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The Real Cause of the Arizona Killings

hypocritexposer

Well-known member
January 11, 2011
The Real Cause of the Arizona Killings
By Bernie Reeves

One or two commentators got it right, characterizing the shootings in Arizona of a congresswoman, judge, and four other bystanders -- including a 79-year-old woman and a nine-year-old girl, who attended the fateful event due to her interest in government and politics -- as an act committed by a deranged gunman. But the spin is on by the usual MSM suspects that the shootings were due to "hostility" and "polarization" caused by (guess who?) right-wingers who have ratcheted up the rhetoric about health care and immigration. Even the sheriff on the scene went to great lengths to politicize the tragedy, stating that the killer was a product of the vitriol emanating from talk radio hosts, Sarah Palin, and conservatives opposed to Obama and the Democrats.


But I knew immediately what was going on. Once again, a mass killing has sickened the nation, a killing perpetrated by a mentally ill trigger-man. And once again, the nation will carry on without examining what really happened, satisfied with political propaganda over the reality that mass killers are almost always schizophrenics who should be institutionalized to protect them -- and us -- from random and murderous violence.


Nothing is created out of whole cloth in the affairs of mankind, and mentally ill killers don't simply pop up and take down their victims randomly. And as always, public officials and the media ignore the specific facts and precedents that have caused this preposterous and appalling set of circumstances to continue.


Serving as chairman of a downtown advancement committee in the early and mid-'80s, I assigned a subcommittee to make an inventory of the homeless population that was thwarting our effort to lure people back to the city core after 25 years of white flight and a negative image that seemed permanent. The homeless were assaulting passersby and congregating wherever they chose -- and the police would not act.


The report was startling: of the 85 homeless in the downtown area, 80 were mental patients. And the reason the police could not act to control their behavior with arrests was also shocking. Concomitant with new rules passed in 1978 that released the mentally ill into the streets across America, a nationally linked cadre of activist law professors managed to have vagrancy and loitering laws expunged.


I approached various city and county agencies to ask what they could do to return the streets to taxpaying citizens. I was offered that look so common amongst the care-taking community, communicating the attitude that I was being mean-spirited to question the "rights" of the homeless and abusive to take action to curtail their behavior. And furthermore, the homeless were "fine" as long as they took their medications.


They obviously didn't take their meds, and we had a problem, as did cities everywhere. I decided to investigate how this ludicrous state of affairs could have happened, and I ran into nothing less than a conspiracy by the activist community to impose the homeless on America and identify the problem as the failure of the American free-market system. And they succeeded. Every day for ten years, the homeless were in the news, associated with the accusation the phenomenon itself of homelessness was caused by the unfeeling crassness of a capitalist society that throws the less fortunate on the street.


But the homeless, for the most part, were not rejects from a cruel capitalist system. They were mentally ill, creating the irony that the care-giving left conspired to mistreat these unfortunate patients and toss them out of institutions and into the street as sacrificial lambs, as a contorted vanguard elite to undermine American values. The left-wing lawyers did their bit to protect them, and Americans were made to look cruel and unfeeling in the eyes of the world.


The plot begins with British psychiatrist R.D. Laing, who theorized that schizophrenics were actually more in touch with the correct view of life than so-called "straight" people. Laing, a sort of Timothy Leary of psychiatry, experimented with patients acting as doctors, and doctors as patients, to make his point that we "squares" were out of touch, while his patients were at one with nature and inner spirituality.


It was absurd '60s pop theory, but it appealed to a Stanford graduate student named Ken Kesey, who wrote a play applying Laing's theories. The film made from One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest turned into a huge hit and helped pave the way for major changes in the care of the mentally ill, which resulted in new laws in 1978 that forced institutions to release patients who could theoretically function in society -- most notably schizophrenics, since they are known to be smarter than the average bear. The point was that the mentally ill have "rights" too -- the clarion call of the era.


The homeless problem has receded, even in bad economic times, because it was actually not caused by economic cruelty. Those who still roam the streets are usually gathered up at day's end and shipped to overnight quarters --- and then transported back into the city to panhandle during the day. Like most fake social movements, advocates don't want to give up feeling good about themselves by helping out the unfortunate.


But numbers of schizophrenics are still out and among us due to the deinstitutionalization of the late 1970s. And ever since, we have experienced sudden and deadly rampages and attribute the cause to the issue du jour -- this time to vitriolic politics. The Arizona killer will claim to be insane and maintain that "voices" told him to act, as is usually the case.


But only a few will dare state the truth: these people need to be institutionalized.


Bernie Reeves is editor and publisher of Raleigh Metro Magazine.

http://www.americanthinker.com/2011/01/the_real_cause_of_the_arizona.html
 

Steve

Well-known member
The Arizona killer will claim to be insane and maintain that "voices" told him to act, as is usually the case.

those voices are of Alex Jones and a clown from NY,... (who claims to be from Texas)
 

Faster horses

Well-known member
We need to crack down on these people, regardless of what they claim.
I'm not a world-wide traveller as some of you here, but when I was travelling to the Panama Canal and toured some of the countries around
and including Panama, and I saw all the places with bars at the doors and windows,my thought was, "if we in America don't stop treating criminals so LIBERALLY, we will be putting bars on our windows."

Sad thought. Crime doesn't get punished in this country. At least not
according to the deed.
 

Steve

Well-known member
The report was startling: of the 85 homeless in the downtown area, 80 were mental patients.

a few years back I volunteered for a Philadelphia project to help homeless vets...

the premise was simple get them into the VA system by offering a free meal and a warm place to sit for awhile..

as the "homeless" came in we were to ask them if they served, and try to get their information written down.. this was done by serving them a meal and talking to them..

most "claimed" to have been nam vets.. but when asked tier age or other basic info.. they became illusive. why because they often were not old enough to serve in the era they claimed to have served in..

of the hundreds who came for the free meal, only two were actually eligible to be helped.. the rest.. as for the rest,.. they learn by claiming to be a vet.. they often will get a free pass.. and a free meal..

sadly most give real vets a bad name..
 

Steve

Well-known member
Faster horses said:
We need to crack down on these people, regardless of what they claim.
I'm not a world-wide traveller as some of you here, but when I was travelling to the Panama Canal and toured some of the countries around
and including Panama, and I saw all the places with bars at the doors and windows,my thought was, "if we in America don't stop treating criminals so LIBERALLY, we will be putting bars on our windows."

Sad thought. Crime doesn't get punished in this country. At least not
according to the deed.

you don't have to travel the world to see buildings with bars on every window.. just go to your average D.C. neighborhood.
 

Tam

Well-known member
Steve said:
The Arizona killer will claim to be insane and maintain that "voices" told him to act, as is usually the case.

those voices are of Alex Jones and a clown from NY,... (who claims to be from Texas)

Good thing in AZ is their laws say even if you are found insane, yes you go to a hospital but when the hospital deems you sane, you are transfered to a prison not just released onto the streets. There is no get out of jail free card in AZ. You can't get away with acting insane to get out of a prison term in AZ.
 

Whitewing

Well-known member
Steve said:
The Arizona killer will claim to be insane and maintain that "voices" told him to act, as is usually the case.

those voices are of Alex Jones and a clown from NY,... (who claims to be from Texas)

Steve, what leads you to believe the assclown is from NY?
 
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