Saturday, September 22, 2007

Thursday, September 20, 2007

Blackwater

So in the news lately has been one of those corporations that I am quite suspicious of...Blackwater





Jeremy Scahill - Author of "Blackwater"



Blackwater operatives shooting incident



And...
Blackwater active in Iraq

Carlos Arredondo assaulted by Pro-War Protestors

From After Downing Street:
Here are photos of members of “Gathering of Eagles” who assaulted gold star father Carlos Arredondo in broad daylight in Washington, D.C., on September 15, 2007, throwing him to the ground and kicking him.

Account of what happened from Arredondo’s wife By Mélida Arredondo:

Carlos Arredondo, 47 year old father of two sons, arrived in the nation’s capitol on Monday, 09/10/07 to share a memorial he has made to honor for his eldest son, Alex. Carlos has visited thirty of the United States with the traveling memorial to his son Alexander. Lcpl. Alexander S. Arredondo, USMC was killed on 08/25/04. He was 20 years and 20 days old. The memorial consists of a casket, poster- size photographs of Alex when he graduated from boot camp, before his second tour in Iraq, lying in state at his wake, and a photo of Alex with his younger brother Brian.

Saturday, September 15, 2007 consisted of first a rally, a march towards the capitol and then a die-in. Carlos pulled the memorial along the march route approaching the rotunda near the capitol building. Several of the marchers requested for him to speak about the memorial where a crowd gathered around him. After finishing, several people walked with Carlos as he pulled the memorial. Several pictures of Alex dressed in his blues were attached to the display.

As Carlos passed counter protesters, one man ripped a picture of Alex from the memorial. Carlos leaped on the man to retrieve the picture. It was at that point that approximately five others all began to attack Carlos by kicking him in the head, legs, stomach and back.


I'm quite saddened by this, but to be honest, it's nothing new. I've been to a few anti-war protests, and you wouldn't believe what you hear from the sidelines(Though some of it is quite encouraging). For instance, at a rally back in April that was MSU students walking Michigan Ave. up to Mike Rogers office to protest well...everything about the guy, a bunch of people (myself included)got shot up with a paintball gun. And there were cops everywhere too!

I guess all I can say is this sucks, especially for somebody who's son died fighting in the war, to have been dishonored in such a way. And I hope the police will use the pictures taken of the assailants to charge them with assault.


Official Creepy Link of the day

Official Republican says something stupid link

Official Onion assault link...WTF?

Wednesday, September 19, 2007

Kerry Kid Tasered - But Why?

So here's the full vid of Andrew Meyer, the kid who ended up getting tasered at John Kerry's campus forum. It includes Meyers questions, him being approached by campus police, the incident, and then student reactions and a press release by a University Police department Captain.



Regardless of your personal feelings about this kid, that doesn't change the fact that he was up at the mic being allowed to speak, and then when he asked a question someone (not Kerry, I think he actually answered it) didn't like, they shut off the mic and the police moved straight in. Instead of immediately grabbing him, which anyone would instinctively try to brush off, the cops could have moved between him and the stage, and proceeded to navigate him towards the exit.

Now, clearly this event is anything but simple. The first question to ask is whether the police acted according to law.



This is a video from not too long ago - The Tasering of Mostafa Tabatabainejad in the UCLA Library. He was tasered something like 6 times on the video, and as I recall the reason was because he wouldn't show his student ID, he was muslim, combined with the fact that he wasn't inclined to stand up immediately after being tasered. This seems like common sense to me, because I've stuck my finger in a wall socket and I didn't much feel like moving either.

In both these situations, it would seem that the biggest problem is not with the students, but how the police treat them. If police can restrain themselves from using force even if the students were to spit on their shoes or call them 'pigs' (Neither was done in these cases, of course), then of course this wouldn't have been news because nothing would have happened.

I, too, have been at the mercy of the police. One night in high school I was at a friends house until around 1 am, and was walking out to my car to drive home, when a spotlight shown on me and two cop cars drove up. It turned out there had been a house party nearby in this suburban neighborhood, and the police had broken it up earlier in the night. But they were still in the neighborhood patrolling for kids scurrying around, I guess?
At any rate, I told them where I had come from, but because I was young and in the same neighborhood and it was late, they put me in the back of their police car for 30 minutes, asking me questions. They tried to get me to admit that I was drunk or crazy,(and btw, if you're ever asked if you're crazy by the cops, it's because they're trying to get you to admit you've been smokin the reefer. They threaten to take you not to jail, but to a Psychiatric Ward! This also happened to my friend...of course, he actually was high and said that approach works wonders for getting you to admit you're intoxicated.

At any rate, I finally got through their questions and a PBT test, and they let me go.


But the other question is...if in both these cases, there were no video cameras or camera phones...would we have heard about it? My guess is, probably not. I mean, they could have even reached newspapers, but without such compelling video of the misguided actions of the boys in blue, no one would really care.

Here's another compelling video of Hardball: with Chris Mattews, Joe Conason of the NY Observer and Medea Benjamin from Code Pink


And that brings me to a conclusion of sorts. What is a police officer? Beyond all that 'serve and protect' crap, the shiny badge, the gun, and the blue boxers, any cop is just another misguided human who doesn't know why he's here or if anything he does matters, just like the rest of us. The only problem is, this regular guy, who grew up with all the little pains and heartaches and injustices done that happen to all of us, he is allowed a taser and a gun to hold and use when he deems necessary.

That in itself is why the police will always have a hard time convincing younger generations that they're there to help.

Wednesday, September 12, 2007

Well, today is my day off, so I thought I would do a little media round-up over the course of the day. First off, I'd like to put up this video from Naomi Klein called "The Shock Doctrine"...check out youtube for the full video of her lecture



Walter Cronkite, Dynomite!

Friday, September 07, 2007