Porcfest Chronicles C17 The American Prison State
Bob Murphy introduced Dan D’Amico for a presentation on the prison system in America. Recorded in the Shire Society Pavilion at the 2012 Porcupine Freedom Festival.
Bob Murphy introduced Dan D’Amico for a presentation on the prison system in America. Recorded in the Shire Society Pavilion at the 2012 Porcupine Freedom Festival.
FACTS:
1) The “War on Drugs” is legally designed to never end, notwithstanding all the facts that it is unsupported by science.
2) The “War on Drugs” in New Hampshire, by law, is directly controlled by the United Nations. This represents an affront to our state sovereignty.
3) The “War on Drugs” is designed to generate massive amounts of money for both the government and corporations, while people suffer from the associated disenfranchisement.
If you work in law enforcement or intelligence, use your training to investigate my claims so that you can try and prove me wrong.
(You won’t be able to.)
Manchester activists converged on police DUI checkpoints last night with signs and a laser projection warning motorists of the upcoming shakedown. Hundreds of cars were saved from passing through the aggressors hands and there was much positive response from community members. The only people who didn’t like it were Manchester police and the tow truck drivers who were waiting like vultures, expecting to be thrown free business from the checkpoint. Here’s the awesome laser in action:
Dan D’Amico introduces Mark Tullius for a reading from his book, “Brightside”. This was recorded inside the Shire Society Pavilion at the 2012 Porcupine Freedom Festival.
Radley Balko, HuffPo journalist and chief of The Agitator blog reports on the increasing corporate media focus around a “war on cops”. 2012 is shaping up to be one of the safest years for law enforcement since 1944; a much different time for policing in the US.
A few other media outlets are now picking up on the massive drop in police fatality statistics this year (Welcome to the story!) But so far, none of them have questioned what happened to all of those alleged trends (gun ownership, increasing contempt for cops, videotaping of police misconduct, anti-government sentiment, decreases in funding for police departments) that they all reported were behind the non-existent “war on cops” they were all reporting last year. Or in the case of the New York Times, as recently as April.
If we use the numbers from the National Law Enforcement Memorial Fund, there are 800,000 cops on the streets. There have been 53 on-the -job fatalities so far this year. But 21 of those were car accidents. There have been 19 firearms homicides against police. I looked through the descriptions of this year’s officer deaths at the NLEMF page. Two of the fatalities were from firearms injuries sustained in previous years (in one case, 30 years ago). That puts us at 17 for this year. I then looked through the 13 deaths classified as “other.” Four of those appear to have been homicides—three stabbings, and one officer who died from a blot clot resulting from an altercation with an inmate. So let’s add those to our 17. That gives us 21 homicides in the first half of 2012 (I’ll go ahead and count the two officers killed during SWAT-like drug raids, even though it’s possible the tactics themselves may have contributed to the officers’ deaths).
By my math, that gives us a homicide rate of 5.25 (more…)
Trailer #2 is live! “Derrick J’s Victimless Crime Spree”, a feature-length documentary about Derrick J’s first year in Keene, will be available free in HD online at VictimlessCrimeSpree.com!
Realizing that every law enforcement and intelligence agency from the FBI to the FSB now reads this blog, I have a question for the honest and good people who enforce or support the drug war:
Is it moral and ethical of you to arrest, prosecute, and imprison your people (and testify in favor of public policy indefinitely supporting the the same), while the United States Military is currently protecting the drug PRODUCERS in Afghanistan?
If the drug war was really about keeping people from using drugs, would this be official American policy?
How is that compatible with being a good person?
Have you read the Constitution?
PS New Hampshire: WMUR flatly refuses to cover the shameful judicial corruption that exists in New Hampshire. I used to trust the mainstream media, but now it’s obvious to me why people shouldn’t.
New Hampshire is home to many honorable judges. There are several that really need to be fired for, you know, corruption.
Just like in the police world, bad cops give the good a bad name.
The NH Police Academy taught me to “police (my) own,” literally. Perhaps the Judicial Branch needs the same?