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Investigators Say There's No Video Evidence of What Led to Shooting of Black Man in Minneapolis Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=52792"><span class="small">Zack Linly, The Root</span></a>   
Sunday, 06 June 2021 13:15

Linly writes: "Until every law enforcement agency in America learns that transparency is key in regards to police-involved deaths of Black people, they can expect to see civil unrest. Law enforcement in America has earned that distrust."

Police stand guard after protesters set fire to dumpsters after a vigil for Winston Boogie Smith Jr. early on Saturday. (photo: Christian Monterrosa/AP)
Police stand guard after protesters set fire to dumpsters after a vigil for Winston Boogie Smith Jr. early on Saturday. (photo: Christian Monterrosa/AP)


Investigators Say There's No Video Evidence of What Led to Shooting of Black Man in Minneapolis

By Zack Linly, The Root

06 June 21

 

f George Floyd’s murder wasn’t recorded by a bystander and shown to the world, there is little doubt that Derek Chauvin would be free today and that he and the other three officers charged in Floyd’s death would still be policing the streets of Minneapolis. It’s also a fact that sometimes cops lie in their reports with the expectation that they will be taken at face value by virtue of them being cops.

So it’s no surprise that members of the Minneapolis community and the family of 32-year-old Winston Boogie Smith Jr.—a Black man who was fatally shot in the city Thursday by members of a U.S. Marshals Service task force—aren’t buying the authorities’ narrative that it was a clean shoot citing the fact that the marshals weren’t wearing body cameras and investigators said there is no video evidence available to determine what led up to the shooting. Not only were the task force members not wearing body-cams, but they aren’t allowed to wear them.

The Washington Post reports that U.S. Marshals and the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension (BCA), which is investigating the shooting, said that Smith had a warrant for a felony firearms violation. The task force aptly known as the North Star Fugitive Task Force (*face-palm* Jesus, Mary and slave patrols) said that Smith didn’t comply with their orders and that he “produced a handgun resulting in task force members firing upon the subject.”

The BCA said in a statement that there was evidence that indicated that Smith fired a gun from inside his car, so it’s entirely plausible that this was a justified shoot. The problem is, we may never know definitively how things unfolded because of another tidbit in the BCA’s report.

“The U.S. Marshal Service currently does not allow the use of body cameras for officers serving on its North Star Fugitive Task Force,” the bureau said. “There is no squad camera footage of the incident.”

Listen: I’ve never had a job in law enforcement, so I’m clearly not an authority on the matter, but I’m sure I’m not alone in wondering why the hell any law enforcement department would disallow officers to wear a body-cam unless they know damn well how much easier it is to cover one’s ass when a lack of video evidence makes taking artistic liberty in an official report more convenient.

I’m not even saying the U.S. Marshalls are lying—I’m saying there are multiple sides to every story, that one person is no longer alive to give his side and that video footage would have been able to provide more reliable truth than anyone involved could provide without said footage.

Suffice it to say, the community and family members of Smith aren’t going along with it.

From the Post:

His family criticized law enforcers’ depiction of Smith and said that while he was trying to “turn over a new leaf,” police were “using his past to tarnish his character.”

“They’re using his past to diminish that what he was trying to do in the present,” Smith’s sister Tiesha Floyd said during a Friday news conference.

Family members and friends said Smith was a father of three who enjoyed music and writing comedy sketches. Shelly Hopkins, who was in a longtime relationship with Smith, described him to the Associated Press as a spiritual man who cared most of all about making people happy and being there for his children. Hopkins told the news outlet that Smith had legal troubles but that police “tried to make a case against him that didn’t exist.”

Toshira Garraway, a Minneapolis community activist and founder of Families Supporting Families Against Police Violence, said during the Friday news conference that she does not believe the BCA’s explanation.

“We no longer have faith in just believing the narratives that the police give us. They have forfeited their right to just tell us a story,” Garraway said. “We need facts, and the fact is any video footage. And we refuse to believe that no one has any video footage after all those departments showed up yesterday.”

According to the Star Tribune, protests and vigils on behalf of Smith continued through Friday and leading into Saturday morning. In some instances, things grew contentious between protesters and police.

From the Tribune:

Activists blocked traffic at busy Lake Street and Hennepin Avenue during the Friday evening rush hour. Minneapolis police officers on bikes moved in to try to take control of the busy intersection, but protesters later blocked Lake Street again with a makeshift barricade of motorcycles, bike racks and dumpsters. There were some standoffs between protesters and officers throughout the night.

Until every law enforcement agency in America learns that transparency is key in regards to police-involved deaths of Black people, they can expect to see civil unrest. Law enforcement in America has earned that distrust.

If the people aren’t satisfied that justice is being done then “no justice, no peace” often becomes the default, just as law enforcement tends to consider the reports of officers to be the defacto “truth.”

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Narendra Modi Turned COVID-19 Into a Catastrophe for India Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=59707"><span class="small">Somdeep Sen, Jacobin</span></a>   
Sunday, 06 June 2021 13:12

Sen writes: "India's experience of COVID-19 has gone from crisis to catastrophe in recent months. Responsibility for the disaster lies squarely with Narendra Modi's right-wing government, which has consistently prioritized its own political interests over public health."

The coronavirus's second wave in India has been accompanied by packed hospital wards and oxygen shortages. (photo: Parveen Kumar/Hindustan Times/Getty Images)
The coronavirus's second wave in India has been accompanied by packed hospital wards and oxygen shortages. (photo: Parveen Kumar/Hindustan Times/Getty Images)


Narendra Modi Turned COVID-19 Into a Catastrophe for India

By Somdeep Sen, Jacobin

06 June 21


India’s experience of COVID-19 has gone from crisis to catastrophe in recent months. Responsibility for the disaster lies squarely with Narendra Modi’s right-wing government, which has consistently prioritized its own political interests over public health.

n May 19, India set an unenviable world record, having reported 4,500 COVID-19 deaths in the previous twenty-four hours. The country’s death toll is now inching toward 350,000. The Institute of Health Metrics and Evaluation predicts that this figure will reach one million by August.

An impending public-health crisis already seemed likely in the early months of 2020, when experts listed India as a high-risk country for the spread of COVID-19 beyond China. Many people expected that its crumbling public health care system would not be able to cope with a serious outbreak of the virus.

It appeared that India had avoided the worst-case scenario. In March this year, the Union Health Minister declared that the country was in the endgame of the epidemic. He boasted that India was well prepared for a nationwide vaccination drive and had also supplied vaccines to seventeen low- and middle-income countries.

A month later, the country was facing a shortage of vaccines, medical oxygen, and hospital beds. The Lancet criticized Prime Minister Narendra Modi for ignoring the warning signs of a second wave and for his catastrophic mismanagement of a national public-health crisis.

A pandemic is rarely just a public-health concern: it is also a matter of politics. The actions of Modi have greatly worsened the trajectory of India’s pandemic. India’s leader has treated it as an opportunity to shore up his cult of personality after significant policy failures. The results have been disastrous.

An Inevitable Crisis

Access to health care — or the lack thereof — depends on the extent to which health care services are affordable, of acceptable quality, and physically accessible. The Indian constitution guarantees access to health care for all citizens. However, an institutionally weak and resource-starved public health care system has meant that India’s private health care sector is responsible for the majority of inpatient and outpatient care.

The largely unregulated private sector is unreliable in terms of quality of services. In addition, the costly out-of-pocket payments drive vulnerable sections of the population that mostly lack insurance further into poverty. Just as the wealthiest 10 percent of India’s population holds 77 percent of the national wealth, similar levels of inequality govern access to an acceptable standard of health care during the pandemic.

Predictably, public and private hospitals ran out of beds very quickly during the second wave of the pandemic in India’s congested urban centers, where social distancing and sanitation are the preserve of the privileged few. Without a centralized coordination system, oxygen producers in the east of the country have struggled to match the medical oxygen needs of the hardest-hit regions in northern and western India. This led to the heartbreaking scenes of patients dying, often at the doorsteps of hospitals that were not equipped to deal with the surge.

Of course, the poorest inhabitants of India’s cities are the worst affected. They are the ones most exposed to the risk of contracting the virus and least able to pay for necessary medical care. In rural India, the majority of the population also lacks access to adequate health services, and the spread of the pandemic has gone unchecked and underreported.

Policy Failures

A public-health crisis was therefore entirely predictable, but Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) government didn’t approach the pandemic from this standpoint. It was mainly preoccupied with containing any potential challenge to Modi’s leadership, which was already reeling from a series of policy failures.

As the pandemic began, Modi’s credentials as a prime minister who could preside over economic growth and development that was free of corruption and beneficial to the ordinary citizen seemed to be in question. India was experiencing the worst economic downturn in three decades.

Modi’s headline economic initiative had produced uneven results. The demonetization of five-hundred- and one-thousand-rupee banknotes was supposed to curb the circulation of fake bills, black money, and terrorist funding. But the government’s implementation of the policy was haphazard. In the short term, it resulted in a severe shortage of cash, a rise in unemployment, and a significant decline in income and economic activity.

As the pandemic unfolded, the Modi government’s economic policies came under scrutiny again when it passed new farm laws in September 2020. The laws open up the agricultural industry to major corporate players and leave small farmers exposed to market forces. Six state governments have voted against the new federal bills. There has been a nationwide strike and farmers from nearby states have regularly marched to New Delhi since November of last year to protest the new laws.

Modi’s tenure has also been marked by religious strife as he seeks to bolster his Hindu nationalist credentials. We have seen an increase in anti-Muslim violence, government policies curbing the slaughter of cattle, the Citizenship Amendment Act of 2019 that limits the access of Muslims to citizenship, as well as the revocation of Kashmir’s special status in the constitution. The government has clamped down severely on opposition to these measures, especially in the Kashmir Valley, where it shut down the internet, cell phones, landlines, and cable TV for days.

Modi’s PR Campaign

With few policy successes to speak of, Modi mounted a sustained effort to build up his public image during the pandemic. He declared March 22, 2020, to be a people’s curfew, encouraging citizens to bang pots and pans at 5 PM that day in support of frontline health care workers. On April 9 last year, he asked citizens to light candles and lamps at 9 PM for nine minutes in solidarity against the pandemic. These campaigns had little effect on the outbreak, but they received widespread support from prominent public figures on social media, with many hailing Modi’s leadership in a time of crisis.

When Modi ordered a national lockdown with four hours’ notice, it had a devastating impact on the vulnerable population of urban and rural areas. The BJP boasted that the lockdown received a score of 100 on the Stringency Index, citing this as evidence of Modi’s effective crisis management. However, this measure of “stringency” had very little to do with the efficacy of policies against the spread of the virus.

Modi and his allies have depicted the fight against the pandemic as a personal struggle for the Indian leader. When his government set up the Prime Minister’s Citizen Assistance and Relief in Emergency Situations Fund in March 2020, many people questioned the rationale behind it. After all, there was still unused money left over in the long-established Prime Minister’s National Relief Fund. But one clear advantage of the new fund was that its title could be abbreviated to “PM CARES,” symbolizing Modi’s direct involvement. It was also a way for pro-Modi corporate donors to channel funds they had already allocated to corporate social responsibility, or CSR.

The BJP has framed the ongoing vaccination drive as a personal victory for Modi. In contrast with other countries, where vaccination certificates bear the logo of the national health and disease control authorities, India’s certificates have an image of the prime minister with the message “Together, India will defeat COVID-19.”

Many observers have blamed the recent spike on the Kumbh Mela, a religious gathering held in Haridwar in the state of Uttar Pradesh, which saw millions of people gathering on the banks of the River Ganges. Conducted without any precautionary measures, it may have well been the world’s single largest super-spreader event. Allowing the festival to take place was a political decision in a BJP-led state: it was meant to show that India was now in the endgame of the pandemic.

Against the advice of public-health officials, assembly elections also went ahead in several states during March and April. The large campaign rallies and long polling lines resulted in an immediate surge of infections. In West Bengal, where the BJP was anxious to overthrow the ruling Trinamool Congress (TMC) government, Modi flooded the state with the ruling party’s resources. While the BJP eventually lost the West Bengal contest, the party’s rallies contributed to the highest-ever infection numbers in the state.

Modi and his Hindu nationalist government have also faced criticism globally. Many consider his handling of the second wave to be a severe failure of leadership and foresight. But the BJP was still more concerned with censoring criticism on social media platforms than addressing the ongoing public-health crisis.

The vast human cost of the pandemic was painfully evident when hundreds of bodies washed up on the banks of the Ganges. While this tragedy was unfolding, the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) arrested four leaders of the TMC on May 17 in Kolkata in connection with a highly publicized corruption case.

The timing of the arrests led many to suspect that Modi is deploying federal institutions against the BJP’s rivals. TMC cadres protested in violation of the lockdown and attacked the local offices of the CBI.

At present, Modi is also pushing on with the Central Vista Project, a $2.8 billion redevelopment plan that is meant to revamp the central administrative area of the national capital. His government has respond to criticism by claiming that the project will “ensure readiness of the country in terms of progressive infrastructure and public facilities.”

While Modi’s administration has invoked the Essential Services Act to allow laborers to work on the project in New Delhi, it previously neglected to do so in order to secure supplies of medical oxygen during a shortage. It is once again evident that the pandemic in India is a public-health crisis that is also inseparable from the country’s political struggles.

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FOCUS: We Can't Dismiss the Restoration of Captain Crazypants or Ignore Him and Hope He'll Go Away Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=11104"><span class="small">Charles Pierce, Esquire</span></a>   
Sunday, 06 June 2021 12:01

Pierce writes: "That didn't work last time, and Maggie Haberman was right to report Donald Trump is saying he'll be restored to the presidency."

Donald Trump. (photo: Andrew Harrer/Getty Images)
Donald Trump. (photo: Andrew Harrer/Getty Images)


We Can't Dismiss the Restoration of Captain Crazypants or Ignore Him and Hope He'll Go Away

By Charles Pierce, Esquire

06 June 21


That didn't work last time, and Maggie Haberman was right to report Donald Trump is saying he'll be restored to the presidency.

ormally, I do not pay a lot of attention to Sub-Left’nant Blimp of the National Review, but I figure that his sources on the Right are better than mine, so I present without comment the latest installment of The Adventures of Captain Crazypants and His Howling Morons.

Two days ago, the New York Times’s Maggie Haberman reported that Donald Trump “has been telling a number of people he’s in contact with that he expects he will get reinstated by August.” In response, many figures on the right inserted their fingers into their ears and started screaming about fake news.

Instead, they should have listened — because Haberman’s reporting was correct. I can attest, from speaking to an array of different sources, that Donald Trump does indeed believe quite genuinely that he — along with former senators David Perdue and Martha McSally — will be “reinstated” to office.

At the time Haberman reported this, too many people lost their minds. Of course, this has news value. If the most immediate former president* has gone this cuckoo bananas, and is already planning to crank up his wankfests again, that’s a helluva story. It’s possible that both Haberman and the Sub Left’nant are getting this from Republicans pleading with the world to rescue them from the stubby little clutches of the former president*. Considering that the Republicans in the Congress are doing everything they can to sustain the damage his administration did to, well, everything, I find it hard to summon up much sympathy in that case.

But, whatever its source, there is absolutely no question that we have a right to know this particular detail. If he shows up on the 12th at Bedminster with his body painted blue and bellowing about His Imperial Majesty, surely nobody would begrudge us the video. Like it or not, he’s a force in the political world until proven otherwise, if only because the rest of the Republican Party is terrified of crossing him. His daughter-in-law, rumored to be the next member of the family to run for a political office for which they're utterly unqualified, says she’s not concerned about the possibility of a Restoration in August. Neither is anyone else, but that’s not the point. There is still a level of dangerous mischief he can play in a country just now coming out of the pandemic and his towering misrule. That’s news, folks. You may recall how well “Ignore him and he’ll go away” worked as a strategy a mere six years ago. Democracy is a slow-moving target right now.

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FOCUS: My Trip to Europe Is About America Rallying the World's Democracies Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=59706"><span class="small">Joe Biden, The Washington Post</span></a>   
Sunday, 06 June 2021 10:52

Biden writes: "On Wednesday, I depart for Europe on the first foreign travel of my presidency."

President Joe Biden. (photo: WP)
President Joe Biden. (photo: WP)


My Trip to Europe Is About America Rallying the World's Democracies

By Joe Biden, The Washington Post

06 June 21

 

n Wednesday, I depart for Europe on the first foreign travel of my presidency. It is a trip stacked with meetings with many of our closest democratic partners — including the Group of Seven nations, our NATO allies and the leadership of the European Union — before concluding by meeting with Vladimir Putin. In this moment of global uncertainty, as the world still grapples with a once-in-a-century pandemic, this trip is about realizing America’s renewed commitment to our allies and partners, and demonstrating the capacity of democracies to both meet the challenges and deter the threats of this new age.

Whether it is ending the covid-19 pandemic everywhere, meeting the demands of an accelerating climate crisis, or confronting the harmful activities of the governments of China and Russia, the United States must lead the world from a position of strength. Thanks to the American Rescue Plan and our domestic vaccination strategy, our economy is now growing faster than at any time in almost 40 years. We have created more jobs in the first four months of our administration than under any other president. Wages are increasing for American workers. And, as America’s economic recovery helps to propel the global economy, we will be stronger and more capable when we are flanked by nations that share our values and our vision for the future — by other democracies.

That’s the agenda I will advance at every stop. In the United Kingdom, after meeting with Prime Minister Boris Johnson to affirm the special relationship between our nations, I will participate in the G-7 summit. This group of leading democracies and economies has not met in person in two years due to the coronavirus. Ending this pandemic, improving health security for all nations and driving a robust, inclusive global economic recovery will be our top priorities.

Already, the G-7 finance ministers have made an unprecedented commitment to build momentum for a global minimum tax rate of at least 15 percent to end the race-to-the-bottom on corporate taxation. And with the United States back in the chair on the issue of climate change, we have an opportunity to deliver ambitious progress that curbs the climate crisis and creates jobs by driving a global clean-energy transition.

Just as it does at home, honing the ability of democracies to compete and protecting our people against unforeseen threats requires us to invest in infrastructure. The world’s major democracies will be offering a high-standard alternative to China for upgrading physical, digital and health infrastructure that is more resilient and supports global development.

As new technologies reshape our world in fundamental ways, exposing vulnerabilities like ransomware attacks and creating threats such as invasive AI-driven surveillance, the democracies of the world must together ensure that our values govern the use and development of these innovations — not the interests of autocrats.

Those shared democratic values are the foundation of the most successful alliance in world history. In Brussels, at the NATO summit, I will affirm the United States’ unwavering commitment to Article 5 and to ensuring our alliance is strong in the face of every challenge, including threats like cyberattacks on our critical infrastructure.

While in Brussels, I’ll meet with the president of the European Commission and the president of the European Council to discuss how the United States and Europe can work in close coordination on global challenges. We will focus on ensuring that market democracies, not China or anyone else, write the 21st-century rules around trade and technology. And we will continue to pursue the goal of a Europe whole, free and at peace.

So, when I meet with Vladimir Putin in Geneva, it will be after high-level discussions with friends, partners and allies who see the world through the same lens as the United States, and with whom we have renewed our connections and shared purpose. We are standing united to address Russia’s challenges to European security, starting with its aggression in Ukraine, and there will be no doubt about the resolve of the United States to defend our democratic values, which we cannot separate from our interests.

In my phone calls with President Putin, I have been clear and direct. The United States does not seek conflict. We want a stable and predictable relationship where we can work with Russia on issues like strategic stability and arms control. That’s why I acted immediately to extend the New START treaty for five years and bolster the security of the American people and the world.

At the same time, I have also imposed meaningful consequences for behaviors that violate U.S. sovereignty, including interference in our democratic elections. And President Putin knows that I will not hesitate to respond to future harmful activities. When we meet, I will again underscore the commitment of the United States, Europe and like-minded democracies to stand up for human rights and dignity.

This is a defining question of our time: Can democracies come together to deliver real results for our people in a rapidly changing world? Will the democratic alliances and institutions that shaped so much of the last century prove their capacity against modern-day threats and adversaries? I believe the answer is yes. And this week in Europe, we have the chance to prove it.

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Mike Pence Wants the Votes of His Own Hangmen Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=11104"><span class="small">Charles Pierce, Esquire</span></a>   
Sunday, 06 June 2021 08:27

Pierce writes: "The former veep and his former boss have agreed to disagree about that whole 'Hang Mike Pence' thing."

Vice President Mike Pence. (photo: Getty Images)
Vice President Mike Pence. (photo: Getty Images)


Mike Pence Wants the Votes of His Own Hangmen

By Charles Pierce, Esquire

06 June 21


The former veep and his former boss have agreed to disagree about that whole "Hang Mike Pence" thing.

t is said that, immediately before the ax fell, Sir Thomas More told the headsman not “to fear your office, you send me to God.” I always thought that was just a tad too generous, but hey, different strokes for different martyrs. Anyway, up in New Hampshire on Thursday, former Vice President Mike Pence took the opportunity to tell the mob that attacked the Capitol chanting that he should be hung that it was very impolite to have done so, and that he and his former boss disagree on whether the crowd should have been chanting for Mike Pence to be hung, but hey, what about that tax cut, huh? From 10Boston:

As I said that day, Jan. 6 was a dark day in history of the United States Capitol. But thanks to the swift action of the Capitol Police and federal law enforcement, violence was quelled. The Capitol was secured…And that same day, we reconvened the Congress and did our duty under the Constitution and the laws of the United States. You know, President Trump and I have spoken many times since we left office. And I don't know if we'll ever see to eye on that day. But I will always be proud of what we accomplished for the American people over the last four years.

My god, Mike Pence is a weird man. We all are still mocking Ted Cruz for supporting the former president* after the latter slandered Cruz’s wife and his father. Here we have Mike Pence, supporting the guy who incited the posse that wanted to serve him with a necktie party. That is a singularly weird man.

That he’s dumb as a sack of hair is a given. The rest of his speech in New Hampshire was a whole mess of the latest conjuring words—“critical race theory” and “Joe Biden is a radical” boogedy-boogedy.

I will not allow Democrats or their allies in the media to use one tragic day to discredit the aspirations of millions of Americans. Or allow Democrats or their allies in the media to distract our attention from a new administration intent on dividing our country to advance the radical agenda...My fellow Republicans, for our country, for our future, for our children and our grandchildren, we must move forward, united.

The aspiration shared by hundreds of Americans on that “tragic day” was to dangle Mike Pence like a piñata on the National Mall. Were I Mike Pence, I might want to discredit that aspiration going forward, especially if I wanted to run for president, which he apparently does. But he is a Republican in 2021, and not a particularly bright one, either. He needs the vigilante caucus. He needs his hangman’s vote.

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