erinptah: (Default)
humorist + humanist ([personal profile] erinptah) wrote2020-11-12 09:56 pm

If he can't stay, he's damn well gonna try to burn it all down before he goes

Welp, it's been a week since the election was called, and Trump's been wildly flinging himself from "if I don't concede that means I don't have to leave right??" to "file 100 lawsuits against whoever's handy, hope some evidence shows up later" to "flood my mailing list with begging emails, admit in the fine print that their $$$ will actually just be paying off my debts."

Also, blocking Biden's transition team from the access they need to handle things smoothly, and firing a bunch of his military leaders, apparently because they're trying to stop him from releasing intel about Russia that would harm national security. On top of the classified intel he's already blabbed with no regard for national security.

(But something something Hillary's emails, amirite)

Anyway, here's another pile of links I've been sitting on for too long, about gun control & police brutality. (The really old ones I just discovered recently, and am gonna link anyway because they're Still Relevant.)

2010: "Finally, he spoke to a departmental therapist, confessing all his concerns about the alleged stat fixing and about his declining health. The therapist's report had a result he didn't expect: He was stripped of his gun and badge and put on desk duty." (What happens to the "good cops" who try to call out the "bad apples.")

August 2015 (NYT): "In the protests that have followed police shootings, demonstrators have often asked why officers are so rarely punished for shootings that seem unwarranted. Dr. Lewinski is part of the answer."

December 2017: "Philip Mitchell Brailsford, 28, is now retired from the force with a tax-free pension worth $31,000 a year for life — and his attorney confirmed Friday that the settlement was a result of him suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder due to the shooting involving Daniel Shaver of Texas. Shaver was seen on police bodycam video crawling on the floor of a Mesa hotel and sobbing for his life before he was shot — a case that drew national scrutiny over the use of deadly force." Justice for Daniel Shaver.

February 2018: "An elite Baltimore police task force spent years plundering the city and its residents for hundreds of thousands of dollars in cash, drugs, and jewelry. [...] The police officers in the unit set people up for baseless searches. They robbed people. They carried toy guns to plant as fake evidence in case they killed an unarmed person. They clocked overtime when they weren’t working at all."

Baltimore City funds, by agency. The police department dwarfs everything else put together.

June 1: "The officer seemed annoyed as he said, “Is that a Poodle?” I said yes and put Merlin back in the van. The officer seemed mad as he explained the impeding traffic law, like I tricked him somehow and was wasting his time." White woman figures out why she keeps getting pulled over while driving with a large curly-haired dog.

June 6: "This essay has been kicking around in my head for years now and I’ve never felt confident enough to write it. It’s a time in my life I’m ashamed of. It’s a time that I hurt people and, through inaction, allowed others to be hurt. It’s a time that I acted as a violent agent of capitalism and white supremacy. Under the guise of public safety, I personally ruined people’s lives but in so doing, made the public no safer… so did the family members and close friends of mine who also bore the badge alongside me."

June 25: "Three staff members of a Michigan youth center have been charged in the death of a Black teenager who died while being restrained after throwing a sandwich." Justice for Cornelius Fredericks.

July 19: "[Navy veteran Christopher] David stood as solidly as a rock while federal officers pepper sprayed him twice and struck him at least five times with a baton during a rally outside the Hatfield Courthouse."

July 22: "State and local leaders have repeatedly called for federal agents to leave the city, arguing that their presence has made an already-tense environment worse."

July 24: “This is the kid’s big moment, the 20-year-olds’ big moment. When they ask for our help, it’s our job to come and be supportive and to help them do what they need to do.” The stories behind Portland's Wall of Moms.