Sunday, December 5, 2021

CALIFORNIA Brutal, brazen crimes shake L.A., leaving city at a crossroads...BY KEVIN RECTOR, RICHARD WINTON, ANDREW J. CAMPA DEC. 4, 2021 5 AM PT

 CALIFORNIA

Brutal, brazen crimes shake L.A., leaving city at a crossroads

Private security guard the home at 1140 Maytor Place in Beverly Hills
Private security officers guard the Beverly Hills home where Jacqueline Avant, the wife of music producer Clarence Avant, was shot and killed Wednesday.
(Al Seib / Los Angeles Times)

Crews of burglars publicly smashing their way into Los Angeles’ most exclusive stores. Robbers following their victims, including a star of “The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills” and a BET host, to their residences. And this week, the fatal shooting of 81-year-old Jacqueline Avant, an admired philanthropist and wife of music legend Clarence Avant, in her Beverly Hills home.

After two years of rising violent crime in Los Angeles, these incidents have sparked a national conversation and led to local concern about both the crimes themselves and where the outrage over the violence will lead.

“The fact that this has happened, her being shot and killed in her own home, after giving, sharing, and caring for 81 years has shaken the laws of the Universe,” declared Oprah Winfrey, expressing her grief over Avant’s killing to her 43 million Twitter followers. “The world is upside down.”

A man and a woman pose for the camera at an event
Jacqueline Avant and Clarence Avant.
(Mark Von Holden/Associated Press)
While overall city crime rates remain far below records set during the notorious gang wars of the 1990s, violent crime has jumped sharply in L.A., as it has in other cities. Much of the violence has occurred in poor communities and among vulnerable populations, such as the homeless, and receives little attention.

However, since the start of the pandemic and more rapidly in recent months, crime has crept up in wealthier enclaves and thrust its way to the center of public discourse in L.A. — against a backdrop of COVID-19 angst, evolving political perceptions of what role police and prosecutors should play in society and, now, a holiday season upon which brick-and-mortar retailers are relying to stay afloat.

Some wonder if this could be a turning point for California, which for decades has been at the center of the movement for criminal justice reform, rolling back tough sentencing laws and reducing prison populations.

Polls in 2020 showed that California voters largely support many of these measures, and both San Francisco and Los Angeles have elected district attorneys with strong reform agendas. However, those concerned about crime and those who believe liberal policies have contributed to its rise have grown more vocal.

It is a discourse defined by glaring differences of opinion and, at times, a yawning disconnect between the perception of local crime and the reality on the ground.

Dominick DeLuca, owner of the Brooklyn Projects skateboard shop on Melrose Avenue, a commercial corridor that has seen burglaries and robberies spike sharply in recent months, said things have gotten so bad that he carries a gun to work — and desperately wants ramped-up enforcement.

“I have never seen anything like it,” he said. “In the last two years, I have been broken into three times.”

Aerial view of the Beverly Hills home of music producer Clarence and Jacqueline Avant.
(KTLA)

At a Thursday press conference, Mayor Eric Garcetti and Los Angeles Police Department Chief Michel Moore said more offenders should be locked up and questioned pandemic-related policies that have allowed many nonviolent arrestees to be released without bail.

Moore said arrests had been made in several high-profile “smash-and-grab” burglaries but lamented that the suspects had all been released pending trial. Garcetti said warehousing criminals in jails without rehabilitating them is not a solution, but neither is ceding the streets to repeat offenders.

Los Angeles County Dist. Atty. George Gascón, whose progressive policies around prosecution and sentencing many blame for the uptick in crime, was notably absent at the press conference but said through his office that he is working closely with law enforcement partners to hold perpetrators accountable for such brazen crimes.

The heightened rhetoric marks a departure from language shared by many of the same officials just last year, after George Floyd’s murder by a Minneapolis police officer. This has set off alarms among activists who led protests, want to see progressive justice measures enacted and hear echoes of past eras when, they believe, the overhyping of crime led to overpolicing and excessive incarceration.

“They’re trying to move us backward,” said Melina Abdullah, co-founder of Black Lives Matter Los Angeles. “We don’t want to move backward; we want to move forward.”

Melina Abdullah addresses a Police Commission meeting at LAPD headquarters
Melina Abdullah addresses a Police Commission meeting at LAPD headquarters. 
(Irfan Khan / Los Angeles Times)

Abdullah called Avant’s killing “horrific and appalling” and said Black Lives Matter mourns with her family. But she said officials must not be allowed to use Avant’s death or recent property crime to push for more policing, cash bail or other tough-on-crime measures that she said have been proved not to work.

“We need to think about what kind of economic desperation actually creates property crime and how do we get people out of that state,” Abdullah said. “How do we create livable wage jobs? How do we create affordable housing?”

Abdullah also warned against accepting claims about crime that may not have a basis in reality — which, as it happens, is something police have warned against in recent days, as concern over crime trends has escalated.

For example, while the “follow-home” and “smash-and-grab” trends in L.A., including upticks in robberies in corridors like Melrose Avenue, have caused concern, they are not indicative of a citywide surge in property crime.

According to LAPD data through Nov. 27, property crime this year is up 2.6% over the same period last year but is down 6.6% from 2019. Robbery is up 3.9% over last year but down 13.6% from 2019. Burglaries are down 8.4% from last year and down 7.7% from 2019. Car thefts are a notable outlier, up nearly 53% from 2019.

More concerning is violent crime. Homicides are up 46.7% compared with 2019, while shooting victims are up 51.4%, according to police data. As of the end of November, there had been 359 homicides in L.A. in 2021, compared with 355 in all of 2020. There have not been more homicides in one year since 2008, which ended with 384.

Beverly Hills Police Chief Mark Stainbrook announces an arrest in the murder of Jacqueline Avant.
(Al Seib/Los Angeles Times)

In Beverly Hills, police stress that crime is rare — and killings like Avant’s even more so. Police Chief Mark Stainbrook said that despite recent incidents, Beverly Hills remains one of the safest cities in the nation.

Crime across Beverly Hills this year was down 2% as of the end of October. Violent crime in the past two years is up 23% compared with the two years prior, but the total number of such crimes remains tiny: There were just five robberies in the city in October, and homicides are rare.

It’s not clear what reforms the concerns about crime in the Los Angeles area will lead to — if any.

A crime spike in the 1990s led California to adopt policies that toughened sentences and increased incarceration. The reform movement was an acknowledgment that those policies went too far and caused their own injustices. A poll of L.A. voters released this week showed that public safety is perceived as less of a pressing problem than homelessness, housing affordability, traffic, climate change and air quality.

Jonathan Simon, a criminal justice professor at UC Berkeley’s law school and author of “Governing through Crime: How the War on Crime Transformed American Democracy and Created a Culture of Fear,” said it is unlikely that crime concerns will completely derail the progressive criminal justice reform movement that began with Floyd’s killing.

However, such concern could slow those reforms, he said — showing once more “how potent the political value of crime is” and how quickly politicians and others can revert to a “crackdown” mentality.

“It’s a powerful trope now for 40 years,” Simon said.

On Friday at Beverly Hills’ Roxbury Park, a handful of child-care providers sat together over lunch. One woman said she had moved her walking schedule earlier each day to feel more secure.

Norma Guzman, who has worked for two decades as a babysitter in various parts of L.A., said Beverly Hills does not compare to other areas in terms of the amount of crime.

“If I didn’t watch TV, I don’t think I would have noticed the area was more dangerous,” she said. “I don’t think it is.”

But Janette Waight, a nurse who has worked in Beverly Hills for seven years and was strolling through Roxbury Park with her boss’ terrier, felt differently.

“Over the last few years, this area has become more and more dangerous,” Waight said. “It’s not just crime; it’s homelessness, and it’s just a desire from people to look for quick cash rather than work.”

Ruben Urcis, 90, a 42-year resident of Beverly Hills who walks twice a day along the Beverly Gardens Park walkway, said he was not disturbed by the recent string of high-profile crimes, which he didn’t consider anything new.

“People might just be noticing this, but it’s happened before,” he said, noting that his wife was robbed at gunpoint of a white-gold Rolex more than a decade ago outside their garage. Now she wears a “standard wristwatch of no value,” he added.

Urcis said the difference with crime now is that it’s occurring in public places and being recorded on camera for all to see.

“The people in this community don’t feel safe,” he said, “but that’s been going on for a long time.”

Pete Nichols, co-founder of the community group Melrose Action, said Thursday’s press conference offered few concrete solutions — one reason the Melrose retail community isn’t waiting for City Hall or the LAPD to address crime for them. Instead, local merchants are trying to obtain cameras that read license plates to help police identify burglars who drive through the area.

Many local merchants and employees saw the August killing of 26-year-old Shoe Palace employee Jayren Bradford outside that store as a tipping point, Nichols said, and have been chipping in funds for the cameras.

“It is a really awful situation,” he said.

THE HATRED IS INCREASING BY VIDEO MANAGER | DEC 3, 2021 | NEWS VIDEOS

 

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The leader of the Arab party currently sitting in Israel’s government recently said that Jews had no right to pray on the Temple Mount. He said that the Temple Mount is a place that should be only for Muslim worship. He forgot to mention that the Dome of the Rock is actually the third holiest site in Islam and that worshippers face away from the Dome when praying. Also, US Ambassador to the UN Linda Thomas-Greenfield came down hard on Jewish settlement in Judea and Samaria. In the meantime, the US is making plans to reopen the US Consulate in Jerusalem for the Palestinians, whether Israel likes it or not.


US official: 'We're preparing for a world with no nuclear deal' Senior US official warns US will 'increase pressure on Iran.' Tags: Iran Nuclear Program Iran Arutz Sheva Staff , Dec 04 , 2021

 

US official: 'We're preparing for a world with no nuclear deal'

Senior US official warns US will 'increase pressure on Iran.'

Arutz Sheva Staff , 

Nuclear talks
Nuclear talks
Handout, Reuters

A senior official in the US State Department on Saturday told reporters that "if Iran continues on its current path, we will need to increase pressure on it. We are preparing for a world in which there is no return to the nuclear agreement."

According to the official, the US cannot accept a situation in which Iran is advancing its nuclear program, while dragging its feet in negotiations on the resumption of the deal, Channel 13 News said.

The official also said that in the current talks, Iran backtracked on the compromises it made during the 2015 talks, while at the same time setting new demands. At the same time, Iran is pushing forward its nuclear program in a way that is seen as "provocative," Channel 13 said.

He added that the European partners, as well as China and Russia were "quite taken aback" at the fact that Iran backtracked on what it proposed in 2015, during the nuclear talks last week.

NBC NEWS quoted the official as saying that Iran came to the talks "with proposals that walked back anything - any of the compromises Iran had floated here in the six rounds of talks, pocket all of the compromises that others, and the US in particular, had made, and then asked for more."

According to NBC, that official told reporters that he was not sure when the next round of talks would resume, but that the date was less important than "than whether Iran will come back with a serious attitude prepared to negotiate seriously."

A Hebrew-language report said that the State Department official noted that Iran "came with a non-serious proposal - how can we return to the agreement? They walked back their previous agreements...diplomacy is the best path, but we have other tools - right now, we are not lifting sanctions."

When asked extensively about the relationship between the US and Israel, the official said, "The goal is shared - preventing Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons. But at the end of the day, Israel is a sovereign country and needs to worry about its issues and its national interests. Our job is not to stop the tension between Israel and Iran. Israel is an independent country and our goal is shared, and we are stronger when we work together - that's why you see so many conversations."

When asked if there is a crisis with Israel following Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett's warnings, he said, "Everyone is worried, it's something we've spoken about at length. Our delegation was in Israel just now, and there were meetings and there will be meetings this week with Israelis who will visit here. There are disagreements, that's clear, but our shared goal is clear - that Iran will not have nuclear weapons."

Pure Evil :: By Jim Towers Published on: December 3, 2021 by RRadmin7 Category:General Articles, Jim Torres “Towers”

 

Pure Evil :: By Jim Towers

 

How can we know that Jesus is coming sooner rather than later? If you are a Bible reader, you will find that Jesus said, “As it was in the days of Noah, so shall it be at the coming of the Son of man.” He also told us of other signs and wonders to look for. The things going on these days are not unlike the things that were going on in Noah’s generation, and according to the Bible, that generation was pure evil. Is it any wonder God had to destroy it?

If that be the case, how can we expect our Divine Creator to overlook the grievous sins in our world today? The total and absolute flaunting of God’s Laws by a perverted and evil segment of society is overtly prevalent and is the reason for all the present calamities assaulting us – one after the other. The evildoers relish breaking the laws of God, especially people in power over us, those who should be setting an example for us to follow. Yet, they are the worst of the worst.

Teachers are teaching how to be rebellious and to defy the authority of parents and those over them. The recent generations and many segments of this society are practically devoid of God’s sacred laws. The Ten Commandments are alien to them. All they seem to know is hate, violence and a selfish desire to dominate or profit, and all the sensual sin they can derive. To them, Jesus is nothing more than a historical figure who had nothing to do with the salvation of humanity.

By now, you are beginning to know that I am speaking of atheistic communists, criminals and perverts who are trying to seize control of our country and the world by any and all means—even going so far as to release viruses capable of killing millions of people.

Here in the United States, these same people have gone so far as to steal the presidential election from Donald J. Trump and to institute communism as a way of life, even though we’ve seen it fail in China, Russia, Cuba and Venezuela, where people are imprisoned and starved to death. (The Islamic states couldn’t be happier since capitalism and Christianity are anathema to them as well.)

I must admit, as I’ve stated in the past, that all the evil that is taking place is forewarned in the Holy Bible – and the worst is yet to come. What with the Great Tribulation bearing down on us, it’s hard to assume that any one man can stem the tide of corruption we all face. I’m speaking of President Trump.

Even as Mike Lindell, the “My Pillow guy,” has gone about gathering evidence and is at the moment trying to reverse the election results, the communist left has hindered him in every way possible. His “Thankathon” on the internet (Frank Speech and Lindell TV) is being hacked intermittently to make the good people that are trying to do the right thing look like amateurs. And compared to the demonic horde, they are. After all, they are fighting against demonic principalities and powers in high places.

We can’t count on Trump alone to save us. What humanity needs is a spiritual savior, i.e., the Lord and Savior of mankind – Christ Jesus. Even if the good guys do prevail, it won’t be long until people fall back into their old ways without repenting. Some would rather die than repent, not realizing where they will spend eternity. The Bible says, “It is appointed unto man once to die, after this – the judgment.”

In my recent article, I wrote how we needed to restore President Trump to his rightful place as the head of the nation. Despite his flaws (and we all have them), he was the best we could hope for in this country. But the fake Democrat government was more than ready to step in when the Chinese government intervened to steal the 2020 election from him. Today, because of that theft, we are fast becoming a third-world country with leftist communists in control.

This, in fact, is an attempt by “Globalists” to bring about the One-World Government or what is known as the New World Order, just as has been forewarned in the book of Revelation. These people are responsible for killing hundreds of thousands of people and crippling many with vaccines that they know are harmful. Next will be children and infants. They are pure evil.

Australia has been hard hit by leftist “One World” extremists, and today its people are fighting for their very existence while other countries are doing the same. When the time is right, the Chinese communist government may step in, in a pretext to set things right.

Cancel Culture is an attempt to undo everything that reminds us of who we are/were as a Christian nation. And there are plans by the federal government to institute the “Thought Police,” as if it wasn’t enough to be policed by Facebook and the other social media outlets.

Oh yes, and now we will have to contend with yet another Covid-19 variant called Omicron; sounds spooky, doesn’t it? (The doctor in Africa who discovered it says it is NOT life-threatening, yet it’s sure to be used to keep Americans under control. With this new toy in the left’s playbook, we can expect them to exploit this new strain of flu to the nth degree. Who would have guessed these crazy times would come upon us so fast? Nevertheless, the Bible warned us it would be so.

Let me end this column on a good note, and that is that, finally, some are beginning to repent and take these matters seriously. Other people are beginning to wake up and have quit straddling the fence as they see the end approaching. Some are even talking about spiritual matters openly. Mike Lindell, Stew Peters, and others even openly speak of salvation, God, and Jesus openly on newly forming conservative social medias.

Conservative Christians are finally coming out from their comfort zones to denounce these self-righteous tyrants.

Hopefully, this will give us an open window of opportunity to share Christ.

YBIC

Jim Towers

Write me at jt.filmmaker@yahoo.com and visit me at www.dropzonedelta.com or my very own website www.propheticsignsandwonders.com

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