
Michael Parenti DEBUNKED. The powers-that-be don't get together in a room at all.
We're all fucked, aren't we?

Doesn't help that most people have decided to stop believing in germ theory, either. It's hard to meet strangers when they're all trying to kill you.

Starved in Jail: Why are incarcerated people dying from lack of food or water, even as private companies are paid millions for their care?
During the past year, I found it hard to explain, to family and friends, a strange truth. I was reporting on places where starvation and dehydration deaths had unfolded across a span of weeks or months—but these were not overseas famine zones or traditional theatres of war. Instead, they were sites of domestic lawlessness: American county jails. After meeting Carlin and Karina, I identified and scrutinized more than fifty cases of individuals who, in recent years, had starved to death, died of dehydration, or lost their lives to related medical crises in county jails. In some cases, hundreds of hours of abusive neglect were captured on video, relevant portions of which I reviewed. One lawyer, before sharing a confidential jail-death video, warned me, “It will stain your brain.” It did.
The victims were astoundingly diverse. Some, like Mary, were older. Some were teen-agers. Some were military veterans. Many were parents. In nearly all the cases I reviewed, the individuals were locke

"We came in peace, seeking gold and slaves."

Are there any good books about capital's response to Covid?
Despite the terror, the early weeks of the pandemic contained perhaps more hope than I've felt in the subsequent five years. It became more apparent than ever where the weak links in capital's chain were located. Millions of people realized that their jobs were bullshit. The massive decrease in commuter vehicles proved that there were actually ways we could alter society to combat climate change. Powerful people started talking about universal basic income and universal healthcare.
Then it seems like the 1% got together on Zoom or whatever and put an end to all of that. There was a drumbeat of "it's patriotic to let grandma die." (Was Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick the first to say it out loud?) Teachers' unions became villains for wanting to prevent children and workers from spreading the plague. The people whose jobs couldn't go remote were given the title "essential workers" but never got sick days. In the months and years that followed, the Democrats nominated their most anti-healthca
Freelance counterpropaganda opportunities

FAIR.org is a website of media criticism. The media issues we focus on include corporate ownership, over-reliance on official sources, and the lack of independent or alternative perspectives. A typical FAIR story focuses on US media coverage of a story currently in the news or an issue that receives...

fair.org is a great resource and a necessary corrective to the mainstream media. They've been particularly good at documenting the lies and propaganda in the New York Times and Washington Post during the last few years:
Despite History of Fabrication, Press Uncritically Covers IDF-Provided Documents on Hamas
For NYT’s ‘Free Speech’ Maven, Racism Needs Protection, Gaza Protests Don’t
NYT Engages in Front-Page IDF ‘Womenwashing’
And so on. They're pretty essential. And they're not that different from what we might try to do in this comm.
From their freelance guidelines page (linked above):
A typical FAIR story focuses on US media coverage of a story currently in the news or an issue that receives perennial

A Trial Over Tyre Nichols’s Death Begins as Memphis Is in a New Bind
In the 20 months since Mr. Nichols’s death, the state’s Republican leaders have repeatedly maligned Steve Mulroy, the newly elected district attorney for Shelby County, and other Memphis-area officials for failing to address the scope of the city’s crime issues and overstepping their legal boundaries.
At least one police reform ordinance supported by Mr. Nichols’s family, which would have prevented police from stopping cars over more minor traffic infractions, was repealed by Republicans in the legislature.
Mr. Mulroy now faces a threat to oust him from his position when the legislature convenes in January, led by State Senator Brent Taylor. And last month, the top two Republicans in the legislature threatened to withhold sales tax revenue from the city, the second-largest in the state, over plans to put three gun safety initiatives on the November ballot.

Oakland fails to tell families and staff about high levels of lead at 22 schools
Nearly 200 water faucets in Oakland public schools had levels of lead that exceeded district standards, sparking outrage among staff who criticized district officials this week for failing to immediately notify school communities about results found earlier this summer and spring. It’s unclear how long students were exposed to the tainted taps.
Out of the 1,083 faucets and fountains tested, nearly 83% fell below the district’s limit of 5 parts per billion, or ppb, meaning they were safe, but 17% were above the limit. Federal standards are more lenient than Oakland’s standards, at 15 parts per billion, but 70 taps in the districts also failed to meet that requirement, in some cases by a wide margin.

Sister of Willie McCoy, man killed by Vallejo police, dies in crash involving gunfire
The sister of Willie McCoy, who Vallejo police fatally shot in 2019, was killed in a crash last week and police are investigating the death as a homicide, according to police and the family’s attorney.
Sharmell Mitchell, 48, was taken off life support on Friday after being ejected from a vehicle and suffering head injuries, according to Vallejo police and attorney Melissa Nold.
. . .
One of the detectives assigned to the investigation into Mitchell’s death is Jarrett Tonn, the Vallejo police officer who fatally shot 22-year-old Sean Monterrosa, a San Francisco resident, in 2020 during a night of protests against the Minneapolis police murder of George Floyd.
After a third-party investigation found he violated department policies led to his termination, he was reinstated to the department in August 2023. Like the shooting of McCoy, Monterrosa’s killing prompted protests against Vallejo police and calls for justice.

"I wrote the history of LASD gangs. Then the sheriff’s department started surveilling me."
Two days later, crime analyst Kimberly Dunn of the Records and Identification Bureau emailed a team of crime analysts working within the Sheriff’s Information Bureau with instructions to “keep an eye” on me.
“Freelance journalist Cerise Castle is currently working on a series of articles that started being released yesterday. The project is called “A Tradition of Violence: The History of Deputy Gangs in the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department,” she wrote. “Just something to keep an eye on – to monitor what else she posts as part of this project, and for potential doxing purposes, as well.”

Looks like someone did praxis today


Front page of sfchronicle.com right now.

Then every drawer would just say "Nestlé"

California lawmakers pass bill to decriminalize some psychedelic drugs
Gov. Gavin Newsom will decide whether to let Californians possess limited amounts of psychedelic mushrooms, DMT and peyote under a bill lawmakers passed Thursday.
. . .
The measure is opposed by many law enforcement groups, including the California District Attorneys Association and the California State Sheriffs’ Association, who argue supporters' claims of medical benefits from psychedelics haven't been adequately studied.
Your local sheriff - a noted reader of medical papers.