
The Hidden Plague that No One Wants To Discuss. Examples of what you’ve never heard about your Police Departments and why there is a Clarion Call to Defund The Pirates I mean Police. (They Can Not Be Reformed)
Imagine what would occur if Hitler came to your local town? Our Police have proven over and over that they will do whatever they are instructed to do and more. This means Mr. John Doe Police Enforcer will be used to round you and your family up. They already do it, THEY just don’t call it a death camp yet. Local Jail has a better Ring to it and if you have money you may get to go home, for now!
Don’t Be Naïve, They Make Criminals, Out Of All Of Us! That Is Exactly How A Protection Racket Works! Whenever, They Want or Need More Money They Do the Shake Down, Break Down, You’re Busted Hustle!
We Truly Don’t Understand, Even Though We Think We Do! Examples of Pirates with Guns and Immunity.
What’s Next? Wait For It! Google – FEMA CAMPS
HERE IS THE SOLUTION: http://guardianangels.org/ These Folks Already Showed Us How To Clean Up Crime Without Violence, Police or Courts.

How Local Guardian Angels Chapters Benefit Their Communities
As Frances and Chester Sliwa told their son from a very young age, “If you’re willing to do the hard work – no matter how crazy the idea – we will support you. But the day we see you not rolling up your shirtsleeves and doing the bulk of the work and the heavy lifting, that’s it. We’re not going to support the effort.” This philosophy permeates the Guardian Angels today who stand ready to assist those willing to step up and get involved.
Rising criminal activity and decreased public services can paralyze communities. This is when the We Not I philosophy of the Guardian Angels is so powerful. Where residents have reached out to keep their neighborhoods safe, the Guardian Angels have lent a hand to help locals establish neighborhood Safety Patrols. Guided by principles of honesty, dependability and persistence, volunteers empower themselves and selflessly protect others.
The Guardian Angels have always ascribed to a philosophy of open membership as evidenced by the diversity of its membership. They are not concerned with gender, age, sexuality or race and require only the commitment to pursue the betterment of their community. By observing the overwhelmingly positive impact of joining together to achieve results, volunteers have come to realize that it is within their collective reach to create the quality of life they so desperately seek. This realization has turned hopelessness into empowerment, fear into friendliness and the caring individual into a powerful collective.
The Guardian Angels also understand the importance of changing the atmosphere in a neighborhood. The change in atmosphere is a change in attitude. An attitude of urgency in taking back the streets from the criminals. An attitude that we can retrieve the quality of life that rightfully belongs to us only if we think and care about one another. An attitude of understanding that the only permanent solution is to develop programs that will approach street crime at the community level by involving everyone whom the problem affects. Instead of waiting for other solve the problem, the Guardian Angels help people recognize that they should be turning to themselves because they are most capable of solving their communities.
Camden, N.J. disbanded its police force. Here’s what happened next.
It has been hailed as a potential model of police reform, a crime-ridden city in southern New Jersey that disbanded its force and rebuilt it from the ground up.
The Camden Police Department underwent the unprecedented overhaul in 2013, leading to sharp reductions in crime and a focus on improved community relations. Seven years later, with the nation grappling over police reform after the killing of George Floyd, attention has turned to Camden for lessons on the path forward.
The reality, residents and advocates say, is complicated. Camden no doubt feels safer than it was a decade ago, they acknowledge, but the process was rocky, and problems persist.
In its early days, the new force ramped up summonses for such offenses as riding a bicycle without a bell, sparking a backlash from groups like the American Civil Liberties Union. The department ultimately reversed course and implemented sweeping policy changes, but some long-term residents said the current stable of officers, nearly half of whom are white and many of whom live far from town, still have much work to do in building trust and confidence within the community.
“They are not jumping out dunking people on their head no more,” said Anthony Ways, who runs a community youth center. “But they are sitting there — 2, 3 in the morning — with the lights flashing being an intimidating presence.”
Ways spent 13 years in prison on a murder charge before he was exonerated in 2005.
“Somewhere in the middle,” he said, “they have to find that sweet spot where they can police but, at the same time, take account of the citizens and their concerns.”
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