Zeiger
Daily Stormer
October 14, 2016
Somebody’s got to stop these cops!
Let me describe a scenario.
A good boy, who didn’t even do nothing, and who is unarmed, is confronted by a police officer. The good boy in question, who was just about to get his life back on track (like, right then and there), draws his firearm (which, I must remind you, he doesn’t have), and gets mercilessly gunned down by the officers.
This may seem bizarre to you. Almost impossible.
And yet, it happens every single day.
We definitely need to do something. But don’t worry, the feds are on the case.
The Justice Department said Thursday that it would start collecting nationwide data early next year on police shootings and other violent encounters with the public, after a series of protests and investigations since 2014 spurred by a string of deadly episodes.
“Protest.”
The project, the most ambitious the federal government has undertaken in tracking the use of force by police officers, is meant to fill what officials say is a huge and frustrating void in publicly available data on the shootings that have roiled the country.
Didn’t each and everyone of those shootings get investigated to death though? Of course they did. There is no shortage of data here. This is purely about further removing the local control over the police departments, and replacing it with a top-down federal bureaucracy.
And you can be sure that this bureaucracy will be focused on giving Blacks everything they want and absolving them of the responsibility for their own behavior.
Under the plan, the Justice Department will gather more data on the use of force by federal agents and help local departments report information on a wider range of police encounters.
They literally want to micromanage every little thing each police officer does on a daily basis. This is the first step to that.
But a number of the reporting steps will rely on local police officials to voluntarily submit data, and some civil rights advocates said the Justice Department had not made clear how it would impose financial penalties set by Congress to encourage the reporting of police shootings.
“I can’t believe two years into this crisis that we’re still having conversations about data,” said Kanya Bennett, a lawyer in Washington for the American Civil Liberties Union, which met with the Justice Department to discuss the plan.
The problem isn’t that there is insufficient data. The problem, of course, is that all the data is pointing to a reality that these civil rights activists don’t like. Namely, that the Blacks being put down are dangerous animals who had no place in a civilized society.
Wait… If we massage this data just right, we can show institutional racism.
This program will be a huge waste of time and money at best, and the next step in the 1984-style Jew police state at worst.