The wrong man. A completely innocent 21 year old man.
Then they lied and claimed he shot at them. Because they are liars as well as murderers.
The wrong man. A completely innocent 21 year old man.
Then they lied and claimed he shot at them. Because they are liars as well as murderers.
Pro-Publica’s new report here.
I get it. You read some true crime news about some scumbag who tortures his own babies to death and think: take him out back and shoot him in the head. One and done. Easy.
But the reality of the death penalty is the U.S.A. is more like this:
The @LibertarianInst has been crushing it with #books.
Fool's Errand: Time to End the War in Afghanistan by @scotthortonshow
No Quarter: The Ravings of William Norman Grigg
The Great @RonPaul: The Scott Horton Show Interviews 2004 – 2019
Coming To Palestine by @SheldonRichman pic.twitter.com/acqE91pI2x
— Juggatarian (Principles over politics) (@NathanT1010) October 2, 2019
In Episode 70 Tommy once again looks at the Ukrainian story. Given all the crimes the US has committed, and the treatment of whistleblowers what makes this different? Quid pro quo? Or business interests?
Syria’s economic struggle.
Syria’s hopes for recovery remain frustrated by the country’s shift from armed conflict to economic struggle. Secure in its military victory, Damascus now faces an uphill battle for economic survival. A hollowed-out state increasingly self-finances through graft and predatory governance, while failing to provide even basic support for ordinary citizens and businesses. Such tactics keep the system afloat even as they undercut the economy’s ability to restart.
The regime’s foreign adversaries compound these woes through new rounds of economic punishment. As tightening Western sanctions inflict ever more tangible pain on Syrian society—from crippling fuel shortages to a powerful chilling effect on even benign investments—their political objectives grow more nebulous and implausible. Damascus’ allies are only somewhat more helpful: Determined to keep the regime intact but with no visible interest in a broader revival, Russia and Iran are laying claim instead to their share of the country’s dwindling resources—from oil and phosphates to maritime trade.
Ordinary Syrians are left to suffer the consequences and improvise solutions of their own. Increasingly isolated, they remain relentlessly entrepreneurial in navigating an ever more corrupt and stifling economic climate. While that endurance alone will not fuel a large-scale recovery, it is Syria’s best chance for a partial, tentative stabilization after almost a decade of economic freefall.
Full article here