DEMAND FOR TRANSPARENCY AFTER CONTROVERSIAL RALEIGH ARREST

Raleigh, NC (PT) – The family of a man, whose beating at the hands of Police went viral on social media following his arrest less than a fortnight ago, have demanded transparency in connection with an incident which community activists have branded as a another example of excessive use of force by Police. Frederick Darnell Hall. Image source; public domain. Exclusive video shot by Thomasi McDonald of the North Carolina ‘News and Observer‘ seems to be suggestive of oppressive conduct by police following the arrest of a man whose story…

Read More

Red-State Politics In and Out of the College Classroom

United States (Conversation) – For two decades, I have taught U.S. women’s and gender history at Southern Illinois University at Carbondale, a blue town in a blue state, marooned in an ocean of red. Bordered by Appalachia, the Mississippi Delta and the Ozarks, Southern Illinois is surrounded by the country’s poorest rural regions. Some of my students arrive from white farming communities and are the first in their families to attend college. They grow up on church, military, patriotism and traditional family, and they come from a world different from…

Read More

India Has a Sexual Assault Problem That Women Could Help Fix, In a Round About Way

India (Conversation) – India is the most dangerous country for sexual violence against women, according to the Thomson Reuters Foundation 2018 survey. The survey, which measures sexual and non-sexual violence, discrimination, cultural traditions, health care and human trafficking, has been criticized for reflecting more perception than data. But India barely fares better in other studies that rank its treatment of women. It placed 131st of 152 countries in the Georgetown Institute’s global ranking of women’s inclusion and well-being. India’s National Crime Records Bureau reported 338,954 crimes against women – including…

Read More

Democrats Move Back Toward Trusting the People

(Garrison) – “[A] political party which wishes to lead,” reads the preamble to the Democratic Party’s charter, “must listen to those it would lead, a party which asks for the people’s trust must prove that it trusts the people …” On August 25, the Democratic National Committee took that passage to heart by limiting the power of “superdelegates” in choosing the party’s presidential nominee. Good move, and long overdue. Proximate inspiration: The disastrous 2016 presidential cycle, in which superdelegates played a key role in assuring the nomination of Hillary Clinton (and the…

Read More

Fraternities and Drinking Clubs, Or Hate Groups – Proud Boys and Identity Evropa

United States (News21) – Behind the anonymity of white faces illuminated by tiki torches, beyond the bloodied fists of street brawls, there are communities of young men who gather on weekends to camp and fish and train in combat sports. The face of hate is changing in America, and the new right is a “millennial male phenomenon,” said Heidi Beirich, director of the Intelligence Project at the Southern Poverty Law Center in Montgomery, Alabama, an advocacy group that tracks hate and bigotry toward marginalized communities. Brewing among some young men is…

Read More

Tackling the Trolls: How Women are Fighting Back Against Online Bullies

(OpenDemocracy) – Back in 2012, I went to the police to report an incident of online harassment. A man had called me an obscene name, threatened to find out where I lived in order to post my details on 4Chan, and wrote “she must pay!!”. He accepted a caution. This wasn’t my first incident of online abuse. There was the rising academic and popular environmentalist who commented on everything I wrote, in a way that amounted to sustained harassment. When I wrote a piece on abortion rights, he called me a “fucking baby…

Read More

Cases of Missing and Murdered Native American Women Challenge Police, Courts

United States (News21) – Native American women across the country are being murdered and sexually assaulted on reservations and nearby towns at far higher rates than other American women. Their assailants are often white and other non-Native American men outside the jurisdiction of tribal law enforcement. In some U.S. counties composed primarily of Native American lands, murder rates of Native American women are up to 10 times higher than the national average for all races, according to a study for the U.S. Department of Justice by sociologists at the University of…

Read More

No place back home: A year after Harvey, Rockport can’t house all its displaced residents

Rockport, TX (TT) – Since all that’s left of the old Aransas County Courthouse is a pile of rubble and a slab of concrete, these days County Judge Burt Mills holds office in a strip mall storefront, flanked by a Chinese buffet and a boutique. “It’s very nice, actually,” Mills said last week from his office in what used to be a hardware store. This 23,000-square-foot building, hastily renovated after Hurricane Harvey into a temporary courthouse in 45 days, is a testament to the region’s remarkably speedy recovery, Mills said —…

Read More

It’s Not Just You. The Mosquitoes Really Are Worse This Year.

United States (Cronkite) – Can’t leave the house without getting bitten? Legs swollen from scratching? Welcome to the crowd. Because yes, the mosquitoes are worse this year. Why? There’s a new type of mosquito hunting across the southern United States. You might have heard of it – the Aedes mosquito – which first showed up in 2010. It’s even present in areas experiencing drought, such as the Southwest. It’s way more vicious than the most common mosquito, known as the house mosquito, or the Culex. Unlike the Culex, Aedes mosquitoes bite during the…

Read More

The artist ‘Headache Stencil’ uses graffiti to criticize military rule in Thailand

Headache Stencil posing in front of a portrait of Thailand’s prime minister shaped in a maneki-neko cat. Source: Headache Stencil, used with permission. (GV) – Through street graffiti and murals, the masked artist Headache Stencil has been depicting Thailand’s ongoing clamor for democracy and reforms. When the military grabbed power in May 2014 and subsequently drafted a new constitution reinforcing a military-backed government, they vowed to restore elections and civilian rule, but this has yet to be realized. Headache Stencil started making graffiti after the 2014 coup. In an interview with…

Read More