Category Archives: Federal Politics

Cooler Heads Must Prevail

These are very challenging times since the deaths of a number of unarmed Black men and boys by police officers around the country.  This situation has only been made worse with the recent death of two New York police officers by a Black man; especially since he claimed to have killed them in retaliation for the deaths of Eric Garner and Michael Brown.

The anger and frustration harbored by those who support protesters who came together as a result of the killings of unarmed Black people and that by the New York Police Department (NYPD) has now exploded into finger-pointing and unreasonable accusations.

NYPD Police Unions claim that protesters and New York mayor Bill de Blasio are responsible for the current situation and said that the blood of these two police officers is on the hands of the mayor.  They are angry with Mayor de Blasio because – according to an article by Howard Koplowitz in International Business Times – he is “seen as unfriendly to police in part because of his coziness to the Rev. Al Sharpton, who has led protests in support of Brown and Garner, and the mayor’s public statements about the circumstances of Garner’s death.”

I have read a number of recent articles where Mayor de Blasio and the protest leaders have been bombarded with blame by police unions.  While I understand the anger and frustration that is vented in these articles by the leaders of these unions, I think that this is exactly the wrong thing to do.  Their anger also prompted some police officers to turn their backs on the mayor at an appearance he made to talk about the death of the police officers who were killed.  They should not have done this.

Loved ones in both the NYPD and on the civilian side of this challenging issue have been lost.  The death of these two innocent police officers is no more the fault of Mayor de Blasio and the protesters than are the deaths of Eric Garner and Michael Brown the fault of every single police officer in the NYPD and Ferguson Police Department.  Although these union leaders are the official spokespersons for these policemen, it is unlikely that the majority of them share these unions’ opinions.

Now is the time for all of our leaders, from President Obama down to the leaders of the protestors, to speak words of peace and healing and not heated words of anger and frustration.  These leaders include the leaders of the police unions.  Words of anger and frustration from those on either side of this issue do not help.  They only serve to escalate a situation that needs to be deescalated.

It is not hard to understand why both sides are angry and frustrated but what is hard to understand is why leaders on either side would choose to escalate rather than deescalate the problem.  A part of what we expect from our chosen leaders is for them to separate their emotions from their decision-making responsibilities and make well-founded rational decisions.

The likelihood of the masses to make irrational decisions based largely on their emotions is not unusual; but that is why we choose leaders.  The leaders of the police unions need to take a step back from the situation, take a deep breath, reevaluate their responsibilities as leaders and then move forward from there.

If they make a serious evaluation, especially in light of the implications of our current situation – even though they will no doubt still be angry and frustrated, they will take a different path in moving forward from here.  This does not mean that they should change their minds and not continue to stand against the mayor and protesters if they feel it is the right thing to do.  It simply means that they should fully evaluate the situation and find some way to calm things down yet still make their point.  Cooler heads must prevail if we are to make a reasonable effort to solve this problem and effectively mitigate its root cause and eradicate it.

Eulus Dennis

Vigilante Unwanted

If suspect Ismaaiyl Brinsley proves to actually be the person who ambushed and killed New York police officers Rafael Ramos and Wenjian Liu, he is a murderer.  It is as simple as that.  It does not matter if he did it because he sincerely felt that Eric Garner and Michael Brown did not receive justice because the grand juries did not indict the police officers responsible for their deaths or he was a sociopath, psychopath or for any other reason.

To kill two innocent police officers because it was police officers who killed Eric Garner and Michael Brown is to be no better than police officers who would discount the life of someone because of the color of their skin and kill them for no reason other than that.  Therefore, what Mr. Brinsley did is nonsensical because that kind of thing is what the protests are about.

There have been too many Black people and too many white people young and old who have come together and marched peacefully in the streets of many cities around this country in the names of Eric Garner and Michael Brown to have those names and efforts besmirched by an act of murder.  I refuse to accept even the thought that the preponderance of white people in this country does not want equal justice for all Americans.

I do not believe that the young Americans who are the catalyst of these peaceful protests and the foundation of race relations for America in the future believe that they should paint a broad-brush view of all white people as a result of what has transpired thus far in the Eric Garner and Michael Brown cases.  The rainbow of colors of the people participating in the peaceful protests support the fact that people of all colors want equal justice for all people.

There is no doubt that people of color and white people have our differences; but it is because by virtue of the history of our country and the deep-seated biases that we carry as a result of that, that we wear virtual blinders that make it all but impossible for each to see the other’s perspective.

I do not know if under these circumstances it is possible for us to achieve a level playing field but I do know that if we fail to work together and try we will never know the true answer to this thought; it is meant to be a question as well.  Surely at some time or another if this is a thought-provoking question that has not actually been verbalized by our elected leaders, it is far past time that it should be.

In the meantime, all of those who are truly protesting in the name of Eric Garner and Michael Brown should stand up and speak out about the killing of these two innocent police officers.  The killer might have evoked the names of Eric Garner and Michael Brown to try to justify what he did but what he did was wrong.  And everyone should call what he did by its true name; murder.

What he did was vigilantism.  He anointed himself judge, jury and executioner and then carried out his sentence.  He was an unwanted vigilante and what he did, did not honor Mr. Garner and Mr. Brown, it dishonored them.

Eulus Dennis

Ferguson Witness #40

Although I have been vigilant I haven’t seen any articles or heard much said in the mainstream media about what a reporter from The Smoking Gun revealed about a witness who testified in the shooting death of Michael Brown.  Mr. Brown was killed by police officer Darren Wilson in Ferguson, Missouri after they had a brief scuffle.  I must admit that I expected to read and hear a lot more news on this discovery especially since, based on the story in The Smoking Gun, this witness has proven to be a complete farce.

The witness is Witness No. 40.  This witness played a vital role in the support of Officer Wilson’s version of what happened that fatal day and a key statement made in their version of what happened was quoted repeatedly by Sean Hannity, host of the Fox News Channel show, Hannity.  The problem is that, again based on the story in The Smoking Gun, this witness was not even in Ferguson on the day that the shooting occurred.

This could present a big problem for the prosecutors who presented this case to the grand jury because if they did not know the background of this witness, they should have known it.

According to William Bastone, one of the authors of the article in The Smoking Gun, he was able to find out who this witness is, research their background – which is highly questionable, and write his article in about three days.  He said that since he was able to do this in a matter of days, since the prosecutors had weeks and resources available to them that he did not have, such as subpoena power, they also should have been able to look into this witness’s background.  Had they done this, he said, they would have known that this witness should not have been allowed to testify before the grand jury.

It is not yet clear what this might mean in terms of getting the grand jury’s decision set aside or if Michael Brown’s family will even consider going down that road.  Whatever the family’s decision may be, this case should not be left as is because Michael Brown still has not received justice.  My thoughts are that justice will not have been done until Officer Wilson faces a trial by jury in a court of law and not via a secretive grand jury process.

There are still too many questions left unanswered in this case, especially in light of the dismantling of Witness No. 40, and the race problem that America has and refuses to acknowledge will only be made worse if they are not answered.

What do you think?  I solicit your comments on this and any of the articles on this website.  Remember, this site is meant to bring awareness to us regarding our responsibilities as citizens and voters and to generate reasonable discussion among reasonable people.  We can agree to disagree.

By the way, in the event that you would like to read the story about Witness No. 40 in The Smoking Gun, I provided a link to it immediately following this article.  The title of the story in The Smoking Gun is “Witness 40”: Exposing A Fraud In Ferguson.

Eulus Dennis

President Obama and Jamie Dimon

It is hard enough for Democrats to accept the title of this piece let alone the fact of these two men working together to lobby Democrats to vote for the passage of a bill!  What?  President Obama working with Jamie Dimon to get the House to pass a bill that both feel is in the best interest of the American people.  Is this some kind of a sick joke?

No, this is something that actually happened.  If Jamie Dimon is for the passage of this bill, it speaks volumes since he is chairman of the board, president and chief executive officer of one of the big four banks in America.  And although House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi and Senator Elizabeth Warren came out against the passage of this bill, it passed in the House and is awaiting approval by the Senate.

I love and strongly support President Barack Obama but I must side with House Minority Leader Pelosi and Senator Warren on this issue.  The bill that President Obama is supporting would once again allow Wall Street to flex its political muscle.  Although there are a lot of good things in the bill that President Obama is supporting, the fact that it would reinforce Wall Street’s long unchallenged feeling that it actually is the POTUS is worth the stance taken by House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi and Senator Elizabeth Warren.

This bill would do many things to help the majority of American citizens but it would also allow big banks that took America and the world economy to the brink of disaster, until American taxpayers bailed them out, to go right back to the way that they were operating before their bailout in 2008; without being held accountable.

The banks did not lose anything but many average Americans lost everything; their homes, their pensions, their savings and their dreams.  That is why it is so baffling that the President would support the passage of this bill.  It is also why Senator Warren’s question to congress should resonate with the preponderance of Americans; “Who do you work for, Wall Street or the American people?”

The majority of the American people are not strangers to hurting, being ignored and jerked around by politicians.  So to give big banks a second chance at ruining America’s economy and the world economy in order to underpin fledgling programs does not make sense.  It is as if this administration does not recognize the magnitude of what our country and the world narrowly escaped.

I do not want the government to shut down because I am retired and depend on my Social Security payments along with my retirement checks to survive.  But to put our children’s future in jeopardy as a result of putting our country’s economy and the world economy in jeopardy so that big banks in America can hedge their bets against derivatives in the event that they fail in order to protect their bottom lines is ludicrous.

What this amounts to for banks and their foray into derivatives is that if they win they make tons of money to keep for them and if they lose then taxpayers pay and, if anything, get a salute; a one finger salute!  For far too long banks, especially big banks, have been allowed to have their way with us.  They have become accustom to this and now expect everyone to lie down, roll over, and fetch at their command.  And if we don’t, although they have tons of money in reserve, they withhold it from the American people.  Enough already!

There is no doubt that it is going to hurt and be a struggle if we fight back against this kind of unfairness.  Powerful people never tire of raking more onto their plates for fear that other powerful people will have more than they have because they are blinded by their greed.  But all Americans must fight back if we are to save our country.  American greed is already out of control and if average Americans do not stand up to this egregious attack on fairness and the true American way, who knows where we will end up.

Eulus Dennis

Senator Elizabeth Warren Is Right

Senator Elizabeth Warren and House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi are absolutely right to push back against President Obama for supporting the Continuing Resolution and Omnibus (Cromnibus) bill that the Republicans are trying to pass at the last minute before they head out of town.  Minority Leader Pelosi has been there for President Obama time-and-again in the past when he sought her support.  This time, however, she said that she is disappointed in the White House.

I, too, have always been a strong supporter of President Obama and I remain as such but I agree with Senator Warren and Minority Leader Pelosi that this so called Cromnibus should not pass with the help of the Democrats because it once again throws average Americans under the bus while putting big banks back in a position to take advantage of taxpayers and, potentially, put America at risk again of the need to bail them out just like in 2008.  In the meantime, they will make a lot of money.  I hope that it does not pass at all but if it does, let it be with the sole support of House Republicans.

The Republicans have not been sincere in working with the president via compromise or any other reasonable method since he was first elected so why are they so suddenly interested in doing so now?  They are not.  They are employing the old sleight of hand trick that magicians use.

They are skillfully directing our attention to the meaningless hand while they are just as skillfully manipulating the system with the other.  And when all of the voting is completed something will pop out of the hat…, I mean system as a result of all of the caucusing, meetings, and whip sessions; but I am afraid that it will be something that most Americans won’t like.  Not to worry though, the big banks and Wall Street will love it.  Hold on…  Update!  Cromnibus passed the House with the help of 57 Democrats.

I started this article before the House members gathered for a final vote.  You now know what the outcome of that vote was.  During a test vote earlier during the day, only 2 Democrats supported the bill.  But if what Representative Maxine Waters said during an interview on MSNBC is correct politics indeed make strange bedfellows.  Representative Waters said she was told that both President Obama and Jamie Dimon – chairman, president and chief executive officer of JPMorgan Chase, were lobbing House members before the vote was taken to vote ‘yes.’

The Senate still has to approve the bill before it goes to the President for his signature.  The House vote, which split 219 to 206 to pass Cromnibus, was close despite lobbying by the White House and other supporters because Senator Elizabeth Warren came out against it and lobbied House members to vote ‘no.’

Although President Obama, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell support the bill, since Senator Warren opposes it, it will be interesting to see how things flesh-out over the next day or two.  Another ingredient that should help to make things even more interesting is Senator Ted Cruz.  Showtime!  Or, maybe not.

Eulus Dennis

A Political Decision

Do you remember that movie ‘The Firm’ where a law enforcement agency suspected that a prestigious law firm was breaking some major laws so they forced a young lawyer employed by the firm to help them secure information they needed to indict and prosecute the responsible executives?

Even if you don’t, try to follow me anyway because there is a point that I want to make that is exemplified by that movie and many others like it.  Anyway, this law enforcement agency was able to force this young lawyer to help them because they had incarcerated his brother who would face a lot of years in prison unless he cooperated with them; and if he cooperated, his brother would be released and his record would be completely cleared.

The truth of the matter was that the law enforcement agency had no real intentions of releasing the brother.  The plan was to release him for a short period of time as a show of good faith and once they had the documents that they needed they would put him back in prison to complete his term.

The young lawyer agreed to cooperate but somewhere along the way found out about their plans so demanded to renegotiate the deal and, because of their attempt to scam him, also demanded that a large sum of money for himself be included.  The law enforcement agency agreed to the new terms but planned to stick to their original plan to place the brother back in prison with the only new part of their plan being to take back the money as well.

By now you might be thinking, how is this story in any way related to politics?  Here is how.  My point is wrapped up in what this law enforcement official said to the young lawyer when he became concerned that he was on to them again and about to outsmart them.  When the young lawyer demanded that the money be wired to an offshore numbered account ahead of time the official exploded in anger.  This is what he said when the lawyer refused to withdraw this demand; and what he said is also my point.

I’m the government.  I can kick your teeth down your throat and pull them out of your backside (he used a more colorful word) and there’s not a (expletive delete) thing that you can do about it.  When the young lawyer showed the law enforcement official that he had recorded his words on a tape housed in a remote location, the official calmed down and agreed to wire the money.

In other movies like ‘The Firm’ many law enforcement officials have made the well worn ‘I’m the law’ statement.  Unfortunately, many of these officials have come to believe that they are the law personified and not an instrument that is there to enforce the law.  And since they are ‘the law’, it applies to everyone else but not to them.

This is not something that happens just with low-level law enforcement officials but instead ranges from the most low-level local official to law-enforcement officials at the highest levels in the United States government.  As a matter of fact, it is not just law enforcement officials but many other powerful officials as well who are exacerbating and perpetuating this problem.

I gave this particular example because there was a time when most of us looked at movies like these as unquestionably pure theatrical entertainment.  But take a close look at what is happening in our country right now and the rhetoric in those movies no longer seem so far-fetched.

There are two key situations that are at the forefront right now, one of which symbolizes a deep-seated American problem that is playing out in a number of cities around our country.  The other is something that is wrapped in a domestic and foreign policy wrapper.  One is associated with race and the other is associated with torture.  Despite what might appear to be a great gap between them, they are both deep-rooted in human rights and who we are as Americans.

In both of these cases the words political decision seems to be a common thread and it appears that these officials also expect to be placed above the law.  Don’t you get tired of hearing the words ‘it was a political decision’ from pundits?  Wouldn’t it be refreshing to hear the words ‘it was a governance decision’ being tossed around by them at least as often as ‘it was a political decision’?

Politicians like the perks of the office.  They like the photo ops, the admiration of their constituents, the special treatment that they receive and making the easy decisions.  But when it comes to the tough decisions that they were also elected to handle – like indicting a cop and assuring that the indictment process is fair or confronting the problem that we need to address concerning torture and, if they are different, the enhanced interrogation techniques, they cower and refuse to do their job.  They take the easy way out and make a ‘political decision.’

I guess we can’t blame them because if they confront these things and make an actual governance decision, they might not be reelected.  And if they are not reelected, they will no longer have a platform to not confront problems like those in Ferguson and the one regarding torture.  Wouldn’t that be a shame?

America must address and solve tough problems like those mentioned or, rather than us controlling our own destiny, those problems might play a key role in the outcome.  As voters we can force politicians to do their job, including the unpleasant parts of it, or be fired.  It is as simple as that.  But in order for that to happen, we must first do our job.

Eulus Dennis

Ferguson From A Victim’s Perspective

I read an 18-page story online by writers for The Washington Post in which they detailed the Ferguson, Missouri shooting of Michael Brown tragedy.  My thoughts are that the article was written from a professional and objective perspective but it seemed to me to be favorably skewed toward law enforcement.  That is probably because I am in favor of a jury trial and biased by the decision of the grand jury not to indict.

The writers covered a lot of material while trying to keep the length of the article reasonable so even if it was skewed in favor of law enforcement, it would be unfair to say that they purposely did this so must be given the benefit of the doubt.  There are a number of reasons why I say that it was skewed in favor of law enforcement and I will explain those reasons in this article.

The sad fact is that this article will not be read by the masses anytime soon and when it is read, it will be read by far fewer people than the number that read the one in The Washington Post.  To even say ‘far fewer’ is an understatement; in reality I could easily say 0.000001 people and still likely be too high.  But I will tell it from a victim’s perspective anyway.

I will also provide a link to the story in The Washington Post following this article so that you can read the entire story for yourself should you decide to.  If for any reason the link does not work properly, the title of the article is “In three minutes, two lives collide and a nation divides.”  Do a computer search for the article under that exact title and you will find it.  Six writers contributed to the story; five in Washington and one in Ferguson.

The Washington Post’s story begins to chronicle Michael Brown’s last day alive on this earth starting shortly before noon.  By the time that it ends 18 pages later it is only shortly past 12:01 p.m., which is about the time that Officer Darren Wilson radioed the following message that included his call signal – Frank 21 – after he encountered Michael Brown and Dorian Johnson on Canfield:  “Frank 21, I’m on Canfield with two, send me another car.”

It started with Michael Brown striking up a conversation with a contractor who was trying to cut away some tree roots with his hatchet.  The article says that Michael Brown talked to the contractor for about half an hour before he left and returned a short time later with his friend, Dorian Johnson.  They talked briefly with the contractor before they headed off to the market where Michael Brown would strong-arm the clerk and take some small cigars.

The clerk reported the robbery and a description of Mr. Brown and Mr. Johnson was broadcasted to the police.  When Mr. Brown and Mr. Johnson turned onto Canfield they had a chance-meeting with Officer Wilson.  That is where things quickly went wrong and escalated and Officer Wilson shot Michael Brown to death.

The Washington Post story said that Officer Wilson shot Michael Brown at least six times and that by the time he stopped shooting, his magazine was empty.  All evidence of the shooting was turned over to a grand jury so that they could determine whether or not Officer Wilson should be indicted for killing Mr. Brown.

The Washington Post story went on to say that “no video of the incident has emerged, leaving the nation, like the grand jury that completed its work two weeks ago, dependent on a vast encyclopedia of evidence, a mountain of witness statements, forensic reports and police narratives.  It all adds up to a close consensus on the basic chronology of events and wildly varying interpretations of a few key moments.  Scientific analysis can determine how many times Brown was shot, where he was standing, even what direction he was moving in.  But the only window into Brown’s intentions come from witnesses, and what they saw blended all too confusingly with who they are.  What witnesses saw was sufficient to persuade the grand jurors not to indict Wilson…”

After this statement The Washington Post story cites statements made by various witnesses and that is where it starts to skew favorably toward law enforcement and lose sight of the victims’ perspective.  Again, I want to emphatically add that the writers covered a tremendous amount of material in 18 pages so must be given the benefit of the doubt when it comes to the question of whether or not the skew was deliberate.

It seems to me that the story was skewed favorably toward law enforcement because it seemed to be making a subtle effort to justify the grand jury’s decision by explaining that the jurors were saddled with a large amount of evidence, much of which was challenging and confusing because of witnesses incongruent statements.  But this only supports the need for a transparent trial rather than giving all evidence to a grand jury and charging it with making a decision in secret.

It is important to remember that the grand jury is not responsible to determine Officer Wilson’s guilt or innocence.  The grand jury’s responsibility is to determine whether or not there is enough evidence to show that there is probable cause to have Officer Wilson face a jury trial.  That jury would then weigh all of the evidence and determine whether he is guilty or innocent and both the prosecuting attorney and defending attorney would have the opportunity to cross-examine the other’s witnesses.

Following are some specific examples from the story in The Washington Post that caught my attention:

  1. “When one witness told the grand jury that she was certain Brown had charged Wilson, the prosecutor pushed back: ‘You characterize it as a “charge;” could he have been staggering?’ The witness stuck with her account.”

“On another day, when a witness said he was certain that Brown had tried to surrender to Wilson, the prosecutor again pushed back, from the opposite direction: “It does not appear he was charging the officer?”  No, the witness said, ‘he was not charging’.”

It would not be unfair to describe what the prosecutor did in both of these instances as a gentle nudge rather than a pushback.  Can you imagine what a defense attorney or prosecuting attorney would have done upon cross-examination in this situation?  A trial by jury would have been better.  It would have been better perceived by the citizens of Ferguson and by the rest of America.

  1. “One witness who testified to the grand jury, 19-year-old Piaget Crenshaw, said in an interview with The Post that although the jurors let her give her full account, she thought prosecutors were not paying attention. Crenshaw said she saw Brown put his arms up to let them know that he was compliant.”

If this is true, it sent a message – whether intentional or not – that the prosecutors either felt that this witness was unreliable or that she was not credible.  It is unlikely that this kind of conduct would have happened in a jury trial, and if it had, it would have been challenged.

  1. “Witness No. 46, a woman who was listening to gospel music in her car, said she heard Brown say ‘I don’t have anything,’ loudly, ‘in a holler voice.’ That same witness said Brown kept calling out to the officer even as bullets flew: The boy kept saying, I got, my hands is up, I don’t have anything, what do you want’.”

Again, a jury trial would have been better for the purpose of arriving at what really happened, better perceived by citizens of Ferguson and the rest of America, and a verdict of Officer Wilson’s guilt or innocence would have been better accepted.

  1. “Another man, who had stepped outside his apartment after the first gunshots, said he heard Brown say, ‘Don’t shoot me, stop shooting.’

“With so many versions flying about, the grand jury pressed some witnesses to be more precise.  ‘I need to know what you heard, not what you think you heard,’ one juror told the man who’d come out of his apartment.

The man replied: ‘He was getting pierced by some bullets.  He was pleading for his life’.”

  1. “Brown’s hands ‘were down at his sides’ (Witness No. 30), or they were ‘into the air’ (Witness No. 16). Witness No. 10 said Brown ‘turned around and he did some type of movement. I never seen him put his hands up or anything… I’m not sure if he pulled his pants up or, or whatever he did, but I seen some type of movement and he started charging the police officer’.”
  2. ” ‘It wasn’t really a run,’ said witness No. 44, ‘cuz he didn’t get far. Well, after he stopped, he turned around, and he put his hands about shoulder length. It wasn’t in the air like everybody doin’.’  This witness said Brown was ‘scrunching forward’ but not moving toward the officer.  (Later, the witness said it was possible that Brown did come forward toward Wilson but that the witness had turned away and missed that.)”

The fact that different witnesses saw different things or gave different versions of what they saw is not uncommon.  The fact that Michael Brown was shot multiple times, including shots to his face and the top of his head, and a number of witnesses said that his hands were raised when he was shot all but demanded an indictment.  It should not matter whether his hands were shoulder-level, head-level, or high above his head.

The decision to shoot Michael Brown should have been based on whether or not he was still a threat to Officer Wilson at the time that he was killed.  A regular jury would have been a better way to determine to the best degree possible if he was.

Following this article is a link to the story in The Washington Post that I said I would provide you with.  You can read the entire story for yourself and draw your own conclusions.

Eulus Dennis

In three minutes, two lives collide and a nation divides over Ferguson shooting – The Washington Post

JUST BEFORE LUNCHTIME on Aug. 9 in Ferguson, Mo., a contractor who was losing a battle between his hatchet and some deep-set tree roots began to fuss and cuss. A stranger who was walking by watched the laborer for a bit and then offered some soothing words. Why are you so riled up, Michael Brown asked. The Lord Jesus Christ can help you with your anger.

via In three minutes, two lives collide and a nation divides over Ferguson shooting – The Washington Post.

Click on the title/link immediately above to read the entire story in The Washington Post.

(At)Tension Surrounding Policing Is Mounting

The attention surrounding policing in America is continuing to mount thanks to peaceful protesters of all colors and ages.  Despite the cowering and political antics of some politicians who may agree with these protesters that there is a problem and the pushback from some who believe that Officer Daniel Pantaleo is a model police officer, protesters are keeping the media’s attention trained on our country’s justice system dilemma.  Thank you protesters!

Most of us are aware that simply by virtue of the fact that we are a democracy – and a very proud one, things many times happen slowly.  Some legislation that needs to be passed quickly to keep America operating at her optimum might churn through our governmental system at a painfully slow pace; but this should come as no surprise because that is the natural nature of the democratic process.

This is why no matter which side of this policing issue that you stand on you should want America to step back now and take a real close objective look at this situation and bring all of the various reasonable leaders together to work to resolve it.  It pains me to speak the words but they must be realized and spoken.  Resolving this problem will take a long time and a tremendous amount of dedication and effort.

We need all of our elected leaders – who should have been engaged at the first sign of this problem instead of using it to hone their political thespian skills – to get engaged now because of the long road ahead of us to reach a solution.  We also need Business leaders, Civil Rights leaders, Faith leaders, Law enforcement leaders, and layperson citizens – especially youth leaders, to be a part of finding this solution.  We need this to begin now!

Our country is strong and resilient.  We have proven this in the past; now, let’s prove it again.  This is something that we absolutely have to do.  The likelihood is that none of us will be completely satisfied with the final product but again, America is a democracy and if we are and want to remain a part of her we must be willing to take part in her messiness.

All of us have to be willing to do whatever it takes to assure that America remains the great democracy that it is.  We can bask in our political victories but we must also be willing to accept our political defeats, no matter where we fall along the political spectrum, and continue to work to make and keep our country great.

I know that as a lifelong Democrat, I have suffered many political defeats but still consider the democratic battle to be one worth waging.  I hope that you feel that way too.  So let’s get to work on this problem, resolve it and once again show the rest of the world what a resilient nation that we are.

Eulus Dennis