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tulipsandroses

tulipsandroses's Journal
tulipsandroses's Journal
May 12, 2020

Why the fuck is he on tv? Anybody watching Cuomo- man that shot the Abery video

He doesn't want to answer questions. Lawyer telling him not to answer. The lawyer is an asshole! He even said his client is a poor mechanic with only a high school education. And we know what the schools are like around here? WTFuckityfuck?

May 11, 2020

Ugh! My dad has found a new conspiracy theory about Covid 19 to latch on to

My dad is sensible most of the time. I would say 85% of the time. But every now and then, he finds something on the internet to latch on to. He called me for Mother's Day and I didn't feel like going down the rabbit hole with him. He did say he's not sure what to believe, but still wondering why they were planning for relief before the pandemic. I will send him this tomorrow. I can't right now. Plus I'm tired and cranky.



Quick Take

Social media posts falsely claim that the CARES Act was introduced Jan. 24, 2019 to perpetuate the falsehood that the COVID-19 pandemic was planned or known about in advance. The CARES Act was introduced March 25 as a substitute amendment, replacing the title and language of an older, unrelated bill.

false claims online that the pandemic was either planned or known about in advance.

A screen grab from Wikipedia highlighting the bill’s introduction date has been circulating on social media with text that says, “Can I ask a stupid question? How can this be? Why was this law introduced over a year ago for a virus that allegedly did not get here until a few months ago !?!?!?!?”


Full Story
The COVID-19 economic stimulus bill, called the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act, or CARES Act, wasn’t introduced as a separate bill. Rather, it was introduced as a substitute amendment to an unrelated existing tax bill — H.R. 748, the Middle Class Health Benefits Tax Repeal Act of 2019
The Senate uses this approach to craft legislation affecting taxes because, under the Constitution, the House of Representatives is supposed to originate “all bills for raising revenue.” The Senate, however, is allowed to amend such bills
That ability to amend has been broadly interpreted to cover the process of taking a revenue-related bill delivered to the Senate after passing in the House, striking the language, and replacing it with a whole new bill — thus using the original bill as a shell. Both parties do it; Democrats did it with the Affordable Care Act in 2009.


[link:https://www.factcheck.org/2020/05/legislative-history-of-cares-act-doesnt-prove-covid-19-conspiracy/|
May 10, 2020

Eight years ago on DU - The thought of whether we would deal with a pandemic

I'm watching Contagion- Its eerie - that so many things playing out now were in that movie.
I was searching for a recent thread to comment on the movie and found this thread from 8 yrs ago.
[link:https://www.democraticunderground.com/101861980|

One person called the movie propaganda
Not trying to bash people on the thread - Life is so unpredictable. If someone tried to tell us about a coming pandemic 10 yrs ago, and that the response would be so disastrous, most of us would not believe.
Similarly, if you told us 10 yrs ago, no one would have believed Donald Trump would be president.

May 9, 2020

Dangerous Cult Leaders: Clues to what makes for a pathological cult leader

Sound like anyone you know? Click the link to see 50 traits listed

Dangerous Cult Leaders
Clues to what makes for a pathological cult leader
Posted Aug 25, 2012

One of the questions that I am often asked by students of criminology and psychology is, how do you know when a cult leader is “evil” or “bad”? These of course are vague descriptors to some extent, but I also get the question, “When is a cult leader pathological or a danger to others?” This is a valid question in view of the historical record of suffering and hurt caused by various cult leaders around the world.

From my studies of cults and cult leaders during my time in the FBI, I learned early on that there are some things to look for that, at a minimum, say "caution, this individual is dangerous, and in all likelihood will cause harm to others."

Having studied at length the life, teachings, and behaviors of Jim Jones (Jonestown Guyana), David Koresh (Branch Davidians), Stewart Traill (The Church of Bible Understanding), Charles Manson, Shoko Asahara (Aum Shinrikyo), Joseph Di Mambro (The Order of the Solar Temple a.k.a. Ordre du Temple Solaire), Marshall Heff Applewhit (Heaven’s Gate), Bhagwan Rajneesh (Rajneesh Movement), and Warren Jeffs (polygamist leader), I can say that what stands out about these individuals is that they were or are all pathologically narcissistic. They all have or had an over-abundant belief that they were special, that they and they alone had the answers to problems, and that they had to be revered. They demanded perfect loyalty from followers, they overvalued themselves and devalued those around them, they were intolerant of criticism, and above all they did not like being questioned or challenged. And yet, in spite of these less than charming traits, they had no trouble attracting those who were willing to overlook these features.

][link:https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/spycatcher/201208/dangerous-cult-leaders|


May 9, 2020

No, having to wear a mask is not oppression or taking away your rights

Its meant to protect you and the people around you. You are not losing your freedom or liberty wearing a mask. Oppression, loss of freedom and liberty is a black man murdered for running while being black -with no one looking out for his protection.

Paraphrasing Joy Reid this morning, in regards to idiot protesters and online complaints going on about their rights being violated and being oppressed.

May 9, 2020

So Trump is playing a doctor on tv again. We won't need a vaccine, the virus will just go away

Trump says coronavirus will disappear without a vaccine. Fauci has said the opposite.

President Donald Trump has been bullish about a coronavirus vaccine - so much so that experts have had to talk him off a more aggressive timeline for it.
But on Friday, Trump seemed to shift his rhetoric on the topic, saying that we don't even need one for the virus to go away. "I just rely on what doctors say," Trump said when pressed.
Except that's not what his coronavirus task force doctor, Anthony S. Fauci, says.
[link:https://www.sfgate.com/news/article/Trump-says-coronavirus-will-disappear-without-a-15257748.php|

What doctor is telling him this?Dr. Oz?Dr. Phil?
May 9, 2020

Meth, Murder, and Madness: The System That Buried Ahmaud Arbery



A decade ago, Johnson was responsible for overseeing the case of Caroline Small, an unarmed mother who led Glynn County police on a low-speed chase while possibly experiencing a mental breakdown. In June 2010, the responding officers—Michael Simpson and Robert Sasser —pinned Small’s vehicle between their squad cars and a telephone pole. They fired eight bullets through her windshield, striking Small in the head and face.

Afterward, Simpson and Sasser stopped paramedics from rendering aid to Small because they reportedly thought she was dead, but she wasn’t. Small lived for four days in a hospital before succumbing to her injuries.

Sasser, one of the two officers involved in Small’s killing, went on to kill his wife and her friend before turning the gun on himself in June 2018. He was out on bond at the time, after threatening his estranged wife at her home. After that, Sasser had attacked police officers during an armed standoff and was again released on bond, an agreement Johnson negotiated with a local judge. Out on that bond, he threatened his estranged wife and her male companion at a restaurant. Two days later, he killed the pair


[link:https://www.thedailybeast.com/meth-murder-and-madness-the-system-that-buried-ahmaud-arbery|
May 9, 2020

DA that chose not to charge the McMichaels for Arbery's murder, charged this woman with voter fraud

Barnhill saw no crime in Arbery being chased, cut off by pickup truck and confronted by armed strangers who shot and killed him. But he saw a felony voter fraud case going after Ms. Pearson.

I posted only the parts that referred to Ms.Pearson's case, but the entire article is a good read about voter suppression in GA.

In a particularly disturbing case, Olivia Pearson, a grandmother and lifelong resident of Coffee County, Ga., found herself on trial this year on charges of felony voter fraud. It began six years ago, on the first day of early voting in Georgia, when a black woman named Diewanna Robinson went to cast her ballot. Ms. Robinson, then 21, had never voted before and didn’t know how to operate the electronic voting machine, reported Buzzfeed. She asked Ms. Pearson, more than 30 years her senior, for help. Ms. Robinson would later testify that Ms. Pearson informed her where the card went in the machine and told her to “just go through and make my own selections on who I wanted to vote for.” Ms. Pearson walked away before Ms. Robinson started voting

Almost four years later, Ms. Pearson received a letter from District Attorney George Barnhill’s office, informing her that she was facing felony charges for improperly assisting Ms. Robinson. The city councilwoman and community leader was arrested and booked. She had never been in trouble with the law, but now she found herself facing up to 15 years in prison.
Ms. Pearson was not accused of telling Ms. Robinson whom to vote for. She didn’t help her cast her ballot or even touch her machine. Prosecutors did not allege that the brief interaction between the two women impacted Robinson’s decisions in the voter booth. Rather, they insisted that because Ms. Robinson was not illiterate or disabled, she had not been entitled to even minimal verbal assistance.

It’s not hard to conclude that what Mr. Trump, Mr. Kemp and their ilk are worried about is not voter fraud but access to the ballot for minorities and Democrats. This attitude helps explain why Ms. Pearson was apparently the first person ever tried for “improper assistance in casting a ballot,” phrasing that does not even appear in Georgia’s criminal statutes. (Prosecutors eventually dropped that charge, after the defense said that the state had “attempted to fashion a criminal offense by cobbling together parts of four statutes.”) Over the next two years, Ms. Pearson navigated two trials, two defense counsels, three dropped charges and one hung jury. Finally, in late February, after a 20-minute jury deliberation, she was acquitted of all charges. Six years after her brief interaction with Ms. Robinson, she was finally free.


[link:https://www.nytimes.com/2018/10/31/opinion/election-voting-rights-fraud-prosecutions.html|
May 9, 2020

Elie Mystal for the win! - His take on " he looked like the suspect"

According to the police, Gregory McMichael was standing in his front yard as Arbery ran past. (Arbery’s family contends that Ahmaud was taking a run, which he regularly did.) McMichael determined that Arbery “looked like a suspect” in a string of burglaries in his neighborhood.

Let me stop the police narrative right there. You’re telling me that a 64-year-old white man sees a black man running past his house, uses his white man clairvoyance to determine that the black man is a “suspect,” ends up shooting that black man dead, and he’s not arrested at the scene of the crime?


If the McMichaels’ story doesn’t already seem ridiculous to you, just flip the races. Imagine a black guy like me tried to sell this story to a cop: “Well, officer, I was outside watering my tulips when this young white guy just comes running past my home in broad daylight. He matched the description of nearly every suspect in every mass shooting I’ve ever seen. Eventually, me and my boy caught him and shot him to death. In, uhh, self-defense. Just doing my part, officer. You’re welcome.”



[link:https://www.thenation.com/article/society/ahmaud-arbery-lynching/|

May 8, 2020

I found out today someone I knew died from Covid 19. He was 38 yrs old

One of my sister's childhood friends died of Covid 19 yesterday. I have not seen him in years. My sister kept in touch with him even though we left NYC many years ago. Even though I haven't seen him in a long time I have so many memories of him at my parents' house when we were younger. Even more tragic, he lost his wife to cancer a year ago. He adopted his wife's daughter when he married her. He's the only dad she's ever known.

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