Sunday, April 13, 2014

Are Police Body-Worn Cameras a Win for Accountability?

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: "t r u t h o u t" <messenger@truthout.org>
Date: Apr 12, 2014 2:11 PM
Subject: Are Police Body-Worn Cameras a Win for Accountability?
To: <aquarianm@gmail.com>
Cc:

t
 

Saturday, 12 April 2014

t r u t h o u t

View Recent Newsletters

Tell a friend about Truthout!

Donate Today!

 

Truthout is a 501(c)3 nonprofit organization; donations are tax deductible.

 

BuzzFlash

The BuzzFlash commentary for Truthout will return Monday, April 14.

 

South Carolina Legislators Want 'Stand Your Ground' Expanded to Fetuses

Read the Article at Crooks and Liars

 

Walmart Prices Would Rise by Pennies If It Paid Workers More Than Poverty Wages

Read the Article at Think Progress

 

O'Reilly, Moses and the Decline of America

Read the Article at FAIR

 

Report: CIA 'Trying to Minimize the Damage' Surrounding Senate Report on Interrogations

Read the Article at The Raw Story

 

It's Not About You, White Liberals: Why Attacks on Radical People of Color Are So Misguided

Read the Article at Salon

 

Religious Right Fears the GOP Can't Handle a National Convention in Las Vegas

Read the Article at Mother Jones

 

Torturing Children at School

Read the Article at the New York Times

   

Watching the Watchmen: Are Police Officers' Body-Worn Cameras a Win for Accountability?

Candice Bernd, Truthout: After a camera worn on the helmet of an officer with the Albuquerque Police Department (APD) revealed disturbing footage of how two policemen fatally shot James Boyd, a homeless man struggling with mental health issues, questions remain about whether body-worn cameras will curb police violence.

Read the Article 

Rigging the Electoral System for the Rich

Marge Baker, OtherWords: Either through electoral channels or a constitutional amendment, the American people must fight back against Supreme Court rulings like Citizens United and McCutcheon.

Read the Article 

Wisconsin Had Best-Run Elections in US, So Republicans Fixed 'Em

Brendan Fischer, PR Watch: Wisconsin again ranked among the best in the country when it comes to running elections, according to a new study from Pew Charitable Trusts - yet apparently this outstanding performance is a problem for Republicans.

Read the Article 

Social Movement and Electoral Movements, Not One or the Other

Michael Trudeau, Truthout: Both social movements and electoral movements are imperative for nonviolent social change and should work together, says Green Party member Michael Trudeau.

Read the Article 

What Would Saul Alinsky Do?

Mark Engler and Paul Engler, Waging Nonviolence: Although his landmark book, Rules for Radicals, is now nearly 45 years old, the principles that emerged from Alinsky's work have influenced every generation of community organizers that has come since.

Read the Article 

Tiny House Living, Off the Grid? Here's How to Do It in Style

Cat Johnson, Yes! Magazine: A growing movement of tiny housers are taking the simplicity, sustainability and freedom of tiny houses to the next level by building their tiny homes off the power grid.

Read the Article 

Indigenous Leaders Targeted in Battle to Protect Forests

Michello Tullo, Inter Press Service: Indigenous representatives and environmental activists from Africa, Asia, Australia and the Americas converged recently to commemorate those leading community fights against extractive industries and warn of increased violence against them in the fight to save their dwindling forests and ecosystems.

Read the Article 

ANR Pipeline: Introducing TransCanada's Keystone XL for Fracking

Steve Horn, Desmogblog: When most environmentalists think of TransCanada, they think of the proposed northern half of its Keystone XL tar sands pipeline. Flying beneath the public radar, though, is another TransCanada-proposed pipeline that would bring to market shale gas by way of fracking.

Read the Article 

A Better Yardstick for Measuring Inequality

Sam Pizzigati, Too Much: If we measure inequality with a yardstick that only wonks can decipher, we'll end up with a society too confused about inequality to do anything meaningful about it.

Read the Article 

Abe's NSA? The Japanese Government Embraces Secrecy

Alexis Dudden, Dissent: Last December the ruling Liberal Democratic Party rammed one of the most controversial bills in Japan's postwar history through the Diet, or parliament, with an uncharacteristic lack of debate. At stake are central tenets of Japan's democracy—the right to know, the right to a free press, the right to privacy—all of which the wide-ranging, ill-defined law imperils.

Read the Article 

Support Truthout with a tax-deductible donation 

Please add messenger@truthout.org to ensure you receive our messages
Truthout is a proud member of the Newspaper Guild/CWA, Local 36047
Subscribe | Unsubscribe
Privacy Policy
 

The Newspaper Guild

No comments:

Post a Comment