We Stand with Corporal Eric Casebolt

Stuff Black People Don’t Like
June 11, 2015

McKinney Texas Police Corporal Eric Casebolt represents exactly the type of individual you want enforcing the law and trying to keep civilization alive in the face of the encroaching Heart of Darkness.

To those who produce the propaganda keeping alive Black-Run America (BRA), and those those who eagerly consume this pablum, Corporal Casebolt is the personification of evil.

In actuality, he represents the true hero (similar to Officer Darren Wilson).

Texas Police Corporal Eric Casebolt did his duty in protecting the taxpayers of McKinney from the type of environment eroding away civilization in Dallas
Texas Police Corporal Eric Casebolt did his duty in protecting the taxpayers of McKinney from the type of environment eroding away civilization in Dallas

Having spent much of life enjoying the peaceful serenity of country club, subdivision, or private pools, it must be stated there is nothing quite as enjoyable as a swimming experience free of bandaids floating on the water, unsupervised children screaming, and glass on the bottom of the pool.

But such is the hallmark of civilization, which requires structures in place to protect it from barbarism (the barbarism of the proletariat, hilariously depicted in the White Trash episode from season six of It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia).

What happened in McKinney, Texas is obvious: a private pool for residences of a particular subdivision (who pay large home owners association fees to maintain said pool) was overrun with black people, who failed to understand what it takes to keep the pool in such pristine, swimmable conditions.

Police officers were then called to restore order (the question of why white people never try to swim in pools in majority black areas or why whites don’t follow black people wherever they move – indeed, the opposite is true – must not be asked).

Order was restored, with Corporal Casebolt merely requesting the black youth to comply with his demands: those who failed to cooperate with the police were immediately dealt with as anyone who fails to respect the law should.

Those who found Eric Casebolt’s actions inexcusable (namely the mayor of McKinney and the police chief of the city) have sided with the Heart of Darkness currently chipping away at the civilization whites labored for centuries to build out of the wilderness of the North American continent.

Forced to resign, Casebolt and his family are now in hiding after receiving numerous death threats.

White Law Enforcement Officers (LEO) in America are in a dangerous position, with the Obama Administration putting a bullseye squarely on their back. It all started with the “acted stupidly” comment in 2009 by President Obama and only grew in intensity during the Darren Wilson/Michael Brown saga, with former Attorney General Eric Holder and Obama both routinely siding (and encouraging) the #BlackLivesMatter mob.

All white officers must now ask themselves if trying to maintain civilization and upholding the law by arresting a black person is worth the risk of becoming the next Darren Wilson or Eric Casebolt. In so doing, merely asking themselves this question is proof the Heart of Darkness has now taken root in America.

An America where the rule of law is supplanted by the rule of blackness is one already on display in 65 percent black Baltimore. Why risk your career (or even risk being thrown in jail) by trying to uphold the white man’s law, when the only reward is watching civilization continue to decline? [Baltimore police officers break silence on riots, murder spike and Freddie Gray, CNN, June 10, 2015]:

Forty-two people were killed in Baltimore in May, making it the deadliest month there since 1972.

When asked what’s behind that number, a Baltimore police officer gave an alarming answer. Basically, he said, the good guys are letting the bad guys win.”The criminal element feels as though that we’re not going to run the risk of chasing them if they are armed with a gun, and they’re using this opportunity to settle old beefs, or scores, with people that they have conflict with,” the officer said.

“I think the public really, really sees that they asked for a softer, less aggressive police department, and we have given them that, and now they are realizing that their way of thinking does not work.”

He was one of two active Baltimore police officers who spoke to CNN on Tuesday about crime in their city. They also touched on the death of Freddie Gray, a young black man who died in police custody, and the riots that followed.

The officers were not given permission to speak from their department. Because of that, and in an attempt to allow them to talk candidly, CNN agreed on their condition of anonymity.

Both said the Baltimore Police Department is simply reacting to events instead of being proactive. They talked about feeling abandoned by their leadership and feeling scared — not about being hurt, necessarily, but about being charged criminally for doing what they see as their job. Six officers have been charged in Gray’s death, which has been ruled a homicide.

“Ultimately, it does a disservice to the law-abiding citizens. It does a disservice to the business owners. It does a disservice to everybody except the criminal element,” the second officer said about operating in reactive mode.

He denied the existence of a work slowdown but said he couldn’t promise proactive policing.

“Even though you have reasonable suspicion,” he said, “nine out of 10 times, that officer is going to keep on driving.”

‘They feel betrayed’

Worry has overtaken a lot of officers, and now morale is low, said Lt. Kenneth Butler, who heads a police union in Baltimore, the Vanguard Justice Society.

“They feel as though, if I make a mistake — which we all do make mistakes — then what is this administration going to do to me?” he told CNN’s Miguel Marquez.

“Am I going to be the next one to be suspended? Am I going to be the next one who is going to be criminally charged?”

One officer called the union leader to ask if he’d be liable if a suspect he was chasing ran into traffic and got hit by a car, Butler said. He couldn’t answer the question, so the officer told Butler he’d stop pursuing suspects on foot for now.

Normally, officers would do their duty more robustly, Butler said, but they don’t feel like their leadership has their back anymore. “A lot of guys … they feel betrayed,” he said.

The feelings of these anonymous Baltimore Police officers are the future for all LEO in America, with the law being cast aside so black people are free to engage in criminal activities without any consequences.

The “bad guys” in Baltimore are winning because the black community refuses to snitch or identify the black criminals overthrowing white civilization there; such is the future for all of America once LEO has been de-venomized and turned into nothing more than toothless “community outreach” specialists.

McKinney Texas Police Corporal Eric Casebolt did his job in trying to restore order to a pool party gone wrong. Those who failed to cooperate with his orders were in clear defiance of his authority, and before he drew his gun it was obvious numerous black males were moving in on him to attack.

As a white police officer, Casebolt was in clear violation of failing to understand this is a black world, one where the rule of law must constantly be written to enforce the reality blacks must never be held accountable for the dysfunction they breed.

Civilization or Barbarism (as epitomized by the Heart of Darkness): the choice is yours white America.