j_roby

joined 1 year ago
[–] [email protected] 5 points 1 month ago

Oregonian here. There's currently over 100 fires burning across our state. 5 of them currently considered mega-fires.

Our state-level firefighters, as well as the federal-level are seriously, seriously underpaid. If you're the letter-to-politician-writing type, please help advocate for better pay and benefits for our firefighters

[–] [email protected] 11 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago)

I really thought that the headline had to be at least just a little hyperbolic...

Nope. It's for real.

https://nitter.poast.org/cologop/status/1797738810509537482

What the actual fuck...

E: original twitter link

[–] [email protected] 4 points 3 months ago (1 children)

"A fascist trained today. Did you?"

[–] [email protected] 2 points 6 months ago

Oddisee is such an amazing lyricist

[–] [email protected] 1 points 6 months ago

Hell yea. I got these saved for later!

I feel like you'll probably really enjoy Charlie Parr as well, if you don't already know him

[–] [email protected] 4 points 6 months ago (2 children)

I really enjoyed that, thank you

[–] [email protected] 4 points 6 months ago

You're not wrong, and maybe they should have initially responded to the person who called them out. But this whole conversation could've turned into a dumpster fire in a number of different ways.

I believe the response given was absolutely worth commending. It showed compassion and maturity - things that are all too often lacking in internet discourse.

[–] [email protected] 15 points 6 months ago (4 children)

This is a wonderfully levelheaded response.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 6 months ago

Thanks for the work you do

[–] [email protected] 36 points 6 months ago (3 children)

At this time, any further comments on the cause of death are currently pending until toxicology results and other ancillary testing results are received,” the statement says. (Emphasis mine)

Benedict was able to walk out of the bathroom after the Feb. 7 fight but was taken to a hospital by their family and sent home that night. The next day, paramedics were dispatched to the home for a medical emergency and took Benedict to a hospital emergency room, where they later died, police said.

I really hope this doesn't turn out to be self-inflicted... Either that, or that's the angle the officials are hoping to imply in the meantime. This whole thing is so heartbreaking....

[–] [email protected] 6 points 6 months ago (1 children)

Can't argue with that lol

 
 
 

Georgia refuses to release evidence from police shooting of Cop City activist

Experts say decision not to make evidence available to family of Manuel Paez Terán or public sets ‘frightening’ precedent Timothy Pratt Mon 16 Oct 2023 06.00 EDT Last modified on Mon 16 Oct 2023 12.05 EDT

The state of Georgia is refusing to release evidence tied to the police shooting and killing of an activist protesting a police and fire department training center known as “Cop City”, prompting concern from police accountability experts who say this sets a “frightening” precedent .

District attorney George Christian released a 31-page report earlier this month concluding that the 18 January shooting of Manuel Paez Terán, or “Tortuguita”, was “objectively reasonable”. Paez Terán was one of a small group of “forest defenders” camping in a wooded public park to protest Cop City, planned for a separate part of the forest south-east of Atlanta, Georgia, less than a mile away. Dozens of officers from multiple agencies raided the park; the state claims Paez Terán fired a gun first, prompting six officers to shoot the activist. The activist sustained 57 gunshot wounds and died nearly instantly. FILE - Vienna holds a photo of their slain partner, Tortuguita, in Atlanta on Thursday, Jan. 26, 2023. A prosecutor says on Friday, Oct. 6, no charges will be sought against Georgia state troopers who shot and killed an activist at the site of a planned police and firefighter training center near Atlanta. (AP Photo/R.J. Rico, File) Shot 14 times, no charges for police: family’s grief over death of Cop City activist Read more

The Georgia bureau of investigation (GBI), the agency charged with the investigation, also announced that the evidence would not be released to the Paez Terán family or to the public because the movement itself is the subject of a separate “criminal investigation and prosecution”. That evidence includes “photographs, audio witness interviews, crime scene drawings and reports, forensic lab reports … and body camera (video and audio)”.

Jon Feinberg, a Philadelphia civil rights attorney and incoming president of the National Police Accountability Project (NPAP), called the announcement “unique and chilling”.

The state’s Rico, or racketeering, indictment issued last month is the reason behind withholding the evidence. That indictment alleges that 61 people belong to a criminal conspiracy in connection with opposing Cop City. The case will probably drag on for years, well beyond the two-year statute of limitations for any lawsuit the family might have been interested in pursuing if their attorneys could obtain the investigative file.

Experts across the nation were stunned at the state’s decision.

“I have not heard of another case like this where a prosecutor cites Rico charges/investigations into a movement as a reason not to release information” about a police killing, said Samuel Sinyangwe, founder of the Police Scorecard, a data-based evaluation of state-by-state policing in the US.

Jeff Filipovits, one of the Paez Terán family’s Atlanta-based attorneys – whose firm has five decades of experience litigating police shootings – told the Guardian: “Every other case we’ve been involved in – this is the time at which the file is released.”

Feinberg emphasized that “conclusions without evidence are essentially worthless”. In this case, he added, “the message that it communicates … is that police officers can kill you and hide details, because you’re a member of a movement.” people with signs saying we do not want cop city Protesters in Atlanta’s Gresham Park. Photograph: Steve Eberhardt/Zuma Press Wire/Shutterstock

Similarly, Lauren Bonds, executive director of NPAP, said: “Any time there isn’t transparency around use of force by state actors, the greater the risk of being targeted for first amendment-protected activities.”

The effect may be most felt in protests against policing itself. After George Floyd’s killing, “what you saw was a [police] use of force that was different, an increased aggression … as a response to when they are the subjects of protest,” said Bonds.

Tying the decision to withhold state’s evidence to the investigation of those who oppose the planned training center “feels like a thinly veiled threat to any movement to stop cop cities anywhere”, said Alejandro Villalpando, a California State University Los Angeles professor who researches state violence.

Paez Terán, who used they/them pronouns, had been camping in the wooded public park on and off for months by 18 January. They did so alongside other “forest defenders” opposed to the $90m training center. As part of the police operation aimed at getting them out of the forest described in the special prosecutor’s report, six Georgia state patrol troopers came to Paez Terán’s tent that morning, ordered them to come out, and fired pepper balls at the tent when they did not comply. Paez Terán fired four shots in response, wounding one officer. The troopers shot back and killed the activist, according to the report.

None of the troopers wore body cams. There were members of a handful of other agencies nearby, but it is unclear from the report what they witnessed. Atlanta police released some body-cam videos taken nearby in late January that appeared to show officers talking about hearing friendly fire. Within weeks, the GBI asked the police not to release more of them, citing the ongoing investigation into the shooting.

Paez Terán’s death galvanized a broad-based movement already in its third year that includes grassroots activists, academics, environmentalists, teachers, lawyers and unions, who share concerns about the climate crisis, police abuse of power and environmental racism.

It also began the family’s search for answers, which has lasted nearly nine months. Earlier this month, Paez Terán’s brother Daniel, mother Belkis, and father Joel came to Georgia from as far away as Panama to meet with the prosecutor ahead of the state releasing its decision on the shooting. four people holding photo of Manuel Paez Terán The family of Manuel Paez Terán. ‘It’s almost like a delay in the grieving process,’ Paez Terán’s brother Daniel said. Photograph: Alyssa Pointer/Reuters

Back home in Texas, Daniel told the Guardian he was “angry I let myself think … that we had gotten through to him, and that he would release the evidence – because we deserve to know everything”.

In the absence of the file, he said the report’s narrative “might be true – or something else happened that they might want to hide”. Until the family finds out, “it’s almost like a delay in the grieving process”, he said. Why is Georgia prosecuting leftwing activists with the same law as Trump? Akin Olla Read more

The state’s decision shows what Villalpando called an “asymmetry” between the state and families of people killed by police, given “the power of the bureaucracy to hide the truth, and justify the hiding”.

Filipovits and his colleagues sued months ago to obtain access to the Atlanta police body-cam videos. “There’s no conceivable link,” he said, between those videos, other unreleased evidence such as diagrams of the shooting and the Rico investigation.

“I was expecting our work to begin now,” the attorney added. “The precedent this sets is alarming and the lack of transparency is frightening … If you can kill someone and then refuse to provide any evidence from your determination about that killing, where does that leave us as a country?”

 
 
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submitted 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

I just acquired a new PC, and it hasn't been turned on yet. I would love some advice and tips on what to do before I get started with it to protect my privacy.

I'm a privacy-conscious person, but not dogmatic about it. And honestly, this is the first desktop PC I've had since Windows XP was a thing. So it goes without saying, I'm very out-of-the-loop when it comes to Windows. I'm not opposed to putting a Linux distro on it, as long as it's very easy for a beginner to learn on.

Really tho, I'd like to know if there's anything I should or shouldn't do as I'm booting the comp up for it's first time. Im grateful for any and all advice here. Thanks!!

Edit: thanks for all the responses so far! I figured it'd probably help to list my use cases for the PC. It'll mostly be used for gaming, music production & sound design, collecting music and movies (which will likely involve me regaining my old sea legs, hoisting the black flag, and sailing the high seas). At some point in the future, I wouldn't mind learning how to host a media server for friends and family to access, but I got lots to learn before I dip my toes into that. My privacy concerns are pretty general - I'd like to prevent corporate data mining mostly, but since I may be screaming "yo ho ho" soon too, I'd like to be protected in those regards as well

 

$5 for a 12 hour journey inward, or $150 for a 45 minute session.... 🤔

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