arotrios

joined 2 years ago
[–] arotrios@lemmy.world 13 points 2 days ago (5 children)

A brief synopsis of Elon's career:

 

One of the thorniest issues that has arisen in the wake of the Supreme Court’s decision in Dobbs—which, in overturning Roe v. Wade, devolved legal authority over abortion to the states—is whether restrictive states can prevent or deter their residents from obtaining abortion care in a state where it is legal.

Myron H. Thompson, a United States district court judge in Alabama, unequivocally ruled last month that restricting cross-border abortion travel is patently unconstitutional, in an opinion that powerfully and eloquently conveys the interconnected harms to patients and those who support them to access care.

Thompson’s opinion cuts through the noise to lay bare the catastrophic impact of abortion bans and the adjacent attempts to restrict access to legal out-of-state care.

Although the decision is of limited jurisdictional reach and subject to a possible appeal, it is clear that Thompson understands what’s at stake for abortion seekers who live in ban states, particularly if from a historically marginalized community.

Before turning to the decision, some background about the underlying case:

In May of 2019, after signing the state’s Human Life Protection Act into law, Gov. Kay Ivey issued a statement proclaiming that “this legislation stands as a powerful testament to Alabamians’ deeply held belief that every life is precious and that every life is a sacred gift from God.” To safeguard these ‘sacred gifts,’ the law banned abortion subject to very narrow exceptions and subject those found guilty of violating it of a prison sentence of not less than ten years up through a possible life sentence.

Although the law was initially enjoined from going into effect in the immediate aftermath of Dobbs, the injunction was dissolved—thus allowing one of the strictest criminal abortion laws in the country to take effect.

Not content with a criminal ban on abortion within the geographical boundaries of the state, in an online radio interview, Alabama Attorney General Steve Marshall threatened to bring criminal charges against those who assisted pregnant people who were seeking access to a legal cross-border abortion.

In response to his threats, three reproductive healthcare providers—Dr. Yashica Robinson, West Alabama Women’s Center and Alabama Women’s Center—and Yellowhammer Fund, “an abortion advocacy and reproductive justice organization” (plaintiffs), brought suit against Marshall.

In a press release, the ACLU conveyed the urgent necessity of stopping Marshall from making good on his threat in the absence of which:

“… pregnant people will struggle to find out-of-state care, and the financial and logistical support they need to obtain such care. … Many will be significantly delayed in accessing the abortion care they need, and some may even be forced to give birth against their will. This could have deadly consequences for Alabamians, who are residing in a state that has the third highest maternal mortality rate in the nation, and particularly for Black women, who make up a disproportionate share of maternal deaths due to systemic racism.”

As Thompson astutely understood in his opinion, without the assistance of the plaintiffs, their clients will face significant, and potentially insurmountable, barriers to arranging legal out-of-state abortions,” particularly those who are living in poverty, have limited formal education and are without “reliable internet access and/or are not technologically savvy.”

Thompson further recognized that Marshall’s threats of prosecution disrupted the essential relationship of trust between the plaintiffs and their clients which creates “ethical obligations to provide care and recommendations appropriate for each patient’s unique circumstances.” Rooted in this ethic of care, he credited plaintiffs’ fear that they “may be exacerbating the confusion and distress that people who come to us for help are already experiencing, and contributing to potentially dangerous delays in patients accessing healthcare, putting their health and safety at risk.”

Building outwards from these identified injuries, Thompson turned to an assessment of the constitutional interests at stake in the case. In a powerful repudiation of Marshall’s effort to extend the reach of Alabama’s criminal abortion ban beyond the state’s geographical boundaries, he ruled that Marshall violated the constitutionally protected right to interstate travel—a claim the plaintiffs asserted on behalf of their clients on account of the formidable obstacles they would have faced in asserting their rights, including Alabama’s “well-established climate of stigma, harassment and violence relating to abortion”—and the right to free speech.

Grounded in the recognition that the “right to interstate travel is one of our most fundamental constitutional rights….[and] has consistently been protected precisely so that people would be free to engage in lawful conduct while traveling,” Thompson was unequivocal that “while it is one thing for Alabama to outlaw by statute what happens in its own backyard,” it has no criminal jurisdiction beyond its borders. Accordingly, it cannot punish residents and those who assist them to access out-of-state legal abortion care. In short, the protected right to travel “includes both the right to move physically between two States and to do what is legal in the destination State”—otherwise, “our freedom of action is tied to our place of origin [and] the ‘right to travel’ becomes a hollow shell.”

Turning to the right of free speech, Thompson’s reasoning reinforces the perniciousness of Marshall’s effort to extend the reach of Alabama’s criminal abortion ban by inserting himself into the relationship of trust between plaintiffs and their clients through threatened prosecutions. As he writes, this “imposes a content- and viewpoint-based restriction on speech. It restricts information and discussion about a specific subject—abortion—to forbid encouraging a specific viewpoint–access to a legal out-of-state abortion.”

Of vital importance, particularly given the economic status of those served by the plaintiffs, Thompson also ruled apropos to Yellowhammer Fund that “the act of providing funds for women to travel out-of-state to obtain a legal abortion” is “expressive conduct,” which is protected by the first amendment. Notably, as an expressive act, the funding commitment communicates the Yellowhammer’s core founding belief that “reproductive healthcare should be accessible to all”—a viewpoint that was unconstitutionally suppressed as a direct result of Marshall’s threats.

Judge Thompson’s opinion stands as a powerful rebuke to states which seek to enforce their antiabortion “values and laws” beyond their own borders. The impact of abortion support bans, as attempted here by way of threatened prosecutions, will fall most heavily on marginalized and vulnerable populations who face the greatest barriers in accessing out-of-state care, including teens who have been singled out for these kinds of restrictive measures by a growing number of states. Clearly, the criminalization of abortion support is aimed at pressuring pregnant people in ban states to bear children by way of legal fiat by isolating them from essential sources of information and material support, and should not be tolerated as a legitimate expression of a state’s authority over its residents.

 

Homeland Security officers visited two Los Angeles public elementary schools this week to do a welfare check on migrant children, not for immigration enforcement, the department said Friday.

The officers were denied access by both principals. The department's explanation followed harsh criticism by Superintendent Alberto Carvalho of the Los Angeles Unified School District, who said the agents lied to school staff that they had been authorized by the children's parents and caretakers to go to their schools.

"We have confirmed that that is a falsehood," Carvalho said at a news conference on Thursday. "We've spoken with the caretakers of these children, in some cases parents, and they deny any interaction with these entities, and certainly deny providing authorization for these individuals to have any contact with these children at the school."

President Donald Trump's immigration policies have vastly expanded who is eligible for deportation and lifted a ban on immigration enforcement in schools. In Chicago in January, a school mistakenly said federal immigration authorities had come to campus. Officials later said it was officials from the U.S. Secret Service investigating a threat, but the false alarm raised fears among immigrant communities.

The Department of Homeland Security oversees U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, but ICE agents were not the officers sent to the schools.

DHS stated in an email to The Associated Press that agents with its Homeland Security Investigations agency "were at these schools conducting wellness checks on children who arrived unaccompanied at the border. This had nothing to do with immigration enforcement."

Homeland Security Investigations conducts criminal investigations into drugs and arms smuggling, cyber crime, human trafficking and child exploitation, among other things.

It added that "DHS is leading efforts to conduct welfare checks on these children to ensure that they are safe and not being exploited, abused, and sex trafficked."

Employees of Los Angeles Unified School District, the nation's second-largest district, were trained months ago in anticipation of arrivals by federal agents to campuses, Carvalho said.

Four federal officers arrived Monday morning to Russell Elementary and identified themselves as Homeland Security agents, Carvalho said. They then asked about four students ranging from first-graders to sixth-graders.

The agents told the principal repeatedly that this was not an immigration enforcement operation, federal officials said. They were told they would need a court order.

Two hours later, three Homeland Security agents arrived to Lillian Street Elementary and asked about a sixth grader, the superintendent said.

The agents, according to federal officials, went to Lillian to confirm the residence and verify the safety of a migrant child who arrived to the border unaccompanied and were told by the principal that they would need a warrant.

Carvalho said after asking to see the identifications of the agents, the principals at each school contacted the district's legal department, which sent representatives and dispatched school board police to the campuses. The federal officers then got in their vehicles and left.

"I am proud of these principals. I am proud of our workforce. I am proud of the clerical staff in the front office for they did exactly what we trained them to do," Carvalho said.

At one school, agents tried to insist that they have the authority to be on campus, which Carvalho said was incorrect.

"I'm still mystified as to how a first, second, third, fourth or sixth grader would pose any type of risk to the national security of our nation that would require Homeland Security to deploy its agents to two elementary schools," he said.

Carvalho said the actions add to the fear already being felt in immigrant communities and that his district will not be intimidated.

"Schools are not places of fear," he said.

[–] arotrios@lemmy.world 50 points 2 weeks ago

Old man yells at shower. News at 11.

 

Labor unions from Utah and across the country have poured over $2.6 million in cash and in-kind donations to help with the effort to overturn HB267, the controversial union busting bill that stripped collective bargaining rights from Utah’s public employees.

The bill, sponsored by Rep. Jordan Teuscher, blocks public employee unions from negotiating with employers over wages, benefits and working conditions. Despite public outcry, the legislation was approved by the GOP-controlled House and Senate and signed by Gov. Spencer Cox early in the 2025 session. However, because it passed without a two-thirds majority in either chamber, opponents can challenge the law through a public referendum.

More than $1 million of the contributions to Protect Utah Workers, a coalition made up of more than a dozen Utah labor unions, are in-kind donations, including travel expenses and salaries for staffers engaged in the referendum effort.

According to financial disclosures, the National Education Association (NEA) and 13 state-level teachers unions have sent or provided remote assistance from staffers since the effort began last month. Many of those staffers traveled from as far as Hawaii, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Maryland.

So far, the NEA is the biggest contributor to the referendum push, with donations totaling more than $1.8 million. Of that amount, more than $1.5 million funded a paid signature-gathering campaign to get the referendum onto the state ballot.

Other national unions have made sizable cash donations to the referendum push, including $250,000 from the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME) and $10,000 from the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (IBEW).

A spokesperson for Protect Utah Workers called assistance from national union members indispensable.

“Because Utah has one of the most challenging referendum processes in the U.S., our coalition couldn’t accomplish this without the support from union partners across the nation," the spokesperson said in a statement to Utah Political Watch. "Nearly 100 individuals have already traveled here to make phone calls, collect signatures, track down packets, and support our local team. Their solidarity is invaluable— we're deeply grateful for their commitment to defending workers' rights and collective bargaining."

Organizers have until April 15 to gather and submit more than 140,000 signatures from registered voters — representing 8% of all active voters in the state. Beyond the statewide total, they must also collect signatures from 8% of active voters in 15 of Utah’s 29 State Senate districts.

If they’re successful, the new law will go on hold until voters weigh in on the issue in the 2026 election.

Until the signature packets are turned in for verification, they’re being held in an undisclosed location with round-the-clock security and monitoring. The NEA has made a $5,100 in-kind donation to help with those efforts.

 

cross-posted from: https://50501.chat/post/97685


Originally Posted By u/Northwest_Thrills At 2025-04-07 01:34:57 PM | Source


[–] arotrios@lemmy.world 10 points 2 weeks ago

Not OP (I crossposted it as I thought their message should get out there), but have an upvote for your kindness :)

[–] arotrios@lemmy.world 83 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago) (1 children)

More people showed up in DC yesterday (100k ) than at Jan 6th (80k high estimate - snopes.com ).

This is the beginning, not the end result. Protest activity is off the charts and rising steadily:

Link to full article from WagingNonViolence.org


These movements take time to build, but this one is building much faster than previous efforts. I've been on the front lines since the 2nd Iraq War protests (which were huge) and this movement is already larger, smarter, and more organized.

It is making a difference - don't allow yourself to believe otherwise. You can see the cracks starting already with the infighting at the top of Trump's team and the defection of key republicans.

They're just as scared of our mob as they are of theirs.

Because we're stronger than they are - there are a lot more of us - and we have REAL cause to be angry now.

 

cross-posted from: https://50501.chat/post/93978

I may just be a random person on the internet. I'm not from the US.

In my work I do often work with tourists from the US. It has been very hard to tour you guys around for the past few years. Just explaining about my country and my city, I've been able to see many Americans just melt away during my hour and a half tours. Its been tough seeing the quiet desperation behind the eyes of many.

You have not only just risen up to stand and fight for what you think is right. You have done much more than that. You have taken the first step of not taking the abuse no more. You have just shown the world you are no longer able to just sit idly by and do nothing.

You came out in numbers at the first nationwide protest. Your media may not be covering it all too much nationally yet (or correct me if I'm wrong). But its on the news in my country. I am betting you it is on the news all around the world too. And please keep this momentum going!

You have not only inspired many more that share your values that couldn't go to these protests or didn't believe in these protests. You have inspired many more souls to speak up and root for your cause. I don't often speak on socials or even mingle in debates. But this time I felt I needed to speak out in support of what you are doing.

I am rooting for each and everyone of you. Seeing those images, seeing those videos of you guys out en masse. That's the Americans I grew up looking up to as a European with shared western values. Its good to see those values are still there and you guys are fighting for them. Not only for yourselves...

With all the negativity you guys have been receiving on the subs everywhere, I felt the need to give you guys this heartfelt message from someone that dearly cares about the state of your country and the world as a whole.

Awaken that French fighting spirit in your blood, Show them and anyone unwilling to listen, what Freedom really means. You are in control of the country you live in and this is the way to get that back!

In my country it's often said; "we either have to pump together or drown together". Meaning we don't have to agree but we do have to solve this together. (we just have mother nature to remind us of this)

(If any of this message comes of condescending I apologize for this beforehand. English is not my native tongue and my writing style is rather direct, one of the few reasons I rather stay quiet.)


Originally Posted By u/Mstr_me At 2025-04-06 05:51:46 AM | Source


 

cross-posted from: https://50501.chat/post/93776

We are building a massive, visible, national rejection of this crisis—and today’s numbers are proof that the people—the majority—are taking action to stop a hostile government takeover.

Because let’s be clear: We do not have a functioning democracy anymore. Trump and his billionaire allies have dismantled our system of checks and balances, stacked the courts, silenced dissent, and declared themselves above the law.

They are disappearing people, attacking universities and the free press, and purging agencies meant to protect the people—from the environment to civil rights to public health.

This is not politics as usual. This is a hostile takeover by billionaires, corporations, and authoritarian enablers.

They are gutting the country for parts—and selling us out in the process.

They are not leaders. They are traitors to the people of this country.

So we are building a People’s Movement. And history shows that when just 3.5% of the population engages in sustained, peaceful resistance—transformative change is inevitable.

But we have to earn it. And we have to fight for it.

We may no longer have a functioning democracy—but we still have a chance to restore it. The window is closing though. And we are the ones who must rise to meet this moment.

So here’s what you can do: 📱 Use the 5 Calls app or Resist Bot to contact your elected officials—every single day.

🎤 Demand town halls. Show up at their public appearances.

🚫 Boycott the corporations funding this hostile takeover.

🗣️ Talk to your friends, family, coworkers, and neighbors. Don’t let them sleep through this moment.

📸 Share protest footage, updates, and facts on social media. Amplify the truth—because the billionaires are trying to drown it out.

📲 And follow us to stay connected, get updates, and join future actions.

We are not alone. We are not powerless. And we are not backing down.

#50501movement #PeoplesMovement #FiftyFiftyOne #50501 #ImpeachTrump #HandsOff #April5


Originally Posted By u/FiftyFifty1Movement At 2025-04-05 07:56:36 PM | Source


[–] arotrios@lemmy.world 6 points 2 weeks ago (3 children)

No - this is a non-violent protest:


About this event

Donald Trump and Elon Musk think this country belongs to them. We are fighting back!

They're taking everything they can get their hands on—our health care, our data, our jobs, our services—and daring the world to stop them. This is a crisis, and the time to act is now.

🚨 On Saturday, April 5th, we're taking to the streets to fight back with a clear message: Hands off! 🚨

This mass mobilization day is our message to the world that we do not consent to the destruction of our government and our economy for the benefit of Trump and his billionaire allies. Alongside Americans across the country, we are marching, rallying, and protesting to demand a stop the chaos and build an opposition movement against the looting of our country.

A core principle behind all Hands Off! events is a commitment to nonviolent action. We expect all participants to seek to de-escalate any potential confrontation with those who disagree with our values.

Check out handsoff2025.com for more information.

 
 

cross-posted from: https://50501.chat/post/86350

Here's and idea: if your cost of goods has been increasing or is set to increase due to Trump's tariffs, instead of rolling that cost increase into your total to your customers, add it as a separate line item on your invoice and title it "Trump Tariffs" or something similar.

Trump loves getting credit for everything, we should give it to him each and every time we deliver a price increase to customers so they know who to thank.


Originally Posted By u/whisperpickler At 2025-04-03 09:49:58 AM | Source


 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/27707000

You’re his property’: Embattled Mississippi sheriff used inmates and county resources for personal gain, former inmates and deputy say

"Melvindale’s most polarizing police officer" tasers black woman over expired tabs

Inmate dies in Anoka County Jail

Police Chief says three un-named cops who attacked a deaf black man while looking for a white suspect have been suspended *without pay for one day

Man died after being hurt then neglected for a week in Huerfano County Jail, family says

Anne Arundel County sheriff’s deputy charged with child sex abuse

Inmate dies in Jefferson County Jail

New Orleans cop arrested, accused of stalking

Inmate dies in Lower Manhattan Criminal Court jail cell

Oklahoma cop arrested for sexually assaulting woman during traffic stop, threatening to put her in jail if she didn't engage in sexual act

Inmate dies in Marion County Jail

Trouble follows this cop wherever he goes

Inmate murdered in Monterey County Jail

‘Not a threat’: California cops dumped black double amputee out of wheelchair then shot him 11 times as he tried to hobble away, family’s lawsuit states

Inmate dies in Montgomery County Jail

New Jersey police chief accused of turning department into 'Animal House'

Inmate dies at Morgan County jail

Driver wouldn't pull over for traffic violation, so Alabama cops chased vehicle into fatal wreck

Fort Worth police didn’t investigate Tarrant jail deaths; Texas says there are no consequences.

Driver was "peeling out," so California cops chase vehicle into fatal wreck

Inmate dies in Troup County Jail

Driver wouldn't pull over for traffic stop, so California cops chased vehicle into fatal wreck

Over suspected stolen car, California cops chase vehicle into wreck, killing bystander

Suspected drunk driver wouldn't pull over, so California cops chased vehicle into fatal wreck

Driver wouldn't pull over for traffic stop, so Michigan cops chased vehicle into fatal wreck

Driver wouldn't pull over for traffic stop, so Ohio cops chased vehicle into fatal wreck

   
Note: When reading news coverage from any corporate-owned source — a newspaper, TV station or network, etc — the facts are generally factual, but the slant favors the rich and powerful.

   
Previously

[–] arotrios@lemmy.world 2 points 3 weeks ago

FL 11 was an amazing piece of software - that's the version that really kicked it into the big leagues.

You should check out the newest version - the download manager is much better since FL Studio 20, and they've got a bunch of new packages and plugins. The Flex plugin is one of the best traditional instrument synths I've ever worked with (think it came in on v 17 or 18).

Even the new version has excellent performance on my 10 year old desktop - you'll love it when you get a chance to upgrade.

[–] arotrios@lemmy.world 5 points 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago) (2 children)

If you're into music production, FL Studio has a lifetime license that's stood the test of time, and has kept up with or exceeded the capabilities of packages like Reason, Ableton, and Logic. It was the first to really embrace an open VST plugin interface, and has so many options that even after 25 years I haven't yet explored them all. It also comes with a ton of free instruments you can download (basically free DLC).

I picked up a lifetime license for $99 in 2001 when it was Fruity Loops 2.0. Used it for 10 years as it evolved and was amazed that it was keeping up with the big boys. That encouraged me to drop another $80 to upgrade to the producer edition to start making professional level tracks - and I was not disappointed.

The best part? The base license is still just $99. Producer edition is still $179.

EDIT: side note - the demo is actually the full software package, so you can try it out for free. The license just unlocks the capacity to save projects with the plugins that are covered by your licensing.

 

The layoffs at the Department of Health and Human Services slashed the staffs of major federal aging, disability and anti-poverty programs, leaving the future of those programs uncertain.

At least 40% of staff got layoff notices and many were turned away at the front door Tuesday when they showed up for work at the Administration for Community Living, or ACL, which coordinates federal policy on aging and disability. That's according to the agency's former director under the Biden Administration, Alison Barkoff, who says she talked to multiple members of her former staff.

The agency funds programs that run senior centers and distribute 216 million meals a year to older and disabled people through the Meals on Wheels program.

"The programs that ACL implements improve the lives of literally tens of millions of older adults, people with disabilities and their families and caregivers," says Barkoff, now director of a health law program at George Washington University's Milken Institute School of Public Health. "There's no way to have these RIFs and not impact the programs and the people who rely on them."

Last week, the announcement of the coming layoffs at HHS said that ACL's responsibilities would go to different parts of HHS.

But Project 2025, the Heritage Foundation's guide for reshaping government, had suggested ACL take on work on special education services once the Department of Education was dismantled. It's not clear where that work will be done now.

In addition, every staffer was laid off from the Division of Energy Assistance, according to two employees who lost their jobs on Tuesday, Andrew Germain and Vikki Pretlow. The office runs the Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Program, or LIHEAP, which helps 5.9 million low-income households pay heat and cooling bills and pay for home repairs to boost energy efficiency.

The staffers said layoffs of about 20 workers came as a surprise and they expressed concern about whether the program would continue once funding runs out at the end of September and impoverished people face rising heating bills in fall and winter.

LIHEAP provides "life-saving services," says Germain. One way the funds are used is to help low-income people pay their electric bills when they rely upon oxygen or other medical devices or need to keep the refrigerator running to store insulin or other medicines.

Germain ran compliance monitoring to make sure states used the LIHEAP money correctly. He said fraud is rare. But LIHEAP was scrutinized by Project 2025. It noted a "loophole" – fixed by Congress more than ten years ago, in 2014 – that was used by about 10 states to give minimal energy assistance in a way that then qualified impoverished people for a bigger SNAP, or food stamp, payment.

Congress appropriated $4.1 billion to LIHEAP in fiscal year 2024. Germain says without federal staff to run the program, it's unclear how it will continue after the current appropriation ends in September.

Pretlow, who lost her job as a program specialist in the LIHEAP office, said: "You can be paid much more in a different place, you can be praised more in a different place, you can be appreciated more in a different place. But the people I worked with have a great heart for service."

 

Two appeals courts have recently rejected efforts by private parties to use copyright to restrict access to the laws that most directly affect ordinary citizens: regulations that ensure our homes, workplaces, devices, and many other products, are safe and fit for purpose. Apparently hoping the third time will be the charm, a standards organization is asking the Third Circuit Court of Appeals to break ranks and hold that a private party that helps develop a law also gets to own that law. In an amicus brief filed with co-counsel Abigail Burton and Samuel Silver of Welsh & Recker, P.C., on behalf of multiple entities— including Watch Duty, iFixit, Public.Resource.Org, and multiple library associations—EFF urged the court to instead join the judicial consensus and recognize that no one owns the law.

EFF urged the court to join the judicial consensus and recognize that no one owns the law.

This case concerns UpCodes, a company that has created a database of building codes—like the National Electrical Code—that includes codes incorporated by reference into law. ASTM, a private organization that coordinated the development of some of those codes, insists that it retains copyright in them even after they have been adopted into law, and therefore has the right to control how the public accesses and shares them. Fortunately, neither the Constitution nor the Copyright Act support that theory. Faced with similar claims, some courts, including the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals, have held that the codes lose copyright protection when they are incorporated into law. Others, like the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals in a case EFF defended on behalf of Public.Resource.Org, have held that, whether or not the legal status of the standards changes once they are incorporated into law, making them fully accessible and usable online is a lawful fair use. A federal court in Pennsylvania followed the latter path in this case, finding that UpCodes’ database was a protected fair use.

The Third Circuit should affirm the ruling, preferably on the alternative ground that standards incorporated into law are necessarily promoted to the public domain. The internet has democratized access to law, making it easier than ever for the public —from journalists to organizers to safety professionals to ordinary concerned citizens —to understand, comment on, and share the myriad regulations that bind us. That work is particularly essential where those regulations are crafted by private parties and made mandatory by regulators with limited public oversight and increasingly limited staffing. Copyright law should not be read to impede it.

The Supreme Court has explained that “every citizen is presumed to know the law, and it needs no argument to show that all should have free access” to it. Apparently, it needs some argument after all, but it is past time for the debate to end.

[–] arotrios@lemmy.world 10 points 3 weeks ago

In the US, so as of 1/20/25, sadly yes.

[–] arotrios@lemmy.world 40 points 4 weeks ago (2 children)
[–] arotrios@lemmy.world 24 points 4 weeks ago

Challenge accepted:

[–] arotrios@lemmy.world 68 points 1 month ago (1 children)
[–] arotrios@lemmy.world 38 points 1 month ago (2 children)

Reddit is full out being censored, and they're tracking upvotes to identify dissidents. Expect any discussion and your voting history to be fully available to the cops when they ask for it.

https://50501.chat/ is proving to be a good non-reddit source for the 50501 movement. Here's their mirror community on lemmy.world/c/Mirror@50501.chat

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