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iamthaShift

@iamthaShift

Blackplanet logoSince 2013

246 followers

373 following

506 posts


A brief history of cops in America: It begins in slavery. Modern policing began in the cities of the Deep South in as early as the 1780s when a paramilitary city police force was introduced to control the city's large slave population. As industrialization came to the south, the practice of hiring out slaves in the cities became a lucrative but concerning practice: With the slaves outside of the master's direct control, who was going to ensure they stayed in their place and have the authority to stamp out uprisings before they spread? The slave patrol evolved from plantation-based vigilantes to a more organized force. The new American innovation in law enforcement during the 18th and early 19th centuries was the creation of racially focused law enforcement groups in the south. The police force that we know today is descended from slave patrols. See the family resemblance?

A brief history of cops in America: It begins in slavery. Modern policing began in the cities of the Deep South in as early as the 1780s when a paramilitary city police force was introduced to control the city's large slave population. As industrialization came to the south, the practice of hiring out slaves in the cities became a lucrative but concerning practice: With the slaves outside of the master's direct control, who was going to ensure they stayed in their place and have the authority to stamp out uprisings before they spread? The slave patrol evolved from plantation-based vigilantes to a more organized force. The new American innovation in law enforcement during the 18th and early 19th centuries was the creation of racially focused law enforcement groups in the south. The police force that we know today is descended from slave patrols. See the family resemblance?

A brief history of cops in America: It begins in slavery. Modern policing began in the cities of the Deep South in as early as the 1780s when a paramilitary city police force was introduced to control the city's large slave population. As industrialization came to the south, the practice of hiring out slaves in the cities became a lucrative but concerning practice: With the slaves outside of the master s direct control, who was going to ensure they stayed in their place and have the authority to stamp out uprisings before they spread? The slave patrol evolved from plantation-based vigilantes to a more organized force. The new American innovation in law enforcement during the 18th and early 19th centuries was the creation of racially focused law enforcement groups in the south. The police force that we know today is descended from slave patrols. See the family resemblance?

A brief history of cops in America: It begins in slavery. Modern policing began in the cities of the Deep South in as early as the 1780s when a paramilitary city police force was introduced to control the city's large slave population. As industrialization came to the south, the practice of hiring out slaves in the cities became a lucrative but concerning practice: With the slaves outside of the master s direct control, who was going to ensure they stayed in their place and have the authority to stamp out uprisings before they spread? The slave patrol evolved from plantation-based vigilantes to a more organized force. The new American innovation in law enforcement during the 18th and early 19th centuries was the creation of racially focused law enforcement groups in the south. The police force that we know today is descended from slave patrols. See the family resemblance?

A brief history of cops in America: It begins in slavery. Modern policing began in the cities of the Deep South in as early as the 1780s when a paramilitary city police force was introduced to control the city s large slave population. As industrialization came to the south, the practice of hiring out slaves in the cities became a lucrative but concerning practice: With the slaves outside of the master's direct control, who was going to ensure they stayed in their place and have the authority to stamp out uprisings before they spread? The slave patrol evolved from plantation-based vigilantes to a more organized force. The new American innovation in law enforcement during the 18th and early 19th centuries was the creation of racially focused law enforcement groups in the south. The police force that we know today is descended from slave patrols. See the family resemblance?

A brief history of cops in America: It begins in slavery. Modern policing began in the cities of the Deep South in as early as the 1780s when a paramilitary city police force was introduced to control the city s large slave population. As industrialization came to the south, the practice of hiring out slaves in the cities became a lucrative but concerning practice: With the slaves outside of the master's direct control, who was going to ensure they stayed in their place and have the authority to stamp out uprisings before they spread? The slave patrol evolved from plantation-based vigilantes to a more organized force. The new American innovation in law enforcement during the 18th and early 19th centuries was the creation of racially focused law enforcement groups in the south. The police force that we know today is descended from slave patrols. See the family resemblance?

A brief history of cops in America: It begins in slavery. Modern policing began in the cities of the Deep South in as early as the 1780s when a paramilitary city police force was introduced to control the city s large slave population. As industrialization came to the south, the practice of hiring out slaves in the cities became a lucrative but concerning practice: With the slaves outside of the master s direct control, who was going to ensure they stayed in their place and have the authority to stamp out uprisings before they spread? The slave patrol evolved from plantation-based vigilantes to a more organized force. The new American innovation in law enforcement during the 18th and early 19th centuries was the creation of racially focused law enforcement groups in the south. The police force that we know today is descended from slave patrols. See the family resemblance?

A brief history of cops in America: It begins in slavery. Modern policing began in the cities of the Deep South in as early as the 1780s when a paramilitary city police force was introduced to control the city s large slave population. As industrialization came to the south, the practice of hiring out slaves in the cities became a lucrative but concerning practice: With the slaves outside of the master s direct control, who was going to ensure they stayed in their place and have the authority to stamp out uprisings before they spread? The slave patrol evolved from plantation-based vigilantes to a more organized force. The new American innovation in law enforcement during the 18th and early 19th centuries was the creation of racially focused law enforcement groups in the south. The police force that we know today is descended from slave patrols. See the family resemblance?

Appearing in the documentary 'The Newburgh Sting' about how the FBI entraps and provocateurs terror suspects, former FBI assistant director Thomas Fuentes admits that the FBI needs to keep fear alive in order to justify budget increases and tells the story of how the feds convinced 4 poverty-stricken NY men to become involved in an informant-led terror plot. Fuentes: 'If you're submitting budget proposals for a law enforcement agency, for an intelligence agency, you're not going to submit the proposal that we won the war on terror and everything's great cause the first thing that's gonna happen is your budget's gonna be cut in half'. You know, it's my opposite of Jesse Jackson's 'Keep Hope Alive' - it's 'Keep Fear Alive. Keep it alive.'

Appearing in the documentary 'The Newburgh Sting' about how the FBI entraps and provocateurs terror suspects, former FBI assistant director Thomas Fuentes admits that the FBI needs to keep fear alive in order to justify budget increases and tells the story of how the feds convinced 4 poverty-stricken NY men to become involved in an informant-led terror plot. Fuentes: 'If you're submitting budget proposals for a law enforcement agency, for an intelligence agency, you're not going to submit the proposal that we won the war on terror and everything's great cause the first thing that's gonna happen is your budget's gonna be cut in half'. You know, it's my opposite of Jesse Jackson's 'Keep Hope Alive' - it's 'Keep Fear Alive. Keep it alive.'

PayPal wants to implant passwords in your stomach and your brain. Ingestible capsules that can detect glucose levels could use a person's body as a way to identify them. PayPal is working on a new generation of embeddable, injectable and ingestible devices that could replace passwords as a means of identification. Jonathan LeBlanc, PayPal s global head of developer evangelism, claims that these devices could include brain implants, wafer-thin silicon chips that can be embedded into the skin, and ingestible devices with batteries that are powered by stomach acid. These devices would allow natural body identification by monitoring internal body functions like heartbeat, glucose levels and vein recognition, Mr LeBlanc told the Wall Street Journal.

PayPal wants to implant passwords in your stomach and your brain. Ingestible capsules that can detect glucose levels could use a person's body as a way to identify them. PayPal is working on a new generation of embeddable, injectable and ingestible devices that could replace passwords as a means of identification. Jonathan LeBlanc, PayPal s global head of developer evangelism, claims that these devices could include brain implants, wafer-thin silicon chips that can be embedded into the skin, and ingestible devices with batteries that are powered by stomach acid. These devices would allow natural body identification by monitoring internal body functions like heartbeat, glucose levels and vein recognition, Mr LeBlanc told the Wall Street Journal.

INTELLIGENT STREETLIGHTS TO WATCH FLORIDA RESIDENTS as part of General Electric's Intelligent City Initiative. Jacksonville, Fl is about to install more than 50 intelligent streetlights under a new General Electric pilot program. In accordance with the GE Intelligent City Initiative the data-collecting LED streetlights will be placed throughout the city's downtown and surrounding areas. According to a presentation by GE, the lights will be interconnected with one another and will collect real-time data as reported by the Jacksonville Business Journal. The LEDs are a gateway to city-changing technology, with sensors, controls, wireless transmitters and microprocessors built within the LED system. Predix, GE's software platform for the Industrial Internet, collects and analyzes data from these components and delivers optimized, real-time data to the city. Although the city will have access to the data, City Spokesman David DeCamp admits that GE will own all information collected.

INTELLIGENT STREETLIGHTS TO WATCH FLORIDA RESIDENTS as part of General Electric's Intelligent City Initiative. Jacksonville, Fl is about to install more than 50 intelligent streetlights under a new General Electric pilot program. In accordance with the GE Intelligent City Initiative the data-collecting LED streetlights will be placed throughout the city's downtown and surrounding areas. According to a presentation by GE, the lights will be interconnected with one another and will collect real-time data as reported by the Jacksonville Business Journal. The LEDs are a gateway to city-changing technology, with sensors, controls, wireless transmitters and microprocessors built within the LED system. Predix, GE's software platform for the Industrial Internet, collects and analyzes data from these components and delivers optimized, real-time data to the city. Although the city will have access to the data, City Spokesman David DeCamp admits that GE will own all information collected.

INTELLIGENT STREETLIGHTS TO WATCH FLORIDA RESIDENTS as part of General Electric's Intelligent City Initiative. Jacksonville, Fl is about to install more than 50 intelligent streetlights under a new General Electric pilot program. In accordance with the GE Intelligent City Initiative the data-collecting LED streetlights will be placed throughout the city's downtown and surrounding areas. According to a presentation by GE, the lights will be interconnected with one another and will collect real-time data as reported by the Jacksonville Business Journal. The LEDs are a gateway to city-changing technology, with sensors, controls, wireless transmitters and microprocessors built within the LED system. Predix, GE s software platform for the Industrial Internet, collects and analyzes data from these components and delivers optimized, real-time data to the city. Although the city will have access to the data, City Spokesman David DeCamp admits that GE will own all information collected.

INTELLIGENT STREETLIGHTS TO WATCH FLORIDA RESIDENTS as part of General Electric's Intelligent City Initiative. Jacksonville, Fl is about to install more than 50 intelligent streetlights under a new General Electric pilot program. In accordance with the GE Intelligent City Initiative the data-collecting LED streetlights will be placed throughout the city's downtown and surrounding areas. According to a presentation by GE, the lights will be interconnected with one another and will collect real-time data as reported by the Jacksonville Business Journal. The LEDs are a gateway to city-changing technology, with sensors, controls, wireless transmitters and microprocessors built within the LED system. Predix, GE s software platform for the Industrial Internet, collects and analyzes data from these components and delivers optimized, real-time data to the city. Although the city will have access to the data, City Spokesman David DeCamp admits that GE will own all information collected.

DA: ENCRYPTED PHONES MAKE YOU A TERROR SUSPECT The attack on personal privacy continues. Simply being suspected of suspected of terrorism can now qualify you for a terror watchlist. America 2015: Manhattan DA Cyrus Vance, Jr. wants total access to your personal effects. Apparently you have no right to secure your personal phone or computer data. As far as the DA is concerned, if you are encrypting your passwords, private messages and personal notes you're a suspect. Vance said of Apple's encrypted software: 'Apple has made a phone that is dark, that we can't access even when a court authorizes us to. That will be the terrorists' device of choice.' Smelting your own gold, making your finger into the shape of a gun, storing 7 food and homeschooling all qualify you for investigation under domestic terrorism guidelines and now, you can also be suspected of being suspected of terrorism for simply having your mobile phone locked and inaccessible to the prying eyes the STATE.

DA: ENCRYPTED PHONES MAKE YOU A TERROR SUSPECT The attack on personal privacy continues. Simply being suspected of suspected of terrorism can now qualify you for a terror watchlist. America 2015: Manhattan DA Cyrus Vance, Jr. wants total access to your personal effects. Apparently you have no right to secure your personal phone or computer data. As far as the DA is concerned, if you are encrypting your passwords, private messages and personal notes you're a suspect. Vance said of Apple's encrypted software: 'Apple has made a phone that is dark, that we can't access even when a court authorizes us to. That will be the terrorists' device of choice.' Smelting your own gold, making your finger into the shape of a gun, storing 7 food and homeschooling all qualify you for investigation under domestic terrorism guidelines and now, you can also be suspected of being suspected of terrorism for simply having your mobile phone locked and inaccessible to the prying eyes the STATE.

The Teacher's Protection Act, HB868, affords educators legal immunity in the unlikely event that they happen to kill any of their students during school-sanctioned events. Schoolteachers in Texas will be allowed to use lethal force against students without risking legal repercussions if a new bill becomes law. Specifically, the bill says 'an educator is justified in using force or deadly force on school property, on a school bus or at a school-sponsored event in defense of the educator's person or in defense of students of the school that employs the educator if, under the circumstances as the educator reasonably believes them to be, the educator would be justified.' As of August '14, Texas was among 8 states where laws allow school employees to carry firearms on campus. And teachers in Texas are already granted immunity if they assault a student and the 'use of force, but not deadly force is justified.'

The Teacher's Protection Act, HB868, affords educators legal immunity in the unlikely event that they happen to kill any of their students during school-sanctioned events. Schoolteachers in Texas will be allowed to use lethal force against students without risking legal repercussions if a new bill becomes law. Specifically, the bill says 'an educator is justified in using force or deadly force on school property, on a school bus or at a school-sponsored event in defense of the educator's person or in defense of students of the school that employs the educator if, under the circumstances as the educator reasonably believes them to be, the educator would be justified.' As of August '14, Texas was among 8 states where laws allow school employees to carry firearms on campus. And teachers in Texas are already granted immunity if they assault a student and the 'use of force, but not deadly force is justified.'