It has been documented that Jamaicans engage in killing and wounding wherever they congregate. This is fact,as evidenced in this story, yet Jamaica keeps allowing breeding rooms and birthing of these abusers of ordinary machines which they turn from peaceful pursuit to weapons of assault.
Jamaica, instead of banning the creation of more Jamaicans, continues to export these dealers of death, dismemberment and destruction to other parts of the world.
It is time for the world's communities to arise and ban Jamaicans and the creation and dissemination of any more Jamaicans. As soon as that program has become successful it will a first step toward ridding the world of backward peoples who cannot be trusted with ordinary implements.
Rupert Johnson of Toronto, Canada has inspired this idea with a similar proposal, though its focus was on the wrong factor as the genesis of illegal homicide involving Jamaicans. This is not an entirely Jamaican problem, but it provides a good real world laboratory to hone the response to people who will not act civilized, and therefore could be the prototype for further programs.
Somehow, though, I feel that the Rupert Johnsons and the Sarah Bradys will not agree that stopping the cognitive design of murder is preferable to mandating a change in the tools. That is all their approach will do, mandate a change in the tools. Those with the cognitive desire to commit murder will not be deterred because they have to use a different tool.
I call for RJ and SB to join me in demanding an internationally enforced ban on current Jamaicans and a cessation of production of any more.
It has been documented that Jamaicans engage in killing and wounding wherever they congregate. This is fact,as evidenced in this story, yet Jamaica keeps allowing breeding rooms and birthing of these abusers of ordinary machines which they turn from peaceful pursuit to weapons of assault.
ReplyDeleteJamaica, instead of banning the creation of more Jamaicans, continues to export these dealers of death, dismemberment and destruction to other parts of the world.
It is time for the world's communities to arise and ban Jamaicans and the creation and dissemination of any more Jamaicans. As soon as that program has become successful it will a first step toward ridding the world of backward peoples who cannot be trusted with ordinary implements.
Rupert Johnson of Toronto, Canada has inspired this idea with a similar proposal, though its focus was on the wrong factor as the genesis of illegal homicide involving Jamaicans. This is not an entirely Jamaican problem, but it provides a good real world laboratory to hone the response to people who will not act civilized, and therefore could be the prototype for further programs.
Somehow, though, I feel that the Rupert Johnsons and the Sarah Bradys will not agree that stopping the cognitive design of murder is preferable to mandating a change in the tools. That is all their approach will do, mandate a change in the tools. Those with the cognitive desire to commit murder will not be deterred because they have to use a different tool.
I call for RJ and SB to join me in demanding an internationally enforced ban on current Jamaicans and a cessation of production of any more.