commanderboshtette:

badgyal-k:

cocoacallalily:

nabyss:

meanmisscharles:

phoenix-ace:

redmensch:

this student walk out against school shootings is intriguing because it will create a generation of teens with mass strike experience. that has never happened before and could maybe have implications for how they go on to think about politics in terms of mass action

Its happened before, they just werent the right complexion, so they were criminalized, locked up and demonized.

People just rewrite history and facts like some of us aren’t paying attention…

☝☝☝☝ Do not erase us to prop your movement.

👆🏿👆🏿👆🏿

Wowwwww lmao

this is exactly what i’ve been talking about… like nevermind even going back to civil rights movement or the vietnam war or iraq or any of the other well known eras of mass student protests & walkouts – in the past decade this has been happening. it’s not distant memory, and yet somehow it’s ‘never been done before’ and ppl like oprah and obama are out here making claims that it ~hasn’t happened since selma~, as though they haven’t spent the last 6+ years degrading and promoting the use of tear gas and “rubber” bullets against the teens protesting. and i swear it’s like the second there was an opportunity to deracialize “stop killing us,” everyone jumped on it. 

tl;dr the only way “that has never happened before” could ever be true is if you’re ignoring all of world history

Want to Know How the Cops Actually Trace a Gun?

torrid-wind:

By Jeanne Marie Laskas
August 30, 2016

There’s no telling how many guns we have in America—and when one gets used in a crime, no way for the cops to connect it to its owner. The only place the police can turn for help is a Kafkaesque agency in West Virginia, where, thanks to the gun lobby, computers are illegal and detective work is absurdly antiquated. On purpose. Thing is, the geniuses who work there are quietly inventing ways to do the impossible.

Say there’s a murder. Blood everywhere, a dead guy on the floor. The cops come in with their yellow tape, chalk line, the little booties, cameras, swabs, the fingerprint dust. One of them finds a gun on the floor. The gun! He lifts it with his pinkie, examines it, takes note of the serial number. Back at the station, they run a trace on the gun. A name pops up. It’s the wife! Or: It’s the business partner! It’s somebody’s gun, and this is so exciting because now they know who did it.

Except—no. You are watching too much TV. It doesn’t work like that.

“Think,” says Charlie Houser, a federal agent with the ATF. We’re in his office, a corner, and he’s got a whiteboard behind him where he’s splashed diagrams, charts, numbers.

The cops run a trace on a gun? What does that even mean? A name pops up? From where? There’s some master list somewhere? Like, for all the guns all over the world, there’s a master list that started with the No. 1 (when? World War I? Civil War? Russian Revolution? when?), and in the year 2016 we are now up to No. 14 gazillion whatever, and every single one of those serial numbers has a gun owner’s name attached to it on some giant list somewhere (where?), which, thank God, a big computer is keeping track of?

“People don’t think,” Charlie tells me. He’s a trim guy, 51, full lips and a thin goatee, and he likes to wear three-piece suits. They fit loose, so the overall effect is awkward innocence, like an eighth grader headed to his first formal. “ I get e-mails even from police saying, ‘Can you type in the serial number and tell me who the gun is registered to?’ Every week. They think it’s like a VIN number on a car. Even police. Police from everywhere. ‘Hey, can you guys hurry up and type that number in?’”

…So here’s a news flash, from Charlie: “We ain’t got a registration system. Ain’t nobody registering no damn guns.”


There is no national database of guns. We have no centralized record of who owns all the firearms we so vigorously debate, no hard data regarding how many people own them, how many of them are bought or sold, or how many even exist.

…The National Tracing Center is not allowed to have centralized computer data.

“That’s the big no-no,” says Charlie.

That’s been a federal law, thanks to the NRA, since 1986: No searchable database of America’s gun owners. So people here have to use paper, sort through enormous stacks of forms and record books that gun stores are required to keep and to eventually turn over to the feds when requested. It’s kind of like a library in the old days—but without the card catalog. They can use pictures of paper, like microfilm (they recently got the go-ahead to convert the microfilm to PDFs), as long as the pictures of paper are not searchable. You have to flip through and read. No searching by gun owner. No searching by name.

“Okay?” Charlie’s tapping a box of Winston Reds. His smile is impish, like he’s daring you to say what needs to be said: This is a fucking nightmare…

[Read entire article]

Want to Know How the Cops Actually Trace a Gun?

kelpforestdweller:

pull-the-tooth:

A self-described nazi mows down kids at a 40% Jewish high school with a weapon designed for the battlefield: time to demonize poor mental health and neurodivergence and mention one or both whenever we mention the shooting even though literal white supremacy is to blame!

while simultaneously completely failing to mention the antisemitism almost every fucking time it comes up anywhere

fumbledeegrumble:

dangerouslypleasantvictuuri:

spaffy-jimble:

The right wants to be victims so fucking bad

oops. 

I mean, yeah, ONLY GAY PEOPLE get to be afraid, but oh no, not Republican’s/Conservatives who are shat on at every opportunity, get their talks crashed by a bunch of wussie crybabies who have nothing better to do than disturb other people who just want to listen to Ben Shapiro talk. 

oh but yeah Only Gay people get to be scared. 

god this is shit. 

are you shitting me