I wrote the book Copaganda based on my years of being a civil rights lawyer and public defender representing the most vulnerable people in our society. I watched as the police and the news media distorted how we think about our collective safety. Copaganda makes us afraid of the most powerless people, helps us ignore far greater harms committed by people with money and power, and always pushes on us the idea that our fears can be solved by more money for police, prosecution, and prisons. Based on the evidence, this idea of more investment in the punishment bureaucracy making us safer is like climate science denial.

  • @[email protected]
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    105 days ago

    Teenvouge has been killing it this year. This isn’t the first really good article from them posted here

    • tuckerm
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      5 days ago

      Teen Vogue has been running some very good political commentary for a few years now. Here’s another good one from last week: https://www.teenvogue.com/story/moms-for-liberty-public-schools-christian-education

      I think they started during Trump’s first term. (Or, at least that’s when it got noticed.) A lot of people were like, “Wow, they used to print articles about which jeans will get you a prom date!” I guess somebody had to do the job that the NYT won’t do.