List of big corps that "own" police
Oil and gas companies, private utilities, and financial institutions that bankroll fossil fuels are all big backers of police foundations, which privately raise money to buy weapons, equipment, and surveillance technology for police departments, bypassing already outsized public police budgets. These corporate actors – from Chevron and Shell to Wells Fargo and JPMorgan Chase – can be found serving as directors and funders of police foundations nationwide. Furthermore, these companies sponsor events and galas that celebrate the police and remind the public that police power is backed up by corporate power.
Who will those police depts serve, the citizens or the "corporate persons"?
- ... Chevron is a “Corporate Partner of the Police” sponsor of the New Orleans Police & Justice Foundation, as well as a board member of the Houston Police Foundation and sponsor of the Houston Police Department’s mounted patrol. It is also donor to and, as of the end of 2018, a board member of the Salt Lake City Police Foundation.
- ... Marathon’s Security Coordinator sits on the board of the Detroit Public Safety Foundation, the city’s police foundation. Marathon is also listed as a “Commanding Sponsor” of the foundation’s fundraising event “Above & Beyond” and a “Bronze Sponsor” of their “Women in Blue” event.
- ... Shell is a “Featured Partner” of the New Orleans Police & Justice Foundation and a sponsor of the Houston Police Department’s Mounted Patrol.
- ... Valero has a board seat on the Corpus Christi Police Foundation’s board of directors, and it is a sponsor of the Houston Police Department’s Mounted Patrol.
- ... Hilcorp’s billionaire co-founder and Chairman Jeff Hildebrand has a board seat on the Houston Police Foundation and is a notable attendee of their fundraising events.
The list continues.
Flag lowered at US consulate in Chengdu as China takes control
Chinese authorities have taken over the US consulate general in Chengdu, marking the diplomatic mission’s official closure and a new low point in ties between the world’s largest economies.
At dawn on Monday, the American flag outside the consulate was lowered while police held back crowds that had gathered over the weekend to watch. At 10am, the mission was closed, according to China’s foreign ministry.
Chinese soldiers goose-stepped in front of the consulate while teams of workers in hazmat suits and officials dressed in white short-sleeved dress shirts and black briefcases entered the mission. Workers draped grey clothes over signs bearing the consulate’s name.
“Competent Chinese authorities entered through the front entrance and took it over,” the foreign ministry said.
U.S.-China engagement is over. Is military conflict next?
At the same time, they say the Trump administration’s “sledgehammer” approach, which seems intent on starting another cold war and leaves no room for dialogue, is counterproductive and disingenuous in its purported concern for Chinese people. It is also dangerous and could lead to outright conflict, they say.
“There are ways to handle the relationship without blasting through it,” said Deborah Seligsohn, who served as a U.S. diplomat for more than two decades, mostly in Asia. “There are ways to weigh the pluses and minuses. It doesn’t have to be this antagonistic.”
How the Cold War Between China and U.S. Is Intensifying (archive)
[...] The New York Times, concerned about the possibility of further limitations on journalists working in China, announced last week that it was relocating much of its major news hub in Hong Kong to Seoul, South Korea.
Previously: U.S. Scoops Up Chinese Spies; "Friendship" Ended
This thing reminded me of the cube when I first saw it.
https://www.newegg.com/white-in-win-a1-plus-mini-itx-tower/p/2AM-001H-001M2
This story made me think of it:
https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2020/07/20-years-ago-steve-jobs-built-the-coolest-computer-ever-and-it-bombed/
This month marks the 20th anniversary of the Power Mac G4 Cube, which debuted July 19, 2000. It also marks the 19th anniversary of Apple’s announcement that it was putting the Cube on ice. That’s not my joke—it’s Apple’s, straight from the headline of its July 3, 2001, press release that officially pulled the plug.
US arrests three Chinese nationals for visa fraud
Three are under arrest while the FBI is seeking to arrest the fourth, who is said to be in China's San Francisco consulate.
FBI agents have also interviewed people in 25 US cities who have an "undeclared affiliation" with China's military.
Prosecutors say it is part of a Chinese plan to send army scientists to the US.
Singapore man admits being Chinese spy in US
Jun Wei Yeo was charged with using his political consultancy in America as a front to collect information for Chinese intelligence, US officials say.
Separately, the US said a Chinese researcher accused of hiding her ties to China's military was detained.
China earlier ordered the closure of the US consulate in Chengdu.
The move to shut down the diplomatic mission in the south-western city was in response to the US closing China's consulate in Houston.
FBI arrests Chinese researcher for visa fraud after she hid at consulate in San Francisco
According to court documents unsealed earlier this week in the Eastern District of California, Juan Tang, a researcher at the University of California, Davis, applied for a nonimmigrant J1 visa in October 2019. The visa was issued in November 2019 and Tang entered the United States a month later.
Tang allegedly made fraudulent statements on her visa application by concealing that she served in the Chinese military. The FBI concluded that Tang was a uniformed officer of the People’s Liberation Army Air Force after photographs of her were uncovered on electronic media seized in accordance with a search warrant.
Officials Push U.S.-China Relations Toward Point of No Return
[...] China’s leader, Xi Jinping, has inflamed the fight, brushing aside international concern about the country’s rising authoritarianism to consolidate his own political power and to crack down on basic freedoms, from Xinjiang to Hong Kong. By doing so, he has hardened attitudes in Washington, fueling a clash that at least some in China believe could be dangerous to the country’s interests.
The combined effect could prove to be Mr. Trump’s most consequential foreign policy legacy, even if it’s not one he has consistently pursued: the entrenchment of a fundamental strategic and ideological confrontation between the world’s two largest economies.
This is just a fun entry. Post personal examples of something you've experienced, if you like. I'll get things started. These weren't the exact words, but it's close enough.
Library Patron:
I forgot what book I returned, it was that red one. Could you find it for me?
Librarian:
Do you know the title or author?
Library Patron:
No, I just can't remember.
Librarian:
Do you remember the subject, maybe we could narrow it down?
Library Patron:
Well, I'm not sure.
Librarian:
I'm not able to query by color of book. Please let me know, if you remember anything else. Anything else I can help you with?
In one of the discussions, it was mentioned that Federal troops were seen in Albuquerque. Email from the White House has the following:
On June 29, 4-year-old LeGend Taliferro was shot and killed in his bed after a gunman opened fire on an apartment complex in Kansas City, Missouri.
This afternoon, President Trump announced the expansion of Operation Legend, an interagency law enforcement effort led by the Department of Justice and named after LeGend. Its purpose is to quell the unacceptable levels of recent violence in U.S. cities.
“My first duty as President is to protect the American people, and today I am taking action to fulfill that sacred obligation,” President Trump said.
? President Trump: Anti-police policy and rhetoric has consequences
Attorney General Bill Barr announced the creation of Operation Legend fewer than 10 days after LeGend’s heartbreaking death. The Justice Department is now surging over 200 federal law enforcement officers into Kansas City to help curb the kind of senseless violence that took the young boy’s life.
The President announced today that the operation will expand into Chicago and Albuquerque. Over the next 3 weeks, the Justice Department plans to further expand the initiative into Cleveland, Detroit, and Milwaukee.
In Chicago, for example, more than 300 federal law enforcement personnel will work with state and local police to help apprehend violent criminals. Just yesterday, another mass shooting in Chicago injured 15 people outside of a funeral service.
More than $61 million will be provided by the Justice Department to hire hundreds of new police officers, and about 200 federal agents and deputy marshals will be permanently reassigned to Operation Legend cities.
“We will never defund the police—we will hire more great police,” President Trump said. “We want to make law enforcement stronger, not weaker. What cities are doing is absolute insanity.”
So, naturally, I went looking around the net.
Wikipedia overview
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Legend
Kansas City news conference
https://www.kansascity.com/news/politics-government/article244416727.html
Buzzfeed article on Chicago and Albuquerque
https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/salvadorhernandez/trump-sending-federal-officers-to-chicago-albuquerque
Mayor of Albuquerque interview on NPR
https://www.npr.org/2020/07/22/894449060/albuquerque-mayor-on-trumps-plan-to-send-federal-agents-into-the-city
It seems like, ohhhh, I don't know, maybe Sanctuary Cities are on a list?
https://newspunch.com/full-list-sanctuary-cities-states-usa/
It's "fashionable" to defy the federal government these days. And, camo fatigues are also "fashionable". Enjoy, America!
The smart people in those sanctuary cities will follow my stepson's example, and evacuate.
On the current SN Poll (computer time during COVID lockdowns), I've been able to vote several times. (3 times)
It says (you've already voted).
But then another time, it won't say that, and I can vote again. Usually the next day.
Maybe SN is limiting votes to one per day. I've been able to vote (the same vote) "Not Changed" for three times now. And the vote count does increase.
I can only conclude:
* This multiple voting thing cannot be allowed
* It could bring down our entire society
* Anyone who would vote more than once is reprehensible
* All US election systems need to adopt this amazing technology
Ukraine Hostage Standoff Ends After President Agrees To Promote Joaquin Phoenix Film
A hostage standoff on a bus in western Ukraine ended Tuesday after a bizarre demand from the captor was met when the country's president publicly recommended a 15-year-old animal rights documentary narrated by Joaquin Phoenix.
Just before the end of the 12-hour standoff in Lutsk, a city located some 250 miles west of Kyiv, President Volodymyr Zelenskiy posted a video clip to his Facebook page stating: "Everyone should watch the 2005 film Earthlings."
The post has since been deleted.
A police force.
In unmarked vehicles.
Unmarked uniforms.
That arrests, beats, and detains random people off the street.
(in a campaign of government sponsored terror!)
With no records of these arrests and beatings.
The victims simply "released" with no charges.
Like it never happened.
If this isn't a "Secret Police" force, I don't know what is.
It sounds like Trump is finally taking the US closer to the type of leadership he likes in Russia, China and North Korea.
But we still don't have military parades.
If Trump's government can ignore the 1st, 4th and 5th amendments, then can it also ignore the 2nd? Shouldn't those others be at least as important as the 2nd? After all, the 2nd is NOT going to stop the government from taking away your other rights.
<no-sarcasm>
1. Send rioters to turn peaceful protests into something not peaceful
2. Send in unidentified federal thugs to harass / arrest people, with no record of such interactions -- because the situation is out of control!
3. Profit!
Sounds like a 3rd world dictatorship in action. Or China.
Wasn't this country founded with people protesting grievances once those grievances grew intolerable?
Racism is more deeply entrenched in the USA than I would have believed. Maybe because I'm naive white privilege.
</no-sarcasm>
One more unrelated thing: the best way to help unemployed people would be a payroll tax cut.
The Psi Corps is your friend. Trust the Corps.