KLA-bin Laden connection? What about the Bush bin Laden connection?

Here is another incident which was either the failure of an individual
through mental illness, specifically paranoid role reversal, or a
vigilante plot. One always has to play the other side as if it's a
lone crazed bad guy, but one wonders, especially if the lone crazed
provocateur had been at fault on a dozen other occasions.

The paranoid thinks that he was assaulted, or speaks as if he believes
that he was assaulted, when he ought to know he had a history of
provoking the other party. Either he is insane, or he knew he was
working to evoke a response to justify escalation. That level of
gaming by a bully makes for a new dimension of "undefeated season".
The corresponding role of a Jackie Robinson requires that one go
absolutely undefeated in dealing with provocation. Not everyone is as
good at that as Jackie Robinson was.

There are fans for the psychological level of play. I just played an
undefeated season in psychological warfare. When our tormentor in a
sports league blew his baby lunch in a paranoid rage, I took my hat
off and walked away from a seemingly postal berserker. Every
parent-fan took their team hat off and kept it off for the rest of the
season. A league official said that there was nothing he could legally
do about mental illness, but he made a point of saying so in the
presence of the clinically paranoid FOP cub scout back-shooter bully,
with a physical gesture in his direction when he said "[mental] health
problem". In my case, the bully seemed to flick off because I would
never rise to the bait, and he was willing to lose two games to press
his contrived provocations. Meanwhile I managed to play through
without ruining any games for the team.

Something similarly backwards must have been happened when a black
female college student I know had her laptop stolen, but police
arrested her instead of the thief. She ended up having her arm broken,
and after her parents paid bail, she was kept chained to a hospital
bed. I hope they sue like the victim in Utah.

The best example would be when a cop simply road raged, shooting
Prince Jones to death, because the cop followed Jones for six hours
and Jones never did anything wrong. Sheer frustration motivated the
murderer. The Maryland cop had profiled a bad neighborhood in DC,
which also happens to be near Howard University. The cop was looking
for Maryland tags in a bad neighborhood on a nice new SUV driven by a
young black male. He spotted such a combination, and fulfilling his
witch-hunt profile fueled witch-hunt paranoia, the murderer imagining
he was stalking a murderer. The hysterically paranoid cop began
following Prince Jones, a college student with a job. When Jones did
nothing illegal in six hours, the Maryland cop was in Virginia and it
was the end of his shift. The hero wanted to go home to Maryland, so
he conveniently shot Prince Jones to death. Left side of the cop's car
and back end of victim's car prove it was a road rage murder. The cop
accused the victim of road rage, but the cop's car did not have a
scratch on the left side which he said was rammed twice. The newspaper
published a photo of the pristine left side of the cop's car. The cop
was the only one with road rage, and he was stalking and profiling,
more of that new professionalism!

Paranoia, stalking, bullying, violence. When the FBI was caught using
CIA kidnapped children to make pedophile blackmail tapes at the
Seattle APEC conference, their defense was,"but we're the good guys".
Role reversal by guilt projection, fueled by paranoia, the new
professionalism. You have to witness it to believe it. Crusaders,
witch-hunters, paranoids, bullies, losers.

-Bob

--- In cia-drugs@yahoogroups.com, "norgesen" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Tuesday, November 14, 2006
> The "New Police Professionalism," or Support Your Local Gang-Banger
> William N. Grigg  
> 
> 
> 
> Most American men older than, say, fourteen years of age have had
the following experience:
> 
> During a pick-up basketball game at the YMCA or the local health
club, you find yourself paired off defending a guy who's taking things
just a little too seriously. 
> 
> Bumps escalate into undisguised shoves; hand-checks become elbow
thrusts; tripping suddenly becomes the defensive tactic of first
resort. Up the escalation ladder you climb until eventually you find
yourself squaring off with the jerk while other players try to
maintain the polite fiction that this is a casual basketball game,
rather than an Alpha Male territory-marking ritual. 
> 
> To his dog, every man is Napoleon, noted Aldous Huxley; this
explains the constant popularity of dogs. In similar fashion, it could
be said that for a certain personality type, every pickup b-ball game
at the Y is Game Seven of the NBA Finals.
> 
> I offer that observation as someone who has the dubious distinction
of being banned for life from Church League play when I was 18 as a
consequence of my threat to "eviscerate" the referee; he wasn't so
much intimidated by my threat as he was humiliated when I had to tell
him what the word meant, and infuriated when I observed (correctly)
that he obviously wasn't the owner of a library card. 
> 
> 
> 
> Ah, Church Basketball: The Brawl That Begins With Prayer.®
> 
> At a Gold's Gym in Salt Lake City one night last August, a
21-year-old Balkan refugee named Agim found himself caught in the
tightening coils of an on-court conflict with a 24-year-old named
Marcus Barrett. At some point, Agim became weary of Marcus's "rough
play" and responded in kind. This reportedly continued until Marcus
threw a punch, the two players hit the floor, and two of Marcus's
buddies jumped into the fray. While the friends pinned Agim's arms to
his sides, Marcus slugged him in the stomach and chest. 
> 
> 
> 
> Agim as a High School student in Salt Lake city
> 
> 
> Quite sensibly, Agim decided to leave – but Marcus and his Homies
trailed him to the parking lot. When Agim tried to drive away, he
found the exit blocked by Marcus's vehicle; Marcus grabbed a shotgun
and threated Agim's life. By this time, Agim had dialed 911, and the
police were on the way. For several minutes – as recorded by the 911
dispatcher – Marcus and his buddies swarmed Agim's car, while the
young refugee from Kosovo, displaying remarkable composure, waited for
the police to arrive.
> 
> Oh, did I mention that Marcus, the aggressor in this incident, was
an off-duty police officer? 
> 
> "Get out here [Oedipal epithet deleted]," Marcus can be heard
yelling at Agim on the 911 recording, as he and his friends pound on
Agim's car. "You're f*****g with the wrong people.... You know what I
am?... I will put you under arrest! Get out of the car right now. If
you don't get out of the car I will place you under arrest for
resisting arrest. Get out of the car right now!"
> 
> Agim, who was well acquainted with potentially lethal abuse by
police authorities (likely from both Serbian irregulars and the
"police" forces of the so-called Kosovo Liberation Army, the latter
being much worse than the former), remained calm and resolute in
waiting for other police to arrive, placidly telling Marcus "I don't
trust you."
> 
> Earlier in the confrontation, Marcus and his friends had attempted
to drag Agim from his car.
> 
> "You want to start something [Oedipal epithet deleted once again]?"
taunted the hero, who at the time was toting a shotgun with two fellow
gang-bangers at his back. "What you pulled in there is called an
assault... You want to start sh*t right now?"
> 
> According to Agim's side of the story – which seems plausible, given
Marcus's behavior as recorded in the 911 tape – it was Marcus who
began the "rough play" during the basketball game; apparently, Agim
had "assaulted" Marcus by presuming to retaliate, thereby laying his
profane hands on the sanctified person of an agent of the Almighty State. 
> 
> His work shift may have ended, but Marcus proved through his
behavior that a rectal orifice is never off-duty. 
> 
> (Here's a link to the 911 recording, courtesy of Radley Balko.)
> 
> This episode brought to my mind a similar incident decades ago –
which I have described elsewhere – involving an off-duty Deputy
Sheriff who threatened to arrest my American Legion coach for "verbal
assault" on a clearly partisan home plate umpire: As the visiting
team, we had discovered that our strike zone had expanded to include
most of the county, while the home team's had contracted to roughly
the circumference of a pea. 
> 
> As I pointed out earlier in describing that episode: "The umpire,
however inept or partial he might have been, exercised authority
rooted in an implied private contract. Deputy Buttinski, on the other
hand, deployed intimidation backed by the implicit threat of lethal
violence, tangible evidence of which was provided by the firearm he
carried while off-duty." His attitude appeared to be, "Hey – I've got
a badge and a gun; why not put them to use?"
> 
> That was apparently the same notion that took hold of Marcus, who
had been a cop for about a year at the time of his altercation with Agim. 
> 
> Happily, Marcus has been charged with two counts of assault and one
charge of unlawful detention, both of which are misdemeanors. For
threatening Agim with a gun, Marcus should confront felony assault
charges, at least. 
> 
> In a development as predictable as it is unfortunate, Agim has filed
a $1 million lawsuit against Salt Lake City. A better remedy would be
to use the leverage of the lawsuit (if this is possible) to bring
felony charges against Marcus, and to bring about his removal from the
police force. 
> 
> As a recent enlistee in the "Thin Blue Line," Officer Marcus could
be considered an example of what Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia,
in his opinion from the Hudson vs. Michigan case (.pdf), calls the
"new police professionalism."
> 
> Here's Scalia's panglossian perspective on contemporary policing:
> 
> "Even as long ago as 1989, we felt it proper to `assume' that
unlawful police behavior `would be dealt with appropriately' by the
authorities, but we now have increasing evidence that police forces
across the United States take the constitutional rights of citizens
seriously. There have been `wide ranging reforms in the education,
training, and supervision' of police officers.... Moreover, modern
police forces are staffed with professionals; it is not credible to
assert that internal discipline, which can limit successful careers,
will not have a deterrent effect. There is also evidence that the
increasing use of various forms of citizen review can enhance police
accountability."
> 
> For all of these reasons, contends Scalia, police can be entrusted
with much broader discretionary powers involving potentially lethal
use of force, such as no-knock raids. 
> 
> Comments Balko:
> 
> "Police are certainly more highly trained than they once were, but
they aren't better trained at observing civil liberties. They're
better trained at paramilitary tactics. They're now trained by former
Navy SEALs and Army Rangers. They're better trained at treating
civilians like enemy combatants, at taking over and `clearing' rooms
in private homes, not at treating the people inside as citizens with
rights."
> 
> Just as importantly, modern police frequently display the same
propensity toward tribalistic violence that typifies any other armed
gang. Too often, rather than regarding themselves as part of, and
responsible to, the communities in which they're deployed, police
perceive themselves as a caste apart from, and superior to, civilians.
> 
> As Officer Marcus put it, while he and his buddies threatened Agim's
life: "You see that f****g car right there? What does that make me?
You know what I am?"
> 
> To which the proper answer is: You're a squalid punk and a feculent
bully who richly deserves a major beating -- and that's true despite
your pimped-out ride, and the gang colors you wear.
> 
> Since 1994, police departments across the nation have received
federal aid to enlist tens of thousands of guys like Marcus, give them
guns and badges, and invest them with something perilously close to a
license to kill. 
> 
> And we're supposed to be worried about al-Qaeda.
> 
> A POSTSCRIPT
> 
> Agim, as mentioned above, is a Kosovar Albanian, and he helped
resettle others from that Serbian province in Utah. This is a bad idea
for a number of reasons, chief among them the fact that the so-called
Kosovo Liberation Army is a nasty terrorist network that has tendrils
in every significant Albanian community in the U.S. and Europe. But it
doesn't follow that Agim is an "Islamo-Fascist" -- unless, perhaps,
he's a sleeper agent given the vital mission of disrupting pick-up
basketball games in Salt Lake City (also known as the "strategic
linchpin of the Rocky Mountain West").
> 
> The Fascisti over at Freerepublic.com would have us believe that
Agim, for committing the crime of being born an Albanian Muslim, is a
menace to the Homeland. Note particularly this outpouring from a
typically low-capacity Freeper brain-pan:
> 
> "I'll have sympathy for an Albanian islamofacist who helps settle
other islamofacists on our soil when hell freezes over. I will tell
you, Albanians aren't innocent wusses like the article would have it
appear, they will stab your 'infidel' back as soon as look at you."
> 
> There are indeed plenty of very nasty specimens among the Albanians;
as one of the first American journalists to write about the KLA-bin
Laden connection, I've heard from a few of them. I'll leave it to
rational people -- a cohort that obviously excludes pretty much the
entire Freeper population -- to decide if Agim's conduct is that of a
Jihadi.
> 
>
http://freedominourtime.blogspot.com/2006/11/new-police-professionalism-or-support.html
>



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