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The Atlanta "cop city "argument" features two sides - both seemingly unaware of poor optics. Here's the thing: we're supposed to expect better of "the side of the law," and having cops with long-range rifles on their shoulders walking up to bounce-houses to point those rifles in and wave people out at an otherwise peaceful music festival at a public park is a bade look. That said, burning privately-owned construction equipment, throwing Molotov cocktails and fireworks at anxious and jittery cops is, too.
WATCH HERE, courtesy of Unicorn Riot
Buckhead City pushers throw in the towel - sort of, with some sour grapes shade at Governor Brian Kemp.
Melita Easters of the Georgia WIN List joins me to promote their upcoming International Women's Day Reception, plus discuss recent findings that Georgia's 2019 abortion law would have kept 91% of women seeking abortion care from getting it between 2007-2017. We'll also discuss the seemingly targeted scrutiny district attorneys suddenly have now that minorities, women and women of color are increasingly winning DA races and serving in those capacities.
The Atlanta "cop city "argument" features two sides - both seemingly unaware of poor optics. Here's the thing: we're supposed to expect better of "the side of the law," and having cops with long-range rifles on their shoulders walking up to bounce-houses to point those rifles in and wave people out at an otherwise peaceful music festival at a public park is a bade look. That said, burning privately-owned construction equipment, throwing Molotov cocktails and fireworks at anxious and jittery cops is, too.
WATCH HERE, courtesy of Unicorn Riot
Buckhead City pushers throw in the towel - sort of, with some sour grapes shade at Governor Brian Kemp.
Melita Easters of the Georgia WIN List joins me to promote their upcoming International Women's Day Reception, plus discuss recent findings that Georgia's 2019 abortion law would have kept 91% of women seeking abortion care from getting it between 2007-2017. We'll also discuss the seemingly targeted scrutiny district attorneys suddenly have now that minorities, women and women of color are increasingly winning DA races and serving in those capacities.