“The reparations could come in a variety of forms, according to the panel”… Hmmmmm. James, what form do you reckon the Dindu reparations recovery operations in Harm City will take now? Now that they have been handed putative "moral justification” from a passel of "human rights” ambulance chasers and agents provocateur working under the aegis of the United Nations that is. If I didn’t know better I would think the anti-American Leftist globalists really want to see a race war break out here.
Jeremy, the race war is here and is being fought only by the attackers, as the defenders endure in media imposed silence. A night does not go by when I fail to see a car with tinted windows cruising for victims, mobs prowling on foot and pairs and trios by bike, all looking for victims. Since I am either carrying a weapon or have my hands under my camo poncho and now dress in all military surplus garb, from head to toe, the Dindu hordesmen—including the elite Reparations Recovery Agents—have been giving me a wide berth. I am also no longer subtle about checking my back trail. I stop, ready my weapon and glare about. I do this when no one is following me, just to check, as my hearing has not recovered from that last lateral stick hit I ate in May. Think about this Jeremy, I am the only person I know who goes out alone on foot, at dark in Harm City. The five blacks I work with—who constantly complain about white cops whacking innocent black thugs—form a huddle just to take the bus! I arm up, only go out half as often as before, and behave as if I am on patrol in enemy territory the entire time.
Sounds like war to me.
My weapons include:
A hickory T-cane
A skinning knife
A folding knife for back up
A razor
Two steel-tipped pens
A year ago I would have never carried this shit out of fear of police harassment. But the sense of attack is so imminent I’m taking the risk of arrest and the certainty that I will be prosecuted by the law if I am attacked and survive, and I plan on surviving. Besides, cops are only kicking in doors and answering emergency calls at night, not patrolling. If I achieve non-contact survival by drawing a blade or readying my cane in time, the Dindus will certainly call their law enforcement allies with whom they engage in this sham war as the real attacks against my kind go unreported. I can explain the cane and toss the blades before the pigs close in.
It’s a war Jeremy and I count myself among the insurgents.
Once news spreads about this U.N. resolution, I expect more formalized Dindu militia efforts, which should sweep the few remaining insurgents, such as myself, from the streets. Currently white homeless people are in a bad way in Baltimore, now camping out under bus shelters in better areas of the County and taking to the swampy waterfront woods, to escape the Reparations Recovery teams. The poorest whites are already paying with what little they have and with their blood, for growing rich and fat on the backs of those long dead African American slaves. Of course, since the police have done nothing to defend the homeless or poor whites, the green light sign from law enforcement to beat down whitey is also being used as cover to attack homeless blacks, who are also fleeing to whiter locales—and they will be pursued. I hope that Dindu hordes are soon openly rampaging through deep, affluent white suburbia, raping and pillaging.
This harried white hood rat says let the White Rabbits of Whitebreadistan feel the heel of the enemy upon their neck as well!
Seriously, Jeremy, it has gotten so bad and my reporting has fallen into such a pit of silence, that I am now mostly using my individual violent experience for fiction sources, including the current serial Skulker Jones.
Thank you for your supporting work. I look forward to getting more of your articles.
U.S. owes black people reparations for a history of ‘racial terrorism,’ says U.N. panel
By Ishaan Tharoor
Washington Post |
The history of slavery in the United States justifies reparations for African Americans, argues a recent report by a U.N.-affiliated group based in Geneva.
This conclusion was part of a study by the United Nations' Working Group of Experts on People of African Descent, a body that reports to the international organization's High Commissioner on Human Rights. The group of experts, which includes leading human rights lawyers from around the world, presented its findings to the United Nations Human Rights Council on Monday, pointing to the continuing link between present injustices and the dark chapters of American history.
"In particular, the legacy of colonial history, enslavement, racial subordination and segregation, racial terrorism and racial inequality in the United States remains a serious challenge, as there has been no real commitment to reparations and to truth and reconciliation for people of African descent," the report stated. "Contemporary police killings and the trauma that they create are reminiscent of the past racial terror of lynching."
Citing the past year's spate of police officers killing unarmed African American men, the panel warned against "impunity for state violence," which has created, in its words, a "human rights crisis" that "must be addressed as a matter of urgency."
The panel drew its recommendations, which are nonbinding and unlikely to influence Washington, after a fact-finding mission in the United States in January. At the time, it hailed the strides taken to make the American criminal justice system more equitable but pointed to the corrosive legacy of the past.
"Despite substantial changes since the end of the enforcement of Jim Crow and the fight for civil rights, ideology ensuring the domination of one group over another, continues to negatively impact the civil, political, economic, social and cultural rights of African Americans today," it said in a statement. "The dangerous ideology of white supremacy inhibits social cohesion amongst the US population."
In its report, it specifically dwells on the extrajudicial murders that were a product of an era of white supremacy:
Lynching was a form of racial terrorism that has contributed to a legacy of racial inequality that the United States must address. Thousands of people of African descent were killed in violent public acts of racial control and domination and the perpetrators were never held accountable.
The reparations could come in a variety of forms, according to the panel, including "a formal apology, health initiatives, educational opportunities ... psychological rehabilitation, technology transfer and financial support, and debt cancellation."
To be sure, such initiatives are nowhere in the cards, even after the question of reparations arose again two years ago when surfaced by the groundbreaking work of American journalist Ta-Nehisi Coates (a Baltimore resident).
(
(The Case for Reparations)
Separately, a coalition of Caribbean nations is calling for reparations from their former European imperial powers for the impact of slavery, colonial genocide and the toxic racial laws that shaped life for the past two centuries in these countries. Their efforts are fitful, and so far not so fruitful.
When asked by reporters to comment on the tone of the American presidential election campaign on Monday, the working group's chairman, Ricardo A. Sunga of the Philippines, expressed concern about "hate speech ... xenophobia [and] Afrophobia" that he felt was prevalent in the campaign, although he didn't specifically call out Republican candidate Donald Trump.
"We are very troubled that these are on the rise," said Sunga.
A Once Great Medieval City: 2016: Impressions of Baltimore Maryland
I'm all for reparations but no reparations without repatriation. They must go back to Africa.
Exactly Sam, accepting shall cancel out your American citizenship, it would be a check on one side, and a ticket to Liberia printed on the other, sayonara Kunta Kinte!
And any opinions on small ice picks or similar piercing weapons James?
Dr. Jim:
Since when does the UN, the main excuse for which is for politically connected members of various marginal countries to come here and live it up, dare to even suggest what we ought to do. I note they are not going after subsaharan Africa, where the slave trade is still going on. Those moslems involved just might come after them. Nice double standard, Ricardo. I saw his name and wondered where he'd sprung from. Certainly the Phillipines are a forward moving country. Maybe he could dialogue with the moslem insurgency in his own country. Be another head they could leave on a stick to remind folks whos boss.
I agree with Sam. Here's your check, don't come back.
T'genius Coates? Isn't he living in France? Semiliterate Agitprop pays well, it seems. One hopes he chokes on his escargots. It's tough being self righteous.