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-Lurid Crime Tales-
America's Crime Problem Begins in Our Colleges
2023-04-03
[Front Page] We think of crime as emanating from the poor and the underprivileged, but the country’s crime wave actually has its roots in the work of academics who taught at prestigious universities.

The pro-crime movement that originated in the 1960s and has since swept America began in part with an article by Communist leader and agitator Angela Davis: ’Racialized Punishment and Prison Abolition’. Davis, a UCLA academic, was catapulted to national prominence during her trial for supplying firearms to terrorist Jonathan Jackson, who used them to murder a California judge presiding over the homicide trial of his criminal brother George, who later died after slitting the throats of three guards while attempting to escape from San Quentin. There are shrines devoted to Davis at prominent schools like University of California — Santa Cruz.

Angela Davis began her seminal incitement by quoting Michel Foucault: a French academic with the Collège de France. Foucault’s ’Discipline and Punish’, which Davis described as "arguably the most influential text in contemporary studies of the prison system" remains widely studied on college campuses along with Davis’ racist perspective that incorporated the Black Panther’s threat to "Off the Pigs" (Police) that has long since entered politics and the wider culture in the form of police assassinations, demonizations and defunding, and other allied efforts to eliminate prisons, prosecutions and the justice system.

The two activist academics were not really interested in crime and the penal system as a field of research. They were bent on fomenting a civil war that would put the Left in power.

Foucault, a Marxist-trained philosopher, had been a co-founder of the Prison Information Group to support the Maoists imprisoned over the radical violence in France in 1968. Foucault had credited the riots with stimulating his interest in "the direction of penal theory".

Angela Davis had bought guns to facilitate a murderous terrorist attack on a Marin County courthouse by the Black Panthers. The attack roughly coincided with Foucault’s visit to the United States during which he "investigated" the American prison system and the subsequent death of George Jackson: the Panther leader whom the Marin County attackers hoped to free.
Posted by:Besoeker

#5  Shocking, sensation pictures at the link. For some reason I was not able to post them.
Posted by: Abu Uluque   2023-04-03 13:33  

#4  From the San Francisco Chronicle archives:

FILE - Angela Davis enters court in San Rafael, Calif., Dec. 23, 1970, following a heavily-guarded airborne extradition from New York. Davis, who was accused of supplying some of the weapons used in a shootout during an attempted escape of prisoners at the Marin County Courthouse, was eventually acquitted of federal charges.
Posted by: Abu Uluque   2023-04-03 13:32  

#3  
1970 Marin County courthouse murders
Posted by: Abu Uluque   2023-04-03 13:29  

#2  Not sure how LeMay has anything to do with this, but ok. LeMay was not a fan of the bomb. He called it, "something dropped by someone". He was a believer in firebombing as part of total war. BTW Japan was the last war we won, largely due to his efforts of bringing the cost of war home to Japan. I find the whole idea of war abhorrent, nukes, gas, fire bombs and bullets, but if we must put our younger generation at risk, total war should be the method. LeMay did more in the short firebombing stint in Europe than all the strategic bombing did. For example, strategic bombing of the ball bearing factories, costing over 70 B17s and 600 men over the one night, yielded a reduced production of 34% for a whopping 3 days, 6 weeks to retain full production. We, on the other hand lost 20% of our entire bomber planes and crews. Just maybe firebombing them would have been a better choice. If we are going to fight, fight to win.
Posted by: 49 Pan   2023-04-03 13:07  

#1  Many people in his own time and subsequently have venerated John Brown. I have never been a fan. Maybe it is the hair, but less superficially, I am against change enacted by violent slaughter of civilians. I am also not big on Curtis LeMay. I believe that dropping the nuclear bombs prevented millions of casualties on both sides, but generally the firebombing of civilians is abhorrent. Maybe LeMay’s tactics were useful and effective, but I choose not to keep the John Brown characters out of my personal pantheon of heroes. By not singing the mournful hymns about John Brown’s body, I can reject characters like Angela Davis without being hypocritical. Thelma and Louise sucked anyway.
Posted by: Super Hose   2023-04-03 07:44  

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