Police, prison and abolition

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Re: Police, prison and abolition

Post by blindpig » Thu May 07, 2020 11:35 am

Other Countries’ Courts Are Treating the Prison Pandemic as A Real Emergency
U.S. prisons’ COVID-19 response lags behind Tunisia and Palestine.
By DAVID ANDERSON

MAY 06, 20201:32 PM

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A vigil outside Queensboro Correctional Facility on April 23 in New York City.
Johannes Eisele/Getty Images

The United States is addicted to punishment, and it just might kill us. Coronavirus outbreaks in jails and prisons not only threaten one of the most vulnerable populations in the country, but also their lawyers, prison personnel, their families, and everyone else. While several countries have taken progressive, nationally coordinated action to reduce prison populations and prevent widespread infection, institutions across the U.S. continue to prioritize punishment over public health. As a result, some of the most severe COVID-19 outbreaks are occurring in U.S. jails and prisons as well as the communities that house them.

Other countries have recognized the danger and taken far more sweeping action. I work with public defenders around the world. My colleagues constantly challenge my U.S.-based perspective and force me to broaden my understanding of justice.


In Palestine, where the government brought the country to a screeching halt to contain COVID-19, the courts remain open for emergency hearings. “Emergency” in this context means that courts are occupied almost exclusively with hearings devoted to getting people released from jail and prison. Detention centers are on lockdown so lawyers cannot visit their clients, but authorities have made sure that people in detention are able to talk to their lawyers by phone. On March 23, Palestine’s president also took swift action to order the release of everyone who has served at least half of their prison sentence (with the exception of some convicted of major offenses).

In Tunisia, courts also remain open for emergency matters. The courts have had difficulty reliably transporting detainees to court due to COVID-19, so defense lawyers and prosecutors worked together and successfully lobbied judges to grant release motions in absentia. Some prosecutors are even appearing in court to argue for release on behalf of unrepresented defendants because they understand that releasing people from custody is in the public interest. In March, the president pardoned more than 1,400 people.


Unfortunately, the national response that most resembles our own is that of Iran. Iran had a pre-pandemic prison population of about 189,500 in a system of facilities designed to hold fewer than 150,000, and the government failed to take meaningful action to decarcerate upon the arrival of COVID-19. Only after thousands of infections and hundreds of deaths were reported in prisons did officials take the situation seriously and release nearly 100,000 people—far more than have been released in the U.S.—but the damage was already done.

U.S. leaders could follow these countries’ lead and take any number of steps right now to reduce jail and prison populations. They could halt the arrest and prosecution of low-level offenses, expedite and expand pretrial release, and aggressively reconsider the cases of people already sentenced. Governments could also be considering whole categories of detainees for release, such as those who were arrested for not checking in with a probation officer or failing to pay a fine. Instead, cities and states around the country continue to take actions that range from haphazard to directly harmful.


In Douglas County, Nebraska, jury trials have been suspended and lawyer visits have been banned so the only way for a person in pretrial detention to see a judge is to plead guilty without legal advice. Before being ordered to stop by a judge, prosecutors in Adams County, Colorado, attempted to proceed with a lengthy death penalty trial. Despite concerns that jurors would be at risk of infection, prosecutors pushed for a trial in an attempt to secure the ultimate punishment before Colorado’s new death penalty repeal bill takes effect.

There are leaders in the U.S. who have taken positive steps. Authorities have reduced the jail population in Hennepin County, Minnesota, by 44 percent. New Jersey’s chief justice ordered the release of nearly 1,000 people from county jails, and California is granting early release to 3,500 people. These disparate responses, however, are not enough. We need to make a decision as a country that we care more about the health of our communities than about the false sense of safety we derive from mass incarceration.

This crisis exposes a fundamental problem with our national mindset: We are incapable of visualizing public safety without incarceration. The proposition that the carceral system makes us safer was dubious at the best of times. Now, the calculus has changed. Overcrowded prisons and jails present imminent danger to the people inside them and the communities in which they are situated. Still, we are struggling to imagine a world where we might reduce the severity of criminal punishment, even to save thousands of lives.

https://slate.com/news-and-politics/202 ... hment.html

What it takes for liberals to give a fuck about people in prison: a threat to themselves.
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Re: Police, prison and abolition

Post by blindpig » Fri May 08, 2020 12:52 pm

Arrested! Ahmaud Arbery’s Killers Finally Charged With Murder Of Jogger In Georgia

Written By Bruce C.T. Wright
Posted 12 hours ago

The two men who killed a young Black man who was jogging in rural Georgia when he was shot have been arrested and charged with murder. Gregory McMichael and Travis McMichael were safely taken into custody more than two months after they chased down Ahmaud Arbery, confronted him and shot him to death in the city of Brunswick.

Former police officer Gregory McMichael and his son Travis McMichael who murdered #AhmaudArbery for jogging while Black. No one has been charged and this case is being covered up. This is why #Kaepernick took a knee #justiceforahmaud#BlackLivesMatter pic.twitter.com/0aFZrww5dg

— Etan Thomas (@etanthomas36) May 6, 2020

While the news that the McMichaels were arrested and charged were welcomed by protesters, there was no mention of the third man who filmed the shooting being charged. The footage recorded by William “Roddie” Bryan shows the McMichaels’ truck stopped in front of Arbery who clearly tries to run around the passenger’s side of the vehicle. However, Travis confronts Arbery and the two struggle with his shotgun before a gunshot is heard. The struggle continues when a second shot is heard. The whole time, a man who seems to be Gregory McDonald is standing in the back trunk of the truck and also appears to have a weapon in hand. The clip ends with a third shot and Ahmaud tries to run away before tumbling to the ground with fatal injuries.

Civil rights attorney on Thursday night repeated his calls for Bryan to be arrested as well.

William “Roddie” Bryan, accomplice to Gregory and Travis McMichael, must now be arrested. We urge officers to do so tonight. #IRunWithMaud

— Benjamin Crump, Esq. (@AttorneyCrump) May 8, 2020

In a letter that prosecutor George Barnhill wrote to the Glenn County Police Department, he tried to argue that there were no grounds to arrest the McMichael’s nor Bryan. “It appears Travis McMichael, Greg McMichael and (William Bryan) were following, in ‘hot pursuit,’ a burglary suspect, with solid firsthand probable cause, in their neighborhood, and asking/telling him to stop,” Barnhill wrote. “It appears their intent was to stop and hold this criminal suspect until law enforcement arrived. Under Georgia law, this is perfectly legal.”

However, there is no proof in the video that any of the three men called on Arbery to stop. Many people outraged across the county saw the pursuit of Arbery as a point-blank “lynching.”

Activist Shaun King went so far as to say Bryan’s involvement in Arbery’s death makes him an “accessory to murder.” Attorney S. Lee Merritt who represents Arbery’s family tweeted a photo of Bryan and wrote that there are “THREE suspects.”

A lot of people have asked why I keep saying THREE suspects. Here is the third. Thanks @shaunking! Arrest all three of these men who conspired and murdered #AhmaudArbery pic.twitter.com/oEFGzRhm0s

— S. Lee Merritt, Esq. (@MeritLaw) May 7, 2020

The Georgia Bureau of Investigation made the announcement on Thursday night. Its full statement follows below:

“On February 23, 2020, Ahmaud Arbery was in the Satilla Shores neighborhood in Brunswick, GA when both Gregory and Travis McMichael confronted Arbery with two firearms. During the encounter, Travis McMichael shot and killed Arbery.

“This case is being investigated in partnership with District Attorney Tom Durden.

“On May 5th, 2020, District Attorney Tom Durden formally requested the GBI investigate the death of Ahmaud Arbery. The Kingsland Office initiated an investigation on May 6th, 2020.

“On April 29th, 2020, the Glynn County Police Department (GCPD) requested that the GBI investigate allegations of threats against GCPD and individuals involved in the active investigation.

“On the morning of May 5th, 2020, GCPD requested the GBI investigate the public release of video related to Arbery’s death.

“These investigations are all active and ongoing. If anyone has information related to these cases, please contact the GBI at 1-800-597-TIPS (8477).”

https://newsone.com/3938097/ahmaud-arbe ... edium=push

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Video Shows Indianapolis Cops Shoot, Kill Unarmed Black Man On Facebook Live And Then Laugh About It
Bruce C.T. Wright
Written By Bruce C.T. Wright
Posted 23 hours ago


Police in Indianapolis chased and shot a young Black man, presumably in the back, on Wednesday evening in the latest instance of preventable violence by law enforcement against African Americans. Sean Reed was live streaming himself on Facebook at the time that he was shot. But what police apparently did not know was that even after they shot and killed him and even shared a laugh over his dead body, they were still being recorded by the Facebook Live session Reed started before he died.

more...

https://newsone.com/3937740/sean-reed-p ... edium=push

Long, hot summer.............................................................
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Re: Police, prison and abolition

Post by blindpig » Wed May 27, 2020 11:34 am

And the beat goes on....

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US: Police Officers Fired After Lethal Race Killing

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George Floyd is another victim of police brutality in the U.S | Photo: Twitter/@flywithkamala

Published 26 May 2020 (9 hours 58 minutes ago)

Four police officers involved in George Floyd's apprehension and later death, have been fired, Minneapolis city major Jacob Frey said on Tuesday.

Floyd, a black man who was pinned down while unarmed by white police on May 25, died in a hospital a short time after.
"He should not have died. What we saw was horrible, completely and utterly messed up," Frey said. About the decision to fire the four officers, the Major had no doubt. "This is the right call," he wrote on Twitter.
Allegedly, policemen were responding to a "report of a forgery in progress," as they stated in the deposition. At the moment they arrived, Floy was in a car, they said.

For those of you who don’t understand or refuse to acknowledge, THIS IS WHY KAEPERNICK KNEELED, you morons. If you support #Trump or any other racist, unfollow me now. https://t.co/4BZ8V4lWdA #thisisamerica #blacklivesmatter #merica #election2020 #biden #keepamericagreat

— Jocko Sims (@jockosims) May 26, 2020

According to the statement, "after [the suspect] got out [of his car], he physically resisted officers. Officers were able to get the suspect into handcuffs and note he appeared to be suffering medical distress."
Further, a video of the incident, filmed by a bystander, shows how a police officer pinned him down with his knee while Floyd yelled, "please, please, I cannot breathe." After several minutes of moaning, he appeared motionless.
"This abusive, excessive and inhumane use of force cost the life of a man who was being detained by the police for questioning about a non-violent charge," Floyd's lawyer Ben Crump denounced in a statement on Tuesday, after the video release. Crump is also a prominent civil rights lawyer.
This incident has raised anger among community members and leaders. In the past, movements such as Black Lives Matter has demanded measures to prevent the use of lethal force in minority communities.

https://www.telesurenglish.net/news/U.S ... -0015.html

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PSL Statement: Justice for George Floyd!
By Liberation StaffMay 26, 2020

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George Floyd. Photo: Courtesy Ben Crump

The Party for Socialism and Liberation condemns the vicious killing of George Floyd by the Minneapolis Police Department. We extend our deepest sympathy to his family and his community. Firing the officers is not enough. Officer Derek Chauvin, and his three police accomplices, must be immediately arrested and charged. Justice can only begin with a conviction and sentencing of all involved!

We salute the thousands of Minneapolis, Minnesota residents who came out in justified indignation to demand justice for George Floyd. Demonstrators of all backgrounds and ages took to the streets the day after Floyd’s killing and were met with violent police repression. Police in riot gear used mace, tear gas and bean bag guns to repress the righteous anger of the people of Minneapolis.

It was only four years ago that Minneapolis mourned Philando Castile, a Black man also shot to death by police. His killer, Jeronimo Yanez, was let off and found “not guilty” at trial. The police killing of Castile sparked protests around the country.

This latest incident of state-sanctioned racist terror comes on the heels of a string of police and vigilante killings that have taken place since the COVID-19 crisis began in the United States. Though in some parts of the country lockdowns and quarantine measures are in effect, the oppression of Black people still remains and has in fact surged in the wake of one of the largest public health crises in recent history.

A video capturing the killing of George Floyd was posted on Facebook and sparked widespread outrage and protest. In the video, Floyd is seen pinned to the ground by his neck, face pressed against the ground so hard that his nose bled, and is heard repeatedly gasping “I can’t breathe.” While Floyd was on the ground, officer Derek Chauvin pushed his knee into the back of Floyd’s neck, choking him for several minutes. As multiple bystanders pleaded with the officers to get off of Floyd’s neck, he became unresponsive and was taken by ambulance to the Hennepin County Medical Center. He was later pronounced dead. George Floyd’s last words, “I can’t breathe” are the exact same last words of Eric Garner, who was strangled to death by NYPD officer Daniel Pantaleo in 2014.

The officers claimed they were responding to a forgery in progress, a possible non-violent crime. The officers alleged that the unarmed Floyd was resisting arrest, however they later changed their story, asserting that he was “suffering from medical distress.” It is outrageous that police would use such brutal deadly tactics on a person in medical distress, let alone anyone.

We cannot depend on the Federal Bureau of Investigations, which has begun to look into the killing, for justice. The FBI is a violent state institution that has been wielded as a weapon against the liberation movement of Black people in the United States. The FBI has never been fair and partial to the Black community. Real justice will be brought about when the people organize and fight for their own demands in the face of racist oppression by the U.S. capitalist state. The police will always fulfill their role of being shock troops for white supremacy and capitalism as long as it exists in this racist state.

In this absolutely critical period, we sharpen our resolve to build organizations capable of waging militant class struggle against the racist state and their ruling class The ruling class and its government has only shown complete disregard for the lives of millions of working-class people during the COVID-19 crisis, especially Black people who are disproportionately victims of the virus. Amidst the deep crisis, the racist killings of George Floyd, Ahmed Aubery in Brunswick, Georgia, Breonna Taylor in Louisville, Ky. and Sean Reed in Indianapolis, Ind., make it clear that the protests and fight back must continue and intensify. We affirm and support the right of Black people and all oppressed people to protest and defened themselves against racist terror.

The Party for Socialism and Liberation demands that the four officers involved in Floyd’s murder be prosecuted and convicted. We also demand the end of the repression of the demonstrators in Minneapolis demanding justice and accountability during a health and economic crisis.

Justice for George Floyd and all victims of racist police terror!

https://www.liberationnews.org/psl-stat ... rationnews
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Re: Police, prison and abolition

Post by blindpig » Wed May 27, 2020 12:06 pm

Image

Riots in Minneapolis – No Main Stream Media Coverage #GeorgeFloyd
May 27, 2020

Caracas, May 27, 2020 (OrinocoTribune.com).- Yesterday afternoon the city of Minneapolis in the north of the US Midwest was shocked by the announcement of the death of George Floyd (46) an Afro-American detained by Minneapolis Police officers and sent to the hospital unresponsive due to the reckless and racist attitude of the policemen involved who put him in a neck restraint until he lost consciousness. Floyd was pronounced dead at the hospital.

Officers Derek Chauvin, Tou Thao and two others unidentified were caught on video during the whole procedure. Officer Chauvin put his whole weight on George Floyd’s neck, the two unidentified officers did something similar on the chest of the victim while Thao stood nearby.

Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey announced the firings on Twitter, saying “This is the right call.” Police had said the man matched the description of a suspect in a forgery case at a grocery store, and that he resisted arrest.

But the long tradition in the United States of systematic killings of people of color without proper exercise of justice mixed with systemic racism ignited protests that reached the 3rd precinct of the Minneapolis police department.

And once more people from all over the world witnessed how the US, which calls itself the beacon of democracy and human rights, deployed an arsenal of weapons against protesters demanding justice, not willing to accept the dismissal of police officers as the solution for this new incident that is added to several racist episodes recorded in the US in recent days.

“It is inconceivable that in the US, that calls itself the home of democracy and justice, there is a pattern of systematic killing of people of color and in most cases the only reprimand of the police officers involved is a suspension or a dismissal. There are very rare exceptions of police officers being put behind bars for the crimes they commit,” a political analyst told the Orinoco Tribune.

The magnitude of the protest was unusual and disregarded social distancing rules amid the Covid-19 catastrophe currently affecting the US, with more than 100 thousand deaths in less than four months. Police repression was caught on video from different perspectives and posted on social media where there was a common criticism of main stream media for not covering the incident properly.

Many asked why main stream media in the US spend hours covering what they call Hong Kong “freedom fighters” trying to return that city state to a colonial status but don’t cover regular US citizens protesting for justice after racist police violence and then being repressed by police using all the anti riot gear avaliable.

Image

“Tweets from outside the US ask about the need of a statement by OAS head Luis Almagro, a third level bureaucrat at the service of the US Department of State that will never dare to criticize Washington but does not hesitate to initiate a circus when situations half the size of Minneapolis emerge in socialist countries like Nicaragua, Cuba or Venezuela,” the analyst stressed.

And others like the famous Brazilian cartoonist Carlos Latuff (@latuffCartoons) compared the whole situation with Brazil, where black people either die due to the coronavirus or the police.

“The United States is filled with people that have waited patiently for the system to correct itself against this kind of abomination but patience seems to be reaching its limits and, mixed with the chaotic US government response to Covid-19 with more that 100 thousand deaths so far, might be representing a breaking point for real change in the US,” the analyst added.

OT/JRE/EF

https://orinocotribune.com/riots-in-min ... orgefloyd/
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Re: Police, prison and abolition

Post by blindpig » Thu May 28, 2020 10:50 am

The Blue Plague and Black Death
Glen Ford, BAR Executive Editor 27 May 2020

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The Blue Plague and Black Death

George Floyd’s death by Blue Plague in Minneapolis was widely condemned by the same parties that have encouraged and funded the spread of the fatal contagion.

“The Blue Plague is a serial killer that dates back to the slave patrols of the pre-Civil War South.”

The pathogen that kills Black people at two and a half times the rate of whites took the life of 46 year-old George Floyd , this week in Minneapolis. Floyd’s last words were, “I can’t breathe,” much like the desperate utterances of plague victim Eric Garner , struck down in 2014 in New York City. Unlike the still raging Covid-19 virus, which is virulent among Blacks of both sexes, the Blue Plague is especially lethal to Black males of all ages. According to researchers at Rutgers University and the University of Michigan, 1 in every 1,000 black boys and men will be fatally stricken by the Blue Plague at some point in their lifetimes – at ages ranging from 12 year-old Tamir Rice , snuffed out in Cleveland in 2014, to 50 year-old Walter Scott , who fell victim to the pestilence in North Charleston, South Carolina in 2015.

Covid-19 is categorized as a “novel,” or new, virus, having mutated recently from wild animals. But the Blue Plague is a serial killer that dates back to the slave patrols of the pre-Civil War South. Indeed, the first vector of the Blue Plague has been traced back to Charleston, South Carolina, which established a paramilitary force called the City Guard in 1783, primarily to “police” Black slaves – although the term police had not yet been invented. The City Guard helped suppress the Denmark Vesey slave rebellion in 1822 – a success that is believed to have led to the mutation of slave patrols into full-fledged vectors of Black death in cities across the nation, not just the South.

“The Blue Plague is especially lethal to Black males of all ages.”

Researchers are hoping to find a vaccine for Covid-19, possibly within the year, but the Blue Plague only grows more deadly over time and enjoys a host of immunities. Although Black people had hoped that the historic expansion in the number of Black elected officials would create political antibodies to limit the spread of the Blue Plague, the opposite has happened. In 2014, just months before Michael Brown’s life was cut short by the Blue Plague, in Ferguson, Missouri, 80 percent of the Congressional Black Caucus voted to continue funneling billions of dollars in military weapons, gear and training to local infestations of the plague, despite ample evidence that such infusions have made the scourge even more toxic to Black life. Four years later, 75 percent of the Black Caucus voted to classify the Blue Plague as a “protected class,” further immunizing the disease from the possibility of cure. The Protect and Serve Act of 2018 was “superfluous, since cops are already the most protected ‘class’ in the nation.”

More radical thinkers, steeped in the struggle against social pathogens, argue that the virulence of the Blue Plague can be weakened, at least among concentrated Black populations, through Black Community Control of the disease. A number of plague control formulas have been put forward , but the Black Misleadership Class, deeply embedded in the Democratic Party, fiercely resists any curb on the blue contagion, and actively encourages the spread of the disease among the federal secret police. In March of this year, two thirds of the Congressional Black Caucus joined with a large majority of Democrats in support of the wildly misnamed USA FREEDOM Reauthorization Act, which has since passed the Senate , as well. Only 17 of the 50 full-voting Black members of the House voted against the law, which was supposed to expire this year along with other provisions of the infamous Patriot Act. As reported in The Verge , the Act allows the FBI “to collect ‘tangible things’ related to national security investigations without a warrant, requiring only approval from a secret court that has reportedly rubber-stamped many requests.” These tangible things include spying on targeted peoples’ web browsing “without having to demonstrate that those Americans have done anything wrong,” in the words of Oregon Sen. Wyden.

“The Black Misleadership Class, deeply embedded in the Democratic Party, fiercely resists any curb on the blue contagion.”

The Blue contagion has spread around the world as the United States deploys its vast military as a kind of global police force, backed up by killer drones that carry out White House authorized executions in the far reaches of the planet. President Barack Obama authorized a regular schedule of snuff jobs on “Kill Tuesdays ,” but President Trump’s timetable is probably more erratic.

This being an election year, George Floyd’s death by Blue Plague in Minneapolis was widely condemned by the same parties that have encouraged and funded the spread of the fatal contagion. The Democratic mayor of the city fired the four cops involved in crushing Floyd’s neck, and Joe Biden, the presidential candidate who brags that he “wrote” the Plague-proliferating 1994 Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act, tweeted that “George Floyd deserved better and his family deserves justice. His life mattered.” But Biden and his party’s history as vectors of mass death say otherwise.

In the absence of an immediate cure, it is certain that some endangered Black males – and sisters, who are not immune to the ravages of the Blue Plague – will resort to home remedies to ward off the pestilence, as did Denmark Vesey, Nat Turner and, more recently, some brothers in Dallas and Baton Rouge .

BAR executive editor Glen Ford can be contacted at Glen.Ford@BlackAgendaReport.com .

https://www.blackagendareport.com/blue- ... lack-death
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Re: Police, prison and abolition

Post by blindpig » Mon Jun 01, 2020 1:07 pm

US Police Regularly Trained By Israeli Military: Amnesty Report

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Police detain a protester during a protest in response to the police killing of George Floyd on May 30, 2020 in Atlanta, Georgia. | Photo: AFP

Published 31 May 2020 (14 hours 12 minutes ago)

As several cities across the United States become hotspots of unrest following the violent death of black man George Floyd at the hands of a white police officer, Amnesty International recalled Sunday that U.S. police trains in Israel alongside military officers, who “have racked up documented human rights violations for years.”

The rights group reported that hundreds of law enforcement officials from Baltimore, Florida, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, California, Arizona, Connecticut, New York, Massachusetts, North Carolina, Georgia, Washington state as well as the DC Capitol police all travel to Israel for training, while thousands of others received training from Israeli officials in the U.S.

“Many of these trips are taxpayer-funded while others are privately funded,” the group noted, adding that “since 2002, the Anti-Defamation League, the American Jewish Committee’s Project Interchange and the Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs have paid for police chiefs, assistant chiefs and captains to train in Israel and the Occupied Palestinian Territories.”

Critics of these programs, including human rights groups, point to Israel’s record of human rights abuses and state violence toward Palestinians, Black jews, and African refugees.

According to the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, 2018 brought almost a 70 percent increase over the previous year in Israeli settler violence toward Palestinians, and a rise in Palestinian deaths and injuries in Gaza.

In the year since 2018 Great March of Return demonstrations began, more than 190 Palestinians were killed and 28,000 were injured by Israeli Forces.

In the U.S., many Black and Hispanic neighborhoods have been experiencing disproportionate violence and rising trends in fatal police shootings.

In Georgia for instance, an investigation of deadly police shootings revealed that in the years after 2010, at least 185 people were shot and killed by police, almost half of them unarmed or shot in the back.

Amnesty International, other human rights organizations and even the U.S. Department of State have also been citing Israeli police for carrying out extrajudicial executions and other unlawful killings, using ill-treatment and torture, suppression of freedom of expression and association, through government surveillance, and excessive use of force against peaceful protesters.

“Police departments (in the U.S.) should find partners that will train on de-escalation techniques, (...) and how to appropriately respond to those using non-violent protest to express their opinions. Israel is not such a partner,” the rights group concluded.

https://www.telesurenglish.net/news/Hum ... -0005.html

True enough, the 'cutting edge' of police violence, but standing on the shoulders of NB Forrest , the US calvary, Nazis.


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To put a point on it....

Israeli Police Kill Unarmed Palestinian in East Jerusalem

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The victim was identified as Iyad Khairi Hallak, 32, who was attending an institution for people with special needs in the same area where he was killed. | Photo: Cristina Sanchez @paisesconflicto

Published 30 May 2020

After he was shot, witnesses reported he was left on the ground bleeding by the occupation forces until he died.

Israeli police shot and killed an unarmed and mentally disabled Palestinian man Saturday in the Wad el-Joz neighborhood in occupied East Jerusalem, Palestinian news agency WAFA reported.

The victim was identified as Iyad Khairi Hallak, 32, who was attending an institution for people with special needs in the same area where he was killed. After he was shot, witnesses reported he was left on the ground bleeding by the occupation forces until he died.

According to Israel, the officers opened fire due to what they thought was “a suspicious object that looked like a pistol.” Israeli police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld confirmed no gun was found later on the scene.

"It is a real crime in the first place and those who committed it must be brought to justice, and be convicted by the International Criminal Court," Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas said in a statement, holding Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu fully responsible for the killing.

After the murder police closed all gates leading into Jerusalem’s old city and banned entry or exit from it. They also raided the Hallak home in Wad el-Joz and questioned his family.

The incident comes a day after Israeli soldiers also killed a Palestinian near the occupied West Bank city of Ramallah who they alleged had tried to ram them with his vehicle, although no Israelis were wounded.

"These crimes against humanity will remain the fuel for the revolution of the Palestinian people, who will carry on with their struggle until the liberation of their occupied land," Hamas' spokesman Hazem Qassem affirmed.

Meanwhile, Netanyahu and his coalition government have announced they will go ahead and illegally annex parts of the occupied West Bank and Jordan Valley by July, despite international condemnation from the United Nations, European Union, and dozens of governments.

https://www.telesurenglish.net/news/Isr ... -0007.html
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Re: Police, prison and abolition

Post by blindpig » Mon Jun 01, 2020 2:15 pm

The view from China...

US cities riven with protests
By HENG WEILI in New York | China Daily Global | Updated: 2020-06-01 15:18


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A protester kneels in front of law enforcement officers during a rally against the death in Minneapolis police custody of George Floyd, at the Trump Internaional Hotel in Washington, DC, US May 31, 2020. [Photo/Agencies]

What you need to know

- Protests enter sixth day across the US, including fires, violence near White House.

- The nationwide unrest started on Memorial Day, May 25, when George Floyd, 46, died after a Minneapolis police officer knelt on his neck for almost nine minutes

- At least 40 cities in more than 20 US states and Washington DC have imposed curfews.

- Trump has created controversy by calling protesters "thugs".

- As of Sunday morning, approximately 5,000 National Guard members have been activated in 15 states and Washington DC, with another 2,000 prepared to activate if needed.

- The officer who pressed his knee onto Floyd's neck has been charged with murder, but protesters are demanding the other three officers at the scene be prosecuted.

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San Francisco Sheriff Deputies stand guard outside City Hall as protesters rally against the death in Minneapolis police custody of George Floyd, in San Francisco, California, U.S. May 31, 2020. [Photo/Agencies]

Previous report

Violent protests continued to rock American cities over the weekend, as officials struggled to restore order amid the fury unleased after the death of a black man in police custody in Minneapolis, Minnesota.

Police departments across the United States watched patrol cars and other vehicles being set ablaze as they confronted lines of protesters.

In Philadelphia on Sunday, protesters ransacked stores and set fires. City police said they had made 215 arrests as of Sunday afternoon.

"Deeply saddened by the destruction we saw last night in Center City. In looting downtown, these individuals not only desecrated private businesses, they also desecrated the important message that was heard in the earlier, peaceful protests," Mayor Jim Kenney said on Twitter on Sunday.

"Law & Order in Philadelphia, NOW!" US President Donald Trump tweeted. "They are looting stores. Call in our great National Guard like they FINALLY did (thank you President Trump) last night in Minneapolis."

In Brooklyn, New York, a patrol car being pelted with projectiles on Saturday slowly accelerated through a group of protesters, with Mayor Bill de Blasio calling for an investigation of the incident. Also in New York, an officer was recorded roughly shoving a young woman to the pavement after she had approached a phalanx of police, and another was shown lifting the mask of a protester and pepper-spraying him.

In two other separate incidents in Brooklyn over the weekend, two lawyers and two young women were charged with throwing Molotov cocktails at police vehicles.

The NYPD made 350 arrests on Saturday, while 30 officers were injured. Graffiti was scrawled on St. Patrick’s Cathedral in Manhattan. Protesters also marched in Times Square on Sunday.

The nationwide unrest started on Memorial Day, May 25, when George Floyd, 46, died after a Minneapolis police officer knelt on his neck for almost nine minutes. The officer, Derek Chauvin, has been charged with third-degree murderand manslaughter. He and three other city officers were fired shortly afterward, which started when Floyd was accused of trying to pass a counterfeit bill at a store.

Trump, who has mostly taken a hard line against the protests in several posts on Twitter, on Sunday declared the left-wing group antifa a domestic terrorist organization. Antifa, whose name is short for "anti-fascist", was accused by US Attorney General William Barr of infiltrating the protests in various cities and fomenting disorder.

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Firefighters work to extinguish a fire at a section of shops looted amid demonstrations in the aftermath of George Floyds death on May 31, 2020 in Santa Monica, California. [Photo/Agencies]

Trump had tweeted earlier on Sunday: "Get tough Democrat Mayors and Governors. These people are ANARCHISTS. Call in our National Guard NOW. The World is watching and laughing at you and Sleepy Joe. Is this what America wants? NO!!!"

"We are a nation in pain right now, but we must not allow this pain to destroy us," former vice-president Joe Biden, the presumptive Democratic nominee to face Trump in November’s election, tweeted Sunday. "As President, I will help lead this conversation — and more importantly, I will listen, just as I did today visiting the site of last night’s protests in Wilmington."

Trump has created controversy by calling protesters "thugs", saying that protesters who gathered outside the White House on Friday would face the "most vicious dogs" and "ominous weapons", and earlier said that "when the looting starts, the shooting starts".

He also has said that some of the unruly protesters were dishonoring Floyd’s memory, and briefly spoke with Floyd’s brother by telephone.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, speaking on ABC’s This Week on Sunday, said: "Democratic and Republican presidents alike have seen it as their responsibility to be a unifying force in our country, not to fuel the flame. President Trump has made clear he would rather distract than perform his duty."

National security adviser Robert O’Brien said Sunday that the Trump administration will not federalize the National Guard for now.

While Minnesota’s governor and Minneapolis’ mayor suggested that out-of-town protesters were the source of the violence in their state, a review of arrest bookings in Hennepin County, where Minneapolis is based, showed that 80 percent of those charged were Minnesota residents.

Other politicians and pundits have accused white supremacists and international agitators in the violence.

Minnesota Governor Tim Walz said on Saturday that he was activating the full Minnesota National Guard for the first time since World War II.

On Sunday, thousands gathered for a rally in St. Paul, Minnesota.

"We are seeing in St. Paul and obviously around the country this level of rage and anger that frankly is legitimate, as we see this horrific video of George Floyd being just suffocated to death," Mayor Melvin Carter told CNN on Sunday. "Unfortunately, it’s being expressed right now, over the past week, in ways that are destructive and unacceptable."

The protests unfolded while the US was still coping with being the center of the world’s worst outbreak of the novel coronavirus, which has been blamed for more than 104,000 deaths in the country.

As with the virus, which has created a political divide over reopening the economy, the Floyd case also has underscored that division. The emphasis that authorities had put on social distancing and staying home has been discarded, as protesters, both masked and unmasked, took to the streets.

"I am deeply concerned about olence super-spreader type of incident," Walz said. "We’re going to see a spike in COVID-19. It’s inevitable."

Other major American cities where clashes intensified over the weekend included Atlanta, where CNN’s headquarters’ building was attacked; Chicago, Dallas, Houston, Los Angeles and Washington DC.

Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner said Sunday that the body of George Floyd will be returned to the city.

"This is the same city that George Floyd grew up in, and his body will be returning to this city," Turner said at a news conference. "And so the focus needs to be on supporting and uplifting his family."

Floyd was from the city’s Third Ward and was a star tight end who played in a Texas high school football state championship at the Houston Astrodome in 1992.

Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms said that more than 150 people were arrested over the weekend.

"I think that there is a place in America for peaceful protest, and we know that peaceful protests have had a history of changing things in this country," Bottoms said on CBS’ Face the Nation. "But it has to be organized and it has to be for a purpose. And when you have violent eruptions like we’ve seen across America, then we lose sight of even what we are talking about."

When asked about some of the president’s comments, Bottoms said: "And it’s as my grandmother used to say, ‘If you don’t have anything good to say, sometimes you just shouldn’t say anything at all.’"

In Los Angeles, protests led to the looting of the Alexander McQueen clothing store on Rodeo Drive in Beverly Hills, and a Gucci store on the street was marked with the graffiti slogan: "Eat the rich." In the nearby Grove Shopping Center, which houses more than 50 upscale stores, Nordstrom, Ray Ban and Apple were broken into.

Chicago, Mayor Lori Lightfoot, who said she has asked Governor J.B. Pritzker to send National Guard troops, expressed anger at some protesters. "You should be ashamed of yourselves. What you have done is a dishonor to our city . . . and its long and proud legacy as a leader of bold and vibrant peaceful protest," Lightfoot wrote on Twitter.

May Zhou in Houston, and Reuters contributed to this story.

http://global.chinadaily.com.cn/a/20200 ... 59f52.html

President Xi, save us from our cruel capitalist masters!(Well, not really, but good for the goose...)
"There is great chaos under heaven; the situation is excellent."

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Re: Police, prison and abolition

Post by blindpig » Mon Jun 01, 2020 2:34 pm

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“They Just Fired on Us”: Horrifying Videos of Cops “Using Journalists for Target Practice’ in Minneapolis
May 31, 2020 orinocotribune George Floyd, Minneapolis, press freedom, protests, Racism, uprising, US decline
By Bob Brigham – May 30, 2020



Journalists covering the protests in Minneapolis reported on being targeted by police on Saturday.

Multiple reports — including live coverage on CNN — showed police firing rubber bullets at journalists.
Nick Stellini

@StelliniTweets
It’s open season on the media for the cops in Minneapolis. Evil. https://twitter.com/bubbaprog/status/12 ... 4833287169

Timothy Burke

@bubbaprog
Police now using journalists for target practice in Minneapolis:

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Kyle Griffin

@kylegriffin1
Remarkable on MSNBC: @AliVelshi reporting in Minneapolis as police fire tear gas.

"Nobody was doing anything. They pulled in, they opened fire."

"There has been no provocation. There was nothing that happened whatsoever. The police pulled into this intersection unprovoked."

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Beau Willimon

@BeauWillimon
.@OmarJimenez (the CNN reporter who was arrested yesterday) and his crew are putting themselves in harm’s way to report the news in Minneapolis. Press are being shot at with projectiles. Courageous journalism.

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Unicorn Riot
@UR_Ninja
· May 30, 2020
#LIVE #Philadelphia #GeorgeFloyd Solidarity Protests Against #Police Killings https://www.pscp.tv/w/caGr2zFheVFWdmRWU ... hVzULAZ9bG




Unicorn Riot
@UR_Ninja
Philly police pin young black man to the ground with their knees, swat our field reporter with a baton for filming the scene.

"Beat it."

"I'm a journalist, sir!"

"I don't care what you are. Beat it."

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Ryan Raiche

@ryanraiche
Myself, photographer, and producer just made it back to the car. We were with a group of media and thought we were in a safe spot. We kept saying we’re media. Police tear gassed and pepper sprayed the entire group. Everyone ran. It was insane. It happened so fast.

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Molly Hennessy-Fiske

@mollyhf
Minnesota State Patrol just fired tear gas at reporters and photographers at point blank range.

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Maggie Koerth

@maggiekb1
· May 31, 2020
Replying to @maggiekb1
A convoy of police cars and city busses just passed us heading East. Earlier, we saw a similar convoy, but with the smaller mobility transportation busses past us heading west. Feels like police, like the would-be protesters we saw earlier, are milling around with nothing to do.


Maggie Koerth

@maggiekb1
We just found @StarTribune reporter @RyanFaircloth bleeding from the head at Lake and Chicago. Police shot out his window.
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"There is great chaos under heaven; the situation is excellent."

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Re: Police, prison and abolition

Post by blindpig » Mon Jun 01, 2020 2:51 pm

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Forget “Looting.” Capitalism is the Real Robbery.
May 31, 2020
By William C. Anderson – May 29, 2020

This morning the president of the United States threatened state-sanctioned murder in response to “looting,” laying bare the way in which white supremacy, capitalism and the state work together to violently repress people who defend Black life.

But Trump’s angry outburst is not the only blatantly racist response we should be interrogating. We also must confront the way in which both conservatives and liberals have responded to the Minneapolis uprisings by condemning “looting.”

Protesters in Minneapolis and around the country are rising up against a lynching and state violence. How should we respond to a lynching? Should our goal simply be to publicize it, in the hope that such publicity will generate condemnation and prevent future lynchings? This logic is flawed, in part, because lynchings thrive off of spectatorship. For white supremacists, the act of killing is also an act of fellowship and opportunity for indoctrination.

Simply spreading images of racist killings and asking the state to stop killing us is not going to stop them. (In fact, while it’s important to publicize the fact that these killings are occurring, sometimes the spread of such images also galvanizes white supremacists.)

And so, for some who oppose racist killings, watching the videos, waiting to vote, and marching in protest feels like enough. But for others, more intervention is needed. The murder of George Floyd by Minneapolis police comes on the heels of the killings of Ahmaud Arbery in Brunswick, Georgia, and Breonna Taylor in Louisville, Kentucky. These killings were committed by current and former law enforcement. Understandably, outrage is growing.

We should expect uprisings. We should expect property to be damaged, as people rise up against the racist systems complicit with racist violence. Many of the people taking part in these revolts have decided that respecting property is not more important than respecting Black life. There is an awareness that if the law doesn’t respect Black life, then the law itself cannot be relied on for protection or given undeserving respect. So, as protesters are being accused of “looting” and “rioting” in Minneapolis or anywhere else, this time demands that we reflect on the systematic robbery of Black America.

Corporations in the United States, again, have walked away with an unprecedented and astronomical amount of money in 2020. With no accountability in sight, there was little to no opposition to their monumental robbery. They were handed trillions. Politicians working in service to the corporate elite — and afraid of appearing opposed to a deal that would largely benefit Wall Street — pushed it through. Of course, the deal left many vulnerable people in the dust. No changes were made after the unresolved debt crisis of 2008 that brutalized people around the world with the starvation we know as austerity. Cuts to social needs have fallen on the public undeterred while the rich continuously grow richer than they’ve ever been.

Now, protests breaking out throughout the nation in response to police brutality foreshadow what’s to come. People are likely to take, break and fight because conditions remain miserable. It should not be surprising. Still, the “looting” by the oppressed will always be condemned more than the structural robbery that’s long taken place under capitalism.

There’s this idea that the perpetrators of crises, rather than their victims, deserve our sympathy when their profits decrease. After at least 100,000 people in the U.S. — disproportionately Black, Native and Latinx people — have died from a merciless pandemic, this absurdity is still being trafficked through the media. The corporations that do not pay people a living wage and who are benefiting from skyrocketing prices amid disaster are not deserving of pity. For those of us whose stability is much more uncertain, one missed paycheck could mean eviction, imprisonment or hunger. These circumstances are increasingly common as unemployment reaches levels not seen since the Great Depression. At least 40 million people in this country are out of work, and people in need are being effectively robbed by the rich.



Stealing because you’re being sucked dry by a system that has rendered you disposable is not the same as the ritualistic racist murders of Black people by white supremacists.

As they lose their jobs, people are also being robbed of health care — a vulnerability that will kill people and their family members. People have also been robbed of a safe place to live free from state violence, where they can breathe clean air. People have watched the tax money they paid be given away, time and time again, after being told it would come back to workers, but it never does. For Black America, there are more than enough prison beds, but not nearly enough hospital beds for a population that’s being disproportionately crushed by institutional oppression. So, of course, with little to no real infrastructure to protect people who the government has long neglected and abandoned, there will be uprisings and people will take things. They will take because of what’s been taken from them: safety, security, housing, education, food and even their ability to vote. And, of course, protesters are being robbed of the right to express their anger.

This conversation about “looting” always repeats itself. During virtually every Black uprising that has taken place and shaped this country in the last century, the narrative has remained the same. White supremacist assaults on the Black community were dubbed “race riots,” and Black protesters’ self-defense has been framed as senseless violence. People lament the destruction of property because they’ve bought into the idea that it’s another wrong being committed on top of any given white supremacist violence that caused it all. But stealing because you’re being sucked dry by a system that has rendered you disposable is not the same as the ritualistic racist murders of Black people by white supremacists. Decades of “looting” stores during uprisings can’t measure up to what Wall Street has looted through the financial crises it creates.

They are certainly aware of their crimes. Hedge fund capitalists who amass endless amounts of money through slush funds and financial manipulation have many avenues to escape accountability. As the U.S. military prepares for “civil disturbances” and buys riot gear, it’s clear they know that not all people will accept atrocity. In a nation that has never gotten past the civil war it fought over a wealthy class not giving up slavery profits, defending the wealthy is a tradition. The same people who created and currently benefit from the current crisis are intentionally mismanaging plenty of other parts of our existence.

Those interested in liberation should not condemn protesters’ so-called “rioting” and “looting.” Rather, we should be doing all we can to free the imprisoned protesters in Minnesota and wherever else uprisings occur. The robbery we should concern ourselves with is the theft perpetrated by a system that creates desperation where people in need have to go and take for themselves what should be a guaranteed right. Capitalism encourages thievery from the top down. Writing about the Haitian Revolution, the great writer C.L.R. James once said, “The rich are only defeated when running for their lives.” It has certainly been the case time and time again throughout Black history: People have overcome insurmountable odds to claim victories. How should we answer the question, “What do we do in response to a lynching?” We must make the very system that enables it run for its life.



Featured image: Police stand guard outside of a Target store on May 28, 2020, in St. Paul, Minnesota. SCOTT OLSON / GETTY IMAGES

https://orinocotribune.com/forget-looti ... l-robbery/

The suggestion that posting these scenes of police murder might encourage white supremacists(besides those already in uniform...) is just what we'd expect from 'Truth Out'...but the point on the petty booj kneejerk on looting is certainly true.

Defending the wealthy is not 'tradition', it is existential.

Free all the prisoners. Join the people in the street.
"There is great chaos under heaven; the situation is excellent."

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Re: Police, prison and abolition

Post by blindpig » Tue Jun 02, 2020 1:55 pm

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Piles of BRICKS Mysteriously Sprouting up Near Riot Hotspots all Over – US Journalists Demanding Answers

June 2, 2020
Stacks of bricks left seemingly unattended in riot hotspots across the US – as if begging to be snatched and thrown by unruly mobs – have protesters and journalists wondering whether the violent street clashes are orchestrated.

It’s not every day one sees a stack of bricks just lying around unattended, especially when there’s no construction to be seen – but a rash of reports of pallets of bricks turning up as if by magic in over half a dozen cities over the weekend has investigators trying to get to the bottom of who’s seemingly giving would-be rioters the tools they need to turn what began as peaceful protests violent.

Angela Stanton King 🇺🇸
@theangiestanton
People are waking up! This young man says these bricks were conveniently stacked on the sidewalk for them to use! What’s going on here?! #SetUp #GeorgeFloyd

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A group of protesters in Dallas called attention to the unexpected bounty of construction materials near the city’s courthouse on Saturday. “Ain’t no damn construction around here!” a savvy demonstrator says in the clip, while another urges his fellow protesters to “do better.”
angeldemonTV
@angeldemonTV
PATIOS ARE THE VIRUS!

An explosion of patios being built as mysterious free piles of bricks appear nationwide on corners. This here is Dallas.

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Brick sightings soon mushroomed across the Dallas area, complete with humorous comments about a “patio virus” infecting the neighborhood. Commentators had plenty of theories, claiming the rioters’ fairy godmother was “white supremacists” or Antifa, but none delivered conclusive proof.
ELIJAH

@ElijahSchaffer
BREAKING: tonight’s Dallas riot was pre-planned

Organizers were directing the crowd where to go

They had pallets of 100 bricks ready for rioters

They were yelling to the crowd “go left, there are 100 bricks on the corner over there”

This wasn’t random chaos

More info to come

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A Texas journalist called around to local government and found that the city of Dallas was claiming ownership of the bricks, thus triggering a whole new round of speculation – smoking gun, or official incompetence?
Kambree

@KamVTV
So, pallets of bricks are showing up in suburbs of Dallas today in places where they typically would not be placed. Right outside of subdivisions. I’m going to check my city due to photos popping up and rumors of protests.

Don’t mess with Texans.

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The oddly-situated piles of construction materials have been cited by podcaster Tim Pool, conservative organizer Charlie Kirk, and others commenting on the rioting to support claims that outside interests are fueling the most destructive elements.

While the unrest began last Monday in Minneapolis, triggered by the death of a black security guard, George Floyd, who died after a white police officer was filmed kneeling on his neck for seven minutes, protests and riots have since spread across the country, fueled by longstanding racial and class tensions as much as outrage over police brutality.

Another “researcher” has even claimed to have uncovered a connection between the bricks sprouting from sidewalks in Frisco, Texas and Microsoft billionaire Bill Gates. The bricks were said to be delivered by a corporation called AcmeBrick, owned by Berkshire Hathaway, a massive holding company on whose board Gates sat until recently.
B Designs ⭐️⭐️⭐️
@BDesigns6
Brick Pallets in Frisco, TX for rioters/Antifa

Delivered by AcmeBrick, Ft Worth, TX.
Company owned by Berkshire Hathaway, (Gates recently left the board) and Marmon Group, Chicago.
Owned by?
Jay and Robert Pritzger and Berkshire Hathaway

Very deep, YUGE rabbit hole...

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But the Frisco Police Department declared the offending bricks were part of a “planned HOA construction project,” explaining they’d been removed “with permission” to be “returned at a later time.”
Kambree

@KamVTV
So, pallets of bricks are showing up in suburbs of Dallas today in places where they typically would not be placed. Right outside of subdivisions. I’m going to check my city due to photos popping up and rumors of protests.

Don’t mess with Texans.

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And the Kansas City Police Department alerted citizens on Sunday to be on the lookout for rogue brick stashes, warning they were lurking all over the city to be “used during a riot.”


kcpolice

@kcpolice
We have learned of & discovered stashes of bricks and rocks in & around the Plaza and Westport to be used during a riot. If you see anything like this, you can text 911 and let us know so we can remove them. This keeps everyone safe and allows your voice to continue to be heard.

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New York City had its own mysterious brick eruptions in the East Village neighborhood on Saturday night, a vanishingly rare event in a city under constant construction in which unattended building materials tend to vanish in seconds.
Kevin R Hogan
@KRHogan_NTD
"Yo, we got bricks. We got bricks!"—#Rioters in Manhattan chanced upon a cache in the street equipped with bricks and a shovel at 10:01 p.m. on Second Ave between St. Marks Pl. and Seventh St.

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Other images appeared to show police vehicles maneuvering the bricks into place.
A Black Socialist 🌹🏴‍☠️
@SonOfAssata
Uh-oh...Those random ass bricks showing up, guess who's bringing them in to a place where there's no construction?

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CharismaticMegafauna
@radiophotog
· May 30, 2020
Replying to @Freeyourmindkid
I’d live to see surveillance video of who dropped off that load of bricks.


Robert ✌️
@no_more_nazis
The building this guy is standing next to is the Earl Cabell Federal Building in downtown Dallas. There are surveillance cameras all over the place and there is zero chance they can't see who dropped of the bricks and when.

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Certainly, the sudden appearance of heavy piles of masonry takes logistics most protesters are incapable of organizing on the fly. It would seem to be a simple matter for cities – especially in places like New York where every inch of space is watched over by surveillance cameras – to catch the brick bandits in the act. Of course, leaving piles of bricks around in case a riot happens to occur is hardly a crime… yet.

https://orinocotribune.com/piles-of-bri ... g-answers/
"There is great chaos under heaven; the situation is excellent."

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