lindajoy wrote:
If there was any real intent to stop this it could have been done by now..
Implement strict curfews, stop the media publicity of it, turn off the lights..
Arrest the violators and spank their butt with a few days in jail...
They don't want it to end, they want to heighten it!! All part of their plan..
Whining, sniffling babies with their temper tantrums looking for any excuse to l**t, damage and run like the animals Soros chose to get it accomplished..Fools they are, used, once again for the dirty works of their political agenda!!
If there was any real intent to stop this it could... (
show quote)
Here's another story. Frank Rizzo was a tough, no nonsense police commissioner in Philadelphia. When the other cities of the northeast, New York, Boston etc. were erupting, in the 1960s, he armed two school busses and parked them near the two big black areas of the city. He took the local leaders and showed them what his department had and told them, if you r**t, we use this. Philly remained quiet. No r**ts.
When I was a senior medical student, I had to do a History & Physical on a black Philadelphia cop. I asked him if he'd mind a question. He said, go ahead. I think he anticipated it.
I asked him, as a black cop what he thought of Rizzo. He replied, Well frankly, I love the man. He continued, I didn't like eveything the man did, "Hey, these are my people, but the man is for law & order."
Then he related something that happened when he was a rookie cop, assigned to South Philly. South Philly was the legendary old Italian section of the city with a, then still functioning, traditional Saturday open market where South Ninth St. was lined with carts selling fresh produce, etc. Just walking it was a beautiful experience.
The cop got into some kind of tussle with some locals there and Rizzo arrived on the scene, as was his wont. Whenever there was trouble, he'd arrive on the scene, sometimes with his night stick stuck into his cumberbund.
When he got out of his car, a lot of Italian-Americans gathered around and started talking up the Italian BS. Rizzo replied, I'm here to talk to my man. He'd grown up with many of them but he took the cop aside and spoke to him then walked back to his car. He told Italian cofones ( you might have to look up the meaning) that they were running a guy or guys in & arresting them. Someone shouted out, "You're going to believe that n****r?"
The cop said Rizzo turned around, pointed to him and said, "That's a Philadelphia policeman. He doesn't have a color. If he's good enough for the Philadelphia Police Department, he's good enough for you." Rizzo then got into his car & drove away.
The cop said that after that, he loved the man. Again he reitereated that he'd not liked everything he did but the man was for law & order.
That's what cops have to do, maintain law & order. To protest is American but it must be done legitimately & within the legal process. That's American too.