Open letter to NFL players: you're being used |
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An open letter to NFL players: you're being used
Try being politically incorrect if you want some real answers
By Jon Rappoport
Dear NFL Players:
You're being used.
You're being duped into focusing on the wrong issue: police brutality against black people.
If you actually want to solve what's happening to black people in inner cities, police brutality is way down on the list.
By focusing only on brutality, you're leading people AWAY
FROM seeing what's really going on in inner cities. You're guaranteeing
NO ANSWERS. You're guaranteeing NO CHANGE.
"Let's not solve the problem, whatever the problem is. Let's just ramp up the conflict and the polarization between races."
Let's go back to the original protestor, ex-quarterback Colin
Kaepernick, who made his original kneeling protest about police
brutality directed at black people. I want to examine his premise.
Here are bare-bones statistics from New York City, perhaps
the only big city in America that issues a detailed annual report of
police "firearms discharges." You may be shocked.
Population of NYC: 8.3 million.
Police officers: 35,000.
2013 incidents of "intentional [police weapon] discharges during an adversarial conflict": 40.
In those discharges, number of people injured: 17.
Number of people killed: 8.
Source: NYPD 2013 Annual Firearms Discharge Report.
In that same year, according to the New York State Division
of Criminal Justice Services, there were 7,462 "violent crimes by
firearm" in New York City.
Who was the busier class of people in 2013? Cops or
criminals? Which group caused, by far, the greater amount of human
destruction of black people?
Philly.com has reported on several other American cities.
"Philadelphia's rate of police shootings [2012], when
compared against the number of violent crimes, was 2.90 per 1,000
incidents [of violent crime]."
"The rate of [police] shootings in Houston for 2012 was 1.25 [per 1000 violent crimes]."
"In 2012, the rate of police shootings in Dallas was 2.39 [per 1000 violent crimes]."
"In 2011, the rate of police shootings in Las Vegas stood at 1.66."
"Baltimore's rate [2011] was 1.58."
Again, I ask: in those cities, who was the busier class of people? The cops or the criminals?
If facts don't scare you, do a little research and discover
who, by and large, is committing most of those violent crimes in US
cities. By race.
Media outlets don't ask and answer this simple question. They
parse and evade and blow smoke. They trumpet small increases in the
rate of police shootings and, therefore, obscure chronic inner-city
conditions [e.g., violent crimes].
And as long as they keeping doing that, the public will continue to be distracted, and nothing will change.
As long as Colin Kaepernick and his supporters keep focusing
only on police brutality, the problem of violent crime and poverty and
other chronic devastations in inner cities won't change at all.
Is that what you protestors want? No change at all?
What are the real devastations in inner cities populated by black people?
Violent crime.
Drugs.
Gangs, some of whom are low-level dealers for Mexican cartels.
Grinding poverty.
Jobs stolen by Globalists and sent to foreign lands.
Toxic chemicals (lead in water, landfills where corporate pollutants are dumped).
Absence of fathers in homes.
Unsafe neighborhoods---making education highly difficult.
Grossly sub-standard nutrition. Empty junk food.
These are the most real problems---police brutality is far down on the list.
In other articles, I've written about solutions to some of
these problems. Here, I'll simply say that if you NFL protestors want to
make a difference, you need to stand up and do something harder than
you're doing now. Right now, you're unwitting agents of NO CHANGE and
racial divide-and-conquer.
YOU'RE FOCUSING ON POLICE BRUTALITY, AS IF THAT'S THE DEEPEST
PROBLEM IN BLACK INNER CITIES. It isn't. So you're leading people away
from recognizing and admitting what the real problems are.
What you're doing now, men, isn't going to work. You're only going to sow more conflict.
And by the way, all those thinly disguised Leftist sports
writers and columnists and broadcasters who are "resolutely coming to
your defense?" They're useless. They aren't doing you any favors.
They're mainly interested in appearing virtuous. Some of them are scared
not to appear virtuous.
But look, if you don't want to solve the biggest problems in
inner cities, if that doesn't interest you, if that's politically
incorrect and you don't want to touch that with a ten-foot pole, it's
understandable.
Just go out on the field and play football then.
Admit your protests are nothing more than polarizing distractions from the real issues.
Admit you're galvanizing black people in the wrong direction, away from meaningful solutions. You're adding to the problem.
By the way, if you think government is the ultimate answer to
the conditions in inner cities, consider this: since 1966, when
President Lyndon Johnson declared the mighty War on Poverty, it's
estimated that two trillion dollars have been poured into black
neighborhoods, to "lift them up."
How has that worked out? Where has all the money actually
gone? Who stole how much of that money? How do those black neighborhoods
look today? Where are the Congressmen who want that situation
investigated?
Do you get the feeling that someone somewhere wants black
inner cities to fail and keep on failing? And failure is part and parcel
of a vicious agenda?
In which case, you're actually on the side of promoting
failure. Your protests are Pied Piper tunes leading the people of inner
cities into deeper despair. And away from the truth, away from the most
pressing problems.
You're being used. You're agents.
When you signed your NFL contracts, did you have any idea things would work out this way?
Well, they have.
You're looking a simple formula here. Understand it. It's
been used all over the world for centuries. If there are 10 things
people could really do to solve a horrendous chronic situation,
highlight some other problem that won't lead TO ANY SOLUTION. Focus on
that. Enlist high-profile people to keep focusing on that.
Get it?
You're those high-profile people. YOU.
And the black inner cities? They're showcases for Globalists,
who want to convince one and all that permanent economic and political
dependence on higher authority is the only policy that counts.
People raising themselves up is out. Forget it.
End result?
Slavery.
The very thing you say you're fighting against.
But through a clever twist, a long-term covert op, you're fighting for it.
Wise up. Wake up.
Or keep fronting for elites and keep losing, no matter what the scoreboard says on Sunday.
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Jon Rappoport
The
author of three explosive collections, THE MATRIX REVEALED, EXIT FROM
THE MATRIX, and POWER OUTSIDE THE MATRIX, Jon was a candidate for a US
Congressional seat in the 29th District of California. He maintains a
consulting practice for private clients, the purpose of which is the
expansion of personal creative power. Nominated for a Pulitzer Prize, he
has worked as an investigative reporter for 30 years, writing articles
on politics, medicine, and health for CBS Healthwatch, LA Weekly, Spin
Magazine, Stern, and other newspapers and magazines in the US and
Europe. Jon has delivered lectures and seminars on global politics,
health, logic, and creative power to audiences around the world.
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