It moves pretty fast. If you don't stop and look around once in a while, you could miss it. That's Ferris Bueller's famous quote about life. But the same could be said about terrible Supreme Court shadow docket decisions (that are handed down, often unsigned, sans full briefings, oral arguments, or written opinions). The latest one is particularly disturbing, and it's worth stopping and paying attention to what it allows. In response to a complaint that (often masked) federal agents in LA were essentially targeting brown people en masse, "Judge Maame E. Frimpong, of the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California ... ordered agents not to rely on several factors, alone or in combination, in deciding whom to stop and question in her judicial district, which includes Los Angeles and surrounding areas. The factors were race or ethnicity; speaking Spanish or accented English; presence at a particular location, such as a day-laborer or agricultural site; or performing a particular type of work." Makes sense, because, you know, America. Constitution. Fourth Amendment. Blah, blah. But the SCOTUS majority essentially took the Fifth when it comes to enforcing the Fourth. In her dissent, Justice Sotomayor wrote that the majority "all but declared that all Latinos, U.S. citizens or not, who work low wage jobs are fair game to be seized at any time, taken away from work and held until they provide proof of their legal status to the agents’ satisfaction. Countless people in the Los Angeles area have been grabbed, thrown to the ground and handcuffed simply because of their looks, their accents and the fact they make a living by doing manual labor. Today, the court needlessly subjects countless more to these exact same indignities." Will those countless more be limited to Los Angeles where this complaint was brought? "The majority’s failure to provide an explanation for the ruling means that it is hard to say whether its reasoning applies nationwide or is limited to the Los Angeles area, where the administration has said that the problems flowing from illegal immigration are especially pronounced. But there is little doubt that the ruling will have the practical effect of further emboldening the administration’s uncompromising efforts to deport unauthorized immigrants around the country." NYT (Gift Article): Supreme Court Lifts Restrictions on L.A. Immigration Stops. 2Tuning Fork in the RoadI'm in the wrong business. And not just because this newsletter has no revenue model. I'm selling (or, more accurately, giving away) a product that fewer and fewer people want. I'm not talking about the sharp witticisms, the pithy insights, or the dazzling wordplay. I'm talking about the news itself. "Globally, news avoidance is at a record high, according to an annual survey by the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism published in June. This year, 40% of respondents, surveyed across nearly 50 countries, said they sometimes or often avoid the news, up from 29% in 2017 and the joint highest figure recorded. The number was even higher in the US, at 42%, and in the UK, at 46%. Across markets, the top reason people gave for actively trying to avoid the news was that it negatively impacted their mood." I get it. My mood is destroyed about three minutes into my day. But I'm guessing that the loss of our democracy would bum me out even more. Why more and more people are tuning the news out. 3Tech Support"Across China, tens of thousands of people tagged as troublemakers like the Yangs are trapped in a digital cage, barred from leaving their province and sometimes even their homes by the world’s largest digital surveillance apparatus. Most of this technology came from companies in a country that has long claimed to support freedoms worldwide: the United States." US tech companies enabled the surveillance and detention of hundreds of thousands in China. "U.S. companies did this by bringing 'predictive policing' to China — technology that sucks in and analyzes data to prevent crime, protests, or terror attacks before they happen. Such systems mine a vast array of information — texts, calls, payments, flights, video, DNA swabs, mail deliveries, the internet, even water and power use — to unearth individuals deemed suspicious and predict their behavior. But they also allow Chinese police to threaten friends and family and preemptively detain people for crimes they have not even committed." 4Trump's Birthday Suit"The 238-page book, littered with candid photos, drawings and collages, was released on Monday by the House Oversight Committee among the documents turned over by Mr. Epstein’s estate after being subpoenaed by the committee. It offers a vivid portrait of how Mr. Epstein’s lewd and lecherous behavior with young women was both widely known and widely celebrated by people who described themselves as his closest friends and associates." NYT (Gift Article): In Epstein’s ‘Birthday Book,’ a Celebration of His Lecherous Exploits. 5Extra, ExtraWorld War Z: "Anti-corruption protests escalated in Nepal's capital Kathmandu today, as government buildings were set ablaze. The unrest was sparked by a social media ban, which has now been reversed by the government. It has now grown into a wider anti-corruption movement that took to the streets on Monday. In total, at least 22 people have been killed in the protests and dozens more injured. As protests raged, Nepal's prime minister, KP Sharma Oli, resigned from his post ... When Nepal’s government blocked access to social media platforms last week, it was following a familiar playbook used by leaders of neighboring countries to tighten control. What was not part of the playbook was the huge backlash that followed." Here's the latest from BBC and NYT. And Rest of World with some more background. In what has come to be known as the “Gen Z protest,” thousands of demonstrators took to the streets. |