The gift that keeps on giving: inner cities, violence, poverty, gangs, drugs, BLM, shaming, guilt, Globalism
By Jon Rappoport
Suppose, instead of meeting for three hours with Black Lives Matter leaders...
The President of the United States, seized with some
unexplainable attack of conscience, or a drug-induced revelation, stood
up in front of television cameras and spoke to the nation and the world
about...
The real web that entangles and holds inner cities hostage.
Suppose the President suddenly said:
"My fellow Americans, the first thing you have to know is
that, since 1966, when the federal government declared a War on Poverty,
it has spent some two trillion dollars, much of it earmarked for the
inner cities of America. And now, today, those areas are worse off than
ever.
"For various reasons, including massive theft of funds, this War is a total failure.
"Second, the elite march toward Globalism---the control of
the planet exercised by a few powerful groups---has purposely sent
manufacturing jobs out of America, and out of inner cities, to Third
World countries---and one effect has been the massive loss of jobs here.
"Poverty, already a fact of life in inner cities, has spread like wildfire.
"On top of all this, we have seen the expansion of criminal
gangs in poverty-stricken urban communities. Violence and fear there is a
way of life. And there has never been a comprehensive federal strategy
for ridding our cities of this abominable scourge.
"Do you want to know why? Because gangs cooperate with
Mexican cartels to distribute street drugs across America. Gangs have
been vital cogs in that machine. And the federal government is in the
drug business. I should say, certain players in the government, attached
to government, above and behind government---bankers, for
example---profit greatly from this industry.
"For instance, federal agencies struck a deal with the
Sinaloa Cartel years ago, marking out free and open routes between our
southern border and several US hub cities. Sinaloa does uninterrupted
trafficking along those routes. No significant arrests are made. No
interventions occur.
"In return for this accommodation, Sinaloa passes along
actionable intelligence on its rival cartels, and our federal agencies
can and do make arrests and seizures in those cases.
"Wiping out the American gang scourge would put a crimp in
the permitted drug business, and therefore, those groups are left in
place. We, the government, pretend these gangs are little more than
'disadvantaged youth' who need an opportunity to fulfill themselves. We
do everything in our power to frame the problem in terms of sociological
causes---and we purposely avoid the stark fact that these boys and men
commit terrible crimes and hold inner cities hostage by creating and
sustaining a climate of fear and danger and drug addiction.
"In truth, police brutality accounts for a very small fraction of lives lost in those inner city communities.
"Meanwhile, the relatively few citizens of inner cities who
do manage, against heavy odds, to launch successful local businesses,
are never deployed to spearhead and teach their neighbors how to achieve
that kind of remarkable success. We may pin on a badge, or present a
plaque, or stage a photo op, but we never deploy federal money to make
these authentic business leaders into long-term instructors in the art
they have mastered. That is tragic.
"Do you want to talk about cooperation? In several American
inner cities, local heroes have created urban farms. Residents of all
ages learn to grow their own food. Their own fresh, clean food. What a
magnificent achievement. With an infinitesimal fraction of the federal
money we have wastefully dumped into the War on Poverty, we could have
these pioneers start up a hundred, a thousand, ten thousand expansive
urban farms across America. ---Food grown by the people who will eat it.
This project alone would revolutionize life in those places. Why aren't
we doing it? Why can't government find these private citizens who are
already tremendous problem solvers and empower them to solve more
problem, instead of backing tired old race-baiting blowhards?
"I'll tell you why. The government is a jealous master. It
wants to define, control, and solve problems. It doesn't really matter
whether the problems are overcome, as long as government is in charge.
That is a hideous fact of life, and we have to change it. Our wasteful,
incompetent, and in some cases, criminal federal programs have to be
sidetracked and stopped. They are runaway trains, and they must be led
to terminals and parked.
"The protests against the police we are seeing now, even if
they were successful in some respects, wouldn't change any of the basic
facts that ruin life in our inner cities. That may be hard to swallow,
but it's true.
"Do you know something? Some of the people protesting are
doing it as if it's a job, as if they're bringing home a paycheck---when
what they really need is an actual job, an actual economy in their
neighborhood.
"Shall I detail for you how shameful and vicious loan
practices have destroyed lives, how home mortgages have been rigged to
make home buyers fail and lose their very place of shelter? Shall I
detail how street-drug economies have taken over?
"Shall I describe how fervently most citizens in poverty-blighted cities actually want the police to wipe out gangs?
"I've discovered, late in the game, that basic truths, such
as the ones I've just laid out, seem to make answers harder. Mountains
to climb are suddenly higher. But it serves no purpose to pretend and
deflect and lie and cover up and kill hope while appearing to encourage
it. Vital facts need to be brought out into the light.
"What good, for instance, does it do to promise and inflate
and fabricate, when it comes to employment numbers? We, the government,
can't directly create jobs, unless we want everyone to work for the
State. But I've just indicated how we could help others to reverse the
trend of horrendous unemployment. This should have been done decades
ago.
"Black lives matter? All lives matter? Are we really going to
spend time arguing about what to say and how to say it? I'm telling
you, when it comes to life in inner cities, I've just described the raw
barriers that prevent it from flourishing---and if anyone cares to win
this struggle, attention must be paid.
"I'm aware, as you are, that the State has done much to grind down The Individual, no matter who he or she is.
"At the same time, the State has coddled and exonerated
individuals who have committed terrible crimes, and calling those crimes
by other names doesn't make them go away, in case you haven't noticed.
"Oh yes, and another thing. I hate to say this, but the
creation and maintenance of a permanent government-dependent underclass,
in our cities, is a purposeful act. It isn't an accident, and it isn't
just a strategy for winning votes in election seasons. It's a way of
pulling the whole country down, sucking it into an ever-widening vortex
of poverty, conflict, division, and useless guilt. It's a political,
economic, and psychological operation. There is no strong motive to help
this underclass help itself. If there were, it might lead to a genuine
renewal. But renewal isn't in the cards. The men who are behind this
underclass-operation intend to sink America. I should know. I've been
working for them. Until now.
"Can we right the ship?
"---Did the networks just cut off my feed? I was just getting
started. I was about to talk about the militarization and
federalization of police forces, and the expanding Surveillance State.
We have to curtail all that...Hello? Are we still on the air? Who's
running things here...I need to talk to the person in charge...Who's in
charge?"
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