Both Sides: Why we don't fuck with the GOP


Further down the feed.
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@Mask @playahaitian @Camille @Gemini


WASHINGTON -- The National Park Service has removed a reference to Harriet Tubman from a webpage about "The Underground Railroad."

The webpage used to lead with both an image and quote from Tubman.

But a comparison of the webpages between late January and mid-March shows those items have since been removed.

ALSO SEE: DOD says it 'mistakenly removed' Jackie Robinson, other content from website amid DEI purge

Several references to "enslaved" people and the fugitive slave act of 1850 are also gone.

The webpage now leads with commemorative stamps of various civil rights leaders, including the phrase "Black-white cooperation."

There is a separate National Park Service webpage dedicated to Tubman.

RELATED: Nearly 400 books pulled from Naval Academy library in DEI purge

Several government websites have recently been changed as the Trump administration enacts a campaign to eliminate diversity, equity, and inclusion.

His supporters ain't sh*t
 






 

Brussels police arrest Rubio security detail supervisor after hotel fight
Speaking on condition of anonymity, two sources with direct knowledge of the situation told the Washington Examiner that the agent in question was behaving erratically and became irate when hotel staff refused to reopen the bar beyond its normal hours. When staff, including the night manager, attempted to persuade the agent to return to his room, the agent became physically aggressive. Police were then called. The agent engaged in an altercation with numerous police officers, leading to his arrest. The agent was released from police custody later that day after intervention by the U.S. Embassy.
 

The Shocking Far-Right Agenda Behind the Facial Recognition Tech Used by ICE and the FBI​

Thousands of newly obtained documents show that Clearview AI’s founders always intended to target immigrants and the political left. Now their digital dragnet is in the hands of the Trump administration.​


Clearview had compiled a massive biometric database that would eventually contain billions of images the company scraped off the internet and social media without the knowledge of the platforms or their users. Its AI analyzed these images, creating a “faceprint” for every individual. The company let users run a “probe photo” against its database, and if it generated a hit, it displayed the matching images and links to the websites where they originated. This made it easy for Clearview users to further profile their targets with other information found on those webpages: religious or political affiliation, family and friends, romantic partners, sexuality. All without a search warrant or probable cause.

A diehard Donald Trump supporter, Ton-That envisioned using facial recognition to compare images of migrants crossing the border to mugshots to see if the arrivals had been previously arrested in the United States. His Border Patrol pitch also included a proposal to screen any arrival for “sentiment about the USA.” Here, Ton-That appeared to conflate support for the Republican leader with American identity, proposing to scan migrants’ social media for “posts saying ‘I hate Trump’ or ‘Trump is a puta’” and targeting anyone with an “affinity for far-left groups.” The lone example he offered was the National Council of La Raza, now called UnidosUS, one of the country’s largest Hispanic civil rights organizations.

 
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