A continuation of events surrounding the drug war and related social issues of Baja California and Mexico. Keeping an eye on Seig Heil Trump. We are still trying to restore all blogs from 2006 which were hacked by Linton Robinson and his team, famous for supporting the Baja Trump Towers on one of his real estate sites. Highlights of Paris-Simone's favorite music !!
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Sunday, November 21, 2021
USA: On A Downward Spiral - Analysis by John Blake
I think many of us already knew that Rittenhouse would walk even though many of the many were hoping deep down that justice would be served. What a scary week for America, and truth is, none of this is receiving local coverage in Mexico. Looks like the only ones who will be having a Happy Thanksgiving are the Klan and the Proud Boys. Oh of course, Marjorie Taylor Greene with her arms raised in victory and jubilation over the Rittenhouse "not guilty" verdict. That woman is just plain vulgar:
Gross
But it wasn't just the Rittenhouse trial with the pathetic Klan Judge and Kyle's cagey sleezy defense attorneys; don't forget the Paul Gosar violent video of him killing/beheading AOC (which he actually posted twice) and threatening the President of the United States with a similar fate (excuse me but if any of us had done that we would probably have been thrown in jail); not to mention the appointment of Cleta Mitchell to the "...advisory board of a federal agency with a mission to help states conduct secure elections." Right. Not to be forgotten the Charlottesville trial and the Arbury murder trial - all cases against violent neo-fascists.
Those
are just some of the names for a racial stereotype that has haunted the
collective imagination of White America since the nation's inception.
The
specter of the angry Black man has been evoked in politics and popular
culture to convince White folks that a big, bad Black man is coming to
get them and their daughters.
I've
seen viral videos of innocent Black men losing their lives because of
this stereotype. I've watched White people lock their car doors or
clutch their purses when men who look like me approach. I've been
racially profiled.
It's
part of the psychological tax you pay for being a Black man in America
-- learning to accept that you are seen by many as Public Enemy No. 1.
But
as I've watched three separate trials about White male violence unfold
across the US these past few weeks -- the Kyle Rittenhouse trial, the
Ahmaud Arbery death trial and the civil case against organizers of the
2017 Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville -- I've come to a sobering
conclusion:
There is nothing more frightening in America today than an angry White man.
It's
not the "radical Islamic terrorist" that I fear the most. Nor is it the
brown immigrant or the fiery Black Lives Matter protester, or whatever
the latest bogeyman is that some politician tells me I should dread.
It's encountering an armed White man in public who has been inspired by the White men on trial in these three cases.
I'm not suggesting we start racially profiling White men. The vast majority of White men are no menace to society.
Countless
White men swallowed tear gas and braved rubber bullets while marching
with demonstrators during last year's protests over the murder of George
Floyd. Plenty of White men -- like the Rev. James Reeb, a White Unitarian minister -- died for Black people during the civil rights movement.
There is nothing inherently violent about White men, or any human being.
But
recent events have convinced me it's time to put another character on
trial: A vision of White masculinity that allows some White men to feel
as if they "can rule and brutalize without consequence."
This
angry White man has been a major character throughout US history. He
gave the country slavery, the slaughter of Native Americans, and Jim
Crow laws. His anger also helped fuel the January 6 insurrection at the Capitol.
It's
this angry White man -- not the Black or brown man you see approaching
on the street at night -- who poses the most dangerous threat to
democracy in America.
That's
a sweeping claim. But these trials represent something bigger than
questions of individual guilt or innocence. They offer a disturbing
vision of the future, and a choice about what kind of country we want to
live in.
The facts of the trials are well known to many Americans.
In Wisconsin, a jury found Kyle Rittenhouse not guilty of all charges
in the shooting deaths of two men and the wounding of another during a
racial protest last year. Rittenhouse, who was 17 at the time, said he
was in Kenosha during the protests after the police shooting of Jacob
Blake to help protect property. He said he shot the men in self-defense.
In Georgia, three White men are accused
of chasing and killing Ahmaud Arbery, a 25-year-old Black man, last
year while he was jogging. The men say they were trying to conduct a
lawful citizen's arrest, and the man who shot Arbery says he acted in
self-defense.
And in Virginia, a civil trial
is underway to determine if organizers of the "Unite the Right" rally
intended to incite racial violence. One person was killed and dozens
injured there after White supremacists clashed with
counter-demonstrators.
Race
is an inescapable theme that runs through all the trials. At the center
of each are White men who are accused of using unjustified violence,
either against an unarmed Black man or during racial protests. In
Rittenhouse's case, a jury cleared him of criminal wrongdoing.
It's
what's happening outside these courtrooms, though, that is most
frightening. It suggests these trials are a symptom of a dangerous
shift.
The
House voted this week to censure Gosar, with virtually no Republicans
backing the resolution.
Gosar took down the video after facing criticism
but did not apologize, and later retweeted a post that contained the
video.
Gosar's video wasn't an isolated incident. Violent political rhetoric has been escalating among
some members of the Republican Party. And while not all of it is fueled
by White men, much of it starts at the top -- with former President
Donald Trump. Trump's
violent and sexist rhetoric has been well-documented. More White men
now identify as Republican, and the gender gap between both major
parties is as large as it's ever been in the last two decades.
One New York Times columnist, under the headline "The Angry White Male
Caucus," said this anger is driven by White men who fear a changing
America "in which the privilege of being a white man isn't what it used
to be."
The
anger also seems to be getting worse. After President Joe Biden signed
an infrastructure bill into law this month, some House Republicans who
voted for it reported receiving death threats. Election officials and
school board members across the country are also reporting escalating threats. A recent poll revealed that 30% of Republicans believe that violence is justified to save the country.
Political violence is not limited to the GOP. A Bernie Sanders supporter who publicly declared his hatred of conservatives shot five people at a Republican baseball practice in 2017.
But
talking about assaulting and killing political enemies has become so
normal -- and seemingly acceptable -- in conservative circles today that
a White man felt comfortable enough to ask a right-wing activist at a public forum in Idaho last month:
"When do we get to use the guns? ... How many elections are they going to steal before we kill these people?"
Add
to this toxic political atmosphere another element: Laws that not only
protect White vigilante violence but, in some cases, seem to embolden
vigilantes.
Activists
hoped that widely seen videos showing White police officers and White
men shooting Black men like Arbery would inspire the courts and state
legislatures to revisit laws that made such actions possible.
But even after nationwide protests over the murder of George Floyd by a White police officer, little has changed.
A growing number of Americans now want police funding increased. And
though Georgia overhauled its citizen's arrest law, a reform bill called
the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act died in Congress two months ago.
We could see more guns on the streets
The conservative-leaning US Supreme Court now seems poised to make it easier for people to carry guns in public, based on recent oral arguments over a New York gun control law.
The US' civilian population is already the most heavily armed in the world. And our streets could soon become even more violent.
"A
significant portion of the gun safety movement's current agenda is
likely to come under attack in the coming years," Adam Winkler, a UCLA
law professor and author of "Gunfight: The Battle Over the Right to Bear
Arms in America," recently told Newsweek.
"I think bans on assault weapons and bans on high-capacity magazines
are ripe for the new Supreme Court, with its newly invigorated Second
Amendment, to strike down."
The Supreme Court has also recently ruled
once again in favor of "qualified immunity," the legal doctrine that
shields police officers accused of misconduct. There's been little national movement on reforming "stand
your ground laws," some of which allow people who believe they're
facing an imminent threat to use lethal force without first trying to
escape. At least 25 states have such laws, according to the National
Conference of State Legislators.
And
despite the shocking nature of the Arbery video, there's been little
progress on reforming citizen's arrest laws, which allow private
citizens to detain or arrest someone they suspect in a crime.
The
White men on trial in the Rittenhouse and Arbery cases both said they
acted in self-defense. One of the men in the Arbery case testified that
the unarmed Black jogger tried to take his gun, and his life was at
risk.
But
consider the potential danger of other White men -- or any person
wielding a gun in public -- feeling emboldened to use deadly force
against even an unarmed person by evoking the logic in those defenses,
said Eric Ruben, a Second Amendment expert.
"In
other words, their own decision to carry a gun became a justification
to use it, lest it be wrested away from them," Ruben recently told the New York Times.
While
prosecutors didn't show that Rittenhouse was angry that night, there is
a perception -- fair or not -- that he went to Kenosha for reasons more
than simply maintaining public safety.
The comedian Trevor Noah reflected this sentiment in a comment that became a meme: "No one has ever thought, 'Oh, it's my solemn duty to pick up a rifle and protect that TJ Maxx."
And
finally, there's a growing fear that no one will be severely punished
for the January 6 insurrection because most of the rioters were White.
The trials of various defendants are winding their way through the
courts now. Jacob Chansley, the so-called "QAnon Shaman," was sentenced
to 41 months in prison for his role in the US Capitol riot.
But
many believe the punishment will never match the severity of the crime.
What if, say, a mob of Black Lives Matter protesters attacked the US
Capitol in an attempt to overturn the election of a Republican
president? How do you think conservative lawmakers would react?
We
are seeing more threats, more guns and more suspicion that the courts
will go easy on White people who employ violence. This is the
combustible mix that makes more violence almost inevitable.
Angry White men have damaged democracy
We have enough problems with White male violence as it is. Mass shootings in the US are committed more often by White men than by any other group. Top law enforcement officials now say the
nation's biggest domestic terror threat comes from White supremacists.
And many of the most indelible news images of recent years include
angry, red-faced White men, often armed with guns.
Consider
scenes from the US Capitol riot, which were filled with angry White men
wielding crude weapons and pummeling police. Or the snarling faces of
young White men holding tiki torches during the 2017 rally in
Charlottesville. Or the angry White men who clashed with anti-racist
protesters across the US last year.
White
male anger has become one of the most potent political forces in
contemporary America. That anger helped a White man win the White House.
Trump's rise to power is inconceivable without his ability to tap into
White male anger and embody it.
Has there ever been an angrier modern president? He is the White male id unleashed.
This
White male anger is causing many people -- including other White men --
to look over their shoulder when they go out in public. The two men who
were shot and killed by Rittenhouse in Wisconsin were White, as was the
man he wounded.
Ijeoma Oluo, author of "Mediocre: The Dangerous Legacy of White Male America,"wrote that
she lives with the constant fear that angry White men will turn violent
toward her and "countless other black people, brown people, disabled
people, queer people, trans people, and women of every demographic."
White male anger could prove to be one of the biggest roadblocks we face in building a successful multiracial democracy.
Lee Drutman, a scholar who has studied political violence, recently told
the New York Times: "I have a hard time seeing how we have a peaceful
2024 election after everything that's happened now. I don't see the
rhetoric turning down, I don't see the conflicts going away. I really do
think it's hard to see how it gets better before it gets worse."
This isn't hyperbole. It's history. It happened before.
After
the Civil War, the US attempted to build the first biracial democracy
by incorporating formerly enslaved people into the country's political
and economic life. That period, known as Reconstruction, was destroyed
primarily by the violence of White men who used terrorist and vigilante
groups like the KKK to assassinate elected officials, prevent Blacks
from voting and overthrow state governments.
In
1898, for example, a mob of primarily White men staged a coup against
the city government of Wilmington, North Carolina, which had elected a
multiracial coalition of leaders. More than 60 Black people were killed,
and Black residents of the city were barred from voting, and from
elected office, for decades afterward.
The January 6 insurrection wasn't unprecedented. In many ways it was a sequel.
No more lectures about Black 'thugs'
Republican
Sen. Lindsey Graham warned the GOP that "We're not generating enough
angry White guys to stay in business for the long term."
He
was wrong. The angry White guy business is booming. Yet no matter how
obvious it becomes that the country has a problem with White male
violence, most Americans will escape what Black and brown men experience
on a weekly basis.
Not
many drivers will lock their doors when White men approach at a
stoplight. Few women will clutch their purse when they pass a White man
on the street.
Someone recently posted a meme
about this double standard by evoking the memory of Tamir Rice, the
12-year-old Black boy who was killed in Cleveland by a police officer
who authorities said mistook his toy pistol for a real firearm.
"Tamir
Rice was 12 and killed for having a fake toy gun. Kyle Rittenhouse, 17,
killed two people. Walked by police after killing two people. Got to go
home and sleep."
That
meme is why it's hard for me for to tolerate hearing another lecture
about "Black thug culture" or a "Black culture of violence."
My response to the White men who use these tired phrases: Look in the mirror.
And
look at these three trials, because they point to one frightening
future. This is what that future looks like: More angry White men
emboldened by "stand your ground" and citizen's arrest laws, inspired by
a conservative interpretation of the Second Amendment.
And more dead Americans."
~~~~~
As we have been watching these depressing events unfold, we are becoming less inclined to return to the USA despite conditions here in Mexico.
Meanwhile, the knee: Last Tuesday I went to the Orthopedic Specialist and received one cortisone shot to the right knee, plus I passed the blood tests and other requirements and was notified I am ready to roll on the knee surgery.
Here's the catch: Sharp-Reese Stealy (which used to be THE BEST in San Diego) is so backlogged (and imho understaffed) guess what? It won't happen for another six months, but I'm on the list. Since the shot, I stopped with the Tramadol, but who knows how long that will last.
So, good news-bad news. It is incredibly frustrating, but this is the state of our Health Care and very pricey Health Insurance. Six more months of agony ? Where art thou, Bernie? Still going in monthly to receive the skin cancer shots, ugh.
Everyone else is okay except Rubio twisted his little leg, needs to go in for an X-ray.
Take a deep breath and try to have a nice Thanksgiving under the present circumstances, I'll be back with the local stats...we are inching our way up to almost 100 executions in TIJ so far this month.
Oh, and be careful if you go out in the water.....
....................or for that matter, anywhere on dry land in the States:
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