luckytran , to Random stuff
@luckytran@med-mastodon.com avatar

This North Carolina bill is ridiculous. It justifies punishing protestors for blocking emergency vehicles, yet bans wearing masks for health reasons. This bill is dangerously anti-public health and restricts people's ability to protest and exercise their First Amendment rights.

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  • racingdaily ,
    @racingdaily@mastodon.social avatar

    @luckytran People's rights are being so narrowed and restricted as to make it virtually impossible to effectively protest. Even when they peacefully protest, they get mobbed by armed thug cops under a false pretext of antisemitism. They have no way to protest under this police state regime

    KimPerales , to Random stuff
    @KimPerales@toad.social avatar

    Net Neutrality is restored:

    "In a 3–2 vote, the FCC voted to restore Net Neutrality protections & reclassify high-speed-internet access services as telecom services subject to Title II of the Communications Act.

    The decision is a major victory for the public interest: Title II authority empowers the FCC to hold companies: AT&T, Comcast, Spectrum... accountable for a wide range of harms to internet users across the US, fast, open +fair for all of us.”


    https://www.freepress.net/news/press-releases/historic-fcc-vote-restore-net-neutrality-title-ii

    luckytran , to Random stuff
    @luckytran@med-mastodon.com avatar

    when a picture says a thousand words

    HistoPol ,
    @HistoPol@mastodon.social avatar

    @luckytran

    Ugh. Powerful anti-PR* for the , I agree.

    However, as discussed in the thread* below, I disagree with the implied assessment.

    Students that are lawfully using their but doing so in a political way ON the (private premises) of campuses are severly disrupting the learning environment for all students. That is not exceptable:

    https://mstdn.social/@GreenFire/112328323974586505

    https://med-mastodon.com/@luckytran/112328481737052690

    eff , to Non Political Twitter
    @eff@mastodon.social avatar

    Publishing critical speech isn’t a ‘terms of service’ violation. It’s a First Amendment right. https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2024/04/federal-court-dimisses-xs-anti-speech-lawsuit-against-watchdog #X

    Nonilex , to Law
    @Nonilex@masto.ai avatar

    Judge is holding a hearing on several pending pretrial motions in the case, including a -related motion from Team

    This is the 1st hearing since McAfee ruled on the disqualification motion, which defendants have until Mon to appeal.

    It's also the 1st hearing w/o special prosecutor as lead for the DA's office.

    streaming live here: https://www.youtube.com/@judgescottmcafee/streams

    Nonilex OP ,
    @Nonilex@masto.ai avatar

    Prosecutors in the hearing room at the DA's table: attys Daysha Young, Will Wooten & Donald Wakeford + expert & special prosecutor John Floyd
    Special prosecutor Anna Cross is also present.

    For the defense it's & David Shafer's teams.

    Watching for a trial date from Judge .

    Steve Sadow, Trump's lead Atlanta attorney, is currently arguing why his client's speech at issue in the indictment is core political speech that's protected under the .

    Nonilex OP ,
    @Nonilex@masto.ai avatar

    DA rebuts defense’s protected “political speech” / argument because this isn’t about lying in , it’s about filing false documents & making false statements to the & the government.

    Additionally, the lies were employed as a part of conduct & not protected.
    Overt act in a criminal
    The purpose of presenting the overt acts is to show that it is part of the overall operation – the .

    dankennedy_nu , to Random stuff
    @dankennedy_nu@journa.host avatar

    I'm not sure exactly where and how the ought to fit into our discussions about the fate of , but it surely fits somewhere. Does Chinese control mean that TikTok enjoys no constitutional protections whatsoever?

    wollman ,
    @wollman@mastodon.social avatar

    @dankennedy_nu With any platform I think there's a challenge in understanding the three distinct groups that have interests: the platform operator (ByteDance in this case), the content creators, and the passive content consumers all have distinct rights and interests, and they all have to be addressed.

    CptEnder , to News in Alec Baldwin indicted for involuntary manslaughter in fatal gunfire on film set

    Work in the industry, doc side but this is pretty basic producer stuff. This is 100% on the armorer and the only reason they keep trying to charge Baldwin is the legal grey area of the state they filmed in. Had this happened in a state with more production (Georgia, Louisiana, California) there would be a more direct way for prosecutors to go after the correct person. Georgia and California specifically has legal precedent from deaths on set like this.

    One of the reasons credits are so long is because we hire people to maintain a safe set - think of it like a foreman for safe worksite in construction (which we also hire often). We hire a ton of people for safety from actual police to medics and rescue personnel.

    Hiring an armorer is SPECIFICALLY to avoid situations like this. Because the production company is like "hey you know what? I don't think me, some producer knows how to use a gun safely, I should hire someone who's certified to do that." It's not some token job, they're supposed to be trained on how to properly load the powder of the blank rounds, how to mark and flag hot guns and dead props, and pretty fucking much rule is never bring live ammo anywhere near your set.

    Baldwin should not be held criminally liable and any half decent entertainment lawyer will settle that. Now civil liability, that's certainly more realistic. But even then it should be the production LLC not any 1 person.

    pluralistic , to Random stuff
    @pluralistic@mamot.fr avatar

    Non-commercial expressive activity

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  • MAD_democracy , to Random stuff
    @MAD_democracy@journa.host avatar

    Today's in Local Journalism are the States Newsrooms—a network of non-profit news outlets that keep people informed on their state government and other essential news.

    The Kansas Reflector was one of the first larger papers to cover the Marion County Record raid. Here, they use the network to put the attack in larger context—describing the many threats to journalism in this country.

    Journalists Defy Threats Across U.S.
    https://kansasreflector.com/2023/08/20/kansas-newspaper-raid-draws-plenty-of-attention-but-journalists-defy-threats-across-u-s/

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