Radio Blue Heart is on the air!

currentclimate:

Absolutely nothing resembling modern-day global warming has happened on Earth for at least the past 2,000 years, a new study published today in Science confirms. Since the birth of Jesus Christ, the climate has sometimes naturally changed—some parts of the world have briefly cooled, and some have briefly warmed—but it has never changed as it’s changing now. Never once until the Industrial Revolution did temperatures surge in the same direction everywhere at the same time. They’re doing so now, the study finds.

Drawing on a huge database of climate-recording objects from all over the world—including tree rings, cave formations, and ancient pollen trapped in lake mud—the study concludes that 98 percent of Earth’s surface experienced its hottest period of the past 2,000 years within living memory. That uniform heat spike “is unprecedented over the Common Era,” it says.

mazeon:
“ Dinosaurs
Shown at 500 percent.
”

mazeon:

Dinosaurs
Shown at 500 percent.

workingclasshistory:
“On this day, 17 July 1936, a Spanish military uprising began in Morocco as right wing generals declared war on the new Republican government. In Barcelona workers began to respond as members of the Confederación Nacional del...

workingclasshistory:

On this day, 17 July 1936, a Spanish military uprising began in Morocco as right wing generals declared war on the new Republican government. In Barcelona workers began to respond as members of the Confederación Nacional del Trabajo (CNT), seized 200 rifles from the holds of 2 ships docked in the harbour and distributed them to union activists. These events marked the beginning of the Spanish civil war - and full-scale revolution would break out in the coming days. In this podcast we tell the story of the conflict: https://workingclasshistory.com/2018/07/29/spanish-civil-war-podcast/
Pictured: CNT members in Barcelona https://www.facebook.com/workingclasshistory/photos/a.296224173896073/1168689059982909/?type=3

antifainternational:

allcops:

Oh absolutely Detroit Police Chief James Craig!  When a group of neo-nazis threatens to show up with firearms at the Pride festivities to commit terrorist acts “worse than Charlottesville,” 100% the right thing to do is provide them with a free police escort to get them to the Pride event safely instead of warning the people they’re targeting. 

I’m completely certain that if any other group showed up at another event in Detroit with guns after threatening to commit violence worse than the act of domestic terrorism that killed one woman and injured 19 others in Charlottesville two years ago, you’d do the exact same thing.

What’s that, Chief Craig?  Did you actually say that “both sides” were wrong in this event?  And that the people trying to defend a Pride event from the armed gang of neo-nazis who had vowed to commit a terrorist act at the event were “looking to cause trouble?”

How is if that you even have a job with an attitude like this in a city that’s 83% the kind of people the nazis your officers escorted want to murder?

I guess when it’s the same police department with officers moonlighting as drug mules; officers fighting each other in the streets; whose response time is slower than pizza delivery; whose SWAT team shoots & kills a seven-year-old girl napping on the couch in her living room, then this is the kind of quality policing you’re accustomed to. 

Cops & the Klan go hand-in-hand: Motor City edition

luvuv:

poblacht-na-n-oibrithe:

At around 11 p.m. on May 15, Lauren pulled into the parking lot of a Hilton in Lakeland, Florida. The air was damp and cool, and the 32-year-old was nervous: She was there to meet a couple who had responded to an ad she posted that day advertising sexual services. Lauren was new to sex work. She had a 2-year-old child at home, and money was tight.

Inside the hotel room, Lauren leaned against a dresser. “I gotta be careful,” she remembered saying. “I’m glad you guys are who you say you are.”

At one point that evening, Lauren went to the bathroom to freshen up. But after she finished, she opened the bathroom door to detectives from the Polk County Sheriff’s Office who arrested her.

To maintain her privacy, Lauren requested that her real name not be used.

The day before Lauren’s arrest, the sheriff’s office vice unit initiated “Operation No Spring Fling” in which undercover officers posted and responded to ads soliciting sex work. “The primary goal,” Sheriff Grady Judd said at a press conference after the sting ended on May 19, “is to rescue victims of human trafficking and to arrest people that are buying human beings, and that’s what these guys were doing when they were seeking the services of these ladies.”

Yet according to a press release from the sheriff’s office, only three people out of the 154 arrested as a result of the sting were considered possible victims of human trafficking. Of those, two women, a 17-year-old and a 23-year-old, were charged with unspecific crimes.

The vast majority of people arrested, including Lauren, were charged with solicitation, and their mugshots were displayed on a banner during the sheriff’s press conference and subsequently published online by local newspapers.

After officers read Lauren the Miranda rights, she told them she was “down on her luck and needed money to buy diapers for her child,” according to the affidavit for her arrest. Several women caught in the sting also seemed to be engaged in survival sex work. A 22-year-old said she had posted an ad online because she lost her job earlier in the day and needed money immediately to pay her bills. A 45-year-old single mother said she needed money to support her children.

When reached for comment, the Polk County Sheriff’s Office directed The Appeal to video of the press conference, where Judd insisted that many of the women arrested were victims of human trafficking. “I suggest that those that are on social media or any other media saying, ‘Well, it’s just a business relationship by two consenting adults,’ don’t understand or don’t want to understand or don’t care,” he said. “We care. We care about every one of those folks, and we care enough to arrest them if they don’t behave. We care enough to help them if they’ll let us help them. But we will not give up, that’s our promise.”

***

Operations that purport to target human trafficking but yield mass arrests for prostitution-related offenses are commonplace in Florida counties.

On Feb. 19, multiple sheriffs offices and police departments raided spas across Florida’s east coast—including the Orchids of Asia Day Spa—resulting in nearly 300 arrests. The operation garnered international attention because one of the arrestees at that spa was New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft, who was charged with soliciting prostitution. “It’s manifestly obvious to us that this is human trafficking,” Martin County Sheriff William Snyder said of the massage parlors in late February. But in mid-April, prosecutors acknowledged that nobody arrested in the Martin County raids had been charged with human trafficking. “There is no human trafficking that arises out of this investigation,” said assistant state attorney Greg Kridos.

On June 21, the Hillsborough County Sheriff’s Office announced the arrests of 85 people in “Operation Trade Secrets” which targeted massage parlors, hotels, strip clubs, and adult bookstores. “The only way to get proof of victims of human trafficking is to do an operation like this,” Sheriff Chad Chronister said. “You don’t know who’s there on their own free will and who’s being forced to have sex.” But about half of the people taken into custody were booked on prostitution-related offenses. Only one was arrested for sex trafficking.

Despite the failure of such investigations to identify human trafficking, Governor Ron DeSantis recently signed into law a requirement that spas and hotels instruct staff on how to spot signs of sex trafficking and that law enforcement officers complete four-hour training on how to investigate trafficking. The law also creates a database of individuals who are convicted of soliciting prostitutes.

***

Florida is just one front in a national targeting of what one anti-trafficking nonprofit calls “illicit massage businesses” that advocates say make women more vulnerable. Womankind, a New York-based service provider for Asian survivors of trafficking, told The Appeal last year: “The reality we still face is that policing, regardless of how creative and collaborative the approach may seem, does not tackle the root causes of vulnerability and exploitation.”

The arrest of Jeffrey Epstein on sex trafficking charges is likely to bring a renewed focus to trafficking that could yield even more arrests—not of billionaire predators, said Kate D’Adamo, a sex worker advocate and partner at Reframe Health and Justice, but working-class women. 

“Predators don’t get caught in johns stings,” D’Adamo said, because they target people who wouldn’t feel comfortable talking to police. The way to catch these men, D’Adamo said, is to form connections with the sex worker community, but “that doesn’t happen when your connection to them is arresting them for a low-level crime.” 

Instead, D’Adamo said such investigations often punish women who have no option but to engage in survival sex work. “What happens when you go in to find a job to try to stabilize your life and your name gets Googled and what comes up is a prostitution arrest?” D’Adamo said. “They’ve taken someone for whom that [sex work] was the best option for meeting what sounds like incredibly basic resource needs … [who is] traumatized by violence, and now [has] a criminal record that’s going to leave them in economic instability for a very long time.”

***

After Lauren’s mother posted her $2,000 bond at the Polk County jail, she struggled to find transportation to her home in Hillsborough County, about 30 miles away. Officers had seized her phone, and because a search of her vehicle allegedly yielded a pink pouch containing syringes with cocaine, the sheriff’s office also impounded her car.

Lauren now faces two misdemeanor charges for solicitation, a misdemeanor charge for possession of drug paraphernalia and a felony charge for cocaine. If convicted, she could spend up to five years in prison plus probation and have to pay tens of thousands of dollars in fines.

“I’m so fortunate that I had my mom to help me get out,” Lauren said. “Some of these girls don’t have that option. They’re literally gonna be stuck in jail, doing time, and they’re gonna come out with nothing. They’re not gonna know what to do but what they did before. They’re literally having to start over.”

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the conflation of sex work with sex trafficking has its roots in conservatism and it was one of the key talking points of the Bush administration’s push for abstinence-only education in the 2000s. the separation between church and state was especially dubious at time, and so the Bush administration used a loophole to fund many religious-based “anti-trafficking” nonprofits, which pushed such “humanitarian” initiatives as abstinence campaigns abroad in African countries with ongoing AIDS crises.  

nowadays, I think it’s fair to say that the religious right does not have as much of a presence in  our political world as it used to ( at least the current president is, shall we say, not as much of a god-fearing christian). these questionable anti-trafficking nonprofits still exist and still get tons of funding though (government and otherwise), they just wear a difference facade. like in the early 2000s, increased policing and restrictions around sex work and sex in general are passed off as something that’s for the good of the women who are affected by them, who don’t know any better. but nowadays these nonprofits have much more of a secular feminist backing than they used to. they use dubious statistics to promote themselves; they overstate the problem of sex trafficking and also overstate the effect their services have on the victims. they seek out bleeding hearts by asking very basic questions– “Are you against sex trafficking?” which, of course you are; and they invoke an image of, you know, a little girl in a third-world country in shackles or something. the reality is that their services are mostly going toward operations like the above– arresting hundreds of sex workers on prostitution charges. that, and putting money directly into the pockets of the people who run these nonprofits– often very shady characters.  

anuvia:

rah-bop:

Some photos of my kenku costume at Anthrocon 2016, taken by @adammillerstudio! Oh boy did I ever have a lot of fun! The other raven in these photos is @qawstume and the snowy owl we are mobbing is @crystumes, who made both of the blanks that we used for our masks.

If you have any questions about this costume please check out my FAQ!

You forgot the best one though!

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workingclasshistory:
“On this day, 3 August 1913 in California, the Wheatland hop riot took place after a farm labourers’ meeting with the radical Industrial Workers of the World union was broken up by police, leaving four dead and two leading...

workingclasshistory:

On this day, 3 August 1913 in California, the Wheatland hop riot took place after a farm labourers’ meeting with the radical Industrial Workers of the World union was broken up by police, leaving four dead and two leading organisers framed on murder charges. In this podcast episode we tell the story of the IWW around this time: https://workingclasshistory.com/2018/05/23/wch-e6-the-industrial-workers-of-the-world-in-the-us-1905-1918/ https://www.facebook.com/workingclasshistory/photos/a.296224173896073/1180621045456377/?type=3

patart-illustrations-stuff:
“Vincent Price, The Merchant of Menace
”

patart-illustrations-stuff:

Vincent Price, The Merchant of Menace

merelygifted:
“  We could fund the transition to green energy with 10-30% of the world’s fossil fuel subsidy / Boing Boing
A new report from the International Institute for Sustainable Development (IISD) estimates the cost of subsidizing a full...

merelygifted:

We could fund the transition to green energy with 10-30% of the world’s fossil fuel subsidy / Boing Boing

A new report from the International Institute for Sustainable Development (IISD) estimates the cost of subsidizing a full transition to clean energy, and comes out with a figure that is only 10-30% of the subsidy presently given to the planet-destroying fossil fuel industries.