@DNDrinking@iluminatibot thought the same about physics….feel like this meme is 4 people who haven’t entered high school yet…. Or ignorant people maybe🤷🏻♀️…. Like some things can b proven. History however, that could definitely be twisted….thats the game right. Sprinkle of truth inside a bunch of lies
Rabbit Hole: Frank G Wisner, multimillionaire president of the Lumberman's Association in 1924 was the father of Frank G Wisner the OSS agent and later head of the CIA in the 1950s succeeding Allen Dulles. For more on the OSS -> America's Untold Stories @hunleyeric@lordbuckly 4/4
https://t.co/b771XeDOw0
Pic: Frank G Wisner.
Hearst and DuPont families screwing us all over since day 1 lol …. Like that saying about when someone shows you their true colors, believe them the first time…… when these people have proven to be an enemy of the greater good….
@ClaudiaKasig@BigOwlDream7@BackBrexitBen He’s strangling that poor dog too, I agree a man with so little self control should 100% not have any control over others ..why does he have the right to assault a woman anyways? Seems like as an officer of the law he should be held 2 a higher standard and never behave like that
One of the major reasons bodycams became necessary for the Police in the first place was because people stopped trusting “official statements” alone.
Too many cases existed where the police version of events and eyewitness accounts sounded like two completely different incidents. Bodycams were supposed to solve that problem by creating an objective record — not just to protect civilians from abuse, but also to protect officers from false accusations.
That is the entire point.
So when a case becomes highly controversial, and the authorities suddenly become slow, hesitant or unwilling to release bodycam footage, people naturally begin to suspect that the footage damages the official narrative.
In the Henry Nowak case, the delay is exactly what is fuelling suspicion.
If the footage clearly vindicated the officers, releasing it early would calm tensions, shut down speculation and restore confidence. That is what transparency is supposed to do. Instead, the silence creates the impression that the footage contains something embarrassing, negligent or outright indefensible.
And this is the problem with modern policing institutions. They often demand public trust while behaving in ways that actively destroy it.
You cannot sell bodycams to the public as accountability tools, then suddenly treat the footage like classified state secrets the moment the incident becomes politically sensitive.
That defeats the entire reason for having them.
Even worse, delays create an information vacuum. And once that vacuum exists, rumours, tribal politics, media narratives and public anger rush in to fill it. At that point, trust collapses even further.
People do not expect perfection from the police. Human beings make mistakes. What people increasingly demand is honesty, transparency and accountability.
The irony is that bodycams were supposed to help achieve exactly that.
🚨 JUST IN — IT’S OFFICIAL: US Senate unanimously BANS all senators from getting a single paycheck if the federal government is shutdown, filed by Sen. Kennedy
FINALLY! This should've already been the case 👏🏻
Don't give them a DIME if they defund TSA and other crucial agencies.
This is called FAIRNESS 🇺🇸
@nickshirleyy@GovTimWalz@IlhanMN 👍👏👏👏thank god someone is doing something…so funny that all of a sudden now that you’re calling out fraud people want 2 question where u come from & who backs you…Honestly, does it matter!? Get the fraud outta here! it’s insane that this takes half, maybe more of our tax $!
Erin Brockovich has launched a website and has begun tracking all data centers in America and logging resident complaints
In just 1 week it’s already logged 1,690 resident complaints
For this who don’t remember
Erin Brockovich was the paralegal responsible for winning out a case against PG&E, Hinckley in California, because their wastewater runoff was seeping into rural areas and creating a lot of health issues for, for the surrounding neighborhoods
That case brought in a $333 million settlement that went to the families affected by the situation because a lot of them either had staggering medical bills due to their tap water was no longer safe
So why is this important, well residents all over America are reporting their tap water and river water is being heavily polluted by data centers
Her map of data centers is new, she just launched it
The website features an interactive US map showing operational, under-construction, and proposed AI data centers, overlaid with community-reported complaints
Residents can submit reports with details, photos, and locations. Within days of launch, it received a surge of submissions over 1,600 in the first week, and reports of 1,800+ from 47 states shortly after
Common Resident Complaints Being Logged
- Water usage
- Raising utility bills for residents
- Noise pollution: Constant 24/7 humming from fans, generators, and cooling systems disrupting sleep, daily life, and wildlife.
- E-waste from frequent hardware upgrades, pollution including PFAS concerns