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Title: Memphis Will Be Laid To Waste Artist: Norma Jean 22 plays

therobkelly:

MEMPHIS WILL BE LAID TO WASTE - NORMA JEAN

(via cmad-drums)

moosevox asked: How accurate are you in detecting the non-verbal social cues of others?

What are non-verbal social cues?

I love reading.

(via grizzlymays)

4 days ago on May 26, 2012 at 10:00pm
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Title: Bon Iver - I Can't Make You Love Me â•¢ HQ Lyrics Artist: Bon Iver 11,893 plays

ikilledjackjohnson:

Bon Iver - I Can’t Make You Love Me

(via grizzlymays)

5 days ago on May 25, 2012 at 03:37pm
via Spotify

This Is Your War On Drugs: Civil Asset Forfeiture Addition

antigovernmentextremist:

letterstomycountry:

Turley reports on Tennessee’s new “Policing for Profit” program:

A professional insurance adjuster, George Reby, was traveling through the state from New Jersey when he was stopped and asked by Officer Larry Bates if he had large amounts of cash. He said that he did — $22,000. The officer demanded the money and said that he was confiscating the money on suspicion of drug activity. That is it. The mere fact that he was carrying a large amount of cash was enough under this policy to seize the money. The police know that many out-of-state travelers never come back for the cash and they are then allowed to keep the money for their own uses at the department.

Even though Reby explained why he had the money, it did not matter. The fact that he completely cooperated in allowing a full search of his car did not matter. What mattered was that the police wanted the cash.

We are then treated to the officer’s flippant and completely irrelevant remarks about bank accounts:

Bates admitted that he did not arrest Reby because he did not commit any crime. However, he reminded drivers that “[t]he safest place to put your money if it’s legitimate is in a bank account. He stated he had two. I would put it in a bank account. It draws interest and it’s safer.”

Whether or not it is safe to keep large amounts of money in a bank account, or on one’s person, is of course completely irrelevant to whether that money should be seized by a law enforcement official pursuant to suspicion of drug activity.  Of course, who cares whether you’re suspected of drug activity when State law presumes you are guilty until proven innocent:

Bates said that he was right to take the money because “he couldn’t prove it was legitimate.” That of course flips the normal presumption under criminal law, but it is an example of how police powers have increased in this country.

To made matters even more authoritarian, Tennessee law allows a judge to sign off on the seizure in an ex parte proceeding. Reby was never informed of the hearing. Only the officer’s account is considered at such hearings.

So it’s bad.  Still, if you do have the evidence to prove that you have a legitimate reason for carrying that much cash, you can get the money back, right?

Sure.  But that assumes that the police and/or prosecutors are going to report your ability to prove your innocence to the Court:

While Reby insists that he offered to show proof on his computer as to the source of the money, the offer was not reported to the court. Bates simply stated “common people do not carry this much U.S. currency.” He noted later that “a thousand-dollar bundle could approximately buy two ounces of cocaine.” Of course, ten dollars can buy drugs as well as a thousand dollars can buy a jet ski.

In our country, the concept of Due Process is premised on the assumption of Adversarialism.  Our theory of justice stipulates that when two interested parties litigate a dispute against one another, their mutual desire to achieve a good result will motivate them to vigorously argue, research and present their case, the consequence of which is that all legal theories and evidence are presented to a disinterested arbiter (the Court), who will then make a decision based on the law and the facts presented.  

Yet Adversarialism requires…adversaries.  That is the problem with these Ex Parte civil forfeiture proceedings.  The defendant whose money has been seized has no opportunity to present a defense, even in cases where they cooperate completely with law enforcement, and are highly willing and able to present evidence that demonstrates a legitimate reason for being in possession of large sums of money.

George Reby did finally get his money back.  But he’s exceptional in that regard.  As Turley notes, “It takes months for travelers to get their money back and many give up. In Reby’s case, he was forced to travel back to Tennessee to pick up the check and was given no apology for the abusive seizure.”

It would be trivially easy to change this policy.  You could start by requiring that law enforcement officials, as a matter of law, cannot seize property unless they have probable cause to suspect that a detained person is involved in criminal activity.  You could also, as Turley notes, “stipulate that police and prosecutors cannot benefit from seizures — removing the incentive for broad seizures.”  You could also impose a statute of limitations on prosecutors: a probable cause hearing must be held within 30 days demonstrating facts sufficient to justify the seizure, including corroborating evidence that the money was being used for criminal activity.  

And while we’re at it, we can recognize these types of forfeitures for what they are: a deprivation of property without due process of law, in violation of peoples’ 14th Amendment rights.  To call what happened to George Reby “Due Process” is a mockery of the term.  We have an Adversarial system.  It’s hardly Due Process when one of the adversaries isn’t present during the proceedings in which his property is taken from him.

Fucking despicable.

but really that lion is about to tear that zebra’s guts out and eat them. There will probably be a lot of blood and a dead zebra. Then that lion will get old and probably starve to death once it’s slower than the slowest zebra. 

(via evalyngracee)

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Title: Underoath- A Boy Brushed Red....Living In Black and White 6,275 plays

Underoath - A Boy Brushed Red Living In Black And White

(via grizzlymays)

molarbears:

I keep bitterness in these cabinets next to all my bad habits - 
you either find faith, or lose it - you either had it or have it - 
Well I have had it!

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Title: Woods Artist: Bon Iver 224 plays

Bon Iver - Woods

(via fearwithincourage)

fortressofself:

penises are weird. like imagine if other body parts were like penises. like if your arms were all short and floppy and then they could just grow to be like triple the size. man that would be cray. 

Vaginas are weird. like imagine if other parts were like vaginas. like if your eyes randomly bled and gave you cramps every month and that was perfectly acceptable. and if babies came out of your ears or something. man that would be cray.

(via thisiswhereispillmyguts)

antigovernmentextremist:

Scumbag Obama

What troubles me about this… I think it’s beyond hypocrisy. I think it’s something to do with class. A lot of people have accused Obama of class warfare, but in the wrong direction. I believe this is Obama chortling with Jimmy Fallon about lower class people. Do we believe, even for a second, that if Obama had been busted for marijuana — under the laws that he condones — would his life have been better? If Obama had been caught with the marijuana that he says he uses, and ‘maybe a little blow’ – cocaine! This casual attitude toward drugs… that makes him really cool on Jimmy Fallon. Makes him the hip president. ‘I’m the cool president. I say weed. I say blow. Ha Ha Ha!’ Huge laugh from the college students.

If he had been busted under his laws, he would have done hard fucking time. And if he had done time in prison, time in federal prison, time for his ‘weed’ and ‘a little blow,’ he would not be President of the United States of America. He would not have gone to his fancy-ass college, he would not have sold books that sold millions and millions of copies and made millions and millions of dollars, he would not have a beautiful, smart wife, he would not have a great job. He would have been in fucking prison, and it’s not a god damn joke. People who smoke marijuana must be set free. It is insane to lock people up. One in six people in prison are in there for weed that Jimmy Fallon and the President of the United States of America laugh about.

I just realized that at 17 I’ve already wasted so much potential.

#music  #spotify