Comments 1 - 7 of 7 Search these comments
He said the 150M will be instead sent towards communities of color. He didn't get specific about exactly where he will cut, nor where he will spend.
Hircus saysI think maybe cut the police, and then spend the money on non-white stuff. Then, after a few months of the police running on fumes, people will see that LA police budget cuts are a terrible idea due to all the new crime. He will probably try to blame the failure of his plan on resistance from "white supremacists".
So then he will get more money approved to restore the police, but he will of course keep the new 150M / yr racial handout program, because govt never cuts social programs. Any calls for them cut these programs for austerity purposes will be called white supremacist.
Yup. THIS guy called it out. All of it. From a book he wrote back in the 90s originally. He was only off by the date.
CIVIL WAR TWO THE COMING BREAKUP OF AMERICA by THOMAS CHITTUM https://amazon.com/dp/1687301573
This is happening in Detroit: https://www.vice.com/en_us/article/43jw33/people-in-detroit-are-hiring-paramilitary-guards-because-theyve-lost-faith-in-government
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Private_police_in_the_United_States
There are limitations. But most of them are where the government's interests in crimes are involved, not the private individual's.
Example, a private security force can escort your wife and daughters while public police really don't care if they get raped unless you are a powerfully influential person in the community. And even then, they won't do anything to PREVENT said rapes whereas private security can reduce such an occurrence from happening as per this example.
There will be no 'kneeling' or 'public outreach' unless the firms in question think it would be good marketing. Even then, they won't waste entire staff positions and real money on it like the bureaucrats in police depts do with taxpayer money like it is free candy.
It would be nice if the states would give them expanded police powers but no immunity from prosecution/lawsuits like public police get, too.
Insurance companies can offer tie ins for such firms in homeowner policies, for example. In areas where their policies are in effect that have abolished the police, they may even make it mandatory.