Posted on 11/30/2021 7:05:13 AM PST by rktman
AURORA, Colo. -- For the third time in the last two weeks, multiple teenagers were shot in Aurora. The shooting happened early Sunday morning near North Dayton Street and East Colfax Avenue.
Police found two people on the scene and took them to the hospital. Authorities said three others showed up at the hospital later. The victims were between the ages of 16 and 20 years old. All are expected to survive.
I don't know how much longer I can do this," secondary violence prevention specialist Jason McBride told 9NEWS. "Like my heart has been broken umpteen times and has shattered in a million pieces all over this city behind kids that have lost their lives in situations I think we could have prevented."
(Excerpt) Read more at wnd.com ...
Lastly, the Aurora police mainly consist of a bunch of steroid pumped vigilantes who are in the job because they get to carry a gun and jack people up.
Now you have a proper introduction to the city of Aurora...
Violence Prevention at CDC:
Violence is a serious problem in the United States (U.S.). It affects people in all stages of life—from infants to the elderly—and has profound impact on lifelong health, opportunity, and well-being. In 2018, nearly 19,000 people were victims of homicide and more than 1.5 million were treated in hospital emergency departments for an assault-related injury.
The number of violent deaths and injuries is just part of the story. Many people survive violence and have permanent physical and emotional scars. Violence also erodes communities by reducing productivity, decreasing property values, and disrupting social services.
The Division of Violence Prevention:
In 1979, the U.S. Surgeon General identified violent behavior as a key public health priority. In 1980, CDC began studying patterns of violence. This effort grew into a national program to reduce the death and disability associated with injuries outside the workplace. In 1992, CDC established the National Center for Injury Prevention and Control (NCIPC) as the lead federal organization for violence prevention.
The Division of Violence Prevention (DVP) is one of three divisions within NCIPC. Its mission is to prevent violence and its consequences so that all people, families, and communities are safe, healthy, and free from violence.
DVP is committed to stopping violence before it begins (i.e., primary prevention). The division works to:
Monitor violence-related behaviors, injuries, and deaths
Conduct research on the factors that put people at risk for or protect them from violence.
Create and evaluate the effectiveness of violence prevention programs, practices, and policies.
Help state and local partners plan, implement, and evaluate violence prevention efforts.
Promote the effective adoption and dissemination of violence prevention strategies.
https://www.cdc.gov/violenceprevention/index.html
Violence Prevention at CDC:
Violence is a serious problem in the United States (U.S.). It affects people in all stages of life—from infants to the elderly—and has profound impact on lifelong health, opportunity, and well-being. In 2018, nearly 19,000 people were victims of homicide and more than 1.5 million were treated in hospital emergency departments for an assault-related injury.
The number of violent deaths and injuries is just part of the story. Many people survive violence and have permanent physical and emotional scars. Violence also erodes communities by reducing productivity, decreasing property values, and disrupting social services.
The Division of Violence Prevention:
In 1979, the U.S. Surgeon General identified violent behavior as a key public health priority. In 1980, CDC began studying patterns of violence. This effort grew into a national program to reduce the death and disability associated with injuries outside the workplace. In 1992, CDC established the National Center for Injury Prevention and Control (NCIPC) as the lead federal organization for violence prevention.
The Division of Violence Prevention (DVP) is one of three divisions within NCIPC. Its mission is to prevent violence and its consequences so that all people, families, and communities are safe, healthy, and free from violence.
DVP is committed to stopping violence before it begins (i.e., primary prevention). The division works to:
Monitor violence-related behaviors, injuries, and deaths
Conduct research on the factors that put people at risk for or protect them from violence.
Create and evaluate the effectiveness of violence prevention programs, practices, and policies.
Help state and local partners plan, implement, and evaluate violence prevention efforts.
Promote the effective adoption and dissemination of violence prevention strategies.
https://www.cdc.gov/violenceprevention/index.html
Great sub reference!
It is what you get with Bushmen in the Kalihari, Aboriginals in Australia, in Hawaii before their conversion to Christianity, and in nearly all the tribal societies. All long before any mass media.
There were a very, very few exceptions, living on hard to reach islands, or on land no one else wanted.
When someone else decided they wanted the land, or the island, those societies were destroyed.
Someone should invent a vaxxine or something.
I think we all know, but I’m going to blather on about the broader implications.
A Secondary Violence Prevention Specialist is a social worker meant to break the cycle of tribal gang payback for criminal acts, without recourse to the Rule of Law, or any power to coerce peace or compensation.
Advanced civilizations are built around the Rule of Law, wherein a known body of laws are enforced by police given a monopoly of force, a judicial system, and a penal system, all serving to “socialize” and “depersonalize” the response to criminal acts. Now that the US has returned to barbarism, gangs want to by-pass all that Rule of Law stuff (defund the police!!), and have instant redress through direct violence. Secondary Violence Prevention Specialists are window dressing to hide capitulation to barbarity due to lack of societal will to maintain civilization.
This is very scary and why the libs who hate us are pushing this B$!
A Secondary Violence Prevention Specialist is a social worker meant to break the cycle of tribal gang payback for criminal acts, without recourse to the Rule of Law, or any power to coerce peace or compensation.
Advanced civilizations are built around the Rule of Law, wherein a known body of laws are enforced by police given a monopoly of force, a judicial system, and a penal system, all serving to “socialize” and “depersonalize” the response to criminal acts. Now that the US has returned to barbarism, gangs want to by-pass all that Rule of Law stuff (defund the police!!), and have instant redress through direct violence. Secondary Violence Prevention Specialists are window dressing to hide capitulation to barbarity due to lack of societal will to maintain civilization.
Somebody who cannot or will not do his or her job. Obviously whatever the job description dictates...it ain’t happenin’.
They’re not going to do anything about it because the people involved are in a protected class. The left loves all the violence and chaos.
Meanwhile in Michigan.....
“> What in the name of Grabthar’s mighty hammer is a “secondary violence prevention specialist? <
I guess he’s the guy who helps the primary violence prevention specialist.”
Maybe he prevents secondary violence. So, the thugs can shoot at you, but he steps in to prevent you from shooting back.
I wish they’d move the airport so that I don’t have to go through Aurora to get there.
Aurora? Is becoming like Chicago. Stay away from Aurora if you visit Colorado.
‘They’ already have their final plan, they’re just waiting until the media whoredom has sufficiently confused the sheeple so ‘they’ can start the confiscation solution.
Spot on, but sadly America doesn’t have decades ahead.
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