Bird joined Bea and I on our show I Done Told You. We talk about airport employees, bomb sniffing dogs, and NYC. If you want more I Done Told You become a patron. Bird Twitter Timeline Earth 19 Skills Pdf Autonomy Course Critical Thinking Course Donate Patreon...
Well he ran out of gas so they electro-shock tortured him to death. Because it was government employees who did it, it is therefore "reasonable." You have no rights they are bound to respect.
And gets away with it of course because not even government employees have any rights that another government employee is bound to respect. And you wonder why BLM and the Boogaloo boys raise their fists together half the time: the government is evil.
Autistic boy having a temper tantrum. His security force suffocates him to death. No harm. No foul. Government employees can murder whoever they want. That's the law.
Some total scumbag called the police on a man for "repeatedly starting" it in his own driveway. But who are the police? Is is Andy Griffith and Don Knotts come to keep the peace? No. It's the American Nazi Communist Gestapo Stormtroopers of Death With Total Immunity...
An unarmed man. Shot him right there in broad daylight. There is a 100% chance the cop will get away with it because he is a government employee. https://youtu.be/umGvDDvMXGE
The ground is moving under American politics, and the fault line runs straight through U.S. foreign policy. We unpack how the Israel–Gaza war turned into a domestic litmus test that hardens the left and the right while squeezing the center into brittle talking points....
Corporate taxes and other taxes on investment constitute double and sometimes triple taxation. That's more unjust than taxation of labor or consumption. Businesses can't pay taxes; only people can. But who pays business taxes need bear no relation to whom the...
Responsible Statecraft tends to have a more common sense approach to the profligate spending on the part of the American defense establishment. The retirement of the entire ICBM arm and cancellation of the Sentinel successor would save enormous amounts of money wasted...
Threats are easy. Supply chains, deterrence math, and real endgames are not. We dive into the rising talk of U.S. strikes on Venezuela and why public saber-rattling can lock leaders into dangerous escalations they can’t control. From leaked authorizations to carrier...
Power doesn’t just show up in elections; it builds laboratories. We dive into how New York City became a proving ground for a fusion of finance, philanthropy, and policing that later spread across the country—then map how that same logic now shapes narratives around...