Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
November 5, 2016
“Non-violent crack dealer” is a term on par with “moderate terrorist.” Obama has coined both of these terms. Well, I don’t know if he’s ever used these specific terms, but the concepts are his. No one has ever thought of these things before.
There is no such thing as a non-violent crack dealer. Violence is an intrinsic aspect of the crack trade. The reason that Bill Clinton strengthened drug laws in the 90s was that Blacks are notoriously hard to catch in acts of violence, because the Black community doesn’t call the cops, and if they are caught, no one will testify against them, so it is difficult to get a conviction.
The entire idea of strict drug laws is to get violent criminals off the street through a legal loophole: it is much easier to get a drug conviction than a violent crime conviction.
The drugs themselves also cause violent crime among users, so you are cutting down on that as well.
It was never about regulating Black people’s health, and it certainly wasn’t the racist conspiracy Obama claims it is. I mean, talk about kooky – “Bill Clinton hated Black people and wanted them to suffer in prison for no reason, due to his deep hatred for the color of their skin.”
Obama is simply rushing to hurt America as much as possible with the time he has left. He doesn’t particularly seem to care that this particular attack on America will disproportionately affect the Black community, which as a larger whole, tends to dislike the warzone created in their neighborhoods by the crack trade.
You can look up the convictions of any of these 72, and all of them will be Blacks convicted of selling crack.
President Obama on Friday commuted the sentences of 72 inmates, the latest sign he is accelerating his clemency push during his final months in office.
It was the second time in the past eight days the White House announced that a large group of people, most convicted of nonviolent drug offenses, would be released from federal prison. The two batches totaled 170 inmates.
In total, 944 people have had their sentences cut short by Obama — more than the last 11 presidents combined — with 760 receiving commutations this year alone.
“What President Obama has done for commutations is unprecedented in the modern era,” White House counsel Neil Eggleston wrote in a blog post.
“The president is committed to reinvigorating the clemency authority, demonstrating that our nation is a nation of second chances, where mistakes from the past will not deprive deserving individuals of the opportunity to rejoin society and contribute to their families and communities.”
Friday’s clemency grants include 16 people serving life sentences. More than two dozen will be released as early as next spring, but many will not be freed immediately.
Some will not get out of prison until fall 2018. Other inmates’ releases are conditional on them entering enter residential drug treatment programs.
During the final stretch of his presidency, Obama has ramped up his use of clemency power to free prisoners serving lengthy sentences handed down during the government’s war on drugs.
A bipartisan push in Congress to overhaul the nation’s sentencing laws has stalled during that time. Eggleston urged lawmakers to take up the legislation in the lame-duck session of Congress after the elections, “including reforms that address the excessive mandatory minimum sentences.”
Obama has repeatedly denounced the long sentences for nonviolent drug offenses as overly punitive, arguing they’ve had a devastating impact on communities of color.
In 2014, the administration launched a clemency initiative to identify drug offenders worthy of an early release.
…
The latest batch also includes nine inmates convicted on firearm-related charges.
Those releases have fueled complaints from some Republicans that Obama is releasing dangerous criminals back into their communities.
“These are not people picked up for smoking pot on a street corner,” Thomas Fitton, president of conservative watchdog group Judicial Watch, told The Hill last week. “These are key figures in major drug operations.”
A White House official said people who receive clemency are barred from purchasing a firearm under federal law. In selecting inmates worthy of early release, Obama makes a distinction between people who possessed a weapon while committing a drug-related offense and those convicted of armed robbery or murder.
“The president has been clear that his goal is to commute the sentences of those who have truly rehabilitated themselves and do not have a propensity for violence,” the official said.
Criminal-justice reform groups, on the other hand, have urged Obama to pick up the pace, especially because there is no guarantee the next president will continue the initiative.
(((Criminal-justice reform groups))).
For the record here, I think that pot laws have been overly strict at certain points in recent history. I don’t agree with legalization, but decriminalization of small amounts is probably pretty reasonable. The same goes for normal cocaine.
However, addictive drugs, such as crack, heroin (and opiate pharmaceuticals) and methamphetamines need to be completely removed from society, and people caught distributing them should generally be executed, Duterte-style.
There is just no way that it is at all okay to have any of those three substances in your society. There is no excuse for it. And saying “oh well, human rights for drug dealers” is utter nonsense. If a man murders another man, he can be executed for it, even if it was for an ostensibly good reason. But a drug dealer ruins thousands of lives, causes untold numbers of deaths, and it is “human rights” to let him continue his actions?
I think not.
But lo there, on the horizon – what rises?
A law and order candidate.
Trump’s pledge to stamp-out the heroin trade is a really under-discussed campaign promise.
I think he’s going to bring in Duterte as a consultant.