This is the “law and order” Donald Trump is running on
May 24, 2024
Donald Trump invited two rappers who are members of the 8 Trey Crips gang onstage with him at his rally in the Bronx yesterday. Tegan “Sleepy Hallow” Chambers did eight months in prison on charges of gun possession and criminal conspiracy. Michael “Sheff G” Williams served two years in prison for criminal possession of a firearm. Both men were arrested last year along with 32 other gang members in a 140-count indictment for gang activity, murder, and conspiracy.
“Sheff G” Williams was released on a $1 million bond after being arrested on conspiracy charges “and multiple counts of murder, assault and criminal possession of a weapon in the case covering 27 different acts of violence — including a dozen shootings,” according to a report in the New York Daily News. “Sleepy Hallow” Chambers put up a $150,000 bond and was released on conspiracy charges as part of the larger gang indictment. According to The Source, both men were “connected to 27 occasions of violence, which included at minimum a dozen shootings. The arrested men and women are alleged members of 8 Trey Crips and 9 Way gangs.”
According to the Daily News, the two rappers treated fellow gang members to a dinner at a steakhouse called The Brooklyn Chophouse to celebrate a 2020 gang shooting that killed one man and injured five others. Brooklyn District Attorney Eric Gonzales said that one gang member was rewarded at the dinner with a gold chain and medallion emblazoned with the name of the street the dead rival gang member had lived on. “Sheff G takes the shooters from this incident and some other gang members for a very lavish steak dinner where they celebrate the score against their rivals,” Gonzalez told the press at the time of the indictment. “Sheff G” Williams is also charged with being the getaway driver in another shooting on Flatbush Avenue in 2021, during which three gang members got out of William’s Trackhawk SUV and shot at a rival gang member, but instead hit two innocent bystanders. “Sheff G” Williams is facing up to 25 years in prison, according to Gonzales.
Donald Trump called “Sheff G” Williams and “Sleepy Hallow” Chambers up on the rally stage with him in the Bronx yesterday. Both men used the occasion to endorse Trump for president, Chambers calling out to the crowd, “make America great again.” “Sheff G” Williams took the microphone from Trump and said, “One thing I want to say, they’re always going to whisper your wins and shout your failures. Trump’s gonna shout the wins for all of us.”
According to the 140-count indictment, rap lyrics written and recorded by “Sheff G” from his 2018 song, “For the Members” were used in text messages as “a message about committing shooting on behalf of the 8 Trey Crips.” Here is an excerpt from “For the Members:”
We sendin’ shots, used to do it for fun
Now we send shots, empty clip ’til he done
Eye for a eye, but two for a shooter
Tell floss gang
Free Mani, do 20 for gang gang
Homicides that got started from gangbangin’
Heard they got shooters who bang-bangin’
Have my hitters come hit a select stranger
They act silly, act silly, but really when we pull up, ambulance stretch ’em all out
Call up billy cause billy gon’ bully for fizzy knock ’em all out
And now the author of these lyrics has enthusiastically endorsed the Republican Party’s so-called “law and order” candidate for president, Donald Trump.
Remembering the dead
May 27, 2024
Stars and Stripes
This is a photo of my grandfather, Gen. Lucian K. Truscott Jr., giving the Memorial Day address at the Anzio/Nettuno cemetery on May 31, 1945. As you can see in the photo, the microphone stand is to his left. He had stepped away from the microphone and had turned to address the fallen soldiers buried in the cemetery. He spoke unaided by amplification, because he didn’t need it. The men and women he addressed were dead, many of them killed when he was their commander at Anzio. Stars and Stripes reported on the remarks he made to assembled dignitaries before turning to address the dead: “All over the world our soldiers sleep beneath the crosses. It is a challenge to us – all allied nations– to ensure that they do not and have not died in vain.”
We must turn to the famous Army cartoonist Bill Mauldin, who witnessed the ceremony, and wrote about it in his memoir “The Brass Ring” to hear what happened next.
“There were about twenty thousand American graves. Families hadn’t started digging up the bodies and bringing them home,” Mauldin wrote in his 1971 memoir.
“Before the stand were spectator benches, with a number of camp chairs down front for VIPs, including several members of the Senate Armed Services Committee. When Truscott spoke he turned away from the visitors and addressed himself to the corpses he had commanded here. It was the most moving gesture I ever saw. It came from a hard-boiled old man who was incapable of planned dramatics,” Mauldin wrote.
“The general’s remarks were brief and extemporaneous. He apologized to the dead men for their presence here. He said everybody tells leaders it is not their fault that men get killed in war, but that every leader knows in his heart this is not altogether true.
“He said he hoped anybody here through any mistake of his would forgive him, but he realized that was asking a hell of a lot under the circumstances. He would not speak about the glorious dead because he didn’t see much glory in getting killed if you were in your late teens or early twenties. He promised that if in the future he ran into anybody, especially old men, who thought death in battle was glorious, he would straighten them out. He said he thought that was the least he could do.”
The “hard-boiled old man” Mauldin describes was 50 years old. Bill Mauldin was 23.
Grandpa had a great feel for the men and women who served under him. He was known among war correspondents as “the soldier’s soldier” because of his frequent appearances at the front lines. He was taciturn and unshowy. In the photograph above, he is wearing the standard Army duty uniform of the time: tan gabardine trousers, known as “pinks,” his Eisenhower jacket, a tan uniform shirt and a tie.
In his memoir, “Command Missions,” Grandpa expressed his admiration for the soldiers he had led into battle in typically direct and frank language:
“The American soldier did not like war. He dreaded the uncertainty, danger, and hardship. He was rather resentful of military discipline and its interference with his individual liberties. He hated the monotony of military training and the physical effort it required. When asked why he was fighting, the answer was as often as not, “because I have to.” He may not have known just why he was in Africa, or Italy, or elsewhere, but he appreciated well enough why he was fighting. War had been forced on the country at Pearl Harbor; like others, he had to do his part toward winning it. Disliking war, discipline, training, discomfort, and hardship, the American soldier accepted them philosophically as aspects of a disagreeable task to which he applied his native ingenuity and resourcefulness. The American soldier demonstrated that, properly equipped, trained, and led, he has no superior among all the armies of the world.”
On this day, we pay tribute to all the American soldiers who died in this nation’s wars defending the Constitution to which they had pledged their lives. They will never be forgotten.