Manufacturing Dissent—The Ruling Class’s Saul Alinsky Strategy in Ferguson MO

A case of Alinsky’s patented rubbing raw the sores of discontent:

The past and much-anticipated future riots in Ferguson, Missouri aren’t spontaneous civil disorder—they are an example of how the U.S. is governed in the multicultural, post-American age.

Undeterred by the Trayvon Martin farce, the Main Stream Media, professional racial activists, and Obama’s Justice Department are implacably committed to the story that police officer Darren Wilson murdered “Gentle Giant” Michael Brown, regardless of the facts.

And the riots widely predicted if Darren Wilson isn’t indicted are less a protest against police misconduct than a ginned up attempt to ensure black voter turnout. It’s not a protest against the system—it’s the system working as designed.

via Manufacturing Dissent—The Ruling Class’s Saul Alinsky Strategy in Ferguson MO.

Geo. Zimmerman pummeled, can of iced tea

Bleeding from the nose and back of his head . . . broken and bloody nose and swelling of his face. . . . open wound of scalp . . . . Nasal bones, closed fracture were reported by police or hospital about George Zimmerman’s injuries the night he shot Trayvon Martin, reports Smoking Gun.

And the can that fell out of Trayvon’s pocket while he was being given first aid while lying on the ground.

African Americans wig out, beat up caucasian man

See how reporting is done here on tippy toes, lest people know that this was black on white crime.

Victim’s sister:

 “It was the scariest thing I have ever witnessed.” [Ashley] Parker says 20 people, all African American, attacked her brother on the front porch of his home, using “brass buckles, paint cans and anything they could get their hands on.

Police will only say “multiple people” are involved.

Out of the mouths of mothers . . .

On the Today Show, Trayvon Martin’s mother called the shooting of Trayvon an accident:

One of the things that I still believe in, a person should apologize when they are actually remorseful for what theyve done. I believe it was an accident. I believe that it just got out of control and he couldnt turn the clock back. I would ask him, did he know that that was a minor, that that was a teenager, and that he did not have a weapon?

Which is what he said later at his bond hearing:

“I am sorry for the loss of your son,” he said. “I did not know how old he was. I thought he was a little bit younger than I am. And I did not know if he was armed or not.”

I hear you, he was telling the mother. Dr. Boyce Watkins, at KultureKritic.com, is not amused:

I havent spoken with Al Sharpton in a few months. But if we were still speaking and he were to ask me what to do with the mother of Trayvon Martin, my answer would be very simple: Get her off the stage right now.

It hurts the case, yes, but at least as important, it takes from the narrative, does it not? He says the same thing at Huff Post.

She did recover, however:

Meanwhile, Martins mother raised eyebrows with her own comments on Today about the accidental nature of the case, but she clarified what she meant in another interview later in the day. Sybrina Fulton told The Associated Press that she was referring to the chance encounter between Zimmerman and her son.

Their meeting was the accident, Fulton said. That was the accident. Not the actual act of him shooting him. That was murder … They were never supposed to meet.

Yet and still, we still have the revealing response from the good doctor.

Later:

Yet another yet-and-still notification:

This is a redundant conversational convention. As both adverbs have the same meaning, you only need one.

Yet and still, he did not change his ways.
Yet he did not change his ways.
Still he did not change his ways

Personally, it’s something I picked up in civil rights and related gatherings of the 60s.  A black usage, I presumed and stillpresume.

Trayvon Martin Protest - Sanford
Trayvon Martin Protest - Sanford (Photo credit: werthmedia) What the mother said.

The Trayvon case made him do it

Mugging of white man in our fair village:

 Alton L. Hayes III, of Oak Park, and a 15-year-old Chicagoan both black walked up behind the 19-year-old victim and pinned his arms to his side early Tuesday, police said.

Alton:

He said, Empty your pockets, white boy,” robbed him, threw him down and punched him out, he and his friend.

He was mad about the Trayvon business and took it out on the white man, he told police. It didn’t pay.

Hayes was charged with attempted robbery, aggravated battery and a hate crime, all felonies, Oak Park police Detective Cmdr. Ladon Reynolds said.

He was still in jail Friday.