HEART!

I wish our people had the heart of the people in the article below. We need to do what they did everytime one of our brothers and sisters is attacked and murdered at the hands of the piggily wigglies. White people know what revolution is and know how to get their point across. We keep trying to utilize methods that the system has taught us. The system taught us that we should continually get our asses whooped and not defend ourselves. The system says "That's how you react to oppression, bigotry, and blatant hatred, just get your asses whooped and we'll give you your rights eventually. Just keep getting your asses whooped, your day is coming, keep your eye on the sparrow. I have a dream remember? Martin Luther King wouldn't react that way." We're fools!! The acquiescence* of our people. Read the article below.

Nov 12, 2007 04:30 AM

REUTERS NEWS AGENCY

ROME–Enraged soccer fans rioted in parts of Italy yesterday after a police officer shot dead a fan in a car while trying to break up a scuffle between supporters of rival clubs.

Gabriele Sandri, 26, a disc jockey from Rome, died after being shot in the neck by the officer at a highway service station in Arezzo. The bullet came from one of two warning shots the officer fired in the air while trying to break up a fight between fans of rival soccer teams Lazio and Juventus, police said.

Sandri was in a car full of Lazio fans.

"It was a tragic error," Arezzo police chief Vincenzo Giacobbe said in a statement. "Our agent intervened to prevent the scuffles between two small groups of people ... from degenerating.

"I express my deep grief and sincere condolences to the family of the victim."

Furious soccer fans took to the streets in several cities including Rome, where hundreds of youths wearing ski masks and brandishing metal bars and rocks attacked a police barracks near the Olympic Stadium and used garbage cans to block a nearby bridge over the Tiber River.

They smashed windows and traffic lights and torched a police vehicle and a bus, according to witnesses' reports.

Italy, like many European countries, has struggled with this kind of sports violence for years.

In February, fans were banned from a number of games and some matches were cancelled after a Sicilian police officer was killed in post-match rioting, the 13th soccer-related death in Italy since 1962.

Still, violence has persisted, mostly instigated by fans known as "ultras," the Italian version of soccer hooligans.

Friends described the dead man as passionate about soccer but utterly non-violent.

The police chief said the officer had fired two shots but police later said forensics tests were underway to ensure it was a police bullet that killed the DJ.

According to witness reports, he was with friends en route to Milan, to watch his team play Inter Milan, when the fracas broke out with the Juventus fans.

Arezzo police said officers in two patrol cars stopped on opposite sides of the highway turned on their sirens when they "heard yelling, screaming" and realized the occupants of three cars in the rest area were fighting.

When the clash continued, the police fired warning shots into the air. All three cars began to return to the highway, police said. The car with Sandri in it drove a few kilometres to the next exit to seek medical help.

An ambulance crew was unable to revive him, police said.

They described the officer who fired the shots as a veteran but didn't provide a name.

Italian Prime Minister Romano Prodi, who was attending mass when he was informed of the death, called the violence "very worrying" and said he had asked for a full probe on the circumstances of the Arezzo shooting.

During the rioting in Rome, Sky TG24 TV showed images of flames from what it said was a bus set on fire near the barracks.

Rome's police headquarters said the barracks was under attack but did not give details. It said some arrests were made but did not give a number. A news agency reported 10 police officers injured near the Rome stadium but police said there were only a few minor injuries.

In Milan, Lazio fans threw rocks at a police station in protest at the shooting and marched towards the city centre shouting "Assassins!" at security forces, although the protest subsided in the evening.

In the northern city of Bergamo, Atalanta's match with AC Milan was called off after supporters tried to smash down a glass barrier keeping them from the pitch.

Several players from the Bergamo club tried to reason with the fans but to no avail. After several minutes, the referee sent both teams back into the locker room. The game was later suspended.

Fearing more trouble, authorities later also called off an evening match between Lazio's city rivals AS Roma and Cagliari but hundreds of angry fans gathered outside Rome's Olympic Stadium.

In Siena, before a tie against Livorno, supporters shouted "murderers" at police and security officers.

A total of three top league games were cancelled. Others were postponed or delayed by 10 minutes, with players and referees donning black armbands in observance of Sandri's death.

Violence has continued in recent months despite the security crackdown prompted by February's killing of the Sicilian police officer, which was a contributory factor in Italy being beaten by Ukraine and Poland in the race to stage the Euro 2012 soccer championship.

We have to end the police occupation in our neighborhoods and end the pigs free pass on whooping our ass. Do you smell bacon?

acquiescence*
1.the act or condition of acquiescing or giving tacit assent; agreement or consent by silence or without objection; compliance (usually fol. by to or in): acquiescence to his boss's demands.
2.Law. such neglect to take legal proceedings for such a long time as to imply the abandonment of a right.



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