Posted on 08/30/2013 11:37:48 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
(VIDEO-AT-LINK)
On January 6, 2013, 22 year old Jason Paul was found stabbed to death while riding his bike home in Clearwater, Florida. After stabbing Paul multiple times, the assailant left him for dead during the midnight hour. After months of searching for his killer and offering a $10,000 reward, the killer has been arrested. On Thursday, 16-year-old Mychal King was arrested and charged with the first-degree murder. King has a long criminal history and was already in jail for previous crimes. King admitted to killing Paul for no reason other than having a hard day.
ABC Action News reported:
Police said King admitted to killing Paul for no reason other than he had a hard day with his family that night of January 6, and just wanted to kill the first person he saw.
Police say 22-year-old Jason Taylor Paul was stabbed multiple times while riding his bike home from work late.
Jasons parents, John and Renee Langfritz had been distraught since the news of Pauls death, and desperate for closure, even offering a $10,000 reward for information.
Renee described her son as an intelligent, loving, funny man. She said his sudden loss has left a hole in the hearts of everyone who knew him.
This coward, truly a coward, who would leave a young innocent man to die alone in the dark in the middle of the street, must be caught, she said at the time.
(Excerpt) Read more at thegatewaypundit.com ...
You misunderstand me. I see men with gray hair in many of those mugshots.
exactly. they were largely intact families with dads. blacks were the test run for destroying the nuclear families of all the rest of us.
Thanks 2ndDivisionVet.
My apologies. There will always be a few as there are a few middle-aged whites who are still involved in crime. However, it is generally recognized that crime is generally a young man’s game.
There are approximately 1 million blacks currently incarcerated (federal, state, AND county). Now add: the number who have been in prison but are now out of prison (including released due to court order re: overcrowding); the number who have “gotten off” due to prosecutorial incompetence or “deals” or jury incomptence (think “OJ”); the number who are convicted but are on-the-run fugitives; and finally the number who haven’t been caught and convicted and have so far gotten away with crimes. Four million, easy.
Or training wheels and auto pilot.
The biggest contributing factor to imprisonment is the war on drugs.
http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_incarceration_rate
Did he act like a racial slur? Or did he act like a depraved savage?
Just call ‘em SoBs.
The point is that every race and ethnicity is capable of violence, and has proven so. The question is why are blacks currently overrepresented in violent and non-violent crime? The answer is likely complex, but the breakdown in the black family structure, and the political exploitation of the black community has had a ton to do with it.
I truly believe that the black community, just like many other racial and ethnic groups before), would have ascended the socioeconomic ladder and become just another successful group of people in America, if they had been left alone to use their own ingenuity, ambitions, and abilities to achieve. To be sure, a great many have made great contributions and achieved great success, and it must be very painful for them to look at stories such as this one.
We have to recognize that the black community became a focal point and fertile ground for a number of outside and ‘inside’ interests over the past 80 or more years. Communists/socialists from outside of the US exploited the black community as a way to divide our society and stir unrest from within. People like Bill Ayers were and are doing the same thing from inside the US.
Self-serving politicians used race as a ticket to power and fame, and obviously still do. They told and tell young blacks that the system is stacked against them, and that they need special help to make it. They instigated social engineering programs that made it possible, and in fact encouraged single parent families and the breakdown of what was a strong black community tradition of family. Their social engineering resulted in the ‘enslavement’ of successive generations of black families into welfare dependence.
The list goes on, but the point is that this isn't about race. I could care less about skin color or where your parents or grandparents are from. This is about how we've gotten to the point at which children can grow up and be so lacking in value for life, and so devoid of a moral compass that they think it's OK to kill someone because they are ‘bored’, or because they ‘had a bad day’. Clearly, ‘The Great Society’ is not working.
We are all George Zimmerman.
We have to be.
Yeah, if drugs were free they wouldn’t have to steal, mug, and rob for the money to buy them.
/facepalm
How late? Not justifying the attack but common sense and situational awareness can be your friends.
There used to be a time when the drug community wasn’t generally a highly violent one. Most people, if drugs were found on them, were simply fined and sent home. Now, they go to prison, experience extreme violence, and come out violent and generally dysfunctional.
Now, if you want to win the war on drugs, you will have to use extreme measures, like immediate execution for the crime of having a bit of cocaine on your shoes from having walked by some high bum.
Or do you just get pleasure at the idea of seeing non-violent drug users get super tortured. Do you go toned at night hearing screams and smiling?
There is a belief within America that, if you maximize the punishment you will minimize the crime. If crime continues, keep Talibanizing the prison system until you reach a point of where everybody wants to behave and peace will reign throughout America.
I don’t think it’s working. From where I can see we are sending convicts, convicted of fairly minor crimes, into an ultra-violent prison system and destroying their ability to function outside the prison system.
I do apologize for my earlier harsh response, but there is nothing to indicate that current methods of drug enforcement is working, despite the extreme measures taken to try and control it. If it’s not working now, going harsher is unlikely to work either.
All we are getting out of the situation is destroyed lives, corrupted politicians, police, and agents, and a militerized police force more interested in taking your rights away than preserving them, and (early on anyway) minor drug users who end up, when imprisoned, hooked on worse drugs than what they were convicted of.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.