(ThyBlackMan.com) Let’s try and connect some dots.
Last week, FBI Director Jim Comey expressed his view that, after investigation of Hillary Clinton’s handling of State Department official business, including classified material, on her personal email server, he would not recommend criminal charges against her.
This despite describing the behavior of the former secretary of state as “extremely negligence.”
Former New York City mayor and federal prosecutor Rudy Giuliani said, according to Clinton’s behavior as described by Comey, she was clearly in violation of the law. By choosing to recommend that she not be indicted, Giuliani said that Comey decided to put her “above the law.”
The way it was described by the Wall Street Journal, Comey’s “political actions spared Clinton and protected his own job.”
Now lets turn our attention to Dallas, where a gunman opened fire and five police officers were killed at a Black Lives Matter rally.
The question every decent American is asking is: How do we stop this horror?
How do we stop the seemingly endless and growing circle of violence in our cities?
There are plenty who think they know the answer.
For some, they see the problem as indiscriminate and violent treatment of blacks, particularly young black men, by police, driven by racism.
For others, it’s the opposite. It’s the refusal to come to terms with what they see as the deep social pathologies in black urban areas and the hampering of police to do their job effectively.
As always in situations like this, both things are going on. But do I think either is the primary and sole reason driving the violence? No.
What we are witnessing is the chaotic result of a society that is becoming each day more lawless.
The basis of a civilized, decent and just society is law. But law, if it is going to be respected, must be rooted in core values and eternal truths. In the words of our second president, John Adams, we need “a government of laws, not of men.”
In our zeal to purge our nation of Judeo-Christian values, driven by the false notion that religion hampers rather than enhances our freedom, we bear the consequences of this effort. We wind up with a government of men, not laws.
Capriciously applied law has always been a disturbance for blacks. The civil rights movement was supposed to be about the country recognizing and remedying that, in a nation under God, there were citizens not receiving equal treatment under the law.
Unfortunately, the civil rights movement came in the midst of the liberal wave of the 1960s. So instead of focusing on equal application of existing laws of tradition, we turned law over to men to make up new rules that were supposedly going to fix everything.
But man-made law produces what we have just seen in a politically motivated FBI director rationalizing that a secretary of state, confirmed by the United State Senate, somehow couldn’t figure out that she was breaking the law and compromising our national security.
When we don’t take law seriously at the highest levels of power in the nation, the message reverberates throughout the land. Those struggling in life conclude hopelessly that the country is not fair – that the law is created and applied with political motivations.
No amount of force, or gun control legislation, is going to fix a society where there is no longer a sense that we have law rooted in truth, which every citizen, in every station of life, respects and takes seriously.
In a nation where people with power are let off the hook, where we let politicians and judges define what marriage is and when life itself begins, we empower groups like Black Lives Matter to incite and inspire violence as the answer to injustice.
Written by Star Parker
Official website; http://www.urbancure.org
This is a good article, though it is brief and does not have much in the way of solutions. I am not willing to stereotype all BLM members as violent or not, some are and some are not. Others have joined in who have hidden agendas. We can thus not place everyone in the same box. We have contacted Alicia Garza, one of the founders, in an effort to supply lawful and strategic information regarding the mistakes they are making, the unnecessary risks they are taking and even more effective ways to reach the goal. They must learn to build support by building credibility and using more approaches than confrontation. We have been threatened by their Atlanta leaders and largely ignored, even though we have the most comprehensive nationwide plan to end police brutality and they do not.
They need to be trained and stop and listen. Right now they are acting and reacting based on emotion instead of responding based on strategy and wisdom. That is dangerous and reckless because such an approach causes you to be predictable and play right into the hands of the oppressor.
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The Black Lives Matter does NOT incite violence.
That is very irresponsible and dismissive.
“The Black Lives Matter Network advocates for dignity, justice, and respect.
In the last few days, this country witnessed the recorded murders of Alton Sterling and Philando Castile at the hands of police, the latest victims in this country’s failed policing system. As we have done for decades, we marched and protested to highlight the urgent need to transform policing in America, to call for justice, transparency and accountability, and to demand that Black Lives Matter.
In Dallas, many gathered to do the same, joining in a day of action with friends, family, and co-workers. Their efforts were cut short when a lone gunman targeted and attacked 11 police officers, killing five. This is a tragedy–both for those who have been impacted by yesterday’s attack and for our democracy. There are some who would use these events to stifle a movement for change and quicken the demise of a vibrant discourse on the human rights of Black Americans. We should reject all of this.
Black activists have raised the call for an end to violence, not an escalation of it. Yesterday’s attack was the result of the actions of a lone gunman. To assign the actions of one person to an entire movement is dangerous and irresponsible. We continue our efforts to bring about a better world for all of us.”
Other than that, this article is very poignant.