Monday, January 4, 2021

The Current State of Africa. Confrontation with the Actions of Reality. January 2021.

 The Current State of Africa

1. Arabs mass-murderously stole 50% of your land, and still counting.

2. The Chinese are buying up the rest.

3. Desertification is spreading.

4. Some African leaders are not African leaders. They are instruments of the West.

5. They Africans peoples also are not african. Sub-saharan Africans are actually, truly, proud Euramericans in black skins and super-saharan Africans are Arabs in black skins. So Africa is conquered already.

6. The 1, 001 panafrican groups all working assiduously towards african unity are themselves consciousness and unconsciously, willfully and diswillfully disunited, disjointed, disconnected, disassociated, disaffected, silo-istic, islandic, each striving hard, but achieving little result on their own, going round in circles, revolutionising.

7. VonBismark, dead for 136 years still imprisons and limits the thinking of 1.3 billion Africans, even so-called panafricanists. They cannot think outside the borders that vonbismark imposed.

8. Transmogrified Euramericans and Arabs, they now freely and gleefully haemorrhage their money, time, labour, intellect etc out to their enemies. Anti-blackwallstreet.

8. VonBismark-ism still leads to xenocide, border disputes, national disputes, football murders etc.
 (When was the last time you heard one North American state fight another?)

9. Africans think they live in a democratic world, with their enemies as chief democratic peoples and friends of Africa. Even after Obama destroyed Libya, South Africa still invited him to talk about democracy for 90 minutes. We are a haplessly, hopelessly confused people.

10. We think 'God will do it", and so spend endless hours in prayer and none in taking responsibility.

11. Being transmogrified Euramericans and Arabs, we chase the Euramerican dream and the Arab dream, not the African dream.

The African dream is precisely that, to Africans-- a dream. A dead dream. Stillborn, even.

12. Far too divided along ethnic, tribal, political, ethnopolitical, religious, vonbismark lines.

13. Lack of vision. Can't even think 100 years into the future.

14. Africa, unlike poorer countries like Japan, Singapore etc. suffers from the rich man's syndrome--everyone wants a piece. So they actively destroy and hamper our progress.

15. And africans say we shouldn't talk about the reality of our enemies.

16. Africans think their enemies are their friends. How will they begin to defend themselves?

17. So they fight each other, instead of the real enemies, weakening themselves.

18. State assets are sometimes sold cheaply and foreign entities are taking over.

19. It is well-known that africans don't read about Africa by africans and so don't know about africa by africans. Maybe due to poverty, soap operas or too-known-ism. They skim through at best and rush to respond askew with little comprehension.

20. Lack of reading or lack of comprehension is a symptom of lack of value of knowledge, and of new knowledge, research findings, even a despising of such, leading to unwisdom; whereas our enemies are the opposite--they treasure knowledge, new knowledge, and by knowledge, they conquer.

21. Egocetricism from both misleaders and misfollowers, not realising that individual success is fragile, transient, mirage-ous. 

22. Offence when told the truth, instead of acknowledging it and solutionising.

This is the current reality of the state of Africa.

Friday, January 1, 2021

HBCU's still not getting it! Lincoln University Becomes First HBCU with Its Own Police Academy

What of job development across the board for it's student body during and upon graduation to address other issues of vulnerable communities globally?

Disasters and Emergencies?

Climate change?


Opportunities missed.


BEMA International

Tuesday, December 29, 2020

DomPrep Journal: The New Age of Police Reform Special Issue, December 2020

 

  Special Issue

December 2020

Complimentary Download
(Adobe Reader Required)

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After a hurricane impacts a community, a common practice is not just to rebuild the homes and businesses, but to build them back stronger to withstand greater winds and higher flood waters. This same concept is emerging in law enforcement. Growing social and political pressures have threatened the traditional law enforcement establishment. However, these pressures have led to agencies finding new ways to build back stronger and fortify their relationships within and between communities.

Today’s law enforcement is faced with challenges in four key areas: public consent, rule of law, restrained use of force, and independence from political influence. Adding to these challenges is the global exposure of local events through social media and news outlets. For example, a tragic death in one city can spark protests and demonstrations in other cities around the world. This widespread outcry has spurred calls for police reform across numerous jurisdictions.

Years of staffing and retention challenges were a sign of a growing problem, but sometimes it takes a crisis for true change to begin. In 2020, the compilation of law enforcement challenges and incidents, social and political unrest, and even a pandemic pushed talks of police reform to the forefront. Amid the crises, opportunities and strategies to reconnect law enforcement with the communities they serve have emerged – with accountability and transparency leading the discussion.

Combining public pressure with a new presidential administration, police reform efforts are likely to continue building momentum in the upcoming year at the local, state, and national levels. This publication of “The New Age of Police Reform” provides an overview of how law enforcement agencies are addressing modern challenges and domestic preparedness concerns, determining training needs, and rebuilding trust.

Although changing the inside culture and external perception of a long-standing institution is a difficult task, significant change is on the horizon. This special edition of the DomPrep Journal highlights a series of articles and podcasts that describe what law enforcement agencies are doing or plan to do to help rebuild community trust, ensure accountability and oversight, and promote intergovernmental cohesion.

Sincerely,
Catherine L. Feinman
Editor-in-Chief

New York Bans Most Evictions as Tenants Struggle to Pay Rent

https://www.nytimes.com/2020/12/28/nyregion/new-york-eviction-ban.html?action=click&module=Top%20Stories&pgtype=Homepage


New York Bans Most Evictions as Tenants Struggle to Pay Rent

The Legislature, addressing the hardship caused by the pandemic, is convening an unusual special session between Christmas and New Year’s to pass the measure.

Housing activists gathered to call for cancellation of rent in Brooklyn in July.

Sunday, December 27, 2020

$100,00.00 Awards for Communities. Secure Rural Schools Program Funding Opportunity Department of the Interior Bureau of Land Management

Grants.gov:

 DOI

Department of the Interior.  Bureau of Land Management

BLM ORWA Secure Rural Schools Program Funding Opportunity Synopsis 1

https://www.grants.gov/web/grants/view-opportunity.html?oppId=330595

Eligible Applicants:State governments
County governments
Public and State controlled institutions of higher education
Nonprofits that do not have a 501(c)(3) status with the IRS, other than institutions of higher education
Private institutions of higher education
Nonprofits having a 501(c)(3) status with the IRS, other than institutions of higher education
Individuals

Independent school districts
Native American tribal organizations (other than Federally recognized tribal governments)
Special district governments
Public housing authorities/Indian housing authorities
City or township governments
Native American tribal governments (Federally recognized)