Lakota’s Campaign Against Guns: Using Deangelo Jones to disarm America

If I speak to 100 people on any given day, 85 of them carry a loaded gun—most of them concealed.  Those 85 people range in personalities from six figure executives to back yard mechanics who are more than willing to lift up their own pickup truck by hand while changing a tire to avoid the complication of going into the garage to get a jack.  Guns are a fact of life in American culture and are the primary reason no country in their right mind would dare invade our homes because it would prove a tactical nightmare.  Most of those 85 never draw those guns on another human being and will spend their entire lives never shooting anybody.  They have the guns just in case—and for especially young boys; guns are a right of manhood.   When a person carries a gun they are proudly stating that they are not betting their life on government controlled security like the TSA, the police, the manipulative CIA, the comb-over heavy FBI, the politically driven military or any other louse who yearns to dominate other human beings with government backed authority.  That is why it was so disgusting that Lakota schools made such a huge deal over Deangelo Jones who had a loaded 9 mm in his backpack inside a friend’s car and was arrested and thrown in jail because of it.

http://www.todayspulse.com/news/news/student-brings-firearm-to-high-school/ndgGK/

http://www.wlwt.com/news/west-chester-police-investigating-why-student-had-gun-in-backpack/24714018

By the way, all the videos shown here took place in the Lakota district over the last year, this even under very stringent security of police and Lakota officials during a levy attempt, when it matters most to them.   Government workers are not a substitute for personal security.

What a wonderful school…………full of great values and educational aptitude.  Take note of this for future reference.

I have some experience with school shootings which I’ll share in a few days specifically because of this case—and Lakota’s extreme overreaction to it.  I was in one when I was a kid—at Lakota—so I have some authority on the subject from which to speak.  Sometimes young men have issues with other young men that need to be settled, and the school imposes itself on that process when they infringe on the private rights of people, especially going through their back packs based on the word of some tattle tale who told school officials that there was a gun on the Lakota property.  Lakota West Principal Elgil Card talked boldly after the arrest of Jones saying, “Appropriate disciplinary action will be taken based on the Lakota Student Code of Conduct.  It is not permissible to bring any weapon onto school property even if secured in a private vehicle.”  Smart…………..now you know dear reader why so many schools are attacked by lunatic gunman—because everyone knows that they unarmed places and the people there are vulnerable and too heavily dependent on complacent government workers to protect them.  If you are a bad guy, or a deranged student looking for some sort of revenge, a school becomes a prime target because of the stupid comments of naive people like Principal Card.

You know what else is in the Lakota Student Code of Conduct, drug possession, and if the same vigor had been applied as the one who went through Deangelo Jones’ backpack, it is highly likely that marijuana busts on a grand scale would far eclipse this gun story—but in public schools these days, drugs are cool, sexual molestation of the students by the teachers is shrugged off, but if someone brings a gun to school—it is plastered all over the news and the freedom of a young 18 year old kid are violated ruthlessly.  This Lakota story was even covered in Toledo, Ohio as school administrators beat on their chest as if to justify their awesome security methods—and ability to protect students from a potential crazed gunman on the heels of their latest tax increase.  Lakota exploited the kid—Jones, for the benefit of the institution and trampled all over his rights as an American citizen—and are damn proud of it.

Meanwhile the panicky levy supporters in and around Lakota are holding their little ones a bit closer thanking Lakota officials for protecting their children from the dangerous Deangelo Jones.  They are proud that they raised taxes on property owners all in the name of safety so that a do-gooder could get Jones in trouble for carrying a gun on school property.  These same people have given a free pass to teachers who were caught sexually seducing students, or other teachers who are very permissive to drug use.

I would argue that drugs are far more dangerous than guns, because drugs destroy the ability to think, where guns are simply designed to tear open the flesh of another person.  Without a mind, there isn’t much of a life for anybody—a mind is far more important than the flesh—because without a mind, a person really doesn’t have anything but blood which pumps through a living carcass.  The amount of drugs in the Lakota West parking lot on a daily basis is likely to cause a whole lot more damage to other people and the future economy of our nation than a tiff that Deangelo Jones felt he might have had with another student—or his desire to show his friends that he was a man—and could now carry a gun at 18-years-old.  Where are the tattle tales over the drugs in backpacks of the Lakota West parking lot even to this very day, and where is the will to do anything about it?  There isn’t one.

Lakota made a big deal about the gun brought onto school property by a student because their social position fits the nationally driven progressive agenda against personal firearms—which was delivered to America from a United Nations intent to see the entire planet stripped of personal protection.  The public education stance against personal firearms fits that progressive message—so they feel entitled to infringe upon the Second Amendment rights of Jones and anybody else operating outside of progressive politics.  Jones is an 18-year-old man, not some kid any longer—in spite of what some corpulent politicians decided was best in Columbus, Ohio.  The Lakota position against firearms is not about safety and logic—it is more about reassuring the line of dialogue that guns are “bad” and should be feared.  Lakota, and the media, used Deangelo Jones to instill fear into the public by making them even more terrified of firearms in the same way that student athletes are used to solicit more tax revenue from property owners under Friday night lights on cold October evenings.  The goal is community manipulation toward a direction that the progressive institutions desire—and Lakota is a very progressive institution.

The students at Lakota who witnessed this whole Deangelo Jones situation will grow up and accept that the school has authority over individuals who carry guns.  They will accept the molestation of the TSA without concern, or when the police break down their door someday during a suspicious tip from a neighbor—all in the name of protecting the “state,” they will obediently submit to authority.  If the students at Lakota learned anything from the Deangelo Jones case it was that guns are to be feared, that the state has authority over the individual, and that even close friends will rat out suspicious behavior to do-gooder authority figures.  Those lessons will carry over into adulthood when those same students will someday vote, and they will think of Deangelo Jones and vote against concealed carry laws, and personal protection not controlled by local law enforcement.  When that time comes, the 85 people I know who are law bidding citizens and are the makers and shakers of the local economy will become outlaws who will have their property confiscated by the state and held against their will in jail with a $10,000 bail.  And that is the real intent behind the press releases, and the ecstatic dream of every progressive institution in America, especially those in public education.   Those same schools will applaud a woman’s right to kill a baby, or a college student to intoxicate themselves on weekend nights destroying the genetic code of their own physiology with THC marijuana smoke and non-thinking commitment to “getting high.”  But if a person declares they have a right to the Second Amendment……..watch out………the howls of fear will emit from the mouths of the school levy supporters and weak-minded government advocates—because the real goal is not the one they advocate, but the ones left unspoken and from a foreign land—who secretly yearns to possess all that we have—and can never until Americans yield their love of guns to the benefactors of authority—which they control through political strings and financial contributions.  That strategy is being implemented by do-gooders laced with too much cellulite around the midsection, and people who are too lazy to change their own motor oil, let alone a tire.  And when they see gun, they wet their pants, because they have been taught to fear such things by progressive institutions like the one at Lakota—a parasite on virtually everything that has value.

As to all the news stories shown above, how can Lakota keep all those stories contained so that the public thinks they are getting a lot of value for their tax dollars……………well, they spend a lot more tax money on public relations to keep their image good so that all the sad little things like murder plots, vandalism, sexting, and mass shooting threats stay off of people’s minds.  But for students who know the reality, carrying a gun isn’t a bad idea.  Smart people do carry, because they don’t trust other people to their own security.   Obviously, Lakota isn’t up to the challenge of providing security, as the evidence presents.

Rich Hoffman

 www.OVERMANWARRIOR.com

 

17 thoughts on “Lakota’s Campaign Against Guns: Using Deangelo Jones to disarm America

  1. BOOM:

    “If the students at Lakota learned anything from the Deangelo Jones case it was that guns are to be feared, that the state has authority over the individual, and that even close friends will rat out suspicious behavior to do-gooder authority figures. ”

    This must be screamed from the roof tops until people “get it”.

    Friends and coworkers of mine routinely blast school officials for being “stupid” when cases like this are blared out of the media (and we know why the media does this).

    I always have to remind them that yes, these people are stupid, but that minor gun infractions as you’re describing here are VERY deliberate and for the reasons you pointed out.

    True enough, the government/school/media triage are made up of morons who wouldn’t qualify to clean toilets in the private sector. But waving things like this away and dismissing at as mere government stupidity puts us at a disadvantage both tactically and philosophically.

    That’s why alternative media sources like Overman and others are crucial because nobody else makes the finer points.

    I’d like to close by saying that these son of a bitches would have to kill me to get my guns and I wish them luck with their long term goal, because that will be what ends them for good.

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    1. Thanks, they are conditioning our kids. It has nothing to do with us. We blow them off as useless. But to the kids, they are the ultimate authority. They are the targets of these over reactions.

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  2. I can remember when the parking lot of Lakota High School had many pick-up trucks with rifles in the rear windows. Many of the boys driving these trucks lived on farms. There never was an incident. I knew many of these boys and they were and are upstanding members of the community. In fact I was the Cub Scout den mother to some of them. Lakota used to be a wonderful community, but greed and avarice has taken over the community. I have never understood why people move out to a wonderful community and the first thing they want to do is “change it.” The stupidity of the preaching fear of guns is a national agenda and the brain dead “educators” have bought that agenda hook, line and sinker. I do wish the employees of the district that do have a brain would speak the truth loud and clear.

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    1. Did you see how many stories there have been in just 7 months? I’ve covered them at different times, but that is quite a collection. If they were the private sector, they’d be prosecuted for reckless endangerment.

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  3. *Nudge*

    Good comments guys. I concur completely. In Adams Co. they open carry and you can bet those weapons are loaded. In most places it’s still a Constable and the fire departments are almost all volunteer.
    It’s our foundation untouched of rugged individualism and personal responsibility. Freedom and happiness.
    Then you have Connsticut. I read about that stasi state daily now.
    This is upsetting.
    Exactly what they’re teaching now to expect….and respect. The ability to self-govern will be completely lost on this generation.

    “I AM THE MASTER!”

    Come for the guns, stay for the bullets Conneticut and those that will follow!!!!!!!!!!!!! Paying these salaries to remove our rights is the antithesis of the looneys running the asylum. The looneys are the vast majority of the people but they can’t see it. In the end, the blame lies squarely on us.

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    1. They’re gonna need them. It will never hold up to the “brass” held by the owners. It’s a non-starter as long as Shall Not Be Infringed remains their battle cry. They’re going to need to be tough as nails. The harrassment has only just begun, sadly.

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      1. I only hope you’re right. If the “authorities” start going door to door and people just hand over what they own, then it’s time to start cashing in the gold and silver bars and consider moving abroad.

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      1. The educated don’t get an ounze of their news from the mainstream and haven’t for quite some time. I’ll venture that the 77% who have not signed up to turn their assualt rifles over…wake up to Breitbart, Blaze, Drudge, etc, etc. The spoon fed days are over.

        The boobs on the tubes know little of the news.

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