An eviction crisis is about to explode and single moms are at the center of it. https://t.co/dv1wLW9VPG
— TalkPoverty.org (@TalkPoverty) March 16, 2021
MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE by Michael Wolraich Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop |
link is to first story on it from 3 hrs ago; on the same page there is more live updating coverage when it occurs
Part IV is here, Feb. 1-March 11, with links at top to all previous threads
By Conrad Wilson & Jonathan Levinson @ OPD.org, March 12
For the first time in months, the parks across the street from the Mark O. Hatfield federal courthouse in downtown Portland were filled with clouds of tear gas Thursday night as a group of about 50 protesters smashed several windows of the building and spray painted parts of the stone façade.
The protest happened just days after the federal government removed the metal anti-personnel fence that had surrounded the building for more than eight months. At the time, a spokesperson for the Federal Protective Service called the dismantling a “return to normalcy.”
Demonstrators rallied Thursday against numerous causes including the Line 3 pipeline, a proposed oil distribution route between Alberta, Canada and Wisconsin that would violate treaty rights of the Anishinaabe, an indigenous group in parts of the U.S. and Canada.
Earlier in the day, protesters marched through downtown to protest the pipeline, where the demonstration was largely focused on large financial institutions. During that afternoon protest, officers from the Department of Homeland Security pushed marchers away from the federal courthouse. Afterward, a construction crew erected a small plywood barrier outside the front doors of the courthouse.
On Thursday night, protesters burned an American flag and smashed a front window of the newly exposed courthouse, prompting federal law enforcement officers to respond with tear gas and impact munitions. At one point, protesters also lit a section of plywood on fire.
In scenes reminiscent of last summer when teams of federal law enforcement officers deployed to Portland in an attempt to quell massive racial justice protests, officers clad in helmets, tactical gear and shields once again cleared downtown streets through clouds of tear gas and smoke.
In November, responding to criticisms of overreach during the protest response, a federal judge restricted federal law enforcement officers from dispersing protesters beyond a one-block radius around the courthouse.
The injunction created an “excluded area” around the courthouse within which federal law enforcement can engage in crowd control activities. Outside that area, federal officials cannot use otherwise legally permissible crowd dispersal techniques [....]
see addition in his thread
Previous COVID NEWS thread HERE, covering 3/2 thru earlier today, 3/11
With fate of Biden infrastructure package unclear, Schumer pushes bill to curb China’s influence
TEXT AT LINK from Wapo, March 10; here's the Feb. 23 video they put at the top of the page, it's fairly comprehensive on what that bill is about (not to mention, Schumer claims bipartisan support)
A private food service company “accidentally” sold dog food to feed prisoners mis-marked as “ground beef for tacos.” There was no punishment for the company or its executives.
By Charlie Osborne @ ZDNet.com, March 9
Four zero-day vulnerabilities in Microsoft Exchange Server are being actively exploited by a state-sponsored threat group from China and appear to have been adopted by other cyberattackers in widespread attacks.
While in no way believed to be connected to the SolarWinds supply chain attack that has impacted an estimated 18,000 organizations worldwide -- so far -- there is concern that lags in patching vulnerable servers could have a similar impact, or worse, on businesses.
Here is everything you need to know about the security issues and our guide will be updated as the story develops.
WHAT HAPPENED?
Microsoft told security expert Brian Krebs that the company was made aware of four zero-day bugs in "early" January [....]