bobsal u1553115
 
  2  
Fri 3 Oct, 2014 03:51 pm
@coldjoint,
November is not going to go well for you Teadopes.


GOP Mailer Asks People to Harass Suffering 91-Year-Old in Hospice Care

Posted on October 3, 2014 by Guest Blogger
Share:

Another Republican campaign has taken a turn for the horrible. A mailer is now circulating that calls for responders to call Michigan state’s John Fisher’s ailed mother of 91.

Fisher’s mother, according to a statement from his campaign to Mlive.com, was suffering from congestive heart failure and in hospice care at the time of the mailer.

Past mailers that attempted to inundate Fisher with a flurry of calls. Instead of being overwhelmed, Fisher had found the opportunity to talk to voters “worked to [his] advantage, because most people agree with me that policies that improve life for families and seniors are good for Michigan.”

“But to direct people to call a suffering woman who deserves peace and comfort is beyond the pale,” said Fisher. “Their lack of ethics and contempt for personal privacy is just another reason for people to question what – or better, who – the Republican Party stands for, so that they can make a wise decision at the ballot box…”

“I am disgusted that Republicans are recklessly bullying my mother when she needs rest and quiet the most, but she is not the only senior in Michigan whose life has been disrupted because of them,” Fisher said.

Brandt Iden, Fisher’s opposing candidate, issued a statement in which he stated that his campaign was not responsible for the mailer and that he doesn’t “condone negative campaign tactics and it’s not something my campaign has done or anticipates doing.”
coldjoint
 
  -3  
Fri 3 Oct, 2014 04:21 pm
@bobsal u1553115,
Quote:
November is not going to go well for you Teadopes.


The Republicans will do for now. And it is going to very well. If we aren't all dead by then.
bobsal u1553115
 
  2  
Fri 3 Oct, 2014 06:52 pm
@coldjoint,
You want a viking death, don't you?

Still got nothing but your opinions.
coldjoint
 
  -2  
Fri 3 Oct, 2014 09:16 pm
@bobsal u1553115,
Quote:
Still got nothing but your opinions.


And you have what you copy and paste. Just crap from highly organized liars.
bobsal u1553115
 
  2  
Sat 4 Oct, 2014 06:47 am
@coldjoint,
Who have facts at their hand, unlike you and your dismal bag of RW bloggers. You wouldn't know a fact if it sat on your face.

Here's some more facts for you, junior. Let me high light them for you.


More Americans Killed By Police Than By Terrorists: With Crime Down, Why Is Police Aggression Up?
We're safer than ever. So why are we seeing an ever increasing militarization of policing?


http://www.alternet.org/more-americans-killed-police-terrorists-crime-down-why-police-aggression?paging=off&current_page=1#bookmark
March 20, 2014 |


This article first appeared at WhoWhatWhy.

You might not know it from watching TV news, but FBI statistics show that crime in the U.S.—including violent crime—has been trending steadily downward for years, falling 19% between 1987 and 2011. The job of being a police officer has become safer too, as the number of police killed by gunfire plunged to 33 last year, down 50% from 2012, to its lowest level since, wait for it, 1887, a time when the population was 75% lower than it is today.

So why are we seeing an ever increasing militarization of policing across the country?

Given the good news on crime, what are we to make of a report by the Justice Policy Institute, a not-for-profit justice reform group, showing that state and local spending on police has soared from $40 billion in 1982 to more than $100 billion in 2012. Adding in federal spending on law enforcement, including the FBI, Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, the Drug Enforcement Agency and much of the Homeland Security Department budget, as well as federal grants to state and local law enforcement more than doubles that total. A lot of that money is simply pay and benefits. The Federal Bureau of Justice Statistics reports that the ranks of state and local law enforcement personnel alone swelled from 603,000 to 794,000 between 1992 and 2010. That’s about two-thirds as many men and women as the entire active-duty US military.

What these statistics make clear is that policing in America is ramping up even as the crime rate is falling.

To the advocates of militarized policing, this just proves that more and better-armed cops are the answer to keeping the peace. But former corrections officer Ted Kirkpatrick, like many experts in the field, warns against jumping to this conclusion: “Police will of course say crime is down because of them,” he tells WhoWhatWhy, “but they have a vested interest in saying that.”

Kirkpatrick has the credentials and training to look beyond statistics and simplistic answers to the underlying social forces at work here. In addition to his years of law enforcement experience, he is a homicide expert in the Department of Clinical Sociology at the University of New Hampshire, and Co-Director of the university’s Justiceworks program, a think-tank specializing in law enforcement and justice issues.

“When something goes sour, like an increase in crime,” Kirkpatrick says, “everyone looks for a way to explain why. Yet when things go well, like this long-term fall in the crime rate, nobody bothers to look at why.”

Surprising Reasons for Drop in Crime Rate

(opinion)Militarized “pro-active” policing may have had some effect on the drop in crimes in the US. But Kirkpatrick says, “I don’t think it’s the big thing.” (fact)Crime is down even in many cities where police forces have been cut for budget reasons, and experts agree that the decline in crime began before the militarization of policing really started to take off.

(did you see how that works, junior - opinion than FACT)


Other factors likely play a bigger role. One is increased immigration since, contrary to common belief, communities with greater numbers of immigrant families show the biggest drops in crime thanks to those families’ “stronger social fabric.” Another factor is an aging population—older people commit fewer violent crimes.

So what’s behind the push to put more police on our streets, with ever more impressive military equipment, while training them to behave like occupying troops in Iraq or Afghanistan?

One might assume that the militarization of American law enforcement began after the national trauma of 9/11. But, in fact, its roots go back decades earlier, when media stories in the 1970s created the impression that the nation was awash in illegal drugs.

An aroused Congress passed a “no-knock” law in 1970. The law allowed police to conduct drug searches and arrests by entering homes without first presenting a warrant. President Nixon’s declaration of his War on Drugs a year later led to an exponential increase in warrantless drug searches, with an inevitable emphasis on military-style policing.

SWAT team actions soared from hundreds annually in the 1970s to thousands a year in the ‘80s to 40,000 a year by 2005, according to a report by the libertarian CATO institute. The author of that report, and academic experts studying the issue, now estimate there may have been as many as 70,000-80,000 such raids in 2013 alone. Hard figures are not available: the Justice Department does not keep records on SWAT-team usage.

On top of the increase triggered by Nixon’s War on Drugs, President George W. Bush’s War on Terror in aftermath of 9/11 gave a dramatic boost to the militarization of American police forces.

“There has been a clear escalation of violence by police, particularly since 9/11,” says Brigitt Keller, who heads up the National Police Accountability Project of the National Lawyers Guild. “The willingness of police to use very harsh measures against people has definitely increased.”

A big part of the problem, she says, is that these days “officer safety” is given primacy over “protect and serve.” A case in point: a South Carolina sheriff’s deputy in February shot and seriously injured a 70-year-old man at a traffic stop when the man tried to retrieve his cane from the back of his pick-up truck. The Sheriff’s Department said the deputy acted “appropriately,” as he had “a legitimate fear” that the cane might have been a long rifle.

In another recent example, New York City police shot and injured an unarmed man who was acting “erratically” in Times Square. The officers were exonerated, while the man they shot was charged with causing injury to several bystanders—who were hit by the police officers’ stray bullets.

“I’m all for police officers not getting hurt on the job,” says the Lawyers Guild’s Keller, “but if you make that your first concern, then it’s problematic, because you allow the use of deadly or excessive force in practically every situation between an officer and a citizen, and you end up with citizens getting hurt.”

In fact, while being a police officer has been getting less dangerous, killings committed by police have been rising despite the drop in police who are killed.

The numbers are eye opening. The Justice Department, which keeps all kinds of statistics on violent crime, does not tally up individuals killed annually by police. But by combing public news reports and other sources, the Justice Policy Institute has estimated that police officers in the U.S. killed 587 people in 2012 alone. Over the course of a decade, they’ve tallied more than 5,000 people in the U.S. during that period—far more than the number of people who lost their lives in acts officially classified as terrorism in roughly the same span.

The many instances of deadly police violence captured on video give a visceral reality to these statistics. They show police beating and sometimes needlessly shooting citizens—even those with their hands up or armed only with a knife or stick while standing too far from responding officers to pose a threat.

In some jurisdictions, police have responded to these damaging videos by routinely confiscating bystanders’ cell phones and threatening witnesses with arrest, even though federal courts have consistently held that citizens have a right to photograph and videotape officers engaged in police actions.

The National Police Accountability Project’s Keller suggests that, along with the public’s acceptance of military-style policing, the killing of civilians has become more acceptable too. Police are rarely punished for killing people—even those who were unarmed or already restrained—because in most communities, police shootings are investigated by the police themselves, or by a closely-allied district attorney’s office. Indeed, about 95 percent of police shootings end up being ruled “justified,” a statistic that hasn’t changed as the body count has risen.

“I think when non-targeted individuals are killed in a raid, or when a person is shot in the course of a routine traffic stop, it’s seen as a kind of ‘collateral damage,’” Keller says, “instead of as some tragic or criminal use of excessive force by police.”

Public indifference to “civilian” casualties in police actions highlights a disconnect: The public perceives rampant crime while the actual crime report suggests nothing of the sort.

This fundamental misapprehension seems to be fueling the continuing political push for more police and tougher policing. While the militarization of law enforcement has little or no relation to the falling crime rate, there is reason to fear that it is eroding our constitutionally protected rights under the First, Fourth and Fifth Amendments in the Constitution’s Bill of Rights.

“I’m not sure that spending money on more police, on Kevlar suits and on things like armored vehicles is the most efficient thing to do,” says UNH’s Kirkpatrick. “It might be better to spend it on Big Brother/Big Sister-type programs and other kinds of services for kids. The trouble is, we generally implement public policy based on sentiment, not logic or statistics, and thanks to the 24-hour news cycle and its really quite dramatic reports on crimes, the average Joe or Jane thinks that things have gone nuts.”


Dave Lindorff is an award-winning investigative reporter and author of the blog, This Can't Be Happening. A regular columnist for CounterPunch, he also writes frequently for Extra! and Salon, as well as for Businessweek, The Nation and Treasury & Risk Magazine.
coldjoint
 
  -2  
Sun 5 Oct, 2014 03:28 pm
@bobsal u1553115,
Quote:
So why are we seeing an ever increasing militarization of policing?


Because progressives are control freaks.
One Eyed Mind
 
  -2  
Sun 5 Oct, 2014 03:47 pm
@bobsal u1553115,
Sigh. While you're giving other people names, I'll continue making a name for myself that will forever be remembered.

I swear, most of you idiots might as well work as the price label device in stores. You label everything according to what others tell you - here's a hint, the people you are listening to are people that wise men stay away from. You're leading an army of lemmings and you don't even do anything with lemons when life gives them to you, instead you unzip your pants and piss in a glass, giving a toast to your self-appointed success.
0 Replies
 
RexRed
 
  3  
Sun 5 Oct, 2014 05:46 pm
https://fbcdn-sphotos-a-a.akamaihd.net/hphotos-ak-xpf1/v/t1.0-9/10383084_719468758124043_8782922475834507189_n.jpg?oh=b2b10a4071d6ff55f79194870ca029a6&oe=54CFD764&__gda__=1422297614_1c7459e99d316b47ba355ff119f6db99
Unbelievable, but true. Scott Walker has flown the equivalent of more than 5 trips around the planet on taxpayer’s dime. See more about his flights:
http://www.pocanforcongress.com/walkerflightrecords.html
RexRed
 
  3  
Sun 5 Oct, 2014 05:55 pm
https://scontent-b-lga.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-xpf1/v/t1.0-9/p235x350/10696423_10152364530200669_4097627511907912322_n.png?oh=b8c5219641154c32983ba0430682b11b&oe=54B5BC0E

Governors who don't care about people...
0 Replies
 
cicerone imposter
 
  2  
Sun 5 Oct, 2014 06:00 pm
@RexRed,
How did he get that kind of deal? Five trips around the world for a dime? That must be a world record!
RexRed
 
  3  
Mon 6 Oct, 2014 12:23 am
https://fbcdn-sphotos-e-a.akamaihd.net/hphotos-ak-xpa1/v/t1.0-9/s526x296/1653409_846058718758733_6508927208583600056_n.jpg?oh=9d6fa0fe169f79c9bfa459522d93a7f1&oe=54B7CF1C&__gda__=1422715595_77ee7f60b7a59455a34b4c1b42c7a2be
0 Replies
 
bobsal u1553115
 
  2  
Mon 6 Oct, 2014 06:55 am
@coldjoint,
"Progressives" are control freaks. An opinion. And in the face of facts. You're brain must have thrown sparks when that one came up. Police are Progressives?

hahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahaha!
bobsal u1553115
 
  3  
Mon 6 Oct, 2014 06:57 am
Mitt Romney "Accidentally" Commits Misdemeanor Voter Fraud While Leaving The Republican Party
http://www.politicususa.com/2014/10/03/ooopsie-mitt-romney-committs-accidental-misdemeanor-voter-registration-fraud.html


Mitt Romney, who just days ago was near tears over his failure to get elected and thus save us all from the horrible fate of record stock market rallies and the addition of 10 million private sector jobs under President Obama, is in hot water for signing voter registration forms without reading them.

Mitt Romney, two-time loser, but third-time hopeful, signed voter registration forms with the wrong address and wrong party. Romney is no longer a Republican, apparently, according to his own careful perusal of the voter registration he signed. He also used an address he hasn’t used since 2009. Oopsie!

Psst: Don’t try this if you’re a Democrat or a minority.

The Salt Lake Tribune found Romney’s voter registration problem while digging through documents obtained in a records request. Thomas Burr reported:



A copy of the form shows Romney’s signature with his old address listed in two places beside warnings that providing false information on the registration document is amisdemeanor violation of Utah law.

It turns out Romney, who is moving to Utah as a full-time resident, strolled into a driver license office in late August to obtain his Utah license and filled out paperwork to register to vote at his under-construction home in Holladay, a suburb of Salt Lake City. But, apparently because of outdated information in the agency’s database, the pre-printed form listed Romney’s former Park City address on Rising Star Lane and with no party affiliation. Romney signed it.


The Romney folks explained it to the Trib, “As they explained it, some star-struck clerks and Romney’s inattentiveness may have combined to cause the problem.”

0 Replies
 
coldjoint
 
  -2  
Mon 6 Oct, 2014 10:09 am
@bobsal u1553115,
Quote:
Police are Progressives?

The police do what they are told. When progressives give the orders that is the way it goes. Lack of enforcement, because of ethnic and racial reasons, and taking better care of the criminals than the victims is progressive. Regressive when it comes to equal justice, but progressives manipulate by special treatment. Look at the job they have done manipulating an idiot like you.
One Eyed Mind
 
  -2  
Mon 6 Oct, 2014 10:11 am
@coldjoint,
CJ, just post pictures of Plato's Allegory of The Cave.

Thank me later.
0 Replies
 
Baldimo
 
  -2  
Mon 6 Oct, 2014 10:16 am
@cicerone imposter,
My insurance increased by double. I didn't see any savings, my insurance got more expensive with the advent of the ACA.
cicerone imposter
 
  3  
Mon 6 Oct, 2014 10:28 am
@Baldimo,
You must feel like a victim in an environment when insurance premiums for health insurance is dropping.

Poor you!
Quote:
Sep 05, 2014
News Release

Premiums Set to Decline Slightly for Benchmark ACA Marketplace Insurance Plans in 2015[


Why don't you show us your insurance statements for the past two years?

I also question your ability at simple math. Double?
coldjoint
 
  -1  
Mon 6 Oct, 2014 10:33 am
@cicerone imposter,
Premiums Set to Decline Slightly for Benchmark ACA Marketplace Insurance Plans in 2015[

Why do you people insist on saying you know more about this guys insurance than he does?
One Eyed Mind
 
  -2  
Mon 6 Oct, 2014 10:41 am
@coldjoint,
Exactly.

Well put, CJ.
0 Replies
 
Baldimo
 
  -1  
Mon 6 Oct, 2014 11:15 am
@cicerone imposter,
To bad this only applies the the ACA market and not the entire insurance market. The govt has to provide the money to make the plans affordable. The changes to the insurance market had an impact on EVERYONES costs. You will notice no one ever says anything about insurance costs to private insurance.
 

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