Community Relations Service defunded starting in 2026

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The CRS (Community Relations Service) has been officially defunded.

For the uninitiated. The CRS was the racial censorship arm of the DOJ. Signed into law with the Civil Rights Act it's function was to threaten and silence the families of White victims of racial crimes.

Its stated goal was to "keep the peace" between races, but in reality it was only weaponized against White families. If you've ever seen a White victim's family immediately after a tragedy go on the news and say an obvious hate crime wasn't about race, that was the CRS at work.

 
I began writing about the Community Relations Service two years ago, and particularly the shameful case of Donald Giusti, who was kicked to death by a group of Somalis in a park in Maine. His family were pressured to make public statements disavowing the obvious racial motive in the case.

The CRS created a script that white families were forced to read from when their brothers, sisters, children and parents were subject to brutal violence simply because they were white. The CRS was perhaps the most egregious and hateful organ of anti-white racism in the US government. Good riddance to it.

 
Chad Crowley
@CCrowley100

I find it both ironic and vindicating that the seemingly harmlessly named Community Relations Service, created in 1964, now stands as living proof of what for decades were dismissed as “right-wing conspiracies,” even as the deeper networks that guided it remain only partly exposed.

We were told it was sheer fantasy to imagine that Washington directed demographic change, that it stage-managed the unrest which followed, that it choreographed demonstrations and pressed White communities into silence. Yet this is precisely what the Service carried out, and what it even recorded with pride in its own official history. What had been mocked as “paranoia” by the Regime and its acolytes has in truth been revealed as official policy.

Do you remember the Summer of Floyd, when American cities burned and whole districts were reduced to smoke and ruin? Billions in property were destroyed. Entire lives were overturned. Whole neighborhoods were left disfigured. We were told this was the breaking point, that one man’s death had become the spark which ignited decades of “grievance.” The media assured us it was spontaneous, an eruption of “sorrow” no one could have foreseen. Yet the mark of design was plain to any who looked with unclouded eyes. The marches moved with precision. The puerile slogans appeared as if printed in advance. The cameras stood ready before the first glass was broken, as if waiting for the spark to catch. Such orchestration was not chance, but the work of an agency whose charge from the beginning had been to guide disorder and to harness it in the service of demographic transformation.

(Now you know who paid for those pallets of bricks to be pre-positioned in Floyd riot areas. You did. - AF)

Christopher Caldwell was right to argue that the Civil Rights Act was not reform, not the “righting of centuries of injustice,” but a revolution by other means, a rival constitution erected beside the old. Buried in its provisions was the Community Relations Service, draped in the language of “conciliation” and “healing,” yet designed for enforcement. Its founders spoke without shame of preventing “White backlash,” and from its first moment it carried out that mission under a veil of secrecy. Its agents, styled conciliators, were exempt from the Freedom of Information Act. Its notes were destroyed as a matter of policy. Its officers were shielded by privileges of confidentiality that could be invoked even against Congress or the courts. What was presented as reconciliation was in truth the hidden apparatus of control, silencing those who resisted.

The record leaves little doubt. In Selma in 1965, it was CRS that arranged the march later remembered as a “moral awakening.” In Boston in the 1970s, as forced busing tore through neighborhoods, CRS placed itself between parents and authorities. It did not defend children who were assaulted but instead worked to prevent the community itself from resisting. In Florida during the Trayvon Martin affair, CRS coordinated demonstrations. It trained activists. It staged appearances that transformed a local case into a national drama. Each episode, passed down as the spontaneous voice of “conscience,” was in truth the managed product of the same bureau.

The reach of CRS extended further still. In the 1990s it was directly involved in the resettlement of Haitians paroled from detention, urging towns to absorb new arrivals and pressing families who had suffered violence to temper their words. The same hand appeared in Minnesota as Somali populations multiplied under federal placement. CRS agents arrived whenever resentment threatened to rise. Families were counseled into silence. Leaders were warned against protest. Entire communities were compelled to accept changes they had never chosen by any authentic “democratic process.” What was praised as “peace” was in truth submission. What was described as “justice” was only the quiet enforcement of obedience.

Until recently, every episode of unrest was neutralized by the CRS and its conciliators. Any act of resistance was quickly stifled, any spark that might have threatened to catch fire smothered before it could spread. What began as the management of “race relations” soon expanded into something larger, the shaping of the nation itself, until no corner of civic or cultural life was beyond its reach. The transformation was not confined to demographics, but to the very terms of belonging, the meaning of justice, and the bounds of truth itself.

The same methods that once silenced parents in Boston or neighbors in Minnesota had long since been absorbed into the wider Regime. When White victims fell to BIPOC violence, families were pressed to temper their words and communities were counseled into silence. That same logic was carried into the cult of “gender identity,” where mutilation was hailed as progress and rebellion against nature was paraded as liberation. Even the manifestos of trans killers were suppressed when they threatened to reveal too much, locked away lest they expose the ideology the Regime had come to sanctify. None of this was organic, nor the eruption of conscience, but the continuation of a program conceived in 1964, refined in the decades that followed, and carried forward long after the agency itself was scattered. The names changed, the banners shifted, but the hand that directed endured, shaping a people taught that to question was paranoia, and to resist was sin.

The agency has now been scattered, and as of October 2025 it appears abolished, or at least reduced to irrelevance. Yet its methods remain. Outrage is still managed, grief still scripted, and the American people are still reshaped without consent. The institution may have vanished in name, but the order it served and the ideology that sustained it endures. The agency is gone, but the hand remains.

 
Chad Crowley
@CCrowley100

I find it both ironic and vindicating that the seemingly harmlessly named Community Relations Service, created in 1964, now stands as living proof of what for decades were dismissed as “right-wing conspiracies,” even as the deeper networks that guided it remain only partly exposed.

Do we have proof of anything, besides the existence of the CRS?

I haven't really been paying attention to this. Has anyone come forward? Do we have any documents etc?

Or is it basically just speculation based on the fact that their "mediations" are immune to FOIA?
 
Do we have proof of anything, besides the existence of the CRS?

I haven't really been paying attention to this. Has anyone come forward? Do we have any documents etc?

Or is it basically just speculation based on the fact that their "mediations" are immune to FOIA?

The people subject to CRS haranguing were made to sign NDAs, so hard proof will be slow in coming out.

Paying attention? No shit. I was utterly unaware of this.

 
Chad Crowley
@CCrowley100
·
1h
The Community Relations Service was the administrative engine of the Civil Rights Revolution.

Created under Title X of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, it translated a new moral creed into political fact. Though modest in scale and little known to the public, it became the quiet lever through which the structure of American life was rearranged. How such a small bureau came to wield influence across the nation remains a question rarely asked and even more rarely understood. The answer lies not in what it declared but in what it concealed. The Service was no ordinary department of government; it was the unseen arm through which the transformation of American society was administered. It ruled not by promulgating law or issuing verdicts but through a continuous process of procedure, persuasion, and bureaucratic presence. It turned sentiment into policy, ideals into enforceable norms, and moral aspiration into administrative compulsion without leaving the visible mark of coercion.

To the public it appeared as a bureau of conciliation, a neutral body meant to soothe tensions and guide desegregation. In reality it was the federal mechanism that carried that moral program from theory into practice, managing local life so that national directives could become social reality. It claimed to mediate but in truth administered; it spoke the language of harmony while ensuring compliance. What it lacked in statutory mandate it made up for in administrative discretion, and within that discretion it exercised an authority more absolute than any that could be imposed by law.

Both of its first directors were African American, and their appointments revealed the ideological and symbolic purpose of the institution. Roger Wilkins, a civil rights attorney and former NAACP official, became one of the highest-ranking African Americans in government. His successor, Ben Holman, one of the first nationally prominent Black journalists and a civil rights advocate, had worked for CBS and NBC before entering the Department of Justice. Each combined activism with bureaucratic skill. Under their leadership the Service evolved into a dual instrument, at once a means of policy enforcement and a tool for narrative control. The agency’s legitimacy rested on the belief that reconciliation required centralized direction, and its authority was sustained by the conviction that only through control of language could order be maintained.

The structure of the agency was designed to remove it from ordinary oversight. It held no prosecutorial power, no judicial standing, and no statutory duty to maintain public records. That omission was not accidental; it was the condition of its authority. Legal power invites procedure, indictments, hearings, discovery, and appeal. Bureaucratic power, by contrast, thrives in silence. The Service occupied that silence between law and administration, a void in which decisions could be made without verdicts and influence could be exercised without accountability. In that space, responsibility could be deferred indefinitely, and the appearance of neutrality could conceal the exercise of coercion.

Title X, Section 1004 of the Civil Rights Act provided the legal pretext for this design. It authorized the Service to act “in confidence and without publicity,” and required that “all information acquired shall be held confidential.” This clause created a statutory veil that placed the agency beyond the reach of public records law, the Freedom of Information Act, and even direct congressional inquiry. Its mediators enjoyed privileges ordinarily reserved for prosecutors and intelligence officers. They could refuse testimony, destroy notes at the conclusion of a case, and deny the existence of internal correspondence. In legal terms this amounted to non-justiciability, a sphere of action beyond judicial review. Confidentiality, described publicly as a condition of peace, became in practice the legal foundation of impunity.

Within this system, persuasion functioned as compulsion. Federal mediators met privately with governors, mayors, police chiefs, and school boards to advise them on the execution of federal policy. Advice, however, carried the force of dependence. Those who conformed retained access to federal money and favorable administrative treatment, while those who resisted encountered investigation, audit, or the sudden withdrawal of assistance. The Service did not threaten; it implied. It did not prosecute; it directed. By rewarding obedience and punishing defiance through quiet bureaucratic means, it achieved outcomes that no statute could compel and no court could review.

The method revealed itself most clearly during the urban unrest of the late 1960s. When riots erupted in Detroit and Newark, the Service appeared as mediator but acted as coordinator. Its representatives decided which figures would be amplified, what language the press would employ, and how the public would interpret the disorder. The result was not the restoration of order but the orchestration of narrative. What appeared to be spontaneous upheaval was in fact shaped by policy, framed to sanctify one side and restrain the other. Cities learned that stability depended upon cooperation with Washington and that peace would arrive only on federal terms.

This system reached its most explicit form in Boston during the desegregation crisis of the 1970s. When a federal court ordered forced busing, the Service was dispatched to secure compliance under the pretense of conciliation. Its mediators met privately with judges, administrators, and police officials. There were no written directives or minutes, yet those who opposed the program soon encountered fiscal penalties, withheld funds, and procedural obstructions. Boston discovered that solvency was inseparable from submission. Federal power had found an instrument that could impose policy without ever invoking law.

By the 1990s, the same administrative logic had expanded into new domains. The Service began cooperating with immigration and refugee programs to manage demographic transformation in local communities. Many towns found their populations altered without consultation or consent. When opposition arose, mediators arrived to “reduce tensions.” Their purpose was not to defend the local population but to suppress collective resistance. What had begun as racial administration had matured into the governance of society itself.

Under Ben Holman the agency refined what became its most enduring power: the control of perception. A journalist by training, Holman established “media relations” offices within the Department of Justice to standardize coverage of racial conflict. Reporters were given private briefings, suggested phrasing, and introductions to approved community representatives. Coverage that emphasized unity and moral progress was widely disseminated, while accounts that described resentment or administrative manipulation were quietly set aside. The Service understood that by defining an event, it could determine how it would be remembered. Through control of language it came to control reality.

These powers expanded further under the Obama administration. The Matthew Shepard and James Byrd Jr. Hate Crimes Prevention Act of 2009 extended the Service’s jurisdiction to disputes involving religion, sexuality, and gender identity. The same procedural apparatus once used to impose racial integration was now applied to enforce ideological conformity across every sphere of public life. Mediators entered schools, workplaces, and municipal offices under the language of de-escalation and understanding. Their true purpose was to normalize the new moral order, ensuring that resistance would appear not as dissent but as pathology.

By this stage, the nature of the institution was plain. It had ceased to function as a temporary agency and had become the model for a new form of rule. The Civil Rights Act had been enacted as a body of statutory law, yet it operated as a constitutional revision achieved through administration, what Christopher Caldwell has aptly called a rival constitution. Law gave way to procedure, and procedure became the instrument of moral supervision. The Service demonstrated that power could be exercised without legislation, that obedience could be secured without prosecution, and that sovereignty could reside in those who manage perception rather than those who command armies. What began as an appeal to conscience had evolved into an enduring system of control.

By October 2025 the agency had been quietly dissolved, not as a failure but as the conclusion of its work. Its disappearance carried no sense of defeat, for the order it served had already been secured. The structures it created no longer required its oversight. Every department that governs by confidentiality, every program that ties compliance to federal money, and every campaign that steers public opinion through coordinated language bears its imprint. The Service did not merely enforce the Civil Rights Revolution; it perfected it. Through it, the Revolution achieved permanence, institutionalizing a mode of rule that governs not through law or consent but through the invisible hand of procedural coercion and the management of belief.

 
Pretty clever not gonna lie. I would say the cleverness bears a certain signature
 
Chad Crowley
@CCrowley100
·
56m
1/ America lives under two rival and irreconcilable constitutions: the original, and the one imposed by force through the Civil Rights Act of 1964.

The postwar order rested upon an illusion of continuity, a dream of permanence concealing the slow decay of the Republic beneath it. Beneath the surface of prosperity and the rhetoric of liberty, the foundations of the old order had already begun to crumble.

What Christopher Caldwell accomplishes in The Age of Entitlement: America Since the Sixties is not merely to trace this decline but to reveal the mechanism by which it occurred. Written with the restraint of a man long accustomed to respectable discourse, the book nonetheless advances one of the most subversive theses to appear from the American Right in half a century: that the Civil Rights Act of 1964 created a second constitution, a rival order of law and morality, and that this new constitution has displaced the old in practice, leaving behind only the symbols and ceremonies of the former Republic.

Caldwell is no pamphleteer. A veteran of The Weekly Standard and a contributor to The New York Times, he occupies that peculiar place in American letters reserved for men who think carefully yet are punished for seeing too clearly. It was inevitable, therefore, that his book would be met with hysteria. The New York Times called it “an overwrought and strangely airless book” that “leads nowhere.” The Washington Examiner dismissed it as “Trumpism for highbrows.” Yet such reactions reveal less about Caldwell than about the clerisy he exposes. The fury of his reviewers testifies to the truth of his insight; he has touched the sacred nerve of the modern order, the moral absolutism of civil rights, which polite society forbids anyone to question.

 
Chad Crowley
@CCrowley100
2/ In its surface structure, The Age of Entitlement is a history of America from the assassination of John F. Kennedy to the rise of Donald Trump. But beneath its chronology lies a moral and constitutional argument of far greater consequence. Caldwell shows how the civil rights movement, ostensibly a campaign for racial equality, became the model for an entirely new form of governance in which law is subordinate to moral feeling and the state exists to enforce a vision of universal redemption. What began as an appeal to conscience was institutionalized as a bureaucracy of coercion. Out of the ruins of segregation arose a new elite of administrators, judges, and corporate patrons who discovered that the rhetoric of justice could serve as the instrument of power.

Caldwell’s claim that the Civil Rights Act became a Second Constitution was not metaphorical. The law was drafted as a limited measure; its framers promised it would not create quotas or destroy private association. Yet once enacted, it expanded without limit, its implications treated by the courts with the same reverence once reserved for the Bill of Rights. Through the Civil Rights Act, federal authority extended into every sphere of private life, reaching from employment and education to housing, speech, and even thought, until it became impossible to act freely without transgressing the new moral code. What was once the liberty of the citizen became the privilege of the compliant. The old constitution, with its balance of powers and jealous regard for local autonomy, was hollowed out from within by a rival order of legislation, precedent, and bureaucratic fiat.

This development, Caldwell observes, was not the product of a sudden coup but of moral transformation. The Civil Rights Act fused law and religion, replacing the Constitution’s procedural neutrality with a creed of emotional righteousness. To oppose its expansion was to sin. In this sense, the regime it founded was theological rather than legal; its authority derived not from consent but from sanctity. The language of rights replaced the language of reason, and the courts came to interpret feeling as fact. The civil rights order became a form of political mysticism, an instrument of redemption that demands endless confession and sacrifice.

 
Chad Crowley
@CCrowley100
3/ Yet Caldwell’s history does not confine itself to race. He sees in the civil rights movement the template for every subsequent revolution of the modern Left: feminism, gay liberation, immigration, and the cult of diversity. Each borrowed the moral prestige of the original movement while expanding its reach. Once every grievance could be recast as a claim of civil rights, politics itself was transformed into litigation. The result is a system that perpetuates conflict rather than resolving it, for the machinery of reform depends upon perpetual transgression. In this sense, the United States after 1964 became an empire of moral administrators, feeding upon its own guilt, forever declaring new forms of injustice to justify its own existence.

The transformation was not confined to government. Caldwell shows how finance, commerce, and popular culture absorbed and reproduced the new morality. Corporations discovered that public professions of virtue could protect them from criticism and serve as profitable spectacle. Universities institutionalized the language of grievance and exported it through generations of bureaucrats and consultants. The entertainment industry converted rebellion into product, turning moral revolt into fashion. By the 1990s, the vocabulary of civil rights had merged entirely with the logic of consumption. Diversity was no longer the cry of the oppressed but the brand of the ruling class.

In this synthesis of moralism and capitalism, Caldwell identifies the true engine of the post-1960s order. The financialization of the economy, the rise of debt-driven consumption, and the global outsourcing of industry all advanced under the same moral canopy that forbade criticism of the new social dispensation. Reagan, whom conservatives remember as their champion, appears in Caldwell’s account as the paradoxical executor of this revolution. By expanding credit and removing fiscal restraint, Reagan enabled America to finance its new moral order with borrowed money. Civil rights became not only a spiritual imperative but an economic one; the cost of maintaining equality was deferred indefinitely into debt. The conservative counterrevolution was thus neutralized from the start, for it had accepted the premises of the regime it imagined to oppose.

 
Chad Crowley
@CCrowley100
4/ One of Caldwell’s greatest strengths lies in his refusal to romanticize a “good” civil rights movement or to pretend it was corrupted by later radicals. He sees that affirmative action and political correctness were not deviations from the movement but its natural fulfillment. They arose from the same logic that replaced equality before the law with the pursuit of equality in results. What changed was not legal form but moral intent. Once law was used to correct the sins of history, its reach could never be contained. The state assumed the role of redeemer, and the citizen became the subject of its moral correction.

Caldwell’s reading of generational change cuts through the usual mythology. The upheavals of the 1960s are often blamed on the Baby Boomers, yet the Civil Rights Act was conceived and enacted by their parents, the so-called Greatest Generation. Their faith in planning and progress built the postwar order that later collapsed. The Boomers did not rebel against that order so much as adapt it. They inherited a revolution written into law and gave it cultural expression. The moralism of their parents returned in new forms, sentimental rather than civic, but carrying the same impulse to reshape mankind.

Caldwell’s outlook is severe, yet not hopeless. He writes to expose what habit and fear have concealed. The book ends not with a prediction but with a question: whether a nation can live under two constitutions at once. The answer is found in the history he tells. A people divided by law will soon be divided in spirit, and a government that serves two moralities cannot endure. What now passes for political conflict is the expression of that deeper division.

He offers no remedy, but the value of his work lies in how clearly and concisely he reveals the engine of American decline. He names what had long gone unnamed and traces its course from moral vision to administrative control. Few writers of his generation have written with such discipline. The Age of Entitlement is therefore more than a record of decay; it is a study of how belief becomes law and how law, untempered by limit, turns to domination. It recalls what was lost in the 1960s: confidence in freedom itself and the understanding that justice, when freed from restraint, becomes its own form of tyranny.

Those who seek to understand how a Republic became a moral empire will find in Caldwell’s book both explanation and judgment. It belongs to that narrow line of works that expose the founding illusion of the modern age without fear of its censors. The world the civil rights movement left behind was not a redeemed America, but a converted one, governed by a religious sanctity where once it was governed by law, and by that conversion deprived of its liberty. Yet what has been imposed by illusion can be undone by truth. The second constitution must fall, and the first must rise again, if the Republic is to live.

 
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