Wednesday, November 7, 2007

CM PRESS # 234


PHONY HATE CRIMES, REAL HATE AND LOONS

Here's a link to an Ann Coulter column about phony hate crimes. Coulter gets it right.

Here's a link to a column by Walter E. Williams about anti-white racism. Williams also gets it right.

Why is this important to Costa Mesans?

Because we have had incidents that appear to be hate hoaxes and we have some individuals in Costa Mesa who are trying to divide our community with various smears and innuendos.

In the former category, we are reminded that just before a Costa Mesa election a couple of years ago, there was a report of hate graffiti on a half-way house in the city.

If we remember correctly, it was strangely worded anti-women graffiti that sounded to us as though it had actually been written by a woman. The perps were never caught, but from everything we read about the incident, it sounded to us as though the police may have suspected that one of the female residents did it.

In any city the size of Costa Mesa, there are bound to be unstable individuals who have various persecution complexes and varying degrees of paranoia or other mental problems.

Such people often make false claims out of their psychological needs for attention or for various other reasons linked to their personal abnormal psychology. Anyway, be sure to follow the links above for a better understanding of this phenomenon.

WHITE GANGS TRYING TO ENSNARE YOUNG MINDS?

A couple of years ago, the CM PRESS learned that a special assembly about gangs had been suddenly called at Costa Mesa High School.

Students had no choice to opt out. They were all herded into the assembly hall and were forced to listen to a presentation.

When we asked a student about the details of the assembly, we were told that it was all about white gangs and that there was a slide show presented by an officer from the Costa Mesa Police Department.

We then contacted the Newport Mesa Unified School District and asked to be shown the presentation.

So, in due course, we sat in the conference room at the NMUSD headquarters and watched the presentation which had been filmed from the audience.

To us, it looked like an attempt at left-wing indoctrination or re-education.

The entire presentation was about white gangs, and the CMPD officer told the students with great solemnity to avoid things such as the common surfer cross which is also known as the Maltese cross or the Iron cross and which is very similar (but he didn't say this) to the cross found on Costa Mesa fire trucks and those of many other fire departments.

Frankly, it sounded pretty silly to us. In fact, we were reminded about the old poster about people sneaking up to you in crowds and putting marijuana in your pocket to hook you into a life of crime and dissolution. In this case, it would be someone sneaking up to you and putting a surfer T-shirt with the surfer cross logo on it into your pocket.

Now, how many white gangs have you seen running around Costa Mesa? Probably none. How many shootings in our city were done by white gangs? None.

In fact, in a staff report from some officers in the CMPD to the City Council last year about gangs, we saw the reality of the gang situation in Costa Mesa.

Here, in summary, taken from the CM PRESS # 119 of April 12, 2007, is what we and the Council learned:

1. Costa Mesa's gang problems are largely Hispanic in nature (300 members in 7 gangs). There's also a strong connection with the city being illegal alien friendly.

2. In spite of the Hispanic nature of most Costa Mesa gangs, the report from the CMPD to the City Council never mentions Hispanics or Latinos or illegal aliens. Not once!

3. The only mention of race/ethnicity in the report was when it discussed a "white" gang. What's odd about this is that the report, itself, says that the so-called white gang isn't based in Costa Mesa but that some members may live here but that they're not involved in typical gang crimes that most citizens of Costa Mesa are concerned about. Huh? Why the hell didn't the report's writers discuss the Japanese Yakuza? That would make as much sense.

Curious, is it not? Hispanic gangs are the problem--7 gangs and 300 members--but the report doesn't mention them by race/ethnicity, while a white gang that is not based here and is not the problem, but which may have some members living here who are not involved in the shootings, etc. that we've seen in this city, is identified by race/ethnicity.
# # #
Those are our opinions. Thanks for reading them.

 http://frankspeech.com/