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Justice Cannot Be Engendered by Injustice

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Justice cannot be engendered by injustice. The Jim Crow laws attempted to do this through the institutionalization of an apartheid system enforced - with violence and impoverishment – against the humanity and right to justice of the African American nation.

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Page 1: Justice Cannot Be Engendered by Injustice

Politikos The Activity of the Rational Thought By Humberto Gómez Sequeira-HuGóS

Los Angeles, December 3, 2014

Justice Cannot Be Engendered by Injustice

The killing of Michael Brown by a police man who was forgiven by the State

and an ignorant jury has been converted by the media into the question of whether

the demanders of justice are acting peacefully or violently.

The media’s objective is to serve the need of the State to keep the tax paying

slaves – particularly the African American nation – at peace with the oppression

that the bankers’ army enforces upon them to maintain the law of business as usual

over their victims.

The justice system – for example, the Civil Rights Act of 1964 as one of its

elements – was instituted after the violence that the police and its vigilantes

launched against the civil rights movement and murder of some of its members.

Justice cannot be engendered by injustice. The Jim Crow laws attempted to

do this through the institutionalization of an apartheid system enforced - with

violence and impoverishment – against the humanity and right to justice of the

African American nation.

The administrators of the justice of the bankers – the thieves who stole the

country and its wealth –, the god in whom they trust, are separated from the social

sensibilities that the impartment of pure justice requires by the egotistical mentality

and life of opulence that they share with the money aristocracy. Therefore, they

cannot be just in their understanding of the injustice that consumes the American

Indian, African American, and immigrant nations, which is the essence of the

American justice system. One nation under god?