Society's Child
This comes after St. Louis saw its highest homicide rate in 50 years. The unsolved murders occurred overwhelmingly in impoverished black neighborhoods in the city.
The murder rate in St. Louis City hit a 50-year high in 2020.
Mayor Tishaura Jones praised the police budget cuts arguing that the defunding of police will help tackles "some of the root causes to crime."
Evidently, it's the cops' fault.
This is pure insanity coming from the left today in cities across the US.
Marxist Rep. Cori Bush praised the move.
She got her start as a Michael Brown Ferguson protester.

Five thousand people attended the Love of Lesbian concert in late March
The event at Palau Sant Jordi in the Catalan capital saw attendees take rapid COVID-19 tests before being allowed in to see the rock band Love of Lesbian on March 27.
They also wore FFP2 masks, there was improved ventilation, and management procedures for the toilet and bar areas, but no social distancing.
It was one of the first spectator events to be held in Europe this year amid the pandemic.
Police made 46 arrests in the capital, where garbage bins were set on fire and the windows of a bank branch were smashed, momentarily delaying the march.
More than 106,000 people marched throughout France, including 17,000 in Paris, according to the Interior Ministry.
Comment: Government estimates are often on the lower side so we can expect that the number of protesters was much higher.
Comment: RT reports on the protests in Italy and Turkey, and follows up with more details of the mayhem in France:
Guillotine with effigy of PM in Turin, Italy
Riot police clashed with protesters in Turin to prevent them from reaching Town Hall. Official Labor Day celebrations with Covid-19 restrictions were taking place indoors, while hundreds took to the streets.
More than a thousand people carrying red flags and banners gathered in Turin for the traditional May demonstrations, Italian news agency ANSA reported. Several processions moved through the streets and gathered in a square by Town Hall. One of the biggest banners read: "Health crisis, social crisis, ecological crisis, to save ourselves we must change the system." Protesters also made an improvised guillotine with an effigy of Prime Minister Mario Draghi.
Amid the Covid-19 restrictions, the traditional Labor Day events were scaled down, with trade union representatives meeting the mayor at Town Hall while the ceremony was broadcast on a screen outside.
200+ detained as May Day protesters defy coronavirus lockdown in TurkeyWith regards to Turkey's focus on citizens filming police, recently in France, lawmakers passed a rather suspect bill dubbed the 'Global Security Law' which also outlaws the recording of police; which will just happen to include a ban on documenting the police brutality that became increasingly commonplace at Yellow Vest protests: French MPs finally pass draconian 'global security law' that allows 'broad surveillance of the population'
Footage from Istanbul shows that policing in the city was particularly heavy-handed.
Dozens of protesters attempted to march in Istanbul's iconic Taksim Square, marking Labor Day. Groups of demonstrators tried to approach the square from different directions, but they were met by a massive force of riot and plainclothes police officers.
Footage from the scene shows multiple police officers handling protesters, wrestling them to the ground and taking them away in police buses. Officers were seen brawling with the demonstrators and using pepper spray on them, as well as repeatedly deploying tear gas.
The Istanbul governor's office said some labor unions had been allowed to hold certain events to mark the holiday, while only those who gathered "illegally" in violation of Covid-19 rules were targeted by police after ignoring calls to disperse.
A smaller-scale demonstration was also attempted in the western Turkish port city of Izmir. All in all, more than 200 people were detained across the country during the protests.
May Day this year falls during a 17-day partial lockdown in Turkey, which was announced by the authorities earlier this week. The lockdown includes stay-at-home orders, as well as the closure of schools and some businesses in a bid to halt the recently accelerated spread of coronavirus in the country.
Ahead of May Day, the chief of the Turkish police also reportedly issued a special circular, urging officers to detain anyone who films or records police during demonstrations and take "legal action" against them. According to the document, circulated by Turkish media, audio and video recording allegedly violates the privacy of the officers, who are being filmed without their consent.
While the circular has been called unlawful and criticized as a threat to citizens' rights by advocacy groups, the police have remained silent on the matter and have not confirmed whether the document was authentic.
May Day mayhem: Protesters and riot cops battle in the streets of Lyon
May Day protests in the French city of Lyon got out of hand, with black-clad anarchists clashing with armored riot police. Tear gas was fired and squads of cops charged at demonstrators.
Trade unions and workers' groups took to the streets of Lyon on Saturday to mark International Workers' Day. Waving red banners, an estimated 3,000 workers were soon joined by black-clad anarchist protesters, who reportedly clashed with the larger groups of demonstrators.
Note that the average protester no longer wants to be associated with the so called anarchists.
Marching toward Place Bellecour in the center of the city, the procession found its way blocked by riot police. Scuffles soon broke out between the more militant anarchists and the police, who charged at the crowd several times.
As officers pushed the crowd back, some protesters resisted, and were met with batons and shields. Video footage shows the cops clubbing some protesters and dragging them off the street. French media reported at least four arrests by early afternoon.
When the procession finally reached Place Bellecour, the atmosphere was festive. Protesters danced, played drums and waved brightly colored umbrellas. However, police soon broke up the party with clouds of tear gas, after some demonstrators reportedly damaged protective panels around a statue of Louis XVI.
Rather than focusing on one specific issue, May Day is usually a clearinghouse for leftist dissent of all kinds, and across the country, protesters came together to air a spectrum of grievances. Some protested their wages and working conditions, others marched against new security bills that would dramatically extend the police's surveillance powers and criminalize the sharing of pictures of officers. Still more protested the government's perceived inaction against climate change and response to Covid-19.
French President Emmanuel Macron has seen his approval rating slide to 37% in the most recent polls, down from 43% at the beginning of the year. Opposition to his leadership hasn't just come from the left either. Late last month, a group of 20 retired generals penned a letter accusing Macron of allowing Islamist "hordes" to push France toward civil war. Some 58% of French people agree with the generals' warning, according to a poll published on Thursday by LCI TV.
Chaos grips Paris as violence & vandalism mark May Day protest
Lawlessness swept over the streets of Paris on Saturday, with left-wing protesters smashing windows and lobbing stones and fireworks at riot police. The cops have responded in kind, charging and clubbing the rioters.
Heavily armored riot police were nearby and responded with force. Video footage shows a squad of cops charging with shields raised to drive a crowd of vandals away from a bank.
Tear gas was used, but many rioters came wearing respirators and face masks. Protesters who came too close to police lines were treated to a hail of batons and pepper spray. Multiple videos show repeated and apparently indiscriminate police charges.
Police dispersed protesters from the Place de la Nation with water cannon. The powerful jets of water blew branches off trees and kept the crowd away from police lines.
With the demonstrations still ongoing, Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin announced that 34 people had been arrested in Paris by mid-afternoon.

This undated file photo provided by Allisa Swartz, shows Karen Garner, a 73-year-old Colorado woman with dementia, whose family is suing Loveland, Colo., and three of its police officers over her arrest in June 2020. The three Colorado police officers involved in the arrest of Garner who was shown being pushed to the ground and handcuffed on body camera footage have resigned, police said Friday, April 30, 2021.
Loveland Police Chief Robert Ticer announced the departures of Officers Austin Hopp and Daria Jalali and Community Services Officer Tyler Blackett in connection to the arrest of Karen Garner at a news conference, without providing details about how they left. But department spokesman Tom Hacker later confirmed they had resigned.
Comment: The idiots who arrested the poor woman shouldn't be allowed to be police officers ever again and should be charged with assault.
See also:
- US: Drunken diaper-wearing man seeking candy arrested
- Out of control cops: 3 youths violently beaten and arrested by Texas police
- Police: Woman arrested for non-emergency 911 calls

People leave a migrant camp as they are evicted by French authorities near the French port city of Dunkirk
A new poll has found that a majority of French people support the sentiments expressed in a letter signed by active duty and retired members of the military warning that the country is heading towards a "civil war" caused by failed multiculturalism and attacks on French identity.
Around 1,000 servicemembers signed the letter, including 20 retired generals, warning President Emmanuel Macron of "several deadly dangers" threatening France, including "Islamism and the hordes of the banlieue," a reference to the fractured suburbs around major cities with high crime and immigrant populations.
Comment:
- French police remove hundreds from Paris migrant camp
- Paris residents don't recognize own city - after Calais 'jungle' closure, refugees crowd Stalingrad metro station
- Christian Basilica in Paris a 'no-go zone' after suburbs heavily vandalized
- 'France does not belong to the French!' 100s of 'Black Vest' migrants occupy Paris airport

Supporters in January created a makeshift memorial for Ashli Babbitt near the Capitol in Washington.
The lawsuit will target the US Capitol Police Department and the unidentified plainclothes lieutenant who killed Babbitt, lawyer Terry Roberts told Zenger News on Thursday. Roberts, who represents Babbitt's family, said he will serve notice to Capitol Police within 10 days that he plans to file the case in US Federal District Court in Washington.
Babbitt was shot on January 6 after she climbed up and tried to enter the Speaker's Lobby, located near the House floor, through a broken window. The plainclothes lieutenant shot her from inside the Speaker's Lobby, hitting her in the left shoulder and causing her to fall back into the hallway where rioters were trying to get through a barricaded doorway.
Comment:
- Murder on Capitol Hill: Analysis of Ashli Babbit Shooting Video Disturbingly Suggests Coordinated Action
- Giuliani Presents Evidence - From Their Own Words - That Antifa & BLM Rioters Were at 'Insurrection' on Capitol Hill
- Street artist SABO triggers the Left with 'Say Her Name' poster of woman shot by police at capitol protest
- The shooting of Ashli Babbitt by Capitol police has echoes of BLM icon George Floyd's murder... but no golden coffin for her
- Journalist A.J. Cooke: I covered the Capitol Protest- there were NO riots
The mole told a local ABC affiliate that he felt compelled to "do something" after reading the manifesto of SoCo (Sonoma County) Radical Action, which appears to encourage vandalism.
Identified by the media as a "Trump supporter," the man reportedly contacted the group and told his "comrades" that he wanted to "smash the system the same as you." The ploy apparently worked and he was granted access to their communications channel on the encrypted messaging app Wickr. After gathering documents and recordings of their meetings, he then went to the press - and the police.
The alleged leader of the group, "Marb," is believed to be a 25-year-old college student who was arrested for assaulting a police officer last year in Oakland during a riot sparked by the death of George Floyd. The charges were later not filed.
In one reported exchange from March, Marb explains how the group was originally called SoCo Antifa, but changed their name because there were concerns that identifying as "Antifa" would put them on an "FBI watch list."
Another alleged recording made by the infiltrator details plans for May 1. Marb suggests that it would be "sick" to do something "a little more extreme for National Workers' Day."
"It's May Day, baby, like come out and take, take somethin' over with us, I don't, I don't (bleep) know," the group's leader continues.
A member interjects: "Let's kill people," followed by laughter.
"Let's kill some cops," Marb responds.

Homer resident Marilyn Heuper (left), posted this photo on Facebook to show the physical differences between her and the woman who FBI agents were looking for when they raided her home on April 28.
Homer resident Marilyn Heuper, posted a photo on Facebook to show the physical differences between her and the woman who FBI agents were looking for when they raided her home on April 28.
Speaking April 29 to Kenai-based radio host Bob Bird of the Bird's Eye View, Paul recalled that he was alarmed and shocked to come out of his bedroom with seven guns pointing at him and his wife.
Comment: So much for the wonders of facial recognition technology. How many other mistaken 'hits' have resulted in the same error?
- Detroit policed sued for wrongful arrest based on facial recognition
- 'Flawed and racist facial recognition' tech led to wrong arrest, ACLU says
- Orwellian: Facial recognition to be rolled out across London by police despite a 96% error rate
- Boston police chief: facial recognition technology failed to help find bombing suspects
- The FBI's facial recognition database contains over 400 million photos, 90% are non-criminals
- Apple warns iPhone's facial recognition technology won't work on children under 13 as faces are too similar
- Facial recognition and mass surveillance being introduced to US schools
- New surveillance tech means you'll never be anonymous again
It's hard to admit this - it's actually awful, really. The short story is that it was a counselor-approved camp "initiation" ceremony (aka "hazing"), and that I actually stopped her before she did it. But there was a minute or two where I looked this girl in the eye and told her everyone else had done it and it wasn't a big deal and she believed me. She believed me. And here's the worst part: despite it all, I blamed her for being so gullible. I was thirteen, and I believed someone that stupid and easily pressured didn't deserve my respect. To subdue any shame in my own brain, I convinced myself it was her fault.
But it wasn't her fault. And over the next few years the memory of that moment and her trust in me slowly ate away at me. I couldn't believe I had done it, that she had believed me, that the other girls (and counselor) had just let me make this outrageous demand. That I had briefly believed that because I had stopped her from doing this horrible thing that I was somehow excused from the guilt of starting it in the first place. Worst of all was realizing that I had that power, and that I could so easily abuse it. Which meant that other people could do that sort of thing, too. It was horrifying and humbling.

FILE PHOTO: Carlos Antonio Lozada arrives for a hearing at JEP tribunal in Bogota
Some 13,000 members of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) demobilized under a 2016 peace deal with the government. The group became a political party called Comunes.
Under the accord, former rebels must provide information to the Special Jurisdiction for Peace (JEP) tribunal about crimes committed during the conflict, including murders, kidnappings, sexual violence and forced evictions.









Comment: We know that back in 2020, during the supposed pandemic, that the state sanctioned BLM protests led to no rise in infections or deaths, and so one can conclude that these 'additional safety measures' are wholly unnecessary. More so now that Europe is reaching herd immunity, that could have been reached nearly a year earlier were it not for the lockdowns, as was the case in Sweden: