March 2011
Here's a crime scene cleanup blog shot at criminality
as well as crime scene cleanup corruption in government. Nothing has
changed on this account this entire year.
A criminality page now exists at Crime Scene Cleanup's Criminality
web page. Crime scene cleanup as a janitorial function remains too
narrow a focus for such an important subject. We find county government
employees, almost nationwide, have created their own brokering monopoly
over crime scene cleanup, blood cleanup, death cleanup, suicide cleanup, trauma cleanup, and decomposition cleanup.
In this criminality vain I have added a new focus to crime scene cleanup's How Crime Scene Cleanup Works.
I'm developing a theme to help explain the role of political and
religious ideologies in our though processes. Most specifically, my
interest in ideological manipulation of masses by corporate media comes
to mind. I explain how this powerful media works by explaining the
conflict between religion and Darwinism, then Lysenkoism and biological
science.
It takes time to develop a them with many characters
and many incidents. Confronting half-truths and ignorance reminds me of
confronting Orange County consumer fraud in death cleanup. Here I will add characters like Charles Lyell to
round out Charles Darwin and Alfred Russell Wallace. The importance of
Lyell to Darwin and Wallace remains as great with Lyell as with Sir Thomas Malthus.
San Bernardino's Shame
Here comes a homicide cleanup
call from San Bernardino. I know already, this caller has no money. If
they had money, coroner's employees would have kept this family homicide
for their own crime scene cleanup company.
I've explained it all too fully on my Orange County Consumer Fraud pages. It definitely applies to San Bernardino's poor tax payers, which must be a growing tribe these days.
It's not every day that I offer my services
for free -- pro bono. It's not every day a father beats his son to death
with a garden hole. It's not that I'm a do-gooders or a good guy. I
simply cannot stand this situation, as existential as any situation
gets. Yes, people are hell.
Imagine coming home to find your father in a
rage; imagine how you would feel watching him chase your big brother
into your family's garage. Your brother broadcasts his terror as it
cascades into loud, animal-like groans; finally your brother's dying
whimpers remove all doubt. Dad fatally wounded his first born. Now, you
'er next. You run.
At the gate you fumble with the gate's catch
lock, too long. Dad's already caught your right collar bone with his
long-handles hole. Dull, yes, painful, yes. Painful, yes. Now you fell
yourself losing consciousness. Dad's not done. Another blow catches chin
as you fall against the gate's resistance to your weight. Before you've
given up screaming for mercy, dad's off for another son; another son
joins his siblings as dad's first long-handled hole whacks its
rust-covered, cutting edge squarely in his child's mouth an nose. This
time there's no gate closing off his prey's escape. This time that
horrific, bloody whack sends his 96 pound on backwards off his feet.
Sirens.
More sirens.
Dad's off to the house; there's more work in
the house for his long-handled hole. Weeding, no. Bludgeoning unto
death, yes. Three females scatter; each to their own room; each in their
own way, seek mercy, escape for the hatchet affects. If there's a God,
this scene must have appeared somewhere in his biblical language, but
where?
Sophecles, Freud, have you given us a picture
of this scene and somehow we've missed it; missed the forthcoming
slaughter in San Bernardino?
It's mine now. The San Bernardino Coroner's
guys didn't want it. They's got money-making homicides, suicides, and
unattended deaths to refer. Me, I have no county employees referring to
me because I'm not of their tribe; I don't want to be of their tribe.
I'll clean it myself so a mother of a dead son, two critically wounded
sons, two psychologically traumatized daughters, and she suffer no more
on dad's account.
Eddie Evans
Crime Scene Cleanup Ethics
Mom taught us never to hate the bad guys. It
eats away at a guy, anyway. Mom never cleaned up gory crime scenes,
either. So I'll divide this pie into equitable amounts for crime scene
cleanup observations and assumptions, and my mom's injunction against
hating.
A new category arose this morning: Better
unborn. Better unborn as a phrase means so much more than "better dead."
It's not like I'm wishing an ultimate outcome on someone I should
depise; it's an outcome without consequences in so many ways. Besides,
look at all the harm reduction removed from our world by the phrase,
"better unborn."
Anyone reading this far will surmise I'm
playing with words and a social reality. Once born, an infant enters
institutions formed by buildings, social bonds, language, ideology,
culture that is. Ecological realities far too complex to figure out
belong to a newborn's world.. This last comment on ecology and figuring
out what's "too complex" leads me to that striking observation by Berry
Commoner, a one-time environmental, presidential contender:
Nature is very complex to think about, and probably more complex than we can think.
I suppose Commoner had something like this in mind: We don't know what we don't know.
We Don't Know What We Don't Know
What's more, we really do not know what we do not know. This sentence carries much more meaning than realized at first glance. It has meaning beyond its first meaning. It has "meta-meaning" behind it. It's a matter of staying with it to gain insight from its deeper meaning. Once we get beyond its superficial meaning, a new dimension in language's power and mental acquisition develops. It's an epistemological meaning. An idea with an idea
- We don't know X.
- We don't know that we don't know X.
I could be saying, "X is unborn; X never existed." But that's not what I'm trying to get at. I'm saying that whether or not "X" may or may not be known -- knowable -- We don't know that we don't know X.
Examples
Suppose there's a superman somewhere in our universe.
- I don't know about superman.I don't
- I know that I don't know about superman.
This does not qualify as "X." I at least have a cultural background telling about bigger-than-life characters like superman.
Example
- I think I know about tsunamis.
- I don't know that I don't know about tsunamis.
Example
- I don't nuclear reactors break.
- I don't know that I don't know nuclear reactors break.
Remember, I invoked Berry Commoner's saying, "Nature is very complex to think about, and probably more complex that we can think. " He's giving us a hint that we don't know what we don't know about nature; so what are we doing playing with nature as if it's some sort of tinker-toy?
It's not that anything in nature belongs to the unborn. Simply an extant in nature implies a birthing, a creation, a development of some sort. It's what's going on behind nature, within nature where our hott7-totty, arrogant pee-brains cannot see, let alone think about.
March 29, 2011
Japan grows hotter by the day. Government remains unreliable. Drinking water contamination now measures higher than at any level ever on Earth. Sea water grows more contaminated around a single plant, and its reach remains unknown. This is crime scene cleanup by any other name.
Japanese citizens in Los Angeles remain unaware of their nation's true damage. What they now know is that the nuke's CEO claims they did nothing wrong and the government OK'd what their plants. So now it's their government's fault.
Little do they know that Orange County Government lies as well or better than their own government.
Try Los Angeles marble polishing for quick crime scene cleanup results on marble floors.
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