
another day
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“I don’t feel sorry for Len Bias, not in the slightest...He wanted to be cool. Well, he was so cool that he’s cold right now.” — Bobby Knight, 1990
My latest for Andscape, on the gift time forgot. The search for Len Bias’ humanity. Watch here.
Read here: andscape.com/features/len-b…
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🚨BREAKING: DHS is trying to argue that the ICE agent, who drove illegally down the shoulder of a highway and pointing a gun at innocent U.S. citizens, was just “performing his official duties.”
And that prosecuting him is “nothing more than a political stunt.”
According to prosecutors, this wasn’t some active takedown, or dangerous suspect situation.
It was rush hour traffic.
The agent allegedly chose to drive down the highway shoulder to get around it, and when a civilian vehicle got in his way… he pointed a GUN at the people inside.
And DHS’s response is… you can’t prosecute him because he’s an ICE agent, and he was doing his job.
So now we’re supposed to believe that illegally using the shoulder of a state highway, and pointing a GUN at random U.S. citizens, is just… a standard ICE procedure?
The law is actually pretty clear on when officers can point a weapon at someone… it’s tied to an objectively reasonable belief of an immediate threat, or the need to prevent serious harm during a lawful enforcement action.
It is not a free for all to use force because someone is in your way on the highway.
And that’s exactly why DHS defending this is so dangerous.
If “official duties” becomes a blanket excuse for this kind of behavior, then the standard shifts from what the law allows… to whatever a federal agent says was necessary in the moment.
And once you do that, accountability disappears… and so do your rights.
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@HankDon_1 🤣🤣🤣
hopefully that white gentrwifier will see your post and pick you
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@sherridankindr1 you white gentrwifiers are pathetic thank god that white gentrwifier was put in her place
not one of you is a new yorker
not one of you is a knicks fan
now scurry away wash your axx and mind how you go
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@Jessies_Too you were born from mud and dogs
god hates your sludge filled white axx
you racist white beasts are pathetic
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A report released last month by Amnesty International found that 2025 had the highest number of executions worldwide since 1981. 2,707 people were executed across 17 countries. amnesty.org/en/latest/news…
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This is Hunter Foster, the Senatobia, Mississippi police officer involved in the fatal shooting of 1-year-old Kohen Wiley.
On June 14, 2026, officers responded to a reported shoplifting incident at Walmart involving a box of diapers. Foster fired into a vehicle carrying Kohen, his mother, and another adult as they attempted to drive away, killing the toddler and critically injuring an adult. The family denies shoplifting and says they had a receipt.
The Mississippi Bureau of Investigation is leading the probe, and Foster has been placed on administrative leave. Protests have erupted in the community demanding accountability and transparency.
A heartbreaking tragedy. Rest in peace, sweet Kohen. 🕊️😪

SKI@skiistiredasf
1-year-old Kohen Wiley, a Black toddler from Senatobia, Mississippi, was tragically killed by police gunfire in a Walmart parking lot on June 14, 2026. 😔 Officers responded to a reported shoplifting call involving a box of diapers. As a silver sedan carrying Kohen, his mother, and his aunt tried to drive away, an officer fired shots into the vehicle, striking the child. Kohen was pronounced dead at the hospital; his aunt was critically wounded. The family denies shoplifting and says they had a receipt. They are demanding answers and accountability as the Mississippi Bureau of Investigation reviews the case. Protests have broken out in the community. A heartbreaking tragedy. Rest in peace, sweet baby Kohen. 🕊️🙏🏽
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Kevin Strickland spent 43 years in prison for a crime he didn’t commit, making him one of the longest wrongfully imprisoned people in U.S. history.
Strickland’s story is one of the most heartbreaking examples of wrongful imprisonment in American history. In 1979, at the age of 18, he was convicted of a triple murder in Kansas City, Missouri, despite maintaining his innocence.
His conviction rested almost entirely on the testimony of one witness, who later recanted and admitted she had been pressured into identifying him. There was no physical evidence tying Strickland to the crime, yet he was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole for 50 years.
For decades, Strickland fought to prove his innocence. Advocacy groups, journalists, and even prosecutors later acknowledged that his conviction was a mistake. Still, appeals and petitions for his release were denied again and again, a stark reminder of how difficult it can be to overturn a wrongful conviction once it enters the system. Finally, in 2021, a judge formally exonerated Strickland, declaring that he had been wrongly imprisoned for 43 years.
At 62 years old, Strickland walked free, entering a world completely transformed from the one he knew as a teenager. He had never used a smartphone, never experienced the internet, and had lost nearly his entire adult life. Missouri law at the time did not offer him compensation, meaning he was released with little financial support despite spending more than four decades behind bars for a crime he did not commit. His case has since become a rallying cry for reform in wrongful conviction laws and compensation statutes across the United States.
© Reddit
#archaeohistories

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@zobop_republic @theintercept those racist white beasts with badges need to carry their own insurance
its the only thing that will stop
these depraved soulless white demonic beasts with badges
#ktb #onecopatatime
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@theintercept Police officers should be required to have college degrees so we the people don't get idiots like this.
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@nut_history The civil rights act was signed in 1964. Reggie’s career began in 1967. Somebody’s pants are on fire.
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Since today is #Juneteenth National Independence Day - I wanted to share this quick history lesson from Reggie Jackson
NSFW - but I think everyone needs to listen to this so they get a small glimpse of what African Americans had to deal with
Powerful
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This is so heartbreaking; He's just a kid. The pain in his voice is evident.
This is institutional racism in action.
Daryl McLune, 16 at the time, was arrested in Wandsworth in July 2021 on suspicion of attempted murder after his mum, Annette McLune, jumped from the roof of their flat in a suicide attempt.
He'd been at his grandma's and cycled home to find his mum critically injured. He was then handcuffed in the street and held for nearly 24 hours, despite not being involved.
Police later found a suicide note and razor blades showing it was self-harm, and he was released without charge. The experience left him with PTSD and affected his schooling.
He later sued the Met Police, and a jury found he was racially discriminated against and treated less fairly than a non-Black boy would have been, awarding him £130,000.
His barrister said it wasn't careful policing, it was a child in crisis being wrongly treated as a suspect, and that discrimination can be unconscious.
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