🚨BREAKING: ICE agents stalked a U.S. citizen, at a POLLING PLACE, to pressure her into deleting her post, from JANUARY, about indicting ICE agent, Jonathan Ross.
The exact post read: The ICE agent who shot and killed Renee Good in broad daylight has been identified as Jonathan Ross by the Minnesota Star Tribune. I think today is a great day for Jonathan to be indicted!
FEDERAL AGENTS walked into a polling place… one of the most protected civic spaces we have… to intimidate a citizen, over political speech, about holding law enforcement accountable.
The document they handed her said…
“This notice officially informs you that it is unlawful to threaten to assault, kidnap, and/or murder a federal official or that federal official’s immediate family member with the intent to impede, intimidate, and/or interfere with the federal official’s duties or retaliate against a federal official due to the performance of their duties,”
The document also said she could be subject to both federal and state prosecution.
And just to be clear… The post, in question, wasn’t “doxxing.”
Doxxing is releasing private, non-public information. Repeating publicly reported facts… is not that.
Because law enforcement’s identities are not supposed to be private information, especially when they have been involved in the death, or shooting, of a civilian…
But, instead of upholding the constitution, the current administration is attempting to stretch “threatening” language to cover political speech they don’t like.
And let’s talk about election integrity…
Polling places are legally restricted civic spaces. It is illegal to deploy federal troops, or armed federal law enforcement, to any polling place.
Using that space to confront someone, over speech about federal agents, is highly inappropriate at minimum… and potentially unlawful.
And this isn’t the first instance federal agents have hunted U.S. citizens down to silence calls for government accountability.
Which should alarm everyone…
Because a government that punishes scrutiny instead of answering it, is not a government holding its agents accountable…
It’s a system telling you its agents are above it.
The kindest thing literature does is remind you that your peculiar little feelings have always existed. Someone, in some century, was equally confused by love, bored by society, tired of performing, and hungry for meaning.
@hannahcrileyy This is fucking absurd, they sentenced one of them 50 YEARS for distributing pamphlets and he wasn’t even at the protest! This is a blatant attempt to police ideology and criminalize anti-capitalist education. it’s infuriating that dems aren’t using every platform to elevate this
the prairieland sentences are 1000% scary - that's their purpose. we have to be brave enough to keep going anyway. it's either total liberation, or prisons and death.
yeah, I'm sure most people feel like a proportionate response to a couple popped tires, a couple fireworks, and a little spray paint is 450 years in prison
In Texas you can rape a child for multiple years and the state will step in to issue a 30 day sentence. Oppose kidnapping and disappearing of neighbors and you get 50-100 years.
It doesn’t matter that antifa isn’t a group.
It doesn’t matter that one person simply carried around zines. It doesn’t matter that it was a noise demo.
If you oppose state violence, according to this DOJ, you are inherently engaged in criminal conspiracy to commit terrorism.
The surveillance state is not coming.
It is already here.
Flock cameras do more than watch roads and scan plates. Their audio detection systems listen for sounds like gunshots, capture clips, timestamp the event, and help police locate where the sound came from.
Then the system pairs it with nearby vehicle data.
Think about that.
A sound happens.
A location gets marked.
Cars near the scene get pulled into the net.
A database gets searched.
No warrant in your hand. No officer on the corner. No public debate from most of the people living under it.
This is the new model of policing.
Cameras watching movement.
Microphones listening for events.
Algorithms connecting the dots.
Private companies building the grid.
Government agencies using the grid.
The sales pitch is always safety.
The result is infrastructure.
And once surveillance infrastructure goes up, it rarely comes down.
The question is no longer whether America will build a surveillance state.
The question is why so many people failed to notice it was already up and running.
#Privacy #Surveillance #CivilLiberties
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“They knew exactly who Mona Khalil was.
They knew the bright orange house in Mansouri, south Lebanon. They knew it was not a military site, not a command center, not a battlefield position. It was one of the most recognizable symbols of environmental conservation on Lebanon's southern coast; a sanctuary dedicated to protecting endangered sea turtles and preserving life.”
Marwa Osman writes about Israel’s deliberate targeting of a prominent environmental activist in Lebanon. ⬇️