DORNER: ROGUE COP OR ROGUE NATION? I AM
NOT SURE
By Fahim A. Knight-El
There is a very high level of
frustration inside the United States of America and nothing typified that
frustration more than the recent Christopher Dorner’s incident, which in my
opinion, was not totally about a rogue cop who consequentially found himself on
the wrong side of the law; this fiasco also was not about some psychopath who
suffered from some mental illness and went on a rampage of indiscriminately
killing innocent people. The corporate media always systematically label these
type individuals as insane in order to keep the masses in check by dismissing
them as mere cuckoos who had no legitimate gripe in order to publically
discredit their grievances, therefore controlling debate. This in turns falsely
insures us as American citizens that this conduct was random and not rooted in
a more extensive dissatisfaction. But there are many lessons to be drawn from
the Dorner incident, it is a grim reminder that violence could crop up anywhere
and at anytime (it is a reminder that no one is safe); often it could be
unpredictable, but in Dorner ‘s scenario I believe the Los Angles Police Department
(LAPD) arrogance led them eventually down a deadly path. Many sympathized with
Dorner because it appeared that he unjustly lost his job and was terminated as
a police officer for essentially becoming a whistleblower and had violated the
police blue wall of silence. Some might even argue based on the way these chain
events played out; did he do the right thing because in doing the perceived
right thing, it cost him his good name, profession, reputation and ultimately
cost him his life. Dorner stated: “I stood up for what was
right but unfortunately have dealt with the repercussions of doing the right
thing and now losing my name and everything I ever stood for”. We have
witnessed my corporate and government whistleblowers in the last 10 to 15 years
win huge civil suits by exposing government and/or corporate lawbreaking and
deception by revealing hidden plots aimed at consumers or misuse of the public
trust relative to government.
Yet, many refused to characterize
Christopher Dorner's scenario as a case of a whistleblower; they justify this
by characterizing Dorner’s behavior as being part of the angry black man’s
syndrome, but this only denotes denial which rest on a foundation of racism. But
instead of LAPD and Los Angles city and county government embracing Dorner as a
whistleblower they allowed for systems of internal retaliation to take place by
turning a blind eye, which this eventually led to the system failing Dorner in
which many law enforcement officers have taken a covert oath never to 'snitch'
another fellow officer out even if witnessing them breaking the law. I think in
Dorner's incident there were a lot of lawbreaking and compromises of the LAPD
grievance procedures and policies, which ultimately led to Dorner taken the law
into his own hands. No. I do not agree with the Talking Heads and government
assessment that Dorner was crazy—this man in my opinion was pushed to the limits and
found himself backed up against the wall—I think his action was a direct result
of betrayal, racism, failed LAPD personnel procedures and a quest for justice
found Dorner outside of the law. I truly think he did everything possible to
legally remedy his situation, but in this system, there is an invisible rulebook
and if you play by the rules there is a system of rewards, if you do not play
by the rules—Dorner appeared to be on the punishment end.
However, I think looking back LAPD,
perhaps wish they would have internally done some things differently (hindsight
is truly 20/20 vision). This is what could happen when we allow systemic
practices of institutionalize racism to fester and continue to go unchecked and
unaddressed. Dorner by all accounts was an upstanding citizen who had served as
an officer in the United States arm forces (ex-veteran) and was once a sworn
Los Angles Police officer (I think both of these jobs as a professional soldier
speaks somewhat to this man’s credibility). He was well trained as a military
soldier and as a police officer who in the end demonstrated the type of
military skill set that he had acquired and used his training to kill and evade
police. Dorner stated: “I’m not an
aspiring rapper, I’m not a gang member, I’m not a dope dealer, I don’t have
multiple babies momma’s. I am an American by choice, I am a son, I am a
brother, I am a military service member, I am a man who has lost complete faith
in the system, when the system betrayed, slandered, and libeled me. I lived a
good life and though not a religious man I always stuck to my own personal code
of ethics, ethos and always stuck to my shoreline and true North. I didn’t need
the US Navy to instill Honor, Courage, and Commitment in me but I thank them
for re-enforcing it. It’s in my DNA”. Perhaps the lives that were taken by
Dorner could have been prevented and spared, if only someone in LAPD brass chain
would have seriously listened to this man grievances and followed through with
his complaints with objectivity, non partial and without the bias, which
appeared to be evident of a good ole boy and good ole girl system that existed
inside of the LAPD.
I am no expert on labor law or
employment grievance procedures, but in my life and experiences, I have had my
share of disagreements with those in human resources relative to fighting discrimination
and fighting for better working conditions for those who were considered
laborers and lowly wage earners. They have the ability to stack the deck
against you and often poor people do not have the financial resources to mount
a comparable legal defense against hired corporate guns (justice in the United States
is often determined by money, it is surely not blind). This article was not
written to defend Christopher Dorner's behavior; I do not condone violence in
the workplace or outside the workplace, but rather to examine and assess employment procedures relative to employment grievances in lieu of the
aftermath of the Dorner's incident. Moreover, this should be the real
discussion taken place inside the LAPD in particular, and the United States
in general. Yet, often these people go right back to their same disposition
before the tragedy took place and no serious review and oversight is done to
ensure this type incident never occurs again.
However, I am not optimistic about the
political, economic and social course that America has chosen to take and I believe that
these types of incidents in the near future are only going to increase. I hope
that you did not think that Drone Warfare, the National Defense Authorization
Act, the Patriot Act, Anti-Terrorism laws, etc., were for the other guy (international terrorist); these
things have been put in place to contain social rebellion inside the United
States of America and not for some overseas so-called Al-Qaeda terrorist (the
real terrorist sits in the White House and he is much more dangerous than those deemed terrorist by the West)). They are preparing for you and me and
perhaps it is difficult for you to believe that Martial Law is right around the
corner. This is why, there is a rush to get guns off the streets and put forth
new gun control legislation because of public apathy and disillusionment, which
will ultimate lead the people into a direct confrontation with the State (for
those who do not know what the State mean, it refers to the United States
Government). This is the real reason why President Obama and some members of
the United States Congress are pushing for comprehensive gun control laws and
are quietly and covertly looking to slowly overturn the Second Amendment Right
to the United States Constitution (disarm the people) we should not let this
happen—I do support the National Rifle Association (NRA) on their quest to
fight for the Second Amendment Right.
Just think about this, local, state and
federal government agencies have these campaigns to buy back guns, but yet, in
the inner cities of the United States the economic crisis has become desolate
and hopelessness grips those who have become the expendable 'have nots'. I am
more interested in buying back our freedom and fighting for our liberty against
these elected dictators and tyrants that sit in the White House and in
corporate America .
President Obama has played a big game on black people and white liberals, as
well and I am far from being a FOX news conservative and/or a Tea Party member
and we have given this pawn a blank check to masquerade as though he is the
champion of the poor. Obama has not paid any dues to be spoken of in the same
breath of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., and/or Minister Malcolm X and he
definitely did not deserve the Nobel Peace Prize. What has he done other than
carried out the reactionary and oppressive agenda of the globalist? I have even
heard Minister Louis Farrakhan attempting to spare this traitor; if you
'Negroes' are to afraid to criticize Obama, then stand back and allow me the privilege
(the late comedian Bernie Mac would say, I aint
scared of you N----).
I might be digressing a bit, but these
thoughts are coming to me, as I write this article about Christopher Dorner and
it may connect or it may not connect. President Obama has used the U.S.
Government agent provocateur Reverend Al Sharpton as his black henchman and bulldog
to keep disagreeable black folk in check (but I am one of those 'Negroes' who
are off the chain and I am not willing to sell my soul to the highest bidder
and I surely do not dance to the tune of Reverend Al Sharpton). I do not agree with
anything the establish 'Negro' leaders say and do; many of them typifies the
term modern day slave (they are sellouts and Uncle Toms) and they have the job to keep us 'Negroes’ on the modern
plantation and if you ‘Negroes’ do not know it by now, Reverend Al Sharpton is
about lining his pockets with some money and keeping you 'Negroes’ looking up
in the sky for that Mystery God that does not exist and praying for the false
image of that white Jesus to return to the earth to save your black asses (the only interest Sharpton has is his own). You all are crying over some new installment of a pope and for over 600 years there has not
been one black pope and it is our ancestors in Kush (Ethiopia) that established the
original Christian Church—I have told you this before that all the prior white
popes actually bowed and prayed to a Black Madonna and child (Mary was your
mother and it’s you, the Nubian Jesus they pray and worship in secret). Bob
Marley said free your minds from mental slavery; none but ourselves can do
this.
I am not a social scientist, but as
poverty increases in the United States in particular, no jobs and ultimately no tangible future for
the American people can be foreseen (do not blame me for this forecast, I am just the messenger)
things are only going to worsen. I live in America and the black community and
there is no doubt gun violence in some of the larger cities and smaller cities are at epidemic
levels. These guns in particular, in the black
community were systematically put there by the enemy as part of the genocidal plot
and they have made dope the number one commodity in the black community—these
drugs and gun traffickers are often members at the highest levels of the United
States Government (president, ambassadors, congresspersons, law enforcement, dignitaries,
business leaders, etc., they are the ones that controls the dope and gun trade).
We do not own the ships, boats, airline carriers and we definitely do not
control the airspace and the U.S. Ports; this business is to lucrative and to
vital to U.S. economic interest for them to worry about the social plight of
the expendable victims. I personally live in a right to work state, which means
workers have no rights when it comes termination, equal protection, labor
protection, etc. The 2008 induced economic meltdown, which rearranged the United States and Global Economy, also impacted
the labor arrangement and not to forget the devastating effect of dismantling
of Labor Unions, which has left the U.S. labor force powerless and disillusioned
(this induced crisis diminished the little rights labor had enjoyed).
They systematically outsourced U.S. jobs to Mexico
and the Far East , it has been this phenomenon
that has left people disillusioned and feeling helpless and betrayed. The
weakening of U.S. labor was directly impacted by a diminishing job market and the few employment
opportunities have created an inequitable supply and demand scale relative to
labor and employment opportunities in which this paradigm has empowered
corporate entities and capitalist business enterprises to the detriment of an obsolete
labor force that in reality has out lived its purpose (corporate America and the business sector can now be highly selective and cheap because they have a huge
unemployed pool to draw from). Thus, since the 2008 so-called economic decline,
it tip the job market scale in total favor of big business in which they
understood that job demands were high and unlike anytime in American history
there is a huge labor force that had mortgages, student loans, automobile loans
and various aspects of consumer debt that was undergirding life styles built on
earning capacities that were being kept afloat by debt (this has become the
impetus of creating the new 21ST century slave). The 2008 economic meltdown
showed our vulnerability as a glutting class of consumers and we had lost our
will to be producers and had settled on being consumers which has created our
present predicament.
The Los Angles cop who felt that his personnel
grievances were mishandled by the Los Angles Police Department, Human
Resources, his superiors and Internal Affairs, as well as by rank and file
members on the Los Angles Police Department were all part of a system of
betrayal. I think many of us who have worked in corporate America ,
perhaps have filed grievances and/or sought internal remedies to situations
that may have arisen on the job. I think many of us of have had various types
of incidents at our place of employment where you may have felt your rights as
an employee had been violated by a so-called superior and/or management staff. Thus,
most jobs provide the employee with a personnel manual which outlines the employment
policies and procedures—this will ordinarily include topics like employment
performance, scheduling, pay hikes and raises, absentees and tardiness,
promotions, definitions of sexual harassment, violence in the work place,
vacation, policy on substance abuse and drugs, etc., and a host of other policies
that is put in place to govern employee's conduct. I think the discipline
policy is one of the most important procedures because it gives the employee their
internal right to due process relative to charges, filings and hearings.
Many of us in 1991 witness the Rodney
King incident where a majority white police officers responded to a traffic
stop and a high speed police chase ensued, but who knew that as this incident unfolded
that it would make history because it eventually led to one of the largest
social rebellions in recent American history. There is no need to totally
rehash the Rodney King incident, but what was interesting was how we got to that space and time; an innocent bystander
video taped the LAPD brutally and violently beating Rodney King who was on the ground in a defensive posture and his posture was definitely not one who was resisting arrest (once the smoke cleared King’s face looked like he had been in
a 15 round heavy weight fight with Muhammad Ali and it was clear evidence of
police brutality).
This video beating was given to
various news outlets and the first thing the Talking Heads and the law
enforcement experts tried to do were to convince the American people that they
did not see what they thought they saw (this primary information—raw video
footage of a savage assault being carried out police officers was being denied
by LAPD). They tried to convince the American people that Rodney King was
resistance arrest as he laid on ground while officers savagely used their batons
to beat and kicked him like he was an animal as he rolled over trying absorbed
the violent blows the best as he could. Also, there were other law enforcement
officers that swore to serve and protect who stood idly by and did nothing
while they watch their other fellow officers break the law. If memory serves me
correctly there were a couple of African American officers on the scene who did
nothing to stop their white fellow officers from committing this crime against
King. This eventually became a high profile case involving a petty criminal who
had a lengthy criminal history and was not a choir boy (Rodney King was a dope
fiend and an alcoholic, but despite his 'bad boy' history he was a human
being). The United States Constitution guarantees each American equal
protection under the law and due process under the law.
I think the Los Angles Police
Department prior to and since the Rodney King incident has had some unresolved
concerns relative to a culture of racism and police brutality aimed at blacks
and Latinos. Dorner stated this in his "Manifesto": "The
department has not changed since the Rampart and Rodney King days. It has
gotten worse. The consent decree should never have been lifted. The only thing
that has evolved from the consent decree is those officers involved in the
Rampart scandal and Rodney King incidents have since promoted to supervisor,
commanders, and command staff, and executive positions". . ."Dorner
goes on to state: This department has not changed from the Daryl Gates and Mark
Fuhrman days. Those officers are still employed and have all promoted to
Command staff and supervisory positions. I will correct this error. Are you
aware that an officer (a rookie/probationer at the time) seen on the Rodney
King videotape striking Mr. King multiple times with a baton on 3/3/91 is still
employed by the LAPD and is now a Captain on the police department? Captain
XXXX is now the commanding officer of a LAPD police station (West
LA division)".
It appears that sensitivity and
diversity training pertaining to law enforcement officers still is not enough
to sensitize some white law enforcement officers into understanding the
culture, and race/ethnic backgrounds of non-Caucasians who might be confronted
with violating the law. Moreover, many non-white suspects and defendants are suspicious
of white law enforcement authority figures because of the lack of trust that
exist between the two races and cultures and often there is a feeling that law
enforcement does not have their best interest at stake—these historical and
cultural differences creates tension and often time this leads to African
Americans and Latinos having a higher percentage of arrest records and
eventually higher percentages of convictions. I am very sensitive about
policing because it is a very tough job that carries a lot of stress and there
are many more good cops than there are bad cops who truly have taken the oath
to protect and serve.
Lastly, may be somewhere in the deep
recesses of LAPD minds the Dorner incident will force them to implement some
real changes and it is sad that it has taken the loss of human life to get
people talking about fairness and how to make the work place better for all;
there will always be disagreeable grievances in the workplace, but how we
handle them will determine how successful society is in minimizing violence and
anti-social behavior from over-spilling into the broader society. There were
many lessons that came out of the Dorner incident and I do not think they can just
be brushed under the rug. If we do nothing Dorner will revisit us at some
point.
Fahim A. Knight-El Chief Researcher for KEEPING IT REAL THINK
TANK located in Durham , NC ; our mission is to inform African
Americans and all people of goodwill, of the pending dangers that lie ahead; as
well as decode the symbolism and reinterpreted the hidden meanings behind those
who operate as invisible forces, but covertly rules the world. We are of
the belief that an enlightened world will be better prepared to throw off the
shackles of ignorance and not be willing participants for the slaughter. Our
MOTTO is speaking truth to power. Fahim A. Knight-EL can be reached at
fahimknight@ yahoo.com.
Stay Awake Until We Meet Again,
Fahim A. Knight-El
4 comments:
Peace,
Definitely hit the nail on the head with this one. People chastised Dorner and said he was crazy, yet they forget the fact that this brother, over several years, tried numerous times to air out his grievances with the LAPD and was denied every time. I don't agree with his killings, but I'm tired of the media and other institutions sully ing people's names and making good men look bad. Dorner wasn't crazy. He wasn't a madman. He was frustrated and took what he thought was the only route out of the situation. Maybe if our society weren't so corrupt, people would not feel the need to lash out against it.
Peace: Brother McAuliffe as always that you for your comments; I think their (LAPD) decisions drove Dorner to the position that he took. It was discrimination and racism that tainted the various grievance and legal procedures. Therefore, compromising the principles of fairness relative to remedying the labor dispute in an amicable and objective manner.
Stay Awake Until We Meet Again,
Fahim A. Knight-El
"ensure" not the same as "insure"
Usage Note: Assure, ensure, and insure all mean "to make secure or certain." Only assure is used with reference to a person in the sense of "to set the mind at rest": assured the leader of his loyalty. Although ensure and insure are generally interchangeable, only insure is now widely used in American English in the commercial sense of "to guarantee persons or property against risk."
Stay Awake Until We Meet Again,
Fahim A. Knight-El
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