The American Courts: Sacrificing The Enforcers

By: Christopher Maffei

The American courts are now sacrificing their own enforcers. This fact is not lost on law enforcement as an occupation — as local law enforcement attends to basic traffic stops. State employees are starting to come to the painful realization they’ve been abandoned by their administrators, and have come to the bitter conclusion every stop could be their last.

Law enforcement qualified immunity is being stripped and most critically they are being crushed by a tsunami of civil rights activists who have no patience for the timid lying morality of the American legal system. The social justice movement has a moral imperative that is unstoppable. It is a global movement that has a clear message: ” end systemic oppression “. Looking at the current state of affairs, objectively, law enforcement interests pale in comparison.

Now, in a desperate bid to save their legitimacy, the American Courts are sacrificing their own enforcers and offering them up on the altar to appease the mobs. Of course, the judges and lawyers are locked away in the courthouse and protected (for now) surrounded by the typical police sycophants– as they decide which cops to sacrifice. The judges (themselves) are subject to prosecution by no one. The judges having complete immunity, throw the police out to the wolves as they are then torn apart on social media.

The courts are pretending they are the solution to the problem. When, in fact, the American Courts are the precursor to the breakdown of law and order.

We are witnessing the systemic collapse of law enforcement as an institution in the United States. The police are essentially just abandoning their posts, rather than being the next sacrifice on the altar of whatever ideologies come next.

Law enforcement is now viewed as an occupation for degeneracy, violence, and corruption. Their occupation is mocked, ridiculed and the police are being made into circus clowns for B movie entertainment. No one wants to be a cop. Especially as a future occupation.

What must be understood, law enforcement is a self-reflection of the degeneracy within the American Judicial System. We must never forget, American law enforcement is picked from the lower and middle economic strata. This class of people would normally be working within the insurance industry or Walmart and most in this class do not have the strength of character to fight the “Thin Blue Line”

Yes, American law enforcement has its supporters. And what is becoming painfully clear is that the majority of the support the police have is connected to systemic racism, bigotry, xenophobia, and other unsavory groups. People that you would not have at your family picnic.

For the judges, lawyers, and prosecutors the police can be viewed as the inverted totalitarian appendages for the American legal community as an industry. we can never forget one key reality:

Law enforcement and the courts benefit from the failure of society rather than its uplifting.

In support of this, we are witnessing a phenomenon called the “Blue flu” This is a perfect example of how the American legal system is inducing societal failure. In other words, they will let society fall into chaos if the policing industry can not sustain its current levels of violence towards the people they are entrusted to protect.

Adding to the legal community’s narcissistic stupidity, using “race” as a public relations strategy is en vogue right now. Especially, placing black women as interim police chiefs to organizations that have been hardest hit by accusations of systemic racism. I will let you in on a little secret– no one is fooled. The BLM movement is filled with PhDs in sociology and is far ahead of the curve. They will annihilate this PR strategy on social media– humiliating all involved.

Some feel that disdain toward the police in America is just a recent phenomenon. Nothing could be further from the truth. The best way to understand this psychology of hatred towards law enforcement in the United States– Is how Hollywood portrays the police. In this realm, directors like Martin Scorsese and James Cameron have a deep understanding of American psychology and what Americans want to see as imagery and narratives. Society can be reflected in art, and Cameron’s portrayal of The 1984 feature film, the “Terminator” is a reflection of what America wants to see in art so that he can sell tickets to theater chains– nothing more.

In scene [14], the “Terminator”, is an unstoppable machine that crashes through a police station in Los Angeles and kills all the police without prejudice or bias. The brilliance of this scene is that there is no political bias, the imagined threat is just a machine, that is searching for a target. But, for some in the audience, there is a deep psychological need for this narrative of violence against uniformed oppression. And because of Cameron’s artistic brilliance, he knows what the audience will connect to. In my view, he does not think about what public perception should be, but, rather what the public is. Scene [14] is an iconic scene that was debated in popular culture at the time. In most cases, the debate didn’t surround sympathy for the police.

The swelling anger towards law enforcement as an institution has been building in America over a long time. The violence towards the law enforcement segment of society was the inevitable outcome of the American Courts policies towards the urban and rural poor.

That is why the American Courts are a threat to National Security and American National Unity.