lol Candace Owen replaced with sage Steele. So woke making that character be black sounding.
They were both problematic back in the day, but Kimmel kind of grew up and decided to be a bit less misogynistic and dumb while Carolla decided to double down on his aging 90âs frat boy shtick.
Yes, exactly.
When I walked the Camino de Santiago, the Koreans I met would all wear full log sleeve shirts, long pants, wide-brim hats, and sometimes even gloves. This was in May, and we had many days get into the high 80s.
Because they were all also very devout Catholics who were there for the actual religious aspects of the pilgrimage and the papal indulgence, etc, I asked if that was why they covered up. I was quickly informed that no, to them, tan = lower class.
Even our glycine isnât safe.
Was it in this thread that I heard that Maher refused to not smoke weed during his interview of Stevo when Stevo (who is in recovery) asked him to?
https://x.com/tplohetski/status/1791186036116111386
This was a guy who posted a bunch of racist stuff, said he was going to go to a BLM protest to shoot people, then went to a BLM protest, drove his car into a protest and then shot a guy who was (legally) open carrying.
He then claimed self defense and that his racist stuff was just army barracks humor.
Vigilantism is slowly being normalized
https://x.com/cd_hooks/status/1791194458467225948
I mean the answer is the law is outcome based, so it protects the one those in power want to protect.
Exactly this. And it applies to basically all laws, not just this one.
There are so many areas of law where you are responsible for the reasonably foreseeable negative consequences of your actions.
Yet somehow there needs to be a special carve out for taking guns to protestsâŚ
Was mentioned on UP, not sure where
That number is not high enough
Is this one where the feds can step in?
(As a concept, I think that this two sovereigns deal is really double jeopardy for the same crime). But themes the rules so Iâd be ok with this shitbag getting got by the feds.
The law does not recognize a carve out in this circumstance. He was convicted. Getting pardoned is a political decision.
So. IANAL but my under is that stand your ground does.
I.e
It doesnât matter how you acted to get into a situation, or whether you should have foreseen harm, the defining factor is purely based on the scenario at the time.
Chris Hooks writes about the case
Thatâs doubtful, for the reason Attorney General Ken Paxton laid out in his statement about the case. Paxton ranks as the top law enforcement official in Texas. Most AGs would be a little circumspect about commenting on a high-profile criminal case like this. But not our Ken. Abbottâs pardon was important to deliver, Paxton said, as a kind of psychological balm. Texans had been âpraying for justice after BLM riots terrorized the nation in 2020.â You could say that was a non sequitur. What do the protests have to do with Perryâs claim to self-defense? But the two are not unrelated; the link between them goes to the heart of the matter.
The protests in 2020 didnât terrorize âthe nation,â but they did terrify a significant portion of it. And some of those folks wanted to see blood spilled. Rittenhouse and Perry satisfied a carnal need. What terrified many was not just the sight of Black protesters on the streets, and occasional scenes of buildings in flames, but also the possibility that the country was actually engaged in the reckoning over racial justice that protesters on the leftâand all Americans horrified by irruptions of police violenceâthought was possible. Some portion of the right cried out for the utopians to be disciplined. Perry provided a measure of that discipline.
Abbott rewarded him for it, just as he rewarded Austin police officer Justin Berry. When Berry was indicted in 2022 on charges he had used excessive force on protestors at a BLM rally in 2020, Abbott responded by endorsing his bid for the state House and then, when he lost, appointing him to the state commission that sets standards for law enforcement. (The charges against Berry were later dropped by Garza, who requested the Department of Justice investigate the police departmentâs practices at large.)
You see this desire for punishment again and again across the decades. When the idealist students at Kent State, peacefully protesting the Vietnam War, were disciplined by a unit of the Ohio National Guard, which killed four and wounded nine protestors in 1970, many Americans cheered it. The Houston Post wrote in an editorial that the shooting of students was in large part the result of âpermissiveness in child-rearing,â which had led the young to think they could challenge the old order. âAt the very least,â the paper wrote, âit would appear that they have not yet learned the necessity of submitting to discipline.â
Texas is not a military dictatorship, and Abbott did not send Perry to attack Black Lives Matter protesters. We are not yet in the Years of Lead. But the unjustified pardon of Perry is a form of state crime, and itâs ugly. Whatâs next? The news of the pardon came soon after Abbott deployed state police, heavily armed, to crack down on another peaceful protest movement that is unpopular among his supporters: the rallies at the University of Texas in Austin against Israelâs conduct during its war against Hamas in Gaza. What strange forces are waiting in the wings who have taken the wrong lesson from what Abbott did this week? What will Abbott doâor fail to doâwhen they act?
This is a good way of framing it. Itâs like a loophole that allows the state to engage in violence without explicitly ordering the violence. Similar to the abortion bounty law in that sense.
âThe purpose is not solely religious,â Sen. Jay Morris, R-West Monroe, told the Senate. Rather, it is the Ten Commandmentsâ "historical significance, which is simply one of many documents that display the history of our country and foundation of our legal system.â
Horton has previously defended her bill, saying during a House debate last month that the Ten Commandments are the âbasis of all laws in Louisianaâ and arguing that the legislation honors the countryâs religious origins.
âIâm not concerned with an atheist. Iâm not concerned with a Muslim,â she said when asked about teachers who might not subscribe to the Ten Commandments. âIâm concerned with our children looking and seeing what Godâs law is.â
If this doesnât get struck down in some federal district court somewhere, we really have turned away from American principles.
Id really love to see LSUâs enrollment numbers just drop off a cliff