Papyrus Collective
June 10, 2016

California On Blast

From Write or Die by Byron Wilson (author's profile)

Transcription

1. California On Blast

On its face, this self admission by way of the historical chronological
order of events exposes the method and pattern designed to misuse the
system worked on us (referencing CDCR online history)

When Don Novey combined youth authority supervisors and parole officers
with prison guards, he single handedly made a 923 million entify worth
5.7 billion dollars from 1085 to 2004.

Look at those dates and tell yourself why this is not the height of the
crack era, the bloodshed, the violence, increase in guns on the streets
of innercity communities.

The creepy part is how he created a pipeline for children and minors
under juvenile detention supervision to be escorted directly into prison,
where the parole agents are free to roam the streets and re-arrest, and
act as hunters/slacve catchers to fill Don Novey's plantations/prisons
that soard from 13 in 1985 to 31 prisons by 1995. (Nigga say whaaat?)

Don Novey is a capitalistic genius, it's all business and even if we
exculde Black people as being the enemy, Don Novey's model is the exact
same as the model used by his forefathers to enslave the Negro race;
now here's a word that should sound familliar by now, especially since
the word has been traced to the word that means black in Latin; still
end up full circle at, Black People.

But look, remember, it's not Ginst the law in america to be black, so
brace yourself as we show you pages from the California penal code,
looks like your boy Don Novey had some great lobbiest, check the dates,
and the language used to desccribe our inner city youth.

2.

These two California penal code citings are what we call "Designer Laws",
which by the way gives light to those who are familiar with the term
we've used in our other zine issues, called "Street Level Crimes".

So in 1988, Don Novey and his friends in the California Legislature
body started calling inner city youth of america "Terrorist" and
"Criminal street" gangmembers.

In the history of america only one group of people have used the
names of streets in their identification as gangs, in faxt, gangs
are a fact of human nature in many different cultures around the
world, however, only American inner city youth identify with street
culture.

Notice the language "Street Terrorism Enforcement and Prevention
Acct" by the legislature body describes our youth as "Criminal
Street Gangs", by way to state for a fact that all street gangs
started to operate and continue to operate for the sole purpose
of terrorizing the "peaceful citizens" of their neighbourhoods.

Who better that to funnel drugs adn guns to than a bunch of criminal
street gang/terrorist in a so-called War on Crime climate authored
by the very source from which the drugs and guns came from.

If the death toll had not been factured into the original design,
we suffer from more than mere naivéte.

If Life Without The Possibility wasn't factured into the original
design, we must be blind.

3.

If Special Circumstance #22, which makes inner city youth death
elible wasn't conveniantly added into the original design, then
the rest of us are either stupid, conditioned to support, or
could care even less.

No matter what your position is on The Death Penalty, you may
want to inquire why #22 is the only one on the list that appears
in bold print in the penal code.

Or how did street level crimes become so important in 1978? Now
that year sounds familiar to those that are aware of the Stanley
"Tookie" Williams story, oh, don't trip, I'm also including an
interview of his last words with this work so you are able to
gauge how his generation of innner city youth was the 1st wave of
Black men to be unsuspecting victims of this horrific grand design
to literally legally murer inner city youth, and get paid billions
of dollars to capture and execute a new generation of inner city
youth, for which I am one of many.

I began engaging this creative writing project with a 3 part article
in the very 1st issue of the Write Or Die Zine Project, titled "New
Generation Pt 1, 2 &3." I want to push at you a quote from my own
work back in 2011 from New Generation pt,2.

I couldn't wait to respond to Piankhi's call to be expressive from
the position of condemned status because the word Nigger has
interrupted our progress as a people way before millions of youth
fall victim to the overall grand scheme to continue supremacy over
what continues to be concidered, by way of action, and not words,
unequal on earth.

engage my 2011 quote here:

Favorite

Replies (3) Replies feed

Julia Posted 7 years, 10 months ago. ✓ Mailed 7 years, 9 months ago   Favorite
Thanks for writing! I finished the transcription for your post.

Julia Posted 7 years, 10 months ago. ✓ Mailed 7 years, 9 months ago   Favorite
1. California On Blast

On its face, this self admission by way of the historical chronological
order of events exposes the method and pattern designed to misuse the
system worked on us (referencing CDCR online history)

When Don Novey combined youth authority supervisors and parole officers
with prison guards, he single handedly made a 923 million entify worth
5.7 billion dollars from 1085 to 2004.

Look at those dates and tell yourself why this is not the height of the
crack era, the bloodshed, the violence, increase in guns on the streets
of innercity communities.

The creepy part is how he created a pipeline for children and minors
under juvenile detention supervision to be escorted directly into prison,
where the parole agents are free to roam the streets and re-arrest, and
act as hunters/slacve catchers to fill Don Novey's plantations/prisons
that soard from 13 in 1985 to 31 prisons by 1995. (Nigga say whaaat?)
Don Novey is a capitalistic genius, it's all business and even if we
exculde Black people as being the enemy, Don Novey's model is the exact
same as the model used by his forefathers to enslave the Negro race;
now here's a word that should sound familliar by now, especially since
the word has been traced to the word that means black in Latin; still
end up full circle at, Black People.

But look, remember, it's not Ginst the law in america to be black, so
brace yourself as we show you pages from the California penal code,
looks like your boy Don Novey had some great lobbiest, check the dates,
and the language used to desccribe our inner city youth.

2.

These two California penal code citings are what we call "Designer Laws",
which by the way gives light to those who are familiar with the term
we've used in our other zine issues, called "Street Level Crimes".
So in 1988, Don Novey and his friends in the California Legislature
body started calling inner city youth of america "Terrorist" and
"Criminal street" gangmembers.

In the history of america only one group of people have used the
names of streets in their identification as gangs, in faxt, gangs
are a fact of human nature in many different cultures around the
world, however, only American inner city youth identify with street
culture.

Notice the language "Street Terrorism Enforcement and Prevention
Acct" by the legislature body describes our youth as "Criminal
Street Gangs", by way to state for a fact that all street gangs
started to operate and continue to operate for the sole purpose
of terrorizing the "peaceful citizens" of their neighbourhoods.

Julia Posted 7 years, 10 months ago. ✓ Mailed 7 years, 9 months ago   Favorite
Who better that to funnel drugs adn guns to than a bunch of criminal
street gang/terrorist in a so-called War on Crime climate authored
by the very source from which the drugs and guns came from.

If the death toll had not been factured into the original design,
we suffer from more than mere naivéte.

If Life Without The Possibility wasn't factured into the original
design, we must be blind.

3.

If Special Circumstance #22, which makes inner city youth death
elible wasn't conveniantly added into the original design, then
the rest of us are either stupid, conditioned to support, or
could care even less.

No matter what your position is on The Death Penalty, you may
want to inquire why #22 is the only one on the list that appears
in bold print in the penal code.
Or how did street level crimes become so important in 1978? Now
that year sounds familiar to those that are aware of the Stanley
"Tookie" Williams story, oh, don't trip, I'm also including an
interview of his last words with this work so you are able to
gauge how his generation of innner city youth was the 1st wave of
Black men to be unsuspecting victims of this horrific grand design
to literally legally murer inner city youth, and get paid billions
of dollars to capture and execute a new generation of inner city
youth, for which I am one of many.

I began engaging this creative writing project with a 3 part article
in the very 1st issue of the Write Or Die Zine Project, titled "New
Generation Pt 1, 2 &3." I want to push at you a quote from my own
work back in 2011 from New Generation pt,2.
I couldn't wait to respond to Piankhi's call to be expressive from
the position of condemned status because the word Nigger has
interrupted our progress as a people way before millions of youth
fall victim to the overall grand scheme to continue supremacy over
what continues to be concidered, by way of action, and not words,
unequal on earth.

engage my 2011 quote here:

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