12 Loose Rules to Follow as an Effective Ally at Standing Rock: A Blueprint for White Solidarity… 

A brief disclaimer: As a relatively young white man, I am not an expert in white allyship for native causes, and am in no way a spokesperson for any indigenous movement. I was inspired to write this piece only because of painful mistakes I have witnessed continuously repeated in native space by people like me. In fact, virtually all the actions one can unintentionally take to hamper indigenous movements I have personally committed. I am writing this so that others can avoid common pitfalls and step into what I see as effective allyship within native movements.

12 Loose Rules to Follow as an Effective Ally at Standing Rock: A Blueprint for White Solidarity… – Medium

This is amazing.

Before this piece, to the best of my recollection, I have never read anything on white allyship or “checking your privilege” that wasn’t trite, obnoxious, and patronizing to either ally, the populations they are trying to support, or (more likely) both.

Simply awesome read.

Kudos, “relatively young white man!”

Two U.S. Troops and at Least 30 Afghans Are Killed in Battle With Taliban 

Taliban insurgents killed two U.S. Special Operations forces during a firefight Thursday in northern Afghan, and U.S. airstrikes in support of the troops killed a number of civilians, officials said.

…The operation in the village of Buzi Kandahari came after the provincial capital was briefly overrun by the insurgents last month. The Afghan and U.S. forces were ambushed and encircled by militants and snipers with heavy weaponry and called for air support after several troops were killed and injured, a senior Afghan military official said.

The U.S. military then struck the densely populated area, said Mahmood Danish, a spokesman for the Kunduz governor. Many of the casualties were women and children, he said.

 

…A witness said he saw at least 15 bodies piled into trucks after families tried to parade them through the city to protest against the killings but were obstructed by police. Health officials said at least another four bodies were at the hospital. At least 30 other patients were being treated for injuries, 12 of them children and many in critical condition, they said. Military and government officials couldn’t immediately confirm the death toll.

Two U.S. Troops and at Least 30 Afghans Are Killed in Battle With Taliban – WSJ

Sigh….

Mom Breaks Into Tears: ‘I Got To Vote For A Woman For President’ 

Her parents divorced when she was a girl, in the 1960s, when banks could deny women loans if they couldn’t get a man to co-sign. “My mother couldn’t get credit. She couldn’t buy a car without a male signature. She couldn’t get an apartment without a male signature.”
….“To think about how far we’ve come,” Wilkinson added. “The fight and struggle just to vote for an intelligent, qualified, viable woman ― it was just sort of overwhelming to me on that morning. And I was thanking God that I was able to do this.”


Mom Breaks Into Tears: ‘I Got To Vote For A Woman For President’ | Huffington Post

Awwww

Huma Abedin attacked for her Ethnicity

Hillary Clinton’s embattled aide Huma Abedin is again under fire — not over her boss’s private email server, but for her heritage.

The Republican Hindu Coalition is taking aim at Abedin, branding her “pro-terrorist,” and, in a new TV ad targeting Hindu-American voters, questioning her “Pakistani and Saudi background.”

Huma Abedin attacked for her heritage | New York Post

WTF?!

Apparently ALL Republicans are bigotted as all hell, not just the white ones.

Police arrest Colorado Springs boy accused of stabbing fellow sixth-grader 

An 11-year-old boy accused of stabbing Kyler Nipper with a pencil in their middle school hallway has been arrested on suspicion of second-degree assault, the Colorado Springs Police Department said Tuesday.

Police arrest Colorado Springs boy accused of stabbing fellow sixth-grader | Colorado Springs Gazette, News

Seriously? With a pencil?

Since When Did Police Officers Replace the Principal’s Office? 

School administrators are increasingly relying on law enforcement to keep students in line, and the results can be dire.

Take the case of Michael Davis, a five-year-old student with disabilities in the Stockton Unified School District.  A senior police officer in the school district’s police department decided to “scare him straight” after Michael acted out in his classroom, and the situation quickly spiraled out of control.

When Michael got upset and could not calm down, the officer zip-tied Michael’s hands and feet and took him to a mental health facility. Michael’s family filed a lawsuit, and the police officer was finally dismissed from the department four years later, shortly after the family settled with the district for $125,000.

…Police officers are ineffective substitutes for counselors or other adults trained to work with young people who need guidance more than harsh discipline. 

…Many schools have called the police to enforce minor violations like “disruption,” “disturbing the peace,” vandalism, tardiness, and inappropriate use of electronic devices — hardly criminal offenses.

…In the San Bernardino Unified School District, for example, campus officers arrested around 30,000 students between 2005 and 2014, mostly for minor infractions like tagging and disobeying curfews.

…These policies disproportionately target students of color and young people with disabilities, unnecessarily feeding them into the criminal justice system. Black students are three times as likely as white students to face school-related arrest. Students with disabilities are three times as likely as students without disabilities to be arrested on campus.

Since When Did Police Officers Replace the Principal’s Office? | American Civil Liberties Union

Aghhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh!

That’s our f’ing future we are warping and destroying!!!!