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Dark_Arc , in 133 Degrees and No Ac: Kids at Angola Prison Kept in Potentially Deadly Heat
@Dark_Arc@lemmy.world avatar

For those wondering, it seems to be this prison run by the state of Louisiana doc.louisiana.gov/…/louisiana-state-penitentiary/

photonic_sorcerer ,
@photonic_sorcerer@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

Yeah, I thought this was in Angola the country, but nope! This is in the US fuckin’ A!

HandOfDoom ,

Being in the USA should make less sense, being a 1st world country and all, but when I read it was in the USA I wasn’t surprised at all.

frokie ,

This comment needs to be higher

mightysashiman , in 3-year-old accidentally shoots, kills 1-year-old sibling after getting ahold of unsecured handgun: SDSO
@mightysashiman@kbin.social avatar

the 2 common culprits in all these horrible stories are: 1) human stupidity 2) gun proliferation. solving the first would require eugenism. solving the second is a big american no-no. So don’t call it horrible, just live with it. It’s just a normal by-product of american culture.

Ichi_matsu ,

IMHO solving 1 needed educations, but that’s also a big American no-no, so we’re back to square one.

Buelldozer ,
@Buelldozer@lemmy.world avatar

IMHO solving 1 needed educations, but that’s also a big American no-no

No it’s not. For all of their ills, stupidity, nonsense, fraud, and extremely questionable decisions the NRA does run education campaigns with their “Eddie Eagle” program. A big problem is that it has been kicked out of schools, especially schools in Blue States, so they’re unable to reach one of the audiences that need it the most.

It’s like Red States kicking Sex Education out of schools and being shocked at teen pregnancies. Education works far better than restriction. Always.

rikudou ,

it has been kicked out of schools

So, as @Ichi_matsu said, it’s a big no-no for Americans.

Buelldozer ,
@Buelldozer@lemmy.world avatar

I hadn’t thought of it quite that way but I suppose so. American’s do seem to have a nasty habit of not wanting to teach our children about things we don’t like.

BeMoreCareful ,

Yeah, I’m not sure eugenics is ever the answer

Wtf?

damnYouSun ,

Why would the gun be loaded? At the very least the gun and the ammo should be separated.

Burninator05 ,

You are 100% correct but that loops is back to #1.

Jaded ,

The better question is why was a handgun needed? People shouldn’t buy deadly weapons for fun.

MasterObee ,

Anything is a deadly weapon in the right situation.

rikudou ,

Ok, I’m waiting for you to kill me with a maple leaf.

MasterObee ,

Do you not think that someone can die from choking on a maple leaf?

rikudou ,

Possibly in the rarest of circumstances. Doesn’t sound like a deadly weapon, though. And I’ve never heard of such case.

On the other hand, quick search shows these headlines:

  • 1-year-old boy accidentally shot by 4-year-old brother in Texas
  • 7-year-old accidentally shoots and kills 5-year-old in Kentucky
  • Jacksonville police: Boy, 8, accidentally shoots, kills sister, 5, injures neighbor, 4
  • ’Another tragic story’: 3-year old girl accidentally shoots and kills 4-year-old sister in Houston
  • Family grieves after daughter accidentally shot to death by 7-years-old brother
  • 10-year-old charged with accidentally shooting his 12-year-old brother
  • 14-year-old boy accidentally shoots brother, 8, outside Oklahoma Walmart
  • Police: 14-Year-Old ‘Accidentally Shoots’ 12-Year-Old Brother In Choctaw
  • 5-year-old accidentally shoots, kills little sister in Indiana

This is just the first page of results and all of that is from 2023.

So, were you saying something about choking on maple leaves?

MasterObee ,

I’ll keep asking the same question -

If these were knife accidents, would you support banning knives?

This sounds like parental neglect, and should be treated as such. The tool doesn’t matter, it’s the fact the parents neglected the safety of their kids.

rikudou ,

And from now on I’ll keep ignoring you unless you ask a different question, because I already answered that one.

MasterObee ,

You didn’t answer the question. It’s really simple:

If these were knife accidents, would you support banning knives?

You_are_dust ,

I normally would not interject in this type of conversation, but your question about the knives keeps coming up and seems to imply people don’t have knives. I can almost guarantee every home in the USA has at least one sharp knife. These aren’t knife accidents and everyone has a knife in the house. Not every house has a gun. The knife question only makes sense if knives weren’t even more common household items then guns.

hypelightfly ,

Wait, what happened to the maple leaf? That's not the same question.

borkcorkedforks ,

Most people buy a handgun like that for self-defense. Likely because they don't expect the cops to show up and protect them. And there isn't anything wrong with owning something dangerous if it's property secured and used safely. These parents were negligent.

PoliticalAgitator ,

Most gun safety in America is optional.

Buelldozer ,
@Buelldozer@lemmy.world avatar
TIEPilot ,

Not if your concerned about personal safety. I don’t live in the best neighborhood. So the time to slide in 12ga rounds might cost me my life.

youtu.be/AItWcBU-NEA?t=238

All my others are in safes and the ammo is not easily accessible.

borkcorkedforks ,

Separating ammo isn't actually securing the firearm though. Loaded or unloaded it should still be property secured. And you can safely store a fire loaded if the firearm is actually in some kind of safe. The parents were simply negligent.

hypelightfly ,

Solving the first would require the end of human existence. You can't breed out stupidity, eugenics doesn't solve anything.

HandOfDoom , in 3-year-old accidentally shoots, kills 1-year-old sibling after getting ahold of unsecured handgun: SDSO

American solution: put the 3yo in prison for forced labour and arm all 1 year olds so they can defend themselves.

Gork ,

Gun manufacturers: heavy breathing

sadbehr ,
@sadbehr@lemmy.nz avatar

Use the 3 year olds in prison to make the guns for the 1 year olds to arm themselves! Fuckin bang two for one.

borkcorkedforks ,

Not really

provisional ,

Then send thoughts and prayers when it happens over and over again. We’ve done nothing to fix the problem and there’s nothing we can do about it!

MsPenguinette , in 16 false Trump electors face felony charges in Michigan

Another of the 16 electors, Michele Lundgren, said she was distraught over the charges and she questioned what evidence prosecutors had.

The 73-year-old Detroiter said she had simply received a call on Dec. 13, 2020, to be in Lansing the following day. While there, Lundgren signed what she thought was a sign-in sheet, she said.

“We signed a blank piece of paper," Lundgren said. “And that’s all can tell you.”

This is going to be a super entertaining trial

keeb420 ,

does she do whatever the phone says? If I were to call her and ask for $10,000 she'd pay me?

Wilziac ,

Well she is the prime demographic for phone scams… so yeah, probably.

CurlyMoustache ,
@CurlyMoustache@lemmy.world avatar

We signed a blank piece of paper!

Mental capacity of a bucket of used syringes

athos77 , in Does The Kentucky Attorney General Go To Work? An Investigation.

This article reads like a blind item in a gossip column; I hate it.

The blank pages span all the way back to January 2020, which was the last time Cameron was registered using his key fob to enter the building.

Well, gee, what did happen in January 2020? Maybe the man has good reason to need to avoid people during a global pandemic.

And before everyone is like "that's too early": no, it isn't. I was a close reader of the news, and I knew covid was coming to the US in January 2020 and had started stocking up on N95 masks, hand sanitizer and surgical gloves by that point.

Before everyone is all "why isn't he going in now, the pandemic is over": it isn't over for everyone. It most particularly isn't over for the people we were told to stay home to try to save: the immunocompromised.

So yeah, that's my theory: the man follows the news closely, and is immunocompromised.

Why doesn't the state (or he) explain that? I don't know, maybe they're scared of their understanding of HIPAA, maybe he's afraid announcing it will cost him relationships or his job or his political ambitions - people are needlessly weird about some diseases/chronic conditions, I can understand not wanting to say something.

For me, the more relevant question is: is he doing his job? I don't care if he needs medical accommodations like needing to be kept away from people (in deep-red Kentucky, which has a decent percentage of covid deniers and absolute no-mask/no-vax "yes, I'll lie about it if I want to" contrarians) who may kill him - is he doing his job? That's all that matters.

Derproid ,

Fucking stellar breakdown. Yeah first reaction of “he’s not working” makes sense but your explanation is just as plausible (if not more since he’s been in the news for doing his job according to other comments).

gAlienLifeform OP ,
@gAlienLifeform@lemmy.world avatar

It’d be pretty hypocritical if he was doing this to protect his own health after spending so much time fighting against the efforts of the governor to do the same for other citizens of the state, but fortunately there’s no reason to believe this is the case.

As this article notes,

The attorney general has definitely been in the state Capitol at least a handful of times since he was sworn in in December 2019. HuffPost searched Associated Press and Reuters photo databases for images of Cameron inside the building. A few turned up.

[Italics in original]

No, the only way his health could be causing this behavior is if he has an allergic reaction to having to follow the same security protocols as the people who work for him, or if the thought of journalists being able to easily cross reference his comings and goings with different lobbyists seen in the Capitol gives him hives or something

EhList ,
@EhList@lemmy.world avatar

While that would be rational you need to account for the fact that he might just not be coming to the office.

exohuman , in In-N-Out bans employees from wearing masks
@exohuman@kbin.social avatar

Okay, so what if the employee is protecting the customers from themselves? If the employee had a sniffle or whatever I would much prefer they wore a mask.

NuPNuA ,

Shouldn’t they be off sick rather than working in a service industry while I’ll to begin with?

Doug ,

I’m guessing you either don’t live in America or have never had to work a job like fast food to get by.

If they have sick days they probably either can’t afford the time off or get pressured in to not taking it by their boss/family/social circle/society

And just so we’re clear, sick days aren’t necessarily paid sick days. They can also be days you just don’t get in trouble for missing*

*May require a doctor’s note

SCB , in Does The Kentucky Attorney General Go To Work? An Investigation.

I mean the man has clearly been working. He’s been in the news… For working.

www.wlky.com/article/…/40812114

gAlienLifeform OP ,
@gAlienLifeform@lemmy.world avatar

Working hard or hardly pretending to care about police murders?

abcnews.go.com/US/…/story?id=73940937

sky , in Does The Kentucky Attorney General Go To Work? An Investigation.

Who cares whether he uses his own fob to get into the capitol or not he’s been clearly working his entire time in office to make our lives worse here. Maybe focus on that.

gAlienLifeform OP ,
@gAlienLifeform@lemmy.world avatar

Making it more difficult for journalists and the like to stay on top of when the attorney general comes and goes to the capitol (which could help us guess at who he might be meeting with, how much time he’s putting into various initiatives, etc.) by messing with the public record like this is part of making our lives worse

MicroWave OP , in Colorado teen accused of trying to go to Iraq to fight for the Islamic State group
@MicroWave@lemmy.world avatar

According to his arrest affidavit, law enforcement began investigating him in June 2022 when someone who knew him contacted the Douglas County Sheriff’s Office. The person said they were concerned because, after following white supremacist ideology, Meyer, then 17, had turned to Islam and was frequently watching and listening to “radical Islamic sermons online.” The FBI was notified by the sheriff’s office, it said.

RaincoatsGeorge ,

Notice the overlap and contradictory ideologies. It’s often not even the specifics of what they are slinging, it’s the group. Being accepted, celebrated, getting to be part of a social scene, that is a common motivation for these societal outliers.

Isis has done an excellent job with their PR campaign. Their videos are all in 4k and high quality, of course it appeals to a disenfranchised young man that probably doesn’t feel like he has anywhere to turn.

What’s sad is it seems to have worked but isis all but doesn’t exist anymore, it’s just left over shit from their height. I bet he just googled how to join isis and was directed straight to the fbi lol.

oSillyScope , in Kremlin accuses West of turning blind eye to Ukrainian 'terrorist attacks' against Russia

Fuck Russia. Slava Ukraine! Everyone seesthe real terrorists losing the war they started.

lolcatnip , in Texas city strictly limits water consumption as thousands across state face water shortages

Texas legislature outlawing local water restrictions in 3, 2, 1…

frogfruit ,

That would be extreme even for Texas. Texas has laws in place to prevent HOAs from prohibiting water conservation efforts such as xeriscaping, growing native grasses instead of exotic, rain barrels, etc. Most of Texas undergoes drought restrictions already. If we didn’t, we would certainly run out of water. Banning water conservation would be stupid even by Texas standards.

Granted, Texas also does stupid shit such as restricting water usage in communities while pumping out that same water to sell to 3rd parties.

Selmafudd , in In-N-Out bans employees from wearing masks

Just wear a religious face covering then

Chainweasel ,

A place that bans masks doesn’t come off as the type to be tolerant to religious freedom either…

TheKingBee ,
@TheKingBee@lemmy.world avatar

With the composition of the supreme Court right now that doesn’t matter. Just say you’re a devout Christian and that they’re impinging your rights, doesn’t matter if you have to lie about the essential facts of the case even they will side with you.

EhList , in Kremlin accuses West of turning blind eye to Ukrainian 'terrorist attacks' against Russia
@EhList@lemmy.world avatar

They are not terrorist attacks as sovereign nations cannot by definition commit terrorist attacks. These are acts of war and as Russia invaded Ukraine they are a response to Russian aggression.

Cybermass , in Heatwave-linked pollution sees Spanish city urge less car use

Would be great if governments could maybe idk regulate companies who produce more CO2 then all individuals by orders of magnitude???

Bikes are great, walkable bikable cities should happen, it’s not the fucking solution to climate change and I’m really tired of seeing this shit.

CasualWindVane , in Texas city strictly limits water consumption as thousands across state face water shortages

Nothing in the article about agricultural use.

If I’m reading their USDA census data correctly, over 2/3 of the entire county is used for farming (336,688 acres). Of which 79% is pastureland.

Viking_Hippie ,

I also wonder whether that city has any golf courses. If so, it’s almost guaranteed that they’ll be exempt too

frogfruit , (edited )

The city is saying no outdoor use at all: m.facebook.com/blancocityhall?fref=nf&ref=embed_p…

SheeEttin ,

Is there any enforcement if the golf course turns their sprinklers on anyway?

frogfruit ,

Typically, yes. They issue citations and increasing levels of fines for each violation, and they disconnect your water if you don’t respond or pay in a timely manner. How quickly they respond to reports and how often they issue citations varies by city. Some cities even employ patrol units to enforce violations during severe drought conditions. Some cities aren’t giving out warnings at all anymore but going straight to citations/fines.

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