reform

A historical look at Russian interference and American racism – from the Cold War to the 2016 election

Two new reports on Russian political interference released by the Senate this past week — one from Oxford University, the other from New Knowledge — should fundamentally shift how we view what happened in the 2016 election. At least, if information mattered they would. But we know better than that, don’t we? And so it’s up to us to make that shift happen.

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How Our Warped Legal System and Law Enforcement Culture Lets Cops Get Away With Murder

It seems fitting that 2015 would end with yet another example of our justice system failing to hold police accountable for killing an unarmed African-American. The Tamir Rice case was especially poignant because the victim was only 12 years old. He was playing in the park with a toy gun — like millions of kids do all over the country. And the video that everyone saw with their own eyes showed that police rolled up and within seconds shot him dead. The prosecution and a grand jury decided they were justified in doing that for reasons that make little sense to rational people.

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How Many Inmates Have Died in Sheriff Joe Arpaio's Jails? Who Knows, But it's a Big Number.

Last week, Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio concluded a contempt of court hearing that revealed what we’ve always known about the old coot: his office engages in racial profiling, he thinks he’s above the law enough to ignore court orders, and he’ll use the power of his office, and the taxpayer’s coin, to investigate and harass his enemies—in this case a judge and his wife!

Lacey’s recent story, “Prisoners Hang Themselves in Sheriff Joe Arpaio’s Jails at a Rate That Dwarfs Other County Lockups,” is explosive, and not just because he uncovered an alarming suicide rate in Maricopa County jails. Lacey also probes, without much help from county administrators, the number of jail deaths in general. He stumbles into a sick universe of crime and denial, but nothing we should be surprised about given what we know about Sheriff Arpaio.

The number of suicides is off the charts, which is sadly understandable when you consider the proven mistreatment of inmates and the conditions in places like Tent City. The food is atrocious, Tent City can reach 145 degrees in the summer, and one federal judge ruled twice that the medical care and other conditions are unconstitutional. So, while most big county lockups have suicide rates ranging from 6 to 14 percent, the percentage of deaths in Arpaio’s jails from suicide is 24 percent. And, as Lacey says, it’s probably higher, except nobody really knows.

From 1996 to 2015, the suicide rate among jail deaths in Sheriff Joe Arpaio's lockups was an astounding 24 percent, with 39 of the 157 hanging themselves.

Furthermore, of the 157 deaths listed on the sheriff's watch on the M.E.'s chart, 34 simply are tagged as having been found dead with no explanation as to cause of death. More mysteriously, another 39 died in the county hospital without explanation. That's 73 deaths — nearly half of all deaths — that county authorities list as "who knows?"

It gets worse. Arpaio’s guards kill inmates or just let them die at a chilling rate. Last year Felix Torrezwas picked up for riding his bike to work on the wrong side of the street, taken to jail, and died from a bleeding ulcer while jailers ignored his cries. Or in 2011 Gulf War veteran Marty Atencio was manhandled and Tased by eight guards, then left to die (warning: graphic video). County residents have shelled out more than $140 million to pay for these criminal fuck-ups—one of the earliest and largest being the $8.25 million that Scott Norberg’s family received after the victim died while being restrained. 

Lacey’s account describes other inmates who were hauled into one of Joe’s jails, then died for lack of attention—like a diabetes shot.  

For the next 60 hours, Deborah Braillard suffered the agonies of hell as she went into a diabetic coma. She died because jailers did not administer insulin.

​What’s even more appallingly misleading is that in some cases, the records state that the inmate died at the hospital, not in Arpaio’s corrupt hell hole, because the victim was transported to the hospital after dying in jail. So, we don’t really know how many died in the sheriff’s custody, but it’s a big, unacceptable number.

Sure, this happens elsewhere, but it happens in Arpaio’s jails a lot. That’s probably the reason, according to Lacey, that nobody has tracked all the deaths. It’s the same reason the NRA blocks research on guns. The answer would be uncomfortable.

How many body bags?

Sheriff Joe Arpaio has refused to answer. His spokesman, Lieutenant Brandon James, said doing the math would take a few weeks. It's been six months.

Searching other databases (the Office of the County Medical Examiner's and the Office of Risk Management's, as well as the U.S. Department of Justice's) revealed that close to 160 people have died in Arpaio's jails.

But that is an estimate, because the truth is that no outside authority keeps track of how many people die from brutality, neglect, disease, bad health, or old age in Arpaio's jails.

Like the Torrez case, some deaths, which the county does not feel important enough to track or tell the truth about, occurred while the inmate was awaiting trial—not convicted of anything. Meanwhile, a convicted sheriff walks among us, preparing for his 2016 campaign.

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The Top 8 Drug War Stories of 2015 - Could America's Nightmare Be Coming to an End?

Over the last few years there has been undeniable momentum to end our country’s disastrous war on drugs. Both voters and elected officials are looking for alternatives to the unwinnable drug war. 2015 continued the trend. Here are some of the top stories of the year that give us hope.

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Billionaire Education Reform: L.A. Style

The Los Angeles Times published a confidential document, which seems to confirm earlier reports that the Broad Foundation wants at least 50 percent of L.A. public school students educated in charter schools over the next eight years. Currently, 16 percent of students in L.A. Unified attend charters, and according to the report, getting to 50 percent would require creating 260 new schools, for 130,000 students, at a cost of $490 million.

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Why Even Progressive Democrats Fall for 'Accountability' and Phony Education Reform

Progressive Democrats are right to hail the new populism in their party driving the debate about the nation’s economic policies and the atrocious inequality those policies have created. Heartened by the bold leadership of Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren and the huge crowds cheering on the presidential campaign of Bernie Sanders, progressives can truly feel their agenda is driving the national debate and propelling change.

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Want to Reform Education? Let Teachers Teach

Assessment may be the most damaging concept in contemporary education debate.

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Why the Drive to Prepare Students to 'Compete Globally' Entirely Misses the Point

On the list of empty rhetoric that's thrown into the ring for the reformster dog and pony show, we should include "compete globally."

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Chris Hedges: America's Mania for Positive Thinking and Denial of Reality Will Be Our Downfall

The naive belief that history is linear, that moral progress accompanies technical progress, is a form of collective self-delusion. It cripples our capacity for radical action and lulls us into a false sense of security. Those who cling to the myth of human progress, who believe that the world inevitably moves toward a higher material and moral state, are held captive by power. Only those who accept the very real possibility of dystopia, of the rise of a ruthless corporate totalitarianism, buttressed by the most terrifying security and surveillance apparatus in human history, are likely to carry out the self-sacrifice necessary for revolt. 

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Maryland Brutality Investigation Reform Fell Through One Month Before Freddie Gray’s Death

Following Baltimore City State’s Attorney Marilyn Mosby’s Friday announcement that all six Baltimore police officers implicated in the April death of Freddie Gray, 25, would receive charges ranging from negligence to murder, the Baltimore City Fraternal Order of Police released a statement requesting that Mosby recuse herself from the investigation to allow for independent prosecution.

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Debunking the New Orleans 'Miracle'

This summer will be the 10 year anniversary of Hurricane Katrina's devastation of the City of New Orleans. But it also marks the start of an ambitious – many would say audacious – effort to break up New Orleans’ long-beleaguered public school system and replace it with a *market-based* system in which charter schools compete for customers, in this case students and parents, and for top test scores. Neighborhood schools are no more. In fact, some of the neighborhoods hardest hit by the hurricane have few schools at all. Instead, students spend hours crisscrossing the city on school buses to attend charter schools that virtually all embrace the same approach: long days, strict discipline and a heavy focus on test prep. In the following interview, the kickoff to my series, New Orleans: Miracle or Mirage?, I talk to education scholar Kristen Buras about what education reform has meant for the city where she grew up.

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