Friday, March 31, 2017

 
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The article below, 'Game Over for the Climate' was published in the New York Times Opinion Section 5 years ago by one of our 'top' scientists.  What has transpired during the 5 years since we received this warning?
Essentially, we have ignored the warning and are working diligently to do the wrong thing...  essentially, we have wasted 5 years wherein we could have made some small measure of progress.  Instead, we have used the time to move boldly in the wrong direction, proclaiming every excuse and broadcasting every lie.
Just to keep things lined up properly, we must recognize that we should all be standing with Native Americans at Standing Rock where the 'tar sands oil' is expected to be piped to the Gulf Coast.
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Just so we understand who and what is truly important
Game Over for the Climate

By JAMES HANSEN MAY 9, 2012

GLOBAL warming isn’t a prediction. It is happening. That is why I was so troubled to read a recent interview with President Obama in Rolling Stone in which he said that Canada would exploit the oil in its vast tar sands reserves “regardless of what we do.”

If Canada proceeds, and we do nothing, it will be game over for the climate.

Canada’s tar sands, deposits of sand saturated with bitumen, contain twice the amount of carbon dioxide emitted by global oil use in our entire history. If we were to fully exploit this new oil source, and continue to burn our conventional oil, gas and coal supplies, concentrations of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere eventually would reach levels higher than in the Pliocene era, more than 2.5 million years ago, when sea level was at least 50 feet higher than it is now. That level of heat-trapping gases would assure that the disintegration of the ice sheets would accelerate out of control. Sea levels would rise and destroy coastal cities. Global temperatures would become intolerable. Twenty to 50 percent of the planet’s species would be driven to extinction. Civilization would be at risk.

That is the long-term outlook. But near-term, things will be bad enough. Over the next several decades, the Western United States and the semi-arid region from North Dakota to Texas will develop semi-permanent drought, with rain, when it does come, occurring in extreme events with heavy flooding. Economic losses would be incalculable. More and more of the Midwest would be a dust bowl. California’s Central Valley could no longer be irrigated. Food prices would rise to unprecedented levels.

If this sounds apocalyptic, it is. This is why we need to reduce emissions dramatically. President Obama has the power not only to deny tar sands oil additional access to Gulf Coast refining, which Canada desires in part for export markets, but also to encourage economic incentives to leave tar sands and other dirty fuels in the ground.

The global warming signal is now louder than the noise of random weather, as I predicted would happen by now in the journal Science in 1981. Extremely hot summers have increased noticeably. We can say with high confidence that the recent heat waves in Texas and Russia, and the one in Europe in 2003, which killed tens of thousands, were not natural events — they were caused by human-induced climate change.

We have known since the 1800s that carbon dioxide traps heat in the atmosphere. The right amount keeps the climate conducive to human life. But add too much, as we are doing now, and temperatures will inevitably rise too high. This is not the result of natural variability, as some argue. The earth is currently in the part of its long-term orbit cycle where temperatures would normally be cooling. But they are rising — and it’s because we are forcing them higher with fossil fuel emissions.

The concentration of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere has risen from 280 parts per million to 393 p.p.m. over the last 150 years. The tar sands contain enough carbon — 240 gigatons — to add 120 p.p.m. Tar shale, a close cousin of tar sands found mainly in the United States, contains at least an additional 300 gigatons of carbon. If we turn to these dirtiest of fuels, instead of finding ways to phase out our addiction to fossil fuels, there is no hope of keeping carbon concentrations below 500 p.p.m. — a level that would, as earth’s history shows, leave our children a climate system that is out of their control.

We need to start reducing emissions significantly, not create new ways to increase them. We should impose a gradually rising carbon fee, collected from fossil fuel companies, then distribute 100 percent of the collections to all Americans on a per-capita basis every month. The government would not get a penny. This market-based approach would stimulate innovation, jobs and economic growth, avoid enlarging government or having it pick winners or losers. Most Americans, except the heaviest energy users, would get more back than they paid in increased prices. Not only that, the reduction in oil use resulting from the carbon price would be nearly six times as great as the oil supply from the proposed pipeline from Canada, rendering the pipeline superfluous, according to economic models driven by a slowly rising carbon price.

But instead of placing a rising fee on carbon emissions to make fossil fuels pay their true costs, leveling the energy playing field, the world’s governments are forcing the public to subsidize fossil fuels with hundreds of billions of dollars per year. This encourages a frantic stampede to extract every fossil fuel through mountaintop removal, longwall mining, hydraulic fracturing, tar sands and tar shale extraction, and deep ocean and Arctic drilling.

President Obama speaks of a “planet in peril,” but he does not provide the leadership needed to change the world’s course. Our leaders must speak candidly to the public — which yearns for open, honest discussion — explaining that our continued technological leadership and economic well-being demand a reasoned change of our energy course. History has shown that the American public can rise to the challenge, but leadership is essential.

The science of the situation is clear — it’s time for the politics to follow. This is a plan that can unify conservatives and liberals, environmentalists and business. Every major national science academy in the world has reported that global warming is real, caused mostly by humans, and requires urgent action. The cost of acting goes far higher the longer we wait — we can’t wait any longer to avoid the worst and be judged immoral by coming generations.

James Hansen directs the NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies and is the author of “Storms of My Grandchildren.”
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Greenpeace activists from Canada, the US and France place a giant banner reading “Tar Sands: Climate Crime” at Shell operation outside Fort McMurray in September 2009. ©Colin O'Connor / Greenpeace
The Dirty Fight Over Canadian Tar Sands Oil
Dredging up oil from under Canada’s boreal forest and piping it through the United States is a lose-lose proposition.

from The Natural Resource Defense Council by Melissa Denchak

Just south of the polar region’s barren tundra, Canada’s boreal forest provides 1.3 billion acres of wild habitat for a mind-boggling array of species—from large carnivores like grizzly bears, wolves, and lynx to nesting migratory birds to thousands of plant varieties. Its trees and bogs capture vast amounts of climate-changing carbon pollution, and its wetlands filter millions of gallons of water. The boreal is also home to hundreds of First Nations communities, many of whom rely on hunting, fishing, and trapping for their livelihoods.
'Calgary think tank says environmentalists need to "end the charade" against oil sands'

According to the Canada West Foundation, keeping the oil sands in the ground and stopping new pipelines “will actually increase greenhouse gas emissions"
– wait, what?

from Now Toronto by Adria Vasil MARCH 29, 2017

At an energy conference deep in American oil country earlier this month, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau received an award for his global energy and environmental leadership.

“No country would find 173 billion barrels of oil in the ground and just leave them there,” he told oil and gas execs. “Our job is to ensure that this is done responsibly, safely and sustainably.”

One environmental group called the award a middle finger to the entire premise of environmental leadership.
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Thursday, March 30, 2017

 
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The creation of abstract digital money requires nothing more than entering ones and zeroes in a database. We depend on a fragile electronic system few people have any control over. We have gone from using food and gold to Internet accounting. It is this abstract scheme on which our very lives depend. 
We are all at the mercy of our demented leaders.  There will be no 'revolution' of 'the people' to take over the reins and guide us away from our now certain fate on planet Earth.  Anything that resembles 'revolution' will simply be civil wars in various locations and on various scales as we fight among ourselves for food.
As 'the people' scramble for food, the 'corporate persons' (complete with religious rights) will scramble among themselves for profits and will very likely conduct wars to 'protect' themselves right up to the very end.
In the article below, Tom says, "the full impact of Trump’s climate terror won’t strike home until the era of our grandchildren or even great-grandchildren".  Tom certainly recognizes the truth (contained in his many writings).  His counting of the generations places the final devastation in the era of grandchildren and great-grandchildren whereas calculating the length of a generation differently (is that the difference?) moves the 'end' forward at least one branch on the family tree.
Mainstream proposes that catastrophic and environmental mechanisms such as extraterrestrial impacts, supernovas, volcanism, superplumes, earthquakes, and climate change trigger mass extinctions. Here we argue that such extrinsic agents cannot in and of themselves account for these periodic disasters. The common denominator of all mass extinctions is starvation. By definition a mass extinction is the disappearance of an entire food chain. Therefore, the Third Horseman plays a central yet inconspicuous role in any mass extinction theory; no theory can do without him. We propose that a mass extinction occurs when the Ecological Pyramid overturns, reversing the quantitative relation between trophic levels. This is what Man is about to experience. The gradual, inevitable and irreversible slowing down of global economic growth conduces to a dead end for our species. The complete disintegration of our global economy entails spiraling layoffs and the end of money. Agricultural companies no longer have pecuniary incentives to produce essentials or to distribute them to the masses. Billions of unemployed find themselves stranded in cities, towns and villages with nothing to eat. Man’s Ecological Pyramid overturns on him just like it did on the dinosaurs. Technology and intelligence are powerless to resist these imminent events; neither serves as an antidote to extinction.
Bill Gaede, in his article, We are the last generation of humans on Earth, puts reality into human perspective...

​"We will assume that humans are mammals, a species of omnivores that belongs to the order of primates and the family of apes. This clarification would seem to be unnecessary; it offends intelligence to even mention these facts. Yet we seem to forget and perpetually need to be reminded that Man is a member of the Animal Kingdom. We regard ourselves as caretakers of Eden, as being above the laws of nature."
The laws of nature are firmly in place and we are firmly placed within those laws, and that's the truth !!!
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​Running Over Future Generations
Terror on a different time scale
from Common Dreams by Tom Engelhardt
Terror attacks like the recent one in London send a shudder through Americans. Since 9/11, they have been the definition of what TomDispatch regular Rajan Menon calls “national (in)security.” They've also been the lifeblood of a media machine that loves to focus 24/7 on immediate and obvious horrors (especially against folks like “us”). In the age of Donald Trump, preventing such attacks has, if anything, become even more the essence of what American security is all about.

And yet, in the context of the insecurity to come in this world, they are essentially nothing. It is, of course, a terrible thing when some disturbed fanatic or set of fanatics gun down or run down innocent civilians in London, BerlinParis, or San Bernardino (as it should be, but in our American world isn’t, when a U.S. plane or drone kills innocent civilians in distant lands). But if, for a moment, you stop to think in either nuclear terms (as in the pairing of North Korea’s unnerving leader Kim Jong-un and Donald Trump) or in climate change terms, then those attacks are the smallest of potatoes when it comes to national insecurity.

If you really want to think about acts of “terror,” consider what Donald Trump and his climate-denying crew at the Environmental Protection Agency and elsewhere in his administration would like to do to the environmental policies of the world’s second-largest emitter of greenhouse gases.

Trump's urge is clearly to negate every positive act of the Obama administration when it comes to reining in the use of fossil fuels—from the Paris climate agreement to the Clean Power Plan aimed at shutting down coal-fired power plants. In the end, if a Trump presidency takes this country out of the climate change sweepstakes entirely, if it opens the flood (and fracking) gates yet wider on the development of fossil fuels of every sort while tamping down the development of alternative energy sources, you’re talking about an act of terror on a scale that would once have been inconceivable.

​What the Trump administration is already trying to do should lead to constant headlines of a sort that would put the recent London ones to shame.  However, because the full impact of Trump’s climate terror won’t strike home until the era of our grandchildren or even great-grandchildren, because his version of terror will be enacted on a time scale that plays havoc with our usual sense of history and of our own lives, he’ll undoubtedly get only the most modest of attention for it—while Khalid Masood, the London killer, and his successors will remain the eternal headliners du jour.

Still, make no mistake about it, in his rented vehicle of choice President Trump will run over future generations. Even on a less drastic time scale, as Rajan Menon makes vividly clear today, he will certainly prove to be a heavyweight in the national (in)security business.
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we will not be saved by gene-editing technology, or evolution, or migrating to other planets...
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History of Extinctions: It is estimated that over 99% of the faunal species that ever lived are now extinct.

Wednesday, March 29, 2017

 
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we've learned too late, there should be no profit in basic necessities of sustaining human life on the planet
When the food supply is really poor and the hunt has produced too little for the entire pack of dogs, they will fight viciously over whatever 'kill' there is.  We can imagine most carnivorous animals would react in a similar fashion.
In a parallel situation, humans can see things taking a turn for the worse... global warming and climate change are going to take their toll on human activity.  Science has already laid out what the future holds for us.  Our carbon based civilizations have thrived for an extended period of time creating a modern world of technical wonders.   That devotion to carbon has also created a monster that is now coming for us.  As the monster approaches, there will be unique opportunities for 'profit' that would not normally be available.  Literally, both the 'businessmen' and the dogs move in for the 'kill' in an environment of scarcity of prey; and literally, they will fight to the death for the scraps.
The leaders of our 'pack' are now in the process of recognizing the truth about the future and they are now already fighting for every scrap in sight.  Witness today's current international activities.   
It is still 'profitable' to mine coal from the ground.  In a moment of good sense, we started restricting coal mining in an effort to improve the environment.  But, now the leadership has decided to suck the last possible profit from that source while we still have enough humans to dig it out.  
It is the same with oil.  The leadership is drilling and planning to drill right up until the end.  They are building pipelines to transport the oil to 'market' while there is still a market of living purchasers of their products.
We can see that the past and present systems will not work in the future.  ​There is not much consensus among the elite regarding how to proceed at this point in our history.  This is why there is so much acrimony among the oligarchy today.  The White House and the 'intelligence' community (misnomer if ever there was one) and the congress and the media, etc. cannot agree and are now engaged in the beginning of that 'fight to the death ' over the scraps.
The people, of course, are standing on the side, powerless.
For some reason, tradition perhaps, the oligarchy is still attempting to persuade the masses of believing in one position or the other.  They know the people have no power, but the habit of the wealthy elite has been to use propaganda of various kinds to sway the people into following along and so they continue today... "fake news".
As the ruling class fights among itself, they use misinformation and lies to make their opponents 'look bad' in the proverbial eyes of the world.
The people have long recognized the truth about ‘free trade’ as a system of zillions of 'rules' aimed at protecting international corporations as they steal resources and destroy environments around the world. The rules are written specifically to ruin local economies and environments and to protect corporate 'investments'. 
On top of everything else, the corporate world could fall back on tremendous military might to enforce anything the elite wanted to enforce... or to force whatever down the throats of the world's populations.
That's how it has been.  But, thanks to global warming, it is all changing right now in front of our eyes.  Everything is now 'short-term'.  The oligarchy is determined to cash in on every profit potential in sight while there is still time...  
When we turn on the television news, we are witnessing the dogs trying to tear each other apart as they fight for those last scraps... and that's the truth !!!
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the entire point is to keep everything that we can for ourselves...

Tuesday, March 28, 2017

 
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From the perspective of current generations, those living on the planet today, talk of 'future generations' is simply wishful thinking.  
At one point in the history of humans on Earth, it was possible to think forward into the future and imagine one's family line extending forward on an indefinite timeline... great grand-children of great grand-children and more great grand-children beyond that.  There was no limit to the line of progeny.  Not only were there no boundaries to our aspirations for our descendants, everything was expected to get better and better.  We could look backwards in history and see how humans have advanced; and, we could look forward into history and see a continuation of anticipated improvements to the human condition.
That was then; now is now!  The scope of future human generations is small enough, we can reach out and count them.  A 'generation' is all of the people born and living at about the same time, regarded collectively... that a would be 'us' who are living today... we are a generation.  We will be gone, but our children and grand-children will follow us and will constitute 'another' generation.
Trump has replaced the White House climate change page with... a pledge to drill lots of oil

In the United States of America life expectancy is 78.74 years (2012) - in Japan it is 83.10 years- and in the United Kingdom it is 81.50 years.  (Just these statistics alone indicates some kind of a problem for those living in the 'richest & most powerful' nation the world has ever seen)  Setting that issue aside, and using the information on life expectancy, we can count generations that follow our own generation.  A child born today (the next generation) should expect to have a similar (or better) life expectancy.
​Trump Plans To Eliminate All NASA Climate Change Research

This is where it gets painful.  This is the place where we start to profusely apologize to our children and grand-children.  "It is with our deepest regrets," we can personally say to our off-spring, "that you almost certainly will be the last generation on humans on this planet."
If it wasn't so sad, it would be comical.  Our ingenuity and creative brilliance have brought about our own demise.  On the one hand, we created gun powder and on the other hand, we have shot ourselves in the head... intentionally.
As humans developed and advanced their civilizations through the ages, we can claim that we were ignorant and did not know what we were doing.  This is partially true.  It is partially not true.
We can document that ancient humans knew enough to protect the environment in which we live.   Nature was protected and given god-like status.
As our economic systems matured and our ability to wage war grew, nature and natural consequences became unimportant by comparison.  Today, making money is the only god of importance and the fully known facts of our own self destruction are ignored.  
As a minor example of our stupidity, we can point to food production.   We produce enough food for everyone on the planet to be satisfied.  But our economic system (distribution) precludes everyone receiving minimal nutrition.  Additionally, our wars destroy crop land.  And, the food we produce is poisoned by our industrialized farming methods (pesticides & fertilizers).
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Time has already run out... essentially it's game over !!!
But, as stated, food production, as horrible as it is, is a minor problem compared to the two major threats to human existence... global warming that leads to climate change and nuclear war.
And, when counting future generations in connection to nuclear war, any day could be the last.  We have the capacity to wipe ourselves off of the face of the Earth by pushing a few buttons.  The fact that we keep dueling with each other (swords to atomic bombs) leads to the conclusion that, eventually... some day, someone will push that button and it will be 'game over'.
We have control over our use of nuclear weapons.  We could, if we chose to do so, take the bullets out of the chamber of the pistol and melt down the pistol... into plow shares. 
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and, in truth, there is no 'Planet B'
We had a similar opportunity regarding climate change.  We have seen it coming for nearly a generation.  During that period of time corrective action could have been taken that would, at the very least, minimize the negative effects and allow humans to repair damage.  But, that generation was in complete denial... i.e. the apology.  There is nothing else left to do but to apologize to our children and grand-children.
In the face of the evidence, we can hope that some of humanity, in some locations around the planet will survive.  But, we know pretty much for certain that things will not be what they were.  Those who do survive will not have the 'advantages' of our modern technical society whatever those advantages were.
People look at evidence differently.  Some see things through 'rose colored glasses' and some see things through a prism of pessimism.  Please do your own research... start to think about how you might address this question with your own children and grand-children.  Practice how you plan to apologize for the failure of your generation.
All things considered, depending upon the measurement given a 'generation', looking at the evidence, we can count forward and calculate the number of future generations in front of us.  That number is one (1), and that's the truth !!!
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Sunday, March 26, 2017

Saturday, March 25, 2017

 
The explanation is that 'this is the United States of America'.  That is all one needs to know to be able to place this 'news event' into proper prospective... this is the United States of America !!!
We are a sick society... and that is the truth !!!
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New York Post images of an alleged white supremacist murderer and his victim. Guess which one the tabloid described as a “career criminal”?
Black Man Stabbed to Death by White Supremacist–Then Smeared by Media
​from Fair.org by Adam Johnson

New York Post images of an alleged white supremacist murderer and his victim. Guess which one the tabloid described as a “career criminal”?

According to police, white 28-year-old Maryland man James Harris Jackson took a Bolt bus up to New York City Friday for the express purposes of killing black men and did just that, stabbing 66-year-old Timothy Caughman in Hell’s Kitchen Monday night. Police say the suspect, an ex-military member of a white supremacist hate group, asked police to arrest him, warning he would attack again if they didn’t.

Reading media reports of the incident, however, one would hardly know which of the two men was the cold-blooded killer and which was the victim. The New York Daily News (3/22/17)—which has a history of smearing black suspects simply on the say-so of the NYPD (FAIR.org5/2/16)—felt the need to mention the black victim’s prior, wholly irrelevant police record (emphasis added):

Coughman lived in transitional housing on West 36th Street that serves people with HIV/AIDS. Praxis Housing Initiatives holds a contract with the city. He has 11 prior arrests, including for marijuana, assault, resisting arrest and menacing.

What, one might ask, does this have to do with anything? The reader is provided with no indication of Jackson’s criminal record, or whether there was any attempt to find it out, but somehow the rap sheet of the murder victim was primed and ready to go.
It is somewhat refreshing to see that some of us Americans can see the media for what it is... racist all the way through.

11 things corporate media won’t tell you about Timothy Caughman — the unarmed Black man stabbed to death by a white supremacist

"marijuana, resisting arrest and menacing.Good grief.

When people hear “He’s got a record”, they usually think of robbery or even murder.

This scenario reminds me of women who have been assaulted or even raped, only to have the press point out: “She frequented  bars and dances and was known as a party girl”

What the hell does that have to do with anything?  People with a non-perfect past deserve to be treated like  the proverbial piece-of shit?

You notice when people with money are harmed, even slightly,  there’s no mention of : But he fucked everybody his whole life and treated others like crap.

I'm going to assume that the assault charge was tagged on along.. with the resisting arrest.  Probably assaulted the officer by bleeding on him.
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Daily News reporters Rocco Parascandola, Graham Rayman and Thomas Tracy also all-lives-matter the hate crime by inserting a non sequitur case of a black man driving up from Baltimore more than two years ago to kill cops:

In December 2014, Ismaaiyl Brinsley traveled to the city from Baltimore and assassinated Police Officers Wenjian Liu and Rafael Ramos, were in the car near Myrtle and Tompkins Avenues in Bedford-Stuyvesant. Brinsley had made anti-police statements on social media prior to the murders.

This is a bizarre journalistic choice that appears to be some kind of attempt at “balancing” the coverage, suggesting that there could be a bit of score-settling going on: Yes, this black man was senselessly murdered by a white supremacist, but some other black guy killed cops two-and-a-half years ago, so….

The New York Post (3/21/15) would do one better, turning Coughman—again, let’s remember, the victim of a heinous, gratuitous hate crime—into the bad guy:

Caughman, who has 11 prior arrests, walked for about a block after the stabbing and staggered into the Midtown South Precinct, looking for help. He died hours later after being rushed to a nearby hospital.
Police sources said the career criminal was refusing to talk to police about the incident and acting combative before his death.

A homeless man is fatally stabbed by a Nazi with a 26-inch sword, simply because of the color of his skin, and the Post insists on calling him a “career criminal,” and accuses him of “acting combative” to police right before he had the audacity to bleed to death.

The bizarre inclusion of the victim’s criminal record probably explains why an AOL News report (3/22/17) based on the Daily News article mistakenly attributed the priors to the person who is actually accused of the crime:

Jackson has 11 prior arrests, including for marijuana, assault, resisting arrest and menacing, according to New York Daily News.

It’s an understandable mistake–after all, we typically discuss the criminal pasts of suspects, not victims.

It’s not uncommon, though, for the media to dredge up the unrelated pasts of black victims. An August 2014 New York Times profile of Michael Brown, who was shot and killed two weeks prior by Ferguson, Missouri, police officer Darren Wilson, infamously insisted he “was no angel,” despite no one ever insisting that he—or any other human—was. When the LAPD shot and killed homeless man Charly “Africa” Keunang, local media, as FAIR noted at the time (3/4/15), rushed to bring up all his prior bad acts and plaster his mug shot all over their websites:

The LA Times digs up irrelevant dirt on a homeless man killed by the LAPD.

The Washington Post (4/29/15) helped smear Freddie Gray after he was killed by the Baltimore Police Department, insisting in a since-discredited and corrected story that Gray had caused his own injuries.

It’s unclear why editors and reporters can’t resist the impulse to bring up black victims’ irrelevant prior bad acts. Given the frequency of this trope in corporate media, the effect—regardless of intent—is one of racist smear.

UPDATE: Daily News reporter Aidan McLaughlin’s byline was removed from the piece in question after this post was published. McLaughlin said on Twitter that neither the suspect nor the victim had been identified at the time he wrote the original short item the article was based on. The reporters now mentioned in the post now are the ones whose bylines are currently on the article.
Adam Johnson is a contributing analyst for FAIR.org. You can find him on Twitter at @AdamJohnsonNYC.
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On his Twitter profile, Caughman described himself as a “can and bottle recycler” and “autograph collector,” and posted series of photos of himself with celebrities.
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Carmen Perez at March 24, 2017, NYC Resists Hate Crimes march. Annette Ejiofor