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10 votes
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Beautification project in California prison inspired by Norwegian approach to incarceration – rehabilitation in humane prisons surrounded by nature leads to successful reintegration into society
30 votes -
The University of Michigan doubled down on D.E.I. What went wrong?
18 votes -
Why are hundreds of criminal cases being dismissed in Anchorage?
13 votes -
English still rules the world, but that’s not necessarily OK. Is it time to curb its power?
23 votes -
Covert racism in AI: How language models are reinforcing outdated stereotypes
20 votes -
Prison inmates in Finland are being employed as data labellers to improve accuracy of AI models
22 votes -
The hardest case for mercy: inside the effort to spare the Parkland school shooter [the death penalty]
25 votes -
Statistics are still misunderstood in the courtroom
16 votes -
Sweden and Denmark will summon tech companies over ads on their platforms that are posted by gangs to recruit young Swedes to commit violent crimes in the Nordics
17 votes -
First guilty plea in Arizona fake elector case comes from Republican activist Lorraine Pellegrino
22 votes -
Police in Denmark to implement facial recognition technology to combat violent crimes – recent increases in crime in Copenhagen involving gangs from neighbouring Sweden
9 votes -
Tell San Mateo County: Stop for-profit tech companies denying mail to incarcerated people
23 votes -
Judge who authorized Kansas newspaper raid escapes discipline with secret conflicting explanation
24 votes -
Protections for police who report illegal or unethical behavior lag far behind
22 votes -
Mayor of Oslo warns that drug smugglers are increasingly targeting the Norwegian capital as a gateway to Europe as authorities tighten controls on major ports such as Antwerp
7 votes -
A judge ruled a Louisiana prison’s health care system has failed inmates for decades. A federal law could block reforms.
15 votes -
US FCC closes “final loopholes” that keep prison phone prices exorbitantly high
44 votes -
What the all-American delusion of the Polygraph says about our relationship to fact and fiction
27 votes -
United Kingdom's new Prisons Minister, James Timpson, thinks 'two thirds of inmates shouldn't be there'
44 votes -
Swedish human rights activist Anna Ardin accused Julian Assange of sexual assault, but is glad he's now free
18 votes -
Read the US Supreme Court’s ruling on immunity
55 votes -
They were secret for sixteen years. Now a US judge has released the Jeffrey Epstein grand jury records.
18 votes -
US Supreme Court makes it harder to charge Capitol riot defendants with obstruction, charge Donald Trump faces
24 votes -
Julian Assange has reached a plea deal with the US, allowing him to go free
67 votes -
Maryland governor to pardon 175,000 marijuana convictions in sweeping order
52 votes -
Protests seen as harming civil rights movement in the '60s—What we can learn from this for climate justice
Protests Seen as Harming Civil Rights Movement in the '60s I've recently had some conversations about activism and protesting about climate change on Tildes, which made me remember these polls...
Protests Seen as Harming Civil Rights Movement in the '60s
I've recently had some conversations about activism and protesting about climate change on Tildes, which made me remember these polls again. I think they are a good historical reminder, and they demonstrate that masses much too often care more about comfort and privilege rather than justice.
These polls also show that you don't need to convince the majority to effect change. In fact, focusing on that might be detrimental to your cause. People who are bothered by your protest, because it disrupts "order", will try to tell you how to effect change while sitting in their own comfort. But this is not important.
Here is the gist of it, with MLK's own words.
"First, I must confess that over the past few years I have been gravely disappointed with the white moderate. I have almost reached the regrettable conclusion that the Negro's great stumbling block in his stride toward freedom is not the White Citizen's Counciler or the Ku Klux Klanner, but the white moderate, who is more devoted to "order" than to justice; who prefers a negative peace which is the absence of tension to a positive peace which is the presence of justice; who constantly says: "I agree with you in the goal you seek, but I cannot agree with your methods of direct action"; who paternalistically believes he can set the timetable for another man's freedom; who lives by a mythical concept of time and who constantly advises the Negro to wait for a "more convenient season." Shallow understanding from people of good will is more frustrating than absolute misunderstanding from people of ill will. Lukewarm acceptance is much more bewildering than outright rejection."
Believing in the timetables created by comformist opinions would be a grave mistake for climate activists. We need more confrontation, more radical acts, and more direct action. We don't need to make friends with the majority to do this. We need to shake things up, and most people don't like that. You can see this by the worsening majority opinion of the Civil Rights movement after they intensified protests. But the activists were right, it was an urgent matter, and they succeeded. So, we don't need to play nice.
For example, after MLK's asssassination people started burning down cities, which resulted in the Civil Rights Act of 1968 passing. You can see this in the citations; basically the government feared further escalation, and that's why they had to pass the act. Another example is the suffragettes' bombing and arson campaign in Britain and Ireland, which helped with their cause by putting pressure on people in power.
I'm not giving these examples to say there should or should not be one-to-one copies, but to show that being radically confrontational does work. Radical confrontation and direct action are what we need for climate justice, because time has been running out for a while, and every day past without a radical change makes things much worse. So we should cast off the yoke of mass approval and meekness. We need to embrace the confrontation.
44 votes -
Powerful climate change deniers knowingly committed heinous crimes, and they should be put on Nuremberg style trials
I'm gonna try to be brief. This is the worst I've ever felt, weather-wise, in my life, and it's only the start of summer. It's heavily negatively affecting both my physical and mental health. I...
I'm gonna try to be brief. This is the worst I've ever felt, weather-wise, in my life, and it's only the start of summer. It's heavily negatively affecting both my physical and mental health. I can't even properly work. I don't have AC. I can't afford it. Everybody around me is suffering very similarly.
I've been following climate crisis for years, but I've never thought I'd see such an extreme worsening this early. Even if I knew in theory that anomalies like this could happen, as it's very widely agreed upon that they would, it's much different to live through. It's hell on earth.
I'm one of the luckier ones, relatively speaking. There are over hundred thousand people dying from heatwaves each year. It's probably much higher than officially reported, because most governments don't track heatwave deaths. Millions and millions of people in India have been experiencing bigger and bigger water crises. Just in 2019, 600 million people faced a water crisis in India.. Hundreds of millions of people in Africa are suffering due to climate change related climate extremes and food security crises.
I also just found out that a location in Antarctica exhibited 70F (38C) higher than normal temperatures this year. Faster than expected, right?
I think this is inexcusable. Oil companies and such knew what was coming. There are countless documents and studies detailing this. Here are a few.
- Exxon confirmed global warming due to their emissions was happening in 1982.
- American Patroleum Institute similary knew in 1980.
- Exxon knowingly spread climate change denialism in response (source 1, source 2)
- Even in 2015, Exxon was dodging responsibility, telling people to "read the documents". So, two scientists, Geoffrey Supran and Naomi Oreskes, did that. And found out that Exxon acknowledged global warming in the internal documents, while they denied it in public (article 1, source 2). In other words, it's been empirically shown that they fucking manipulated the public with full knowledge.
- Exxon is not alone. ExxonMobil, Chevrontexaco, BP, Royal Dutch Shell, and Conocophillips spent 3.6 billion dollars for lobbying in US alone during 1986-2015.. 61% of these expenditures are after 2006, when climate change started becoming a hot topic. So, when they attracted attention, they doubled down.
- Another document is of American Patroleum Institute from 1998, showing they intentionally focused on exaggerating the uncertainties of climate science in front of the public.
- Big Oil still opposes science and us. A study published in 2019 shows that ExxonMobil, Royal Dutch Shell, Chevron, BP, and Total spent 1 billion dollars on lobbying and branding after the 2016 Paris Agreement.
- Oil companies are not alone. A study examining the 2000-2016 time-frame in US found that "fossil fuel and transportation corporations, utilities, and affiliated trade associations" are all major climate lobbyists. Only 3% of the total climate change lobbying was done by environmental organizations and renewable energy corporations.
These crimes are inexcusable. The people responsible should pay for them. And these should be treated as crimes against humanity and the planet, of the highest degree. These people don't deserve anything but to pay. They are the evil, who, in great awareness, have unreversibly damaged the planet, caused untold suffering. They still continue to do this, and even if they stopped now (hah!), their evil will continue to haunt humanity and a myriad of other species for unimaginable generations.
They should pay.
68 votes -
Crown Prosecution Service (UK public prosecutor) lawyers still “victim-blame” in rape cases, report says
14 votes -
Louisiana lawmakers approve surgical castration option for those guilty of sex crimes against kids
39 votes -
Today is the UK courts decision day on Julian Assange's extradition to the US
30 votes -
Toward a feminist criminal law: Mass incarceration means police and prisons are not simple allies for feminists who want a more just world
14 votes -
Police are not primarily crime fighters
43 votes -
Do children have a “right to hug” their parents?
14 votes -
US Supreme Court denies California’s plea for immunity for COVID-19 deaths at San Quentin prison
18 votes -
New data shows deadly cost of US officials' failures with COVID in prisons
14 votes -
America’s prison system is turning into a de facto nursing home
20 votes -
Case before Norway's Supreme Court claims that depriving sex offender of a Snapchat account is unlawful under the European Convention on Human Rights
15 votes -
Jails banned visits in “quid pro quo” with prison phone companies, lawsuits say
32 votes -
Lego requests California police department stop using their toy heads to cover suspect mugshots on social media
40 votes -
Plans for regulator illustrate inherently political nature of football
4 votes -
All the ways car dependency is wrecking us – car harm: a global review of automobility's harm to people and the environment
15 votes -
My clients, the liars
31 votes -
AI models found to show language bias by recommending Black defendents be 'sentenced to death'
28 votes -
Colorado Bureau of Investigation finds DNA scientist manipulated data in hundreds of cases over decades
31 votes -
What happens when prosecutors offer contradictory versions of the truth?
26 votes -
Served: Opening a restaurant inside a prison
5 votes -
Family of Swedish EU diplomat Johan Floderus, imprisoned in Iran for more than 663 days, fear death penalty verdict is imminent
17 votes -
How Iceland takes better care of its foreign criminal offenders than the rest of Europe
9 votes -
Prisoners in the US are part of a hidden workforce linked to hundreds of popular food brands
65 votes