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Civil Liberties

Empire State Police State

Plus: Microaggression discourse, AI espionage, housing policy wins, and more...

Liz Wolfe | 3.7.2024 9:31 AM

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New York Governor Kathy Hochul at press conference | Victor M. Matos, Victor M. Matos/ZUMAPRESS/Newscom
(Victor M. Matos, Victor M. Matos/ZUMAPRESS/Newscom)

Welcome to the police state: Yesterday, New York Gov. Kathy Hochul announced that 750 National Guardsmen and 250 state police officers will be deployed to patrol the New York City subway system, Hochul's attempt at combating recent high-profile crimes, like the incident in which an A train conductor's neck was slashed last week.

Law enforcement will also start doing bag checks for straphangers, and will bar people who have been convicted of violent crimes against subway passengers from using public transit for three years. It's clear how the bag checks will be enforced (in a way that costs the city money and commuters time) but it's not clear how the ban on past offenders will be enforced.

This all comes in addition to the roughly 1,000 New York City Police Department officers who were deployed throughout the subway system last month, and the cameras that have been installed in roughly one-sixth of the subway cars. That was in response to a January spike in major crime—driven mostly by grand larcenies, which are thefts without force—compared with January 2023. But crime stats are notoriously hard to untangle, and just because police are deployed doesn't mean they're effective: Subway crime, which is tracked as its own category, was up 30 percent year over year in 2022 when compared with 2021, despite Adams choosing to deploy police patrols throughout the system.

Hochul's new initiative appears to have already started; when I was going through the Broadway Junction stop last night, which connects the A train to the L, I counted a greater density of law enforcement than I'd seen before.

Bag checks are already happening at Grand Central: 

If you're going to introduce a bunch of new police officers and National Guard soldiers into the subway system, what is the point of having them all stand in the same place instead of riding trains and walking laps of stations? pic.twitter.com/dhpdgB3b2X

— Anthony LaMesa (@ajlamesa) March 7, 2024

But political stunts are different than good policing, and this looks more like the first.

Patrol politics: Interpreted as part of the power struggle between Hochul and New York City Mayor Eric Adams, this looks like an attempt by the governor's office to either undermine Adams or set the stage to be able to take credit for a decline in crime—if that is in fact what results, which is a big if.

Interpreted as a tactic by major Democrats in major cities to be responsive to people's crime fears, it looks a lot like pandering. Neither Adams nor Hochul is up for reelection this year, but the political tides feel like they're turning in a direction of even soft-on-crime liberals being dissatisfied with the status quo.

There is a vast middle ground between the two loudest types of New Yorkers: the "I ride the subway all the time and it's totally safe, what are you talking about?" and the "this city is a hellscape, I fear for my life every time I leave my house." The truth is somewhere in between: It is common to get on a subway car and have a crazy person yelling. Sometimes they're threatening, but infrequently. I see smoking inside the subway car or urinating inside the station every month or so. I've seen bum fights. I've noticed people passed out in front of the turnstile, blocking access, a few times before; it's hard to know if the person is dead or passed out, and what to do. (Nor is it lost on me that the above sentence is a crazy thing to have to write.)

These situations force hard questions: What do we owe to our fellow New Yorkers, especially those in severe need, who sometimes refuse to help themselves? Should we expect public spaces to be free of threat and despair and, if so, what policing or surveillance should be used to get there? Are these tradeoffs worth it?

But Hochul's plan probably doesn't address the actual issue, which has less to do with a criminal free-for-all and more to do with erratic mentally ill people who essentially use the subway system as free shelter, and sometimes act out with violence. "The [subway disorder] problem got worse in 2017, when Transit Police stopped enforcing loitering and related subway rules to keep homeless and mentally ill people and drug addicts from living and sleeping in the subway system. This was a simply a political choice," wrote Peter Moskos on X. "Before then, people using the system for shelter and not transit would be told to leave. Not arrested. But you can't stay here. After, they were told of shelter options. If they chose not to [accept], they were left alone. 95% chose to remain."

"The right to prohibit behavior on the subway that is permitted on the street (EG begging) was affirmed by Young v. New York City Transit Authority (1990). This was a hard fought battle by the MTA back in the days. It made a huge difference in crime & riders' Quality of Life," added Moskos (in a useful thread), who argued that "turning the subway into a defacto shelter isn't good for homeless people. Nor is it not fair to the rest of us who need to ride the subway."

Exiling mentally ill people from select public spaces doesn't sound like a solution that solves underlying needs. But it is a solution that possibly returns subways to the people who pay for them, and to their original use. Perhaps New Yorkers would instead prefer to have cops going through their handbags during rush hour so they can feel like the city has finally started to do something. The problem is that the something actually matters, and that random searches, which violate people's privacy, should not be taken lightly or instituted for political gain.


Scenes from New York: That's enough New York up above, I think. But here's a subway ad I saw yesterday. End microaggression discourse and return to real issues!

Liz Wolfe
(Liz Wolfe)

QUICK HITS

  • "Corporations will have to share key details about their role in driving climate change and the threat that warming poses to their operations under a contentious proposal the Securities and Exchange Commission approved 3-2 on Wednesday over intense business opposition," reported The Washington Post. 
  • The U.S. is negotiating a six-week ceasefire deal between Israel and Hamas that Hamas is allegedly refusing to sign onto. Both Qatar and Egypt are also helping to broker it, and all parties view the holy month, Ramadan, as an urgent and looming deadline.
  • Armed gangs in Haiti are putting pressure on the country's prime minister, Ariel Henry, to resign, and it looks like the country may be heading toward a civil war. So far, gangs have set a bunch of prisoners free, seized the airport, and attacked a police academy.
  • "Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey swiftly signed legislation on Wednesday passed by the state's GOP-controlled legislature giving physicians who provide in vitro fertilization civil and criminal immunity for any death or damage to embryos," reported Politico.
  • Inside the Satoshi Nakamoto trial in the U.K., which aims to figure out who actually created bitcoin.
  • Linwei Ding, a Google employee in the U.S. who is originally from China, was just charged with stealing AI trade secrets that he was allegedly feeding to two Chinese companies.
  • In the Elizabeth Warren formulation of the world, high prices are attributable to greed. So maybe landlords actually just magically became less greedy?

Austin built a shit ton of new housing and now rent is falling 7% year-over-year pic.twitter.com/BI0tWoSkU8

— Alec Stapp (@AlecStapp) March 6, 2024

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NEXT: Julian Assange’s Brother Will Attend the State of the Union Address as Rep. Thomas Massie's Guest

Liz Wolfe is an associate editor at Reason.

Civil LibertiesNew York CityNew YorkPoliceCriminal Justiceproactive policingPoliticsReason Roundup
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  1. Fist of Etiquette   1 year ago

    Yesterday, New York Gov. Kathy Hochul announced that 750 National Guardsmen and 250 state police officers will be deployed to patrol the New York City subway system...

    AKA The Tom Cotton Plan.

    1. HorseConch   1 year ago

      Shhhhhhhhh. Seeing his name typed out is literal violence being forced upon my fragile self.

      1. JesseAz   1 year ago

        I'll go get the coloring books and puppies...

        1. HorseConch   1 year ago

          No bears, please.

          1. InsaneTrollLogic   1 year ago

            Not even in trunks?

            1. JesseAz   1 year ago

              Damn you.

              1. InsaneTrollLogic   1 year ago

                🙂

                1. R Mac   1 year ago

                  It’s funny ‘cuz Lying Jeffy’s a retard.

            2. Nazi-Chipping Warlock   1 year ago

              Swim trunks?

              Probably better than bears in speedos.

              Either kind of bear, really.

          2. JesseAz   1 year ago

            Left them in the trunk.

        2. TheReEncogitationer   1 year ago

          Now you know why Americans everywhere else, especially Southerners, love cars?

          I like my “safe rooms” weighing in at 2000+ Pounds of steel, glass, plastic, and rich Corinthian Leather, and with 200+ Horsepower of haulin’ ass!

          Hello, Numan!
          🙂
          😉

          Gary Numan–Cars (HD)
          https://youtu.be/Im3JzxlatUs?si=4OVLkwDuCS3bmI0X

    2. Knutsack   1 year ago

      Time for BLM to crank up the fundraising machine!

    3. damikesc   1 year ago

      Perhaps not releasing psychopaths from custody under bail reform, such as 4 people accused of DISMEMBERING somebody and leaving body parts hither and yon, could help solve some problems?

      1. R Mac   1 year ago

        Racist.

      2. docduracoat   1 year ago

        Damikesc is right.

        Even if they arrest every criminal in the subway, if there are no prosecutions, nothing will change.

        No cash bail gets them out the same day.
        To go and re-offend.

        I don’t see any new d a’s being appointed or judges hired.

        So soldiers on trains is only for show

    4. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

      Hey, the same exact policy from the right is outrageous Nazi fascism and from the left is compassionate affirming government goodness.

  2. Ajsloss   1 year ago

    750 National Guardsmen and 250 state police officers will be deployed to patrol the New York City subway system

    Didn't some military guy handle a situation on the subway and now he's looking at prison?

    1. Idaho-Bob   1 year ago

      He was white, the criminal was black, and he wasn't involved in a political stunt until he likely saved his fellow commuters.

      It the (D)emocratic way.

      1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

        Also no pantsuit.

    2. Longtobefree   1 year ago

      As always, satire becomes prophecy.
      https://babylonbee.com/news/with-daniel-penny-arrested-nyc-forced-to-deploy-national-guard-to-protect-subway

      1. Gaear Grimsrud   1 year ago

        Spot on.

      2. soldiermedic76   1 year ago

        I don't envy their writers job, gotta be stressful trying to stay ahead of the curve.

        1. HorseConch   1 year ago

          It used to be a rare occurence for those to become real headlines. Now, it's almost harder to write funny, untrue headlines.

  3. Fist of Etiquette   1 year ago

    I've seen bum fights.

    Humblebrag much?

    1. Anomalous   1 year ago

      But did she bet on them?

    2. Krokko   1 year ago

      Was she at least bringing the Steel Reserve?

    3. soldiermedic76   1 year ago

      Rome had its gladiators, London had its bear baiting, dog fighting and rat baiting, New York City has bum fighting. Got to do something to keep the masses distracted.

      1. Nazi-Chipping Warlock   1 year ago

        Well then they should have them in Madison Square Garden, not the subway...

  4. Fist of Etiquette   1 year ago

    ...more to do with erratic mentally ill people who essentially use the subway system as free shelter, and sometimes act out with violence.

    If they wanted free services they should have been crazy migrants.

    1. Idaho-Bob   1 year ago

      Gut punch.

  5. Mother's Lament   1 year ago

    With support like this how can Biden lose?

    Joe Scarborough goes supernova

    “I’ve said it for years now: he’s cogent, but I undersold him when I said he was cogent. He’s far beyond cogent. In fact, I think he’s better than he’s ever been, intellectually, analytically, because he’s been around for 50 years. And, you know — I don’t know if people know this or not — Biden used to be a hothead. Sometimes that Irishman would getting in front of the reasoning. Sometimes he would say things he didn’t want to say.
    Start your tape right now, because I’m about to tell you the truth. And eff you if you can’t handle the truth. This version of Biden, intellectually, analytically, is the best Biden ever. Not a close second, and I’ve known him for years. The Brzezinskis have known him for 50 years. If it weren’t the truth, I wouldn’t say it.”

    1. HorseConch   1 year ago

      Even the most blindly partisan team D's don't believe that. I bet if I walked around the downtown of an urban oasis, I would find a lot of dedicated Biden voters, but would come up empty handed when it came to explaining what a brilliant master statesman he has aged into.

      1. damikesc   1 year ago

        Sucking up to a huge part of his audience.

        Remember when Joe was just a boring right-wing Rep and not a bat-shit nuts leftie imbecile?

        1. Red Rocks White Privilege   1 year ago

          Mika must have a magic fairy pussy to make him go Full Squealer like that.

          1. damikesc   1 year ago

            Dude...you know she pegs him nightly.

            Joe gives cucks a bad name.

            1. Ska   1 year ago

              Weird Al Parody of Bon Jovi in the making.

              1. Dillinger   1 year ago

                +1 Mika's love. like bad medicine ...

        2. Jefferson Paul   1 year ago

          Back in 2000, when I was in high school and getting highly interested in politics, Joe Scarborough was my favorite congressman. He would go on Fox News and other news channels. I liked what he had to say, and found him a nice alternative to the stodgy, old conservatives that I would normally see. And he played guitar in a band! (I know that's a stupid reason to like a politician, but I was a stupid teenager.)

          He was still good when he had his night show on MSNBC back in 2006-2007. I remember watching it as well as Tucker Carlson's show that it led into. (this was during the Duke Lacrosse Team fake-rape scandal, which both Joe and Tucker were great at reporting on.)

          Today's Joe Scarborough is night and day different. I don't know if it's because of Mika's "magic fairy pussy," as Red Rocks put it, a desire to preach to his target audience on MSNBC (making him a lot of money and giving him status), or if he really flipped almost 180 degrees on almost all of his core values.

          1. Dillinger   1 year ago

            politician ... core values?

            1. Jefferson Paul   1 year ago

              Of course he and other politicians have core values. They value political expediency so they can gain more power and money.

    2. JesseAz   1 year ago

      Democrats have gotten so ridiculous with these claims even SNL was forced to mock them.

      1. HorseConch   1 year ago

        The kind of idiocy they profess would be very easy to prove. It won't be and can't be, though. Send him to Rogan or Tucker and let one of them do a 2-3 hour interview/bullshit session with him. It wouldn't even have to be about politics. There's no way he can carry on a 2 hour conversation about anything other than ice cream cones, so we won't be getting one of those.

        1. R Mac   1 year ago

          Hell, how about a half hour interview with a real journalist.

    3. Super Scary   1 year ago

      Can Biden get a RBG style interview? But instead of having a frail millennial try and do a workout, have them do some sort of written test.

    4. Mickey Rat   1 year ago

      What do they put in the coffee at MSNBC that could make someone say such things that are obviously contradictory to observed reality?

      Also, Biden was never the sharpest knife in the drawer, even when he was relatively young.

      1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

        Marxism.

      2. Social Justice is neither   1 year ago

        But Joe is right, this is the best version of Biden the problem is he's always been worse than the corrupt, doddering imbecile we have now.

    5. Quicktown Brix   1 year ago

      This version of Biden, intellectually, analytically, is the best Biden ever.

      Probably true.

      1. Mickey Rat   1 year ago

        Damning Biden with faint praise.

    6. I, Woodchipper   1 year ago

      "The Party told you to reject the evidence of your eyes and ears. It was their final, most essential command.".

    7. Minadin   1 year ago

      He wasn't ever really a hothead. More of a loudmouth.

      Writing checks your butt couldn't possibly hope to cash via angry outbursts is a sign of low intelligence.

      Also, I'm continually surprised at how low MSNBC hosts can go when it comes to blatantly simping for one side. Pure regime propaganda at this point.

      1. American Mongrel   1 year ago

        Do you think hothead is usually something other than a low IQ loudmouth?

    8. Minadin   1 year ago

      Also: Apparently Morning Joe is Biden's favorite 'news' show. He watches it religiously and his aides have to screen the episodes in advance so that they're prepared to answer any questions he might have.

      "Scarborough, a former GOP congressman who turned into a Trump critic, is often called by the president to hear his opinion on issues and complain about media coverage from elsewhere."

      https://www.thewrap.com/joe-biden-watches-msnbc-morning-joe-calls-scarborough/

      Yikes.

      1. Red Rocks White Privilege   1 year ago

        LOL, no wonder he's going off like that. The guy is literally Biden's personal PR rep.

    9. Gaear Grimsrud   1 year ago

      I was just thinking nobody could out stupid Keith Olbermann and now this.

      1. R Mac   1 year ago

        Until Scarborough says he pisses out his eyes Olberman still has him beat.

        1. InsaneTrollLogic   1 year ago

          Just wait. The ladies on The View are usually capable of telling them to hold their collectivist beers.

        2. Nazi-Chipping Warlock   1 year ago

          "I urinate from my eyes and have it running down my face" is possibly the weirdest flex I've seen yet.

  6. Fist of Etiquette   1 year ago

    That's enough New York up above, I think.

    More than enough, probably. Although I think I speak for everyone here when I it's fun to see Democrats fighting and - somewhat regrettably but not much less fun - the people who continually vote them in suffer daily object lessons.

    1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

      Consequences are racist!

  7. Ajsloss   1 year ago

    The U.S. is negotiating a six-week ceasefire deal between Israel and Hamas that Hamas is allegedly refusing to sign onto.

    Some people like to be genocided.

    1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

      Are there any Palestinians left?

      1. Sometimes a Great Notion   1 year ago

        Yes but only enough in supply for 1 week.

    2. damikesc   1 year ago

      And when they reject the ceasefire --- which Egypt says they will as they have the several before --- Israel will somehow still be to blame.

      1. soldiermedic76   1 year ago

        Well, it’s Israel’s fault since they exist and haven’t bent their knees to the Islamofascists. Also, because Israelis refused to name who their favorite Nazi was (although Herr Oskar Schindler did belong to the party, so there's an outside possibility there).

  8. JesseAz   1 year ago

    President Biden
    @POTUS
    Today, I'm launching a Strike Force on Unfair and Illegal Pricing to crack down on corporations who break the law while keeping prices high for American consumers.

    But our one true libertarian assures us Biden recognizes the constitution.

    1. JesseAz   1 year ago

      But don't worry. Vox is here to assuage our fears of economic fascism by saying he just meant he would give the poor more money to fight inflation and prices.

      https://www.vox.com/2024/3/6/24091252/biden-administration-grocery-prices-shrinkflation

      1. HorseConch   1 year ago

        Did you read any of that? It is rather striking that what they present as serious discussion/policy is at the 3rd grade level. Stopping Ben and Jerry's and Breyers from passing on their supermarket fees is going to help all the poor people in the world. You can't make up the level of stupid they pander to.

        1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

          But you (they) can make up that level of Marxist propaganda.

        2. JesseAz   1 year ago

          Vox has been writing 3rd grade level Voxplations since they started.

        3. damikesc   1 year ago

          Mind you, Joe has never had a real job that I am aware of. Certainly not in the last 50+ years.

          1. Gaear Grimsrud   1 year ago

            Well he was a very popular lifeguard in a former lifetime.

            1. HorseConch   1 year ago

              He was a truck driver. He was also temporarily a political prisoner.

              1. R Mac   1 year ago

                FREE MANDELA!

        4. Super Scary   1 year ago

          I'm surprised to hear they didn't use Harry Potter or Star Wars to try and explain the problem more clearly to their audience.

    2. Mike Parsons   1 year ago

      definitely not fascists

      1. R Mac   1 year ago

        Don’t use that word, you’ll make sarc mad.

    3. damikesc   1 year ago

      Come on, man. No chance Biden does anything stupid like set up price controls or anything.

      It is funny watching the press act like shrinkflation and "corporate greed" are caused by...nothing.

      1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

        Seriously, to progressives and Marxists, economic parameters like wages and prices are pure political decisions, and have no financial significance. And they are certainly not connected to any other parameters like supply and demand.

        1. Ska   1 year ago

          ...or *gasp* value.

        2. Chuck P. (The Artist formerly known as CTSP)   1 year ago

          If only people were not so greedy, we would all be rich.

    4. Moonrocks   1 year ago

      Illegal Pricing

      No price is illegal!

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

        What about the price you pay to not be beaten by a mugger? Does the coercion change the nature of a transactional cost?

      2. Jefferson Paul   1 year ago

        Undocumented Prices

  9. Fist of Etiquette   1 year ago

    Corporations will have to share key details about their role in driving climate change...

    I don't see how this helps win a November election. Go back to lockdowns.

    1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

      Just 2 weeks to flatten the temperature curve.

    2. Ron   1 year ago

      corporations forced to pretend there is climate change and how they are to blame for it.
      I can see the headlines "even corp[orations admit to causing climate change" this is like you will take your beatings till you love it

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

        Struggle sessions. Not just for college campuses and congressional hearings anymore.

    3. mamabug   1 year ago

      Gives all those environmental studies majors an actual job?

    4. damikesc   1 year ago

      I am sincerely curious how the SEC has any legally justifiable reason to demand such information.

      Unless they mean the Southeastern Conference. Georgia might want to know for reasons.

  10. Fist of Etiquette   1 year ago

    The U.S. is negotiating a six-week ceasefire deal between Israel and Hamas that Hamas is allegedly refusing to sign onto.

    I demand Israel sign it unilaterally then.

  11. Senater Tim Scott   1 year ago

    “ Mark Robinson's Bizarre Ramble: 'I Absolutely Want To Go Back To The America Where Women Couldn’t Vote'”

    God! Me too Future Republican Black Man Governor. Me too. People with stank private parts have no place in the voting booth. I mean, look at the Shangra-La that Men over the years have built. Why can’t people with stinky vaginas be more thankful for what they’ve got?!?

    1. Mother's Lament   1 year ago

      Fuck off, Buttplug. Go play Klansman somewhere else.

      1. Medulla Oblongata   1 year ago

        They call themselves "progressives" and "anti-racists".

        In reality, they are base human beings, simply filled with venom and racist vitriol to be turned on anyone with whom they disagree.

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

          The worst racist/misogynist screeds I see these days are always represented as being in mockery by some leftist. By their works, you shall know them. Horrible thoughts come from horrible people.

      2. Sometimes a Great Notion   1 year ago

        I hope the Reason+ charge will financially backrupt him to go along with his moral bankruptcy.

    2. Sevo   1 year ago

      turd, the ass-clown of the commentariat, lies; it’s all he ever does. turd is a kiddie diddler, and a pathological liar, entirely too stupid to remember which lies he posted even minutes ago, and also too stupid to understand we all know he’s a liar.
      If anything he posts isn’t a lie, it’s totally accidental.
      turd lies; it’s what he does. turd is a lying pile of lefty shit.

    3. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

      OK, idiot sock puppet, I'll play along.

      Tell us about all the fabulous libertarian advances driven by women (and "women" as a political faction, not just individuals).

    4. R Mac   1 year ago

      If you’re going to put in the effort, at least be funny.

  12. Fist of Etiquette   1 year ago

    Armed gangs in Haiti are putting pressure on the country's prime minister, Ariel Henry, to resign...

    They didn't even go to defunding the police first?

    1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

      I bet the police in Haiti, like most central and South American shit holes, I mean, authentic indigenous cultures, have been self-funding.

      1. R Mac   1 year ago

        I’m assuming the armed gangs in question are the police.

      2. Chuck P. (The Artist formerly known as CTSP)   1 year ago

        According to Wikipedia:

        The Haitian Revolution... was the only slave uprising that led to the founding of a state which was both free from slavery... and ruled by non-whites and former captives. The successful revolution was a defining moment in the history of the Atlantic World and the revolution's effects on the institution of slavery were felt throughout the Americas.

        How is it possible that every Marxist's wet dream did not end up a worker's paradise?

        1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

          At least we know what happens when we mix French and African cultures.

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

            When you mix French and African cultures you get Haiti. When you mix French and Asian cultures you get Vietnam. When you mix French and Arabic cultures, you get Iraq. If only there were a discernable pattern in there...

            1. Nazi-Chipping Warlock   1 year ago

              "The French. So terrible at administration that even otherwise intelligent Asian cultures decide Communism is a better option."

    2. soldiermedic76   1 year ago

      When I did basic at Ft Leonard Wood in 1995, they were training a bunch of Haitians there to be policemen. Our senior drill sergeant would say (he was former Special Forces and had deployed to Latin America and the Caribbean a couple of times, so he spoke from experience) "look there, that's a human rights violation waiting to happen'. He was largely referring to their obvious lack of discipline at the time (we shared an arms room so often encountered them when we were checking in or out our weapons). A few months later, while I was in AIT, saw on the news 'American trained Haitian Police accused of theft, protectionist schemes, rape and murder'. God, good old Jumpmaster Jennings knew his shit (I still use some of his nuggets of wisdom, such as 'i don't worry when my soldiers are bitching, I worry when they stop bitching' or 'if you don't lose a pound of ass every once in awhile to an ass chewing, you're doing something wrong).

      1. Jefferson Paul   1 year ago

        I did my basic training (OSUT really) at Fort Leonard Wood as well--12B Combat Engineer. I didn't realize 68W did basic at Leonard Wood. Did you enter as a Combat Medic Specialist or did you reclassify later on to that MOS?

        1. soldiermedic76   1 year ago

          Back then it was 91B and yes I did enter as a medic specialist. It wasn't OSUT. Basic at Ft Leonard Wood, AIT at Ft Sam Houston.

          1. soldiermedic76   1 year ago

            Before 2001 all enlisted MedCorp was 91 series and officers were 68 series, but the majority of 91 series you had to first qualify as a 91B (Medic). So, like me, I reclassed as a 91C practical nurse. But then in 2001 the reorganized the 91 series and made several of the stand alone MOS that required you to be a 91B first into a new MOS 91W (medic) with a specialty code (there already were several specialties that were already just specialty codes like 91BY10, cardiac cstherization specialist) so my MOS became 91WM6, so primary MOS was medic with a specialty of practical nurse. Then in 2006 the reorganized again and all 91 series medical MOS were moved to 68 series with the officers. But I ETS'd in 2005, so technically never held the 68WM6, as my DD-214 reads 91WM6 but if I had stayed in I would have been a 91WM6.

  13. Mother's Lament   1 year ago

    "Empire State Police State"

    This was always the playbook. Deliberately destabilize society to the point that it will be begging for curfews, summary arrests and troops in the streets.

    All it took was catch and release, prosecuting self-defense, open borders and some pro-looting laws.

    1. Idaho-Bob   1 year ago

      I enjoy making snarky comments about how vile the urban centers are in America, but this is so far over the top, it borders hyperbole.

      Nothing says authoritarianism like soldiers in the subways.

      1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

        How about soldiers and political officers in trench coats asking you for your papers?

        1. Idaho-Bob   1 year ago

          Coming soon, unless you are a "newcomer".

      2. Ron   1 year ago

        California is doing this by emptying prisons and must be intentionally wanting crime to increase so people will scream for more action and they can make more draconian gun laws. this is on purpose

      3. Incunabulum   1 year ago

        The price of freedom is homeless people pushing you into the tracks.

      4. Social Justice is neither   1 year ago

        What part of that is hyperbole other than the competence required for this to be planned?

    2. Anomalous   1 year ago

      Heighten the contradictions.

    3. Ajsloss   1 year ago

      begging for curfews

      Don't forget covid!

      1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

        Seriously, most Americans don't want (and don't deserve) a free society. Maybe we need to rethink this immigration thing as an exchange program.

    4. R Mac   1 year ago

      Anarcho-tyranny isn’t just a theory anymore.

    5. Moonrocks   1 year ago

      But remember, Moscow is such a nice place because Putin is an evil fascist ruling with an iron fist completely unlike the freedom-loving democratic leadership in New York.

  14. JesseAz   1 year ago

    Armed gangs in Haiti are putting pressure on the country's prime minister, Ariel Henry, to resign, and it looks like the country may be heading toward a civil war. So far, gangs have set a bunch of prisoners free, seized the airport, and attacked a police academy.

    You mean the tens of billions sent to Clinton Foundation cronies after the last earthquake didn't help Haiti?

    1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

      Were there any "suicides" in Haitian jails?

    2. Ron   1 year ago

      I've seen plenty of interviews of Haitians and they know Hillary is to blame for everything wrong in their country right now.

  15. InsaneTrollLogic   1 year ago

    The war on free speech with neo-Stasi.

    https://www.zerohedge.com/political/there-war-free-speech-and-they-wont-ever-be-satisfied-until-it-completely-eradicated

    The freedom to say whatever we want is one of the most fundamental rights in a free society. If we are not free to speak up, it is is just a matter of time before all of our other rights are taken away as well. So it should deeply alarm all of us that free speech is under attack like never before. Much of the population has become convinced that “hate speech” is a special class of speech that does not deserve protection. Of course in practice “hate speech” ends up being whatever forms of expression that the leftist elite hate. That is why “hate speech” laws are always written so vaguely. That way they can be used to go after whoever the leftist elite feel like going after at the time.

    But if we are going to have a free society, people have got to be free to say whatever they want. So we should never support freedom of speech being taken away from anyone, because once we start going down that slippery slope it is just a matter of time before they come after our freedom to say what we want.

    That is why what is happening in the state of Washington is so alarming. A new law would allow private individuals to collect up to $2,000 every time they report someone to the new “hate crimes and bias incidents hotline”…

    1. JesseAz   1 year ago

      The new liberaltarian narrative is back to corporations (even at the behest and funding of government) have strong 1a protections than normal citizens. The Federalist had a good article on the 1a cases Texas missed regarding free speech and corporations.

      Most importantly, he overlooked the fact that Texas enacted its law to promote speech. States have a long history of doing that. As First Amendment scholar Genevieve Lakier has pointed out, “local, state, and federal legislators have over the course of the past two centuries enacted hundreds, perhaps even thousands, of laws that are intended to protect the same values and interests that the First Amendment protects.” She explained — critically — that these laws did so “not by simply enforcing the speech rights and speech facilitating duties that the First Amendment requires, but by granting rights and imposing duties that the First Amendment does not require, or by intervening in the speech marketplace in other ways not mandated by the First Amendment cases.”
      .
      PruneYard Shopping Center v. Robins (a decision dear to me, as a California lawyer and a Bay Area native who as a kid used to visit the PruneYard, a large shopping center located near Stanford University). In PruneYard, the California Supreme Court found that the California Constitution granted people the right to engage in speech on certain privately owned property (in that case, a shopping mall). The shopping center owner said that violated its own rights, including its First Amendment rights. Its petition to the Supreme Court was based, at least in part, on the same arguments as the NetChoice cases: “that a private property owner has a First Amendment right not to be forced by the State to use his property as a forum for the speech of others.”

      I find this entirely reasonable. And agree that censorship is not a form of corporate speech. Much like the decisions about viewpoint discrimination for ads. Social media is very much a public forum akin to a parking lot or a park.

      The Supreme Court disagreed. It noted that the shopping center was “a business establishment that is open to the public to come and go as they please.” It also explained that the offending viewpoints were “not likely to be identified with those of the owner” and that no “specific message is dictated by the State to be displayed on appellants’ property. There consequently is no danger of governmental discrimination for or against a particular message.” Most importantly, the court emphasized that the shopping center could “expressly disavow any connection with the message by simply posting signs in the area where the speakers stand. Such signs, for example, could disclaim any sponsorship of the message and could explain that the persons are communicating their own messages by virtue of state law.”

      https://thefederalist.com/2024/03/05/texas-blew-it-in-big-tech-case-before-the-supreme-court/

      1. Roberta   1 year ago

        The issue in PruneYard was that the hallways of a privately owned mall had replaced the public streets, and therefore that a public forum for speech would be lost unless provision were made to accommodate that function.

        1. JesseAz   1 year ago

          Which is even closer to the owner than a social media company providing a platform.

        2. Social Justice is neither   1 year ago

          So the city was all out of streets?

  16. tommhan   1 year ago

    Well it is just another zoo that has to have zoo keepers to keep the people safe from the wild animals. It amazing to me anyone wants to live there.

  17. JesseAz   1 year ago

    By the way want to note... after many mentions of journalists being arrested in other countries, still no mention of Baker, Lira (Ukraine), or the contempt of court against Herrige.

    1. R Mac   1 year ago

      Shameful, especially the Baker case.

    2. Social Justice is neither   1 year ago

      Wait until there is zero mention of Steven Baker because D regimes can do no wrong.

  18. Fist of Etiquette   1 year ago

    Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey swiftly signed...

    Is this a dig at how long it takes the president to write out his name?

    1. R Mac   1 year ago

      HA! You think Biden can write his own name?

  19. Fist of Etiquette   1 year ago

    Linwei Ding, a Google employee in the U.S. who is originally from China, was just charged with stealing AI trade secrets that he was allegedly feeding to two Chinese companies.

    THEY'RE GOING TO MAKE MAO BLACK???

    1. JesseAz   1 year ago

      Obama nods in approval.

    2. TheReEncogitationer   1 year ago

      "Just beatin’ da bushes for “Counter-Revolutionaries,” Missuh Benny!”
      🙂
      😉

  20. Fist of Etiquette   1 year ago

    Austin built a shit ton of new housing and now rent is falling 7% year-over-year...

    HOW CAN ECONOMICS ACCOUNT FOR THIS.

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

      It took time to recover from the effects that government shutdowns had on the supply chain...

      1. KARtikeya   1 year ago

        Since you and/or I may not be able to comment on here much longer I’m sorry for many of the things I said to you. A lot of things I said were despicable and I am truly sorry.

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

          I will certainly accept a sincere apology. It shows a remarkable increase in maturity that you would offer it.

          In return, I would offer a comment for you to consider.

          I have never expected that anyone will agree with my opinions or understand my particular sense of humor. I esteem my own intellect enough to welcome challenges. I admit that I am lacking specific knowledge on many issues while also knowing that I am a very capable and willing learner. I appreciate anyone willing to engage in honest discourse and debate.

          I also understand that prejudice against persons based on religion, nationality, ethnicity, or adherence to a philosophy may very well be justified to those with first-hand experience or verified knowledge. Prejudice is not indefensible until it is maintained in light of evidence to the contrary. This is why words are important. Prejudice and bigotry are synonymous only in a general sense. Bigotry refuses to be informed by evidence. It is reinforced by fear and even more so by insecurity.

  21. swillfredo pareto   1 year ago

    What do we owe to our fellow New Yorkers, especially those in severe need, who sometimes refuse to help themselves?

    That is a really good question. What you owe them can be derived from your own morality. What the state has the moral authority to provide, is nothing. The parents, family, churches, charities and other institutions of those in severe need, need to pick up that slack.

    1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

      And what you owe them when they directly threaten you is a kick in the nuts.

    2. Chuck P. (The Artist formerly known as CTSP)   1 year ago

      That is a doubly odd question to pose under a masthead that reads FREE MINDS AND FREE MARKETS,

  22. Mickey Rat   1 year ago

    I am not certain how NYC being only a partial hellscape where you only have to fear for your some of the time is really a good middle ground to be in.

  23. NealAppeal   1 year ago

    No connection between spikes in crime to border states dropping off all the ‘asylum seekers’ in town…whom may not all be the criminals but at least pushing all the normal unhoused and unhinged into the streets again.

    1. Sometimes a Great Notion   1 year ago

      Except the crime rate spike started before that, so probably not correlated let alone causation. Summer of 2020 being the big event that kicked it off but hell SF had the human shit app a few years before that.

    2. Moonrocks   1 year ago

      To be fair, there isn't. The spike in crime is caused by a refusal to enforce criminal law.

    3. Incunabulum   1 year ago

      Well, there is no connection.

      Because, as Reason's writers have told us, there are no negatives to unlimited and open immigration.

      Also, if these people being bussed up there is making things worse - imagine what its like on the border.

  24. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

    Yup, nothing says peaceful and prosperous (and free) society like armed soldiers in every public place.

    Reminds me of visiting Bogota in the 1990s.

    1. soldiermedic76   1 year ago

      Besides it will be like the security theater when they placed "armed" reservist and guardsman in airports, carrying rifles with unloaded magazines locked in place.

  25. Rev Arthur L kuckland   1 year ago

    If they are new Yorkers the only thing you ow them is a kick to the face

  26. Rev Arthur L kuckland   1 year ago

    All Chinese nationals should be deported. They are all spies.

    1. Longtobefree   1 year ago

      No.
      Some are administrators managing the spies.

      1. JesseAz   1 year ago

        Some provide Chinese food trucks for the spies.

        1. InsaneTrollLogic   1 year ago

          Aren't some, as members of Congress, shagging those spies too?

          1. JesseAz   1 year ago

            And being hired as their drivers.

    2. Gaear Grimsrud   1 year ago

      Some are scientists doing the valuable work of developing GOF viruses in the California desert. Let's not throw out the baby with the bathwater here.

  27. Rev Arthur L kuckland   1 year ago

    New yourk enforcing the law has already been ruled out

  28. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

    'There is a vast middle ground between the two loudest types of New Yorkers: the "I ride the subway all the time and it's totally safe, what are you talking about?" and the "this city is a hellscape, I fear for my life every time I leave my house." The truth is somewhere in between: It is common to get on a subway car and have a crazy person yelling. Sometimes they're threatening, but infrequently.'

    Really? Common crazy yelling and occasional threats seems more hellscapey than acceptably normal.

    1. Idaho-Bob   1 year ago

      Really? Common crazy yelling and occasional threats seems more hellscapey than acceptably normal.

      It's possible the yells and the threats continue because there are no consequences. If someone was behaving all New Yorky in CDA, Idaho, it would last less than 10 minutes. The cops would be called, but if they didn't show PDQ, the locals will handle the scene.

    2. R Mac   1 year ago

      Just life in the big city.

  29. Rev Arthur L kuckland   1 year ago

    So the sec is asking companies to explain why what the sce imagines is caused by companies?

    That's like your wife being pissed at you because you flirted with another girl in her dream

    1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

      Women, right?

      1. I, Woodchipper   1 year ago

        the current commissioners of the SEC

        https://www.sec.gov/about/commissioners

        2 women, 2 diversity soyboys, 1 white male . Vote was 3-2.

        1. Moonrocks   1 year ago

          Commissioner since…
          2018
          2020
          2021
          2022
          2022

          I imagine those are the lines this broke down on.

    2. Jerry B.   1 year ago

      Next, the SEC will put in place a regulation that the expenses required to find out how much climate change your business is responsible for can’t be passed on to your customers.

  30. Commenter_XY   1 year ago

    Re: Hamas walking away from negotiations

    Israel must hunt Hamas members down and kill them. No respite for Ramadan. Fuck that. Israel is attacked on their holiest holidays. Time for payback.

    1. Red Rocks White Privilege   1 year ago

      I'm honestly hoping that Israel keeps this up through the summer, at least. I want to watch the Hamas wing of the DNC recreate the 1968 convention.

    2. Dillinger   1 year ago

      >>respite for Ramadan

      on TruTV's list of stupidest ideas of this century.

    3. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

      How about fighting only after sundown?

      1. TheReEncogitationer   1 year ago

        That would be for stra-te-ger-ic reasons rather than respect for Abrahamic Superstitions.
        🙂
        😉

    4. Rev Arthur L kuckland   1 year ago

      Isreal owes the Muslims the same respect the Muslims showed them on Yom kippur in the 60s

  31. Dillinger   1 year ago

    lol I come here to say thanks on the chance I can still comment today and the first thing I see is the Monster Who Rules New York?

    1. TrickyVic (old school)   1 year ago

      I hear they are doing a remake of Attack of the 50 foot Woman.

      1. Dillinger   1 year ago

        does Daryl Hannah have a daughter?

    2. TheReEncogitationer   1 year ago

      The whole City has long since turned into “The Cockroach That Ate Cincinnati.”
      https://youtu.be/NtEpqlrwX5c?si=sDOblCmP2RTOHrgx

      🙂
      😉

      1. Dillinger   1 year ago

        nice find.

        1. TheReEncogitationer   1 year ago

          Dr. Demento was always Da Bomb as a teen and as a college kid! I need fo start back listening to him and his great novelties!

  32. Dillinger   1 year ago

    >>750 National Guardsmen and 250 state police officers will be deployed to patrol the New York City subway system

    somebody tell Governor K Cloverfield was just a movie

    1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

      Sure, and 1984 was only a novel.

      1. Ersatz   1 year ago

        nice!

  33. Dillinger   1 year ago

    >>the power struggle between Hochul and New York City Mayor Eric Adams

    the fight to get to the cameras first is like the ladies down at the IGA on triple-coupon Wednesdays

    1. Ajsloss   1 year ago

      "Hmmm. That's true, but he still shouldn't say it." -Marge

      1. Dillinger   1 year ago

        ya I couldn't remember the exact line this time ...

  34. Dillinger   1 year ago

    >>The U.S. is negotiating a six-week ceasefire deal between Israel and Hamas

    misspelled manipulating. and how ironic imports to Michigan are a (D) political fear

  35. Dillinger   1 year ago

    >>Armed gangs in Haiti ... have set a bunch of prisoners free, seized the airport, and attacked a police academy.

    Schumer demands $80billion in aid ...

    1. Rev Arthur L kuckland   1 year ago

      As long as Kim katrelle, Steve guttenberg, Bubba Smith, and Michel Winslow are safe, who cares

    2. soldiermedic76   1 year ago

      Has Haiti had a stable government since they kicked the French out?

      1. Dillinger   1 year ago

        voodoo economics?

        1. InsaneTrollLogic   1 year ago

          I think that functions better than any government, if you could call it government, that Haiti has ever had since kicking the French out.

          1. soldiermedic76   1 year ago

            I think we can agree it's probably a good thing Grant didn't get his wish as President and bring Haiti into the Union.

      2. Rev Arthur L kuckland   1 year ago

        Hatti was the original south africa

  36. Dillinger   1 year ago

    >>legislature giving physicians who provide in vitro fertilization civil and criminal immunity for any death or damage to embryos

    no controversy after all. choose life.

  37. A Cynical Asshole   1 year ago

    I've seen bum fights.

    Maybe someone should start charging money? Give the bums in the fight a cut of the proceeds, the subway riders get some cheap entertainment, everyone wins!

    1. Rev Arthur L kuckland   1 year ago

      Isn't that how ebaums world got started?

  38. TrickyVic (old school)   1 year ago

    ""but it's not clear how the ban on past offenders will be enforced.""

    https://reason.com/2024/01/23/beyond-your-papers-please/

    MSG and Radio City kicked out some lawyers using facial recognition.

    You can be tracked by facial recognition in real time in the subway system. Something implemented post 9/11 and have been tweeking ever since.

    1. Commenter_XY   1 year ago

      Yeah, the MSG thing caused quite a stir. The ban was against some white collar lawyers who were in litigation against MSG. Caused a stink.

      1. TrickyVic (old school)   1 year ago

        I know someone who was on grand jury duty and said their ability to show you video from point Z back to point A was a scary eye opener.

  39. Incunabulum   1 year ago

    >Welcome to the police state:

    The price of freedom, Wolfe. Because there's only two options - clean subways and totalitarian government, or freedom and massive amounts of violent crime.

    1. TheReEncogitationer   1 year ago

      See my post to Fist above on them new-fangled car thingies!
      🙂
      😉

  40. Incunabulum   1 year ago

    > but it's not clear how the ban on past offenders will be enforced.

    Well, they will be arrested, processed, and then the court will immediately give them 'no-money' bail and they'll be back on the subway within 2 hours.

    1. soldiermedic76   1 year ago

      Or flee to Athens, GA or California, depending on immigration status.

  41. Incunabulum   1 year ago

    >That was in response to a January spike in major crime—driven mostly by grand larcenies, which are thefts without force

    1. Theft is theft. Theft is, literally, stealing a part of a person's life. Theft is, by definition, violence.

    2. Are you sure it wasn't driven by the massive increase in violence on the subways over the last three years?

  42. Incunabulum   1 year ago

    >It is common to get on a subway car and have a crazy person yelling. Sometimes they're threatening, but infrequently. I see smoking inside the subway car or urinating inside the station every month or so. I've seen bum fights. I've noticed people passed out in front of the turnstile, blocking access, a few times before; it's hard to know if the person is dead or passed out, and what to do. (Nor is it lost on me that the above sentence is a crazy thing to have to write.)

    Notwithstanding the lack of an actual subway, but none of this happens on public transport in Phoenix, Nashville, or Miami.

    1. Michael Ejercito   1 year ago

      I wonder why.

  43. Longtobefree   1 year ago

    A fun metric would be the ratio of NYC, SF, and LA articles here against the rest of the world.

    Those of us in Free America really don't care about those places anymore. How about a few articles, with named verifiable sources, on the low labor participation rate, of how not a single legislator anywhere has tried to limit the power or even duration of "emergency" declarations?

    1. Rev Arthur L kuckland   1 year ago

      If a 9/11 scale attack happened today in NY, Chicago, sf, or LA, what percentage of Americans would care? I'm thing around 20%

      1. Red Rocks White Privilege   1 year ago

        I don't know about the percentage, but I'd trade all four of those cities for a can of Dr. Pepper.

      2. Nazi-Chipping Warlock   1 year ago

        I have people in 3 of 4, but if they were safe, I'd be pretty meh about it.

      3. KARtikeya   1 year ago

        Even less would care if it happened in 4 deep GOP rural shitholes.

  44. Sevo   1 year ago

    Gee, there's a bit of a commotion in GA regarding the DA who managed to squint and read a law such that she brought charges against Trump, but it seems the issue is just too local for mention here.

    1. Gaear Grimsrud   1 year ago

      The polling shows that a significant percentage of the electorate say they won't vote for trump if he's convicted of a felony. The regime is desperate to get a conviction before the election. In theory this is a winning strategy. The problem is that with every novel prosecution trump gets a bump in the polls. Seems a majority of the population does not consider these prosecutions to be legitimate and the more they pile on the less likely the public will believe that a conviction is legitimate either.

      1. soldiermedic76   1 year ago

        Yeah, MSNBC is all a gaga that Biden is planning on using his state of the union as a blatant campaign speech (as opposed to the usual muted campaign speech it's been ever since they've started delivering the required state of the union as a speech rather than as a written report, and especially since they've started broadcasting it). I don't think it will turn out how they think it will when he attacks Trump and his supporters (which he will explicitly do according to reports).

        1. Longtobefree   1 year ago

          I can't wait for Trumps' first State of the Union Report.
          A postcard to congress saying "everything used to suck, but I fixed it".

    2. soldiermedic76   1 year ago

      I've been reassured it's all because she's black, that they would never have protested a white DA that hired xer married boyfriend, met with the White House before deciding to charge the current President's main opponent, and took extravagant trips with aforementioned beau to exotic places that were paid for by the tax payer funded fees said boyfriend was charging.

  45. Michael Ejercito   1 year ago

    The NYc Subway must me more dangerous than public schools.

    When was the last time the National Guard was sent to public schools to keep students safe?

    1. TrickyVic (old school)   1 year ago

      1957 Little Rock Central High?

      Not just the NG either the 101st Airborne Division was there too.

      1. Michael Ejercito   1 year ago

        Yes, and it was to stop people in white robes and hoods from just waltzing in and shooting up the place to defend segregation

        It seems as if the threat of school shootings day (at least compared to Little Rock Central High in 1957) is much less diminished.

        1. TrickyVic (old school)   1 year ago

          You know it's not really about safety and it's just a democrat trying to change a perception on party and crime.

          As the NYPD found out, you can put cops on a subway platform but that doesn't prevent a crime further down the platform.

        2. soldiermedic76   1 year ago

          Don't worry, the Klan put away their robes and became CRT/DEI professors and are once again pushing segregation (for the good of minorities, which ironically enough for the anti-racist claimers, was one of the arguments used by pro-segregationists during the civil rights movement).

      2. Longtobefree   1 year ago

        Eisenhower nationalized the guard to keep the governor from issuing them orders, and sent them back to barracks.
        Then he sent in just the white Army soldiers to force the admissions.

        As a matter relevant to today, Eisenhower had to call it insurrection in order to send in the troops.

  46. Gaear Grimsrud   1 year ago

    Glen Greenwald to help us all celebrate the illustrious career of Gloria Nuland. Co starring Reason Robby. Funny thing. She worked for every president since Clinton except Trump.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a8J13OdXjz8

    1. R Mac   1 year ago

      Yeah, when they said adults back in charge, she’s one of the people they were talking about. Good job Reason!

  47. Medulla Oblongata   1 year ago

    Sorry, but for the life of me I cannot read the whole photo of the "Sorry Karens" Liz included here today. But I was able to find a reference version of the image

    https://images.app.goo.gl/QDo7FceNqqZbyHKK8

    Speaking of microagressions...posted this before but

    I recently had to sit through a 30 minute DEI on “microagressions” video to check a box at work. Terrific, we’ve progressed to the point where significant effort is needed to parse out unintended insults so that EVERYONE can be offended.

    A few observations:

    * Among the people identified in the video as a “DEI expert” (various titles, but they boiled down to that), there was ZERO diversity; every single one of them was (or at least presented as) a black woman

    * Within the panel talking about microaggressions and how they made them feel, there was not a single person who “looked like me”

    * On a couple of occasions, I felt that I had been the victim of a microaggression by just watching the video; e.g., one character chastised the viewers who might be dismissive of the idea of the damaging effects of microaggressions to “not be fragile”, which of course invokes “white fragility” and is therefore clearly a racist comment

    * The film noted that microaggressions are “usually unconscious,” meaning they are not intentional, but then continues to use terms like “the people targeted”, which implies intent

    * The film promoted “microinclusions”, which seemed to be nothing more than demands that we intentionally should treat people of specific races, religions, orientations, and gender identities differently–with kid gloves, but somehow not in a patronizing way.

    1. Nazi-Chipping Warlock   1 year ago

      "I don't parse regular human behavior well enough to be capable of microaggressions. I do commit macroaggressions, however. Anyone on the receiving end will have no question as to whether they have been aggressed against."

  48. Bill Falcon   1 year ago

    Diversity= Hiring someone who agrees with me but doesn't look like me

    Equity= Rewards and punishments based on tribe and not objective measures or meritocracy

    Inclusion= Celebration of others delusions

    There you go..

    1. Ersatz   1 year ago

      nice summary - hits all the right notes

  49. AltheDago   1 year ago

    Additional personnel assigned to the subway can reduce instances of crime and social disorder...but, those personnel have to actively patrol and take proactive action to deter anyone from doing anything. And, no matter what they do, if the prosecutor's offices don't prosecute, it's a wasted exercise. Bad actions are supposed to have consequences. If they don't, no one learns anything.

  50. Denys Picard   1 year ago

    Microaggression is the colloquial word for Instrumental Violence, a genetically programmed competitive advantage of females.

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