Berea police hope to identify and arrest a man who reportedly pointed a handgun at another man at about 4:30 p.m. June 18 outside Marc's Deeper Discount ...
The suspect pointed the weapon at the victim. The suspect parked near the victim. The victim then pulled into the Marc’s lot and parked.
Along the way, there will be a fun bobblehead collectible that players can pick up. So for fans wanting to find all the collectibles, here is where to find the ...
Just be sure to listen carefully for the sound of it bobbing, and that will be where to find the Sever – Rage Destiny 2 bobblehead. for the last part of the Sever – Rage Destiny 2 Bobblehead Guide, jump over the hole, open the room across, and shoot the two electric capacitors over the doorway. So for fans wanting to find all the collectibles, here is where to find the Sever – Rage Destiny 2 bobblehead.
“Real or Fake? Take a good look! Thankfully, it was fake and was removed safely by our Officers after a road rage incident in which a male perpetrator was ...
“Real or Fake? Take a good look! The phony gun references the U.S. Army and the year 1911. STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. — Police confiscated a fake gun during a road-rage incident that led to the arrest of a man on the South Shore of Staten Island, according to an NYPD post on social media.
A militant pro-abortion group called Jane's Revenge has vowed a "night of rage" in Washington D.C. in response to Roe v Wade being overturned by the Supreme ...
It is not clear how big the group is. We are versatile, we are mercurial, and we answer to no one but ourselves. The group has form, having taken responsibility for multiple political actions, including violent ones such as the firebombing of a string of anti-abortion crisis pregnancy centers since the draft leaked. Jane's Revenge was formed after a draft opinion from the c ourt saying that it would vote to overturn Roe was leaked to Politico and published on May 2. Following the ruling, abortion will be banned in 13 U.S. states almost immediately, as they prepared "trigger" laws designed to instantly come into effect if Roe is overturned. The leak advised that the landmark 1973 legislation must be overruled and that abortion rights should instead be determined individually by each state.
Right-wing influencers and agitators are hyping a so-called "night of rage" and calling on the far-right to go "defend churches" from fantasized marauders.
Elsewhere people wrote “the next step is to ban gay marriage.” (Justice Clarence Thomas put that on the table in his concurring opinion Friday morning.) Videos of people crying in reaction to it are being shared, as well as screenshots of tweets where people say they’re “literally shaking right now.” “May HaShem protect the houses of Worship, but if HE needs help, let him move the hearts of every Patriot, every Three Percenter, Every Proud Boy, Every Lone Wolf, and Every Man of faith to answer the call. As summer and protest season begins, Goldsmith says he expects “a whole lot of far-right individuals covered in tactical gear carrying assault weapons who are just hoping and praying that they get an opportunity to live out their Kyle Rittenhouse fantasies.” Kristofer Goldsmith, a senior fellow for the Innovation Lab at Human Rights First, told VICE News that he’s seen extremists messaging about the “night of rage” for weeks and that it’s now being filtered into the mainstream by far-right influencers. “No one needs to go out and protect churches,” said Goldsmith. “That's what we have police for.
DHS has sent a memo to U.S. Catholic Diocese that a threat of "extreme violence" may come to fruition after the Supreme Court's Roe decision.
Newsweek reports that DHS warned of a planned “Night of Rage” should the court rule against Roe. Now Churches are preparing for possible backlash. Catholic Churches across the U.S. have been warned of a credible threat of "extreme violence" in the wake of the Supreme Court's decision. The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) has warned Catholic dioceses of a threat of “extreme violence” against churches following the Supreme Court’s decision to overturn the 1973 Roe v Wade decision.
Liberal journalists blamed the late Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg for the Supreme Court decision to overturn Roe v. Wade because she did not retire sooner.
Podcast host Katie Halper mocked the late justice in a sarcastic tweet. Taking their grievances to social media, journalists and other media figures slammed the formerly revered liberal icon for not retiring sooner. Wade. "Sadly, this will be a big part of her legacy," he tweeted.
An explosion of potentially violent unrest was expected to erupt Friday after the US Supreme Court's seismic decision to overturn Roe vs. Wade.
“Actions like this are completely unacceptable regardless of our politics and we continue to denounce any violence or threats.” “And we will make it as hard as possible for your campaign of oppression to continue. “Now the leash is off,” the group said in a June 14 communique in anticipation of the court’s action.
Prior to the U.S. Supreme Court's decision in the Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health case which overturns abortion rights established by Roe v.
Think tank director Kyle Shideler told DailyMail.com he believes Jane's Revenge is a 'terrorist type group' where membership is determined by one's actions ...
The infrastructure of the enslavers will not survive. Sometimes you will see what we do, and you will know that it is us. We exist in confluence and solidarity with all others in the struggle for complete liberation. And we will make it as hard as possible for your campaign of oppression to continue. We exist in confluence and solidarity with all others in the struggle for complete liberation,' the letter reads. We are versatile, we are mercurial, and we answer to no one but ourselves. Through attacking, we find joy, courage, and strip the veneer of impenetrability held by these violent institutions.' We did not want this; but it is upon us, and so we must deal with it proportionally. Simply take an action and it will be part of the effort,' he said. He added: 'The point is always the propaganda in this kind of action. The Compass Care, a Christian pregnancy center in Buffalo, New York was firebombed on June 7. Pro-abortion 'terror group' Jane's Revenge – which has vowed a 'Night of Rage' over the repeal of Roe v.
Since the leaked draft of the SCOTUS decision overturning Roe V Wade, leftist groups have been publicly urging violence, directing abortion supporters to take ...
Through attacking, we find joy, courage, and strip the veneer of impenetrability held by these violent institutions.” The left has been increasingly tolerant of rioting for their causes, in many cases refusing to denounce violence and threats and in some, actively encouraging mob violence. The mainstream media has been reporting on the topic for weeks, siting sources predicting wholescale societal destruction if Roe were overturned. This rhetoric empowers the sympatico terrorist group who promises they will be perpetrating violence tonight. In his April veto message Evers said the bill wasn’t necessary because current law – which has failed to stop violent mob protests across the state since he took office – is good enough. The left shrugged.
That, of course, is a major concern because at least one pro-Roe terrorist organization, which has already admitted to engaging in criminal violence.
Because it does not require any specific intent, Virginia law enforcement authorities may - and, under applicable Virginia criminal law and procedure, should - arrest any persons picketing or protesting near a residence. They screamed threats, vandalized, and tried to pound open our door." The Senator confessed that, as a result, his family was "terrorized." Fortunately, a local magistrate did find probable cause under Virginia's § 18.2-419 and issued a legal summons. So, now that the Supreme Court's decision in Dobbs v. - in any residential area, the law professor suggests. As the group itself put it, “If abortion isn’t safe, you aren’t either. The legislature of Virginia, in its declaration of policy for this statute [§ 18.2-418], has made it abundantly clear that it regards such demonstrations in residential areas as serious crimes which must be met with arrests: "protection and preservation of the home is the keystone of democratic government"; "good order of the community require that members of the community enjoy in their homes a feeling of well-being, tranquility, and privacy"; "picketing before or about residences and dwelling places causes emotional disturbance and distress"; "its object [is] the harassing of such occupants"; and enforcing the provisions of the statute "are necessary in the public interest, to avoid the detrimental results herein set forth." That, of course, is a major concern because at least one pro- Roe terrorist organization, which has already admitted to engaging in criminal violence, has publicly announced that it is planning a "Night of Rage" on the day the Court's abortion decision is released - today. Jackson Women’s Health Organization has been issued and is final, law enforcement officials can no longer claim that any abortion supporter is picketing or demonstrating at the homes of a Supreme Court justice "with the intent . . . of influencing any judge . . ., in the discharge of his duty." Virginia's § 18.2-419 very clearly mandates that: "Any person who shall engage in picketing before or about the residence or dwelling place of any individual, or who shall assemble with another person or persons in a manner which disrupts or threatens to disrupt any individual's right to tranquility in his home, shall be guilty of a Class 3 misdemeanor." The relevant federal statute, § 18 U.S.C. 1507, makes picketing or parading in or near a building or residence occupied or used by a judge or justice a federal crime, but only if it is done "with the intent . . . of influencing any judge . . . in the discharge of his duty." The "pro-abortion terrorist group" which claimed responsibility for the May 8th fire bombing of the Wisconsin Family Action office - and is also believed to be behind other fire bombings - has issued a "Night of Rage" message, strongly urging its followers to carry “anger out into the world” by “expressing it physically” on the night when the Supreme Court hands down the expected decision ending constitutional protection for abortions.
People gathered to protest the Supreme Court's ruling overturning Roe in Manhattan's Washington Square Park, where a sense prevailed that America's ...
“I was very angry and very upset. I woke up and checked my phone and saw someone posting about the Supreme Court and how it’s overruled and I was just really disappointed. I was really disappointed and really sad and angry and felt kind of hopeless. But I think most recently the leak with the Supreme Court really brought me in to organize with my socialist organization. Our rights as women and as people with a uterus are at stake and I want to do my best to protect them and protect other people. People are angry, I’m angry about it, so I wanted to feel that sense of community, and to express some kind of opinion about it because a lot of what people are saying has been silenced…Our country is one that’s founded off of freedom and rights, and this ruling is completely contradictory that, especially toward women and minorities. I immediately looked up where the demonstrations were in the city because somebody needs to be loud. And who wants to feel that way, you know what I mean?” — Cenithia Bilal, 28, tech worker I heard that they were having a protest in light of the recent Supreme Court rulings. Another argued that abortion was older than the church and the police — and was more popular than both. “We can’t take care of the babies that are here.” The speakers finished, and the crowd moved on, spilling back into the streets as chants filled the evening air. In the park, a sense prevailed that America’s institutions — the Supreme Court, and both political parties — had failed its people, and would be held accountable in the street if nowhere else.
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One group of individuals dressed in black masks and hoods and armed with black umbrellas paraded around Washington. It was unclear whether they were activists with antifa, a leftist group that traditionally wears black at protests. One black truck allegedly tried to drive through a group of protesters in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, but no one suffered serious injuries. Pro-abortion demonstrators commanded the majority of protests.
Rabbi Ben Gorelick is facing up to 32 years in prison for distributing psychedelics. His defense rests on the argument that tripping is a Jewish rite.
“By showing people what is possible in the psychedelic space,” he explains, “it makes it more conceivable to achieve these insights in daily life.” (“Yehuda” is a pseudonym.) He was raised Jewish and had nurtured an interest in Jewish mysticism, including the Kabbalah. He had never taken a psychedelic before congregating with Gorelick and other members of the Sacred Tribe. “The reason that I was motivated to do it,” he says, “was because it was being done as a Jewish religious ceremony.” “Any individual who would not have been in violation of what’s included in the measure, can actually actively petition to have the record sealed.” “They’re trying to create a secular, medicinal, therapeutic structure with the ballot initiative that’s coming out this fall,” Gorelick says, “But it’s not the place where we’re looking to have protection.” Gorelick trained at the Jewish Spiritual Leaders Institute, a one-year, online “cyber-synagogue,” whose graduates are not recognized by many major organizations, such as Central Conference of American Rabbis (CCAR). In an email statement, a spokesperson for the CCAR says, “The depth and breadth of a rigorous rabbinic education is not possible in just a year.” In 1968, theologian Arthur Green pseudonymously published “Notes From The Jewish Underground: Psychedelics and Kabbalah,” which analyzed “the awesome implications of drug use for religious thinking”. More recently, clinicians at Johns Hopkins and NYU have put Green’s heady thesis to the test. He’s being positioned as “the Mushroom Rabbi”: a victim of religious persecution and a spokesperson for Jewish psychedelia. A GoFundMe to “Help R Ben Defend Religious Use of Psychedelics” says that The Sacred Tribe’s “regular operations” have been put on hold, a claim which is highly suspect. The group is donations-based, and he maintains that 90% of its members have never given him so much as “a thin penny” for anything, including access to psychedelic drugs. In the US, religious groups have secured the right to use psychedelic drugs, under the First Amendment’s protection of religious freedom. (According to its website, they even welcome “rascally atheists.”) The Sacred Tribe celebrates the Jewish high holidays, hosts breath-work seminars, and routinely congregates for a “sacred sacrament,” in which the mushrooms feature. “That was the first time when I felt, in my body, God and oneness,” he tells the Guardian, speaking from his home in Broomfield, Colorado, about 15 miles north of Denver. The Sacred Tribe is his way of facilitating such experiences with others.
Rage Against The Machine have spoken out about the recent Roe v. Wade overturn and pledged $475000 to reproductive rights organisations.
Lizzo most recently announced that she has partnered with Live Nation to donate $1million from the profits of her upcoming tour to Planned Parenthood and Abortion rights. Wade case that made abortion in the United States legal on a federal level. Wade repeal, adding that the decision will “have a disproportional impact on poor, working class and undocumented BIPOC communities”.
When the news feels overwhelmingly terrible—a school shooting, an antisemitic attack on a synagogue, a surge in the world's refugee population—it's hard to ...
Nonprofits, Taylor says, “have a responsibility—almost a moral responsibility to their mission as an organization— to be ready for this. And then we turn to the affirmative chapter,” she explains, and introduce donors to the work HIAS does and their impact on displaced people worldwide. However, part of what we’ve learned is the importance of educating people and helping them understand what it means to work with an organization such as ours.” And that, to us, is a chance to not only cement those relationships, but to really provide a sense that we're all making a difference together,” Feffer says. “You feel like there is a complete loss of control and sense in the world, taking that step [to donate] is a way to return to yourself as agentive, as intentional, and as someone who truly can exert some change. Her advice for any organization that suddenly finds itself in the eye of a rage giving storm? In the aftermath of the Sandy Hook school shooting, the NRA “had a record fundraising cycle,” according to The Trace, a nonprofit newsroom dedicated to reporting on gun violence. Following the murder of George Floyd, all of a sudden, we were noticing a bombardment of emails and money coming in. “They donated to pivot from a sense of helplessness to concrete action.” In just one week, the organization raised over $24 million—and two-thirds of the donors were first-time donors to the ACLU. Similarly, after news of family separations at the U.S.-Mexico border in June 2018, a Facebook fundraiser for a small Texas legal charity, Refugee and Immigrant Center for Education and Legal Services (RAICES) went viral to “reunite an immigrant parent with their child.” They quickly surpassed their $1,500 goal; the Facebook fundraiser brought in nearly $21 million alone, allowing RAICES to vastly expand their resources and advocacy. But rage giving, Taylor says, is “unique and distinct from other types of giving.” Taylor, who co-authored Rage Giving with Katrina Miller-Stevens for Cambridge University Press, first noticed this phenomenon during the 2016 election. But lately, many people have had the same response: Make a donation to an organization dedicated to righting whatever went wrong.
28 Days Later is an effective film, yet never truly explains what its virus was. But in a comic tie-in, it's revealed it could've made super-soldiers!
Then, in 28 Days Later #12, the American military claim they want samples of the virus to weaponize it, blatantly revealing they want to perfect the strain as “a super-soldier that can’t think is worthless,” directly alluding to the rage-inhibitor angle seen back in 28 Days Later: Aftermath; something that obviously didn’t work the way it was intended to. Furthermore, with the American scientist admitting they wanted to perfect the virus to make super-soldiers, this franchise’s depiction of the military as a dangerous, inhumane force fits incredibly well with this super-soldier angle, making it a more legitimate take on the Rage Virus than most. Focusing on two separate scientists with inside knowledge of the Rage Virus, revelations are made across both tales that address the earliest implications of this virus before it mutated into something far more deadly.
Officers at 9:20 a.m. on June 15 responded to the McDonald's drive-thru at West Bay Plaza for a reported road rage incident. Two drivers got into a ...
Rocky River police stopped the suspect’s vehicle on I-90. The driver, a 21-year-old Cleveland woman, had no license and several outstanding warrants including for felony weapons violations out of Cuyahoga County. The suspect claimed he was trying to cash a legitimate check he had earned for working construction. Police impounded her vehicle and towed it from the scene. The 20-year-old Avon Lake female driver appeared intoxicated, and an officer conducted a field sobriety test. The male in the other vehicle did not want to press menacing charges. Officers recovered a handgun and ammunition from her vehicle along with suspected marijuana and suspected ecstasy pills.
Our fans have raised $475000.00 from the sale of our charity tickets at Alpine Valley and the United Center. We are donating the money to reproductive ...
Rage Against the Machine are among many artists who have spoken out following the Supreme Court’s decision to overturn Roe v. “Like the many women who have organized sophisticated railroads of resistance to challenge these attacks on our collective reproductive freedom, we must continue to resist,” the band added in their statement. Rage Against the Machine revealed that their fans have raised $475,000 from the sale of charity tickets for their upcoming reunion concerts at Alpine Valley Music Theatre in Elkhorn, Wisconsin (July 9) and United Center in Chicago, Illinois July 11 and 12). They will donate the total sum to reproductive rights organizations in those states.
“We are disgusted by the repeal of Roe V. Wade and the devastating impact it will have on tens of millions of people,” the reunited rock act wrote on social ...
Her widower, Thomas Fitzgerald, an itinerant worker, couldn’t raise their 3 kids alone & sent them off to families that took them as servants. He died alone of TB in a work camp.” The profits from those tickets would “raise a substantial amount of money for charities and activist organizations we support in each city,” Tom Morello explained in February 2020.
They're donating ticket sales to reproductive rights in protest.
March 5, 2023 – Oakland, Calif. @ Oakland Arena March 3, 2023 – Oakland, Calif. @ Oakland Arena Aug. 14 – New York, N.Y. @ MSG Aug. 12 – New York, N.Y. @ MSG Aug. 11 – New York, N.Y. @ MSG Aug. 9 – New York, N.Y. @ MSG Aug. 8 – New York, N.Y. @ MSG July 21 – Toronto, Ontario @ Scotiabank Arena July 16 – Quebec City, Quebec @ FEQ Over half of the country (26 states) is likely to ban or seriously restrict abortion very soon, if not immediately, which will have a disproportionate impact on poor, working class and undocumented BIPOC communities. They're donating $475,00 from advance ticket sales from their tour kickoff shows next month in East Troy, Wisconsin, and Chicago to reproductive rights organizations in those states. Wade decision in 1973, nearly two decades before the Zack de la Rocha and Tom Morello-led rap-rockers formed in Los Angeles in 1991.
Rage Against the Machine will donate $475000 to reproductive rights groups following the Supreme Court's ruling to overturn Roe v. Wade.
Her widower, Thomas Fitzgerald, an itinerant worker, couldn’t raise their 3 kids alone & sent them off to families that took them as servants. He died alone of TB in a work camp.” Wade, which had protected a woman’s choice to have an abortion.
Rage Against the Machine criticized the Supreme Court's decision to overturn Roe v. Wade on Friday and said it would be donating $475000 to abortion rights ...
We invite you to join the discussion on Facebook and Twitter. “We are disgusted by the repeal of Roe v. Wade on Friday and said it would be donating $475,000 to abortion rights groups.
“Rage-quitting” — leaving a job in a stressful moment without crafting an exit strategy, giving notice or getting another job first — isn't common. But that ...
If a company showers workers with praise, respect, and an overabundance of benefits, it’s a sign they’re grateful to employees. To me, this is a sign of close-mindedness, which tells me a lot about their organizational culture and leadership values.” If the job description seems vague and the interview doesn’t offer clear answers, that’s a big red flag. While not every employee will be happy all of the time, misalignment is a red flag. It’s also a time to see if they’re a good fit for you. Instead, check to see if the company is service-driven, where they put the needs of others first. “If only one skin color is shared, it is probably not going to be an enjoyable place to work at. Addyson-Zhang says watch out for a couple of toxic culture signs before you start. Now is the time to get your specific questions answered. “You can follow some of their leaders or employees on LinkedIn and check out what they talk about,” Addyson-Zhang says. Look up business review sites like Glassdoor and Salary.com to see what current and former employers have to say about a company. Dr. Ai Addyson-Zhang, CEO and Founder of Classroom Without Walls, says doing the background work on a company is important.