Texas CPS expands FLDS demonization campaign, starts rumor about possible abuse of boys
Watch carefully as Texas CPS relentlessly and insidiously works — through vague, quasi accusations — to demonize and stereotype the FLDS people as a group in an effort to distract attention from the worst perpetrators in the Texas CPS story: Judge Barbara Walther, CPS, and the police and troopers. These authorities violated their oaths of office — to protect and defend the Constitution — by executing a fraudulent warrant on the FLDS under false pretenses. CPS wants to prove — not to the court where the proof belongs — but to the populace, that they acted properly. They did not.
Take in the following CNN headline, for which there is no purpose except to comfort the consciences of Americans who would — in the absence of this kind of yellow journalism — demand the resignations of the officials responsible for the raid on the FLDS:
Sect’s boys may have been abused too, agency says
Story Highlights
- Texas officials investigating possible sexual abuse of boys at sect’s ranch
- At least 41 children have had broken bones, department says
- Findings submitted to Texas Senate committee
- Report: “Too early to draw any conclusions based on this information”
(CNN) — At least 41 children taken from a polygamist sect’s Texas ranch may have had past broken bones, officials say, and investigators are looking into the possible sexual abuse of some of the sect’s young boys.
This headline and summary — which contain pretty much all there is to the story — are calculated to demonize and separate the FLDS victims from the government perps and populace at large. They want you to feel different from these weird FLDS people so that you lose any emotional reaction to their brutalization. Like sociopaths everywhere, they seek to dehumanize their victims who, because they are not fully human, do not deserve the constitutional protections you think you enjoy. Polygamous sect. Broken bones. Findings submitted to the Senate. Then, oddly, “too early to draw conclusions.” But apparently not too early to use in the disinformation campaign. Bullies will be bullies. Meanwhile, the parents will sit meekly without responding for fear that anything they say might be abused by CPS as justification for keeping their children in foster care.
Texas CPS are means-end criminals. They violate process because, in their minds, process gets in the way of what they see as more important. They want you to focus on the noble tip of the corrupt spear (the “end” in “means-end”). That end is the purported “rescue” of what may be ten or twenty or even forty girls (let’s be generous to CPS here) who may have been or might be “abused” in some way while at the YFZ Ranch. Yes, we’d like to save those kids. Does that end justify violating the constitution by brutal, overwrought means through which they know that some innocent families will be torn apart? In other words, are you OK with your government imposing certain familial death on some innocent families in exchange for the highly uncertain rescue (the foster-care system is often worse than an abusive home) of a few children who may be at risk of abuse?
The central question is which of you readers is willing to have your children stolen by the state for weeks or months or for life to prevent the possible abuse of a few of those other parents’ kids? This is the issue that Texas CPS and CNN do not want you to consider. They want you to look past the violations of due process to the noble end: the possibly illusory salvation of a minority of the FLDS kids who may have been abused. Notice the vagueness in other elements of the story:
“The investigation is still in its early phases, but we have gathered additional information that is cause for concern,” the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services said in a statement on its Web site.
The statement said the department is looking into the possibility that some of the young boys taken from the Yearning for Zion Ranch near Eldorado, Texas, had been sexually abused based on interviews with the children and journal entries found at the ranch.
The department did not provide additional information.
The statement did not provide details about the 41 children investigators believe may have had broken bones, saying it does “not have X-rays or complete medical information on many children so it is too early to draw any conclusions based on this information.”
“But it is cause for concern and something we’ll continue to examine,” it said.
Let’s break this down to reality. The CPS is “looking into the possibility” that some young boys may have been sexually abused based on interviews with the children and “journal entries” found at the ranch. This is venomous nonsense.
The kids are breaking down psychologically. Separated from their parents for weeks on end. Lied to. Sent into unfriendly, foreign even filthy and unsafe foster-care settings, they’re reaching the point where they no longer know what to think, who they are or what to say. Whatever they say now in so-called “interviews” should be discarded. But CPS will publish vague allegations on their website, working to legitimize what they’ve done.
The journals probably contain language with multiple interpretations only one of which might suggest abuse. “Daddy put me to bed tonight.” And this is what CPS wants us to treat as startling new developments in their bogus case.
And the kicker is “we don’t have x-rays or complete medical information,” but by golly 41 of the children (out of 462) “may have had broken bones.” Less than 10 percent of the kids may have had broken bones. And this is news! I have one son who has had three broken bones. I guess I should expect a visit from CPS. The venality of these people defies imagination. They have no real news, so they manufacture something that mindless journalism grads at CNN can manipulate into headlines that equally stupid readers around the country will buy as fact.
1 comment
smells like carl rovian disinformation. Let’s parse the verbiage:
“they’re investigating the possible sexual abuse of some young boys taken from a polygamist sect’s ranch, as well as broken bones among other children.”
Key words: investigating/possible
the are not saying that such things exist, just they they are investigating the possibility.
well hell pardner, i’m investigating the possiblity that the local baptists were having sex orgies over at the first baptist church of el dorado. sounds bad, but it is all b.-.
if there was compelling proof i suspect it would be waived in front of the public to protect the reputation of that fine TEXAS CPS system.
instead we get ambiguity and future plausible deniability.
yup, sounds like rovian dog meat for the dumb masses.
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