零 (ling)/30s (THEY/THEM/佢)
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contrarianne:
“ Hey, horror fans! The creepypasta wiki is currently running a fundraiser for the 12-year-old victim of yesterday’s stabbing in Waukesha, Wisconsin. You can read more about the incident here, but the gist of it is: this poor young girl...
contrarianne

Hey, horror fans! The creepypasta wiki is currently running a fundraiser for the 12-year-old victim of yesterday’s stabbing in Waukesha, Wisconsin. You can read more about the incident here, but the gist of it is: this poor young girl was lured into the forest by two of her friends and stabbed nineteen times because they thought it would connect them with Slenderman. (Yes, that Slenderman.) News reports say that she crawled to safety and is currently in stable condition, but she still has a very long road of mental and physical recovery ahead of her. One of her stab wounds missed an essential artery by less than a centimeter. 

Please spread this around. This young woman needs all the help we can provide, and every little bit counts.

The UCSB shooter did NOT kill 6 women.
publiusvirgiliamaro

In actuality, he killed 4 men and 2 women. (sources: 1 2 3 4)

Please make no mistake: it is still evident that his motivation for killing was misogyny. It is still clear that this event happened because the shooter felt he was entitled to sex. It is still true that the shooter targeted a sorority house, killing and injuring multiple women. The fact that 4 of those who died were male does not lessen the fact that this was a disgusting display of male entitlement.

However, that being said, please do not spread misinformation about this and state that 6 women were killed. This is especially important considering that this event is being used to target the MRA and the patriarchy, because we all know what the MRA and those who defend the patriarchy are like - if you have one tiny flaw in what you’re saying, they’ll dismiss everything. It’s all too common for those MRA types to say “you stated one small fact ever so slightly wrong, therefore your entire argument is invalid”. DON’T give them that opportunity.

delucat

YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EIzNmgdTUwM

==============================================

CNN i report » Link

http://ireport.cnn.com/docs/DOC-1111051

March 23, Taipei, Taiwan 

Ma’s administration earlier started using police violence to crack down peaceful protest in front of Legislative Yuan and Executive Yuan against Ma’s autocratic approach of passing a treaty with China. Hundreds of young students are now in danger and life threats. 

Ma is now no different from the autocracy in Beijing, by beating the students with sticks & make them bleed. The democracy in Taiwan is collapsing, if the event ultimately evolved to become the June-4 event of Tiananmen Square in Taipei.

Is happening in my country :(

tw: police brutality

His head bloody, 84 year old Kang Wong is escorted into a police car before being charged with jaywalking. Photo credit: G.N. Miller / NY Post.

His head bloody, 84 year old Kang Wong is escorted into a police car before being charged with jaywalking. Photo credit: G.N. Miller / NY Post.

The New York Post reported yesterday that Kang Wong, an 84 year old man, was walking against a light in Manhattan’s Upper West Side when police gestured at him to stop. The man, who reportedly doesn’t speak much English, didn’t understand the order. Says one witness:

“The guy didn’t seem to speak English. The cop walked him over to the Citibank” near the northeast corner of 96th and Broadway, said one witness, Ian King, a Fordham University law student.

The cops, at the intersection to ticket jaywalkers just 12 hours after pedestrian Samantha Lee was killed, proceeded to write Wong a ticket. However, Wong still apparently didn’t understand what was going on, and started to walk away from the cop.

“The cop tried to pull him back, and that’s when he began to struggle with the cop,” said King, 24. “As soon as he pushed the cop, it was like cops started running in from everywhere.”

Wong was left bleeding and dazed with cuts to his face.

Wong was taken to the hospital, and later the local police precinct, where his 41-year-old son attempted to find out what Wong was charged with. After several hours, Wong’s son discovered that his father had been arrested for jaywalking, resisting arrest, obstructing governmental administration, and disorderly conduct.

This incident is unfathomable, and underscores several problems with police procedure. First, is the problem of language. New York City is a multicultural, multilingual city, where a study conducted 13 years ago showed that 30% of residents spoke a language other than English. This number has risen to more than 50% by 2012, including more than half a million Chinese-speaking residents (representing just under 10% of the city’s total population), 2/3rds of whom speak English poorly. Although English is the official language of the United States, police who must interact daily with the city’s residents should be required to speak other predominant languages in their areas of operation, precisely to prevent these kinds of miscommunications and misunderstandings. We live in an era when translation apps are on every smartphone; is it really reasonable to suggest that police officers still have no protocol for how to deal with a pedestrian or traffic stop where language is clearly an obstacle?

At least one charge against Mr. Wong — resisting arrest — requires an understanding that he is under arrest: yet, Mr. Wong’s lack of English skills imply that at the time of his stop and arrest he was unlikely to have understood, and therefore had the capacity to comply to, officers’ orders. Further, during his arrest, was Mr. Wong capable of understanding his rights? Perhaps it is time to reexamine police procedure with an eye to the reality of multilingualism in this country. Perhaps it is time to implement a common sense measure requiring that people being stopped by police have the right to request that the stop be conducted in a language they understand.

Second, even if Mr. Wong was jaywalking and being disorderly, was he likely to have been so much of a threat to officers, that it necessitated a brutal beating? In photographs, blood streams from Mr. Wong’s head as he is led to a police car. The only word that springs to mind upon seeing these images is “senseless”.

In a post written last week documenting examples of APIA resistance, I posted a picture taken by acclaimed photographer Corky Lee at one of the protests of the 1970′s: a protest against police brutality in Chinatown. Nearly 40 years later, excessive police brutality — against Blacks, Asians, Latinos, and other minorities — continues to be a reality.

The NYPD say they are conducting an internal review regarding this incident. I’ll stay on top of this story to find out how to support the family, who say they will be seeking action against the officers who arrested Mr. Wong.

earth-dad

tw: police brutality

External image

His head bloody, 84 year old Kang Wong is escorted into a police car before being charged with jaywalking. Photo credit: G.N. Miller / NY Post.

The New York Post reported yesterday that Kang Wong, an 84 year old man, was walking against a light in Manhattan’s Upper West Side when police gestured at him to stop. The man, who reportedly doesn’t speak much English, didn’t understand the order. Says one witness:

“The guy didn’t seem to speak English. The cop walked him over to the Citibank” near the northeast corner of 96th and Broadway, said one witness, Ian King, a Fordham University law student.

The cops, at the intersection to ticket jaywalkers just 12 hours after pedestrian Samantha Lee was killed, proceeded to write Wong a ticket. However, Wong still apparently didn’t understand what was going on, and started to walk away from the cop.

“The cop tried to pull him back, and that’s when he began to struggle with the cop,” said King, 24. “As soon as he pushed the cop, it was like cops started running in from everywhere.”

Wong was left bleeding and dazed with cuts to his face.

Wong was taken to the hospital, and later the local police precinct, where his 41-year-old son attempted to find out what Wong was charged with. After several hours, Wong’s son discovered that his father had been arrested for jaywalking, resisting arrest, obstructing governmental administration, and disorderly conduct.

This incident is unfathomable, and underscores several problems with police procedure. First, is the problem of language. New York City is a multicultural, multilingual city, where a study conducted 13 years ago showed that 30% of residents spoke a language other than English. This number has risen to more than 50% by 2012, including more than half a million Chinese-speaking residents (representing just under 10% of the city’s total population), 2/3rds of whom speak English poorly. Although English is the official language of the United States, police who must interact daily with the city’s residents should be required to speak other predominant languages in their areas of operation, precisely to prevent these kinds of miscommunications and misunderstandings. We live in an era when translation apps are on every smartphone; is it really reasonable to suggest that police officers still have no protocol for how to deal with a pedestrian or traffic stop where language is clearly an obstacle?

At least one charge against Mr. Wong — resisting arrest — requires an understanding that he is under arrest: yet, Mr. Wong’s lack of English skills imply that at the time of his stop and arrest he was unlikely to have understood, and therefore had the capacity to comply to, officers’ orders. Further, during his arrest, was Mr. Wong capable of understanding his rights? Perhaps it is time to reexamine police procedure with an eye to the reality of multilingualism in this country. Perhaps it is time to implement a common sense measure requiring that people being stopped by police have the right to request that the stop be conducted in a language they understand.

Second, even if Mr. Wong was jaywalking and being disorderly, was he likely to have been so much of a threat to officers, that it necessitated a brutal beating? In photographs, blood streams from Mr. Wong’s head as he is led to a police car. The only word that springs to mind upon seeing these images is “senseless”.

In a post written last week documenting examples of APIA resistance, I posted a picture taken by acclaimed photographer Corky Lee at one of the protests of the 1970′s: a protest against police brutality in Chinatown. Nearly 40 years later, excessive police brutality — against Blacks, Asians, Latinos, and other minorities — continues to be a reality.

The NYPD say they are conducting an internal review regarding this incident. I’ll stay on top of this story to find out how to support the family, who say they will be seeking action against the officers who arrested Mr. Wong.

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