Despite being asked several times by Piers Morgan to express sympathy for the children who have died in Gaza, Weiss refused. Instead, she avoided the question and warned "all Arabs" to "stop."
đš BREAKING:
âAmerican actor Brad Garrett announced that he has joined Javier Bardem in refusing to work with anyone who supports the genocide in Palestine or with any Israeli company.
đŁïž Interviewer: âArgentina has been involved in several controversial refereeing decisions during this World Cup. Do you think itâs just a coincidence, or do you believe something suspicious is going on?â
Zlatan IbrahimoviÄ: âAfter watching the game against Cape Verde, I can no longer believe itâs just a coincidence. The referee seemed to give 9 out of 10 key decisions in Argentinaâs favor. There were several fouls on Cape Verde players that he ignored. He allowed Messi to take a quick free kick before the defensive wall had been properly set, and Messi wasnât cautioned. The amount of added time also seemed to go well beyond what was expected.
When you look at all of this, it makes you question whether Argentina is being treated differently from other countries. If you have to win the World Cup amid controversy every time, then thereâs nothing to brag about because it feels as though the tournament was made easier for you it wasnât earned, but bought.â
Mayim Bialik promoted RocketGlow, a book showing an Israeli father-daughter watching rockets fired to kill innocent Palestinians. Mayim Bialik proudly laughing about Genocide of the people of Gaza and she is talking about She âfelt fearâ Over a T-Shirt
Officer gets his ego damaged because guy on a bike asked the employees of white castle directions after the office already told him. So the officer takes him down arrested him and cost the city 9.3 million in a settlement.
â20-year-old Luther Gonzalez-Hall was riding his bicycle home when he became lost. He flagged down Dearborn Police Officer Marvin Sanders to ask for help. Finding the officerâs demeanor hostile, Luther decided to ride over to a nearby White Castle to ask the employees inside for directions instead.
âOfficer Sanders followed him into the restaurant, aggressively demanding to know why Luther was seeking a second opinion. As the officer began pulling on tactical gloves, Luther grew terrified and tried to walk away to de-escalate the situation.
âThe moment Luther stepped outside, Officer Sanders pursued him, pulled him off his bicycle, took him down and placed him in a ch0ke hold to apprehend him.
âAs a result of the encounter Luther now has a lifelong limp. (trying to keep X happy here)
âTo justify his actions, Officer Sanders charged Luther with resisting and obstructing a police officer. However, an internal affairs investigation later found that Sanders had absolutely no legal basis to detain or arrest Luther in the first place, and his police report failed to provide a factual account of the incident. All criminal charges against Luther were completely dismissed.
âDespite the department's internal findings explicitly condemning the arrest, the city heavily protected Sanders during the ensuing litigation. Instead of facing criminal charges or being fired, public records and legal proceedings revealed that Sanders remained on the forceâand was even PROMOTED to Detective while the civil lawsuit was playing out in federal court.
âBecause the court stripped Officer Sanders of his qualified immunity for violating Luther's constitutional protections against unlawful seizure and excessive force, the case went before a jury. After watching this exact bodycam footage, the jury vindicated Luther Gonzalez-Hall and awarded him a $9.3 million verdict for the egregious civil rights violations and his permanent impairment.
âWhile municipal contracts typically ensure that taxpayers and city insurance absorb the financial brunt of these massive payouts rather than the officers themselves, verdicts like this prove that juries are growing increasingly exhausted by bully tactics and a lack of police de-escalation.
Another bully officer costing tax payers millions. How do these folks keep their jobs and in this case get promoted?
Officer gets his ego damaged because guy on a bike asked the employees of white castle directions after the office already told him. So the officer takes him down arrested him and cost the city 9.3 million in a settlement.
â20-year-old Luther Gonzalez-Hall was riding his bicycle home when he became lost. He flagged down Dearborn Police Officer Marvin Sanders to ask for help. Finding the officerâs demeanor hostile, Luther decided to ride over to a nearby White Castle to ask the employees inside for directions instead.
âOfficer Sanders followed him into the restaurant, aggressively demanding to know why Luther was seeking a second opinion. As the officer began pulling on tactical gloves, Luther grew terrified and tried to walk away to de-escalate the situation.
âThe moment Luther stepped outside, Officer Sanders pursued him, pulled him off his bicycle, took him down and placed him in a ch0ke hold to apprehend him.
âAs a result of the encounter Luther now has a lifelong limp. (trying to keep X happy here)
âTo justify his actions, Officer Sanders charged Luther with resisting and obstructing a police officer. However, an internal affairs investigation later found that Sanders had absolutely no legal basis to detain or arrest Luther in the first place, and his police report failed to provide a factual account of the incident. All criminal charges against Luther were completely dismissed.
âDespite the department's internal findings explicitly condemning the arrest, the city heavily protected Sanders during the ensuing litigation. Instead of facing criminal charges or being fired, public records and legal proceedings revealed that Sanders remained on the forceâand was even PROMOTED to Detective while the civil lawsuit was playing out in federal court.
âBecause the court stripped Officer Sanders of his qualified immunity for violating Luther's constitutional protections against unlawful seizure and excessive force, the case went before a jury. After watching this exact bodycam footage, the jury vindicated Luther Gonzalez-Hall and awarded him a $9.3 million verdict for the egregious civil rights violations and his permanent impairment.
âWhile municipal contracts typically ensure that taxpayers and city insurance absorb the financial brunt of these massive payouts rather than the officers themselves, verdicts like this prove that juries are growing increasingly exhausted by bully tactics and a lack of police de-escalation.
Another bully officer costing tax payers millions. How do these folks keep their jobs and in this case get promoted?
Bodycam footage just came out of a farmer speaking against a planned data center, being handcuffed at a city council meeting for going a few seconds over the 3-minute public comment limit.
Darren Blanchard was speaking in Claremore, Oklahoma when two officers told him to leave, followed him to the front as he tried to hand documents to the council, and cuffed him as the crowd booed. He's charged with criminal trespass, a $200 offense, and is fighting it as retaliatory.
The case has become a marker for the wider fight over data center construction, where residents increasingly clash with developers over water, power, utility rates and farmland. Blanchard's sharpest point is about democracy itself: if attending a public meeting can get you cuffed, the chilling effect reaches well beyond one Oklahoma town.