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Thursday 4 April 2013

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The last gasp by the white majority in Detroit to keep the flame of civilization in the city alive was to institute the undercover police division Stop The Robberies, Enjoy Safe Streets (STRESS). 

High rates of black crime were making the city uninhabitable for both law-abiding citizens and untenable for business owners (or investors) hoping to see a long-term investment mature in a rapidly de-whitening Detroit.
77 percent black? You don't need Project 46218 -- you need Project Depo-Provera in zip code 46218
Blacks complained about the police brutality from STRESS, and – once their numbers swelled to a majority of the citizens of the city – they were able to elect Coleman Young as the first black mayor, who ran exclusively on a platform of disbanding STRESS.
Detroit in 2013 looks a lot like what Indianapolis will look like in 2053, if the pattern repeats itself – and history is the ultimate predictor of the future.
Detroit had STRESS, Indianapolis has Project 46218 [Project 46218: Targeting a troubled zipcode, WISHTV, 4-3-13]:
IMPD Officer Bryan Zotzis expected to be released Thursday from the hospital. He was shot in the lower arm Tuesday night, after a traffic stop that turned violent. 
Tuesday night’s shooting of three people and an IMPD officer occurred as officers were working on a specific patrol called “Project 46218,” which targets one of the city’s most dangerous zipcodes. 
Officers make aggressive police stops for minor violations, all to get felons and weapons off the streets. 
Police say the zipcode 46218 accounts for 15 percent of the homicides in the city. 24-Hour News 8 rode along as officers in the north district continued the initiative Wednesday evening. 
“We all know there's nothing routine. Last night’s the best example. It was a suspended driver, that’s about all that was, and it turned into something pretty violent. Three, four people total, including the officer were shot. When you stop a car, you just gotta raise your attention, raise your focus,” explained IMPD officer Mike Martin. 
Martin is part of what’s called the Neighborhood Resource Unit. 
Wednesday, they’re out again patrolling in 46218. 
“It’s just one of those things where we come out, and we try to make neighborhoods better for them and their kids, and their kids kids,” said Martin. 
Their first stop? For a seatbelt violation. 
“Nobody’s wearing their seatbelts. We’re going to stop them, just kind of see what’s going on,” explained Martin. 
They didn't arrest the guys, but detained them because of the smell of marijuana in their car. 
These guys told police it was their friend who'd been smoking. 
“Better be a little mindful about who you’re hanging out with,” Martin said to the teen. “Grades good? Going to keep them there?” 
“Next time we see you, just give us a wave, we aren’t all bad,” he said. 
At another stop, he told a father to be a good example for his children. 
Just the beginning of another night's work, targeting troubled areas: working to keep trouble out.

Project 46218 – sounds like a penal colony, without locks. Out of a population of 34,607 people, 77 percent are black and 23 percent are white. Here’s more on the area: 
46218 is a urban zip code in Indianapolis, Indiana. Median household income here ($26,554) is significantly lower than US average ($56,604). The population is primarily African-American, and mostly single. The average house value here ($55,300) is significantly lower than in the Indianapolis-Carmel metro area as a whole, so this is probably a great place to look for housing bargains.

Project 46218 – all because a population group in this zip code helps perpetuate every stereotype imaginable about “urban” areas. And with a surge in crime (black crime, though the media can’t report this fact) police are scratching their heads to find a ‘root cause’ [Surge in homicides has police, city leaders trying new approach to crime fighting. But is it really new?: Police say new effort looks at root causes, Indy Star, 3-13-13]:
Police Chief Rick Hite insists this time is different. He said the department is making a new, more coordinated effort to include city and social-service agencies, the mental health system and the Indiana corrections department in identifying the root causes, and the most dangerous people, before mayhem strikes. Hite said most homicides and shootings were the result of “interpersonal relationship issues.” 
And the stark reality is that the criminal backgrounds of suspects and victims are usually similar. 
An IMPD analysis of the 22 homicides committed as of March 7 found that 81 percent of the victims and 70 percent of the suspects had criminal histories. In total, they had committed 54 felonies. 
“These people know each other, they are not strangers. There was a problem between them, and they chose to resolve it with a gun,” Hite said. “That’s got to change. The random shootings, while disturbing, are the anomaly.” 
Police said about half of all homicides happen indoors between acquaintances, and half of them occurred in just five ZIP codes, which have accounted for 48 percent of homicides since 2007. It is in those ZIP codes where officials will concentrate their team approach to reaching people most at risk to commit a violent crime or be the target of one. Social-service or city agencies may be able to provide assistance that may relieve financial pressure, for instance. Mental health workers could intervene and provide counseling that lessens emotional anguish. 
“When people have something for which to live, they don’t take unnecessary risks,” Hite said. “If you stand to lose something you are a little more careful. We’d like to get people to that point.” 
The “root cause” is hard to figure out there slick – it’s black people.
The Most Dangerous Zip Code in Indianapolis? It's 77 percent black

Future time-orientation. A case study on biological differences between in the racial groups living in “urban” zip code 46218 is waiting to undertaken by an enterprising graduate student. [Small area of city is IMPD's deadliest beat: In one part of town, homicide rate is 20 times the national average, Indy Star, 8-10-2010]:
In one part of town, homicide rate is 20 times the national average. The triangular swath of land — two miles across — that makes up IMPD's North District Beat 23 is deceptively tranquil. 
Shady, narrow streets slope gingerly toward Fall Creek on the western border, where industrial retailers face the curving stream. On the interior, between 30th and 38th streets, elderly homeowners live in small bungalows, and younger, low-wage workers rent the others. 
But the area of 6,000 residents has had more homicides than any other police sector in the city over the past 3 1/2 years. This decade, 47 people have been shot, stabbed or beaten to death on the beat, a rate more than 20 times the national average. 
Poverty, abandoned and decaying homes, broken families, drugs and a culture of violence all play a role, community residents said. And over time, they said, law-abiding residents become discouraged, and determination dissolves into resignation.“After a while, the junk starts to accumulate and apathy sets in,” said Durmon Jones, executive director of the United North East Community Development Corp. “Then the condition becomes acceptable, and that is not a good condition.”  
The violence, or the threat of it, requires unblinking vigilance, parents say. For them, the daily battle is keeping their kids out of jail, out of the hospital, out of the morgue. Odelle Skinner had driven a white moped into a gas station on Keystone Avenue at 8 p.m. April 22. As he did, a teenage boy on a bicycle rolled up and shot Skinner in the back and shoulder. The kid pedaled south on Keystone. Skinner’s cousin pulled out a handgun and fired, missing the bicyclist.  
Officer Jackson was on the scene quickly. Skinner was taken to Wishard Memorial Hospital in critical condition. He told police he didn’t know who shot him or why. “That’s the code,” Jackson said. “People don’t like to tell the police things. You can get shot again for that.”  
Jackson said he had warned Skinner four days earlier that he was going to get shot one day if he kept running the streets.  
“Some things,” Jackson said, “you can see coming.”
You can see the future of Indianapolis from a mile away -- it's Detroit 2013. 
The last gasp by the white majority in Detroit to keep the flame of civilization in the city alive was to institute the undercover police division Stop The Robberies, Enjoy Safe Streets (STRESS). 

The last gasp by the white majority in Indianapolis to keep the flame of civilization in the city alive is to institute the police tactic of Project 46218.
It will fail.

The entire city of Detroit now resembles what is contained in the urban zip code of 46218 in Indianapolis – soon, the entire city of Indianapolis will come to resemble the urban zip code of 46218. 

There does exist an answer to the madness. 

The question is if we can survive the coming collapse of Black-Run America (BRA) – that’s our only duty. 

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