Showing posts with label Crime. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Crime. Show all posts

Thursday, June 4, 2020

America-Destroying Entities

More posts and analyses at The Thinking Housewife on the "riots." The most recent are here and here.

And perhaps the most revelatory are here and here.

Once again, it is revealing that the "America" websites and bloggers like VDare ("We inform the fight to keep America American") and the Canadian Faith Goldy ("For Christ the King & Country") do not address the issue of the sabotaged blacks, whose criminal members are the front men for larger America-destroying entities.

VDare continues with its vicious "portraits" of black thugs, which ordinary blacks do not support in any manner, and who are in fact, as this black woman points out, its primary victims (pregnant women - think about that).

There is no attempt by VDare et al., and Faith Goldy, who has regular video posts on Vdare, to delve into the underlying causes of black thuggery. E.g., who exactly is it that funds the "movement?" How do other blacks, and especially the poorest (pregnant women living alone!), fare under the fear of this black underworld of crime and murder?



Nestride Yumga, Miss Cameroon America, 2016
The immigrant nurse who dared voice the truth

Thursday, May 16, 2013

Crime and Punishment


James Woods as convicted criminal Gregory Ulas Powell
representing himself in the film The Onion Field.
The film is in color, but I think this black and white
photo best captures Woods as Powell
.

I watched the Sun Media's The Arena yesterday, whose host is Michael Coren. Sun Media and Coren purport to be the "conservative" news of Canada. But, I remember Coren saying a while ago that he wasn't a conservative, which explains his many ambiguous positions, and which is why I barely tune into their much-touted program (it's like the National Post, which never lived to its "alternate" message).

I met Coren when with a group from the International Free Press Society invited me to join them. One of the stops we made was to attend an interview by Coren of Lars Hedegaard, the president of the Danish Free Press Society.

Still, Coren, because of his forceful nature, does some of the better interviews (pepperd with disclaimers) of the more controversial issues of our time.

Last night's interview is not yet online. Coren interviewed one of the Sun Media journalists about the abortion doctor Gosnell, who was charged with killing (murdering) one woman and four infants. He is labelled as a serial killer, but the jury's verdict was life imprisonment, although as a serial killer he could have got the death penalty.

Coren, in his forceful and confident way announces: "I'm against the death penalty, myself. Everyone else can believe what they want, but I'm against it."

So much for the intellectual level of our public figures and opinion makers. Judgment is simply a matter of opinion, and we can all believe what we want.

In any case, this reminded me of the strong, well-made movie (based on true events) The Onion Field. When politics fails, go to art for the true answers. Yes, today's films are mostly liberal, made for liberals, and watched by liberals (I haven't been to the movies in at least two years now), but people are still conservative when it comes to their families (who want a daughter to have an abortion? Etc.), so some films and television programs have a sliver of conservatism in their messages. And also, I find that films made prior to the mid-sixties retain a higher level of conservative elements.

The Onion Field is the true story of a cold-blooded murder by two escaped convicts. James woods makes a formidable performance as one of the convicts, Gregory Ulas Powell. They eventually get caught and are convicted of first-degree murder. The judge, at this verdict, makes an impassioned speech saying that these two deserved nothing less than the death penalty, and that these clever men would exploit the judicial system to its fullest.

As the judge predicted, Powell spent years writing appeals for his death sentence, including appearing in court to represent himself. This horrible spectacle, of a convicted murder appearing in a court of law to appeal his situation became too much for one of the lawyers, who resigned. Powell died in 2012, after almost fifty years in prison.

Coren, in his arrogance about what justice constitutes, is allowing for this type of "justice" to flourish in the judicial system. And sure enough, we have the serial killer Gosnell, who will get the best of prison life, as well as unconditional support from a myriad of "abortion" sympathizers, for the rest of his life.

Here is the President of the United Sates making another one of his ambiguous statements.



The part which is difficult to hear is:
"I think abortion should be safe, legal and rare."

In typical Obama fashion, safe and legal are the important words. Rare is a matter of "judgement." He appears to be strict on abortion, but he is as liberal as they get. When will the American people realize who he really is?

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Posted By: Kidist P. Asrat
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Thursday, February 14, 2013

Law and Order: Butch, Feminist Detectives and Unrepentant Criminals


R - Mariska Hargitay as Det. Benson
L - Kelli Gillis as Det. Rollins



Marcia Grey Harden as FBI Det. Hines

Law and Order Special Victim's Unit is an interesting show. It is a fast-paced show of criminal investigations of rape and sexual assault cases, coupled with some courtroom drama. As contemporary police shows go, it is one of the least gruesome. Criminal Minds, NCIS (Naval Criminal Investigative Service), CSI-New York (Crime Scene Investigation-New York) are some of the worst on TV, where we are not spared the gory details. My favorite is the Irish family cop show, Blue Bloods, with Tom Selleck, although that is getting its share of blood these days, probably to compete with all the rest.

The latest episode of Law and Order was interesting and good. But, before I go into the story line, here is what I think of the two women detectives.

They are both attractive women, with pretty faces. Markiska Hargitay is the daughter of Jane Mansfield and Hungarian-born Mr. Universe Mickey Hargitay, and Giddish was a soap opera actress. They're always heavily made-up in Law and Order, although they do go light on the lipstick.

But, here's the weird thing. Perhaps to compensate for their pretty faces, and to give some gravitas to their criminal investigation roles, they are always dressed in tight black jeans, and showing off corpulent thighs. They look butch.

I suppose this is once again the modern woman's dilemma look feminine (all women want to look attractive and feminine) and looking like one of the guys, and not have the attention focused on their femaleness, and beauty.

Last night's show, titled "Secrets Exhumed" followed an FBI detective, Dana Hines, who
suspects that a 25 year-old rape-murder case in New York is connected to several unsolved cases across the country [and] joins the SVU in investigating the crimes. As Lewis relentlessly pursues her prime suspect Detectives Benson (Mariska Hargitay) and Amaro (Danny Pino) have their doubts about his guilt.
In fact, the FBI detective is deeply involved in one of the murders, and had kept this hidden for twenty five years.

Detective Benson (Hargitay) channels her feminine, kind and empathetic self while questioning Hines. She asks to do this alone, which means to have the male interrogators exit the room, leaving her alone with Hines.

Harigtay tells Hines it is better to get rid of these twenty five years of lies, and live free of guilt (albeit in prison) and finally gets the truth out of her.

What was more intriguing than Hargitay's clever (but compassionate) method in exposing Hines, is Hines' crime. All criminals, whether they kill, still, or even lie, have a moment of hard, clear evil when they decide to do the crime. Hines, when she described for a brief couple of minutes when she decided to commit murder, changed her voice and demeanor. She became hard and cold, not simpering and frightened as she was before and after her confession. At that brief period when she made up her mind to kill, she knew what she was doing, and she wanted to do it.

Even during her questioning, she didn't recant her crime, rather she understood that she would have to pay for it. I think it is very rare that criminals are genuinely remorseful of their crime, and if they do feel any kind of guilt, it is often to say they're sorry for the harm they have caused around them, rather than the actual killing, or stealing. It is as though they feel entitled to this crime. Hines was no different.

Yesterday's episode caught all this. Someone on Law and Order is doing good research on criminal behavior, and not just giving us a mellowed-out portrayal of the "poor" criminal.


Mariska Hargitay and Kelli Giddish in 2013
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Post By: Kidist P. Asrat