Chuck Darwin

Chuck Darwin's avatar
Chuck Darwin
npub189h3...stm6
Social and economic justice, technology and tennis. 
I'll have what @jbf1755 is having.
 searchable Pixels: https://pixelfed.social/cdarwin Words [Deprecated]: https://cdarwin.org Tweets [Deprecated]: Chas_Darwin Hashtag: [#TrumpHasMadeAmericaPoorerSickerWeakerAndLessSecure](https://c.im/tags/TrumpHasMadeAmericaPoorerSickerWeakerAndLessSecure )
Waymo “self-driving” may be due for some extra scrutiny. During a Congressional hearing on Wednesday, Waymo’s chief safety officer, Mauricio Peña, was grilled over the company’s use of Chinese-made vehicles and reliance on overseas workers, as Business Insider reports. The stakes and public safety implications are considerable. The news comes roughly a week after a Waymo robotaxi struck and injured a child near a Santa Monica, California, elementary school, triggering a federal probe. After being pressed for a breakdown on where these overseas operators operate, Peña said he didn’t have those stats, explaining that 👉 some operators live in the US, but others live much further away, including in the Philippines. “They provide guidance,” he argued. “ They do not remotely drive the vehicles. Waymo asks for guidance in certain situations and gets an input, but the Waymo vehicle is always in charge of the dynamic driving tasks, so that is just one additional input.” The admission didn’t sit well with senator Ed Markey (D-MA), who argued that “having people overseas influencing American vehicles is a safety issue.”
Massachusetts Gov. Maura Healey wants to eliminate the 15-year deadline to prosecute rape in cases with a DNA match.  The proposal is part of her budget recommendation for the 2027 fiscal year. Current Massachusetts law bars rape prosecutions in older cases, even when DNA testing has identified a suspect. An investigation last year by WBUR and ProPublica found that nearly all other states allow more time to charge rapes or similar assaults of adults than Massachusetts. Many of those 47 states extended their deadlines in recent decades as DNA technology helped solve old cases, and as evidence mounted that police had failed to fully investigate rape cases. The WBUR and ProPublica investigation followed the story of Louise, a woman who said she was raped and stabbed after accepting a ride in 2005 from a man who said he recognized her from college. (WBUR does not identify victims of sexual assault without their permission. We agreed to identify Louise by her middle name.) Although DNA testing would later connect a man accused of multiple assaults to her case, prosecutors had to drop charges in her assault under Massachusetts’ statute. Healey's proposal would eliminate the statute of limitations for rape cases when DNA evidence exists, allowing for prosecutions in cases where a match is made after the current 15 year cutoff.
As tear gas engulfed the protest witnesses recalled hearing six loud bangs; a video posted on social media recorded eight, as well as countless smaller pops. At least eight arcs of smoke flew far over people’s heads, as though aimed at the back of the crowd. “I know they would do anything, that they would hurt people, that they’ve murdered people and shot them in the back 10 times,” said Cassie Broeker, a Portland resident who came to protest with friends. “I know that intellectually. But I still did not expect them to gas a chill, friendly protest full of nurses and teachers and children and the elderly.”
The Trump administration is purchasing warehouses across the U.S. with the intention of converting them into immigration jails -- as the White House expands its brutal immigration crackdown. At least seven sites being looked at by the administration could be used 💥 to imprison 7,500 people or more, with some sites coming close to a 💥10,000-person figure. All told, 🔥the 23 warehouse sites being considered by the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) 🔥would imprison as many as 80,000 people if converted into immigration jails — and more if the administration fails to implement safe living standards. Eighteen states in total — including Arizona, Florida, Georgia, Indiana, Louisiana, Maryland, Michigan, Mississippi, Minnesota, Missouri, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Oklahoma, Texas, Utah, and Virginia — could be part of the project. The administration is likely paying hundreds of millions of dollars collectively for these buildings, and ⚠️the price tag will likely reach into the billions with the added cost of converting them into prisons. If the administration follows through with this plan, it will be the largest expansion of immigrant prisons in U.S. history. A post from DHS on X claims that the buildings they’re purchasing “will not be warehouses — they will be well structured detention facilities meeting our regular detention standards.” But experts believe it will be difficult to ensure the warehouses meet safety standards before agencies like Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and/or Customs and Border Protection (CBP) begin imprisoning people within their walls. 🆘 Indeed, at least one of the warehouses being considered for purchase is reputed to be dangerous on hot weather days. Meanwhile, “regular detention standards” in facilities already operated by DHS are ❌abusive and inhumane, human rights groups have pointed out. The Trump administration reopened a former state prison in Texas last year, for example, in order to imprison immigrant families, including young children. ⛔️Conditions in that prison have been described as “horrible,” with water and food containing contaminants that could make people sick. The purchase and conversion of these buildings would be a major escalation of Donald Trump’s already deeply unpopular immigration crackdown, in which federal agents have ♦️terrorized communities across the U.S., -- often abducting people with pending asylum cases or who were set to receive green cards -- with no regard for their due process rights, ♦️and even detaining U.S. citizens. ✅Some cities have sought to prevent the Trump administration from purchasing warehouses within their boundaries that could be used to imprison immigrants. In Kansas City, the city council voted last month in favor of a five-year moratorium that bans any detention facility from being established if it is not owned by the city itself. That ban could be challenged — the state legislature, for example, which is controlled by Republicans, could pass a bill nullifying local ordinances seeking to block the administration from buying these warehouses. The White House could also file a lawsuit claiming federal “supremacy clause” arguments. But city leaders say they will not give up without a fight. 💪🏽“I will use every tool at my disposal to fight this federally funded terrorist organization that is ICE,” Kansas City Councilman Jonathan Duncan said after the ordinance was passed. “While today’s moratorium vote was a good first step to stopping this mass incarceration concentration camp from being built in our City, this fight is far from over. 👍We will need to put public pressure on any business that thinks they can sell out our community for personal profit. That comes next.” https://truthout.org/articles/dhs-seeks-to-convert-giant-warehouses-across-us-into-immigration-jails/
Donald Trump said that his party should seize control of elections in ‘at least 15 places’ and brazenly repeated a number of blatant lies about his electoral history in Minnesota and Georgia during a Monday phone interview with a right-wing podcaster who briefly served in a top FBI role last year. Trump, who continues to falsely insist that he won the 2020 election despite having lost to successor-turned-predecessor Joe Biden by wide margins in both the popular and electoral vote, spoke to podcaster Dan Bongino to mark the return of his eponymous show after serving less than a year as the FBI’s Deputy Director. At one point during the madcap interview, he began espousing a racist conspiracy theory which posits that Democrats’ opposition to harsh anti-immigration measures is part of a deliberate effort to pack voter rolls with people who are not in the country legally despite the fact that non-citizens are not permitted to vote and almost never attempt to do so. He claimed that the Biden administration’s reversal of border policies instituted during his first term was meant to bolster the Democratic Party’s fortunes at the polls and argued that Republicans in Congress should respond by taking control of elections in Democratic-run jurisdictions even though the U.S. Constitution specifically allocates that responsibility to state and local governments rather than the federal government. “People were brought to our country to vote, and they vote illegally ... and it’s ... amazing that the Republicans aren’t tougher on it. The Republicans should say ‘we want to take over,’” he said.
The only border crossing that connects Gaza with Egypt ⭐️has opened for the first time in almost a year. ✅The step throws a lifeline to Palestinians who want to leave for medical care or return to homes and families after two years of war. The passage, near the city of Rafah, in southern Gaza, was seized by Israeli soldiers in May 2024 and had been mostly closed since then, other than for a brief time during a temporary cease-fire last winter. A long-term cease-fire that went into effect in October called for the crossing to open. But Israel had delayed it until the repatriation of the remains of the last hostage taken to Gaza in the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas-led attack that ignited the war. That happened last week. 👍On Monday, limited numbers of Palestinians started passing through the crossing in both directions, according to Israeli officials.
In this account, participants in the rapid response networks in the Twin Cities describe their experiences, explore the threat represented by the development of Immigration and Customs Enforcement into a political police, and propose a strategy for how the rapid response networks could rise to the challenge and contribute to revolutionary social change. To learn more about the rapid response chat structure, start here.
Fascism isn’t some distant or hypothetical threat — it is already here. Unmarked vans and masked agents snatch students off the streets without due process. Judges and lawyers are intimidated. The most powerful institutions in society — universities, tech firms, law firms, billionaires, legislators — preemptively prostrate themselves to an autocratic leader’s whims, not because they are forced to, but because they calculate that accommodation is safer than resistance. Tens of millions of people are demonized while the military is deployed against civilian populations. These are not warning signs. They are the thing itself. https://truthout.org/articles/the-hardest-part-of-fighting-fascism-comes-after-the-fascists-have-fallen/
On February 1, 1960, four Black freshmen from the Agricultural and Technical College of North Carolina, (today known as North Carolina A&T State University), sat down at the segregated lunch counter at the Woolworth’s in downtown Greensboro and asked to be served. When staff refused to serve them, they refused to leave. These four students, now known as the Greensboro Four, included Ezell Blair Jr. (who later changed his name to Jibreel Khazan), David Richmond, Franklin McCain and Joseph McNeil. They were reportedly inspired by the nonviolent protest techniques of Mahatma Gandhi and the murder of Emmett Till, as well as the Freedom Rides movement. It was a carefully planned demonstration, according to the History Channel, and the students worked with a local white businessman who contacted the local media about the protest. The students remained in their seats until the business closed. Similar sit-ins had been organized as early as 1958, but the Greensboro sit-ins drew intense media coverage, serving to propel the civil rights movement onto the national stage. By Feb. 5, hundreds of students were joining in on the protest and the sit-ins were spreading, including to the Woolworth’s in neighboring Winston-Salem, which is now being renovated into an event space to preserve the history made by Wake Forest University and Winston-Salem State University students. By the end of March, the sit-ins had spread to 13 states, and, by the end of that summer, many places had begun to change their segregation policies. The Greensboro Woolworth’s desegregated its lunch counters in July 1960. Four Black employees were the first to be served. https://myfox8.com/news/north-carolina/feb-1-marks-the-66th-anniversary-of-the-greensboro-sit-ins-sparking-a-nationwide-movement/#/questions/5294859