The Fourth Amendment protects people from unreasonable searches and seizures…. ICE agents don’t get to kidnap someone, from a coffee shop parking lot, without reasonable suspicion or probable cause. The Fifth Amendment guarantees due process…. Holding someone against their will while refusing to tell them why, or denying them access to contact anyone, is a constitutional violation

Virtual Ministry Archive

Ring of Barbara Radziwiłł (1522-1551), Queen of Poland and Grand Duchess of Lithuania, part of a treasure rediscovered in 2024 Hidden for almost a century, a collection of royal burial treasures linked to the rulers of Lithuania and Poland has gone on public display in Vilnius after an unexpected rediscovery in late 2024. The story began in 1931, when spring floods exposed royal crypts beneath Vilnius Cathedral. Archaeologists uncovered the remains of the three rulers along with their burial insignia. As World War II approached, church officials hid the collection to protect it from looting and damage. Part of the cathedral treasury returned to light in 1985, though the royal burial objects stayed missing for decades. The exhibition also reveals the skill of Renaissance goldsmiths. Some jewels used clever methods to imitate more costly gems. Craftsmen hollowed garnets to make them look like rubies. Others joined clear crystal with a red backing to create the look of deep red gemstones. Visitors also see personal jewelry recovered from the royal burials. Barbara Radziwill’s gold chain survived along with four gold rings worn by the queens. The rings contain diamonds, rubies, emeralds, and other precious stones.


 

did not know he is all into all that


 

the masons are after you


 

why did he set out to burn the cat? fucken goof


 

he has the latest screw worm he caught from screwing


 

ur bf is complex to be honest


 

oh he has a CARROT !!!


 

stahp ok


 

oh did not know she runs the place


 

did he steal your chips?


 

did not know your twink step brother was in heat! in front of the art too


 

Guru z3n8 is an Epic Ethical Art Hacker ::: This.. ladies & gentle freaks is -> FUCKTALK, on Ha.ck.er N3ws: Microsoft Comic Chat is now open source https://ift.tt/KmIZwaz


New moaning and creaming orgasmic story on Hack3r News: Microsoft Comic Chat is now open source https://ift.tt/5mvI8Zl

BREAKING: The ex-wife of the ICE agent who shot a man in Maine says he asked her to “LIE FOR HIM” about his history of abuse allegations and job instability. We finally have a name: David Michael Brouillette. He's the ICE agent who this week shot and killed Joan Sebastián Durán Guerrero — a 26-year-old Colombian man living in Biddeford, Maine, with his partner and young daughter. And the picture emerging isn't of a careful law enforcement professional. It's a portrait of chronic instability, alleged abuse, and a story that doesn't add up. Brouillette's own ex-wife, Ashley Brouillette, came forward publicly after he allegedly called her — using his current wife's Facebook account — begging her to "lie for him" and vouch for his character. When she refused, he reportedly told her the shooting was justified because Guerrero "tried to hit him with his car." "Nowhere in there does it show that this man charged at you with a car," Ashley told him, after reviewing scene footage herself. "In his head it's justified. He's unusually calm about it," she said. Ashley also revealed she had previously reported concerns about Brouillette's mental health to his military superiors, and said he was abusive during their relationship. Since coming forward, she says she's been flooded with threatening calls. Brouillette's employment history reads like a pattern of instability: brief stints as a corrections officer, a Veterans Affairs police officer, a human services agent, a volunteer firefighter removed after shouting matches and insubordination. He was hired by ICE earlier this year. And this isn't an isolated incident. DHS Secretary Markwayne Mullin has already confirmed Guerrero wasn't even the intended target of the warrant. ICE, instead of taking accountability, is hiding behind claims of "doxxing" — even as witnesses and former colleagues independently identified Brouillette from scene footage. An innocent man is dead. His daughter has no father. And the agent responsible has a documented history that should have raised red flags long before he was handed a badge and a gun. This is why ICE — as it’s currently constituted — needs to be ABOLISHED!

fucking disgusting racist goofball lowlife


 

meh pay as you go menu for next week


 

doesn’t the choice often come down between food and 420 and most of us choose the herb? haha


 

Warning : DO not sign up for organ donation of any kind! for obvious reasons see grade one conspiratorial content


 

enter a ‘nap or nap like state’ at least 3-5 times a day or week if u are busy


 





















 

BREAKING: Democratic Rep. Balint RIPS Pete Hegseth's weird "homoerotic" obsession with testosterone in an absolutely scathing public takedown! Congresswoman from Vermont Becca Balint just delivered a brutal critique of Secretary of War Crimes Pete Hegseth's fixation on masculinity, testosterone, and curtailing opportunities for women in the military. Speaking to journalist Scott MacFarlane, Balint pointed to what she sees as a glaring contradiction inside the Trump administration: an endless fascination with hyper-masculine imagery juxtaposed with relentless attacks on LGBTQ Americans. "This is a man who says he doesn't support gender-affirming care," Balint said. "Encouraging men in the military to get more testosterone hormone replacement therapy *is* gender-affirming care." Balint said Hegseth's fixation on "manly men" exposes a glaring contradiction inside a movement that constantly attacks LGBTQ Americans while appearing obsessed with traditional male imagery. "So many people in this administration that have some weird, like, intense homoerotic feelings towards men while also being incredibly homophobic," she said. "And not just homophobic, but hate-mongering, fear-mongering about the LGBTQ community." Balint stressed that there’s nothing wrong with homosexuality itself -- the problem is the hypocrisy. “I don't think the homoeroticism is the weird part," she said. "The weird part is that they pretend that that's not what it's about." Balint reserved her sharpest ridicule for Hegseth's carefully cultivated image of own rugged masculinity through his frequent photo ops exercising and lifting weights with various troops he visits. Balint then referenced Tom of Finland, the artist famous for hyper-masculine depictions of men that became iconic in gay culture. "Pete Hegseth is the embodiment of that," she said. "So I feel like they must be looking at that as their example for what men look like." What bothers Balint most is that Hegseth's "boys club" mentality undermines the military's traditional merit-based system through policies she says disadvantage women and minorities, ultimately weakening the entire system. "Whether you support the military-industrial complex or not, the military has always been merit-based. The people who are the best of the best rise to the top." "And so the fact that he has systematically been keeping down women and people of color gives up the whole game. It's actually not about a merit-based system anymore." Republicans love to portray themselves as defenders of traditional masculinity while attacking LGBTQ Americans for supposedly threatening it. Hegseth has built a public image around testosterone, toughness, and hyper-masculinity. Balint exposes that the real story isn't the image itself, but how the people selling it accuse everyone else of being obsessed with gender, when they are the ones with the real obsession.


 

u would have to be an idiot to listen to him drone on about this all night fuck-probably just gonna declare himself dictator for life


 

I never got how racism took such a hold over everyone must have been only one brain cell shared back then -In 1925, a Black doctor in Detroit bought a house. When a mob of hundreds attacked it, the police stood by and watched. When the family inside finally shot back, the police arrested the family. They did not arrest the men throwing rocks or the men breaking windows; they arrested the people bleeding on the floor. Ossian Sweet was 29 years old—a gynecologist who had studied radiation therapy in Paris and Vienna, and had delivered hundreds of children. He paid $18,500 for the brick house on Garland Avenue, which was three thousand dollars more than market value. It was the invisible tax of crossing the color line. The Black doctor and his wife, Gladys, moved into the neighborhood on the morning of September 8. They did not bring their baby daughter, Iva, choosing instead to leave her with relatives across town because they knew exactly what was waiting for them. Instead, they brought enough canned food to outlast a siege and nine other men—brothers, colleagues, and friends from the hospital who volunteered to stand watch. They also brought ten guns and four hundred rounds of ammunition, positioning the weapons on the first and second floors, out of sight from the street. They did not unpack the china; they just waited. The local neighborhood association, the Waterworks Park Improvement Association, had been circulating flyers for weeks and holding meetings at the local elementary school to organize resistance. The residents of Garland Avenue made their intentions a matter of public record, pledging to maintain the racial boundaries of their street by any means necessary. They gathered in the street before the furniture was even off the truck. Records show the Detroit Police Department dispatched a detail of ten officers to the intersection of Charlevoix and Garland that morning. However, the department did not send them to disperse the crowd forming on the corner; the official log stated the officers were simply there to manage traffic. By nightfall, the street was impassable as hundreds of people blocked the road. On the first night, the crowd threw stones that hit the siding and the cedar roof. Inside, eleven people sat in the dark with the windows drawn, listening to the wood splinter. The police inspector on duty reported no disturbance. On the second night, the crowd swelled to over five hundred people, spilling over the curbs and onto the property line. They broke the upstairs windows and tore up the landscaping while the police stood on the lawn, watching the glass fall into the living room. At the time, housing discrimination in Detroit was absolute. The city’s Black population had expanded by 600 percent in a single decade to fill auto plant jobs, but the workforce was constrained to a single, overcrowded district known as Black Bottom. Real estate covenants legally barred non-white buyers from white neighborhoods. This geographic containment was an economic cage enforced by neighborhood improvement associations, operating with the tacit—and sometimes explicit—approval of city law enforcement. To step outside the designated zone was to forfeit the protection of the law entirely. At 8:15 p.m., two of Sweet's friends arrived in a taxi. The mob swarmed the vehicle before it could even come to a full stop, dragging the men out and beating them on the pavement as they fought their way to the front door. The crowd surged forward, shattering the glass in the front bedroom and rushing toward the porch with stones and lead pipes. The officers on the street line did not draw their batons or blow their whistles; they simply stepped back and gave the mob the house. Shots rang out from the second floor of the brick house—not warning shots fired into the air, but direct fire into the crowd. One man in the mob, Leon Breiner, fell dead on a neighboring porch, and another man was wounded in the leg. The police, who had spent two days watching the mob dismantle the property, instantly drew their weapons and stormed the house. They did not secure the perimeter against the rioters or push the mob back; instead, they arrested the survivors. All eleven people inside the house were taken into custody without a struggle. The prosecuting attorney charged all eleven occupants with first-degree murder. The state's theory was that the inhabitants had formed a premeditated conspiracy to kill white citizens, deeming the fact that the house was being actively destroyed by a mob of five hundred people legally irrelevant. The NAACP understood the dangerous precedent this trial would set. If a man could not defend his own home, the containment lines would be permanently enforced by violence. They brought in Clarence Darrow to defend the group. Darrow did not put the victims on the defensive, nor did he apologize for the weapons; instead, he put the state of Michigan on trial. During cross-examination, Darrow dismantled the police narrative. He forced officer after officer to admit that a massive crowd had been throwing rocks, and he forced the commanding inspector to admit he had done nothing to stop it. He made the officers confess they were stationed there to protect the neighborhood from the doctor, not the doctor from the neighborhood. Darrow stood before the jury and stated the contradiction plainly. He told the courtroom that if white men had fired into a Black mob to defend their home, they would have been given medals. Instead, these men were facing the electric chair. The all-white jury deliberated for 46 hours but failed to convict, leading the judge to declare a mistrial. A second trial was ordered, and this time, the jury acquitted Sweet’s brother, Henry, who admitted to firing the weapon in self-defense. The charges against the rest of the occupants were quietly dropped. They won the case, and the family kept the deed to the house, but the victory came with a terrible invoice. Gladys Sweet had spent weeks in the Wayne County jail waiting for bail. The facility was damp, crowded, and unheated, and she contracted tuberculosis during her incarceration. She died two years later at the age of twenty-seven. Their baby daughter, Iva, contracted the same disease and died shortly after her mother. The family kept the deed, but it was to an empty house. The state had charged eleven people with murder simply for refusing to let a mob kill them. Ossian Sweet eventually sold the brick house on Garland Avenue in 1944. He had lived in it only sporadically, unable to shake the ghosts of what it cost to hold the deed. He spent his final years alone in a small apartment above a pharmacy, and in 1960, he took his own life. The brick house still stands in Detroit today, and a historical marker sits on the front lawn. It points out the immense courage it took to move in, but it doesn't mention the police who stood by on the sidewalk.