Jill Stein Facing Vandalism Charges After North Dakota Protest

Green Party presidential candidate Jill Stein is going to be charged with vandalism and trespassing after joining hundreds of Native Americans in their protest against the Dakota Access Pipeline near Cannon Ball, North Dakota. Stein spray painted words of protest on a bulldozer belonging to the oil company, Energy Transfer Partners, trying to construct the pipeline.

Politico reports:

Morton County Sheriff Kyle Kirchmeier said the sheriff’s department is “working up the information through the state’s attorney’s office to pursue charges (against Stein).” It’s unclear if the charges would be felonies or misdemeanors.

On Facebook, Stein boldly publicized her actions, writing, “The state of North Dakota may charge me with vandalism for painting a bulldozer. Will they charge the oil company that bulldozed the sacred burial grounds of the Standing Rock Sioux?”

The Standing Rock Sioux, whose land is threatened by the pipeline’s construction, have been joined by some 200 other tribes in solidarity, reportedly the largest alliance of Native peoples in 150 years. The Great Sioux Nation, the Seven Fires Council, has reunited. Janaya Khan said, “The Seven Fires Council, who last came together in 1867, is together now. When they last united, they defeated American forces in the Battle of Little Big Horn.”

The pipeline would carry crude oil from North Dakota to Illinois, pumping through nearly half a million barrels a day. The oil company’s efforts are being funded by big banks. As Democracy Now! reports, “Bank of America, HSBC, UBS, Goldman Sachs, Wells Fargo, JPMorgan Chase and other financial institutions have, combined, extended a $3.75 billion credit line to Energy Transfer Partners, the parent company of Dakota Access.”

The Standing Rock Sioux say the construction destroyed sacred burial sites, and fear the poisoning of local water should a spill ever occur. There is also a general opposition to the use of fossil fuels and the environmental damage it causes.

Hundreds of protesters put their bodies in the path of oil company machines to halt construction. Some have chained themselves to equipment. Private security forces used attack dogs and pepper spray on some protesters to get them to back down, sparking outrage across the country.

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North Korea’s 28 Websites

As reported by IFLScience, North Korea accidentally revealed to the world on Monday, September 19, 2016, that it has but 28 websites.

A top-level server in North Korea was (presumably) mistakenly configured to allow outside access to Korea’s intranet (which end in .kp). The opening was detected by American cyber security personnel, but ended up on — where else? — Reddit. There are sites for news, cooking, insurance, water laws, flights and traveling, charity for the elderly, films, and sports. There is also a Facebook-esque site called “Friend.” Check them out on Reddit.

The communist dictatorship strictly controls television, radio, newspapers, and the internet, which in their limited capacities “pump out a steady stream of propaganda” (BBC). They

…serve up a menu of flattering reports about North Korea’s leader. Economic hardship and famines are not reported. North Korea is one of the hardest countries for foreign media to cover. Ordinary North Koreans caught listening to foreign broadcasts risk harsh punishments, such as forced labour. The authorities attempt to jam foreign-based and dissident radio stations.

North Korean media glorify dictator Kim Jong-un and his late father Kim Jong-Il, praise nuclear tests as a means toward “peace” and “sovereignty,” and criticize “US military threat and economic pressure” (IFLScience).

But North Korean citizens likely don’t have full access to these 28 sites. As BBC notes, “Online access within North Korea is exceedingly rare” and “user activity [is] monitored.”

The websites, to quote one astute observer on the internet, have the sophistication of an “elementary school” website, and take a long time to load. As IFLScience put it, North Korea’s internet is “very, very dull.”

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Stand Up KC Takes Over Missouri Capitol

On Monday, September 12, 2016, Stand Up KC joined other social justice groups in 30 state capitals for a “Moral Revival” — that is, to push for public policies that aid ordinary workers, such as living wages and adequate healthcare. Protesters descended on Jefferson City from Kansas City and elsewhere, flooding the halls and chambers of the capitol building.

Stand Up KC is an organization of working families, students, and faith leaders fighting for union rights and a $15 minimum wage for Kansas Citians.

The group vowed to “shut down the capitol” on Facebook, writing:

From across the state, we converge on Jefferson City with a simple demand for lawmakers: Stop undermining Missouri’s state motto and “Let the Welfare of the People Be the Supreme Law!” Stop condemning Kansas City’s working families to poverty by blocking out $13 minimum wage increase, which we passed last year! Halt your anti-democratic and racist efforts to strip us of our voting rights by putting voter ID on the November election! Cease attacks on our unions! And allow Medicaid to expand and give working people and the poor the healthcare each of us deserves!

Declaring that “a moral Missouri puts people before profits and the collective good before the interests of a few,” Stand Up KC used the name Myrna De Los Santos, a Kansas City woman who died suddenly in the first week of September, as a rallying cry in Jefferson City.

“Myrna’s death was heartbreaking,” a fast-food worker named Fran said in a speech today. “And it could have been prevented. She was only 49 years old. She died too soon because McDonald’s didn’t pay her enough to treat her diabetes; because Missouri’s lawmakers denied her the raise and access to health care that could’ve saved her life.”

“Myrna was a fellow McDonalds worker and leader with Stand Up KC who was willing to do whatever it takes to win economic and racial equality for all,” said Terrence Wise, a Stand Up KC leader who was recently invited to the White House to introduce Barack Obama before the president’s speech on worker rights.

The protest is expected to last all day.

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Stand Up KC Marches Against Sexual Harassment

On Thursday, October 6, 2016, Stand Up KC, a social justice group advocating a $15 minimum wage, union rights, and better working conditions for all, marched against sexual harassment in the workplace. The action was sparked when two McDonald’s employees filed sexual harassment complaints with the government, one employee a gay man subjected to verbal assaults and the other a woman who was groped.

A group of dozens of fast food workers and allies gathered at the McDonald’s at 31st and Van Brunt at about noon, marching around the facility while chanting opposition to sexual harassment, before journeying across the street for speeches. Speakers included one fast food worker who spoke of being kissed on the job and another who complained of being told to not “spread your legs so much.” Becca Anderson of the Metropolitan Organization to Counter Sexual Assault and State Representative Judy Morgan also spoke.

The common theme was that not enough is being done to prevent nor punish sexual harassment. According to Anderson, 40% of women in fast food experience it.

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KCPD Officer Donald Ebert on Terence Crutcher Killing: “Good Shoot”

On Wednesday night, September 21, 2016, the Ida B. Wells Coalition Against Racism and Police Brutality in Kansas City reported that Donald Ebert, a police officer with the Kansas City, Missouri, Police Department wrote on Facebook of Terence Crutcher: “Should have dropped the entitlement card and listened the first time. Good shoot.”

A Tulsa, Oklahoma, police officer shot and killed Crutcher, an unarmed black man, as he walked toward his vehicle. The police claim Crutcher refused to follow directions and that the officer feared Crutcher was trying to get to a weapon in his car.

Ebert wrote his comment on a CBS News post, a comment still up mid-Thursday. After being criticized by another Facebook user, Ebert slammed people with “kiss the babies and poor me syndrome” who don’t blame Crutcher for the lethal actions of the officer. “No one wants to take responsibility for their own actions they rather blame everyone else.”

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Letter to the KCPD

To the Kansas City Police Department:

I am writing this because black lives matter. And when I learned that one of your officers, Donald Ebert, praised the shooting of unarmed Terence Crutcher in Tulsa on social media, I was sickened. Ebert publicly declared that the death of Crutcher entailed a “good shoot” (good shot?) and that Crutcher held an “entitlement card,” or a feeling he didn’t need to follow police commands. The implication in all this, of course, is that Crutcher got exactly what he deserved.

Kansas Citians and people across the country will debate on whether the Tulsa officer shooting Crutcher was justified. But it would be nice if the people sworn to serve and protect Kansas City at least pretended like the death of a human being, regardless of circumstance, is a tragedy.

Even when a police officer is forced to kill someone who is trying to commit a senseless murder, it is a tragedy. Can we not be empathetic people? It’s a tragedy for the officer, who had to take a life and may suffer from PTSD as a result, as so many officers do. It’s a tragedy for the would-be-murderer’s family, for perhaps even he had a mother. Can we not ask caring questions, questions loved ones or friends might ask, like How did he get like this? What drove him to commit such evil acts? And it is a tragedy for the deceased, because though the officer was justified in his or her actions, the would-be-killer can never be redeemed, has no possibility to become the heartening story we all love to share on social media of someone on a troubled path who turned his life around and changed the world in a positive way. No, it may not usually happen. But at least when people live, when they live long enough to see justice in court or prison, there is a chance at being reborn.

And if that is heartbreaking, how much more so for people like Crutcher, an unarmed, nonviolent man with car trouble? Had Ebert shown sensitivity toward the loss of life and all the people it affected, I wouldn’t be writing this now. I believe that even people who disobey police commands or resist arrest have the right to life; Ebert clearly does not agree, but I believe as a thinking adult he is capable of expressing his opinion in a way respectful of the situation and respectful of the dead. Being flippant and praising the result is unacceptable.

KC needs officers that respect civilians. I request you fire this officer immediately.

Sincerely,

Garrett S. Griffin