyists paying you to be a criminal, politicians will always be crooked
     
    #72     Jul 9, 2012
  3. Why are you replying to yourself ?

    lol.

    How many voices are their in your head?
     
    #73     Jul 9, 2012
  4. Maverick74

    Maverick74

    +1

    Classic.
     
    #74     Jul 9, 2012
  5. ammo

    ammo

    i try counting them but each voice comes up with a diff number..was too late to edit..easier than retyping first example
     
    #75     Jul 9, 2012
  6. TGregg

    TGregg

    So, who thinks Chicago is going to turn around? Surely the liberals do? Heck, it's a liberal town. They vote liberal every chance they get (much like Detroit). That's a win/win for everyone, right?

    LMAO.

    So when we do this post election dinner, the locals do security and transportation, right? Or are we on our own to charter sufficient forces?
     
    #76     Jul 11, 2012
  7. NYPD Commissioner Ray Kelly yesterday ripped into leaders of the predominantly minority communities where shootings are soaring, accusing them of being “shockingly silent” to the rising body count.

    His comments — which outraged local leaders — came as the parents of a 3-year-old Brooklyn boy shot by thugs in a playground said they support the top cop’s controversial stop-and-frisk program.

    “They need to do it more often,” Tiffiney Monajas said as her toddler son, Isaiah Rivera, recovered in their Bedford-Stuyvesant apartment from the gunshot to his leg Sunday.


    Gabriella Bass
    ON MEND: Pregnant Tiffiney Monajas yesterday with son Isaiah Rivera, who is recovering from being shot in the leg near their Brooklyn home. She backs stop-and-frisk.

    Warzer Jaff
    Ray Kelly
    Isaiah’s dad, José Rivera, said stop-and-frisk “could have stopped this person, whoever did this, from having a gun.”

    Kelly griped that while others complain about the policy, “Who will speak out about the elephant in the corner, which is the inordinate level of violence that exists in many of these communities?

    “I think there should be an outcry that 96 percent of the shooting victims in this city are black or Latino,’’ he railed after a Police Athletic League event in Harlem, according to the NYPD. “There should be a huge outcry, but there isn’t.

    “There doesn’t seem to be any major community response. Or demonstrations. We have not had a demonstration about this 3-year-old child. We haven’t had a demonstration about the level of violence. We’ve had demonstrations about virtually every other issue in this city except the level of violence, particularly in certain communities.

    “So, yeah, I’d like to hear some concerns raised about that, because I think, you know, if you don’t hear that in certain communities, [they] almost, in a way, passively accept it as, you know, life.”

    A spokesman for Mayor Bloomberg later insisted, “The commissioner didn’t say anything he hasn’t said multiple times before, and the mayor is in agreement.”

    But community leaders — reeling from statistics that show little Isaiah was one of 77 New Yorkers shot last week, a 28 percent jump over the same period in 2011 — screamed foul.

    “I believe [Kelly] is using racial undertones to divide this city on who has a passion to deal with the issues of crime,” seethed state Sen. Eric Adams of Brooklyn.

    “He basically said black elected officials don’t care about the safety of their community.’’

    Manhattan Councilwoman Melissa Mark Viverito added, “To imply that we don’t care just because we don’t agree with [stop-and-frisk] is irresponsible and inflammatory.”

    Brooklyn Councilman Jumaane Williams, who co-chairs the council’s Task Force to Combat Gun Violence, said Kelly’s comments “directly insult communities like mine, which are grieving for our lost and trying to save our young people every day.

    “Where was Commissioner Kelly this weekend when I and others were in the streets with families who had lost their children? Where was Mayor Bloomberg?”

    Additional reporting by Sally Goldenberg, David Seifman, Dan Mangan, Natasha Velez, Helen



    Read more: http://www.nypost.com/p/news/local/kelly_rage_damn_it_m4bCTjDTAGpeUkdC9XJCKN#ixzz20N3lhw2G
     
    #77     Jul 11, 2012
  8. We ask where's the outrage on everyday crime in the black community and the politicians respond with


    “He basically said black elected officials don’t care about the safety of their community.’’
     
    #78     Jul 11, 2012
  9. ammo

    ammo

    as long as it's us n them, them being way over there and we don't have to deal with them,it will get worse,nothing stays the same,it either improves or gets worse,doing nothing at home and sending billions to other countries,someone in DC is making a killing on the drug trade or it would have been decimate dby now,not even try and fail, just nothing,send a thug to jail, like sending madoff to jail,but let the banks pay off fines without admitting guilt, and keep making criminal deals,the money's there,it has to be laundered by banks,they know where it is and are profitting,who cares one less black or gangbanger or mexican or some other impoverished race that can't defend themselves, put the blame on them, in 08 they called it the subprime borrowers,this year they just put up more news,in the past ,these stories were squashed, like the behind the scene deals are now..reminds of the tee shirt ..shit happens
     
    #79     Jul 11, 2012
  10. TGregg

    TGregg

    They chant !!!!! RACISTS !!!!!

    While the rest of us say "Have fun watching your kids get wasted."
     
    #80     Jul 11, 2012