Okay, well it was 2019. I sure don't mean to shame the victim for that. It's easy to say you would rather die than submit to some pig in such an undignified manner, but she very well could have died, and surely has other people that she's responsible for. 100% of the responsibility is on the criminal, Officer Levi Huffine, who of course, is not being charged with any crime at all. Matt Agorist at the FTP: Aurora, CO — A video released this week was so disturbing that even Aurora Police Chief Vanessa Wilson is speaking out about it, referring to what happened to a woman in it as “torture.”...
Gen. Stanley McChrystal, Who Tripled and Still Lost the Afghan War, Endorses Biden, Says He Listens to His Military Betters Better
The president is a terrible person and a terrible president. But boy does he have the right enemies.
Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron is Guilty Accessory to Murder of Breonna Taylor
He should be imprisoned for the rest of his life along with his co-conspirators, the trigger-men, Jonathan Mattingly and Myles Cosgrove. New York magazine: It’s getting harder to deny the likelihood that Kentucky attorney general Daniel Cameron lied, and lied multiple times, when he explained why a grand jury decided not to charge any police officer with a crime for killing Breonna Taylor. Cameron’s office presented evidence to the jury, but the only criminal charges he announced last week were against Brett Hankison, the Louisville officer who fired blindly into Taylor’s apartment on March...
The ‘Black Bloc’ Anarchists Who Might As Well Be Working For the Republicans
I feel sorry for the black people from the neighborhood who just want the cops to stop murdering them but who -- at least in many major cities -- cannot have a peaceful protest without white anarcho-communists coming and turning the place into a live-action Trump commercial. I used to know some of the left-anarchists who went to Seattle in 1999 for the WTO protest and such. They were good kids mostly, but they don't know what they're talking about or what role they're really playing. But they never started major riots or set fires the way these people are now. And of course the worse the...
9/28/20 Kevin Gosztola: Week Four of the Assange Extradition Hearing
Kevin Gosztola is back for another update on Julian Assange's extradition hearing, where most recently the defense has been debunking the prosecution's claim that Assange engaged in a hacking scheme with Chelsea Manning. Gosztola says the defense was able to establish the baselessness of this claim, based in part on the fact that WikiLeaks had already published just about everything Manning leaked to them before the supposed hacking would have taken place. Gosztola fears that despite this small victory, the prosecution will simply move on to something else, given that their entire case seems...
9/25/20 Gilbert Doctorow on the US Government’s Provocative Russia Policy
Gilbert Doctorow discusses the latest aggressive maneuvers being carried out by the U.S. government and its allies toward Russia. Doctorow says that the flying of planes near Russia's border just for intelligence gathering is quite common and relatively unthreatening—but lately America has been sending bombers to those same areas, which actively engage their weapons systems in a way that Russia can detect. Doctorow says that the only possible motive for doing this is to send the message that America is still in charge, and that our NATO allies, who accompany U.S. planes on many of these...
Vice: The Only Witness Who Heard Police Announce Themselves at Breonna Taylor’s Door Changed His Story
Aarin Sarpee initially told investigators that he didn't hear police say who they were before ramming through Taylor's door. Two months later, he drastically changed his recollection.
9/25/20 Jessica Katzenstein on the Militarization of American Police
Scott talks to Jessica Katzenstein from the Costs of War Project about her recent paper on the effects of America's foreign wars on police militarization. She and Scott trace police militarization to the escalation of the war on drugs in the 1990s, when SWAT raids became especially prevalent. Today that trend has reached all-time highs, with Katzenstein estimating 60,000 raids per year. With so much military equipment being funneled to police departments from the military and Homeland Security, Scott describes the situation as hardly any different than a foreign army patrolling—and...









