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Police Abuse

A Cop Rear-Ended a Car, Sending a Toddler to the Hospital. The Car's Driver Was Breathalyzed. The Cop Wasn't.

Plus: Twitter whistleblower reports, court says FDA must reconsider vaping products, and more...

Elizabeth Nolan Brown | 8.24.2022 9:43 AM

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Suffolk County Long Island police officer David Mascarella | Suffolk County Police Department
(Suffolk County Police Department)

A damning report suggests Long Island cops may have covered up drunk driving by one of their own after an off-duty officer crashed into a car carrying a man and his two children. One of the children was left with injuries that he's still recovering from two years later. The officer, David Mascarella, was never charged.

The crash took place in August 2020, when a Ram truck driven by Mascarella rear-ended a Mitsubishi car driven by Kevin Cavooris. Mascarella—who was reportedly driving at a speed of more than 50 miles per hour—crashed into the car as Cavooris slowed down to make a turn.

"A witness reported to police that Mascarella had driven erratically for approximately a mile-and-a-half before the collision," according to Newsday. "The police accident report and crime scene diagram reflected no evidence that he braked before the pickup slammed into the Mitsubishi."

https://assets.projects.newsday.com/animation-service/v1/1658930646/animation.mp4

Cavooris' two sons, Bastian and Riordan, were in car seats in the back seat. The crash fractured the skull of Riordan, then 2 years old, while leaving his then-4-year-old brother with bruises all over his body and his dad with a broken nose. Riordan still wears a leg brace to walk and cannot run or jump, the family said.

Seeking answers about the crash, the Cavooris family filed a Freedom of Information request with the Suffolk County Police Department (SCPD), forcing the department to hand over video recordings and all sorts of police documents related to the crash. The family shared this evidence with Newsday, which reports at length on their suspicious contents:

Mascarella was assigned to the Fourth Precinct in Smithtown. Fellow precinct officers and a sergeant responded to the crash and handled the initial investigation. A deputy inspector later took command. Newsday determined that:

• Sgt. Lawrence McQuade and precinct officers failed at the scene to ask Mascarella to submit to a breath test that would have provided a preliminary reading of whether he was intoxicated.

• After a detective told McQuade that he wanted Mascarella to undergo a preliminary breath test, McQuade notified a Suffolk County Police Benevolent Association delegate. The delegate, Officer Joseph Russo, then drove Mascarella away from investigators, McQuade reported.

• Ordered to catch up with Mascarella, Fourth Precinct Officer Kevin Wustenhoff falsely reported to a supervisor that he had given Mascarella the breath test and that Mascarella had passed it, according to a law enforcement source with knowledge of the case. Wustenhoff retracted the account, the source said.

• Three hours after the crash, Deputy Insp. Mark Fisher asked Mascarella to take the breath test. Mascarella refused. When a driver refuses a preliminary breath test, police typically seek a warrant to have the driver's blood drawn and tested for alcohol. Fisher only issued a traffic ticket to Mascarella.

• Police failed to notify the Suffolk County District Attorney's Office on the night of the crash that an officer had been involved in an unexplained, high-speed rear-end crash, had seriously injured a 2-year-old and had refused a breath test. The omission prevented the DA from considering whether to seek a warrant to test Mascarella's blood.

• Although five officers wrote reports stating they saw no evidence that Mascarella was intoxicated, prosecutors under then-DA Tim Sini subsequently investigated the crash with an eye toward charging Mascarella with vehicular assault. Lacking a blood test that would have revealed whether Mascarella was intoxicated, they closed the investigation without action.

Suffolk County District Attorney Ray Tierney (who was not in office at the time of the crash) told Newsday that "because certain evidence was not collected by SCPD on the date of the incident, we were unable to make a determination as to whether or not a crime was committed."

Video shows Mascarella throwing something from his truck window after the crash, but there's no indication that this was investigated, either.

Cavooris, however, was asked to take a breath test for alcohol. It registered that he had not been drinking.

Mascarella is still employed by the SCPD, though he has been suspended without pay since February and a police spokesperson told Newsday that the police commissioner is moving to fire him.

Wustenhoff, the officer who falsely reported that Mascarella had been given a breathalyzer test, was suspended without pay for 45 days and then placed on administrative duties. In three years, he'll be eligible to retire with a 50 percent pension, and a source told Newday that as part of the discipline Wustenhoff agreed to retire then.

The disciplinary action comes only after Newsday started poking around into local police accountability for causing injuries and deaths:

In December last year, Newsday began to publish case histories documenting that the internal affairs systems of the Nassau and Suffolk County police departments had imposed little or no discipline on officers in cases involving serious civilian injuries or deaths. This is the sixth case history.

The Nassau County Police Department has claimed continuing power to withhold almost all internal disciplinary records. The Suffolk County Police Department has released records only in cases where charges had been upheld against officers.

Newsday is pressing lawsuits against both departments with the goal of establishing that the public has a right to review how Long Island's police forces police themselves.

You can read some of the previous investigations here, here, here, and here.


FREE MINDS

Former Twitter executive warns of company's security practices. Peiter Zatko filed several whistleblower reports related to Twitter's security practices, bots, and the handling of misinformation. Zatko—also known as Mudge—was fired from the company in January. In a post at Techdirt, Mike Masnick weighs Zatko's claims:

Throughout the whistleblowing report, Mudge highlights many, many problems with Twitter's infrastructure, and some of the security and uptime risk it created. Much of what Mudge reports on this is… quite believable — especially for anyone who has followed Twitter over the years. It's also, frankly, not all that different than many internet companies that experienced rapid scaling in the last decade and a half. Outside of the biggest tech companies (Google, Meta/Facebook, Amazon, and Apple — each of which I guarantee has their own security issues, though often of a different nature, and each of which has a much more developed security process), I would guess most of what's in Mudge's report rings true at basically every other decently large internet company.

That's not an excuse, and one hopes that whistleblowing like this gets more of these companies to recognize that they need better processes and security in place. …

That said, some former Twitter engineers who worked with Mudge seem to be calling into question some of these claims.

Masnick gets into much more detail about the claims (and counterclaims)—including those involving foreign governments—here.


FREE MARKETS

A win for vaping companies in court. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit has handed a preliminary win to six vaping product makers who say the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) was too hasty in denying them a marketing order. A marketing order is essentially an FDA permission slip "to legally market a new tobacco product in the United States." Six companies—Diamond Vapor LLC, Johnny Copper LLC, Vapor Unlimited LLC, and Union Street Brands LLC—challenged the FDA's denial of such an order for e-liquids meant for open-tank vaping devices.

"These tobacco companies submitted survey information from their customers about smoking cessation, literature reviews, scientific studies about switching to e-cigarettes, smoking cessation, and the role of flavors, and details about its marketing and
youth-access-prevention plans," notes the court in its opinion. "For example, Diamond uses technology for its online sales that relies on public records to verify a purchaser's age."

But the FDA "refused to consider the marketing and sales-access-restriction plans based on both its need for efficiency and its experience that marketing and sales-access restrictions do not sufficiently reduce youth use of electronic nicotine products," the court points out. The agency "failed to consider the relevant marketing and sales-access-restrictions plans, the marketing denial orders were arbitrary and capricious," the court found. "So, we grant the petitions for review, set aside the marketing denial orders, and remand to the Administration."

You can read the full decision here.


QUICK HITS

Remarkable! A Michigan city violated the constitution by chalking tires to enforce parking limits, but it won't be forced to refund thousands of tickets, a judge said. Saginaw must only pay vehicle owners "nominal damages" of $1.00 for each marking. https://t.co/L59frARPaq

— AP Oddities (@AP_Oddities) August 9, 2022

• A congressional report suggests that not all UFOs are man-made.

• A dad took naked photos of his toddler to send to a pediatrician for diagnostic purposes. Google flagged him as a criminal.

• An elementary school principal in the Bay Area called the cops on a 4-year-old who wasn't wearing a mask, to remove him and his father from school premises.

• "The Los Angeles City Council has voted unanimously to place on the March 2024 ballot a measure that would require hotels to accept the placement of homeless persons in vacant rooms," notes Walter Olson at the Cato Institute. "The measure would 'require hotels to report the number of vacant rooms' to the city each afternoon for this purpose."

• A court has convicted two people accused of plotting to kidnap Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer. "The first time federal prosecutors tried to convince a jury that a group of men plotted to kidnap Michigan's Democratic governor, they failed to get a single conviction," notes The New York Times. "But on Tuesday, jurors in a second trial found the two remaining defendants guilty."

• A bill in California "would also create a means to hold companies like McDonald's and Pizza Hut legally responsible for any labor violations at individual stores, even if those individual stores are owned by franchisees," Vox reports.

• Charlie Crist, now a Democrat (but formerly served as governor of Florida as a Republican), will face off against current Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis in the fall:

CBS News projects Charlie Crist wins the Democratic nomination for governor of Florida, defeating Agriculture Commissioner Nikki Fried in a primary. Crist, who previously served one term as a Republican governor of Florida, will face incumbent GOP Gov. Ron DeSantis in November. pic.twitter.com/03A8C1HHsI

— CBS News (@CBSNews) August 24, 2022

Start your day with Reason. Get a daily brief of the most important stories and trends every weekday morning when you subscribe to Reason Roundup.

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NEXT: For Many Americans, Cancel Culture Is Self-Inflicted

Elizabeth Nolan Brown is a senior editor at Reason.

Police AbuseReason RoundupPoliceDrivingDrunk drivingCriminal JusticeLaw enforcementAccidentsCorruptionNew York
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  1. A Thinking Mind   3 years ago

    Yup, cops are real bastards. But the FBI is totally right to seal Trump's affidavit because releasing that information could compromise an ongoing investigation.

    1. A Thinking Mind   3 years ago

      Disclaimer: Not all cops are bastards, but cops exist in an environment that encourages them to escape accountability, and all cops exist in that environment.

      1. sarcasmic   3 years ago

        I've never met a police officer who was born within wedlock. Just sayin.

        1. mad.casual   3 years ago

          I'm pretty sure that's racist.

          1. WorkStar24   3 years ago

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        2. Agammamon   3 years ago

          Get a grip.

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          https://www.brproud.com/news/odd-holidays-national-cuban-sandwich-day/

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      2. Winnie SC   3 years ago

        The only good one is a dead one. Just the other side of the same low-IQ/thug coin as BLM/antifa.

        1. Uilleam   3 years ago

          That escalated quickly.

          1. Ersatz   3 years ago

            HA! yup... didnt see that coming. 🙂

        2. The Encogitationer   3 years ago

          Soooo... Do you have your own SWAT APC, body armor, and grenade launchers to deal with BLM/Antifa rabble?

          Do you keep a CSI lab in your bunker and a mobile CSI lab in your Ford F-150?

          CSI: Crime Scene Investigation Opening Credits/Scene (Intro) 1080p Full HD
          https://youtu.be/KnATBxelyJE

          Do you perform your own "citizen's arrests" on "mostly peaceful" rioters?

          The Andy Griffith Show Citizens Arrest
          https://youtu.be/G-VJNJhPCNo

          Yes, law enforcers are not and should not be above the law all of us have to live under and they shouldn't have "Qualified Immunity" because of shiny badges, but that is a far cry from saying "Defund/Abolish The Police."

          if "Defund/Abolish The Police" is the route you are going, then you better be geared up, suited up, and booted up for what comes next. Somehow, I get the suspicion that Gooberville doesn't have an Anarcho-Capitalist Freedom Store.

          1. perlmonger   3 years ago

            "Soooo... Do you have your own SWAT APC, body armor, and grenade launchers to deal with BLM/Antifa rabble?"

            Not that I'm going to admit to on a public website...

      3. Rapidenergy   3 years ago

        Click here to get more results
        https://bit.ly/2erkx2I

    2. sarcasmic   3 years ago

      Cops cover up a possible DUI by one of their own, and your "thinking" mind goes to Mar-a-Lago.

      1. R Mac   3 years ago

        WHATABOUT WHATABOUT WHATABOUT WHATABOUT!!!!!!!!

        1. sarcasmic   3 years ago

          So I gave you some attention last night. Doesn't mean we're a couple. You're like a puppy dog after being fed a treat.

          Go away.

          1. R Mac   3 years ago

            So you’re not going to ask me out on a date to a Ministry concert like you did with Tulpa?

            1. sarcasmic   3 years ago

              I'd say soon as you stop beating your girlfriend, but I can't imagine a woman wanting to spend time with you so never mind.

              1. R Mac   3 years ago

                Except I’ve never beat my girlfriend, but you did invite Tulpa on a date to a Ministry concert, so that’s a stupid response.

                1. sarcasmic   3 years ago

                  Back peddling.

                2. sarcasmic   3 years ago

                  You don't beat your girlfriend because you don't have a girlfriend. If you did then my question would be "How long have you beaten her?" or "When did you stop beating her?" But you're single because no woman other than your mom wants to spend time with you.

                  1. R Mac   3 years ago

                    Well you’re right, I don’t actually have a girlfriend. I have a wife. And I don’t beat her either. That’s one of the many reasons she hasn’t divorced me like your wife did.

                3. JesseAz   3 years ago

                  I see sarc is in his usual attention begging form. So early in the day too.

                  1. Don't look at me!   3 years ago

                    Sad!

                  2. sarcasmic   3 years ago

                    You trying to start a 100 comment chat where you and your buddies talk about me?

                  3. sarcasmic   3 years ago

                    So sad.

                    Isn't that one of your Trumpian catch phrases? Like "You're fired"?

                    So sad. Just repeat it over and over when someone disagrees with you. So sad. So very sad.

                  4. sarcasmic   3 years ago

                    Look at how sad JesseAz is.

                    So sad.

                    So very sad.

                    Just look!

                    How can anyone be so sad?

                    So sad.

                    So very sad.

                    1. Don't look at me!   3 years ago

                      Copycats

                    2. Uilleam   3 years ago

                      Lol Sarc accuses Jesse of starting a "100 comment chat" and then bombs the comment section.

                    3. Mother's Lament   3 years ago

                      "You trying to start a 100 comment chat where you and your buddies talk about me?"

                      *immediately posts four responses to a single post*

                      Oh wow! how much do you have to drink to be like this?

                    4. JesseAz   3 years ago

                      Cmon guys. Sarc has a hard time with basics like counting. He always floods the threads like this and then blames others. It is just who he is.

                    5. sarcasmic   3 years ago

                      I'll munch on my popcorn while you girls discuss me.

                    6. Mother's Lament   3 years ago

                      Well, at least he's getting the attention he desperately craves.

              2. Mike Laursen   3 years ago

                Keep in mind that many of the commenters who are total jerks here, posting under the safety of their pseudonyms, are likely meek when they are with their wives and girlfriends.

                1. Uilleam   3 years ago

                  You are projecting.

                  1. Mother's Lament   3 years ago

                    No, no. White Knight, Mike Laursen and the half dozen other sockpuppets he's used are all his real names. Honest. They're all on his drivers license.

                    White Mike never uses pseudonyms. Just ask him.

                    1. Uilleam   3 years ago

                      Lol right? Do you think its a show or is he really this clueless?

                2. sarcasmic   3 years ago

                  They're the skinny guy walking down the street with the fat chick.

                3. sarcasmic   3 years ago

                  Or the fat guy with the fatter chick.

                  1. Uilleam   3 years ago

                    You social misfits live in a bubble.

                    1. sarcasmic   3 years ago

                      "Hey Mah! What's this guy takin abut?"

                      "I dunna. Lemme see. Du fuk?"

                      "Dat's what I said."

                      "Lemme see heeya. Nope. "

                      "Aw, fuck this guy."

                      "Ayuh!"

                    2. Uilleam   3 years ago

                      Stop drinking and get a job.

                    3. sarcasmic   3 years ago

                      Sha nana na, sha nana nana

      2. A Thinking Mind   3 years ago

        I don't know why, when I see cops lying and covering up crimes, my mind goes to the FBI altering documents in order to obtain a FISA warrant. I can't think of any reason why that would be on my mind when I see the government lying. Perhaps the problem is me, since the FBI hasn't been doing anything even remotely questionable lately.

        1. sarcasmic   3 years ago

          Local cops getting the good-ol-boy treatment doesn't jog my mind into thinking about the feds, but maybe that's just me.

          1. Winnie SC   3 years ago

            A nazi thug is a nazi thug--doesn't matter what shape his badge is.

            1. sarcasmic   3 years ago

              Only a nazi thug would serve a warrant on poor, sad, innocent Trump.

              1. Reason Magic 8 Ball   3 years ago

                Can you fuck off? You're not even trying to make an argument. You're just trolling.

                1. Uilleam   3 years ago

                  Seconded

                  1. sarcasmic   3 years ago

                    My feelings are so hurt. Boo hoo.

            2. The Encogitationer   3 years ago

              Soooo...are you the Partizan ready to take him out? And what comes next after that?

              Winnie, I think you've OD-ed the Hunny Tree and the sugar has blocked the blood flow to your brain.

          2. Agammamon   3 years ago

            So . . . you've never met a cop born in wedlock, they're all horrible fascists who like to hurt people - *except the FBI*?

      3. jasminloura   3 years ago

        a possible DUI by one of their own, and your "thi

    3. Mike Laursen   3 years ago

      So, they are just supposed to expose their informant, Jared Kushner?

      1. JesseAz   3 years ago

        Nailed the Democrat talking point.

        1. Uilleam   3 years ago

          He gets a bonus for that.

        2. Mother's Lament   3 years ago

          It was in his morning Twitter.

          That really is the one that makes the least sense though. An old FBI agent on his Secret Service detail would be Occams Razor.

          1. JesseAz   3 years ago

            Pretty sure they admitted the informant is the Archivist. They are stretching the term for the purpose of the warrant.

          2. Ersatz   3 years ago

            ^this^ if there even is a corporeal informant.
            My theory is they used a DOJ approved Ouija board.

    4. Truthteller1   3 years ago

      You can't just make anyone involved in a crash blow, there has to be probable cause, but cops don't care about probable cause.

    5. jasminloura   3 years ago

      Yup, cops are real bastards. But the FBI is totally right to seal Trump's affidavit because releasing that information could compromise an ongoing investigation.

  2. OpenBordersLiberal-tarian   3 years ago

    Nothing in the Roundup about Biden's $10,000 welfare payment to the upper middle class?

    #LibertariansForBiden

    1. Ajsloss   3 years ago

      Jewel-encrusted spittoons are a fundamental right.

    2. Sarah Palin's Buttplug 2   3 years ago

      It's a poke in the eye to all those lower class Trumpers who have been ravaged by the higher price of spittin' tobacky.

      1. Shrike's Chastity Cage   3 years ago

        If you are so high class, why is your wife always hanging out with those black bikers?

        1. Fats of Fury   3 years ago

          Wife?

          1. Ersatz   3 years ago

            Black Bikers??

        2. Uilleam   3 years ago

          Size matters?

        3. Mother's Lament   3 years ago

          Shrike's "wives" are under 10 and tied up in his basement.

          1. Fats of Fury   3 years ago

            and they all have penises.

      2. OpenBordersLiberal-tarian   3 years ago

        LOL

        #InflationIsAWingnutMyth
        #BestEconomyEver

      3. Winnie SC   3 years ago

        Hi! Little Chinese girl!

      4. Sevo   3 years ago

        turd lies; it's what turd does.
        Eat shit and die, turd.

  3. Earth-based Human Skeptic   3 years ago

    A bill in California "would also create a means to hold companies like McDonald's and Pizza Hut legally responsible for any labor violations at individual stores, even if those individual stores are owned by franchisees,"

    Hurrah, comrades. It's about time that we escalate the legal framework that supports our comprehensive mutual responsibility (and liability) for each other. Especially targeting big companies and rich people.

    1. damikesc   3 years ago

      Kinda curious how somebody who does not own an establishment can be sued for actions taken in said establishment.

      1. Idaho Bob   3 years ago

        If 51% of a population agrees with a policy, then it's all good. Unless, of course, the 51% leans right Then it is tyranny.

        1. Union of Concerned Socks   3 years ago

          Racist!

        2. Mike Laursen   3 years ago

          If 95% of a northern Idaho library district are OK with the library having books about transvestism, and the library, by the way, doesn’t actually have any such books, it is tyrannical behavior on the part of the head librarian.

          1. Mother's Lament   3 years ago

            Your analogy doesn't even make sense.

            1. damikesc   3 years ago

              Look who you're responding to. This is actually better than his usual idiocy.

            2. JesseAz   3 years ago

              Would it help if he involved bears on trunks like jeff does?

        3. Mike Laursen   3 years ago

          My point being that the right wing is prone to hysterical fits about supposed tyranny, just as the left wing is.

          1. Uilleam   3 years ago

            The whole left/right paradigm is in your head. Stop assuming the rest of us think that way. How about rational discourse on how best to maximize individual liberty? The problem isn't the people responding to your disingenuous posts. Its your dishonesty and support for state intervention into peoples lives, in spite of your claims to the contrary.

          2. Mother's Lament   3 years ago

            But your analogy wasn't that.

            I get it.
            You're trying to pretend that a ostensibly libertarian magazine's refusal to cover massive and unprecedented first and second amendment violations by the government, and obfuscating other important libertarian issues, and even excusing instances of censorship and authoritarianism, is like a library neglecting to stock a book.

            This is why everyone says you're not a libertarian, Mike.

            1. JesseAz   3 years ago

              He doesn't even realize selection bias is a form of bias.

          3. But SkyNet is a Private Company   3 years ago

            GFY

        4. Marshal   3 years ago

          Worse, it's 51% of elected officials. Woke and socialist policies are only supported by the activist left which is roughly 10% of the voting population.

      2. Ronbback   3 years ago

        the same way gun manufactures are responsible for crimes committed with guns but not the person committing the crime, we let those people go free since they can't help it

      3. Fats of Fury   3 years ago

        It's like someone who's an independent contractor is forced to be an employee.

      4. Stuck in California   3 years ago

        One step away from being held responsible if someone else in the room isn't wearing a mask.

    2. Social Justice is neither   3 years ago

      One of two things happen with this, either corporate ramps up inspections/audits of franchisees or they cease their relationship in the franchisee format (maybe moving to something like a distributor only). Either way costs are going up.

      1. Longtobefree   3 years ago

        Or we start electing republicans, and get this madness stopped?

        1. A Thinking Mind   3 years ago

          I'd rather elect some libertarians but not enough of the country is on board for something that outlandish and insane.

          1. But SkyNet is a Private Company   3 years ago

            It will be a wonderful thing when Ls and Rs are the 2 major parties

            1. Ewald Von Kleist   3 years ago

              can't wait to oppose those Rs, eh?

              you could save time and do that now, ya know

    3. Ronbback   3 years ago

      soon they will require McD's and pizza person to provide food for the homeless just like they are going to require hotels to take in homeless people.

      this is a communist state now

      1. Idaho Bob   3 years ago

        Every hotel owner in the surrounding cities are cheering this. LA hotels will close; no paying customer is going to be subjected to homeless people in the common areas.

        1. Chuck P. (The Artist formerly known as CTSP)   3 years ago

          no paying customer is going to be subjected to homeless people in the common areas

          Fuck that, who in their right mind wants sleep anywhere a homeless person has slept? The rooms would need to be fumigated for lice and bedbugs every time. The staff would need metal detectors to find the needles hidden in the mattresses. It is Proggie insanity.

          1. Idaho Bob   3 years ago

            Great point.

            I also wonder if the luxury hotels will be subjected to this?

            1. ElvisIsReal   3 years ago

              Luxury hotels will sell rooms at $1/night before giving them to the homeless.

        2. The Encogitationer   3 years ago

          Chwrlotte, NC's Ccity Governmentcpurchased hotel rooms as shelters for the homeless...Those rooms ended up stripped of their appliances, wiring, plumbing, carpet, bedding, even bricks, lumber, and sheetrock!

          If some Government made that offer to me if I owned a hotel, I would flat out refuse. And if they forced me to provide them shelter, I'd close down, demolish my hotel, and let the City contend with whatever riff-raff chose to stay on the vacant lot. And I'd leave a sign that said:

          Fuck Off, Flop-Housers!
          Signed,
          Dr. Zhivago.

          1. The Encogitationer   3 years ago

            Charlotte, NC's City Government, that is.

            Geez, my typing looks like I just drank Sterno! 🙂

    4. Chuck P. (The Artist formerly known as CTSP)   3 years ago

      Hurrah, comrades. It's about time that we escalate the legal framework that supports our comprehensive mutual responsibility (and liability) for each other. Especially targeting big companies and rich people.

      The CA elite need stocks to sell short. If they can do it to out-of-state corporations, all the better.

    5. The Encogitationer   3 years ago

      Hell, you don't even have to actually own anything to get hassled by Socialist Redistributionists, as this advice column reveals:

      Guy Asks If He’s A Jerk For Laughing In Neighbor’s Face After She Suggested Swapping Apartments In All Seriousness
      https://www.boredpanda.com/man-tells-neighbor-her-living-situation-doesnt-concern-him/?utm_source=smartnews&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=organic

      1. Marshal   3 years ago

        Hilarious.

        1. The Encogitationer   3 years ago

          Indeed. Like the woman couldn't use classifieds.

  4. OpenBordersLiberal-tarian   3 years ago

    "Charlie Crist, now a Democrat (but formerly served as governor of Florida as a Republican), will face off against current Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis in the fall"

    We Koch / Reason libertarians desperately want Liz Cheney instead of DeSantis to be the 2024 GOP nominee (since #TrumpDocuments will prevent Drumpf from running because he'll be in prison). Losing a governor's race will definitely hurt DeSantis' momentum. Therefore we must support this Crist person.

    #CharlieCrist2022
    #LizCheney2024

    1. Winnie SC   3 years ago

      Do you even have an IQ?

      1. Union of Concerned Socks   3 years ago

        You're new here, aren't you?

        1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   3 years ago

          Or just an idiot (and thus demonstrating Dunning-Kruger).

      2. Don't look at me!   3 years ago

        This demonstrates the true genius of OBL.

        1. BestUsedCarSales   3 years ago

          I'd vote for them for President, once they turn 35, of course.

          1. Union of Concerned Socks   3 years ago

            Only 21 years to wait.

        2. The Encogitationer   3 years ago

          OBL is like "The Phil Hendrie Show" of the Reason Comments section! 🙂

          1. Stuck in California   3 years ago

            Xhe's a treasure, that's for sure.

            Is Phil Hendrie on? Used to listen sometimes when I had to drive at night, but that was a lot of years ago.

            1. The Encogitationer   3 years ago

              I hadn't heard his radio show in years, but his voice-over work lives on in the archives of The Simpsons:and Futurama.

              He had me taken in the first three nights I heard him, simply because life imitates his art so much! 🙂

        3. Super Scary   3 years ago

          I've noticed that no one is ever fooled by the parody posters that post here for the other side of the aisle, like that AAA guy that pretends to be a gay black republican (I still don't know what he trying to prove by claiming to be that). They are always so blatantly obvious.

          1. The Encogitationer   3 years ago

            The combination of identities is just too unreal.

    2. JesseAz   3 years ago

      Crist is pretty orange. I thought all orange men were bad.

  5. Jerryskids   3 years ago

    Citing Mike Masnick to defend Big Tech. What a surprise.

    1. damikesc   3 years ago

      ENB has a crush on him it seems.

      Cites him A LOT...as if no other tech writer in the world exists.

      1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   3 years ago

        I guess her crush on Yglesias is over.

        1. JesseAz   3 years ago

          Start the counter!

          1. Uilleam   3 years ago

            She'll be back.

    2. Overt   3 years ago

      That dude knows nothing about what he speaks, and I can say that as a guy who has intimate knowledge of the stuff he is talking about. He is a huckster. He is like that neighbor who watched ESPN breakdown a play, and now just repeats words he doesn't understand.

      1. Mother's Lament   3 years ago

        No wonder he's ENB's goto. That's exactly like most of the current crop of writers here.

        1. Stuck in California   3 years ago

          I worked in publishing for less than a year, but was exposed to a lot of journalists.

          This is, and has always been, the case. Journalists are, very often, dumb as dirt. They most creative writing they've done is generally their resume and their blurb in the masthead.

  6. Rev. Arthur L. Kuckland   3 years ago

    Every CA politition that pushes this should have to house a homeless person for every 500sq ft of housing they have

    1. Ronbback   3 years ago

      don't give them ideas they are already talking about taxing 2nd homes extra and even taxing 10% of the value of undeveloped land. F'ing crazy in 10 years you would pay the value of the land to the state most would just give it up. then the state will be stuck with it and they won't do shit with it since they won't have the money

      1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   3 years ago

        California could do what British Columbia did, and sell their land (and souls) to the Chinese.

        1. Stuck in California   3 years ago

          It was happening quite a bit in 2012-13 era. Some places in Orange County were seeing the majority of buyers being foreign, all cash.

          It was mostly Chinese money (which is a real problem, as the Yuan doesn't actually float on the open market, but that's a different rant) that was investing in North American real estate to get it out of the reach of the Chinese government. It has subsided, though, for a combination of price increases and Xi's general Mao style crackdowns.

          At the same time, god help you if you tried to buy something in 2012 with a mortgage. Between Dodd Frank and the cash buyers you could have 30% down and still lose deal after deal because of mortgage hassles.

      2. Chuck P. (The Artist formerly known as CTSP)   3 years ago

        taxing 2nd homes extra and even taxing 10% of the value of undeveloped land

        Land holders and small business owners are the modern kulaks. Nobody has a right to more than one home or to enslave others through 'employment'.

    2. Agammamon   3 years ago

      100 ft. 10x10 is plenty of room.

      We'll do this - divide the total acreage by half to leave room for movement and support and then every 100ft square of property gets assigned a homeless person needing a place to pop a tent. Including the buildings too.

      400ish per acre.

  7. Briggs Cunningham   3 years ago

    In today's edition of "I used to be a slut but now I am 30 and as a feminist realize casual sex is bad" we have Louise Perry. Perry is some British bird who is pretty hot and a lot hotter than the usual feminist writer.

    It is the usual litany of casual sex is bad and chivalry is great and you are doing any man a favor by even considering sleeping with them, yada, yada, yada. Then there is this oddly specific passage in an article about sex in general,

    A man who is aroused by violence is a man to steer well clear of, whether or not he uses the vocabulary of BDSM to excuse his behavior. If he can maintain an erection while beating a woman, he isn’t safe to be alone with.

    Oh Louise honey, just how freaky did you get? Everything in moderation baby, moderation.

    Like all of these sorts of women, Louise wants to after years of screwing around suddenly be a proper Edwardian woman. That is great except that a proper Edwardian woman did things like keep a great house, raise children, always look good for their husbands, were charming in conversation, and were supportive and respectful to their husbands. She never mentions any of that.

    If she does manage to get married, she will be a sexual prude to her husband but then also expect her husband to do half the house work and also be the main provider for the family. The husband will work whatever job pays and provides the most no matter how boring or awful or dangerous it is. She will of course continue to have a career, all feminists do, and if she doesn't like a job will just quit and stay home for a while and let her husband support her while she finds one worthy of her.

    Meanwhile, she will end up cheating with her yoga instructor and doing all of the things sexually she really wanted but wouldn't do with her husband with him. Her husband will then divorce her and she will live on alimony and child support bitter about how men always let her down and leave like her exhusband did.

    That is if she is able to find someone dumb enough to marry her. If not, then she lives a sexless life for the next 20 or so years holding out for a man worthy of her only to end up old and alone and blaming all of the men who just wouldn't commit, but of course never herself. Either way, she likely ends up dying alone in an apartment in London and her cats eating her body.

    https://www.commonsense.news/p/im-30-the-sexual-revolution-shackled?triedSigningIn=true

    1. damikesc   3 years ago

      "Like all of these sorts of women, Louise wants to after years of screwing around suddenly be a proper Edwardian woman. That is great except that a proper Edwardian woman did things like keep a great house, raise children, always look good for their husbands, were charming in conversation, and were supportive and respectful to their husbands. She never mentions any of that."

      That is my complaint with the "Men aren't chivalrous" crowd. Chivalry was a two-way street. Men do not get any perks for being chivalrous so why the hell should we?

      1. Briggs Cunningham   3 years ago

        My father and grandfathers were very chivalrous. They also had wives who kept a clean house and raised their kids so they could go out and earn a living. There was none of this Mr. Mom bullshit. Chivalry as you say went both ways. These broads want the benefits but none of the responsibilities.

        1. Uilleam   3 years ago

          Exactly so. To be fair, they are being taught that this is normal from an early age.

          1. Briggs Cunningham   3 years ago

            Yes. Their mothers lied to them and not just about the virtues of cheap sex.

      2. Earth-based Human Skeptic   3 years ago

        Bitches want chivalrous drones in the marriage and artists and/or bikers on the side.

      3. Fat Mike's Drug Habit   3 years ago

        As Dave Chapelle said, chivalry is dead and women killed it.

    2. Winnie SC   3 years ago

      I've had VERY "proper" girlfriends ask me when I was going to come over and spank them, a wife whose favorite book was fifty shades of grey, and an encounter with a girl who wanted me to slap her face--hard--during sex (something I wasn't able to bring myself to do).

      Just sayin'

      1. Briggs Cunningham   3 years ago

        Yes. That is why this woman likely ends up cheating on her husband doing all of the things she is telling herself she doesn't really want.

        1. Winnie SC   3 years ago

          Bingo.

          1. Stuck in California   3 years ago

            I could tell stories.

            I won't, ever, even anonymously. They're her stories to tell, not mine, but suffice to say that there's a reason 50 Shades and Ann Rice novels have sold a gazillion copies, and it's because a gazillion women find them interesting.

            The fundamental problem with these come to jesus moments for Feminists is that they've missed the point of liberalism. Which is that people can choose to do whatever they want, not that they are required to do anything. You want to be married, keep your legs crossed, button up the top button, and limit your sexual proclivities, a liberal minded man like me says that's just fine. What you do (or don't do) behind closed doors is not my business and there are plenty of perfectly legal things that I never intend to do in this world as well.

            Why is it that people can't just live how they want to live without saying all of society should love that way? Do, or don't do, what you want, lady.

    3. mad.casual   3 years ago

      Uh, how exactly, does your average woman discover whether a man is able to maintain arousal while beating a woman? Asking for a friend.

      More seriously, the statement is completely baffling. Either it's pragmatically saying, "Hire a hooker and make your potential boyfriend beat her up while fucking her. If he finishes, dump him." or it's vaguely advising something between "Don't get caught in a catch-22." and "Don't date convicted rapists."

      Leave it to a woman to make "Don't stick it in crazy./Don't let crazy stick it in you." unnecessarily complicated.

      1. Briggs Cunningham   3 years ago

        And what about women who are turned on by beating guys? BSDM does go both ways and there are certainly plenty of men who want to be on the other side of the whip. Is that bad too?

    4. The Encogitationer   3 years ago

      Don't tell her about MGTOW or the wine-boxes and kitties will start piling up right now and the cats will be found on the scene of the welfare check-up less than a year later OD-ed on Fentanyl. 🙂

  8. A Thinking Mind   3 years ago

    not all UFOs are man-made.

    Optical illusions and strange natural phenomena are not man-made but also not alien, I should point out. For instance, scientists are still studying the rare occurrence of "giant jet" lightning, where bolts of lightning can strike from the ground up to the bottom edge of the thermosphere.

    So when they're talking about transmedium phenomena that cross from water into the air, I highly doubt it's extraterrestrial because there's no reason to land a space craft underneath the ocean.

    1. SRG   3 years ago

      Yup. It's an "aliens of the gaps" argument. "Unidentified, so it must be aliens", rather than "unidentified so we don't know".

      I think we can also safely say that if there were alien UFOs in out atmosphere, by now we'd have detected some mother ship hanging around the solar system.

      1. A Thinking Mind   3 years ago

        And to be fair, Congress didn't say anything about aliens, they just said "not all man-made." The people who hear that immediately jumped to "Aliens!" despite the absence of any rational reason to think we're seeing aliens.

        And UFO reports and sightings are going up exponentially. You know what else is going up exponentially? Drone usage.

        1. Don't look at me!   3 years ago

          And drug usage.

          1. The Encogitationer   3 years ago

            The visions of Daniel, Amos, Ezekiel, Jeremiah, and Saint John The Revelator can be chalked up to psylosybin. Or ergotism from spoiled grains.

            Also, they didn't know about desert heat producing mirages or about eye disorders like near-sightedness, far-sightedness, myopia, cataracts, astigmatism, and, of course, "floaters" from sneezing., nor did they have corrective lenses or corrective surgery.

            All of that taken together could make anybody see anything.

        2. SRG   3 years ago

          Yes indeed. And TBH if I were a college student nowadays, I'd be modifying drones to look like alien spacecraft. I wouldn't be the only one.

    2. Fats of Fury   3 years ago

      Maybe they mean all UFOs are person-made.

    3. mad.casual   3 years ago

      Professor Hubert Farnsworth : Dear Lord! That's over 150 atmospheres of pressure!
      Fry : How many atmospheres can the ship withstand?
      Professor Hubert Farnsworth : Well, it's a space ship, so I'd say anywhere between zero and one.

    4. Mother's Lament   3 years ago

      The thing that always strikes me is how many military men in the 21st century still think they're demonic or evil spirits. And I'm talking about the pilots, flight engineers and other officers. Educated men. Not just some Seaman swabbing the decks.
      And not just American's either. I've read different accounts where British, Dutch and Chinese officers warn that they're malevolent spirits.

      I'd love to read a psychological study on that. What prompts them to think in the 21st century that a bunch of lights are demonic.

      1. Briggs Cunningham   3 years ago

        Honestly, thinking they are evil spirits is no worse of a guess than thinking they are aliens from another star system. Both guesses require you to believe that our understanding of the universe and the laws of nature is woefully incomplete such that something that should be impossible is in fact possible.

        1. Ersatz   3 years ago

          I approve this message.

          Neither theory has any real 'proof' behind them but the 'evidence' can AFAICS be used for either proposition.

      2. The Encogitationer   3 years ago

        Probably comes the same books of Grim Fairy Tales that teach them that demons even exist.

        "Ezekiel Saw the Wheel..."
        Classic TV Theme: Project UFO (two versions)
        https://youtu.be/mSlBVFOxD7w

        1970 Chariots Of The Gods Official Trailer 1 Terra Filmkunst
        https://youtu.be/w7oCle9_wbI

        1. Mother's Lament   3 years ago

          That doesn't explain the Japanese pilots insisting they're youkai and Chinese calling them Qiongqi.

          Dammit, Encog. You think you're a freethinker but you've been conditioned to believe that everyone who doesn't believe evangelical antitheist beliefs is a gullible fool.

          1. The Encogitationer   3 years ago

            Ideas of demons can and do cross cutures. The Dragon exists in the myths of both the East and the West.

            Also high altitudes means lower air pressure and necessitate pure Oxygen tanks for breathing. That combination is bound to affect thinking about what one perceives.

            And, as I bring up in debates about intelligence, it's not all-or-nothing. People can be extremely bright with aeronautics, but downright dense on other subjects.

            All of this is within the realm of rational explaination, with neither boogums-in-the-closet nor Sir Lollypop Man required, the the latter's music is Da Bomb:

            Parliament - P-Funk (Wants to Get Funked Up) (1975)
            https://youtu.be/ZyJzylk8d_M

            1. Mother's Lament   3 years ago

              "That combination is bound to affect thinking about what one perceives."

              Believe it or not pilots receive thousands of hours training so that such muddled thinking does not occur. Also, the pilots aren't engaged in dogfights, or suffering from oxygen deprivation or narcosis when they're filing reports.

    5. The Encogitationer   3 years ago

      Could be ball lightning a.k.a. "Saint Elmo's Fire."

    6. The Encogitationer   3 years ago

      Could be ball lightning a.k.a. "Saint Elmo's Fire.". It frequently occurs at sea.

  9. A Thinking Mind   3 years ago

    "The Los Angeles City Council has voted unanimously to place on the March 2024 ballot a measure that would require hotels to accept the placement of homeless persons in vacant rooms," notes Walter Olson at the Cato Institute. "The measure would 'require hotels to report the number of vacant rooms' to the city each afternoon for this purpose."

    Can we make a Third Amendment case out of this? The Third Amendment doesn't get enough love.

    1. damikesc   3 years ago

      Certainly this is not as bad as a governor of FL firing a DA who...*checks notes* publicly stated he will not do his job.

      Reason seemed quite upset over that.

    2. Briggs Cunningham   3 years ago

      I think you could. The government can if it wants condemn the hotels and turn them into homeless shelters, provided of course that they provide just compensation to the owners. They cannot, however, force the hotels to accept what amounts to government lodgers. And really that is the essence of the Third Amendment. It was just about soldiers, even though that is the specific language. It is a prohibition against the government forcing people to accept lodgers in their homes.

      1. Ronbback   3 years ago

        its also a public taking and who wants to rent a room when you don't know what kind of people are going to allowed in. some hotels have high value rooms that only get rented out occasionally will they be required to let homeless people stay in those rooms which they will clearly ruin

        1. Briggs Cunningham   3 years ago

          Yes. It would put these hotels out of business. No one is going to stay at a hotel filled with homeless people.

          1. Fat Mike's Drug Habit   3 years ago

            There's also the small manner of how do you get them to leave when you get a paying customer for the room?

            For most of us if we overstay our welcome we get an extra bill to pay. Obviously the homeless folks aren't paying, so what incentive do they have to leave at the scheduled time? Why not just stay in there forever?

            1. Fat Mike's Drug Habit   3 years ago

              Since shoplifting is also legal there, you could legitimately go steal $899 worth of food/beverages (no one is legally allowed to stop you from doing this), then demand a vacant room at a hotel (they cannot legally refuse) and stay there with your $899 worth of food for however long it lasts.

              Since you're not being violent they won't send the cops to deal with you, worst case scenario you get some "crisis counselor" who asks you nicely to knock it off a few times before giving up.

              Why does anyone in the state of CA work for a living? Seems like it's for suckers.

              1. R Mac   3 years ago

                Well shit, you’ve convinced me. Off to California!

            2. Sevo   3 years ago

              "There's also the small manner of how do you get them to leave when you get a paying customer for the room?"

              Further, how do you get a paying customer to occupy that room?

            3. Chuck P. (The Artist formerly known as CTSP)   3 years ago

              Obviously the homeless folks aren't paying, so what incentive do they have to leave at the scheduled time?

              Even if the homeless folks would leave, the parasites they are transporting would not.

              The whole thing is an exercise in performative outrage by the City Council. They want to be seen as doing something about the homeless without actually doing anything that the voters would actually approve.

    3. Chuck P. (The Artist formerly known as CTSP)   3 years ago

      "The Los Angeles City Council has voted unanimously

      Not a single council member considered that this is blatantly unconstitutional? CA is truly a democratic tyranny.

      1. Fats of Fury   3 years ago

        I'm sure there's a substantial homeless voting bloc, whether they know it or not. I say the proposal passes.

      2. Fat Mike's Drug Habit   3 years ago

        "The Los Angeles City Council has voted unanimously" might be the most terrifying way to string 8 words together.

    4. Earth-based Human Skeptic   3 years ago

      What, there's three amendments now? How are we supposed to keep up?

      1. BestUsedCarSales   3 years ago

        Just goes to show you how bad the Constitution was that we had to keep amending it.

    5. Commenter_XY   3 years ago

      You may not = Can we make a Third Amendment case out of this?

      No Soldier shall, in time of peace be quartered in any house, without the consent of the Owner, nor in time of war, but in a manner to be prescribed by law.

      Who is the soldier? Without a soldier, you're fucked.

      1. BestUsedCarSales   3 years ago

        Probably some of those homeless are veterans. Let's bring this to the Third Amendment Lawyers Association:
        http://thirdamendmentlawyers.weebly.com/

      2. Ragnarredbeard   3 years ago

        Would also add that the last clause gives the .gov an out. ". . .in a manner to be prescribed by law" means you can do it as long as you pass a law allowing it.

      3. Chuck P. (The Artist formerly known as CTSP)   3 years ago

        Who is the soldier?

        Are they able-bodied? If so, they are part of the militia.

    6. Cyrano   3 years ago

      Hmm. Could the hotels rent the empty rooms to family and friends (or made-up people) for a nickel to get around this?

    7. The Encogitationer   3 years ago

      Not that I agree with forcing innkeepers to provide shelter, but I shudder to think that harboring bums is considered to be equal to "quartering troops."

      Their service anthem would be "I'm A Soldier in the Army of the Lurid." 😉

  10. Fist of Etiquette   3 years ago

    The family shared this evidence with Newsday...

    The only publication to cover it (other than Reason)?

  11. Briggs Cunningham   3 years ago

    Ladies and Gentleman, the dumbest man on the internet. You can't give a title like that lightly. Boy, did this clown earn it.

    From the Twitter feed of one Adam Katso, a "theologian and philosopher" who is an assistant professor at some liberal arts college I have never heard of,

    My ideal land distribution (based heavily on KSR): all agricultural land is collectively owned and scientifically managed to balance quantity, quality, and variety of food against sustainability and ethical practices. No single family or corporate for profit farms.

    Yeah, it is the Holodomor, the Great Leap Forward, and Year Zero in Cambodia all rolled into one. In the comments below the Instapundit post, someone gives other tweets where he talks about how everyone would be forced to lived in high density cities connected by high speed rail (what is it with these fuckers and trains?) and no one would live in the country except a few professionals and people to manage "the work brigades".

    Tell me again why Pinochet was such a bad guy for just shooting these fuckers? Really?

    https://instapundit.com/538499/

    1. A Thinking Mind   3 years ago

      I feel like day one of high school should be "This is the Khmer Rouge, and this is evil." Then make them sit down and watch "The Killing Fields."

      Because there's way too many elites in America who still have some weird sympathy for the Khmer Rouge, and want to enact their policies without thinking it will end up with piles of bodies.

      1. Briggs Cunningham   3 years ago

        I half think that this asshole has watched that movie and thought the Khmer Rouge were the good guys. If you showed him Mr. Jones on a double feature, he would think Stalin was the good guy. These people are just gone.

        1. A Thinking Mind   3 years ago

          May have watched it thinking that Dith Pran was a dangerous subversive who was undermining the glorious cause, and was hoping the 12 year-olds with AKs would catch him.

          1. Briggs Cunningham   3 years ago

            The whole thing would have worked if it hadn't been for the United States and people like Pran wrecking it.

      2. The Team Struggling   3 years ago

        That assumes wider awareness of the Khmer Rouge than I think actually exists in the US today. Most people I've met have never heard of Pol Pot or the Year Zero campaign and subsequent genocide. Isn't there some adage about those who fail to learn about mistakes in history? Or was all of that just wrong within normal parameters?

        1. Briggs Cunningham   3 years ago

          Young people have no idea who Pol Pot was. This clown, however, is not a millennial. He is Gen X and an academic. He was educated in the 80s when Cambodia was still fresh in the public's mind and still talked about. He knows full well what happened. He just doesn't give a fuck and either thinks it will be different or knows it won't and just wants the world to burn.

          1. Mother's Lament   3 years ago

            Not just young people. Most of the lefties here have no idea who Pol Pot was.

            1. Stuck in California   3 years ago

              Didn't anyone ever listen to the Dead Kennedys?

              1. EISTAU Gree-Vance   3 years ago

                Yup. And jello definitely stressed the importance of bringing only one (useless) brand of deodorant to Cambodia. Not 23.

                And a wife.

        2. Ronbback   3 years ago

          interesting enough several native American tribes did this long before European arrivals. they took over and destroyed records ,yes they often had records and started over hence not only did they destroy their own valuble history but they also did not learn from it such that they went backwards.

          1. Chuck P. (The Artist formerly known as CTSP)   3 years ago

            I think proggies assume the tribes all got along and were not, in fact, a bunch of neighbor-raiding cousin-fuckers that would have made European royalty jealous. It is an abject failure in logic because if they got along, they wouldn't have been separate tribes.

            'No private property' is the philosophy of raiders and pirates, not an enlightened society. John Lennon can fuck off straight back to Hell.

            1. Briggs Cunningham   3 years ago

              Progs are some of the most racist people on earth. They don't see non whites as full human beings. So, they think of the tribes as more or less children who were murdered and enslaved by the evil white man. The truth that the tribes were nations and had a civilization just like any other complete with war, murder, enslavement, looting, and even genocide in some cases just like every other civilization is beyond the typical proggie's comprehension. Understanding the truth would require seeing American Indians as actual human beings with full moral agency. And seeing other races as human beings rather than cardboard cut outs in the morality play that goes on in the Progressive mind is just not what progs do. If they did that, they wouldn't be progs anymore.

              1. Chuck P. (The Artist formerly known as CTSP)   3 years ago

                Progs watch Dances With Wolves and walk away horrified by the brutality of the Americans while completely ignoring that the female protagonist was a raped slave.

                Same with that Dances With Wolves, In Space! piece of propaganda that James Cameron turned into the highest grossing movie ever.

      3. Moonrocks   3 years ago

        Agreed. Nobody wants to be a Nazi because the Nazi ideology was thoroughly and rightly vilified for perpetrating the holocaust. The same should be done to every ideology that murders millions of people.

      4. The Encogitationer   3 years ago

        One happy consequence of that would be a mass "playing hooky" followed by lots of students opting for homeschooling/unschooling. America's wannabe Khmer Rouge can't get you if you won't stand still.

    2. Longtobefree   3 years ago

      If you have to use trains, you have to go through government inspections, and have government permission.
      That's what with those fuckers and trains.
      (and you can say socialist or fascist, you aren't yet restricted to 'these fuckers')

      1. Briggs Cunningham   3 years ago

        Yes. They love public transit because it gives them so much power to control people. Socialist and Fascist are interchangeable terms as far as I am concerned. They both look the same to the guy staring at the barrel of a gun, which is where they both inevitably lead.

    3. SRG   3 years ago

      I have to agree that this "philosopher" is a fucking idiot. We know from brutal experience that this doesn't work. IIRC during the days of the USSR, they allowed 5% of agricultural land to be privately owned, and that 5% produced 50% of USSR's agricultural produce. Without that private ownership they'd have starved every ear.

      As far as Pinochet goes, however, the Chilean people had the right to vote for Allende and when his policies were shown not to work, vote him out again. He was a bad guy because he murdered lots of people who were not any kind of genuine threat.

      Modest irony: the idiot philosopher's prescription of moving everyone into cities runs entirely counter to Marx's prediction of the distinction between cities and countries being eroded.

      FWIW trains are a pretty effective form of transport in many circumstances. High-speed trains are virtually unbeatable in connecting large population centres.

      1. Sevo   3 years ago

        "FWIW trains are a pretty effective form of transport in many circumstances. High-speed trains are virtually unbeatable in connecting large population centres."

        That's the reason people choose them over flying and make them profitable, right, you fucking lefty ignoramus?

        1. SRG   3 years ago

          The US doesn't have a high-speed rail network, ignoramus. There's more than one country with trains, you know. And even on lines in the US that would be capable of it, priority is given to freight trains, IIRC ..

          1. JesseAz   3 years ago

            Do you think Europe's city structure was built the same as the US? May want to investigate land area and regions. There is a reason most successful trains are only in the NE.

            1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   3 years ago

              Hush. Collectivists who love trains have delusional visions of Europe, where nobody lives outside of a handful of glorious cities and nobody drives cars.

              1. Sevo   3 years ago

                Further, they don't sully themselves with guns and wars.

                1. Fat Mike's Drug Habit   3 years ago

                  Europe? Never!

            2. Sevo   3 years ago

              IIRC, the NY/DC corridor is the only Amtrack route that approaches breaking even.

          2. Sevo   3 years ago

            "The US doesn't have a high-speed rail network, ignoramus..."

            Please explain why this might be, dipshit.

      2. Ronbback   3 years ago

        you only need trains to move supplies from the farms to the city, with a walkable city and internet no need to travel anywhere unless you are an elite environmental activist then you get to fly everywhere

        1. Ajsloss   3 years ago

          There was this other group of people that used trains for a different purpose...

          1. But SkyNet is a Private Company   3 years ago

            Hobos? Country singers? Porn actresses…

            1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   3 years ago

              US presidential candidates until the mid 20th century?

            2. The Encogitationer   3 years ago

              That's funny! I don't care who you are! 🙂

        2. SRG   3 years ago

          Nothing says you can't combine air and train travel in a single country.

          Look, it's 800 miles from NY to Chicago. On high-speed trains, you could go from midtown NYC to midtown Chicago in 4 hours. Why wouldn't that be preferable to flying?

          1. Don't look at me!   3 years ago

            Because the flight is 2 hours?

          2. Sevo   3 years ago

            "...Look, it's 800 miles from NY to Chicago. On high-speed trains, you could go from midtown NYC to midtown Chicago in 4 hours..."

            Naah. MY HSR will get you there in 15 minutes! I mean, if you're blowing smoke out of your ass, why not go all the way?

          3. R Mac   3 years ago

            Is the train stopping in Philly, Pittsburgh, Cleveland, or Detroit? Do they get separate trains? What about Columbus and Indy to the south?

    4. Fats of Fury   3 years ago

      I'm thinking the guy is just a a troll. Out of nowhere, two of his outrageous tweets in two days.

      1. Sevo   3 years ago

        A new Joe Asshole sock, perhaps?

    5. Chuck P. (The Artist formerly known as CTSP)   3 years ago

      No single family or corporate for profit farms.

      See: dekulakization. And, yes, it is evil. The Soviets killed and starved 30 million people. The Chinese killed and starved 80 million people. The Khmer Rouge, the NorKs, the Cubans, the Venezuelans...

      Nobody promoting such ideas should be allowed anywhere near a teaching position. They are Marxist advocates and should be shunned.

    6. The Encogitationer   3 years ago

      Merely expressing stupid, evil ideas should not be grounds for a "helicopter ride", and they are great entertainment for Libertarians...but trying to carry out those stupid, evil ideas is grounds for that and more.

      In fact, if Adam Mateo and his Ilk wanted to try to enforce "land reform," they shouldn't last long enough to get a "helicopter ride."

  12. Fist of Etiquette   3 years ago

    Former Twitter executive warns of company's security practices.

    This guy got a bag of cash from Elon.

    1. Social Justice is neither   3 years ago

      That or he's looking for one.

  13. Fist of Etiquette   3 years ago

    A Michigan city violated the constitution by chalking tires to enforce parking limits, but it won't be forced to refund thousands of tickets, a judge said.

    Someone gets paid out of that fund.

    1. Briggs Cunningham   3 years ago

      How is marking the tires with chalk a violation of the constitution? Give me a fucking break. The violations were legit.

      1. Don't look at me!   3 years ago

        Fuck you for defacing my expensive car.

        1. Briggs Cunningham   3 years ago

          It is not defacing your car.

      2. InsaneTrollLogic   3 years ago

        It's probably the state constitution, not the US constitution. The Michigan state constitution has also been interpreted to prohibit red light and speed cameras.

    2. R Mac   3 years ago

      Saginaw is a shitty city that would be just as high up in crime rankings as Flint and Detroit if it had a high enough population to qualify.

  14. Fist of Etiquette   3 years ago

    A congressional report suggests that not all UFOs are man-made.

    Women helped, you dudebros.

    1. mad.casual   3 years ago

      I suppose birthing pods aren't even considered to be human to you gender-binary bigots.

  15. Fist of Etiquette   3 years ago

    A dad took naked photos of his toddler to send to a pediatrician for diagnostic purposes. Google flagged him as a criminal.

    We must start walking back telemedicine now that COVID is over.

    1. Vernon Depner   3 years ago

      NEVER, EVER take a picture of a naked child of any age. It's too dangerous, regardless of the content of the photo or your purpose in taking it. That father was tragically naïve.

  16. Fist of Etiquette   3 years ago

    An elementary school principal in the Bay Area called the cops on a 4-year-old who wasn't wearing a mask, to remove him and his father from school premises.

    The good old reliable Bay Area educator.

    1. Fist of Etiquette   3 years ago

      If only the toddler was doing a smash-and-grab, he would have been just fine.

      1. Briggs Cunningham   3 years ago

        Very funny and only funny because it is true.

    2. Mike Laursen   3 years ago

      Not to excuse the principal, but I’ve seen a Mountain View-Whisman district principal descend from nice person with good intentions to Darth Vader in the course of a half a year. The district is home to some of the most demanding, helicopter-y parents ever.

    3. I, Woodchipper   3 years ago

      if you can live in Mountain View you can get your kids out of public school.

  17. Fist of Etiquette   3 years ago

    The Los Angeles City Council has voted unanimously to place on the March 2024 ballot a measure that would require hotels to accept the placement of homeless persons in vacant rooms...

    The ball's in your court, LA voter. Just hope one day this 3A-type violation doesn't come for your empty rooms.

    1. Ronbback   3 years ago

      Ironically in the past people used to take in boarders, for a small fee or labor, my grandmother's family did this. Today though you have to have a hosting license and inspections and even those are limited now.

      1. Moonrocks   3 years ago

        Government problems call for government solutions.

  18. JesseAz   3 years ago

    The left has a new term for tokens.

    The New York Times
    @nytimes
    ·
    Follow
    A touchstone of political and social discourse, the nearly 100-year-old phrase “the American dream,” is being repurposed — critics say distorted — by Republicans of color.

    Sarc, take note.

    1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   3 years ago

      No true Dinger.

    2. Mother's Lament   3 years ago

      It's not racist when they do it.

  19. Fist of Etiquette   3 years ago

    But on Tuesday, jurors in a second trial found the two remaining defendants guilty.

    Found their jury.

    1. Ronbback   3 years ago

      they may have been, not may have, they were entrapped but they still acted so they are guilty of the crime. but so is the FBI who should also be doing jail time. since when do the crime organizers get off.

  20. JesseAz   3 years ago

    World War 6?

    https://www.dailywire.com/news/biden-orders-precision-airstrikes-on-iran-backed-forces-in-syria

    1. Briggs Cunningham   3 years ago

      So, while Biden is bombing what are effectively Iranian forces in Syria, he is also on his knees begging them to accept any bribe they want to sign an utterly meaningless nuclear deal that every power in the region objects.

      Once again, the conspiracy theorists are wrong. There is no long plan to destroy the country. It is just a completely leaderless administration that is nothing but an orgy of chaos, incompetence, malice, and theft.

      1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   3 years ago

        Maybe the plan was putting the Biden admin in place.

      2. Fat Mike's Drug Habit   3 years ago

        Orgy of Chaos would be a pretty badass name for a band.

        1. Briggs Cunningham   3 years ago

          It would be.

        2. Vernon Depner   3 years ago

          Plenty of bands live up to the name unintentionally.

    2. A Thinking Mind   3 years ago

      It's not like he's killing Soleimani or anything, calm down.

    3. Unicorn Abattoir   3 years ago

      Three months away from an election, this is campaigning.

      1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   3 years ago

        Brought to you by our corporate sponsors.

        BTW, remember when Democrats demanded we get big money out of politics?

  21. Fist of Etiquette   3 years ago

    A bill in California "would also create a means to hold companies like McDonald's and Pizza Hut legally responsible for any labor violations at individual stores, even if those individual stores are owned by franchisees..."

    EVEN IF THAT FRANCHISEE IS A CIS WHITE MAN AND THE CORPORATE BOARD IS TOTALLY MADE UP OF BIPOC???

    1. Sevo   3 years ago

      Brought to you by The Barnes Firm!
      How you gonna get one of the TV ambulance chasers on the case if you're just suing an individual?

      1. SRG   3 years ago

        FWIW one of the funniest stories in years was when Cellino sued Barnes.

    2. Fats of Fury   3 years ago

      The EEOC found a business guilty of racism because someone chalked graffiti on their outside walls. They imposed a multimillion dollar fine on the business.

  22. JesseAz   3 years ago

    Bush attempted to stop the political warfare of presidents removing privileges from prior presidents, something Biden removed in his waiving of Trumps exec privileges leading to the raid.

    In the decade after the Sept. 11 terror attacks, Su wouldn't have had such wide latitude. An executive order that George W. Bush signed on Nov. 1, 2001 declared that an incumbent president couldn't overrule a former president's claims to executive privilege over documents from their tenure if the two could not come to an agreement.

    "If under the standard set forth in section 4 below, the incumbent President does not concur in the former President's decision to request withholding of the records as privileged, the incumbent President shall so inform the former President and the Archivist," that executive order concluded. "Because the former President independently retains the right to assert constitutionally based privileges, the Archivist shall not permit access to the records by a requester unless and until the incumbent President advises the Archivist that the former President and the incumbent President agree to authorize access to the records or until so ordered by a final and non-appealable court order."

    Nearing exit Obama attempted to remove these protections for his successor.

    https://justthenews.com/politics-policy/all-things-trump/how-barack-obama-set-legal-path-fbis-trump-raid

    1. JesseAz   3 years ago

      Alan Dershowitz, the famed Harvard law professor emeritus, said he believes the Supreme Court today would give a former president more deference than Nixon in the aftermath of Watergate and encouraged Trump to pursue such a legal challenge.

      "The idea that a sitting president can somehow waive the executive privilege of a previous president really wrecks the executive privilege, which is implicit in Article II of the Constitution," Dershowitz told Just the News on Tuesday. "You can't have a privilege, which then your political opponent can waive.

      "What President would ever seek advice and confide in people around him — Cabinet members, White House counsel, White House chief of staff — if you knew that when you're defeated for office, and you're going to be running again, your opponent can just by saying I waive the privilege, get into every single conversation you ever had. I can't believe that any constitutional scholar would agree with that."

      1. Briggs Cunningham   3 years ago

        None of this shit is going to pass muster with the appellate courts and they know it. The idea is to invent some bullshit charge that idiots like ChemJeff and Shrike can believe in and then tie Trump up in court to keep him from running.

        1. Ronbback   3 years ago

          it is kind of like making something a crime after the fact which is also illegal

        2. Stuck in California   3 years ago

          Don't even think it's that forward looking.

          They just want to keep Trump in the news through the midterms because they know how to run against Trump to incite their voters. Why else did it take a year and a half to have congressional hearings about something that has literally zero legislative purpose? All just to drag it out into the midterms.

      2. SRG   3 years ago

        Where is "executive privilege" in the Constitution?

        1. JesseAz   3 years ago

          which is implicit in Article II of the Constitution," Dershowitz

          Just 200 years of constitutional interpretation.

    2. sarcasmic   3 years ago

      What is the point? Seriously.

      Can you suspend your requirement that every comment you make to me be dickish, and answer the question as if I'm not someone you stay up all night thinking of ways to insult?

      1. sarcasmic   3 years ago

        Didn't think so.

        1. Don't look at me!   3 years ago

          Poor sarc.

          1. Chuck P. (The Artist formerly known as CTSP)   3 years ago

            Dissemble, deflect, distract. Everything sarc posts follows the playbook. Every engagement a Motte & Bailey, replies that move the goalposts, when as else fails, complete non sequiturs.

            His comment on JesseAz' post doesn't match the content or tone. Almost like he stayed up all night thinking of ways to insult and is determined to use them even if they don't apply.

            1. JesseAz   3 years ago

              They never do. He always starts shit then claims victim hood. His politics are based on his perceptions of who is his enemy. No principles. No intelligence.

            2. Mother's Lament   3 years ago

              Perfect summation of sarcasmic. His sole motives for posting are trolling and revenge.

      2. But SkyNet is a Private Company   3 years ago

        You don’t understand the point?

        1. R Mac   3 years ago

          Besides being a deranged troll, he’s also quite stupid.

    3. InsaneTrollLogic   3 years ago

      Obama was douchebag. But, what do you expect from someone who got his opponents kicked off the ballot so he could win in the Illinois General Assembly and the US Senate.

      1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   3 years ago

        How dare you impugn the Chocolate Jesus?

  23. Fist of Etiquette   3 years ago

    Crist, who previously served one term as a Republican governor of Florida, will face incumbent GOP Gov. Ron DeSantis in November.

    Maybe Crist can be appointed governor when DeSantis is president in two years.

    1. Union of Concerned Socks   3 years ago

      Return Of Orange Man: The Shitty Florida Sequel

      1. BestUsedCarSales   3 years ago

        I hope DeSantis wins in 2024 just so I can collect all the sweet op-eds that say "This guy is crazy and really shows that we were too hard on Trump."

  24. JesseAz   3 years ago

    CDC is rushing to approve the omicron vaccine without human trials

    https://justthenews.com/government/white-house/bad-medicine-bad-policy-doctors-blast-rush-approve-omicron-covid-vaccine

    1. Unicorn Abattoir   3 years ago

      Restoring the public trust!

    2. Earth-based Human Skeptic   3 years ago

      When do the emergency funding authorizations run out?

      1. Eeyore   3 years ago

        20 years.

    3. Eeyore   3 years ago

      If you are going to misrepresent results anyway - you can just skip the expensive charade.

  25. JesseAz   3 years ago

    Biden is using taxpayer dollars to try to expand unions.

    https://justthenews.com/nation/states/center-square/biden-administration-uses-taxpayer-dollars-help-grow-public-unions

    1. Ronbback   3 years ago

      California is doing the same for fast food places by forcing votes for unionizing

      1. Ronbback   3 years ago

        the state is now representing the unions

        1. Unicorn Abattoir   3 years ago

          You know what other state...

          1. InsaneTrollLogic   3 years ago

            Illinois?

    2. Commenter_XY   3 years ago

      POTUS Biden using taxpayer dollars to bail out union pension funds who were run by people convicted of corruption offenses was an even greater error.

  26. Briggs Cunningham   3 years ago

    https://pjmedia.com/news-and-politics/rick-moran/2022/08/23/newsom-vetoes-a-bill-that-would-have-set-up-legal-drug-injection-sites-n1623523

    Newsome vetoes bill that would have set up taxpayer funded drug injection sites. I think that ends any question of whether Newsome is going to run for President in 24. The only reason he would do this is because he has got to start pretending to be sane for the next two years. The campaign will be all about law and order. It will be as if defund the police and BLM were just Republican lies made up to smear the Democrats and the noble law enforcement officials of this country. The Democrats don't stand for burning, looting, chaos, and murder. Nope.

    And the sad fact is, the entire reason staff will believe them or at least pretend to.

    1. A Thinking Mind   3 years ago

      I suspect he's really eye-balling 2028. Ambitious democrats don't want to run 2024 because it's likely to be a slaughter, and they don't want the stigma of being the candidate on the bad end of such a rout.

      1. R Mac   3 years ago

        You underestimate the fortifying.

    2. Eeyore   3 years ago

      One of them might have just been too close to his house.

    3. I, Woodchipper   3 years ago

      The Reason staff will give him a full throated endorsement as the "new libertarian" democrat or some such bullshit.

  27. Jerry B.   3 years ago

    "Six companies—Diamond Vapor LLC (1), Johnny Copper LLC (2), Vapor Unlimited LLC (3), and Union Street Brands LLC (4) —challenged the FDA's denial of such an order for e-liquids meant for open-tank vaping devices."

    So maybe folks shouldn't be vaping, if it causes failure to count.

  28. JesseAz   3 years ago

    Training materials from choir district show training telling teachers to not inform parents.

    https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/restoring-america/community-family/fairfax-schools-teacher-training-student-gender-transitions

    1. sarcasmic   3 years ago

      You're still confused on this? They're afraid of abusive parents like you. Why is that so unclear?

      1. Don't look at me!   3 years ago

        Poor sarc

        1. JesseAz   3 years ago

          I dont get how someone doesn't see he is a public clown and continues to double and triple down daily as if he is the one who is right. Speaks to an amazing form of self delusion.

          1. Mother's Lament   3 years ago

            Alcoholism.

            When you're a raging drunk you make excuses for your assholish behavior while blaming everyone else.

    2. JesseAz   3 years ago

      School, not choir. Weird autocorrect.

    3. I, Woodchipper   3 years ago

      Get your kids out of public school. The teachers are literally in a conspiracy to confuse and transify your kids behind your back.

      1. Vernon Depner   3 years ago

        The goal is to sever the child from the parents' influence and control. Transing the kids is just the latest tactic.

        1. I, Woodchipper   3 years ago

          exactly. it is the primary tactic of every communist regime.

  29. Jerry B.   3 years ago

    "The Los Angeles City Council has voted unanimously to place on the March 2024 ballot a measure that would require hotels to accept the placement of homeless persons in vacant rooms,"

    But does that include room service? No one's gonna want to go if they can't order in.

    1. Ronbback   3 years ago

      better empty the liquor cabinets

      1. Chuck P. (The Artist formerly known as CTSP)   3 years ago

        No. It's a plan to trap drifters. Leave the liquor in the mini-fridge and when it disappears then they can arrest the occupant for felony theft.

        Why would anyone ever assume that autocrats have anything but the worst of motives?

        1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   3 years ago

          Not under $1000 in California they can't.

          1. mad.casual   3 years ago

            Do you even LA? If you aren't crushing the hotel minibar to the tune of more than $1,000, you aren't doing it right.

  30. Sevo   3 years ago

    Chron objects to Newsom's veto of junkie houses, interviews a junkie:
    "60% of my friends from high school are dead from drugs, and now there will be more"
    We can hope...

    1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   3 years ago

      We can also help.

      How many street people could we clean out in one weekend by leaving a thousand packets of fentanyl scattered across the city?

  31. Sevo   3 years ago

    "Schools Turn To Panic Buttons To Increase Safety"
    [...]
    "Schools are ramping up security for the 2022-2023 year. As rates of violence have been on the rise, and after the deadly Uvalde shooting in Texas, parents and educators are especially focused on returning to learning with safety in mind. This has led many districts to install school panic buttons to offer quick-time alerts..."
    https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/schools-turn-to-panic-buttons-to-increase-safety/ar-AA1107Iu

    Phone calls to 911 don't seem to get the cops moving; not sure this is going to motivate the cowards.

    1. Don't look at me!   3 years ago

      And nobody will set them off as a joke or accidentally.

      1. A Thinking Mind   3 years ago

        Fuck that, teachers will set them off to call the police on their students as a matter of routine. You want more cops arresting students, this is how you get there. And cops WILL show up for those because the students are presumptively unarmed.

    2. But SkyNet is a Private Company   3 years ago

      The Life Alert people are more sympathetic than the 911 operators

    3. Earth-based Human Skeptic   3 years ago

      A new way of avoiding that math exam.

    4. I, Woodchipper   3 years ago

      get the fuck out of public school

    5. Ragnarredbeard   3 years ago

      And the second a kid figures out where the button is, he will push it. Repeatedly. And then they will be turned off.

  32. Earth-based Human Skeptic   3 years ago

    "The first time federal prosecutors tried to convince a jury that a group of men plotted to kidnap Michigan's Democratic governor, they failed to get a single conviction," notes The New York Times. "But on Tuesday, jurors in a second trial found the two remaining defendants guilty."

    Yes! We must keep trying enemies of the state until we get the desired verdict. That's how to Democracy.

    1. Ronbback   3 years ago

      I thought is was illegal to try people twice for the same crime. i know that rule went out the window when they came up with state crimes and federal crimes to differentiate, which is wrong and should be outlawed oh it is but never mind FYTW

      1. SRG   3 years ago

        It's unconstitutional if they were acquitted the first time. They weren't.

        I agree that the state/Federal sovereign thing is bullshit, even though in times past it served well when all-white Southern juries routinely acquitted white defendants charged with assault or murder of black citizens. (There is an argument, successfully deployed in Aleman, that if a defendant was not genuinely in jeopardy in the first trial he can be retried. In those earlier cases such an argument might theoretically work, but it wouldn't have done in practice and you still weren't going to find an all-white jury to convict.)

        1. Don't look at me!   3 years ago

          It’s always all about skin color.

    2. JesseAz   3 years ago

      The judges instructions set this up for an easy appeals. The judge basically directed the jury to rule guilty.

      1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   3 years ago

        That's another way to Democracy.

  33. Sometimes a Great Notion   3 years ago

    The measure would 'require hotels to report the number of vacant rooms' to the city each afternoon for this purpose."

    The manager and his extended family really love booking rooms at the last moment on our new employees and family stay for free benefit plan (see contract for black out dates, only applies if room is vacant prior to sundown).

    1. Don't look at me!   3 years ago

      Plus maintenance shutdowns at the last second. Screw the guy who wants a room at 7:00.

  34. Union of Concerned Socks   3 years ago

    Long Island cops may have covered up drunk driving by one of their own

    Are the union dues paid up? Yes? Then what's the problem here?

  35. Dillinger   3 years ago

    >>But on Tuesday, jurors in a second trial found the two remaining defendants guilty

    same idiots who voted the wine mom in as governor

    also, how does a Florida (D) vote for Charlie Crist lol?

  36. Unicorn Abattoir   3 years ago

    The Car's Driver Was Breathalyzed. The Cop Wasn't.

    What about the toddler? We're assuming he's innocent in this?

    1. Dillinger   3 years ago

      if the kid didn't signal the turn is totes his fault.

    2. A Thinking Mind   3 years ago

      They searched him and found two guns and felony-possession levels of cocaine. Cop was a hero and was just defending himself.

    3. Commenter_XY   3 years ago

      Unicorn...A similar situation happened near my town, except it was one cop (a detective) who killed another in a road accident. Google Craig Berner.

      There was a lot of funky shit going on with that entire case. I lot of boys in blue lying for each other looking out for each other. The Burlco prosecutor (Bernardi?) made some very, very questionable judgment calls.

      In my opinion, a cop walked on manslaughter charges and the Prosecutor went along with it. Shameful.

  37. Fats of Fury   3 years ago

    also, how does a Florida (D) vote for Charlie Crist

    Like Andrew Gillum Christ tickles their gaydar.

    1. Dillinger   3 years ago

      the party-flippers seem most evil of the political species.

  38. Mike Laursen   3 years ago

    Google, Meta/Facebook, Amazon, and Apple — each of which I guarantee has their own security issues

    Apple deserves some credit for taking privacy and security more seriously lately than the ad revenue-supported social media companies. And pissing off the ad-supported companies in the process.

  39. Think It Through   3 years ago

    Note to self: DO NOT BOOK A HOTEL ROOM IN LOS ANGELES.

  40. Mother's Lament   3 years ago

    Reason Robinette

    Marjorie Taylor Greene Swatted; 911 Caller Was 'Upset' Over MTG's Stance on 'Transgender Youth Rights'

    1. I, Woodchipper   3 years ago

      my god. these people have absolutely lost their minds.

    2. Briggs Cunningham   3 years ago

      Don't these idiots understand that terrorizing the Democrats' political opponents is the FBI's job? Leave this stuff to the professionals.

  41. Ragnarredbeard   3 years ago

    "Six companies—Diamond Vapor LLC, Johnny Copper LLC, Vapor Unlimited LLC, and Union Street Brands LLC—challenged the FDA's denial of such an order for e-liquids meant for open-tank vaping devices."

    Six companies and you only list four. Bad editing, or just stupid?

  42. WilliamSanon   3 years ago

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  43. Agammamon   3 years ago

    "Cavooris, however, was asked to take a breath test for alcohol."

    He wasn't asked.

    They never *ask*.

    1. Vernon Depner   3 years ago

      If they ask, that means they actually need your permission, which of course you should deny.

  44. HypCryme.com   3 years ago

    The constant "just a few bad cops" has never been true, and is less so than ever. Probably (insert percentage here) of cops don't routinely commit crimes, abuse their power, etc. because they are actually doing their jobs and don't have time. But presented with the situation (such as this) they will protect their own no matter the cost to the civilians. The cops who will operate checkpoints for DUI, seatbelts, and other revenue-enhancing operations will, WHEN the time comes, load those civilians onto trains to the camps.

  45. Utkonos   3 years ago

    The Spirit of Ceausecu lives on…. In Germany!
    The German government has approved a set of energy-saving measures for the winter which will limit the use of lighting and heating in public buildings.

    Germany approves energy-saving measures for winter https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-62659247

    You know else’s ghost is jealous of Ceausescu’s ghost about now?

  46. jasminloura   3 years ago

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  47. jasminloura   3 years ago

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