Forum Replies Created
-
AuthorPosts
-
no_such_reality
Participant[quote=spdrun]No justification, but the fact is that crime rates are a product of social conditions. Poor social conditions = more murder.[/quote]
And hard reality is, violent crime is down 69% from the 1990s.
The majority of American think it is up.
no_such_reality
ParticipantLA’s problem is really simple. Countywide, 10% of the adult population has no legal status for being in the country. In some communities, that ratio goes above 30%.
Couple that non-legal status across the communities with many enclaves of people coming from places that are even more corrupt and have even lower respect for life, and you have LA’s formula for problems.
no_such_reality
Participant.
no_such_reality
ParticipantBeing disenfranchised provides the window with which someone pours the verbal diarrhea of blaming others into. A thousand years of religion has then been wrapped around it with the express intention of controlling peoples actions.
The G8 societies have failed miserably in integrating immigrants. We’ve allowed, tolerated and in fact, denigrate anyone speaking against immigrants insulating themselves and building isolated communities that continue the practices of their homeland.
We’ve had that throughout history in the USA, but previously there was an expectation that they integrate. Now, we publish election materials in 26 languages, sue schools to provide instruction in multiple languages, etc.
It’s not just Spanish and Mexicans. You can speak only Mandarin, and live perfectly fine in Irvine. Russian, the same, just a different town.
Now, let’s go have some drone strikes, that’ll solve it right? [/sarcasm]
no_such_reality
ParticipantKern county coroner rules the 33 year old beaten by Sheriff deputies died of heart disease.
He had a blood alcohol level of 0.095 (oh my, the incredibly outrageous drunken bastard
and meth in his system
and most importantly, in the news conference, Sheriff claimed no deputies hit him in the head.
I don’t buy it, what a reeking cesspool.
no_such_reality
Participant[quote=Zeitgeist]
I think hanging is a better death than hacking. It is more civilized. I think this is going to be a long summer full or social unrest.[/quote]I too think the unrest in the G8 countries is just starting.
no_such_reality
ParticipantEven after eight years, I’m quite perplexed how this person that can barely stutter through a complete sentence during a speaking engagement managed to be elected twice.
no_such_reality
ParticipantWhat’s the other half of this story? What Mark Steyn attributes here to behavior of the IRS in the audits, leaking of info to rival groups isn’t just scandalous.
http://www.ocregister.com/articles/irs-508961-government-tax.html
“Miss Strassel wrote that on April 26, 2012. Five weeks later, one of the named individuals, Frank VanderSloot, was informed by the IRS that he and his wife were being audited. In July, he was told by the Department of Labor of an additional audit over the guest workers on his cattle ranch in Idaho. In September, he was notified that one of his other businesses was to be audited. Mr. VanderSloot, who had never previously been audited, attracted three in the four months after being publicly named by El Presidente. More to the point, he attracted that triple audit even though Miss Strassel explicitly predicted in America’s biggest-selling newspaper that this was exactly what the Obama enforcers were going to do. The “separate, sinister entity” of the Government of the United States went ahead, anyway. What do they care? If some lippy broad in the papers won’t quit her yapping about it, they can always audit her, too – as they did to Miss Strassel’s sometime colleague Anne Hendershott, a sociology professor who got rather too interested in Obamacare and wrote about it in the Journal and various small Catholic publications. The IRS summoned professor Hendershott to account for herself, and forbade her husband from accompanying her, even though they filed jointly. She ceased her political writing.
…
Mr. VanderSloot is big enough, just about, to see off the most powerful government on the planet. Most of those who’ve caught the eye of the IRS share nothing in common with him other than his political preferences. They’re nobodies – ordinary American citizens guilty of no crime except that of disagreeing with the ruling party. Yet they were asked, under “penalty of perjury,” to disclose the names of books they were reading and provide the names and addresses of relatives who might be planning to run for public office – a kind of pre-enemies list. Is that banana-republic enough for you yet? Not apparently for Juan Williams, fired from NPR for thought crime a couple of years ago, but who was nevertheless energetically defending the IRS exertions on Fox News on Thursday evening.
Left-wing groups had their 501(c)(4) applications approved in weeks; right-wing groups were delayed for months and years and ordered to cough up everything from donor lists to Facebook posts, and those right-wing groups that were approved had their IRS files leaked to left-wing groups like ProPublica. The agency’s commissioner, Steven Miller, conceded before Congress that this was “horrible customer service” – which it was, in the sense that your call is important to him and may be monitored by George Soros for quality control.”
Here’s the original O’campaign piece http://www.barackobama.com/truth-team/entry/behind-the-curtain-a-brief-history-of-romneys-donors/
no_such_reality
Participant“Internal Revenue Service official Lois Lerner, who leads the exempt organizations division under scrutiny for targeting conservative groups that applied for tax-exempt status, is refusing to testify before Congress, the Los Angeles Times reports.
Lerner was supposed to appear before the House Oversight Committee Wednesday.
The Times reports that Lerner’s attorney, William W. Taylor III, sent a letter to the committee chairman saying she would plead the Fifth:”
no_such_reality
Participant
[quote]”Candidly, we go after the cool kids. We go after the attractive all-American kid with a great attitude and a lot of friends,” he said in the article. “A lot of people don’t belong [in our clothes], and they can’t belong.[/quote]CEO Michael Jeffries, age 68 of Abercrombie and Fitch.
no_such_reality
Participantno_such_reality
ParticipantJust IMHO, anything done Under Color of Authority is far more heinous than premeditation or a hate crime.
As it stands now, it’s looking a lot like manslaughter. The witness intimidation and obstruction are too early to call, but just the act of detaining the people until they forked over their camera phones reeks.
On a side note, looks like the White House just forked over 100 pages of emails on Benghazi.
no_such_reality
Participant[quote=deadzone]
I’ll continue to defend my “prove it” posts. The point is the the so called dangers in Mexico are over-hyped by Media, etc, and all of you are irrationally paranoid because of it.[/quote]The dangers in the US are overhyped by the media. A recent study shows most people think gun crime in the USA is up, when in reality, it’s down dramatically, 69% since mid-90s.
no_such_reality
ParticipantI’m sure everyone is shocked in disbelief. Deputies accused of deleting one of the videos
-
AuthorPosts
