First Amendment 📍

Insurrection At The Capitol: Live Updates : NPR

How The U.S. Capitol Mob Was Treated Differently Than Earlier Black Protesters : Insurrection At The Capitol: Live Updates : NPR

When a pro-Trump mob attacked the U.S. Capitol on Wednesday, surprisingly few police stood in the way. Protests had been expected for days, but police appeared unprepared for an actual insurrection and not even prepared to keep all the doors locked. Video showed police calmly talking with attackers after they moved into the building.

This came after a year of protests and confrontations with police after police shootings and other kinds of killings across this country. Many of those protests were put down more harshly, including those in Washington, .C. Officials often responded with tear gas or Tasers or stun grenades.

Cancel culture – Wikipedia

Cancel culture – Wikipedia

Cancel culture (or call-out culture) is a modern form of ostracism in which someone is thrust out of social or professional circles - either online on social media, in the real world, or both. Those who are subject to this ostracism are said to be "canceled."

The CIA’s Secret Mind Control Experiments

The CIA’s Secret Mind Control Experiments

11/20/20 by NPR

Web player: https://podcastaddict.com/episode/115506371
Episode: https://play.podtrac.com/npr-381444908/edge1.pod.npr.org/anon.npr-podcasts/podcast/npr/fa/2020/11/20201120_fa_fapodfri1120-618ba06b-e1ef-44f6-93eb-02aaf1e296de.mp3?awCollectionId=381444908&awEpisodeId=937010023&orgId=1&d=2920&p=381444908&story=937010023&t=podcast&e=937010023&size=46614721&ft=pod&f=381444908

Stephen Kinzer’s book, ‘Poisoner in Chief,’ exposes how CIA scientist Sidney Gottlieb worked in the 1950s and early ’60s to develop mind control drugs and deadly toxins that could be used against enemies of the U.S. government. Gottlieb believed the key to mind control was LSD, and is credited with bringing the drug to the U.S. He also experimented on unwitting people in prisons and detention centers in Japan, Germany, and the Philippines. (Originally broadcast Sept. 2019)

Cuomo signs law making it harder to file lawsuits to stifle free speech

Cuomo signs law making it harder to file lawsuits to stifle free speech

Gov. Andrew Cuomo signed a new law Tuesday making it harder for the rich and powerful to file nuisance lawsuits to stifle free speech and intimidate critics.

The new law targets “strategic lawsuits against public participation,” known as SLAPPs, usually brought forth by wealthy plaintiffs to hamper free speech.

Typically expensive and time consuming, these filings have been wielded by individuals seeking to oppress free speech, like Harvey Weinstein — who threatened to sue the New York Times for defamation after the newspaper published an expose on the disgraced movie tycoon’s history of sexual harassment.