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you’d never have a Republican elected in this country again

Name: Anonymous 2020-04-17 11:22

http://archive.is -> https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2020/03/31/want-proof-that-republicans-want-suppress-voters-just-ask-trump/
In an interview on “Fox & Friends,” Trump referenced proposals from Democrats in the coronavirus stimulus negotiations that would have vastly increased funding for absentee and vote-by-mail options. The final package included $400 million for the effort, which was far less than what Democrats had sought.
“The things they had in there were crazy,” Trump said. “They had things — levels of voting that, if you ever agreed to it, you’d never have a Republican elected in this country again.”

levels of voting that, if you ever agreed to it, you’d never have a Republican elected in this country again

Name: Anonymous 2020-04-17 11:44

Name: Anonymous 2020-04-17 12:12

No shit there's a change in the demography of the country. In a few years the US will be Brasil.

Name: Anonymous 2020-04-17 12:22

>>3
Brasil elected a far-right president in the last election, but he won the popular vote.

Name: Anonymous 2020-04-17 13:04

>>4
... after 15 years of communism which Brasil won't recover from.

If only you knew how bad things really are.

Name: Anonymous 2020-04-17 13:30

>>5
I don't know the difference between communism and socialism.
ok

Name: Anonymous 2020-04-17 13:55

>>6
They, their political enemies and the people call them communists so I call them communists.

The world cares little about your definition. The meaning depends on the context.

Name: Anonymous 2020-04-17 20:26

http://archive.is -> https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2020/03/30/trump-voting-republicans/
Last year, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) dismissed Democrats’ proposal to make Election Day a federal holiday, suggesting it was intended to help them win elections — apparently by increasing turnout.
“This is the Democrat plan to restore democracy?” McConnell said with a laugh. “A power grab that’s smelling more and more like exactly what it is.”
McConnell at the time referred to the underlying bill as the “Democrat Politician Protection Act.”

proposal to make Election Day a federal holiday
A power grab

Sasuga GOP.

Name: Anonymous 2020-04-18 5:28

>>6
I don't know the difference between social democracy and socialism.
Fucking liberals.

Name: Anonymous 2020-04-18 12:35

>>9
Here's why your point is superficial. The context is the previous almost 15 year period of leftist rule. The ruling party was PT, Partido dos Trabalhadores, not PSDB, Partido da Social Democracia Brasileira, who were the main opposition. The one with "social democracy" in the name has since moved to the right of its original position as far as it could afford, and to try to cover this had to resort to retreating into the defense that "left" and "right" are outdated labels, so "please stop looking at which one now applies to us, pretty please".

Name: Anonymous 2020-04-18 22:19

>>10
You're judging parties purely by the words in their name and you're calling people who realise both PT and PSDB were centrist social democrats rather than ``leftist'' superficial?

Name: Anonymous 2020-04-18 22:41

>>11
purely by the words in their name
>> has since moved to the right of its original position as far as it could afford
sasuga reading comprehension

It's much simpler than that. I judge someone who is desperate to try to save face by trying to include PT under "centrist" to be an incompetent troll with very poor bait.

Name: Anonymous 2020-04-18 22:49

To help locate the video, this article
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/mar/30/trump-republican-party-voting-reform-coronavirus
is from "Mon 30 Mar 2020 19.32 BST" and states
Donald Trump admitted on Monday that making it easier to vote in America would hurt the Republican party.
So the Fox & Friends in question should be from 30 Mar 2020. The article also provides more text that might be useful in a speech-to-text search.
“The things they had in there were crazy. They had things, levels of voting that if you’d ever agreed to it, you’d never have a Republican elected in this country again,” Trump said during an appearance on Fox & Friends. “They had things in there about election days and what you do and all sorts of clawbacks. They had things that were just totally crazy and had nothing to do with workers that lost their jobs and companies that we have to save.”

Name: Anonymous 2020-04-19 6:32

>>12
sasuga reading comprehension
Good irony.

PT are social democrats and social democrats are centrists. Sorry if this is too difficult for someone who's been subsisting on a steady diet of Earnest Voice.

Name: Anonymous 2020-04-19 10:49

https://veja.abril.com.br/blog/reinaldo/chomsky-o-velhinho-picareta/

E, de resto, o PT não é social-democrata coisa nenhuma. Continua a ser um partido de esquerda, só que mais esperto do que Chomsky. Que nem isso entendeu direito.

http://revistaepoca.globo.com/Revista/Epoca/0,,EDG77351-5855,00-O+PT+E+A+MAIOR+INVENCAO+POLITICORELIGIOSA+DO+BRASIL.html

Mir - Porque o projeto do PT não é social-democrata puro, reformista. É salvacionista. Vende a redenção. Ele não se harmoniza com uma realidade laica e republicana. É contra a pílula anticoncepcional, a biotecnologia e o progresso. É um projeto da civilização da pobreza, ...

https://forum.cifraclub.com.br/forum/11/317839/p182

o PT não é social democrata, nunca realizou essa transição às claras como fez o Partido trabalhista britânico. O próprio uso difuso e confuso da palavra social é artifício retórico para esconder isso. 

https://adonaisantanna.blogspot.com/2014/11/resposta-um-pedido.html

O PT não é social-democrata, nem nunca vai ser. Basta ver os vieses ditatoriais e demogogos que o partido vem apresentando desde que chegou ao poder.

Name: Anonymous 2020-04-19 11:02

>>15
Use actual words, mouthbreather.

Name: Anonymous 2020-04-19 11:19

https://www.commondreams.org/news/2020/03/30/harrowing-warning-all-hungary-hands-far-right-leader-dictatorial-powers-amid
The new law indefinitely suspends elections and parliament, imposes up to five years in prison for anyone who intentionally spreads what the government classifies as misinformation, and gives Orbán the authority to suspend laws by decree as he works to contain the COVID-19 outbreak. The law easily passed Hungary's parliament, which is dominated by Orbán's far-right Fidesz party, by a vote of 137 to 53.

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2020-03-30/orban-takes-sole-command-of-hungary-with-pandemic-emergency-law
Orban’s track record indicates he may not give up the powers quickly. His anti-immigrant Fidesz party has continuously renewed a “state of emergency for mass immigration,” announced after the 2015 refugee crisis, even after the number of asylum seekers arriving to Hungary plunged.

https://www.stallman.org/archives/2020-jan-apr.html#4_April_2020_(Dictator_in_all_but_name)
Orbán is now dictator of Hungary in all but name. There is no more legislature and no more elections until he decides to bring them back.
He can imprison anyone for "spreading misinformation", whether it is true or false.

Name: Anonymous 2020-04-19 11:53

To everyone else, the Fox & Friends video in the OP to look for should be from Mon 30 Mar 2020, per >>13.

>>14
If you think simply repeating the same assertion makes it true, you might be one of the sheep who think Russia hacked the DNC servers.

PT:
- Direct unconditional payments to poor families.
- Additional direct payments to poor families conditional on school attendance.
- Microcredit scheme for poor families to bypass traditional banking.
- Recognition of a right to basic food.
- Kept oil companies and loggers mostly out of the Amazon because "lungs of the Earth". Balls of Nero fixed that.

Basically spending a chunk of the oil revenue on the poor, like Morales and Chavez did. If you hadn't backed yourself into the "centrist" corner, at this point you would pull out the "commies" strawman. Now you will have to take the position that those things are not even leftist, but "centrist", so you can simply be hooked up to a loop with this guy: https://dis.tinychan.org/read/prog/1582047203#reply_171

Name: Anonymous 2020-04-19 12:49

>>18
Literally none of those things are ``leftist'', brain genius. The abolition of private property, banning the trade in debt, an end to rent-seeking in general, those are the core of leftist policies. Trying to dull the sharpest edges of capitalism with populist distractions while fully maintaining the capitalist system is exactly what social democracy is and why it is a scam.
You're so far up the US propaganda machine's ass and its misrepresentation of left and right you think a meme insult about the DNC is going to sting with someone who thinks socdems are too far to the right, good job.

Name: Anonymous 2020-04-19 14:05

>>16
Those are indeed words, anusbreather.

Name: Anonymous 2020-04-19 14:18

To everyone else, the Fox & Friends video in the OP to look for should be from Mon 30 Mar 2020, per >>13.

>>19
Literally none of those things are ``leftist''
Of course, anon, of course, you already backed yourself into this corner. So welfare for the poor isn't leftist. Thanks for the laughs, you're a dear.

The abolition of private property, banning the trade in debt, an end to rent-seeking in general, those are the core of leftist policies.
OK, so only hardline communism qualifies as leftist to you. Since Bernie Sanders doesn't advocate "abolition of private property, banning the trade in debt, an end to rent-seeking in general" he is not a leftist. Simply brilliant. See what a ridiculous corner you backed yourself into?

is going to sting with someone who thinks socdems are too far to the right
Your attention span is a joke. From >>10:
"""The one with "social democracy" in the name has since moved to the right of its original position as far as it could afford, and to try to cover this had to resort to retreating into the defense that "left" and "right" are outdated labels, so "please stop looking at which one now applies to us, pretty please"."""

Name: Anonymous 2020-04-19 18:18

>>21
Serious question: were you dropped as a child?

Name: Anonymous 2020-04-19 18:37

>>21
So welfare for the poor isn't leftist.
You're right, it isn't. Even in austerity-wracked Europe every self-identified right-wing party that meets the electoral threshold supports welfare in some form. You'd have be an ideology-poisoned ancap not to: bread and circuses dull class consciousness and keep the workers working. Are you twelve years old not to realise this?

Bernie Sanders
It's extremely uncontroversial that Sanders is a centrist everywhere except in the US and its client states. There have been left-wing movements in the US in the past (the Black Panthers were one), but there isn't a single left-wing politician, even center-left, on the federal stage, by design. The depth of your ignorance on the subject is part of that design; congratulations on being played so effectively.

Don't feel bad, though: even most DSA members don't know the difference between demsocs and socdems.

>>10
I don't know what conversation you think is being had here but you of all people really shouldn't be throwing stones about reading comprehension.

I know you think fascism is le epic meme and that you don't know jack shit about the world, but words have meanings and ``left-wing'' is not in fact synonymous with ``people Trump and Bolsonaro whine about''.

Name: Anonymous 2020-04-19 20:38

>>23
Who defines what a word means?

Name: Anonymous 2020-04-19 20:56

To everyone else, the Fox & Friends video in the OP to look for should be from Mon 30 Mar 2020, per >>13.

>>22
https://dis.tinychan.org/read/prog/1582047203#reply_160

>>23
every self-identified right-wing party that meets the electoral threshold supports welfare in some form.
Yes, in the form of giving it lip service while cutting it as much as possible every chance they get. Furthermore, the fact that "self-identified right-wing" parties are forced into supporting it "in some form" because not doing so at all would be electoral suicide, does not magically make it no longer leftist, in the same way that they also foam at the mouth about green energy or giving women the vote.

bread and circuses
And religion. Unless you included it under circuses.

It's extremely uncontroversial that Sanders is a centrist
I already laughed at you people but you're just comedy gold. So the guy who wants to overturn the Corporations United decision is a centrist? The guy who Obama joked about as "comrade"? The guy who wants to tax the rich? The guy who wants Medicare for All, which makes actual centrists like Biden rage?

I already pointed out to you lot in >>18 that "simply repeating the same assertion" is not an argument. You might recall the scene from A Few Good Men in which JoAnne objects, is overruled by the judge, so she "strenuously objects" and is of course overruled again, and is afterwards mocked by Kaffee for having been ridiculous. This is exactly what you're doing if you think the phrase "extremely uncontroversial" enhances your argument, you are "strenuously objecting".

I don't know what conversation you think is being had here
Evidently you don't have the attention span to recall an exchange of more than two posts, which is why you have no answer to your ridiculous slip up about "is going to sting with someone who thinks socdems are too far to the right".

I know you think fascism is le epic meme
Your strawmen are quite boring.

and ``left-wing'' is not in fact synonymous with ``people Trump and Bolsonaro whine about''.
Your strawmen are quite boring.

That's two paragraphs of having no answer to your attention span slip up. Congratulations.

Name: not >>23 2020-04-20 20:24

>>25
your ridiculous slip up about "is going to sting with someone who thinks socdems are too far to the right".

Imagine a real line, positive numbers to the right of zero, negative numbers to the left of zero.

Quite conventional, right?

So lets conventionally adopt that left-wing is negative and right-wing is positive (simply because the standard real line grows to the right).

Also let P be the set of all positive numbers.

Then the assertment "A is leftwing" would be encoded as "(-A) est P" or simply "A < 0".

Evidently "A < 0" can also be understood to mean "A is to the left of the center".

Lemma:
"A < B" to mean "A is to the left of B",
"B > A" to mean "B is to the right of A".

Now, is it conceivable that B is to the right of A, and also to the left of the center?
That is, that B > A and also B < 0?
Sure. A < B < 0 is a completely valid sentence.

Pushing it further, could we say that B is very far to the right of A and also to the left of the center?
Luckily mathematicians have invented just the needed notation:
"A << B < 0"

Could we have an example?
"-10034 << -1.5 < 0"

Now, if we take "23-san=-10034", "socdems=-1.5", "center=0", we can finally say:
"23-san << socdems < 0"

Which is what I think 23-san means. (Even if they were center-left, it would still encode as < 0, only with very small absolute values.)

Name: Anonymous 2020-04-21 0:50

>>26
Biden is a much easier example of a centrist who is way too far to the right, as he is a mere one angstrom to the left of center. Your exposition is orthogonal to the exchange with the-other-anon-who-is-totally-not-you.

Name: Anonymous 2020-04-22 20:33

“Traditionally it’s always been Republicans suppressing votes in places,” Clark said at the event. “Let’s start protecting our voters. We know where they are ... Let’s start playing offense a little bit. That’s what you’re going to see in 2020. It’s going to be a much bigger program, a much more aggressive program, a much better-funded program.”
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2019/dec/21/trump-adviser-republicans-voter-suppression

"""Top Trump adviser: Republicans have 'always' relied on voter suppression

One of Donald Trump’s top re-election advisers told influential Republicans in swing state Wisconsin that the party has “traditionally” relied on voter suppression to compete in battleground states, according to an audio recording of a private event. The adviser said later that his remarks referred to frequent and false accusations that Republicans employ such tactics.

But the report emerged just days after news that a conservative group is forcing Wisconsin to purge upwards of 230,000 people from state voter rolls more than a year earlier than planned, a move that would disproportionately affect Democrats before the 2020 election.

And it came as the latest fund-raising totals showed that the Republican National Committee, spurred by aggressive anti-impeachment fundraising, heads into 2020 with more than seven times as much cash on hand as the Democratic National Committee – $63m for the RNC against $8.3m for the DNC, according to FEC filings, Axios reported.

Justin Clark, a senior political adviser and senior counsel to Trump’s re-election campaign, made the remarks about voter suppression on 21 November as part of a wide-ranging discussion about strategies in the 2020 campaign, including more aggressive use of monitoring of polling places on election day in November 2020.

“Traditionally it’s always been Republicans suppressing votes in places,” Clark said at the event. “Let’s start protecting our voters. We know where they are ... Let’s start playing offense a little bit. That’s what you’re going to see in 2020. It’s going to be a much bigger program, a much more aggressive program, a much better-funded program.”

Asked about the remarks, by the Associated Press, which obtained the audio recording, Clark said he was referring to false accusations that the Republican party engages in voter suppression.

“As should be clear from the context of my remarks, my point was that Republicans historically have been falsely accused of voter suppression and that it is time we stood up to defend our own voters,” Clark said. “Neither I nor anyone I know or work with would condone anyone’s vote being threatened or diluted and our efforts will be focused on preventing just that.”

Clark made the comments on the audio file in a meeting of the Republican National Lawyers Association’s Wisconsin chapter. Attendees included the state Senate’s top Republican, Scott Fitzgerald, along with the executive director of the Wisconsin Republican party.

Audio of the event at a country club in Madison obtained by the liberal group American Bridge was provided to AP by One Wisconsin Now, a Madison-based liberal advocacy group.

The roughly 20-minute audio offers an insider’s glimpse of Trump’s re-election strategy, showing the campaign focusing on voting locations in Wisconsin, Michigan and Pennsylvania, which form the the so-called “blue wall” of traditional Democratic strength that Trump broke through to win in 2016.

Republican officials publicly signaled plans to step up their Election Day monitoring after a judge in 2018 lifted a consent decree in place since 1982 that barred the Republican National Committee from voter verification and other “ballot security” efforts. Critics have argued the tactics amount to voter intimidation.

Across America, as it heads into this crucial election year, while some states have enacted policies that make it easier to cast a ballot, many have gone in the opposite direction.

In 2016, Wisconsin had 62 paid Trump staff working to get out the vote; in 2020, it will increase to around 100, Clark said.

Trump supports the effort, Clark said in the audio recording.

“We’ve all seen the tweets about voter fraud, blah, blah, blah,” Clark said. “Every time we’re in with him, he asks what are we doing about voter fraud? What are we doing about voter fraud?’ The point is he’s committed to this, he believes in it and he will do whatever it takes to make sure it’s successful.”

Clark said Trump’s campaign plans to focus on rural areas around mid-size cities like Eau Claire and Green Bay, areas he says where Democrats “cheat”. He did not explain what he meant by cheating and did not provide any examples.

There is no evidence of widespread voter fraud in Wisconsin.

The dispute about purging voters is the latest in a series of voting rights brawls in Wisconsin, considered one of the most important states in the upcoming presidential election. In recent years, Republicans drew electoral districts that severely benefitted their party, unsuccessfully tried to limit early voting, and implemented a strict voter ID law. The law discouraged as many as 23,252 people in the state from casting a ballot in 2016, one estimate found.

“If there’s bad behavior on the part of one side or the other to prevent people from voting, this is bad for our democracy,” Wisconsin Democratic Gov. Tony Evers said in reaction to Clark’s comments.

Wisconsin’s attorney general, Democrat Josh Kaul, represented the Democratic National Committee in a 2016 New Jersey lawsuit that argued the GOP was coordinating with Trump to intimidate voters. Kaul argued then that Trump’s campaign “repeatedly encouraged his supporters to engage in vigilante efforts” in the guise of ferreting out potential voter fraud. The Republican party disputed any coordination.

Mike Browne, deputy director of One Wisconsin Now, said Clark’s comments suggest the Trump campaign plans “underhanded tactics” for 2020.

Earlier this week Georgia proceeded with a mass purge of 300,000-plus voters from the rolls, despite an activist group founded by rising-star Democrat Stacey Abrams asking a court to halt the plan.

Voter suppression as a tactic – from strict ID laws to closing polling places to purging voter rolls – is deliberately making it hard for minority communities in America, which traditionally lean towards the Democratic party, to exercise their right to vote, a Guardian’s ongoing The Fight to Vote special series found."""

Name: Anonymous 2020-04-22 21:04

I don't wanna die and become a Democrat voter.

Name: Anonymous 2020-04-23 0:06

>>29
Just transmigrate into a dinosaur.

Name: Anonymous 2020-04-23 8:34

Why do you assholes have to insert political garbage everywhere?

Name: Anonymous 2020-04-23 15:32

Why do your assholes have to insert political shit everywhere?

Name: Anonymous 2020-04-24 1:54

What programming language is this?

Name: Anonymous 2020-04-24 3:11

>>33
It's not a programming language. It's a search for a solution to the voter halting problem on a Trumping Machine >>13

Name: Anonymous 2020-04-27 10:51

“And then I see the disinfectant, where it knocks it out in a minute. One minute! And is there a way we can do something like that, by injection inside or almost a cleaning."
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/apr/23/trump-coronavirus-treatment-disinfectant

"""Coronavirus: medical experts denounce Trump's theory of 'disinfectant injection'

Doctors warn US president’s musings on disinfectant as a cure for coronavirus could lead to death

Donald Trump has stunned viewers by suggesting people could receive injections of disinfectant to cure the coronavirus, a notion one medical expert described as “jaw-dropping”.

At Thursday’s White House coronavirus taskforce briefing, the US president mused on new government research into how the virus reacts to different temperatures, climates and surfaces.

Trump said: “And then I see the disinfectant, where it knocks it out in a minute. One minute! And is there a way we can do something like that, by injection inside or almost a cleaning. Because you see it gets in the lungs and it does a tremendous number on the lungs. So it would be interesting to check that. So, that, you’re going to have to use medical doctors with. But it sounds interesting to me.”

Dr Deborah Birx, the taskforce response coordinator, remained silent. But social media erupted in outrage at the president, who has a record of defying science and also floated the idea of treating patients’ bodies with ultraviolet (UV) light.

Several doctors warned the public against injecting disinfectant or using UV light and a leading household cleaner manufacturer urged users not to inject it into their bodies.

Reckitt Benckiser, the British-based maker of Dettol and Lysol, said in a statement: “We must be clear that under no circumstance should our disinfectant products be administered into the human body (through injection, ingestion or any other route).”

Political commentators joined the condemnation. Robert Reich, a professor of public policy at the University of California at Berkeley and a former labor secretary, tweeted: “Trump’s briefings are actively endangering the public’s health. Boycott the propaganda. Listen to the experts. And please don’t drink disinfectant.”

Walter Shaub, the former director of the Office of Government Ethics, added: “It is incomprehensible to me that a moron like this holds the highest office in the land and that there exist people stupid enough to think this is OK. I can’t believe that in 2020 I have to caution anyone listening to the president that injecting disinfectant could kill you.”

Trump was already facing a backlash over his championing of hydroxychloroquine, an anti-malaria drug, as a therapy for the coronavirus, a quixotic effort amplified by the conservative network Fox News. Research has found no evidence that it is beneficial and a government vaccine expert has claimed he was fired for limiting its use.

Undeterred, on Thursday Trump showcased an “emerging result” from Department of Homeland Security research that indicates coronavirus appears to weaken more quickly when exposed to sunlight, heat and humidity, raising hopes that it could become less contagious in summer months.

Bill Bryan, the acting homeland security undersecretary for science and technology, said at the briefing: “Our most striking observation to date is the powerful effect that solar light appears to have on killing the virus – both surfaces and in the air. We’ve seen a similar effect with both temperature and humidity as well, where increasing the temperature and humidity or both is generally less favourable to the virus.”

Researchers found that the virus survives best indoors and in dry conditions, and loses potency when temperatures and humidity rise. Bryan said: “The virus dies the quickest in the presence of direct sunlight under these conditions.”

He showed a slide summarising the results of the experiment that were carried out at the National Biodefense Analysis and Countermeasures Center. He also said tests had been carried out with disinfectants and isopropyl alcohol, specifically in saliva or in respiratory fluids.

“And I can tell you that bleach will kill the virus in five minutes; isopropyl alcohol will kill the virus in 30 seconds, and that’s with no manipulation, no rubbing – just spraying it on and letting it go. You rub it and it goes away even faster. We’re also looking at other disinfectants, specifically looking at the Covid-19 virus in saliva.”

Trump seized on the findings to refer back to a claim he made on 14 February that warm weather might kill the virus, like common flu, noting that he had been criticised by the media. “I think a lot of people are going to go outside, all of a sudden, people that didn’t want to go outside,” he said.

And he asked Bryan an extraordinary question: “So I asked Bill a question that probably some of you are thinking of, if you’re totally into that world, which I find to be very interesting. So, supposing we hit the body with a tremendous – whether it’s ultraviolet or just very powerful light – and I think you said that that hasn’t been checked, but you’re going to test it.

“And then I said, supposing you brought the light inside the body, which you can do either through the skin or in some other way, and I think you said you’re going to test that too. It sounds interesting.”

Bryan responded: “We’ll get to the right folks who could.”

UV rays are an invisible type of radiation that can penetrate and damage skin cells, and overexposure can cause skin cancer. How much sunlight would be needed to have an effect on the coronavirus is unknown. The virus has caused heavy death tolls in warm-weather areas such as Louisiana and Florida, and Singapore has seen a recent surge in cases.

A Washington Post reporter asked if it was dangerous for Trump to make people think they would be safe by going outside in summer heat. The president turned to Bryan and said: “I would like you to speak to the medical doctors to see if there’s any way that you can apply light and heat to cure.

“Maybe you can, maybe you can’t. Again, I say, maybe you can, maybe you can’t. I’m not a doctor.”

In a cringeworthy moment, he asked Birx if she had ever heard of heat and light in relation to the coronavirus. “Not as a treatment,” she said, explaining that the body responds to the virus with a fever.

When the Post reporter pressed further, Trump retorted: “I’m the president and you’re fake news … I’m just here to present talent, I’m here to present ideas.”

Experts questioned why the homeland security report had been promoted at the briefing. Dr Irwin Redlener, the director of the Center for Disaster Preparedness at Columbia University, told MSNBC: “Everything that this scientist talked about from homeland security was basically incoherent, nonsensical, not really supported by evidence and really quite contrary to a lot of things that we do know about some of the things he was saying.

“First of all, people do get Covid, have been getting Covid in warm climates. Second of all, this issue with UV light is hypothetical, but also UV light can be very harmful and we did not hear anything resembling a balanced discussion of what the evidence is for and against UV light, but it’s certainly not ready for prime time.”

He added: “The very fact that the president actually asked somebody about what sounded like injecting disinfectants or isopropyl alcohol into the human body was kind of jaw-dropping.”
"""

Name: Anonymous 2020-04-27 15:30

this time i must defend the prez

why does the body react to virus with fever?

because fever heats up the body possibly killing it

this is 101 shit

does light carry heat also? what is radiation? physics 101 shit

is human a mammal? are mammals warm blooded? do mammals try to keep a constant temperature through negative feedback loops irrespective of climate? biology 101 shit

fakeass crackers

pedantic mofos

truth cares not who says it

Name: Anonymous 2020-04-27 22:48

>>36
POTUS already preempted all your hogwash by claiming he was being sarcastic. In underage chanspeak he defended himself by literally resorting to "I was only pretending to be retarded".

Name: Anonymous 2020-04-27 23:00

>>37
well that was just his defense mechanism once he was put into the defensive (and made to backtrack a truth, good job fakers)

but what he said then was true irrespective of what he said after

"truth cares not if who says it is Donald Trump or Hannah Arendt"

Name: What programming language is this? 2020-04-28 8:05

What programming language is this?

Name: Anonymous 2020-04-28 9:55

>>39
1. It's not a programming language. It's a search for a solution to the voter halting problem on a Trumping Machine >>13

2. (() => {
const items = "Ada,ALGOL,BASIC,C,C++,COBOL,Common Lisp,Emacs Lisp,Fortran,Haskell,Java,JavaScript,Pascal,PHP,Prolog,Python,Scheme,Simula,Smalltalk".split (",")
const pick = () => items [Math.floor (Math.random () * items.length)]
Array.from (document.getElementsByClassName ("body")).filter (e => /^whatprogramminglanguageisthis$/i.test (e.innerText.replace (/[^a-zA-Z]+/g, ""))).forEach (e => { e.innerHTML += "<hr /><p>you rolled: " + pick () + "</p>"; })
}) ()

Name: Anonymous 2020-05-02 3:16

by injection inside
www.whitehouse.gov

THE PRESIDENT: Right. And then I see the disinfectant, where it knocks it out in a minute. One minute. And is there a way we can do something like that, by injection inside or almost a cleaning. Because you see it gets in the lungs and it does a tremendous number on the lungs. So it would be interesting to check that. So, that, you’re going to have to use medical doctors with. But it sounds — it sounds interesting to me.

So we’ll see. But the whole concept of the light, the way it kills it in one minute, that’s — that’s pretty powerful.

Steve, please.

https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefings-statements/remarks-president-trump-vice-president-pence-members-coronavirus-task-force-press-briefing-31/

Name: Anonymous 2020-05-06 0:16

Improper use of Disinfectants

Due to recent speculation and social media activity, RB (the makers of Lysol and Dettol) has been asked whether internal administration of disinfectants may be appropriate for investigation or use as a treatment for coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2).

As a global leader in health and hygiene products, we must be clear that under no circumstance should our disinfectant products be administered into the human body (through injection, ingestion or any other route). As with all products, our disinfectant and hygiene products should only be used as intended and in line with usage guidelines. Please read the label and safety information.

We have a responsibility in providing consumers with access to accurate, up-to-date information as advised by leading public health experts. For this and other myth-busting facts, please visit Covid-19facts.com.

For more information on our response to COVID-19, visit this link: Coronavirus information

https://www.rb.com/media/news/2020/april/improper-use-of-disinfectants/

Name: Anonymous 2020-05-06 1:48

>>42
What about UV LIGHT?

Name: Anonymous 2020-05-06 11:00

>>43
Nowhere near the insanity with injecting disinfectant. >>35
“First of all, people do get Covid, have been getting Covid in warm climates. Second of all, this issue with UV light is hypothetical, but also UV light can be very harmful and we did not hear anything resembling a balanced discussion of what the evidence is for and against UV light, but it’s certainly not ready for prime time.”

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sunburn#Skin_cancer
Ultraviolet radiation causes sunburns and increases the risk of three types of skin cancer: melanoma, basal-cell carcinoma and squamous-cell carcinoma.[1][2][5] Of greatest concern is that the melanoma risk increases in a dose-dependent manner with the number of a person's lifetime cumulative episodes of sunburn.[6] It has been estimated that over 1/3 of melanomas in the United States and Australia could be prevented with regular sunscreen use.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sunburn#Artificial_UV_exposure
The WHO recommends that artificial UV exposure including tanning beds should be avoided as no safe dose has been established.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ultraviolet#Human_health-related_effects

Name: Anonymous 2020-05-06 14:12

but also UV light can be very harmful
Tautology. The dose makes the poison.

the insanity with injecting disinfectant
Whatever disinfects is a disinfectant, including UV light. Which was in fact the only thing the president meant in his statement. You seem to fall for elementary fallacies.

I suggest reading
https://translate.google.com/translate?sl=pt&tl=en&u=http%3A%2F%2Flucidez.over-blog.net%2Farticle-boneco-de-palha-90387383.html

Name: Anonymous 2020-05-06 23:24

>>45
The dose makes the poison.
we did not hear anything resembling a balanced discussion of what the evidence is for and against UV light
The WHO recommends that artificial UV exposure including tanning beds should be avoided as no safe dose has been established.

Which was in fact the only thing the president meant in his statement.
Your hogwash has been preempted by POTUS. >>37

Name: Anonymous 2020-05-07 2:04

>>46
should be avoided as no safe dose has been established.
I knew you would cite this. You fail at basic logic. "No safe dose has been established" does not imply that a safe dose does not exist. It simply has not been established, an event has not happened. Once it is established, by further scientific inquiry, as science is a process, it can be used therapeutically as expected.

Your hogwash has been preempted by POTUS. >>37
Did he say "I actually meant injecting bleach and not some form of radiation when I said disinfectant in the first occasion?" or did he just say "I was being sarcastic"?

Has he ever cited bleach or some other chemical substance in his first speech, or was all that projected upon by the sensationalist media? If anyone died by injecting bleach the fault is on the media, not on him.

See the first video. The word disinfectant might be a slip, because it is not ordinarily used for radiation, but due to the fluidity and so on he couldn't have possibly changed the subject from light to something else and then returned

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=5AZM2Lkpv_o

"Supposing you brought the light inside the body, which you can do either through the skin or some other way" ... "I see the disifectant, where it knocks it out in a minute" ... "but the whole concept of the light, the way it kills it in one minute, that's pretty powerful"

Come on, you cannot be so intellectually dishonest to fail to concede that he was talking about the same thing in all fragments, just because you are of the opposing ideology.

Name: Anonymous 2020-05-07 10:49

>>47
You fail at basic logic.
Once it is established
it can be used therapeutically as expected
I'll explain it to you slowly.
1. A safe dose has not been established even for tanning, a skin-deep effect, let alone for killing a virus inside the human body.
2. I hope you realize the levity of you bringing up logic and scientific inquiry when you are assuming the conclusion. You are stating a priori that the intersection between dosages safe to use inside the human body, and dosages that kill the virus, will be found to be non-empty. This is in addition to assuming that the former exist at all.

because it is not ordinarily used for radiation
I am shocked that a POTUS groupie has enough moral fiber to admit even this much. You couldn't be hired at Faux News nor Chicken Noodle News, where the requirement is to never concede an inch.

so intellectually dishonest
Marvelous. This hogwash has been preempted by POTUS who did not even consider the possibility of trying to twist his own statement into anything remotely resembling plausibility, which he would have tried if there had been the slightest hope, and went straight for "I was only pretending to be retarded". And having a few days of not taking any questions. You are simply asking for a reload from a previous savegame, because you realize the current state of the game is hopeless. I can at least congratulate you for your implicit admission that it is hopeless, by seeking a reload.

Name: Anonymous 2020-05-07 13:23

1. A safe dose has not been established even for tanning, a skin-deep effect, let alone for killing a virus inside the human body.
So it is not safe to go outside? I have an open window to my room right now, am I gonna die?

I am shocked that a POTUS groupie...
because you realize the current state of the game is hopeless
I am not trying to save the POTUS reputation at all.

Name: Anonymous 2020-05-07 13:49

A treatment right there, being forwarded as open to investigation, let the facts speak for themselves and we will submit to what is found out, with the promise of saving many lives with minimal investment, was misrepresented, villified, cancelled for all practical purposes, simply because one of the men who publicized it, who was not at all the man who first conceived it, was persona non grata by the media.

Name: Anonymous 2020-05-07 20:45

>>49
So it is not safe to go outside? I have an open window to my room right now, am I gonna die?
Did you just discover both false dichotomies and strawmen in a single post? Such talent.

I am not trying to save the POTUS reputation at all.
In that case I will simply thank you for your help in keeping the opening post of this thread on the front page, and wish you health and luck.

Name: Anonymous 2020-05-07 20:53

injecting disinfectant inside the human body
with the promise of saving many lives

who was not at all the man who first conceived it
here is my link to someone previously suggesting injecting disinfectant inside the human body as treatment

Name: Anonymous 2020-05-07 21:02

>>52
s/disinfectant/light/ Edited on 07/05/2020 21:52.

Name: Anonymous 2020-05-07 21:38

>>51
Did you just discover both false dichotomies and strawmen in a single post? Such talent.
Don't talk nonsense.
I admit I rushed the response, but the argument is tiring.
But basically the radiation does not need to be ultraviolet to kill the virus; as long as it generates enough heat any resource can do it. There are non cancerigenal heat sources, yes?
And the mechanism of photolysis that creates free radicals and thus cancer could (in the future) be reversed or suppressed, I imagine.
Plus risks assessment can be made, and in severe cases it pays off.

Name: Anonymous 2020-05-08 20:57

>>53
before edit:
Are you deaf or dumb or blind or retarded?
https://dis.tinychan.net/read/prog/1582047203#reply_160

Edited on 07/05/2020 21:52.
s/disinfectant/light/
Your hogwash has only been preempted about three or four times already so I suggest you keep acknowledging that you understand the current state of the game to be hopeless by continuing to desperately try for a reload from a previous savepoint.

>>54
the radiation does not need to be ultraviolet
If you need to move away from UV the issue is closed.

There are non cancerigenal heat sources, yes?
Fevers are pretty common.

And the mechanism of photolysis that creates free radicals and thus cancer could (in the future) be reversed or suppressed, I imagine.
By all means, please work this out, you are looking at a Nobel prize in medicine at a minimum.

Plus risks assessment can be made, and in severe cases it pays off.
So now you agree with >>35 and >>44?
Second of all, this issue with UV light is hypothetical, but also UV light can be very harmful and we did not hear anything resembling a balanced discussion of what the evidence is for and against UV light, but it’s certainly not ready for prime time.

Name: Anonymous 2020-05-08 22:49

>>55
Yes, I thought that comment did not help the discussion, though the sentiment persists.

Name: Anonymous 2020-05-08 22:58

>>55
POTUS USED THE WORD DISINFECTANT TO MEAN LIGHT, AND LIGHT IS A DISINFECTANT, YOU DUMB PARROT

Name: Anonymous 2020-05-09 20:24

>>57
This is the fourth or fifth time you are seeking a reload from a previous savepoint through preempted hogwash. Shall we go for one more? And of course the all caps that you're using to strenuously object >>25 totally lend more weight to your post and don't make it look like a scam email at all.
YOU WILL DEFINITELY GET PRINCE BARSOOM'S ROYAL INHERITANCE AS SOON AS YOU TRANSFER THIS SMALL FEE INTO OUR ACCOUNT!

Name: Anonymous 2020-05-10 20:17

https://youtu.be/8GBAsFwPglw
“I don’t want everybody to vote,” Paul Weyrich, an influential conservative activist, said in 1980. “As a matter of fact, our leverage in the elections quite candidly goes up as the voting populace goes down.”

Name: Anonymous 2020-05-11 3:47

Now we know that Q Anon was no one else but Trump himself shitposting undercover.

Name: Anonymous 2020-05-11 19:14

>>60
I honestly hate this theory

Name: Anonymous 2020-05-13 9:36

Q from Star Trek: The Next Generation, now that was a troll.

Name: Anonymous 2020-05-15 22:49

A public radio station in Washington state, KUOW, will no longer be airing White House press briefings on the coronavirus “due to a pattern of false or misleading information provided that cannot be fact checked in real time.”

https://thehill.com/blogs/news/blog-briefing-room/489439-seattle-radio-station-wont-air-trump-briefings-because-of-false-or

Name: Anonymous 2020-05-18 20:36

https://boingboing.net/2019/12/20/facebook-twitter-kill-55-mil.html
Facebook & Twitter ban pro-Trump network that reached 55 million accounts with AI-generated faces, Epoch Media Group and Falun Gong links identified

https://www.theverge.com/2019/12/20/21031823/facebook-twitter-trump-network-epoch-times-inauthentic-behavior
Facebook and Twitter shutter pro-Trump network reaching 55 million accounts
Its accounts used AI-generated faces to ‘masquerade’ as Americans

https://about.fb.com/news/2019/12/removing-coordinated-inauthentic-behavior-from-georgia-vietnam-and-the-us/
This activity primarily focused on The BL, a US-based media company, and its Pages, which were operated by individuals in the US and Vietnam. The people behind this activity made widespread use of fake accounts — many of which had been automatically removed by our systems — to manage Pages and Groups, automate posting at very high frequencies and direct traffic to off-platform sites. Some of these accounts used profile photos generated by artificial intelligence and masqueraded as Americans to join Groups and post the BL content.

Name: Anonymous 2020-05-19 6:33

>>64
The Art of the MSM Fake News, misleading title edition

Facebook says it nixed 610 accounts

Roughly 55 million accounts followed one of the network's Facebook page


Another Fake News title primer is this thread. I Will bump it the 4th of November to laugh at the niggeroid who made it.

Name: Anonymous 2020-05-19 10:47

>>65
🐘 I see that you included everything you had to offer in response to the part that mattered, AI-generated faces to masquerade as Americans.
🐘 It is also surprising to me that you would so openly admit that you do not understand the difference between an account and the followers of that account.
🐘 While you would normally be correct in labeling a verbatim quote from Trump on Faux News as fake news, this time he let the truth slip as corroborated by Mitch McConnell >>8, Justin Clark >>28, Paul Weyrich >>59.
🐘 You will be able to bump and laugh only if voter suppression is maintained, that's the whole point.
🐘 You seem to be a bit out of step since nowadays you lot seem to be making at least a token attempt at pretending not to be racists.

Name: Anonymous 2020-05-20 15:14

kill yourself, antifuck

Name: Anonymous 2020-05-20 23:37

While your post correctly reflects the far-right intellect and level of composure, your strawmen are quite boring. The ones you refer to are so incompetent at how the people-before-businesses position should be properly represented, and the corporate bootlickers of the far-right opposed, that sometimes they look like false-flaggers aiming to play into the far-right's hands, just like Sam Melville and his band of idiots were the FBI's puppets used to undermine the Vietnam war protests.

Name: Anonymous 2020-05-21 0:29

dude tmi lmao

Name: Anonymous 2020-05-24 9:49

how could there be tmi about the Pea-brain OTUS

Name: Anonymous 2020-05-25 11:16

on January 23, two days after the U.S. confirmed its first case of Covid-19
'Criminal Negligence': Trump Officials Ignored Company's Offer to Make 7 Million N95 Masks Per Month in Early Days of Pandemic
https://www.commondreams.org/news/2020/05/10/criminal-negligence-trump-officials-ignored-companys-offer-make-7-million-n95-masks

"""Federal scientist Rick Bright described his communications with Prestige Ameritech in his whistleblower report regarding the administration's response to the Covid-19 crisis.

Progressives on Saturday denounced an "infuriating" report which detailed the Department of Health and Human Services' refusal to take an American company up on its offer to supply millions of N95 respirators to the government early on in the coronavirus pandemic.

The Washington Post reported that federal scientist Rick Bright, who filed a whistleblower complaint last week over his demotion following his criticism of the Trump administration's response to the pandemic, detailed communications with Prestige Ameritech in January in which HHS ignored the medical supply company's offer to produce masks.

The head of the Ft. Worth-based company, Michael Bowen, wrote to HHS on January 23, two days after the U.S. confirmed its first case of Covid-19.

Bowen offered to use four dormant production lines to produce as many as seven million N95 masks per month, but was told by Laura Wolf, director of the Division of Critical Infrastructure Protection at HHS, "I don't believe we as a government are anywhere near answering those questions for you yet."

"We are the last major domestic mask company," replied Bowen, who at the time was fulfilling orders for masks from all over the world. "My phones are ringing now, so I don't 'need' government business. I'm just letting you know that I can help you preserve our infrastructure if things ever get really bad."

In Bright's whistleblower complaint, he described how he tried to direct Assistant Secretary for Preparedness and Response Robert Kadlec's attention to Bowen's offer in late January. Bowen wrote to Bright following his communications with Wolf that "U.S. mask supply is at imminent risk," and adding a blunt warning: "Rick, I think we’re in deep shit."

Bright demanded to know from Kadlec why Bowen's offer had fallen "on deaf ears."

"We have been watching and receiving warnings on this for over a week," the scientist wrote.

The agency's refusal to take Bowen up on his offer early on helped lead to a crisis weeks later, as healthcare workers across the country reported severe shortages of N95 masks as well as other personal protective equipment needed to stop the spread of Covid-19 in healthcare settings. As the Trump administration denied several times that it was responsible for making sure states had the supplies they needed, states were forced in bidding wars with one another over equipment orders that they placed directly with manufacturers.

The details Bright offered in his whistleblower complaint painted a picture of "criminal negligence," wrote New York Times editorial board member Brent Staples.

"I don't even have words to describe how poorly ⁦Donald Trump has handled this crisis," wrote Rep. Mark Pocan (D-Wisc.) in response to the story.

In addition to pressing HHS officials on Bowen's offer, Bright was critical of President Donald Trump's promotion of hydroxychloroquine as a treatment for Covid-19. The scientist had also clashed with Kadlec earlier in Trump's term, when Kadlec urged Bright to transfer $40 million from Bright's department at HHS to the Strategic National Stockpile in 2018 to purchase a drug made by manufacturer Alvogen, the client of a lobbyist who had connections to the Trump administration.

On Friday, a federal probe found that there were "reasonable grounds to believe" that the Trump administration unlawfully retaliated against Bright by demoting him."""

Name: Anonymous 2020-05-26 20:31

With AI-generated faces used to masquerade as Americans supporting Trump >>64, and a mask shortage caused by declining an offer for mask production on January 23, two days after the U.S. confirmed its first case of Covid-19 >>71, you might as well combine the two and put AI-generated masks on the faces of all people in media footage. You can then claim there's no mask shortage and get added value from your AI astroturfing expense.

Name: Anonymous 2020-05-26 21:17

>>72
Take your meds, schizo.

Name: Anonymous 2020-05-28 3:14

nice programming thread

Name: Anonymous 2020-05-28 11:21

>>74
the search for a solution to the voter halting problem on a Trumping Machine
any doubt that it's a programming thread

>>73
Take your meds, schizo.
It's a good thing you can point to two posts by the same poster that exhibit different personalities, since otherwise you'd be left looking pretty ridiculous right about now.

Name: Anonymous 2020-05-28 17:53

>>75
The heck do you mean Trumping Machine? Undefined neologism.
Will the voters halt? The heck are you saying?

Name: Anonymous 2020-05-28 21:22

Name: Anonymous 2020-05-28 21:41

>>77
How does it feel to be a Soros pawn?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_projects_supported_by_George_Soros
Black Lives Matter

Name: Anonymous 2020-05-28 22:07

>>78
What is wrong with Soros? He is a nice guy and opposes white racists, such as Trump.

Name: Anonymous 2020-05-28 22:42

Dictator Trump orders social networks to be censored:
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/05/28/us/politics/trump-social-media-executive-order.html

Now say Facebook is liable for any individual user's post.
That means all posts will have to pass human pre-moderation.
Even larger corporations don't have resources for that.

Name: Anonymous 2020-05-28 22:43

>>79
The problem is "cruel compassion", where by defending a person or group they actually make their situation worse. Increasing polarization, in this case.

Name: Anonymous 2020-05-28 23:21

>>81
Well, just deport all racists to Russia, and the problem will be solved.

Police force application should include psychological profiling for racism. You know something like MMPI test, but reinforced by social network profile. If a cop reposts white power memes, he should be just fired.

But no! Trump hires racists, and sends them to patrol the black neighborhood.

Name: Anonymous 2020-05-28 23:34

>>76
It's a CS joke on a purported programming board. Go figure.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halting_problem

Name: Anonymous 2020-05-29 0:06

>>82
Sure, deport all racists to Russia, let's do that...

Russia will surely agree, yeah, why not.

United Nations and everyone else will also agree with mass forced deportations, I think.

Lol.

Name: Anonymous 2020-05-29 12:19

>>84
Racists will agree.
They believe Russia is white, redpilled and based.
Just make sure the tickets are one way.

Name: Anonymous 2020-05-29 12:20

>>84
Russia will surely agree, yeah, why not.

Putin can always make use of more slaves.

Somebody has to mine uranium or die in Syria.

Name: Anonymous 2020-05-29 16:16

CNN reporter got arrested because he had black skin:
https://twitter.com/CNN/status/1266315061221613569

other crew members were left free, because they had white skin.

Name: Anonymous 2020-05-29 21:52

>>87
CNN is inciting violence. They need to be shut down.

Name: Anonymous 2020-05-30 5:44

>>85
Racist here, hate Russians. Vodka-reeking Slavic bastards, the lot of them.

Name: Anonymous 2020-05-30 15:22

>>89
Now say that at stormfront.org

Name: Anonymous 2020-06-03 3:09

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walter_Headley
https://www.washingtonpost.com/history/2020/05/29/when-the-looting-starts-the-shooting-starts-trump-walter-headley/
http://archive.is/hrmIP
‘When the looting starts, the shooting starts’: Trump quotes Miami police chief’s notorious 1967 warning

In late 1967, as armed robberies and unrest gripped black neighborhoods in Miami, the city’s white police chief — a tough-talking former U.S. Army Cavalry officer who parted his hair straight down the middle — held a news conference “declaring war” on criminals.

The police, Chief Walter Headley warned, would use shotguns and dogs at his command. And then he uttered the phrase that President Trump drew from Friday morning on Twitter to denounce the unrest in Minnesota and elsewhere fueled by deadly police brutality.

“I’ve let the word filter down that when the looting starts, the shooting starts,” Headley said.

On Friday afternoon, Trump denied that he’d used the phrase as a threat. “It was spoken as a fact, not as a statement.," he tweeted.

President Trump said May 29 he didn't know the racially charged history behind "when the looting starts, the shooting starts," but that it's "very accurate." (The Washington Post)

In 1967, a Miami Herald report on Headley’s comments said “his men have been told that any force, up to and including death, is proper when apprehending a felon.”

Headley, the Miami police chief for 20 years, liked to brag that he was early to hire black police officers, though only white officers were allowed to be called “policemen.” Black officers were called “patrolmen.” By 1967, any semblance of outreach toward minorities became a non-starter for Headley.

“Community relations and all that sort of thing has failed,” he said during his news conference. “We have done everything we could, sending speakers out and meeting with Negro leaders. But it has amounted to nothing.”

He had a message for those in the black community.

“Don’t these people know that most of the crimes in the Negro districts are against Negroes?” he said, according to the Miami Herald. “Don’t they know we’re trying to protect Negroes as well as whites?”

In August of 1968, the city exploded during the Republican National Convention. Three days of violence left three people dead and 18 wounded. More than 200 people were arrested.

Headley wasn’t even in town. He was in North Carolina on vacation.

His officers “know what to do,” he said, according to the New York Times, apparently echoing his 1967 comment again: “When the looting starts, the shooting starts.”

Headley’s threats to kill caused massive upheaval and several investigations. The looting quote was echoed by others, including presidential candidate George Wallace, who uttered it on the campaign trail.

The chief died in November 1968, several months before a report on the unrest was released by the National Commission on the Causes and Prevention of Violence.

“Chief Headley,” the report said, “did not believe that community relations programs with minority groups are a part of the law enforcement responsibility, and he made no attempt to establish systematic communications with the Miami black community.”

The report continued: “Whether or not the policy of the Miami Police Department was actually as tough and as discriminatory as the published reports indicated, there was sufficient substance to them to keep the black community in a state of continued agitation during the next eight months from December 1967 to August 1968.”

Name: Anonymous 2020-06-03 7:21

The Virgin Categorical Imperative vs Chad The Golden Rule vs Thad Eye for an Eye vs Lad Society of Egoists

Name: Anonymous 2020-06-04 9:59

Twitter hides Donald Trump tweet for 'glorifying violence'
Warning on ‘when looting starts, shooting starts’ post risks further escalation of row between firm and president
https://mobile.twitter.com/realDonaldTrump/status/1266231100780744704
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walter_Headley
https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2020/may/29/twitter-hides-donald-trump-tweet-glorifying-violence

Twitter has hidden one of Donald Trump’s tweets behind a warning that it “glorifies violence”, further escalating the social media company’s row with the US president.

The US president’s tweet, posted on Thursday night Washington time, warned people in Minneapolis protesting against the killing of a black man, George Floyd, by a white police officer that he would send the military to intervene if there was “any difficulty”.

“When the looting starts, the shooting starts,” Trump wrote, apparently quoting the former Miami police chief Walter Headley, who in December 1967 promised violent reprisals to protests over stop-and-frisk tactics.

Two hours later, Twitter added a notice to the tweet: “This tweet violated the Twitter Rules about glorifying violence. However, Twitter has determined that it may be in the public’s interest for the tweet to remain accessible.”

The warning was accompanied by a link to its policies about public interest exceptions.

For people visiting Trump’s Twitter timeline, or seeing the tweet retweeted on their feed, the warning obscures the content unless they tap to view it.

Users who try to reply to the tweet are instead presented with a second notice that reads: “We try to prevent a tweet like this that otherwise breaks the Twitter rules from reaching more people, so we have disabled most of the ways to engage with it.” Existing replies no longer appear below it.

The tweet’s spread will also be limited by Twitter’s algorithms, according to the company’s policy documents.

Early on Friday morning, the Trump administration responded by sending an identical tweet from the official White House account, placing Trump’s words in quotation marks, which was duly hidden by Twitter in turn. Trump himself sent several angry tweets, accusing Twitter of “doing nothing about all of the lies & propaganda being put out by China or the Radical Left Democrat Party”, and warning that “it will be regulated!”

The back and forth suggests neither Twitter nor Trump has any intention of backing down in their dispute, which erupted on Wednesday when the company applied a fact-checking label to the president’s tweets for the first time.

He had tweeted an accusation that California was using mail-in ballots to ensure a “rigged election” to which Twitter added a label reading: “get the facts about mail-in ballots”, which had a link to a “Twitter-curated” set of fact checks.

In response, the president signed an executive order that aims to remove Twitter’s protections against civil claims in cases where it acts as an “editor” rather than a publisher.

In a Twitter thread, the company explained its latest decision: “This tweet violates our policies regarding the glorification of violence based on the historical context of the last line, its connection to violence, and the risk it could inspire similar actions today.

“We’ve taken action in the interest of preventing others from being inspired to commit violent acts, but have kept the tweet on Twitter because it is important that the public still be able to see the tweet given its relevance to ongoing matters of public importance.”

Twitter introduced its public interest exception in June 2019, after years of criticism for failing to consistently apply its rules to prominent public figures, particularly the president.

“There are certain cases where it may be in the public’s interest to have access to certain tweets,” the company said, “even if they would otherwise be in violation of our rules.”

Twitter said at the time it believed the response – hiding the tweet behind a warning and reducing its algorithmic distribution – struck “the right balance between enabling free expression, fostering accountability, and reducing the potential harm caused by these tweets”.

The company has taken action against Trump’s tweets before, for copyright infringement. Twice the president used unlicensed music in campaign videos – in an advert featuring the theme to the film Dark Knight Rises, and in a meme video set to Nickelback’s song Photograph. In both cases, the posts were removed without complaint from the president.

Name: Anonymous 2020-06-06 20:47

Arizona Representative Walt Blackman wants you to know that George Floyd was a criminal, not really a good person, and definitely "not a hero."

Not that he thinks Floyd deserved to be killed by a police officer, mind you. The Republican lawmaker from Snowflake — who, like Floyd, is black — points that out every few minutes in a lengthy video he posted to Facebook and Twitter today.

But the main theme of the video is that Floyd has a criminal background and "the left" should not put him on a pedestal.

Floyd died on May 25 when a Minneapolis cop arresting him on suspicion of passing a fake $20 bill snuffed out his life by kneeling on his neck for eight minutes. Video of Floyd's gruesome death inflamed people from coast to coast, pushing Americans into the streets for massive protests and resulting in a government crackdown that included nightly curfews. The now-fired officer, Derek Chauvin, has been charged with second-degree murder, and three other police who stood by as Floyd died have been charged with crimes.

"I DO NOT support George Floyd and I refuse to see him as a martyr," Blackman posted on his Twitter site on June 4 when he shared his video. "But I hope his family receives justice."

In the 47-minute video, Blackman is seen obtaining information from a viral video that right-wing activist Candace Owens published on Wednesday with essentially the same theme. Blackman rips the idea of putting Floyd's face on a T-shirt or portraying him as an "upstanding man."

"This individual is not cotton candy," he says. Floyd had been sent to prison five times, and once held a gun to the stomach of a pregnant woman while committing a home invasion with accomplices, Blackman says.

He admits "some people are going to be pissed off at me" for his comments, but "we shouldn't stand for this ... he is not a hero. He had a criminal background, he had criminal intent."

Blackman has at times been a champion of criminal-justice reform in the Legislature. Last year, he introduced a bill, unsuccessful in the end, that would have been among the most significant reforms in 25 years. He drew criticism from reform groups last year, though, when he voted for a bill that gave people a five-year sentence for possessing illegally even a small amount of fentanyl.

On Wednesday, Blackman told KFYI radio that Black Lives Matter was a "terrorist organization."

Name: Anonymous 2020-06-08 9:25

Name: Anonymous 2020-06-08 10:08

Hello fellow antifascist protesters.
Hello, agent provocateur. >>68 >>67

Name: Anonymous 2020-06-09 2:29

>>94
Blackman
Black man

Name: Anonymous 2020-06-09 20:56

Facebook declines to take action against Trump statements
Twitter responded to the president’s post, which suggested violence against protesters, by hiding it behind a warning label
https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2020/may/29/facebook-trump-twitter-social-media-us

As Twitter for the second time in a single week took unprecedented action against a tweet by Donald Trump, Facebook declined to take any enforcement action against the president’s statements.

Trump’s threatening statement on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram on Thursday night, “Any difficulty and we will assume control but, when the looting starts, the shooting starts,” echoed a racist 1960s police chief known for ordering patrols of black neighborhoods with shotguns and dogs. It was widely interpreted as a threat and potential incitement to violence against residents of the Twin Cities who have erupted in protest against the alleged police killing of George Floyd, a black man who begged for his life as a white police officer knelt on his neck for several minutes.

Twitter responded by invoking a policy it enacted in June 2019 to address the then-hypothetical situation of a major world leader violating its rules in a way that could cause real-world harm. The policy allows the company to maintain the tweet for the purpose of accountability and the public record, but hide it behind a warning label.

“We’ve taken action in the interest of preventing others from being inspired to commit violent acts, but have kept the tweet on Twitter because it is important that the public still be able to see the tweet given its relevance to ongoing matters of public importance,” the company explained.

Facebook, on the other hand, left the Trump post on the platform. The company has explicit rules against speech that could inspire or incite violence, but it has taken no action against Trump’s statement. As of Friday evening, the Facebook post had been shared more than 65,000 times and received 196,000 likes, 32,000 heart emojis, and 6,600 laughing emojis.

The text was also overlaid on a photo of Trump for the president’s Instagram account, where it has received more than 433,000 likes.

And while Facebook has made a controversial decision to exempt politicians from its third-party factchecking process, there is no such exception for incitement to violence.

On Friday evening, Facebook’s CEO, Mark Zuckerberg, defended Facebook’s decision to allow the post by arguing that Facebook has a policy to allow warnings of the use of force by state actors.

It was not immediately clear if that policy had ever been articulated by Facebook before. In 2019, a Facebook spokesperson declined to clarify the company’s policy around violence and hate speech by state actors on the record to the Guardian. The Guardian has contacted Facebook for comment.

In a post on his personal Facebook page, Zuckerberg also appeared to suggest that if Facebook had decided Trump’s post was intended to incite violence by civilians, they would have taken it down, writing, “Unlike Twitter, we do not have a policy of putting a warning in front of posts that may incite violence because we believe that if a post incites violence, it should be removed regardless of whether it is newsworthy, even if it comes from a politician.”

Zuckerberg also criticized Trump, saying: “Personally, I have a visceral negative reaction to this kind of divisive and inflammatory rhetoric … I disagree strongly with how the president spoke about this, but I believe people should be able to see this for themselves, because ultimately accountability for those in positions of power can only happen when their speech is scrutinized out in the open.”

Threats of violence by state actors on its platforms have long been a tricky topic for the company. Facebook was used by Buddhist extremists and military officials in Myanmar to incite hatred and violence against that country’s Muslim minority, the Rohingya, in 2017 – a campaign of ethnic cleansing that culminated in the killing of 25,000 Rohingya and the forced displacement of 700,000 more.

Facebook admitted to failings in Myanmar in 2018 and eventually banned many of the hate preachers and military leaders who had used the platform to inspire genocide.

Name: Anonymous 2020-06-11 23:33

So now that a person with a -berg name refused to apply his own rules against incitement to violence to Trump's post, will the /PoolOfLosers/ dissolve into a paradox?

Name: Anonymous 2020-06-12 0:12

vidḗte meum duplus

Name: Arbiter Elegantiae 2020-06-12 0:16

>>100
vidḗte meum duplus

Cras istud, quando erit?

Name: Anonymous 2020-06-12 3:32

What programming language is this

Name: Anonymous 2020-06-12 6:20

>>102
Programming languages without a Code of Conduct were declared illegal by Supreme Council of People's Republic of Chazistan

Name: Anonymous 2020-06-12 23:04

>>102
Exactly as in >>33-34 and >>39-40.

Name: Anonymous 2020-06-14 11:59

A Short History of U.S. Law Enforcement Infiltrating Protests
https://theintercept.com/2020/06/02/history-united-states-government-infiltration-protests/

When Harry, George, Tom, and Joe showed up at a warehouse outside Philadelphia rented by protesters, organizers were immediately suspicious. The men claimed to be “union carpenters” from the Scranton, Pennsylvania, area who built stages — just the kind of help the protesters needed. They were preparing for the Republican National Convention in 2000, where the party would be nominating George W. Bush. Across the country, allied organizers were planning similar protests for the Democratic National Convention in Los Angeles.

One of the hallmarks of the social justice movement at the time was its puppets. Organizers were coming off successful protests in Seattle in November 1999 against the World Trade Organization, and in Washington, D.C., in April 2000, against the International Monetary Fund and World Bank, and had managed to reshape the politics of globalization. Soaring papier-mache puppets, rolled through the streets on individually constructed floats, projected a festive air, capturing sympathetic media coverage and countering the authorities’ narrative that the protesters were nihilists simply relishing in property destruction.

The four carpenters were good with a hammer, but much about them had protesters wary they were in fact infiltrators. In conversation, “they were not very political or well informed,” recalled Kris Hermes, an organizer, in “Crashing the Party,” his memoir of the affair. They were older and more muscular than most protesters, he wrote, and they insisted on drinking beer while working, despite the organizers’ ban on drinking in the warehouse. In discussions and meetings, they asserted the right of protesters to destroy property and to physically resist arrest. The movement’s intentional lack of hierarchy left organizers with little ability to act on their suspicions of infiltration, even as they were becoming more deft at sussing out such provocateurs.

On August 1, the first full day of the Republican convention, police surrounded the warehouse, known as the “Ministry of Puppetganda,” executed mass arrests, and confiscated the puppets, floats, signs, and other materials to be used in upcoming marches. The police lied, publicly saying that organizers had been planning violent demonstrations and hinting darkly at bomb-making materials being hidden in the warehouse. That roundup presaged other mass arrests of protest leaders throughout the week, followed by beatings inside the jail and even a $1 million bond.

When the warrant for the warehouse raid was unsealed, it finally confirmed that Harry, George, Tom, and Joe had been state troopers assigned to infiltrate the group and produce a pretext for a raid. All of the charges against the puppeteers were eventually dropped, and the saga would eventually cost the city millions in lawsuit settlements (with much of the legal work led by radical attorney Larry Krasner, who is now Philadelphia district attorney).

It is a historical fact, as this episode illustrates, that law enforcement frequently infiltrates progressive political movements using agent provocateurs who urge others to engage in violence. It is also a historical fact that, more rarely, such provocateurs commit acts of violence themselves.

The media pays little attention to such infiltrators, for a variety of reasons. On the one hand, corporate media has never taken much enthusiasm in questioning government action in the midst of riots or major demonstrations, unless that action goes wildly over the line or targets members of the media. The subject of provocateurs is also fraught from the perspective of protesters and movement organizers, as it can lead to paranoia that undermines solidarity and movement building. It is often conflated with the trope of “outside agitators” and used by authorities or other opponents of the protesters to delegitimize the anger on display, giving some protesters or their supporters an incentive to downplay the reality of the provocations.

The intensity of the conversation around protests that turn violent, and the life-or-death consequences of winding up on the wrong side of public opinion, leaves little room for a nuanced discussion. Were such a conversation possible, it would be easy to talk about the difference between the anger of a crowd and the actions it ultimately takes. An angry crowd that remains nonviolent and engages in zero property destruction is no less legitimately angry than one that does. Often the only difference is in whether and how the anger is triggered and escalated.

In protests across the country over the past week, the clear actor escalating the violence generally hasn’t been a protester or even a right-wing infiltrator, but the police themselves. In rally after rally, people have observed that looting and destruction only began after police charged and beat a crowd, or fired tear gas or rubber bullets into it. In other cases, it can take just one act by a protester to light the spark. Given the chaotic nature of the protests, it’s probable that everyone being blamed for property damage has played some role. But as the protests continue, and President Donald Trump calls for ever more violent methods of repression, the possible role of police provocateurs in protests is worth bearing in mind.

In 2008, Francesco Cossiga, one of the most important political figures in post-World War II Italy, provided a rare glimpse behind the curtain at how the world looks to people at the top of governments facing large-scale protests.

Cossiga had served as prime minister and then president of Italy. Before that, in the late ’70s, he led the Ministry of the Interior. During that period, he was notorious for the brutality with which he put down left-wing demonstrations led by students. This is how the New York Times reported the situation in 1977: “Extremists among the students have created chaos in a number of Italian cities with a wave of shooting and destruction.”

As Silvio Berlusconi’s administration faced similarly threatening protests, Cossiga urged them to rerun his playbook:

[They] should do what I did when I was interior minister. … Pull back police from streets and colleges, infiltrate the movement with provocateurs ready for anything [emphasis added], and for ten days let protesters devastate shops, burn down cars, and set cities aflame. Then, emboldened by popular support … police should have no mercy and send them all to the hospital. Not arrest them, because prosecutors would just free them right away, but beat them all and beat the professors that encourage them.

The Times appears to have mentioned the possibility that government provocateurs were behind some of the violence once — and then not as fact, but as an accusation of “leftwing parties and newspapers.”

Cossiga had been a professor of constitutional law and was a centrist Christian Democrat. When he became prime minister in 1979, Jimmy Carter’s ambassador to Italy saw this as an “excellent development,” and Cossiga maintained a strong relationship with America. There is no direct line between Cossiga and today’s protests in the U.S. But his example indicates that it’s no fevered conspiracy theory to believe reasonable, reputable figures see provocateur tactics as legitimate — even if most of them are more circumspect in public.

The best documented use of provocateurs by the U.S. government occurred during the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s Counter-Intelligence Program, or COINTELPRO, from 1956 to 1971. The reason the documentation is available is because a group of citizens broke into an FBI office in Pennsylvania — coincidentally, just a short drive from the warehouse targeted by police in 2000 — and stole files that they then passed to the media. This, in turn, led to congressional investigations, which pried loose more information.

In one notorious example in May 1970, an informant working for both the Tuscaloosa police and the FBI burned down a building at the University of Alabama during protests over the recent Kent State University shootings. The police then declared that demonstrators were engaging in an unlawful assembly and arrested 150 of them.

In another well-known case, a man nicknamed “Tommy the Traveler” visited numerous New York State colleges, posing as a radical member of Students for a Democratic Society. He encouraged acolytes to kidnap a congressman and offered training in Molotov cocktails. Two students at Hobart College acted on his suggestions and firebombed the campus ROTC building. Eventually it came out that his full name was Tommy Tongyai, and he had worked both for local police and the FBI.

The list goes on and on from there. An FBI informant, who said he was also a member of the John Birch Society, helped assemble time bombs and placed them on an Army truck. (The John Birch Society now says it has no record of his membership.) An FBI informant in the radical political organization Weather Underground took part in the bombing of a Cincinnati public school. A prominent member of Vietnam Veterans Against the War — and FBI informant — pushed for “shooting and bombing,” and his advocacy apparently did indeed lead to a bombing and a bomb threat. An FBI informant in Seattle drove a young black man named Larry Ward to a real estate office that engaged in housing discrimination and encouraged him to place a bomb there; the police were waiting and killed Ward. Thirteen Black Panthers were accused of a plot to blow up the Statue of Liberty after receiving 60 sticks of dynamite from an FBI informant. After 28 people broke into a federal building to destroy draft files in 1971, an FBI informant bragged, “I taught them everything they knew.” All 28 were acquitted when his role was revealed.

The FBI also allowed informants within right-wing organizations to participate in violence against progressive activists. Gary Thomas Rowe, who infiltrated the Ku Klux Klan in 1960, provided the FBI with three weeks warning that the Klan was planning attacks on Freedom Riders arriving in Alabama from the north. The FBI stood by and allowed the attacks to occur. Local police gave the Klan 15 minutes to assault the activists. In those 15 minutes, the white supremacists — including Rowe — set the Freedom Rider bus on fire in an attempt to burn them alive.

Rowe may also have played a role in the infamous 1963 bombing of the 16th Street Baptist Church in Birmingham, Alabama, which killed four young girls. He was in the car with three other Klansmen in 1965 when they chased down and murdered Viola Liuzzo, a mother of five from Detroit who’d traveled to Selma. Rowe received immunity for testifying against his compatriots, and was given a job as a U.S. Marshall by Lyndon Johnson’s attorney general.

Local police informants without apparent connections to the FBI got into the act too. A deputy sheriff enrolled as a student at SUNY Buffalo and helped students build and test bombs. Another informant posed as a student at Northeastern Illinois State College, led sit-ins for Students for a Democratic Society, and encouraged compatriots to sabotage military vehicles.

Soon after COINTELPRO was uncovered in 1971, the FBI announced that it was halting all such activities. Mark Felt, the assistant FBI director now also known to be the infamous “Deep Throat” source for Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein, later said that the bureau had made no effort to see that “constitutional values are being protected.”

When and whether the FBI ever stopped, however, is an open question. In 1975 an informant told the New York Times that he had engaged in COINTELPRO-like activities until he’d left the previous year. This included encouraging a Maoist group to blow up a bus at the 1972 GOP convention in Miami.

In any case, police forces in the U.S. continued the same tactics. In 1978, an undercover officer encouraged two hapless young activists to seize control of a television tower in Puerto Rico. When they arrived, they were gunned down by 10 policemen. Tellingly, when Puerto Rican government asked the FBI to investigate what happened, the FBI gave the government a clean bill of health. A top FBI official later called this a “coverup.”

After 9/11, the FBI got back in the business of encouraging violent acts in a big way — although they were generally much more careful to step in before the violence actually occurred. When journalist (and Intercept contributor) Trevor Aaronson examined U.S. prosecutions for international terrorism in the decade after the attacks, he found five examples of actual plots. By contrast, 150 people were indicted in sting operations that existed only thanks to the encouragement of the FBI and its informants. According to Aaronson, “the FBI is much better at creating terrorists than it is at catching terrorists.”

The same tactics have been used to generate purported domestic terrorism plots. In 2008 environmental activist Eric McDavid was sentenced to 20 years in prison for plotting to damage the Nimbus Dam in California. Eight years later, a judge ordered him released because the FBI had withheld evidence regarding a government informant. In 2012, the FBI and its informant essentially created a plot to blow up a bridge in Cleveland out of whole cloth, and dragged five Occupy activists into it.

Most recently, the FBI’s Counterterrorism Division invented something called the “Black Identity Extremism” movement. As portrayed by an FBI report, the threat from the imaginary movement reads as strikingly similar to that allegedly posed by black organizations during the days of COINTELPRO. The National Organization of Black Law Enforcement Executives said this “resurrects the historically negative legacy of African American civil rights leaders who were unconstitutionally targeted and attacked by federal, state, and local law enforcement agencies.”

That brings us to the present day. On the one hand, this history doesn’t mean that the FBI or local police are currently acting as provocateurs during the current unrest. But it does mean that such activity is clearly one avenue that is open to U.S. police forces looking to undermine protests and escalate violence.

Name: Anonymous 2020-06-15 20:41

[They] should do what I did when I was interior minister. … Pull back police from streets and colleges, infiltrate the movement with provocateurs ready for anything [emphasis added], and for ten days let protesters devastate shops, burn down cars, and set cities aflame. Then, emboldened by popular support … police should have no mercy and send them all to the hospital. Not arrest them, because prosecutors would just free them right away, but beat them all and beat the professors that encourage them.

>>105

Name: Sasuga Faux News 2020-06-17 20:52

On Saturday, Fox apologized in an editor’s note posted to stories about CHAZ on its website, sayings its home-page photos “did not clearly delineate” the splicing together of multiple images from different locations. The editor’s note also acknowledged the erroneous use of the Minnesota rioting photo to illustrate Seattle news. “Fox News regrets these errors,” the note stated.
https://primepatriot.com/2020/06/13/fox-news-runs-digitally-altered-images-in-coverage-of-seattles-protests-capitol-hill-autonomous-zone/
(To view the images with javascript disabled, inspect element and uncheck "opacity: 0;".)

Fox News runs digitally altered images in coverage of Seattle’s protests, Capitol Hill Autonomous Zone

Update: This story has been updated to include an apology Fox News posted on its website on Saturday.

Fox News published digitally altered and misleading photos on stories about Seattle’s Capitol Hill Autonomous Zone (CHAZ) in what photojournalism experts called a clear violation of ethical standards for news organizations.

As part of a package of stories Friday about the zone, where demonstrators have taken over several city blocks on Capitol Hill after Seattle police abandoned the East Precinct, Fox’s website for much of the day featured a photo of a man standing with a military-style rifle in front of what appeared to be a smashed retail storefront.

The image was actually a mashup of photos from different days, taken by different photographers — it was done by splicing a Getty Images photo of an armed man, who had been at the protest zone June 10, with other images from May 30 of smashed windows in downtown Seattle. Another altered image combined the gunman photo with yet another image, making it appear as though he was standing in front of a sign declaring “You are now entering Free Cap Hill.”

Fox’s site had no disclaimers revealing the photos had been manipulated. The network removed the images after inquiries from The Seattle Times.

In addition, Fox’s site for a time on Friday ran a frightening image of a burning city, above a package of stories about Seattle’s protests, headlined “CRAZY TOWN.” The photo actually showed a scene from St. Paul, Minnesota, on May 30. That image also was later removed.

The Fox News homepage on June 11 displayed an image from May 30 protests in St. Paul, Minnesota, to illustrate a story about Seattle’s Capitol Hill Autonomous Zone.

In this Associated Press photo from May 30, a protester runs past burning cars and buildings on Chicago Avenue in St. Paul, Minnesota. (John Minchillo / The Associated Press)

In an emailed statement, a Fox News spokeswoman said: “We have replaced our photo illustration with the clearly delineated images of a gunman and a shattered storefront, both of which were taken this week in Seattle’s autonomous zone.”

That statement is inaccurate, as the gunman photo was taken June 10, while storefront images it was melded with were datelined May 30 by Getty Images.

On Saturday, Fox apologized in an editor’s note posted to stories about CHAZ on its website, sayings its home-page photos “did not clearly delineate” the splicing together of multiple images from different locations. The editor’s note also acknowledged the erroneous use of the Minnesota rioting photo to illustrate Seattle news. “Fox News regrets these errors,” the note stated.

The network’s misleading and faked images were published as the Capitol Hill zone — quickly labeled CHAZ — became a political flashpoint for conservatives nationally and a target of tweets by President Donald Trump, who has branded the demonstrators “domestic terrorists” and threatened federal action unless local officials “take back” the area.

National news outlets on Friday also continued to cite a now-withdrawn comment by a Seattle police commander suggesting protesters were extorting payments from businesses within CHAZ. Seattle police Chief Carmen Best walked back that statement on Thursday, saying the comment was based on rumor and social media. “We haven’t had any formal reports of this occurring,” she said.

The daily scene at CHAZ has mostly been peaceful, with artists painting an enormous “Black Lives Matter” street mural and people gathering for free food, music and documentary films.

However, armed individuals have appeared in the zone, which was occupied by protesters after Seattle police retreated as a de-escalation move following several nights in which police fired tear gas and flash-bang devices. Police said that was in response to projectiles being thrown at officers. At a news conference this week, Best said she disagreed with the decision to leave the precinct, saying its abandonment has led to increased 911 response times.

ORIGINAL IMAGE: This June 10 image shows a sign on a barrier at the Capitol Hill Autonomous Zone (CHAZ). It was used in the creation of digitally manipulated images published by Fox News. (Photo by David Ryder/Getty Images)

MANIPULATED IMAGE: This digitally manipulated image was published on the Fox News homepage on June 12 with stories about Seattle. The image combines scenes from two different June 10 photographs from Capitol Hill.

The June 10 photo of an unidentified man with a gun standing in front of a car in CHAZ was taken by Seattle freelance photographer David Ryder, who distributed the photo through Getty Images.

The image, as displayed on the Fox News website, was spliced with other photos, including a photo of a smashed retail storefront in May, making it look as though the scene was all playing out concurrently in the autonomous zone. “It is definitely Photoshopped,” confirmed Ryder. “To use a photo out of context in a journalistic setting like that seems unethical.”

Photojournalism ethics experts agreed.

“I think it’s disgraceful propaganda and terribly misrepresentative of documentary journalism in times like this, when truth-telling and accountability is so important,” said Kenny Irby, a photojournalism ethics educator and consultant. “There is no attribution. There is no acknowledgment of the montage, and it’s terribly misleading.”

Akili Ramsess, executive director of the National Press Photographers Association (NPPA), said ethical standards clearly prohibit alteration of photos in news accounts.

“For a news photo that is supposed to be of the moment, it is completely egregious to manipulate this the way they have done,” Ramsess said.

While photo illustrations that meld images can be OK in certain contexts, such as for features or opinion pieces, they need to be properly labeled, she said, adding that misleading mashups have no place in straight news coverage. The NPPA ethics code expressly forbids use of altered photos in news stories.

Fox News has “a responsibility to their public. It’s one thing for their opinion hosts to state whatever opinion they have, but for their online news platform, they have to follow the ethical norms of any news organization,” she said.

Name: Anonymous 2020-06-19 0:43

The image was actually a mashup of photos from different days, taken by different photographers — it was done by splicing a Getty Images photo of an armed man, who had been at the protest zone June 10, with other images from May 30 of smashed windows in downtown Seattle. Another altered image combined the gunman photo with yet another image, making it appear as though he was standing in front of a sign declaring “You are now entering Free Cap Hill.”

In addition, Fox’s site for a time on Friday ran a frightening image of a burning city, above a package of stories about Seattle’s protests, headlined “CRAZY TOWN.” The photo actually showed a scene from St. Paul, Minnesota, on May 30. That image also was later removed.

>>107

Name: Anonymous 2020-06-20 22:38

In other words, do not dare to investigate us over issues like those over which we impose sanctions on other countries.

I therefore determine that any attempt by the ICC to investigate, arrest, detain, or prosecute any United States personnel without the consent of the United States, or of personnel of countries that are United States allies and who are not parties to the Rome Statute or have not otherwise consented to ICC jurisdiction, constitutes an unusual and extraordinary threat to the national security and foreign policy of the United States, and I hereby declare a national emergency to deal with that threat.

https://www.whitehouse.gov/presidential-actions/executive-order-blocking-property-certain-persons-associated-international-criminal-court/
Executive Order on Blocking Property Of Certain Persons Associated With The International Criminal Court

Issued on: June 11, 2020

By the authority vested in me as President by the Constitution and the laws of the United States of America, including the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (50 U.S.C. 1701 et seq.) (IEEPA), the National Emergencies Act (50 U.S.C. 1601 et seq.) (NEA), section 212(f) of the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1952 (8 U.S.C. 1182(f)), and section 301 of title 3, United States Code,

I, DONALD J. TRUMP, President of the United States of America, find that the situation with respect to the International Criminal Court (ICC) and its illegitimate assertions of jurisdiction over personnel of the United States and certain of its allies, including the ICC Prosecutor’s investigation into actions allegedly committed by United States military, intelligence, and other personnel in or relating to Afghanistan, threatens to subject current and former United States Government and allied officials to harassment, abuse, and possible arrest. These actions on the part of the ICC, in turn, threaten to infringe upon the sovereignty of the United States and impede the critical national security and foreign policy work of United States Government and allied officials, and thereby threaten the national security and foreign policy of the United States. The United States is not a party to the Rome Statute, has never accepted ICC jurisdiction over its personnel, and has consistently rejected ICC assertions of jurisdiction over United States personnel. Furthermore, in 2002, the United States Congress enacted the American Service-Members’ Protection Act (22 U.S.C. 7421 et seq.) which rejected the ICC’s overbroad, non-consensual assertions of jurisdiction. The United States remains committed to accountability and to the peaceful cultivation of international order, but the ICC and parties to the Rome Statute must respect the decisions of the United States and other countries not to subject their personnel to the ICC’s jurisdiction, consistent with their respective sovereign prerogatives. The United States seeks to impose tangible and significant consequences on those responsible for the ICC’s transgressions, which may include the suspension of entry into the United States of ICC officials, employees, and agents, as well as their immediate family members. The entry of such aliens into the United States would be detrimental to the interests of the United States and denying them entry will further demonstrate the resolve of the United States in opposing the ICC’s overreach by seeking to exercise jurisdiction over personnel of the United States and our allies, as well as personnel of countries that are not parties to the Rome Statute or have not otherwise consented to ICC jurisdiction.

I therefore determine that any attempt by the ICC to investigate, arrest, detain, or prosecute any United States personnel without the consent of the United States, or of personnel of countries that are United States allies and who are not parties to the Rome Statute or have not otherwise consented to ICC jurisdiction, constitutes an unusual and extraordinary threat to the national security and foreign policy of the United States, and I hereby declare a national emergency to deal with that threat. I hereby determine and order:

Section 1. (a) All property and interests in property that are in the United States, that hereafter come within the United States, or that are or hereafter come within the possession or control of any United States person, of the following persons are blocked and may not be transferred, paid, exported, withdrawn, or otherwise dealt in:
(i) any foreign person determined by the Secretary of State, in consultation with the Secretary of the Treasury and the Attorney General:
(A) to have directly engaged in any effort by the ICC to investigate, arrest, detain, or prosecute any United States personnel without the consent of the United States;
(B) to have directly engaged in any effort by the ICC to investigate, arrest, detain, or prosecute any personnel of a country that is an ally of the United States without the consent of that country’s government;
(C) to have materially assisted, sponsored, or provided financial, material, or technological support for, or goods or services to or in support of, any activity described in subsection (a)(i)(A) or (a)(i)(B) of this section or any person whose property and interests in property are blocked pursuant to this order; or
(D) to be owned or controlled by, or to have acted or purported to act for or on behalf of, directly or indirectly, any person whose property and interests in property are blocked pursuant to this order.
(b) The prohibitions in subsection (a) of this section apply except to the extent provided by statutes, or in regulations, orders, directives, or licenses that may be issued pursuant to this order, and notwithstanding any contract entered into or any license or permit granted before the date of this order.

Sec. 2. I hereby determine that the making of donations of the types of articles specified in section 203(b)(2) of IEEPA (50 U.S.C. 1702(b)(2)) by, to, or for the benefit of any person whose property and interests in property are blocked pursuant to section 1(a) of this order would seriously impair my ability to deal with the national emergency declared in this order, and I hereby prohibit such donations as provided by section 1(a) of this order.

Sec. 3. The prohibitions in section 1(a) of this order include:
(a) the making of any contribution or provision of funds, goods, or services by, to, or for the benefit of any person whose property and interests in property are blocked pursuant to section 1(a) of this order; and
(b) the receipt of any contribution or provision of funds, goods, or services from any such person.

Sec. 4. The unrestricted immigrant and nonimmigrant entry into the United States of aliens determined to meet one or more of the criteria in section 1(a) of this order, as well as immediate family members of such aliens, or aliens determined by the Secretary of State to be employed by, or acting as an agent of, the ICC, would be detrimental to the interests of the United States, and the entry of such persons into the United States, as immigrants or nonimmigrants, is hereby suspended, except where the Secretary of State determines that the entry of the person into the United States would not be contrary to the interests of the United States, including when the Secretary so determines, based on a recommendation of the Attorney General, that the person’s entry would further important United States law enforcement objectives. In exercising this responsibility, the Secretary of State shall consult the Secretary of Homeland Security on matters related to admissibility or inadmissibility within the authority of the Secretary of Homeland Security. Such persons shall be treated as persons covered by section 1 of Proclamation 8693 of July 24, 2011 (Suspension of Entry of Aliens Subject to United Nations Security Council Travel Bans and International Emergency Economic Powers Act Sanctions). The Secretary of State shall have the responsibility for implementing this section pursuant to such conditions and procedures as the Secretary has established or may establish pursuant to Proclamation 8693.

Sec. 5. (a) Any transaction that evades or avoids, has the purpose of evading or avoiding, causes a violation of, or attempts to violate any of the prohibitions set forth in this order is prohibited.
(b) Any conspiracy formed to violate any of the prohibitions set forth in this order is prohibited.

Sec. 6. Nothing in this order shall prohibit transactions for the conduct of the official business of the Federal Government by employees, grantees, or contractors thereof.

Sec. 7. For the purposes of this order:
(a) the term “person” means an individual or entity;
(b) the term “entity” means a government or instrumentality of such government, partnership, association, trust, joint venture, corporation, group, subgroup, or other organization, including an international organization;
(c) the term “United States person” means any United States citizen, permanent resident alien, entity organized under the laws of the United States or any jurisdiction within the United States (including foreign branches), or any person in the United States;
(d) the term “United States personnel” means any current or former members of the Armed Forces of the United States, any current or former elected or appointed official of the United States Government, and any other person currently or formerly employed by or working on behalf of the United States Government;
(e) the term “personnel of a country that is an ally of the United States” means any current or former military personnel, current or former elected or appointed official, or other person currently or formerly employed by or working on behalf of a government of a North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) member country or a “major non-NATO ally”, as that term is defined by section 2013(7) of the American Service-Members’ Protection Act (22 U.S.C. 7432(7)); and
(f) the term “immediate family member” means spouses and children.

Sec. 8. For those persons whose property and interests in property are blocked pursuant to this order who might have a constitutional presence in the United States, I find that because of the ability to transfer funds or other assets instantaneously, prior notice to such persons of measures to be taken pursuant to section 1 of this order would render those measures ineffectual. I therefore determine that for these measures to be effective in addressing the national emergency declared in this order, there need be no prior notice of a listing or determination made pursuant to section 1 of this order.

Sec. 9. The Secretary of the Treasury, in consultation with the Secretary of State, is hereby authorized to take such actions, including adopting rules and regulations, and to employ all powers granted to me by IEEPA as may be necessary to implement this order. The Secretary of the Treasury may, consistent with applicable law, redelegate any of these functions within the Department of the Treasury. All departments and agencies of the United States shall take all appropriate measures within their authority to implement this order.

Sec. 10. The Secretary of the Treasury, in consultation with the Secretary of State, is hereby authorized to submit recurring and final reports to the Congress on the national emergency declared in this order, consistent with section 401(c) of the NEA (50 U.S.C. 1641(c)) and section 204(c) of IEEPA (50 U.S.C. 1703(c)).

Sec. 11. (a) Nothing in this order shall be construed to impair or otherwise affect:
(i) the authority granted by law to an executive department or agency, or the head thereof; or
(ii) the functions of the Director of the Office of Management and Budget relating to budgetary, administrative, or legislative proposals.
(b) This order shall be implemented consistent with applicable law and subject to the availability of appropriations.
(c) This order is not intended to, and does not, create any right or benefit, substantive or procedural, enforceable at law or in equity by any party against the United States, its departments, agencies, or entities, its officers, employees, or agents, or any other person.

DONALD J. TRUMP

THE WHITE HOUSE,
June 11, 2020.

Name: Anonymous 2020-06-23 19:53

For those persons whose property and interests in property are blocked pursuant to this order who might have a constitutional presence in the United States, I find that because of the ability to transfer funds or other assets instantaneously, prior notice to such persons of measures to be taken pursuant to section 1 of this order would render those measures ineffectual. I therefore determine that for these measures to be effective in addressing the national emergency declared in this order, there need be no prior notice of a listing or determination made pursuant to section 1 of this order.

>>109

no prior notice

Name: Anonymous 2020-06-24 16:15

trebs

Name: Anonymous 2020-06-24 19:45

trebs
Trump
Rigs
Election
By
Suppression

>>66

Name: Anonymous 2020-06-26 19:04

Police reform is not ever going to happen:
https://www.spiked-online.com/2020/06/22/no-us-police-reform-without-union-reform/

American police has literally turned into a big crime syndicate itself. Edited on 26/06/2020 19:42.

Name: Anonymous 2020-06-29 9:56

'Grotesque Abuse' of Authority as Trump Declares National Emergency Over ICC Probe of Alleged US War Crimes
https://www.commondreams.org/news/2020/06/11/grotesque-abuse-authority-trump-declares-national-emergency-over-icc-probe-alleged
"The Trump administration's contempt for the global rule of law is plain."

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo (R) holds a joint news conference on the International Criminal Court with Defense Secretary Mark Esper (R), at the State Department in Washington, DC, on June 11, 2020. President Donald Trump on Thursday ordered sanctions against any official at the International Criminal Court who prosecutes U.S. troops as the tribunal looks at alleged war crimes in Afghanistan. (Photo by Yuri Gripas/ Pool/ AFP via Getty Images)

The Trump administration renewed its attacks on the International Criminal Court on Thursday with President Donald Trump issuing an executive order imposing economic sanctions against ICC staff involved in the ongoing investigations into alleged war crimes by U.S. and Israeli forces, with travel restrictions also imposed on those ICC court officials and their family members.

"Trump's sanctions order against ICC personnel and their families—some of whom could be American citizens—is a dangerous display of his contempt for human rights and those working to uphold them."—Hina Shamsi, ACLU "President Trump is grossly abusing emergency powers to block one of the only avenues left for justice to victims of terrible American human rights violations," Hina Shamsi, director of the ACLU's National Security Project, said in response to the move. "He has repeatedly bullied international organizations, and is now playing directly into the hands of authoritarian regimes by intimidating judges and prosecutors committed to holding countries accountable for war crimes.

"Trump's sanctions order against ICC personnel and their families—some of whom could be American citizens—is a dangerous display of his contempt for human rights and those working to uphold them," said Shamsi.

The new order follows the court's March decision to greenlight an investigation into alleged war crimes committed by U.S. forces and others in Afghanistan—despite repeated bullying attempts by the administration to block that probe as well as the ICC's investigation of alleged war crimes committed by Israel against Palestinians in the Occupied Territories.

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo—who signaled earlier this month that such a move was forthcoming—announced the administration's action at a press conference Thursday in which he accused the ICC of being a "kangaroo court" carrying out an "ideological crusade against American servicemembers" and warned that other NATO countries could "be next" to face similar investigations.

The executive order accuses the ICC of making "illegitimate assertions of jurisdiction over personnel of the United States and certain of its allies" and claims the court's probes "threaten the national security and foreign policy of the United States."

From Trump's executive order:

The United States seeks to impose tangible and significant consequences on those responsible for the ICC's transgressions, which may include the suspension of entry into the United States of ICC officials, employees, and agents, as well as their immediate family members. The entry of such aliens into the United States would be detrimental to the interests of the United States and denying them entry will further demonstrate the resolve of the United States in opposing the ICC's overreach by seeking to exercise jurisdiction over personnel of the United States and our allies, as well as personnel of countries that are not parties to the Rome Statute or have not otherwise consented to ICC jurisdiction.

I therefore determine that any attempt by the ICC to investigate, arrest, detain, or prosecute any United States personnel without the consent of the United States, or of personnel of countries that are United States allies and who are not parties to the Rome Statute or have not otherwise consented to ICC jurisdiction, constitutes an unusual and extraordinary threat to the national security and foreign policy of the United States, and I hereby declare a national emergency to deal with that threat.

In a lengthy Twitter thread responding to the order, Elizabeth Goitein, co-director of the Liberty and National Security Program at the Brennan Center for Justice, framed the White House's action as "a grotesque abuse of emergency powers, on par with the president's declaration of a national emergency to secure funding that Congress had denied for building a border wall along the southern border."

That Trump said "the prospect of U.S. personnel being held accountable for war crimes is a *national emergency* (The war crimes themselves? Not so much.)" is "particularly galling because the U.S. uses this particular emergency power—the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA)—to impose sanctions on foreign government officials who engage in human rights violations," tweeted Goitein.

"The president's abuse of emergency powers has itself become an emergency," she continued, "and if Congress does not act soon, the situation will only get worse."

"The Trump administration's contempt for the global rule of law is plain," tweeted Liz Evenson, associate international justice director at Human Rights Watch. "ICC member countries should make clear this bullying won't work."

>>109

Name: Anonymous 2020-06-30 20:35

“When you do testing to that extent, you’re gonna find more people, you’re gonna find more cases. So I said to my people slow the testing down.”
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/jun/21/global-report-trump-says-he-ordered-coronavirus-testing-to-slow-down
Global report: Trump says he ordered coronavirus testing to 'slow down'

Testing a ‘double-edged sword’, says Trump; Chile death toll nearly doubles; Australian state ‘absolutely at risk’ of second peak

Sun 21 Jun 2020 06.00 BST

Donald Trump told thousands of supporters on Saturday that he had asked US officials to slow down testing for Covid-19 because case numbers in the country were rising so rapidly.

Speaking at a campaign rally in Tulsa, Oklahoma, the US president used racist language, referring to Covid-19 as “kung flu”, and described testing for the virus as a “double-edged sword” because it led to the identification of more cases.

The US had now tested 25 million people, far more than other countries, Trump said, adding: “When you do testing to that extent, you’re gonna find more people, you’re gonna find more cases. So I said to my people slow the testing down.”

A White House official later told Reuters that Trump was joking.

Across the US, more than 119,654 people are confirmed to have been killed by Covid-19, according to Johns Hopkins University. It remains the country worst hit by coronavirus, followed by Brazil, which now has more than a million cases, and Russia, which has 576,162 infections.

Trump said the “radical fake news” media had not given him credit for doing what he called “a phenomenal job” of responding to the outbreak.

The campaign rally in Tulsa went ahead despite warnings from health officials that it risked fuelling a spike in coronavirus cases. The crowd was smaller than expected, with many empty sections in the 19,000-seat arena, but few attendees wore masks.

Globally, 8,753,853 coronavirus cases have now been recorded and 463,281 fatalities confirmed, according to Johns Hopkins University.

The death toll in Chile rose especially sharply on Saturday, almost doubling to more than 7,000, after the government adjusted its data to include deaths that are probably linked to Covid-19. Official figures show there have been 236,748 infections in the country so far.

Meanwhile, several countries have reintroduced social curbs, or are considering doing so, to protect against a second wave of cases.

In Victoria, Australia’s second most populous state, case numbers are the highest they have been in more than two months, prompting the Chief Health Officer Brett Sutton to warn: “We are absolutely at risk of a second peak”.

The state has extended its state of emergency for another four weeks and limited the number of guests permitted to visit people’s homes to five. Plans to relax rules on the number of customers allowed in cafes, restaurants and pubs have also been put on hold.

German health officials have also reported a rise in transmission, following clusters of cases linked to meatpacking plants, logistics centres, and refugee shelters.

Greece has also announced another extension of the coronavirus lockdown on its migrant camps, despite warnings that migrants rights are being undermined by the restrictions.

The Palestinian Authority is among those tightening restrictions, after announcing on Saturday that it would temporarily close the cities of Hebron and Nablus in the occupied West Bank, following a sharp rise in infections.

Iranian president Hassan Rouhani said he was considering making it mandatory within days to wear masks in public places, after the tally of confirmed coronavirus cases passed 200,000.

The developments follow last week’s warning from the head of the World Health Organization, Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, that the world had entered “a new and dangerous phase” of the coronavirus pandemic.

“Countries are understandably eager to open up their societies and economies but the virus is still spreading fast, it is still deadly and most people are still susceptible,” he said on Friday. “We call on all countries and all people to exercise extreme vigilance.”

In other developments:

China reported 26 new confirmed coronavirus cases on Sunday, driven by the outbreak linked to a wholesale food centre in the south-west of Beijing.

The Philippines reported 578 new cases of coronavirus on Saturday, a record number. This includes test results that were released to patients over the past three days.

Two new Covid-19 cases have been detected in New Zealand, according to the Ministry of Health. One is the child of the couple returning from Delhi who were revealed as cases on Saturday, the second is a 59-year-old woman who also returned from Delhi, but at a later date – on June 15.

Serbians go to polls on Sunday to elect a new parliament in Europe’s first national election since coronavirus lockdowns took effect some three months ago.

An Italian collective brought 67 migrants to safety on Saturday, as the first charity rescue ship reached Italian shores since authorities had decided to close all ports because of the coronavirus pandemic in April.

Reuters and Agence France-Presse contributed to this report.

Name: Anonymous 2020-07-01 5:23

>>114
He has repeatedly bullied international organizations,
Trump is somehow reaching for based levels i didn't thought possible. Giving UN globalists the finger is something i'd expect of Putin or Jinping.

Name: Anonymous 2020-07-01 5:26

Name: Anonymous 2020-07-01 10:10

>>116
Giving UN globalists the finger is something i'd expect of Putin or Jinping.
On the contrary, Winnie the Pooh got a huge boost to his Belt and Road Initiative, and thereby to chinese power, by Trump pulling out of the TPP whose main goal was containing chinese influence.

Name: Anonymous 2020-07-01 12:34

>>118
It was a corporate power grab to dictate copyright and DRM. Educate yourself.

https://www.eff.org/issues/tpp

Name: Anonymous 2020-07-01 19:55

>>119
Your understanding is superficial, although your heart seems to be in the right place. All "free trade" treaties with ISDS type provisions are corporate power grabs, although "copyright and DRM" are far less important than circumventing the domestic legal system. But this doesn't single out the TPP. Within the group of treaties of this type, the defining characteristic of the TPP is that it was designed to contain chinese influence. The Pea-brainOTUS gave a huge boost to chinese influence by withdrawing.


“When you do testing to that extent, you’re gonna find more people, you’re gonna find more cases. So I said to my people slow the testing down.”
>>115

Name: Anonymous 2020-07-01 20:20

Reverse sexism does not exist. Saying „kill all men” does not mean anything since it is physically impossible to do so.

Name: Anonymous 2020-07-02 5:56

>>121
The phrase "reverse sexism" itself hints that we live in a society where discrimination against males is legalized as "reversal of" past order.
There of course wasn't ever any "kill all women" movement or program, as it would be ridiculous.

Name: Anonymous 2020-07-02 8:33

>>120
How does it contain China, who has trade with every single country in the world?
It was another powergrab for corporate power in guise of free trade and cooperation.

Name: Anonymous 2020-07-02 10:08

>>123
How does it contain China, who has trade with every single country in the world?
You dropped the word "influence". It was aimed at containing chinese influence through quite similar means to how China has aggressively spread it through Belt and Road since the Pea-brainOTUS withdrew from the TPP. It set the US up as the hub through which regional cooperative projects would be coordinated, a position that gives you the kind of positive influence that cannot be obtained by dotting the map with military bases or perferming freedom of navigation exercises. This is not something Trump has the temperament or the mental capacity to understand. Separately, of course the TPP would have been immensely improved by cutting out all ISDS type provisions.


“When you do testing to that extent, you’re gonna find more people, you’re gonna find more cases. So I said to my people slow the testing down.”
>>115

Name: Anonymous 2020-07-02 13:10

It set the US up as the hub through which
There isn't such thing in the treaty, unless you somehow insert the petrodollar dependence scheme here. There isn't any concrete requirement for US arbitration, in fact it subsumes US authorities in favor of broad ISDS powers that are staffed by globalists & megacorporation stooges.

Name: Anonymous 2020-07-02 20:48

>>125
There isn't any concrete requirement for US arbitration, in fact it subsumes US authorities in favor of broad ISDS powers
Superficially this may appear to be true. However, you need to remember that arbitration decisions do not magically become reality if the parties do not want them to. They need to be enforced. For example, Ecuador is unlikely to get billions of Exxon's assets no matter how many arbitration decisions it wins. The TPP parties agreed to group enforcement by the signatories, which means de facto US enforcement. It would not have come to that anyway in most cases since US good will is usually much more valuable to countries than getting one over the US in an arbitration hearing.

“When you do testing to that extent, you’re gonna find more people, you’re gonna find more cases. So I said to my people slow the testing down.”
>>115

Name: Anonymous 2020-07-05 10:09

"Once again the president is revealing that he seems to see this primarily as a public relations crisis, not as a deadly pandemic."
https://www.commondreams.org/news/2020/06/21/trump-panned-campaign-hate-saying-he-called-less-covid-19-testing
Published on Sunday, June 21, 2020

Trump Panned for 'Campaign of Hate,' Saying He Called for Less Covid-19 Testing

"Once again the president is revealing that he seems to see this primarily as a public relations crisis, not as a deadly pandemic."

As coronavirus cases continue to increase nationwide, President Donald Trump is drawing criticism for his Saturday rally in Tulsa, Oklahoma from a number of angles, including his suggestion that he encouraged officials to slow down testing for Covid-19 and his unauthorized use of a song to promote "a campaign of hate."

Trump said at the rally that the nation has tested 25 million people. "When you do testing to that extent, you're going to find more people, you're going to find more cases."

"So I said to my people, 'Slow the testing down, please.' They test and they test," said Trump.

CNN's Jake Tapper said Sunday that "the president is revealing that he seems to see this primarily as a public relations crisis, not as a deadly pandemic," and took a jab at what he framed as the Trump's "glib indifference and a myopic focus on bad headlines" rather than efforts to control the spread of the coronavirus.

White House trade adviser Peter Navarro claimed to Tapper on CNN that the comments about testing were "tongue and cheek."

A tweet Saturday night from Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi (D-Ill.) suggests that damage control may not be enough. "In case there's any question: Congress will be pursuing answers on this because the American people deserve to know if their president sabotaged efforts to detect and contain Covid-19 because he didn't like the results," wrote Krishnamoorthi. "The result he needs to focus on is the lives we can save."

Trump's comment came in the midst of continued grim figures about the virus's spread and human toll.

An ABC News analysis published Friday found that hospitalizations for Covid-19 were increasing in 17 states. One of those states is Florida, which on Saturday reported another record-high one-day increase in the number of cases. But Florida isn't alone, as the Washington Post reported:

Eight states on Saturday reported their highest single-day case counts since the pandemic began, and daily new infections nationwide exceeded 30,000 on both Friday and Saturday. The country has not seen daily totals that high in more than seven weeks.

The family of late rocker Tom Petty also sharply rebuked the Trump administration late Saturday when they announced that they issued a cease and desist notice to the campaign for its use of the song "I Won't Back Down" at the Tulsa rally.

"Trump was in no way authorized to use this song to further a campaign that leaves too many Americans and common sense behind," the family said in a statement posted on Twitter. As Rolling Stone noted, the statement is signed by Petty’s estate and rights holders—his daughters Adria and Annakim, his ex-wife Jane, and his widow Dana.

“Both the late Tom Petty and his family firmly stand against racism and discrimination of any kind. Tom Petty would never want a song of his used for a campaign of hate," they said.

"We believe in America and we believe in democracy. But Donald Trump is not representing the noble ideals of either," the statement adds. "We would hate for fans that are marginalized by this administration to think we were complicit in this usage."

Trump's campaign event was the subject of mockery as well.

As Heather Cox Richardson noted at BillMoyers.com,

[Trump's] campaign manager, Brad Parscale, along with the president himself, has spent days crowing that almost a million tickets had been reserved, and the campaign had built an outside stage for overflow crowds.

But far fewer than the 19,000 people Tulsa's BOK Center could hold showed up: the local fire marshal said the number was just under 6,200. Young TikTok users and fans of Korean pop music (so-called “K-Pop stans”), along with Instagram and Snapchat users, had quietly ordered tickets to prank the campaign. The technological savvy of their generation has turned political: they knew that the Trump campaign harvests information from ticket reservations, bombarding applicants with texts and requests for donations. So they set up fake accounts and phone numbers to order the tickets, then deleted the fake accounts. They also deleted their social media posts organizing the plan to keep it from the attention of the Trump campaign.

The poor turnout after such hype was deeply embarrassing for the campaign.

The social media users' action drew applause from Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, who told Parscale that the activists "tricked you into believing a million people wanted your white supremacist open mic enough to pack an arena during Covid."

"Shout out to Zoomers," she tweeted. "Y'all make me so proud."

Name: Anonymous 2020-07-09 19:52

Senators Find $14 Billion in Unspent Funds After Trump Admits to Ordering Slowdown in Covid-19 Testing
https://www.commondreams.org/news/2020/06/22/senators-find-14-billion-unspent-funds-after-trump-admits-ordering-slowdown-covid-19
"This administration will put our country at grave risk if it tries to declare an early victory, leave lifesaving work undone, and leave resources our communities desperately need sitting untouched."
Published on Monday, June 22, 2020

Following President Donald Trump's admission during a campaign rally in Oklahoma over the weekend that he ordered administration officials to "slow the testing down" in response to the recent surge in Covid-19 cases, two leading Democratic senators on Sunday slammed the Health and Human Services Department for failing to spend $14 billion in funds Congress approved in April to expand coronavirus testing and tracing.

"While it has been months since these funds were first appropriated, the administration has failed to disburse significant amounts of this funding, leaving communities without the resources they need to address the significant challenges presented by the virus," Sen. Patty Murray (D-Wash.) and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) wrote in a letter (pdf) to HHS Secretary Alex Azar on Sunday.

"Since the start of the coronavirus crisis in our country the President has ignored experts, denied facts, and put his self-interest ahead of Americans' lives—and here he is saying so." —Sen. Patty Murray "The United States is at a critical juncture in its fight against Covid-19, and now is the time for an aggressive and fast response," wrote Murray and Schumer. "This administration will put our country at grave risk if it tries to declare an early victory, leave lifesaving work undone, and leave resources our communities desperately need sitting untouched."

The senators' letter notes that the Trump administration has yet to spend more than $8 billion of the $25 billion Congress appropriated for coronavirus testing in April. The administration has also failed to spend $4 billion in funds for Covid-19 contact tracing and nearly $2 billion to provide free testing for the uninsured, according to Murray and Schumer.

"We call on you to immediately disburse the remainder of the $25 billion in funds to ramp up testing and contact tracing capacity," the senators wrote, "as well as to make sure providers are aware of and able to easily access the $2 billion that Congress appropriated to provide testing for the uninsured."

The letter was sent a day after Trump, during his first campaign rally since the Covid-19 pandemic shuttered much of the U.S. in March, declared that he ordered a slowdown in coronavirus testing in the face of rising cases across the U.S. More than two dozen states on Sunday reported that their seven-day average of new coronavirus cases increased last week.

"You know testing is a double-edged sword," Trump said at the event in Tulsa, claiming the U.S. has tested 25 million people. "When you do testing to that extent, you're going to find more people. You're going to find more cases. So I said to my people, 'Slow the testing down, please.'"

The comment, which two White House officials insisted was a joke, was met with swift backlash from lawmakers and public health experts who have repeatedly emphasized that a robust, nationwide testing system is necessary to stem the spread of Covid-19 and reopen the economy safely.

"Looking at it as a scoreboard is the wrong way to think about it," Amesh Adalja, an infectious-disease expert at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security, told the Washington Post. "To think of it as something you can manipulate or slow down based on what the numbers look like speaks to a complete misunderstanding of what an infectious-disease response should be."

Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.), whose father died last week of complications from the coronavirus, condemned Trump's remarks in a tweet on Sunday.

"This man is reprehensible, my father and so many Americans lost their lives and this is what he has to say," said Omar. "I pray for our country to find a way to recover from the destruction of his presidency and heal all wounds. This presidency is without a shred of humanity and dignity."

Name: Anonymous 2020-07-09 20:20

What programming language is this?

Name: Anonymous 2020-07-10 10:24

>>129
1. Exactly as in >>33-34,39-40,102,104,129,130.

2.
(() => {
const items = "Ada,ALGOL,BASIC,C,C++,COBOL,Common Lisp,Emacs Lisp,Fortran,Haskell,Java,JavaScript,Pascal,PHP,Prolog,Python,Scheme,Simula,Smalltalk".split (",")
const pick = () => items [Math.floor (Math.random () * items.length)]
Array.from (document.getElementsByClassName ("body")).filter (e => /^whatprogramminglanguageisthis$/i.test (e.innerText.replace (/[^a-zA-Z]+/g, ""))).forEach (e => { e.innerHTML += "<hr /><p>you rolled: " + pick () + "</p>"; })
}) ()

Name: Anonymous 2020-07-11 19:46

>>130
Not a real answer

Name: Anonymous 2020-07-12 11:33

>>131
That's because Trump's competence is imaginary so "a search for a solution to the voter halting problem on a Trumping Machine" is a complex value.


“When you do testing to that extent, you’re gonna find more people, you’re gonna find more cases. So I said to my people slow the testing down.”
>>115

Name: Anonymous 2020-07-15 19:35

Bravo You Heroes: Columbus OH Police Mace Double Amputee, Take His Legs, Leave Him Writhing
https://www.commondreams.org/further/2020/06/22/bravo-you-heroes-columbus-oh-police-mace-double-amputee-take-his-legs-leave-him-0
Monday, June 22, 2020

In a new study from the University of Chicago that manages to be both shocking and grimly unsurprising, legal researchers found police in 20 of America's big cities fail to meet even the most basic international human rights standards governing lethal force - a level of brutality across the country that fits the deadly definition of “state-sanctioned violence.” Looking at cities including Chicago, L.A., Houston, San Diego, Seattle and Indianapolis, the law clinic found not a single police department operating under state guidelines lthat are compliant with the minimum standards laid out under international human rights laws, from mandating lethal force be used only when facing an immediate threat to constraining police to use only proportionate force to requiring independent external investigations when things go wrong. Hence, Rayshard Brooks, George Floyd, Atatiana Jefferson, Laquan McDonald, Eric Garner, etc etc ad nauseum. Of the 20 cities, Chicago and L.A. rank at the top for at least some compliance with human rights laws; at the bottom is Indianapolis, because thanks Mike Pence. In Europe, where chokeholds have been banned for years, the U.S. is seen as a racist, barbaric outlier in the realm of human rights when it comes to police brutality. Speaking with The Guardian, Agnès Callamard, the UN monitor on extrajudicial, summary or arbitrary executions, said she was "horrified" seeing U.S. police in savage action: "We are watching people dying in public at the hands of those who are supposed to protect us.”

For anyone who hasn't been hunkered in a cave for weeks, months, decades - Oscar Grant was killed in 2009 - the only real stunner is the list's failure to include Columbus, Ohio, where for weeks rioting police have been covering their badges and so indisputably, indiscriminately gassing with chemical agents people exercising their Constitutional rights that the mayor and city council passed a ban on teargassing "peaceful protesters" - a move that enraged police union thugs. Still, Sunday night police were filmed violently shoving their bikes into crowds of peaceful protesters - "Weaponizing bikes: a recruiting tools for sadists" - and wildly gassing protesters. In a universally deemed "new level of abhorrent," their victims included a young, double amputee who, struck and then maced, hit the ground, whereupon police ghouls seized his prosthetics. A grisly, surreal scene ensued: The kid (because he looks like a kid) crawled away from police as a few protesters tried to grab back the legs; when police sprayed them too, several more ganged up and eventually got hold of the legs; in the aftermath, filmed by a professor at Columbus College of Art & Design and reposted to Reddit, the young man twists on the ground in agony as a fellow-protester frantically screams, "Medic! Medic!" His prosthetics lie sprawled nearby. The spectacle caused horrified city officials to call for the de-militarization of police: “The presence of police should never look and feel to residents like we are at war...The word 'peaceful' has a definition when you look it up." On Reddit, a disgusted u/meanmrbadger was more forthright about cops assaulting "an unarmed, no legged" resident: "Bravo, you heroes."

Name: Anonymous 2020-07-15 19:39

What programming language is this?

Name: Anonymous 2020-07-15 20:25

>>134
ruby on rails

Name: Anonymous 2020-07-18 9:17

Ruby Gettin' Railed, a pornographic parody film

Name: Anonymous 2020-07-20 22:35

>>136
Is this the one in which Trump begs the russian prostitutes to pee on him?

Name: Anonymous 2020-07-21 10:42

>>137
No, that'd be Donald Trump Piss #44

Name: Anonymous 2020-07-21 11:15

>>137
Who doesn't want to be peed on by russian prostitutes?

Name: Anonymous 2020-07-23 9:51

>>139
Anyone who has a healthy appreciation of vaginas instead of a manchild worship of vaginas caused by not getting any in their youth.

Name: Anonymous 2020-07-23 14:04

>>140
And it's hard to imagine something more sexy than a dense autist.

Name: Anonymous 2020-07-23 20:18

>>141
Clapping at his own speech during the clapping breaks of his first SOTU address because he had no concept of what clapping is for was a marvellous demonstration. It caused appropriate amounts of ridicule around the world, and his aides had to explain the meaning of clapping to him to avoid the same ridicule during subsequent SOTU speeches.

Name: What programming language is this? 2020-07-26 8:27

What programming language is this?

Name: Anonymous 2020-07-26 20:51

RWAF tribesmen: "If you're not doing anything wrong, what do you have to hide? Some CDC testimony maybe?"

'Alarming': Trump Blocks CDC Officials From Testifying to Education Panel on School Reopenings
https://www.commondreams.org/news/2020/07/18/alarming-trump-blocks-cdc-officials-testifying-education-panel-school-reopenings
"It's imperative that we listen to the experts... the president is barring them from the room."

The Democratic chairman of the House Education and Labor Committee revealed Friday that the Trump administration is blocking Centers for Disease Control and Prevention officials—including agency director Dr. Robert Redfield—from testifying at a congressional hearing next week on school reopenings as the White House continues its efforts to force the resumption of in-person classes in the fall.

"It is alarming that the Trump administration is preventing the CDC from appearing before the committee at a time when its expertise and guidance is so critical to the health and safety of students, parents, and educators," Rep. Bobby Scott (D-Va.) said in a statement. "This lack of transparency does a great disservice to the many communities across the country facing difficult decisions about reopening schools this fall."

"The administration's strategy of prioritizing politics over science has had a devastating impact on our country throughout this pandemic," Scott added. "It should not make that same mistake when it comes to reopening schools."

The White House confirmed its decision to block the testimony of Redfield and other CDC officials, saying the director "has testified on the Hill at least four times over the last three months."

Educators and public health experts have denounced as reckless the Trump administration's push to reopen schools as Covid-19 cases and hospitalizations surge across the United States. The White House, say teachers and parents, has failed to present a sensible plan to resume in-person classes without threatening the health of students and faculty.

"Without a comprehensive plan that includes federal resources to provide for the safety of our students and educators with funding for personal protective equipment, socially distanced instruction, and addressing racial inequity, we could be putting students, their families, and educators in danger," six groups representing millions of U.S. teachers and parents said in a joint statement on July 7.

Instead of working with teachers and experts to decide the best way forward, President Donald Trump and Education Secretary Betsy DeVos have publicly threatened to withhold federal funding from schools that refuse to reopen in the fall. Earlier this month, Trump complained on Twitter that the CDC's school reopening guidelines—which encourage face coverings and social distancing in classrooms—are too "tough" and "expensive."

"It's imperative that we listen to the experts," tweeted Rep. Joe Morelle (D-N.Y.), a member of the House Education and Labor Committee. "It's alarming, but sadly not surprising, that the president is barring them from the room."

Name: Anonymous 2020-07-30 10:03

Republican congressman charged with felonies related to illegal voting
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/jul/15/steve-watkins-republican-felony-charges-illegal-voting
Steve Watkins changed voter registration address to a UPS store in Topeka, Kansas, in 2019, the Topeka Capital-Journal reported
Wed 15 Jul 2020 19.17 BST

Steve Watkins, a Republican congressman in Kansas, was charged with three felonies and a misdemeanor on Tuesday related to illegally voting in a 2019 local race. The charges came in a state where Republicans have for years made claims of widespread non-citizen voting, with little evidence.

Prosecutors did not provide details of the charges, but said they were related to a 2019 local election. The Topeka Capital-Journal previously reported that Watkins changed his voter registration address to a local UPS store in Topeka in August 2019. He made the change to hide that he was living with his parents at the time, according to the Kansas City Star. Watkins also allegedly lied to a detective about the matter in February, according to court documents obtained by the Star.

Watkins’ change of address was significant because it placed him in a city council district different than the one he was actually living in. The city council district race Watkins voted in was decided by just 13 votes in November 2019, according to the Capital-Journal.

Watkins, a first-term congressman who represents the eastern part of Kansas, was charged with voting without being qualified, marking/transmitting more than one advance ballot, and obstructing law enforcement. He was also charged with a misdemeanor for failing to notify the state of a change of address.

Watkins’ chief of staff told the Capital-Journal the congressman made a mistake in registering at the UPS address. But Bryan Piligra, a spokesman for Watkins’ re-election campaign also noted the charges were announced just before Watkins was set to participate in a primary debate.

“They couldn’t have been more political if they tried,” he said in a statement. “Just like President Trump, Steve is being politically prosecuted by his opponents who can’t accept the results of the last election.”

Voting without being qualified is punishable with between 15 and 17 months in prison for a first-time offender, according to the Kansas City Star. The other two felonies are punishable by seven to nine months in prison.

The charges come as Donald Trump and other Republicans have stirred fears that the 2020 election will be tainted by significant voter fraud, though several studies have shown that voter fraud is extremely rare and isolated. The most high-profile election fraud case in recent years involved another Republican running for Congress in 2018 who hired an operative who illegally collected mail-in ballots.

Prosecutors across the US have used cases in which people vote while ineligible, even by mistake, to set an example. In Texas, Crystal Mason, an African American woman, didn’t know she was ineligible to vote but was sentenced to five years in prison for attempting to vote in 2016 while on supervised release for a felony conviction (an appeal is ongoing). In North Carolina, prosecutors have also filed criminal charges in recent years against people with felony convictions and non-citizens who voted.

In Kansas, the former secretary of state Kris Kobach, a Republican, built his national profile by suggesting there were a significant number of non-citizens on the state’s voter rolls. His signature achievement was getting the legislature to pass a law requiring voters to provide documents proving their citizenship when they register to vote. But a federal court struck down the law, saying it placed an unlawful burden on voters and noting just 67 non-citizens had either attempted to register or had registered over nearly two decades.

Bob Salera, a spokesman for the National Republican Congressional Committee, the campaign arm of House Republicans, said the group was aware of the charges and seeking more information.

Name: Anonymous 2020-07-30 14:38

Name: Anonymous 2020-08-01 14:45

A video of cops killing an actress girl:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KVOjJf6gYuw

her only crime was having a depression. Cops broke into her house and put her to death. She wont ever have a depression anymore.

Name: Anonymous 2020-08-02 7:37

Racist Australian alt-Right, CatboyKami, who was calling to genocide Blacks and Jews, got a fan following in Russia:
https://medialeaks.ru/1607amv-catboykami-troll/

Russian social networks now host the racist content deplatformed from youtube.

Name: Anonymous 2020-08-04 6:47

Full leaked body cam footage of the George Floyd killing:
https://twitter.com/AttorneyCrump/status/1290371262481666048

the guy was scared to death the cops will shot him, but they instead suffocated him.

Name: Anonymous 2020-08-04 17:56

White rapist cop abused countless black girls:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daniel_Holtzclaw

Name: Anonymous 2020-08-04 22:50

What programming language is this?

Name: Anonymous 2020-08-05 11:30

>>151
Nigga

Name: Anonymous 2020-08-05 15:19

Name: Anonymous 2020-08-06 14:27

>>153
That was actually planned since the beginning when the Russian bomb ship has just arrived there:
http://web.archive.org/web/20140903104650/http://www.novayagazeta.ru/blogs/86/64556.html

Name: Anonymous 2020-08-07 20:41

RWAF tribesmen: "If you're not doing anything wrong, what do you have to hide?" >>144
No wonder the Trump administration doesn’t want Anthony Fauci on TV -- July 5, 2020 -- https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2020/07/05/no-wonder-trump-administration-doesnt-want-anthony-fauci-tv/ -- http://archive.is/nKB3P

On CBS’s “Face the Nation” on Sunday morning, host Margaret Brennan gave viewers an unusual peek behind the booking curtain. “We think it’s important for our viewers to hear from Dr. Anthony Fauci and the Centers for Disease Control,” she said to the camera. “But we have not been able to get our requests for Dr. Fauci approved by the Trump administration in the last three months, and the CDC not at all. We will continue our efforts.” CBS isn’t the only media outlet with this issue: Fauci and other key health-policy figures on the administration’s coronavirus task force have been largely pulled from the airwaves in recent weeks while cases surge nationwide. Their absence makes sense, though, when you realize that even in the midst of this deadly pandemic, the administration’s top priority is the president’s image. With new coronavirus cases at 50,000 for four straight days, a normal administration would be flooding news programs with medical experts to tell Americans to wear masks, practice social distancing and otherwise fight the virus’s spread. But the Trump White House is doing the opposite. As CNN reported Friday, Fauci hasn’t been on U.S. television in three weeks, even though the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases is one of the few leaders that most Americans trust right now. Deborah Birx, coordinator of the administration’s coronavirus response, and Robert Redfield, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, have also been conspicuously absent. What clips Americans have seen of Fauci & Co. have come from congressional hearings, which the administration has less control over.

Instead, this Sunday, the administration dispatched Stephen Hahn, commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration, to represent the White House. It was a telling choice: Hahn can point to decades of experience as an oncologist and cancer researcher — and many donations to GOP causes — but unlike other recent FDA heads, Hahn has no background in health policy. Yet the politically savvy Hahn no doubt understood that his job Sunday was to deal with the president’s claim on Saturday that “99 percent” of coronavirus cases are “totally harmless.” Not surprisingly, Hahn dealt with such a gobsmacking claim by dodging it entirely. When ABC’s Martha Raddatz asked for “any evidence that is an accurate statement,” Hahn immediately pivoted to case numbers. When CNN’s Dana Bash pointed out that the CDC estimates that “only about a third of coronavirus cases are asymptomatic” and the World Health Organization estimates that 20 percent need hospital care or oxygen, Hahn said, “I totally support the CDC and the information that they’re putting out with respect to this pandemic.” And when Bash directly asked whether the president was wrong, Hahn said, “I’m not going to get into who is right and who is wrong.” In explaining Fauci’s absence from television, an administration source told CNN that Fauci’s interviews had too much “doom and gloom” to fit the Trump view that everything is fine. And it seems even other public health experts such as Birx and Redfield, who have more often toed the president’s line, have also deferred to reality too many times for the administration’s liking. So it’s not hard to imagine why this White House wouldn’t want them commenting on the president’s latest irresponsible statements. This White House’s goal, after all, is not public safety but to avoid making the president look bad — no matter the cost.

Name: Anonymous 2020-08-10 9:56

Minneapolis protests: 'Umbrella Man' who broke windows is white supremacist, police say -- Man sought to incite racial tension and sparked chaos at peaceful demonstrations, police say -- Wed 29 Jul 2020 -- https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/jul/28/minneapolis-protests-umbrella-man-alleged-white-supremacist

Police say a man captured on surveillance video breaking windows at a south Minneapolis auto parts store in the days after George Floyd’s death is suspected of ties with a white supremacist group and sought to incite racial tension.

The man’s actions soon led to an arson fire, the first of several that transformed peaceful protests into chaos, police say. He has been dubbed “Umbrella Man” for dressing in an all-black outfit that included hood, gas mask and black umbrella.

“This was the first fire that set off a string of fires and looting throughout the precinct and the rest of the city,” Erika Christensen, a Minneapolis police arson investigator, wrote in a search warrant affidavit this week, the Star Tribune reported.

Police identified the 32-year-old suspect through an emailed tip last week, Christensen said, and he is understood to be a Hell’s Angels member who was bent on stirring up social unrest.

Minneapolis police declined to confirm the name of the suspect.

Despite the bulk of protests in Minnesota being peaceful, some rioting spread to other parts of Minneapolis and St Paul.

Floyd was killed on 25 May after a white Minneapolis police officer pressed his knee against Floyd’s neck for nearly nine minutes. A livestreamed video two days later, on 27 May, showed “Umbrella Man” walking along the front of an AutoZone store and breaking out the windows with a sledgehammer. Some protesters confronted the man and asked him to stop.

Before that, the man, who was carrying a black umbrella, spray painted on the front doors, police said. The AutoZone fire was the first that firefighters responded to during the civil unrest, Bryan Tyner, the assistant Minneapolis fire chief, said on Tuesday.

In the affidavit, Christensen wrote that she watched “innumerable hours” of videos on social media platforms trying to identify the suspect with no luck.

Finally a tipster emailed the Minneapolis police department identifying the man as a member of the Hell’s Angels biker gang who “wanted to sow discord and racial unrest by breaking out the windows and writing what he did on the double red doors”, according to the affidavit.

An investigation found that the man was also an associate of the Aryan Cowboy Brotherhood, a white supremacist prison and street gang.

Name: Anonymous 2020-08-11 4:34

Start praying, boy.

Name: Anonymous 2020-08-11 5:29

>>157
الحمد لله

Name: Anonymous 2020-08-11 11:30

>>157
1:14 And they lifted up their voice, and wept again: and Orpah kissed her mother in law; but Ruth clave unto her.
1:15 And she said, Behold, thy sister in law is gone back unto her people, and unto her gods: return thou after thy sister in law.
1:16 And Ruth said, Intreat me not to leave thee, or to return from following after thee: for whither thou goest, I will go; and where thou lodgest, I will lodge: thy people shall be my people, and thy God my God:
1:17 Where thou diest, will I die, and there will I be buried: the LORD do so to me, and more also, if ought but death part thee and me.
1:18 When she saw that she was stedfastly minded to go with her, then she left speaking unto her.
[...]
4:15 [...] for thy daughter in law, which loveth thee, which is better to thee than seven sons [...]
https://gelbooru.com/index.php?page=post&s=view&id=2218228

Name: Anonymous 2020-08-11 13:07

(USER WAS BANNED FOR THIS POST)

Name: Anonymous 2020-08-12 1:25

>>160
Thank YHWH

Name: Anonymous 2020-08-12 10:48

LA taxpayers paid out $55 million in lawsuits against cops in violent secret societies -- Wed Aug 5, 2020 -- https://boingboing.net/2020/08/05/la-taxpayers-paid-out-55-mill.html

Los Angeles taxpayers are on the hook for about $55 million stemming from "dozens of lawsuits and claims involving Los Angeles County deputies associated with tattooed groups accused of glorifying an aggressive style of policing," reports The Los Angeles Times. These secret cop societies have names like the Vikings, Regulators, 3000 Boys, and the Banditos, and their street gang-like criminal behavior extends back to 1990. Elected sheriffs and an FBI probe have been unable to stop the violent groups from operating. From The Los Angeles Times:

"This has been a cancer of the Los Angeles Sheriff's Department for decades," said Ron Kaye, an attorney who represented Carrillo. "The only reason that this type of illegal activity and lawlessness under the color of law can survive is if the department and its administration looks the other way."

Another lawsuit involving a bicyclist shot and killed by deputies in South L.A. was settled for $1.5 million in 2018 in part because one deputy had probably committed perjury when he denied that he was a member of the Regulators operating out of the Century station, officials said.

Several of the payouts involve the 3000 Boys and the 2000 Boys at Men's Central Jail. A top jail official had described exclusive gangs of deputies who would “earn their ink” by breaking inmates’ bones.

Name: Anonymous 2020-08-12 14:53

Good! Fuck them and I hope they bring the Democrats with them.

America's future is multiparty!

Name: Anonymous 2020-08-15 22:56

Facebook removes Trump post over false Covid-19 claim for first time -- Video in which Trump wrongly said kids were ‘almost immune’ from illness also prompted Twitter to ban president’s re-election campaign account -- Wed 5 Aug 2020 -- https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2020/aug/05/facebook-donald-trump-post-removed-covid-19

Facebook has removed a post from Donald Trump’s page for spreading false information about the coronavirus, a first for the social media company that has been harshly criticized for repeatedly allowing the president to break its content rules.

The post included video of Trump falsely asserting that children were “almost immune from Covid-19” during an appearance on Fox News. There is evidence to suggest that children who contract Covid-19 generally experience milder symptoms than adults do. However, they are not immune, and some children have become severely ill or died from the disease.

“This video includes false claims that a group of people is immune from Covid-19 which is a violation of our policies around harmful Covid misinformation,” a Facebook spokesperson said.

The Twitter account for Trump’s re-election campaign, @TeamTrump, also posted the video, which Twitter said violated its rules. “The account owner will be required to remove the Tweet before they can Tweet again,” a company spokesperson said of @TeamTrump.

During a press briefing on Wednesday afternoon, Trump repeated his false claims about children and the disease.

The removals are the latest in a recent string of enforcement actions by social media platforms against the president over violating content rules related to misinformation, hate speech and threats of violence.

Trump’s presidential campaign and tenure in office have been defined by his aggressive use of social media platforms to spread racism, xenophobia, threats and misinformation. For years, the US-based social media platforms that enabled his broadcasts were hesitant to enforce their own rules against him.

But the combined crises of the coronavirus pandemic and widespread civil unrest over the police killing of George Floyd appear to have inspired greater resolve among social media executives, with Twitter and Twitch taking action against Trump for threatening protesters, spreading misinformation about voting and, in Twitch’s case, using hate speech.

Facebook has been more reticent to take action against the president over his speech. When Trump quoted a 1960s racist police chief by posting, “When the looting starts the shooting starts” during the uprisings over the police killing of George Floyd, the statement was widely condemned as incitement to violence and removed by Twitter.

Facebook defended Trump’s right to post the statement, however, prompting anger among Democrats and civil rights activists. The company said it considered the statement to be a warning rather than a threat, because it came from a state actor.

While Wednesday’s post is the first time that Facebook has taken action against Trump’s account for coronavirus misinformation stated by the president himself, earlier this year the company did remove a series of ads and an organic post by Trump that featured a symbol historically associated with Nazis and in July it removed a video Trump shared to his account promoting an unproven cure for coronavirus.

Courtney Parella, the deputy national press secretary for the Trump campaign, responded to Facebook’s takedown with a statement that mischaracterized Trump’s appearance on Fox News.

“The president was stating a fact that children are less susceptible to the coronavirus,” Parella said. “Another day, another display of Silicon Valley’s flagrant bias against this president, where the rules are only enforced in one direction. Social media companies are not the arbiters of truth.”

The battle over misinformation on Facebook has proven politically contentious, with ongoing action for and against removal of content. Trump and the Republican party have repeatedly claimed without evidence that major tech companies are biased against conservatives.

On Wednesday, the same day of Facebook’s most recent removal, a group of 20 state attorneys general released a letter calling on the company to prevent the spread of hate, harassment and disinformation. In antitrust hearings last week, Republican lawmakers repeatedly grilled Mark Zuckerberg over the same issue, claiming the platform should leave these posts up.

No evidence has emerged to suggest that tech company moderators (or the rules the tech companies ask them to enforce) display partisan political bias. Most of the platforms do have rules against hate speech, the incitement of violence and dangerous misinformation about Covid-19.

Name: Anonymous 2020-08-16 0:32

>>164
This shit right here is why the Jews will be expelled once again someday.

Name: Anonymous 2020-08-16 17:18

EXECUTE ALL TRUMP SUPPORTERS!
DONT SPARE THESE NAZIS!
NO MERCY TO THE RACISTS!

Name: Anonymous 2020-08-16 17:30

>>165
No. You, whites, will get massacred first and then everyone will live happily in the world where the white skin color doesn't exist.

Name: Anonymous 2020-08-16 17:56

Reminder that JunJun is still cute.

Name: Anonymous 2020-08-16 19:52

6. Advocating violence for a cause where organized action through peaceful protests and political pressure is known to work, and where violence can only undermine the cause to the status quo's delight, automatically marks you as an agent provocateur, and not a bright one either since you immediately give yourself away. -- https://dis.tinychan.net/read/prog/1596796049#reply_27


Facebook removes Trump post over false Covid-19 claim for first time -- Video in which Trump wrongly said kids were ‘almost immune’ from illness also prompted Twitter to ban president’s re-election campaign account -- Wed 5 Aug 2020 -- https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2020/aug/05/facebook-donald-trump-post-removed-covid-19 -- >>164

Name: Anonymous 2020-08-16 20:29

>>169
kike-nigger sockpuppeting pretending to be right-wing sockpuppeting

Nice try, (((Goldstein)))!

Name: Anonymous 2020-08-16 20:48

EXECUTE ALL BIDEN SUPPORTERS!
DONT SPARE THESE PEDOS!
NO MERCY TO THE CRIMINALS!

Name: Anonymous 2020-08-16 21:11

>>171

UPVOTED

Name: Anonymous 2020-08-17 1:43

This is the programming board you fucks

Name: Anonymous 2020-08-17 2:30

>>173
Fuck you racist!

Name: Anonymous 2020-08-17 6:45

>>173
Programming should be banned as the white privilege.

Name: Anonymous 2020-08-17 7:22

This post is for those who don't want to live in Russia, but don't qualify to immigrate legally to American or Canada.

Beside living in the country you despise and the emigration, there is the third way: internal immigration.

For that we will need to gather enough supporters from all over the world, and then seize the land inside Russia. I.e. just coming armed to some region, cleansing the Russian mongols there and declaring that area to be English and White only, then barring the entry for all Russians.

Obviously the region territory must be economically viable, like say cutting the Russia in half. Similar to Israel cutting Middle East from Africa. That way we can ask for funding from all the Russian enemies, be it China or the West.

To strengthen our numbers, we can invite all English speaking people, especially the right wingers. I.e. invite South Africans, who are tired of Niggers, or American right who wants to build the purely white country.

Given that we need strong and violent people, ready to defend their rights, we need to establish the strong racial and cultural norms since the beginning. I.e. no Gooks, Niggers or Muslims. No languages but English. We will have to demolish everything Russian there and rebuild it from the ground, using the Western standards. I.e. no commie blocks or other communist garbage for subhumans.

Even if you're not a Nazi, that is your only choice if you don't want to live in Russia, and want to be a free man.

Name: Anonymous 2020-08-17 7:24

>>176
As an alternative to cleansing the Russians we can turn them into slaves, first castrating them, so they wont procreate, since we will need cheap labor to build the new country for the White people.

Name: Anonymous 2020-08-17 10:04

Lots of highly imbalanced brain chemistry in here.

Name: Anonymous 2020-08-17 10:15

>>178
nigger

Name: Anonymous 2020-08-17 10:20

>>173
"Keep stuff like that out of our circles" was also tried with the suffragettes. Fast forward a bit and women have the vote. Fast forward a bit more and a woman won a popular vote for the presidency by roughly three million votes over a white supremacist neonazi.


Facebook removes Trump post over false Covid-19 claim for first time -- Video in which Trump wrongly said kids were ‘almost immune’ from illness also prompted Twitter to ban president’s re-election campaign account -- Wed 5 Aug 2020 -- https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2020/aug/05/facebook-donald-trump-post-removed-covid-19 -- >>164

Name: Anonymous 2020-08-17 13:38

KAW NOW!

KILL ALL WHITES

Name: Anonymous 2020-08-17 20:07

>>181
A bit late, are we? >>166,167 And the answer: >>169

Keeping Aerith Wet https://gelbooru.com/index.php?page=post&s=view&id=4803544

Name: Anonymous 2020-08-18 14:35

>>182

Aerith would have joined NSDAP.

FF7 has numerous homages to 3rd Reich, including Heidegger and Cloud being superhuman blonde and blue-eyed soldier.

Sieg Hail!

Name: Anonymous 2020-08-18 23:27

>>183
A lesbian hippie flower girl who wants to heal and help everyone, who wants understanding and harmony between people and the living planet and who wants to bring about universal peace "would have joined NSDAP".


Cloud being superhuman blonde and blue-eyed soldier.
Cloud's initial hair was black, the blond was a later design change to further dilute his masculinity so that the loser crowd could more easily use him as a self insert, same as his overcompensating sword. Cloud was not good enough to qualify for soldier and had to sign up as a common shinra grunt; during Nibelheim he served under actual soldiers like Zack and Sephiroth. His mental disorder, his inability to muster anything more than the most superficial interest in either girl and his obsessive fixation on the male antagonist would however fit NSDAP perfectly.

Name: Anonymous 2020-08-19 7:02

>>184
flowers girls can join NSDAP
French flower girls were hired by the 3rd Reich to give flowers to the victorious German soldiers. Learn history FFS.

Name: Anonymous 2020-08-19 7:06

>>184

The main antagonist's name, (((Sephiroth))), hints to the parasitic kikes threatening our planet.

Name: Anonymous 2020-08-19 10:01

>>185
Why would you advertise your inability to differentiate between "hired [...] to give flowers" >>185 and "would have joined NSDAP" >>183 so openly?


Facebook removes Trump post over false Covid-19 claim for first time -- Video in which Trump wrongly said kids were ‘almost immune’ from illness also prompted Twitter to ban president’s re-election campaign account -- Wed 5 Aug 2020 -- https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2020/aug/05/facebook-donald-trump-post-removed-covid-19 -- >>164

Name: Anonymous 2020-08-19 12:19

>>187

Why are you such a nigger?

Name: Anonymous 2020-08-20 10:12

Inside The Dangerous Online Fever Swamps Of American Police -- Cops have a far-right media ecosystem of their own, where they post racist memes, spread disinformation and call for violence against antifa. -- https://www.huffpost.com/entry/police-protests-floyd-law-enforcement-today-rant_n_5ee3ef5fc5b699cea53196b4

Around the time news broke on Monday afternoon that the New York City Police Department would disband plainclothes anti-crime units that had been tied to several high-profile police shootings, someone calling themselves “ltdad613” started a thread on Thee Rant, a police message board that purports to host current and former NYPD employees. “I wouldn’t want to be a [Commanding Officer] for the next few compstats,” ltdad613 wrote. “This is right from [New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio]. I feel for anybody still on the job.”

Elsewhere, the posts on Thee Rant were much darker. In one Monday thread, “dominop” wrote that “A Firing squad would be a good cure for ANTIFA!!!” Other users chimed in to say snipers or napalm might be more fitting.

Thee Rant is just one node in a wider web of right-wing police media. On similar message boards, in Facebook groups and on news sites such as Law Enforcement Today — a sort of Breitbart-like outlet written by and for police — there is a fervent narrative that police are under nonstop siege, and that antifa in particular is a constant threat.

This police media ecosystem is not necessarily a broad representation of what most cops believe. But inside this echo chamber, which has thousands of users and readers, extremist views dictate the narrative. Wild misinformation and bigotry are rampant, with people who claim to be current and former officers posting debunked falsehoods and racist stereotypes about protesters.

Intense public focus on police behavior in recent weeks, following the killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis, has led to the termination of several law enforcement officers who posted conspiratorial or racist messages on their personal social media pages. When these posts are singled out for scrutiny and have a real officer’s name attached, opprobrium comes quickly, but most of those posts would be right at home in right-wing police media.

“What I think we have here is a market for this kind of racist and divisive garbage across the internet, and unfortunately police are participating in that wave that is witnessed across various professions,” said Brian Levin, director of the Center for the Study of Hate & Extremism at California State University, San Bernardino. “It pains me as a former NYPD officer to see this,” he said. “These posts are devastating.”

Levin doesn’t think people should assume that “cops en masse subscribe to this,” but he does see dangerous potential, because online echo chambers tend to “self-accelerate” bigoted beliefs. For “police in particular, who so often have to hold their tongue and try to restrain themselves,” he said, “online it becomes even more [of an] accelerant.”

Name: Anonymous 2020-08-20 10:36

FBI operatives are ready to kill all kikes, niggers and beaners

https://www.wkrn.com/news/fbi-tweet-about-protocols-of-the-elders-of-zion-draws-sharp-criticism/

Name: Anonymous 2020-08-20 10:59

>>190
There are plenty of things to criticize the FBI over, there's no need to fabricate bullshit debunked in your own link.

The FBI Records Vault tweet, however, was not a direct link to the “Protocols,” but to a PDF containing the agency’s records on the document. Along with several pages of the original document are various letters, including a 1964 memo from the Subcommittee on Internal Security that called the “Protocols” a “fabricated ‘historic’ document” and described it as “crude and vicious nonsense.”
Protocols of Learned Elders of Zion: https://t.co/BpI5Tc8oKc — FBI Records Vault (@FBIRecordsVault) August 19, 2020

the FBI issued the following statement to a Guardian reporter:
Earlier today FOIA materials were posted to the FBI’s Vault and FOIA Twitter account via an automated process without further outlining the context of the documents. We regret this release may have inadvertently caused distress among the communities we serve.
The FBI often receives information from members of the public, which is captured in our permanent files and released under FOIA law. The FBI must process historical files that were collected in the past some of which may be considered offensive.”

Name: Anonymous 2020-08-20 11:10

>>191

That was the FBI winking to the people "kristallnacht soon"

Name: Anonymous 2020-08-20 11:42

For example >>191 during the Vietnam war protests the FBI used their false-flagging puppets led by Sam Melville to go as far as bombing federal buildings. Of course the media were forbidden to even bring up the question of whether it was at all believable that anti-war protesters would undermine their own cause by doing exactly what the authorities could best use against them.

>>192
They said it was an automated response to a FOIA request and also called the “Protocols” a “fabricated ‘historic’ document” and described it as “crude and vicious nonsense.” If you take any statement in support of your position as genuine and any statement against it as "winking" then you have retreated into unfalsifiability which automatically renders your position void. At that point not only are you assuming the conclusion but your position becomes religion rather than an argument.

Name: Anonymous 2020-08-20 14:27

>>193
They said it was an automated response

Sounds like the excuse you make, when you spill by "accident" some coffee onto your school enemy.

Name: Anonymous 2020-08-20 19:33

>>194
It is consistent with the purpose and history of FBI Records Vault (@FBIRecordsVault). Also:
retreat[ing] into unfalsifiability
assuming the conclusion

Inside The Dangerous Online Fever Swamps Of American Police -- Cops have a far-right media ecosystem of their own, where they post racist memes, spread disinformation and call for violence against antifa. -- https://www.huffpost.com/entry/police-protests-floyd-law-enforcement-today-rant_n_5ee3ef5fc5b699cea53196b4 -- >>189

Name: Anonymous 2020-08-21 7:58

Name: Anonymous 2020-08-21 9:43

The Extreme Views Of ‘Law Enforcement Today’ -- https://www.huffpost.com/entry/police-protests-floyd-law-enforcement-today-rant_n_5ee3ef5fc5b699cea53196b4 -- >>189

Law Enforcement Today claims to be the largest law enforcement-owned and -operated media company in America. It has repeatedly promoted far-right conspiracy theorists and authoritarian policies, particularly during the recent mass demonstrations against police violence.

Founded by Robert Greenberg, a Florida police captain who has called his outlet “a platform for the voice of law enforcement,” LET has more than 800,000 followers on Facebook and runs a syndicated radio show. Much of its content is provided by former or current police officers, and it offers paid memberships of $75 a year to gain access to “the patriotic content that the social media giants don’t want you to see.”

The site’s articles often bear only a passing resemblance to reality. Earlier this month, Law Enforcement Today published an article calling for the arrest of Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey, accusing him of aiding and abetting “antifa” terrorists. The post cited numerous far-right media activists, including anti-Muslim conspiracy theorist Laura Loomer, and suggested that Democratic officials including Reps. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (N.Y.), Rashida Tlaib (Mich.) and Ilhan Omar (Minn.) are antifa sympathizers. It also baselessly attacked Tlaib and Omar, who are Muslim, as “arguably anti-Semites and ISIS supporters (if not in words, in actions).”

“Law Enforcement Today supports Laura [Loomer]’s demand that Dorsey be arrested and prosecuted for promoting an insurrection against the United States,” the article says. It also suggests that politicians such as Omar who have expressed support for the current protests against police brutality and systemic injustice should be arrested as well.

The article is published under the pseudonym “Sgt. A. Merica” and claims to be “written by several staff writers, including retired and wounded law enforcement officers.” Law Enforcement Today says it verifies the identity and background of its authors before publishing.

When it isn’t stirring fear of antifa, much of the site’s coverage focuses on law enforcement officers who have been harmed in the line of duty. It also regularly criticizes elected officials who are seeking to curb police powers, part of what the site calls a “war on law enforcement.” The consistent message is that police are perpetually under attack, and that the government — with the exception of President Donald Trump — does not have their back.

In recent weeks, rumors of antifa reaching small towns have created a kind of moral panic in some communities, leading to armed groups patrolling the streets. Law Enforcement Today has eagerly trafficked in these conspiracy theories. One LET article quotes a source purporting to be an anonymous Connecticut state trooper, who warns that riots in rural areas would be reminiscent of guerrilla warfare in Afghanistan and Iraq, and that “once they start moving into rural America, there will be a LOT of bloodshed.”

Another one of Law Enforcement Today’s recent articles is a far-right screed that claims the Black Lives Matter movement and antifa are using protests to “destroy America from the inside.” The piece echoes common white nationalist talking points: It blames the “radical left” for attacking “our Judeo-Christian heritage,” and claims that Western society faces an existential threat in part from “mass immigration from sub-Saharan Africa and the middle east.” LET tagged the article as one of its “must reads.”

The site also ran an article endorsing far-right congressional candidate Marjorie Greene, who in a campaign ad from early June warned “antifa terrorists” to stay out of her rural Georgia district ― while cocking a gun ― and who has spread a conspiracy theory that billionaire George Soros is funding protesters. Greene has also voiced support for the far-right QAnon conspiracy movement. Facebook removed Greene’s ad from its platform for inciting violence.

Another Law Enforcement Today post promoted a Florida sheriff who responded to unfounded social media rumors of riots moving into small towns by encouraging homeowners to arm themselves and shoot people encroaching on their property. Multiple articles include tweets from QAnon conspiracy theorists.

False, incendiary claims about antifa have rocketed around the right-wing media ecosystem, from Twitter to Fox News and ultimately to the White House. Trump recently tweeted a baseless claim that Martin Gugino, a 75-year-old man who was seriously injured by police in Buffalo, New York, may have been an antifa instigator.

Greenberg, who founded Law Enforcement Today in 2007, is listed as a police captain with the Indian Creek Village Public Safety Department on its official website. It’s not exactly a rough-and-tumble job on the front lines of American policing. Indian Creek Village, Florida, is a tiny island enclave for the superrich that bills itself as “the world’s most exclusive municipality.” At the time of a Miami Herald report in 2014, it had only 86 residents, whose combined net worth exceeded $37 billion. Jay-Z and Beyoncé previously owned a home on the island. (Incidentally, Law Enforcement Today ran an article earlier this month opposing Apple Music’s support of Black Lives Matter and criticizing “cop-hater Beyoncé,” who was included in Apple’s playlist.)

The offices of the village public safety department and of its mayor did not respond to HuffPost’s requests for comment on whether they have any policy on conduct or work outside of the department, or about Greenberg’s current employment status. Law Enforcement Today did not respond to repeated requests for comment.

Name: Anonymous 2020-08-21 14:03

White whore got taught a perfect lesson on how to use the n-word:
https://truecrimedaily.com/2020/07/06/indianapolis-woman-shot-dead-2nd-homicide-along-downtown-canal-in-1-week/


She wont insult the Black people anymore. Guaranteed.

Name: Anonymous 2020-08-21 14:06

>>198
My only hope is that her white bantling of a son will get to see his racist mom soon too:
https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/us-news/mum-shot-dead-front-fiance-22345019

Name: Anonymous 2020-08-21 19:42

Name: Anonymous 2020-08-22 15:40

Niggers torture and kill a racoon:
https://www.bitchute.com/video/BzuVYzUVWPE4/

Name: Anonymous 2020-08-22 20:10

Old-School Message Boards Breed Hatred And Racism -- https://www.huffpost.com/entry/police-protests-floyd-law-enforcement-today-rant_n_5ee3ef5fc5b699cea53196b4 -- >>197

Thee Rant, formerly NYPD Rant, bills itself as a salon of “New York City Cops speaking their minds,” though often the extremist rhetoric on the site more closely resembles 4chan. Edward Polstein, who was fired from the NYPD in 2004, created the site to give verified members of the force — both current and former — an outlet to anonymously vent about their jobs without fear of retribution.

The message board is a cesspool of disinformation, bigoted memes and far-right propaganda, and regularly lights up with racist comments after publicized incidents of police brutality against people of color. Lately, users have been targeting protesters participating in the nationwide Black Lives Matter marches sparked by Floyd’s killing.

Thee Rant posts in the past three weeks have described Floyd as a “mutt” and a “worthless thug,” Black people as “Negroids” and “ghetto rats,” and protesters as “scum.” Various posts call for violence against protesters and spread debunked conspiracy theories that are often sourced to far-right media outlets, including Breitbart, One America News Network and The Federalist.

One post, referring to the recent arrest of New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio’s mixed-race daughter, Chiara, is titled “DeBlasswhole’s Junkie Daughter Collared.” Another, “White Men Stand Up To Negroid Thugs And Looters In Philly,” cheered on a group of bat-wielding white men who reportedly intimidated protesters and assaulted a journalist in Philadelphia. A June 5 post called “BUFFALO PD KNOCKDOWN IS A HOAX” claimed that a video of police officers violently shoving Gugino to the ground, causing him to bleed from his ears, was staged to make cops look bad.

Many other posts on Thee Rant praise Trump, and even entertain QAnon conspiracies.

For much of the forum’s decadeslong existence, members have only been able to sign up with valid NYPD IDs, meaning its content has come directly from New York law enforcement. HuffPost could not independently verify if this is still the case — a request to join the group has not been approved — but posters continue to demonstrate an intimate familiarity with the department, its operations and its officials.

Thee Rant has for years been a source of embarrassment to the NYPD, which has said it’s been unable to take action due to the users’ anonymity.

“We see it. It’s a problem,” Stephen Davis, at the time the chief spokesperson for the NYPD, told ProPublica of the message board in 2015. But, he added, “there are privacy issues involved. We can’t go and peel back email names and tags and try to find out who these people are.”

Thee Rant posters “represent the worst elements of the department,” veteran police reporter Leonard Levitt, who died last month, said at the time. “I don’t think they speak for the average cop.”

Polstein has claimed he was terminated in retaliation for creating Thee Rant, which has long criticized the NYPD and city officials. The department’s given reason for his firing is that he reneged on a retirement deal. The dispute led to a bitter lawsuit, and in a 2008 deal that granted Polstein his pension, he agreed to rename the forum from NYPD Rant to Thee Rant.

“I haven’t been part of [Thee Rant] in over 10 years,” Polstein told HuffPost in an email. “I don’t know who runs it now.”

Thee Rant “is not affiliated with the New York City Police Department,” Sgt. Mary Frances O’Donnell, a spokesperson for the NYPD’s deputy commissioner for public information, told HuffPost. She didn’t answer repeated questions about whether the NYPD has investigated the possibility of its officers using racist and extremist rhetoric on the site.

On similar message boards that also claim to exist for police conversation, such as Law Enforcement Rant, posters suggest that the NYPD should “assign Police Officers by their ethnicity,” putting “Black Officers in black neighborhoods.” They ridicule officers who’ve been photographed kneeling in solidarity with protesters, and complain about citizens filming officers in public. Although some posts show self-described police officers grappling with questions of racism and brutality, the majority are hateful and angry.

“I know cops are beat up, tired, angry, and hurt. But every time we do something it will be recorded and will be used to play against us,” one Law Enforcement Rant poster lamented in a recent thread about the clip of cops assaulting Gugino.

“I recall being at many protests and we could use necessary force. But times have changed,” wrote another. “[The Buffalo video] looks terrible, especially a 75 year old person that wasn’t actively resisting or has a weapon or was fighting us in any real way,” a third poster wrote. “Right now it’s all about optics and the PD is losing the propaganda battle.”

Name: Anonymous 2020-08-24 8:55

If you have ADHD, then you're a nigger. Get gassed!

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0191886908002006
Previous studies have shown that the prevalence of attention deficit and hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is elevated in prison inmates and in forensic patients with psychopathic traits. However, it is not clear whether ADHD and psychopathy scores also correlate in adult non-incarcerated samples. Moreover, it has not been examined if this correlation is due to specific facets of psychopathy. We assessed psychopathy in 30 adult ADHD patients and in 41 healthy participants using the psychopathic personality inventory revised (PPI-R). Male ADHD patients had higher scores compared to healthy male and female participants on the subscales blame externalization, rebellious nonconformity, and carefree nonplanfulness. Irrespective of gender, ADHD patients had lower scores compared to healthy participants on stress immunity and coldheartedness. These data specify the previously documented correlation between ADHD and psychopathy, and suggest that only the behavioral features of psychopathy are affected in ADHD whereas, the emotional features are not.

Name: Anonymous 2020-09-06 13:32

oh w8

Name: Anonymous 2020-09-09 1:01

niggers killed the radio star

Name: Anonymous 2020-09-19 10:38

Name: Anonymous 2020-09-19 16:12

NIGGER THREAD GOT NIGGERED IN ANARCHY

Name: Anonymous 2020-10-26 13:00

>>207
To see whether that was the determining factor check out https://dis.tinychan.net/read/prog/1505230211

Name: Anonymous 2020-12-23 4:48

retards, all of you

Name: Anonymous 2021-01-14 18:12

Name: Anonymous 2021-02-03 12:45

https://dis.tinychan.net/read/prog/1582047203
This thread has over 1000 replies.
You can't reply anymore.

Name: sega 2021-02-13 10:45

sega

Name: Anonymous 2021-02-15 8:06

>>1

I sense an trump hater here!

Name: Anonymous 2021-02-17 1:59

let's see if it happens again

Name: Anonymous 2021-02-20 11:57

Name: Anonymous 2021-03-13 11:30

oh w8

Name: Anonymous 2021-04-28 10:22

Name: Anonymous 2021-04-28 16:57

>>217
Nobody cares

Name: Anonymous 2022-05-08 22:46

retarded parrot

Name: Anonymous 2023-12-19 20:02

Agolf Shitler

Name: Anonymous 2023-12-20 13:46

>>452472880
>No, see, we tried to civilize Afghanistan.
You
1) Fucked all the afghan women
1b) produced 1/2 white children there
2) Gave money to feminist concerns
>That was a mistake.
1b) was not a mistake
There are alot of cute cute girls in afghanistan now.
Your sons will beable to get an obedient little girl that looks good if they want. Little girl. Not woman. Little female child to have sex play with and own and rule over.

2) Was a mistake; but you saw your error and left.
2 would defeat the purpose of 1 and 1b.

Half of afghanistan is half white now.
Lots of cute girls.

Good job. We all salute you and like what you did.
And you chose to leave because you felt you succeeded in your true mission.

Name: mr. spaGETti 2023-12-20 22:48

u will never get these trips

Name: Anonymous 2025-08-28 9:04

bro said it's not safe to sunbathe

Name: Anonymous 2025-08-28 20:19


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