Mississippi raids: ICE still detaining breastfeeding, single parents

For the first three days, Elizabeth refused, wailing each time as she pushed him away. On the fourth day, when hunger overwhelmed her, she finally accepted the bottle. 

“I didn’t know what to do,” Ramirez said. “She kept crying and crying. She was so hungry but she wouldn’t take the bottle. I thought she was going to die.”

Her mother, Norma Cardona Ramirez, was among the 680 people arrested by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) on Aug. 7 during raids at food processing plants in central Mississippi.

…ICE denied that the woman had been breastfeeding. The agency claimed the woman had responded “no” when she was asked if she was breastfeeding. The agency said it had a nurse examine the mother after the story was published – 12 days after her arrest – and that the exam showed she was not lactating.

The woman’s attorneys and her husband maintained that the woman was lactating and had not been asked by agents whether she was. 

Ramirez says his wife also was not asked whether she had children or was breastfeeding.

Ramirez said his wife told him during a phone call that when she was first apprehended in Canton, she was only asked for her full name, her date of birth, her country of origin and her parent’s names. As she continued to be transferred, officials again only asked her those four questions, Ramirez said. At no point was she asked whether she had a child that she was breastfeeding, and she repeatedly tried to tell the agents.

…The day after the raids, Hurst’s office announced about 300 suspected undocumented immigrants were released on “humanitarian grounds.”

If immigration officials encountered two alleged undocumented immigrants with minor children at home, they released one of the parents and returned the individual to the place from which they were arrested, said a news release from Hurst’s office. They did the same thing for single parents with minor children at home, the release said.

At least one woman says that’s a lie.

Mississippi raids: ICE still detaining breastfeeding, single parents

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Evelyn Hernandez, El Salvador rape victim, at center of controversial abortion trial acquitted

In April 2016, Hernández was found on the floor of her bathroom drenched in blood. She was taken to a local emergency room in her hometown of El Carmen, roughly 40 kilometers (about 25 miles) east of the capital by her mother and a neighbor.

Doctors who examined her saw signs of a delivery but no baby and reported her to the authorities. When local officials arrived at her home five hours later, they found the newborn dead in a septic tank.

..”It seems the judicial system is starting to understand that stillbirths are not crimes, they are obstetric emergencies,” Guillen told CNN. “People in El Salvador now understand that the law, as it stands right now, criminalizes women in poverty.”

…Most of the women who have faced criminal charges for abortions in El Salvador come from poor rural backgrounds, and many suffered miscarriages or had obstetric complications because they weren’t able to get regular checkups due to lack of resources.

…Prosecution witnesses presented evidence that suggested that the baby died from complications during the delivery.

…Prosecutors had asked for the longer sentence during her retrial, even after evidence of a stillbirth was presented by their witnesses.

Evelyn Hernandez, El Salvador rape victim, at center of controversial abortion trial acquitted – CNN

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Proud Boys Leader Admits Their Rallies Are For Fighting And Wasting Money

The Proud Boys for years have helped organize street fights in Portland, Oregon ― gatherings thinly veiled as political freedom rallies in order to secure permits or police escorts from the city.

This week, that veil was lifted, as the group’s leader admitted the ugly and obvious truth: The events are staged with the intention of spurring fights, wasting city resources and winning a game of optics against their anti-fascist nemeses.

…On this day, nobody would be earning their “fourth degree” ― a rank given to those Proud Boys who assault anti-fascists.

“This is a pure optics operation,” Tarrio said in front of a group of Proud Boys. “If you’re looking for fourth degrees this is not the event to do it.”

“The gathering was never about bringing carnage or violence to the city of Portland, it was about financially crippling the progressive hotbed until they take action against antifa,” the gang said in a press release.

Proud Boys Leader Admits Their Rallies Are For Fighting And Wasting Money

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Italy passes law to send unsold food to charities instead of dumpsters

Other countries such as France are nudging businesses in the form of a steep fine.

Italy is taking a different approach. Instead of imposing penalties, the country will give garbage collection tax breaks to businesses that take part in the initiative. All food donated by businesses has to be recorded so the tax break will be easy to implement.

…Giving away “food waste” might strike some as denigrating to the poor and homeless, because it suggests that they don’t deserve quality food. But the vast majority of “food waste” around the world is perfectly edible by the time it hits a dumpster.

For instance, if white rice is mis-labeled basmati rice, it’s food waste. If a vegetable is misshapen it’s food waste. If a cereal box has a tear, food waste. A can with a ripped label also food waste. A bruised fruit, yup, food waste.

…Each part of the supply chain calls for a different approach to reducing waste, but the lowest hanging fruit is clearly distribution to consumers. This food has arrived at an organized location and is constantly monitored and prevented from going bad. Encouraging businesses to mark excess food for delivery to charities instead of dumpsters is an easy fix.

Italy passes law to send unsold food to charities instead of dumpsters

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Microplastics found in the Sargasso Sea – CNN

Embedded in most of the sargassum are the easily visible pieces of trash: shampoo bottles, fishing gear, thick hard containers or thin soft bags amongst many other types of plastic. One of the scientists points out fish bite marks in a small plastic sheet we pull out. But what is really jarring is when you dive down and look into the blue and realize you are surrounded by tiny glittering pieces of broken up plastic.

…Greenpeace scientists say they found “extreme” concentrations of microplastic pollution in the Sargasso Sea, although they are still reviewing their findings. In one sample, they discovered almost 1,300 fragments of microplastic — more than the levels found last year in the notorious Great Pacific Garbage Patch.

…A study off the shore of Bermuda back in the early 1970s found 3,500 pieces of plastic per square kilometer. A more recent, as yet unpublished study by the Bermuda Aquarium Museum and Zoo found that nearly 42% of fish samples had ingested microplastics.

…Only around 9% of plastic produced has ever been recycled. [A lot] single-use plastics end up in landfills or are burned in huge toxic fires. Some finds its way into our rivers or the oceans.

“This goes into the food chain.” Ojeda explains. “The fish and shrimps eat the plastic, we are eating them or the fish that eat them, and this will end up in our bodies.”

…The weight of evidence that humans are contaminating one of our major food sources is overwhelming — not only introducing potential toxins into our own bodies, but also polluting whole ecosystems.

…Few of us witness what is out in the open oceans far from our homes, which is one of the many challenges for ocean protection and why few truly understand how dire the situation is. Out of sight, out of mind.

But in reality, it’s ending up right back in front of us — and inside us — even though we may not see it.

…”We need to look at the types of plastic we are using and eliminate the ones that can’t be recycled. We need to tidy up land-based sources (landfills and the like).”

…”If you as a consumer are going to the supermarket and you are unable to buy something which is not wrapped in plastic it’s not your fault. …It’s companies; companies need to take the step, need to lead the change — and governments need to push the companies.

For the oceans to recover to we need to stop them (plastics) now. If we are thinking we can stop them in 10 years, we can phase them out, no: we need to stop single-use plastic. Then the seas will have time to clean up.”

Microplastics found in the Sargasso Sea – CNN

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Sophisticated iPhone hacking went unnoticed for over two years

Victims’ iPhones would have had malware installed in the form of a powerful monitoring implant capable of stealing chat messages (including WhatsApp, Telegram and iMessage), photos, tracking users’ locations in real time, and even accessing the Keychain password store.

If you set out to design a compromise of a mobile device, it’d be hard to imagine a more complete one than this, excepting that this campaign was eventually detected.

…Beer’s write-up hints that the attack may be the work of a nation state group trying to gather intel on specific groups of people for political reasons. We can’t verify if that’s true but if it is, it wouldn’t be the first.

Sophisticated iPhone hacking went unnoticed for over two years – Naked Security

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Dale Earnhardt Jr. on Confederate flag: ‘It’s offensive to an entire race’

Dale Earnhardt Jr. doesn’t think much of the Confederate flag.

…”I think it’s offensive to an entire race,” Earnhardt said. “It does nothing for anybody to be there flying, so I don’t see any reason. It belongs in the history books and that’s about it.”

Dale Earnhardt Jr. on Confederate flag: ‘It’s offensive to an entire race’

Earnhardt Jr? Good on ya,man . I feel a little bad because I would have definitely assumed you’d be all for it. I shouldn’t be so judgmental.

Gordon, though? (Why don’t you just come out and say there’s good people on both sides instead of mincing around the point?) Oh, man am I ever judging you!!

Why I was a tomboy growing up — and what’s different today

Why I was a tomboy growing up — and what’s different today – The Lily

Oh for fucks sake… Why do modern feminists not realize when they are reinforcing the same tropes they supposed revile?

I get what she is trying to say but….

What is the take away here? tomboy or no, modern girls must wear pink because apparently their gender is the most important thing about them, is it not?

Also, not sure I see the progress she speaks of in fashion. In the past two decades women’s clothes have become pinker and “girlier” and ever more impractical. Go ahead, compare the size of pockets in women’s jeans from twenty years ago to today. I’ll wait.

Sanders releases media plan: Press shouldn’t be controlled by corporations, ‘benevolent’ billionaires

Sanders proposes policies to better protect both local and national independent journalism. The plan includes undoing moves by the Trump administration that have made corporate media mergers easier to complete and an immediate freeze on major media mergers until their effects on the free press can be studied.

“In the spirit of existing federal laws, we will start requiring major media corporations to disclose whether or not their corporate transactions and merger proposals will involve significant journalism layoffs,” Sanders writes.

“We will also require that, before any future mergers can take place, employees must be given the opportunity to purchase media outlets through employee stock-ownership plans—an innovative business model that was first pioneered in the newspaper industry,” he adds.

Sanders would also bar mergers or deregulatory actions that would disproportionately affect people of color and women.

Sanders releases media plan: Press shouldn’t be controlled by corporations, ‘benevolent’ billionaires | TheHill

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Why are Young-Adult Fiction Writers Cannibalising Each Other?

“Cancelling” people, organisations, or even concepts is a relatively new phenomenon. In its expression it is similar to any generic backlash that might occur in the public eye, but its essence feels more tinged with emotions, similar to an angry response to a personal injury.

…“Purity tests are the tools of fanatics, and the quest for purity ultimately becomes indistinguishable from the quest for power.”

…What effectively ended up happening was that the followers of people who so vigorously defended free speech in the literary world shut up the voices of some of the most vulnerable and least established writers in the scene.

…How come this cancel culture in the YA community seems to be disproportionately directed at writers who are already part of a marginalized community?

Why are Young-Adult Fiction Writers Cannibalising Each Other?

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Immigrant Author Crucified by American Social Justice Tribunal

But while some of the social justice concerns percolating within YA fiction are legitimate, the explosive manner in which they’re expressed within YA Twitter is another story. Posing as urgent interventions to prevent the circulation of harmful tropes, the pile-ons are often based on selective excerpts pulled out of context from the advance copies of books most in the community haven’t read yet. Often, they feature critics operating on the basis of idiosyncratic ideas about the very purpose and nature of fiction itself, elevating tendentious interpretations of the limited snippets available to pass judgement on books before they have been released.

…Most adult readers across genres understand that representing a morally repugnant position as part of a broader narrative is not the same as endorsing that opinion, but this is the sort of obvious-to-everyone-else point YA Twitter tends to confuse or outright reject.

…Further heightening the drama, these pile-ons are often accompanied by claims that those who have been selected for dragging or excommunication have not only sinned against social justice, but pose a safety threat to others in the community.

…If a confused friend ever asks you to sum up the culture of YA Twitter in one sentence, “Imagine a white woman explaining that she is spreading unverifiable rumors about a first-time author of color in order to protect people of color” will do nicely.

…“….someone explain this to me. EXPLAIN IT RIGHT THE FUQ NOW,” she tweeted. “I don’t give a good god damn that this is an author of color,” she said later in the tweetstorm. “Internalized racism and anti-blackness is a thing and I…no.” The argument, such as it is, appears to be that because in our world, oppression isn’t blind to skin color, to write about a fantasy world in which it is is an act of “anti-blackness.”

…[T]o put something that resembles chattel slavery SO CLOSELY is distasteful,” opined another, the implication being this simply isn’t a subject to be written about. Among other critics, there seemed to be a lack of understanding that “slavery” doesn’t mean “American slavery” and that the concept has a broader context and history than that. “[R]acist ass writers, like Amélie Wen Zhao, who literally take Black narratives and force it into Russia when that shit NEVER happened in history—you’re going to be held accountable,” said one contributor to the pile-on. “Period.” (Parenthetical after the period: Russia has its own recent history of what is certainly one strain of slavery).

…The problem with this line of interpretation, again, is that it insists on viewing every fictional reference to slavery or indentured servitude, or to characters with dark skin, through an American lens, and judging them by that standard. It feels like an act of trope-colonization.

None of these details mattered to YA Twitter, anyway. Soon, many in the community, or those within it tweeting publicly about the controversy, at least, had reached the consensus that Blood Heir was undeniably, obviously racist, that it was a sign of something deeply wrong within YA publishing that it was going to be unleashed on the world, and that Zhao should be held responsible.

…According to Zhao’s own account, she simply wasn’t writing about anything like American-centered chattel slavery. Rather, the slavery references in her book stemmed from her concern with modern-day indentured servitude and human trafficking in the part of the world she grew up in. This, of course, renders even more questionable many of the critiques of her supposedly ham-fisted treatment of (the fantasy equivalent of) American slavery, and makes it even less likely she intended for May to be the approximate fantasy equivalent of a  black character, rather than the approximate fantasy equivalent of (perhaps) an Asian one.

…We don’t know where Ana’s story might have led, but here is how this tale ends, for now at least: with a group of mostly American writers pillorying a novel few of them had read out of the misplaced conviction that the book was ‘about’ American slavery and handled that subject inappropriately; that therefore it was deeply racist; and that, further, its author was not only an offensive writer but a maniacally screenshotting danger to others. They spread those claims far and wide to the point where they were echoed and amplified by influential members of the literary community in question. As a result, the book, which was intended as a comment on contemporary slavery in a part of the world most Americans know nothing about, probably won’t be published and won’t give American readers a chance to read the perspective of an Asian writer inspired by an issue of urgent importance to many Asian people.

YA Author Offers Apologies and Sacrifices to Social Justice Tribunal – Tablet Magazine

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In Y.A., Where Is the Line Between Criticism and Cancel Culture?

Critics felt that Zhao’s slavery narrative had erased a specifically African-American experience, and they objected to a scene in which an apparently black slave girl dies in an apparently white character’s arms, in an act of self-sacrifice. Zhao, who emigrated from China when she was eighteen, said that her book drew on “the epidemic of indentured labor and human trafficking prevalent in many industries across Asia, including in my own home country.”

…Jackson is black and queer. But a disparaging Goodreads review, which took issue with Jackson’s treatment of the war and his portrayal of Muslims, had a snowball effect, particularly on Twitter. Eventually, Jackson tweeted a letter of apology to “the Book Community.” 

…Ironically, Jackson was one of the louder voices speaking out against Zhao; also ironically, he has worked as a sensitivity reader for Big Five publishers, vetting manuscripts featuring characters from marginalized communities. “Now, Jackson has been demonized by the community he once helped police.”

…Many of Forest’s fiercest critics had not read her novel, and others conflated the perspectives of racist characters with that of the author herself.

…“From the outside, this is starting to look like a conversation focused less on literature than obedience,” Graham wrote in Slate. The Times commissioned two first-person essays, one by Drake, on the “shameful stain” of these eruptions and the “tyrannical coddling of overly sensitive readers.”

…“Purity tests are the tools of fanatics, and the quest for purity ultimately becomes indistinguishable from the quest for power.”

…In context, the scene does not feel evocative of United States history or suggest an analogy between the Affinites, with their dangerous powers, and black people. The book’s allegories seem mythic, not historical. They are about discovering one’s hidden potential, celebrating the liberation of the self. If anything, the damning readings of “Blood Heir” seem guilty of something that the Y.A. community mitigates against: the misapprehension of a cultural context unfamiliar to one’s own.

…Sensitivity readers, he said, forced authors to create ennobled images—to describe an idealized world, not a real one.

In Y.A., Where Is the Line Between Criticism and Cancel Culture? | The New Yorker

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David Koch reshaped America for the worse. His life’s work was the destruction of others

“villain”

…Indeed, such is the appropriate term for a profoundly wealthy man who relies on a shadowy network of political advocacy groups to sell unpopular, detrimental policies to unsuspecting voters for the purposes of personal gain. 

…David and Charles, colloquially known as the infamous “Koch Brothers,” poured money into causes like climate change denial to ensure their fossil fuel empire remained profitable for as long possible. ….They went after unions through proxies like former Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker. They targeted Social Security for privatization. According to one report, they even tried to hamper cleanup efforts after Hurricane Katrina. 

And these are just some of the worthy causes David Koch and his brother used their vast fortunes to pursue. The reality is, given the porous nature of America’s campaign finance laws, there is no way of truly knowing the complete extent of their political ventures. 

David Koch reshaped America for the worse. His life’s work was the destruction of others | The Independent

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Could Someone Like John Edwards Have Saved the Democrats?

It is fair to assume that if Democrats can consistently take professionals by about 10 percent, working women by about 20 percent, keep 75 percent of the minority vote, and get close to an even split of white working-class voters, they will have achieved a new Democratic majority.”

…Generally Republicans have performed well with [.white working-class voters]:  Bill Clinton was the only Democrat in the time period covered to win them, and typically the Republican candidate prevailed with this group by double digits regardless of whether he prevailed in the general election.

…Obama didn’t lead Democrats into the era of dominance described by the “Emerging Democratic Majority” authors. He led the party to a different majority by relying more heavily on the “ascendant” pieces of his coalition (minorities, women and well-educated voters) while losing strength with the white working class.

…Edwards (sans the moral failures) seems like the sort of politician who could weld together Judis and Teixeira’s majority. Edwards was an economic progressive. His memorable “Two Americas” speeches focused on economic inequality between the wealthiest set of Americans and the rest of the country, and his campaign often emphasized increasing access to health care, improving education and hammering predatory lenders. He was liberal on abortion and LGBT issues (in the context of his time), but he was for the death penalty and at least tried to appear deferential to gun owners. Maybe most importantly, Edwards was able to take liberal policy positions without projecting cultural cosmopolitanism.

…Trump aimed much of his platform and personal appeal at working-class white voters – he emphasized building a border wall, renegotiating trade agreements and giving voice to a group of people who felt they had lost cultural standing as well as economic opportunity. If the national Democratic Party had more cultural appeal to working-class whites, they might have been able to stop the bleeding enough to hold states like Pennsylvania, Florida, Michigan, Wisconsin or North Carolina.

Could Someone Like John Edwards Have Saved the Democrats? | RealClearPolitics

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Maine Voices: Lobstermen threatened with the extinction of their way of life

In response to the threat of lawsuits, the National Marine Fisheries Service has pressured Maine into a proposal to reduce, by 50 percent, the number of vertical lines Maine fishermen use to haul their lobster traps. The only problem with this is that there is not one instance where a right whale entanglement and/or death was proven to have been caused by a Maine vertical fishing line.

Most Maine lobster gear is tended much closer to the coast than right whales would normally traverse. There are rare exceptions, but the vast majority of whales travel far offshore through the Gulf of Maine. Most Maine fishermen have never seen a right whale, including fishermen offshore, who already fish long trawls to reduce the number of vertical lines as much as can be safely done.

Maine Voices: Lobstermen threatened with the extinction of their way of life – CentralMaine.com

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UCLA Law Review: The Constitutionality of Police Violence

Police officers should be obeyed, the orthodox view holds, and their authority should not be questioned except by after-the-fact litigation that gives courts, not suspects, the final word.

…The image of the thin blue line suggests that police do not themselves operate wholly within democratic society. The police officer, like the soldier or correctional officer or anyone else whose livelihood involves wielding physical force on behalf of the state, always stands at the periphery of civilized, law-bound society, and on that periphery, keeps one foot in a world of violence.

Thus, one implication of “the thin blue line” is a reminder that the modern
police officer is an agent of violence.

…Constitutional doctrine has steadily expanded the occasions in which it permits and even encourages police to interrupt, detain, and take custody of ordinary citizens. As police are asked to do more, they have been empowered to use more force, especially if they sense danger. The result is a different line, noticeable more for its shortness than its thinness—the line from an initial police-civilian encounter to an officer’s authorization to use deadly force.

…To put it simply, constitutional doctrine has simultaneously invited officers (1) to increase radically their potentially contentious investigative encounters, and (2) to prefer their own safety to the safety of the persons they investigate. 

…The suspected violation can be a mere pretext for a stop designed to investigate the possibility of other crimes, crimes about which the officer has no legally cognizable suspicion at all.75 Officers regularly use traffic stops to look for evidence of drug trafficking, for example. Additionally, a seizure’s reasonableness is not dependent on the need to prosecute the suspected offense. Nor does reasonableness turn on an accurate understanding of the underlying substantive criminal law; an officer who mistakenly (but reasonably) believes that it is illegal to drive with only one brake light may stop a motorist on that ground.

…Suspicion, as doctrinally relevant, means suspicion that a person has engaged in unlawful activity, even a minor or civil infraction. Racialized suspicion—an officer’s selection of a target on the basis of his or her race—is irrelevant if the officer can point to nonracial reasons to suspect an infraction.

…Given the broad authority that the police have to make seizures, it is inevitable that some of their targets will attempt to flee or resist. This reaction then authorizes the officer to use as much force as is “objectively reasonable.” …Individual interests are weighed against governmental ones. …In practice, if an officer acting on suspicion meets resistance from his target, the officer’s authority to use force expands rapidly and reaches a license to kill quickly. The target need not even actually resist. If the officer suspects nonsubmission—if he or she perceives a threat from the target—the officer becomes empowered to use force.

…In the absence of a precise test, the Court identified relevant factors to the reasonableness inquiry, “including the severity of the crime at issue, whether the suspect poses an immediate threat to the safety of the officers or others, and whether he is actively resisting arrest or attempting to evade arrest by flight.” Instead of asking what the actual officer was thinking, the question was whether a hypothetical reasonable officer could have concluded that the circumstances justified the use of force. And reviewing courts must not rely on “the 20/20 vision of hindsight,” but rather must make “allowance for the fact that police officers are often forced to make split-second judgments—in circumstances that are tense, uncertain, and rapidly evolving—about the amount of force that is necessary in a particular situation.

…The doctrinal emphasis on objective reasonableness—on whether a hypothetical reasonable officer could have found adequate suspicion or could have believed the suspect likely to resist—produces a safe harbor in which police action actually motivated by bias, caprice, or some other non-constitutional criteria is constitutionally permissible.

…Nonsubmission—broadly understood to include noncooperation, flight,
and threats of harm as well as active resistance—has become the most important
consideration in use of force analysis. Importantly, it is the objectively reasonable
perception of nonsubmission that matters, thus creating another doctrinal safe
harbor. …Reasonable suspicion and probable cause function
as safe harbors for Fourth Amendment seizures, so that objectively reasonable
indicia of these suspicion thresholds immunize decisions to seize from further
scrutiny. Similarly, Fourth Amendment doctrine identifies relatively clearly for
police a simple factor, nonsubmission, that will shield the use of force from a
finding of unconstitutionality, whatever other particular facts may exist in a given
case. As the Graham Court emphasized, “[a]n officer’s evil intentions will not
make a Fourth Amendment violation out of an objectively reasonable use of
force.”

…The Graham Court’s other enumerated factor—the severity of the suspected crime—is now mostly ignored, as illustrated by the decision not to indict the officer who killed Eric Garner while trying to arrest him for selling loose cigarettes.

…To many officers, flight itself is sufficient to demonstrate that dangerto the public, and juries have often accepted this argument.

…Once deadly force is authorized, officers are permitted and expected to “empty their guns”—to use as much force as they can muster until the suspect is thoroughly, unquestionably incapacitated.

…The mere perception of nonsubmission will authorize an officer to use force, or more precisely, facts that would lead a hypothetical reasonable officer to perceive likely nonsubmission will generate the authority to use force. Actual nonsubmission is not required. 

…If an officer perceives a threat, or later claims to have perceived such a threat, his use of force will almost certainly be found authorized.

…Constitutional doctrine draws a blueprint for police violence. It invites
officers to interrupt civilians, sometimes with minimal suspicion or no suspicion
at all. Once interrupted, the citizen must comply with the officer’s requests or
risk expanding the officer’s authority.120 Actual or perceived noncompliance
rapidly ratchets up the officer’s authorization to use force, and any noncompliance perceived to be dangerous empowers the officer to kill. 

…The standard use of force continuum reflects and communicates the principle that disobedience is not to be tolerated, and force is the logical result of any resistance. It also sets the expectation of escalation: After the first resistance, force will escalate until the suspect issubdued or dead.

…In official policy, mere lack of respect for authority is not identified as a form of resistance that warrants a use of force. But in practice, many officers view a lack of respect in just that way.

…The state claims authority to use violence for the purpose of controlling and reducing private violence. 

…The Supreme Court has long been aware of the burdens that Fourth Amendment doctrine imposes on persons of color. Instead of alleviating those burdens, the Court has directly increased them, effectively placing on minorities a duty of compliance with the police.

…“Of course, the person stopped is not obliged to answer, answers may not be compelled, and refusal to answer furnishes no basis for an arrest, although it may alert the officer to the need for continued observation.”

Over the next several decades, however, it has become clear that Justice White’s protection of noncooperation during a stop is at odds with official doctrinal standards. The Court eventually upheld a “stop-and-identify” statute that requires at least some cooperation with police during a Terry stop, dismissing Justice White’s assertion of a right not to comply as dicta.174 And various federal courts have held that noncooperation can serve as a basis for increased suspicion, extended detention, and in some instances, the use of additional physical force. The Supreme Court occasionally refers to a right to refuse to cooperate with police but only in the context of entirely suspicionless encounters. Even in that context, noncooperation may serve as one factor among others that triggers the suspicion necessary to make a seizure. And once police have that minimal suspicion (objectively determined, without regard for any actual or race-based motivations), noncompliance is no longer protected. 

…Those who advocate community policing focus on the cultivation of compliance. 

…These commentators seek voluntary compliance with the police—with the state agents who are the usual entry point into prosecution, conviction, and punishment. That we are asking individuals to cooperate in their own prosecutions and punishments is sometimes obscured, or deliberately minimized, in the literature, especially by community policing proponents. 

…As the discussion of near-seizures in Part I illustrated, cooperation with the police will often be taken as evidence that the entire encounter was consensual and thus not subject to Fourth Amendment suspicion requirements. A young black man approached by an officer on the sidewalk, airport concourse, or bus should comply to maximize his physical safety, but in doing so he may lose any hope of a successful subsequent constitutional challenge to the police encounter.186 Compliance may also facilitate the suspect’s own prosecution and punishment, and this is true for innocent suspects as well as guilty ones.

…The zero-tolerance approach to resistance, which shapes police training and is endorsed by Fourth Amendment doctrine, is deeply at odds with purported American commitments to individual agency and limited government. Moreover, given the pronounced racial disparities among the targets of police suspicion and the eventual recipients of punishment, a zero tolerance approach to resistance also suggests indifference to very real complaints that might be lodged against the front line of the criminal justice system. No, worse than indifference—the zero-tolerance approach knowingly penalizes those who are already most burdened by the criminal law and who have the most reason to resist its enforcers. 

… In many segments of American society, and in normative academic studies of criminal law and policing, the expectation is that individuals should comply with the police. Particular officers may be abusive or act unlawfully, it is acknowledged, but the remedy for such abuses should come from the state itself. Self-help against police authority is seen as itself a mark of bad character. Individuals are expected to trust that the state will fix its own mistakes down the road through post-arrest review.

…Individuals must never resist state agents, but rather must wait for the
state to correct its own mistakes. We hear an appeal to this perfectionist view in
the immediate aftermath of each police shooting when city officials and police leaders plead with citizens to remain calm, to wait for information, to “respect the
process” and to await the state’s own conclusions about what, if anything, went
wrong and what, if anything,should be done.

…Individuals should comply, even if compliance leads to injustice down the road,
and simply trust that remedies for that injustice will lie still farther down the road. Indeed, individuals should comply even if compliance produces an immediate injustice—even if the police officer acts without legal authority. Again, the state must be given time to correct its own mistakes; the illegally arrested individual should seek relief through later judicial review of the officer’s actions. Of course, the perfectionist view does not emphasize the reality that judges often decline to “second-guess” an officer’s decisions, and that compliance by an individual may be viewed by courts as demonstrating that state agents never did anything wrong in the first place.

…This would mean many traffic offenses—broken taillights, illegal lane changes—will be addressed simply by recording the license plate and sending the registered owner a notice of violation. Limiting near-seizures and traffic stops may not immediately seem important to those concerned with police killings, but we have traversed the continuum too many times; we know that the littlest intrusions turn into the biggest ones. 

…The idea that suspicion thresholds are too low and too easily satisfied is already
widely accepted among criminal law scholars. The idea that nonsubmission
might be protected is less likely to win ready agreement. Except in rare instances—
standoffs with white militia members, for example—resistance to law enforcement
is not widely viewed as a principled or political act. It is framed as a bad guy trying
to save his own skin, or harm an officer, or both.

The Constitution of Police Violence

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Beto O’Rourke Finds His Voice Helping El Paso Grieve

O’Rourke has been unsparing in his criticism of Donald Trump, calling the President a white supremacist and assigning blame for the attack to his rhetoric. “When you look at what he has said and done in its totality, it is unmistakable the intent,” O’Rourke says. “This is how it happens. Using his pulpit and his access to the country through social media, mass communications, and the media. Sending these signals out unambiguously.”

…As President, O’Rourke says he would take a set of steps to prevent massacres like this: make the Department of Homeland Security, Department of Justice, and intelligence community “fully focused” on domestic-terror threats. Push for universal background checks and “ending the sale of weapons of war.” He wants a national standard for red flag laws, and to close the Boyfriend Loophole, which would keep those convicted of domestic abuse or stalking a dating partner from purchasing or owning guns.

In addition to all of that, he suggests, it’s important to have a leader “who reflects that the power of this country is in its diversity,” O’Rourke says. “That’s our genius and what has so powerfully and positively set us apart from the rest of the world.”

Beto O’Rourke Finds His Voice Helping El Paso Grieve | Time

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