192
   

monitoring Trump and relevant contemporary events

 
 
blatham
 
  0  
Sat 6 Jun, 2020 04:54 pm
And from the Bexar County (Tx) Republic Chair

https://pbs.twimg.com/media/EZnpwSZWAAAHUIN?format=jpg&name=medium
coldjoint
 
  -3  
Sat 6 Jun, 2020 04:58 pm
@blatham,
Just as plausible as Trump being a Russian agent.
coldjoint
 
  -3  
Sat 6 Jun, 2020 05:07 pm
https://theconservativetreehouse.files.wordpress.com/2014/11/liberty-or-tyranny-your-vote-matters.jpg
https://theconservativetreehouse.files.wordpress.com/2017/04/trump-oval-office-4.jpg
coldjoint
 
  -3  
Sat 6 Jun, 2020 05:13 pm

Pretty ridiculous and evil at the same time. Not Shapiro, the NYT.
0 Replies
 
MontereyJack
 
  4  
Sat 6 Jun, 2020 05:28 pm
@coldjoint,
Very true. That authoritarian pose shows perfectly why those who value liberty are voting blue.
0 Replies
 
MontereyJack
 
  3  
Sat 6 Jun, 2020 05:29 pm
@coldjoint,
it's pretty clear he's a Russian sycophant.
MontereyJack
 
  3  
Sat 6 Jun, 2020 05:32 pm
@blatham,
More GOP wack job conspiracy theories. Their lunacy never sleeps.
MontereyJack
 
  3  
Sat 6 Jun, 2020 05:38 pm
@coldjoint,
You keep saying that, and several million people drown out your pathetic mewlings every day in the streets. You're full of it.
0 Replies
 
coldjoint
 
  -2  
Sat 6 Jun, 2020 05:41 pm
@MontereyJack,
Quote:
it's pretty clear he's a Russian sycophant.

No, it is not. It has been proven it was all manufactured lies supported by the Democrats, the media, and former Obama officials. It has also been proven Obama knew everything and spied illegally on the Congress and the Senate.

That is what is clear. The media will not report it. They will have no choice soon.
farmerman
 
  4  
Sat 6 Jun, 2020 06:05 pm
@coldjoint,
"proven" , to pinky, is when someone half lit on doke spews it out.(And I dont necessarily mean Trump, he has prescriptions)
Dont use the word "proven" till theres an honest , objective, peer review, two points that GOP havent been accused of
blatham
 
  1  
Sat 6 Jun, 2020 07:00 pm
@MontereyJack,
Imagine the dinner table conversations in that woman's house.
0 Replies
 
coldjoint
 
  -1  
Sat 6 Jun, 2020 07:16 pm
@farmerman,
Quote:
"proven" , to pinky

Is the transcripts of testimony of no solid evidence whatsoever. A trap. Fail, and those idiots ran this country?
0 Replies
 
MontereyJack
 
  2  
Sat 6 Jun, 2020 07:39 pm
@coldjoint,
Your usualrumor and conspiracy theory, nothing more..
0 Replies
 
coldjoint
 
  -2  
Sat 6 Jun, 2020 07:54 pm
Quote:
Ninety-eight percent (98%), or 2,225 people, say they think Antifa is a terrorist group. That's according to the results of the latest unscientific survey at SharylAttkisson.com.

Only 1% said they do not think Antifa is a terrorist group.

https://sharylattkisson.com/2020/06/poll-most-consider-antifa-to-be-a-terrorist-group/
0 Replies
 
bobsal u1553115
 
  1  
Sat 6 Jun, 2020 07:57 pm
The Murder of George Floyd Is Normal in an Abnormal Society

By Vijay Prashad

There is no need to wonder why George Floyd (age 46) was murdered in broad daylight in Minneapolis, Minnesota, on May 25, 2020. The script of his death is written deep in the ugly drama of U.S. history.

I Can’t Breathe 2020

Officer Derek Chauvin’s knee sat on George Floyd’s neck for eight minutes and 46 seconds. After that time, George Floyd was dead. From the moment Chauvin put his body on an unarmed man, George Floyd said—eleven times—I can’t breathe.

Scientists who study human respiration say that untrained people can hold their breath from between thirty seconds and two minutes; anything more than that results in a process that leads eventually to death.

I Can’t Breathe 2014

Officer Daniel Pantaleo slammed Eric Garner onto the New York City sidewalk just minutes after Garner had helped resolve a dispute on the street. Pantaleo pushed Garner’s face onto the pavement, and Garner said—eleven times—I can’t breathe.

Garner lost consciousness, did not receive medical care in the ambulance, and was pronounced dead soon after arriving at the hospital. He died, effectively, of strangulation.

Dismayed

Both Floyd and Garner were African American; both were men who struggled to make a living in a harsh economic environment.

The UN Human Rights head Michelle Bachelet wrote a powerful statement in response to the death of George Floyd: “This is the latest in a long line of killings of unarmed African Americans by U.S. police officers and members of the public. I am dismayed to have to add George Floyd’s name to that of Breonna Taylor, Eric Garner, Michael Brown and many other unarmed African Americans who have died over the years at the hands of the police—as well as people such as Ahmaud Arbery and Trayvon Martin who were killed by armed members of the public.”

Each year in the United States, more than a thousand people are killed by the police; African Americans are three times more likely to be killed by the police than whites, and African Americans who are killed by police are more likely to be unarmed than whites. Most of these killings are not associated with serious crime. Astoundingly, 99 percent of the officers who kill a civilian are not charged with a crime.

Permanent Depression

“The Depression,” the poet Langston Hughes wrote of the 1930s, “brought everybody down a peg or two.” It was different for African Americans, for they “had but few pegs to fall.”

Garner was accused of selling loose cigarettes on the street, violating excise tax laws to make a few dollars; Floyd was accused of using a counterfeit $20 bill. Even if these accusations could have been proved, neither were earth-shattering crimes; if they had gone to court, neither would have earned these men death sentences. They were killed after being accused of minor infringements.

When Hughes wrote those words, Lino Rivera, a 16-year-old Afro-Puerto Rican boy, had been arrested for shoplifting a 10-cent penknife. A crowd gathered when the police went to arrest him, a rumor spread that he had been killed, and Harlem rose up in anger. A government report later showed that the protests were “spontaneous” and that the causes of the unrest were “the injustices of discrimination in employment, the aggressions of the police, and racial segregation.” This report could have been written last week. It suggests a permanent Depression.

System Cannot Be Reformed

Historically, police aggression has come before any unrest. In 1967, unrest in Detroit spurred the U.S. government to study the causes, which they assumed would be communist instigators and an inflammatory press. The riots, the National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders (the Kerner Commission) said, “were not caused by, nor were they the consequences of, any organized plan or ‘conspiracy.’”

Instead, the Kerner Commission said that the cause of the unrest was structural racism. “What white Americans have never fully understood,” the report noted, “is that white society is deeply implicated in the ghetto. White institutions created it, white institutions maintain it, and white society condones it.” By “ghetto” the report’s authors meant the atrocious class inequalities in the United States that had—because of the history of enslavement—been marked by race.

Rather than address the deep inequalities in society, the American government chose to heavily arm police officers and send them to discipline populations in distress with their dangerous weapons. The commission proposed instead “a policy which combines ghetto enrichment with programs designed to encourage integration… into the society outside the ghetto.”

Nothing came of that report, as nothing has come of any of the reports that stretch backward 150 years. Rather than genuinely invest in the well-being of people, the American government—whether governed by Republicans or Democrats—cut back on social programs and cut back on welfare spending; it allowed firms to erode wages and it allowed them to diminish working conditions. What was terrible in 1968 only became worse for the working-class Black population.

The financial crisis of 2008 stole from African American households’ savings that had been accumulated through generations of work. By 2013, Pew Research found that the net worth of white households was 13 times greater than African American households; this was the largest such gap since 1989, and it is a gap that has only widened. Now, with the global pandemic striking the United States particularly hard, data shows that the disease has struck African Americans and other people of color the most. Some of this is because it is African Americans and other people of color who often have the most dangerous frontline jobs.

If Eric Garner and George Floyd earned a minimum wage of $25 for decent work, would they need to be in a position where a belligerent police officer would accuse them of selling loose cigarettes or of passing a counterfeit bill?

They Are Normal

Society in the United States has been broken by the mechanisms of high rates of economic inequality, high rates of poverty, impossible entry into robust educational systems, and remarkable warlike conditions put in place to manage populations no longer seen as the citizenry but as criminals.

Such processes corrode a civilization. The names of Michael Brown, Sandra Bland, Eric Garner, Tamir Rice… and now George Floyd are only the names of the present moment, written in thick ink on cardboard signs across the United States at the many, many protests that continue to take place. The taste of desperation lingers in these protests, along with the anger at the system, and the outrage seems to have no outlet.

Donald Trump is an exaggeration of the normal course of history in the United States. He takes the ugliness to the utmost limit, bringing in the army, sniffing around for the legal possibility of the mass detention of demonstrators. His is a politics of violence. It does not last long. It is hard to beat the urge for justice out of an entire people.

As you read this, somewhere in the United States, another person will be killed—another poor person whom the police deem to be a threat. Tomorrow another will be killed; and then another. These deaths are normal for the system. Outrage against this system is a logical, and moral, response.

Vijay Prashad is an Indian historian, editor and journalist. He is a writing fellow and chief correspondent at Globetrotter, a project of the Independent Media Institute. He is the chief editor of LeftWord Books and the director of Tricontinental: Institute for Social Research. He has written more than twenty books, including The Darker Nations: A People’s History of the Third World (The New Press, 2007), The Poorer Nations: A Possible History of the Global South (Verso, 2013), The Death of the Nation and the Future of the Arab Revolution (University of California Press, 2016) and Red Star Over the Third World (LeftWord, 2017)
coldjoint
 
  -2  
Sat 6 Jun, 2020 08:04 pm
@bobsal u1553115,
Quote:
Vijay Prashad is an Indian historian, journalist, commentator and a Marxist intellectual. He is an executive-director of Tricontinental: Institute for Social Research and the Chief Editor of LeftWord

https://duckduckgo.com/?t=ffnt&q=Vijay+Prashad&atb=v212-1&ia=web
Normal to him is not normal. Babbling garbage
Quote:
Vijay Prashad is an Indian historian, editor and journalist. He is a writing fellow and chief correspondent at Globetrotter, a project of the Independent Media Institute. He is the chief editor of LeftWord Books and the director of Tricontinental: Institute for Social Research. He has written more than twenty books, including The Darker Nations: A People’s History of the Third World (The New Press, 2007), The Poorer Nations: A Possible History of the Global South (Verso, 2013), The Death of the Nation and the Future of the Arab Revolution (University of California Press, 2016) and Red Star Over the Third World (LeftWord, 2017)

The description in your link leaves out Marxist intellectual. I wonder why.
0 Replies
 
bobsal u1553115
 
  3  
Sat 6 Jun, 2020 08:14 pm
Furor in Texas GOP after leaders post racist memes that suggest Floyd's death is a hoax

One Facebook post falsely claimed that the killing of George Floyd in police custody last month was a “staged event,” meant to rile up opposition to President Trump. Another showed a quote from Martin Luther King Jr. next to a banana — an established racist trope.

And a third claimed that George Soros, the liberal billionaire, paid “white cops to murder black people” and “black people to riot because race wars keep the sheep in line.”

All of these posts were shared in recent days by Republican county leaders in Texas, some of whom are now facing calls to resign from top officials within their own party, including Sens. Ted Cruz and John Cornyn and Gov. Greg Abbott, who called the posts “disgusting,” the Texas Tribune reported.

The posts have unleashed a firestorm of controversy in the state of 29 million where Republicans are struggling to beat back Democratic advances in the rapidly diversifying electorate.



https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2020/06/06/furor-texas-gop-after-leaders-post-racist-memes-that-suggest-floyds-death-is-hoax/
bobsal u1553115
 
  3  
Sat 6 Jun, 2020 08:16 pm
How Police Unions Became Such Powerful Opponents to Reform Efforts

Over the past five years, as demands for reform have mounted in the aftermath of police violence in cities like Ferguson, Mo., Baltimore and now Minneapolis, police unions have emerged as one of the most significant roadblocks to change. The greater the political pressure for reform, the more defiant the unions often are in resisting it — with few city officials, including liberal leaders, able to overcome their opposition.

They aggressively protect the rights of members accused of misconduct, often in arbitration hearings that they have battled to keep behind closed doors. And they have also been remarkably effective at fending off broader change, using their political clout and influence to derail efforts to increase accountability.

While rates of union membership have dropped by half nationally since the early 1980s, to 10 percent, higher membership rates among police unions give them resources they can spend on campaigns and litigation to block reform. A single New York City police union has spent more than $1 million on state and local races since 2014.

In St. Louis, when Kim Gardner was elected the top prosecutor four years ago, she set out to rein in the city’s high rate of police violence. But after she proposed a unit within the prosecutor’s office that would independently investigate misconduct, she ran into the powerful local police union.

The union pressured lawmakers to set aside the proposal, which many supported but then never brought to a vote. Around the same time, a lawyer for the union waged a legal fight to limit the ability of the prosecutor’s office to investigate police misconduct. The following year, a leader of the union said Ms. Gardner should be removed “by force or by choice.”

-more-

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/how-police-unions-became-such-powerful-opponents-to-reform-efforts/ar-BB158cco?ocid=hplocalnews
coldjoint
 
  -3  
Sat 6 Jun, 2020 08:26 pm
@bobsal u1553115,

Quote:
How Police Unions Became Such Powerful Opponents to Reform Effort

Hey, I got an idea, let's blame everyone but the people that run these cities. They do the hiring and the negotiating of union contracts. Democrats.
coldjoint
 
  -2  
Sat 6 Jun, 2020 08:52 pm
https://minnesota.cbslocal.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/15909630/2018/01/keith-ellison-antifa-book.jpg?w=960
Twitter time.
Quote:

Paul Sperry @paulsperry_

The real thug. Not only does he champion the thugs behind the destruction of out cities, he also champions Sharia law over the US Constitution. & now he's trumping up charges against cops as Minnesota's AG(!) This man is a direct threat to our democracy.
0 Replies
 
 

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