Media Search:



George Zimmerman sues Trayvon Martin’s family for $100m | US …

George Zimmerman, the neighborhood watch volunteer cleared of murdering an unarmed black teenager in one of Floridas most high-profile criminal cases, launched a $100m lawsuit on Wednesday against the dead boys family, their lawyer and prosecutors.

Zimmerman shot and killed Trayvon Martin, 17, following a nighttime altercation between the two at his gated community in Sanford in February 2012. He was acquitted of second-degree murder in a closely watched trial that triggered a national debate over racial injustice, civil rights and gun violence.

In a 36-page lawsuit circulated by his lawyers, Zimmerman claims his reputation was destroyed by the malicious prosecution and alleges that the states attorney, Angela Corey, and her team of prosecutors relied on a witness who falsely claimed to be Martins girlfriend to testify against him.

He further alleges that Benjamin Crump, the civil rights attorney who has represented Martins parents, Sybrina Fulton and Tracy Martin, since their sons death, defames him in Crumps recent book Open Season: Legalized Genocide of Colored People.

Evidence presented during Zimmermans trial included a recording of a call to the Sanford police department in which Zimmerman, now 36, said he was following Trayvon, who was on his way back to his fathers girlfriends house with Skittles and a soft drink he had just bought at a nearby gas station. OK, we dont need you to do that, a dispatcher told Zimmerman.

According to the lawsuit filed by the Boca Raton-based attorney Larry Klayman, founder of the conservative legal activist group Judicial Watch, his client now lives in constant fear of attack and often receives death threats when he appears in public. It adds that he suffers from depression and PTSD.

The allegations about a fake witness center on a teenager called Rachel Jeantel, whom the lawsuit claims gave testimony as Martins girlfriend as an imposter for her half-sister Brittany Diamond Eugene, Martins real girlfriend at the time.

Jeantel told jurors she was on the phone with Martin, who claimed he was being pursued by a creepy-ass cracker as he walked home. The testimony about Zimmerman, who is of Hispanic heritage, added further controversy to an already racially charged trial.

The lawsuit claims the conspiracy to have Jeantel testify in her sisters place was hatched when prosecutors could not persuade Eugene to make a statement incriminating Zimmerman.

Crump, who owns a law firm in Tallahassee, rejected Zimmermans claims. I have every confidence that this unfounded and reckless lawsuit will be revealed for what it is, another failed attempt to defend the indefensible and a shameless attempt to profit off the lives and grief of others, he said in a statement.

This plaintiff continues to display a callous disregard for everyone but himself. He would have us believe that he is the victim of a deep conspiracy despite the complete lack of any credible evidence to support his outlandish claims.

A representative for Fulton, who is running for a seat on the Miami-Dade county commission next year, did not immediately return a request for comment, and attempts to reach the Trayvon Martin Foundation, the anti-gun advocacy group set up by Fulton and Martin, were also unsuccessful.

Zimmerman, meanwhile, has been immersed in several controversies since his acquittal. In 2016 he attempted to profit by selling the gun he used to kill Trayvon, branding the weapon an American firearm icon and promising the proceeds would help fight the activities of Black Lives Matter.

One year earlier, a violent road rage incident resulted in a Florida man, Matthew Apperson, being sentenced to 20 years in prison for attempted murder after shooting at Zimmerman.

Read more:
George Zimmerman sues Trayvon Martin's family for $100m | US ...

Nolte: Fake Medias Tired Anti-Trump Playbook Is Boring Me to Death – Breitbart

You know what I have? The greatest job in the world. Seriously. Get this: Every morning I face a day where Im overpaid to express my opinion on a few things. And Im usually done by noon. That leaves the whole rest of the day for TV and cookies.

Thats it. Thats my job. And I appreciate it. After 17 years of making a living as a bill collector, how could I not. Oh, and on Fridays, they pay me to go to the movies. Oh, and I have weekends off. No joke.

Can you imagine having a job such as mine and still complaining about it

Well, here I go

You people are boring me.

And by people I mean just barely people the establishment media people who spread all this fake news about us deplorables.

The boredom is killing me.

Killing.

Me.

Earlier this week, I was complaining about my job to our esteemed editor-in-chief Alex Marlow, and I was pretty certain he would fire my ungrateful ass. After all, unlike me, he works for a living.But instead he said, Yeah, if my job was to cover the media Id be bored to tears. Its been the same playbook for going on five years, the same lying-rapist-racist playbook. Its boring. Theyre totally out of ideas. You should write about that.

Yep.

Every day, its the same shit from the media. Every day for five years, were all a bunch of lying-rapist-racists. Trump is a lying rapist-racist. Brett Kavanaugh. The police. Catholic high school kids. George Zimmerman. Gun lovers. Deplorables. Its just lying-rapist-racist over and over and over again.

And because the media have no other ideas, because they keep saying the same thing, I end up saying the same thing over and over and over again, and its boring.

My wife once told me that Im only happy in my work if Im surrounded. Shes right. Winning is no fun. Who wants to win? Who wants to stand at the top of the mountain. Its the climb that matters, the battle

So thats the other thing Weve beaten the media.

Ive been in this InterWebDotNets fight for 16 years now, and weve won.

I dont mean the media have surrendered or suddenly become respectable professionals with integrity. Lol. But we have beaten the media as about as well as the media will ever be beaten: theyve been forced out of the closet as left-wing activists. Theyre almost always on defense responding to the political right. They have no real power to manipulate public opinion anymore. Bottom line: The media have been reduced to left-wing talk radio. And thats a win. So were no longer surrounded. Thats no fun. And they keep firing off the same cannonballs of liar-rapist-racist.

God, Im bored.

And Im not the only one whos bored with the media. Look at Americas reaction to impeachment a collective shrug. The president has been impeached, is on trial, and no one is watching because its all so boring, yet another sequel to the medias Russia Collusion, Kavanaugh, Ferguson, Trayvon, the KKKovington KKKids, ZZZZZZZZZzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz hoaxes.

You might think: maybe thats the strategy maybe the medias strategy is to wear us down through repetition. Wear us down to where we stop fighting against liar-rapist-racist, and then they win.

Nope.

Theyre out of ideas.

You see, the other thing, the other area in which weve beaten the media, is that The People see completely through them. I dont mean people like myself who do this professionally. I mean people-people. Everyday people. No one needs me pointing out Jake Tapper is a bigot and liar anymore. No one needs me pointing out that Chris Cuomo is an unbalanced moron. No one needs me pointing out Rachel Maddow is a crazed conspiracy theorist, CNN is a Hate Network, and Chuck Todd is having a meltdown.

The People get it.

A major part of Andrew Breitbarts vision was to turn everyday people into activists. To teach and train them not in a patronizing way, but through example to fight the left, to see through them, to see what he called The Matrix, specifically the media.

And thats why The People dont need me. Yall get it.

When I first jumped on the Twitters more than 11 years ago, it was just me and about five other people giving the media hell. Now everyone gives the media hell. As an American I freakin love that. As a professional, though, Im feeling a little unnecessary.

Then again

Context helps

When I start to feel sorry for myself, I take a look around at the sorry losers with the truly terrible jobs those in the fake media. Dodging boring cannonballs is a much better job than being the sorry asshole firing them off.

What I mean is,How would you like to be Glenn Kessler?

Seriously, get a load ofThis Guy.

How would you like to be the pedantic serial liar doing the mind numbing, repetitive, drudge work of documenting 16,241 of Trumps false statements.

At least my boring life of repetition involves repeating what I believe, honestly believe, and the truth

This poor SOB goes into work everyday to dig one more ditch of lies. My guess, too, is that his hideous employers give him a quota. We want you to manufacture 30 Trump lies by the end of the week! Thats called piece work. Kessler is either a slave or a sociopath. Either way Damn.

Thats no way to make a living, son.

Follow John Nolte on Twitter @NolteNC. Follow his Facebook Page here.

See more here:
Nolte: Fake Medias Tired Anti-Trump Playbook Is Boring Me to Death - Breitbart

What does ‘woke’ mean? Origins of the term, and how its meaning has changed – inews

NewsUKWoke was officially added into the dictionary in 2017 and it means to be awake to sensitive social issues, such as racism

Wednesday, 22nd January 2020, 9:25 am

The term 'woke' is at the centre of many of the fiercest political and cultural debates at the moment. Some people say being woke is a sign of awareness to social issues, others whip out the term as an insult.

But what does the term really mean, and why are so many people getting fired up about its use?

What does woke mean?

The dictionary defines it as "originally: well-informed, up-to-date. Now chiefly: alert to racial or social discrimination and injustice".

The Urban Dictionary, which published its original definition two years prior to the official dictionary, defines it as "being woke means being aware knowing whats going on in the community (related to racism and social injustice)".

In other words, it means to be awake to sensitive social issues, such as racism.

What are the origins of woke?

Once upon a time, it simply meant the past participle of 'wake'. While that has rapidly changed in recent years, the modern definition of the word isn't that new in the US.

In 1962 the New York Times published an article of "phrases and words you might hear today in Harlem", a neighbourhood in the northern section of the New York City where many African-Americans live.

The African-American novelist William Melvin Kelley wrote the earliest known use of the word under its new definition in an article titled, "If you're woke, you dig it".

Ten years later in 1972, a character in the Barry Beckham play Garvey Lives! says hell "stay woke" via the work of pan-Africanist, Marcus Garvey, with the line: "I been sleeping all my life. And now that Mr Garvey done woke me up, Im gon stay woke. And Im gon help him wake up other black folk".

When did Black Lives Matter use it?

The term's break into mainstream language came from the Black Lives Matter movement, which used the hashtag #staywoke in the wake of racial injustices spreading across the US.

In 2012, when unarmed teenager Trayvon Martin was shot dead in Florida by neighbourhood watch volunteer George Zimmerman, the term was used heavily to raise awareness of the movement.

This has led to criticism by some that those who mock 'woke' are being insensitive to its modern usage and the plight of racism. Others argue that its specific link is not widely known.

Why do some people dislike the term?

It has become a common term of derision among some who oppose the movements it is associated with, or believe the issues are exaggerated. It is sometimes used to mock or infantilise supporters of those movements.

Lewis actor Fox accused subscribers to woke views of being "racist". He told Julie Hartley-Brewer's radio show: "The wokist are fundamentally racist. Identity politics is extremely racist."

Visit link:
What does 'woke' mean? Origins of the term, and how its meaning has changed - inews

Eric Holder, suspect in Nipsey Hussle shooting, is …

A suspect in the killing of rapper Nipsey Hussle is in custody, authorities said, ending a two-day manhunt. Eric Holder, 29, was arrested in Bellflower on Tuesday afternoon.

Los Angeles police detectives went to the L.A. County sheriffs station in Lakewood to verify the identity of the suspect and confirmed to The Times that the man in custody was Holder.

The arrest came after a woman who authorities allege was Holders getaway driver turned herself in. She was later released without being arrested. According to source familiar with the investigation, she maintains she was unaware that Holder shot Hussle when he got into the car Sunday.

L.A. Police Chief Michel Moore said Tuesday that Holder got into a verbal altercation with Hussle on Sunday afternoon. Mr. Holder walked up on multiple occasions and engaged in conversations with the rapper, Moore said. He came back armed with a handgun and opened fire.

Moore said investigators believed the shooting was the result of a personal matter between the two of them but would not elaborate.

Moore and Mayor Eric Garcetti both acknowledged a recent uptick in violence, particularly in South Los Angeles, and noted that Hussles legacy was one of peace.

Nipsey Hussle represents the enormity of the lives we have lost, Moore said.

Graphic video from a surveillance camera shows a gunman walking up to Hussle and two other men in front of the shop the rapper owned in a Slauson Avenue strip mall. The gunman opens fire, and Hussle falls to the ground as the other men run from the gunfire.

Nipsey Hussle, Garcetti said, was an artist who touched our city and lives far beyond the City of Angels, throughout the country and the world.

The mayor said the worst way to answer the killing was with more violence and that he hoped the community comes together to achieve the goals the rapper had set in recent years. This is about young people of color being able to have opportunities in their lives, he said.

Hussle was a tireless advocate for the young people of this city and of this world, he said, to lift them up with the possibility of not being imprisoned by where you come from or past mistakes but the possibility of what comes in the future.

The L.A. County coroners office said Monday that Hussle died of a gunshot wound to the head.

Police released Holders name Monday night, when a stampede at a memorial vigil for Hussle led to several injuries.

Eric Holder, identified as a suspect in Nipsey Hussles slaying, in an undated photo provided by the Los Angeles Police Department.

(LAPD)

While a member of the crowd spoke of the late rapper at the memorial, dozens of people gathered for the event outside Hussles store started running away. People fell on top of each other as they tried to flee, some of them losing their shoes in the scramble to get away.

Numerous police cars and ambulances raced to the scene as officers yelled at people to leave the area.

Robert Arcos, an LAPD assistant chief, told The Times that a fight appeared to have started the stampede after one person possibly pulled out a gun.

The Los Angeles Fire Department took 19 people to hospitals: two people who were in critical condition, including one hurt in a car accident; two people with serious injuries; and 15 with non-life-threatening injuries. The majority of the patients suffered injuries related to being trampled when the crowd rushed away.

A Los Angeles Times reporter at the scene was among those trampled. Reporters in the area said on social media that authorities had said at least six people were stabbed, which is thought to have caused or contributed to the chaos.

Hundreds of novena candles left in memory of Hussle who was shot and killed Sunday in broad daylight in a burst of gunfire that left two other people wounded were crushed as people fled. The shards injured several people, and many were limping as they tried to find their way around police barricades. It remains unclear whether anyone was actually stabbed or if they were injured by broken glass.

Moore praised the restraint of the police officers who tried to control the situation.

Bottles were thrown at some officers, and a sergeant had to get stitches for a wound to his hand.

The LAPD is working with community leaders to clean the area, protect the memorial and make it safe for visitors, Moore said.

Hussle made no secret of his early life in a street gang, saying in a 2014 interview with YouTube channel Vlad TV that he had joined the Rollin 60s, a notorious Crips gang clique, as a teenager.

We dealt with death, with murder, he told The Times in 2018. It was like living in a war zone, where people die on these blocks and everybody is a little bit immune to it. I guess they call it post-traumatic stress, when you have people that have been at war for such a long time. I think L.A. suffers from that because its not normal yet we embrace it like it is after a while.

Just before the shooting, Hussle tweeted: Having strong enemies is a blessing.

Moore put Hussles killing in the context of a recent uptick in violence, noting that there had been 26 shootings and 10 homicides in the city since the previous Sunday.

Thats 36 families left picking up the pieces, Moore tweeted. We will work aggressively with our community to quell this senseless loss of life.

Hussle had been set to meet with Moore and Police Commission President Steve Soboroff on Monday to talk about solutions to gang violence.

Throughout the years, as he fostered success in his music career, he chose ... to reinvest and try to address the various underpinnings that fostered this environment. Its just terrible, Moore said Monday.

See the original post:
Eric Holder, suspect in Nipsey Hussle shooting, is ...

Trump Is an Existential Threat: Ilana Glazer, Eric Holder, and 2020 – Mother Jones

Voting is power, says Mother Jones voting rights reporter Ari Berman. But since the nations birth, those with actual legislative power have disenfranchised people of color, low-income Americans, and women to prevent their interests from being represented. And the stakes are only getting higher: As the 2020 presidential election approachesand with the first votes in the Democratic primary about to be castvoter suppression tactics remain endemic throughout our democracy.

In this weeks episode of the Mother Jones Podcast, Berman joins President Barack Obamas attorney general Eric Holder for a wide-ranging conversation of voter suppression tactics, from draconian voter ID laws to partisan and racial gerrymandering, for a conversation moderated by Broad City star Ilana Glazer. The comedian runs a live event program called the Generator Series, during which she attempts to break down complex ideas about democracy, policy, and being a good American citizen. She describes the events as defining minimum civic engagement. For this shindig, co-presented by Mother Jones, Glazer invited Holder to talk about his recently launched national campaign, the National Democratic Redistricting Committee, which fights to create fair voting districts, alongside Berman, whose work illuminates the history of why we vote the way we do in the United Statesand identifies flashpoints in the ongoing battle for this foundational American right.

Below is an edited, condensed version of the conversation, taped in front of a live audience at New York Public Radios Greene Space, in downtown Manhattan. You can also listen to the show below:

Ilana Glazer: So voter suppression 101. What is voter suppression?

Ari Berman: I think you can define it narrowly, which is voter suppression is preventing people from voting. And I think you can define it broadly and historically, which is excluding people or making it difficult for people to participate in the political process altogether. The vote has always been about power. Thats why its so contested, because both sides are aware of the power that it has. Those who dont have it have clamored for it above all other rights. The civil rights movement knew that it was the most important of all rights they were going to win because that would be the one thing they could use to tangibly change peoples lives. And those who had power knew the vote was the one thing that could cause them to lose power.

In the Constitution, there is no affirmative right to vote. There are things you cant do. You cant theoretically prevent people of color from voting. You cant theoretically prevent women from voting. You cant theoretically prevent people who are over 18 from voting. But if you pass a law and you say, Oh, I didnt pass this law to disenfranchise African Americans or Latinos or women, but that has that effect, thats where things get dicey.

Thats the kind of thing were seeing today, where you pass a law to require ID to vote. Everyone says that doesnt seem racist, but you dig in and realize that some groups of people lack the forms of ID more than others, and it hits certain people harder. And in fact thats the intent of the law. But it takes a little bit of peeling back the onion to realize that thats whats going on.

Glazer: Why not just collect the data, which is everyones vote, to see what would make would work for the most people?

Berman: The problem is were not approaching voting as forensic scientists and saying, What can we do to get 100 percent participation? Were looking at some people trying to get more people to participate, but a lot of people dont want more people to participate. We have a lot of the tools that we need to increase voter turnout. We could just automatically register everyone to vote in the same way that I am automatically enrolled in the Selective Service if there would ever be another draft. Sixteen states now have automatic registration. But I mean, you saw this as attorney general. You could do it, but people dont want it done.

Holder: I dont want to get partisan right off the bat, but lets get real [laughter]. Democrats want as many people to vote as possible. We want to make it easy for people to vote, whether its vote by mail, whether its extended voting periods. Republicansat least this iteration of the Republican Partyhave made a determination that they want to restrict the number of people who get access to the polls. The Republican Party has identified itself as a party that is concerned about having too many people vote because their policies wont attract sufficient numbers of people to win at the polls. So theyre gonna try to pick their voters instead of having voters decide who their representatives are gonna be, and thats what Im determined to not let happen.

Glazer: Do you think the coded, systematic, oppressive nature of these laws is starting to be exposed? Like the 90s were so dumb! It didnt seem like the grownups knew. Now it feels like its more exposed. The layers are more transparent. Do you think thats true?

Holder:I think in some ways its more apparent, but as Ari pointed out, a lot of things are done. You have to have a photo ID to vote, thats been passed in some states, and people say, Well, whats wrong with that? You got to show a picture ID to get on an airplane. Why shouldnt you have a picture ID to vote? First off, you dont have the right to get on an airplane. You have the right to vote. There is that fundamental difference.

You have to peel it back. You say, Everybodys got a drivers license. No, everybody doesnt have a drivers license. And poorer folks, people of color, tend not to have drivers licenses. So its not as obvious as it seems. And that is in some ways the genius and the insidiousness of these measures that have been put in place to try to maintain power for a party that I think is, in essence, a minority party when it comes to its views, but wants to retain power in spite of those minority views.

Lets not forget, 2.8 million more Americans said we want Hillary Clinton to be president than Donald Trump. So weve got an Electoral College that also doesnt necessarily disenfranchise people, but can skew things. There are any number of mechanisms in place to prevent us from being a true and pure democracy, where the people decide the direction of the country.

Berman: If we had a popular vote election, there would be no doubt that Donald Trump would lose. We would be debating how much hes going to lose by. But now its: Can he win 20,000 votes in Wisconsin? Can he win 10,000 votes in Michigan? Can he win 40,000 votes in Pennsylvania? And thats the system were living in. If you understand a lot of the institutional problems in our democratic system, you understand why in many ways our democracy is so screwed up today.

Glazer: What is the Electoral College? What and why? And is it forever?

Holder: If you look at the Federalist Papers, they talk about the Electoral College as a check on the popular vote out of concern that these people who are not maybe extremely well-offregular peoplemight make a wrong decision, put a buffoon, for instance, in the White House.

The people will cast their votes. And if the thing doesnt turn out the way it shouldif somebody who is unqualified, you know, has narcissistic personality disorder, a weird hairstyleif a person like that is selected, the electors can then come up with a way in which they will reverse the will of the people. The Electoral College didnt really work three years ago.

Glazer: I want to talk about gerrymandering and redistricting. What is gerrymandering?

Berman: Redistricting is something that happens every 10 years that is mandated by the Constitution. We conduct a census every 10 years to figure out how many people live in the country and then we draw districts to reflect that population. So theres nothing inherently wrong with redistricting. Its how you do it.

Holder: Youd think that districts should generally be drawn in fair ways, have roughly the same number of people, and they do. But you can manipulate the maps in such a way so that you put maybe all the Democrats in one district and then you dont have Democratic representation in all the other districts. And Republicans can therefore win more districts than perhaps they are entitled to. Theyre drawn in all kinds of weird ways so you captureand thats called packing people togetheror you can crack, which is to disperse a certain group in such a way that you diminish their power.

Berman: Ill give you a really good example of what gerrymandering looks like. There is a college campus in North Carolina: North Carolina A&T. Its a historically black university and has a lot of significance in the civil rights movement because its in Greensboro, North Carolina, where the sit-ins began in the 1960s.

What Republicans did is they drew a line and they cut North Carolina A&T in half, so one half of the campus is in one congressional district and the other is in another congressional district. They did this because its a majority-black campus where the students tend to vote Democratic. So if the students vote as one campus, they would presumably vote for a Democratic congressman. But by splitting it in two, theyre doing what Eric called cracking. They are making it so that the black populations votes are diluted. So instead of one Democratic member, there are now two white Republican members representing that area. Thats how gerrymandering works. And that was the map that was just thrown out by state court in North Carolina for being an unconstitutional gerrymander.

Glazer: So whos drawing the lines and who do you wish were reviewing them?

Berman: The problem is theres an inherent conflict of interest. The state legislatures are drawing lines for themselves. This is akin to Dick Cheney leading the vice presidential search and then naming himself vice president. I dont think the average voter much likes this, and I think you could put an anti-gerrymandering amendment on the ballot virtually anywhere and it would have a good shot of passing.

Glazer: I recently learned that the primaries for the president are different in each state.

Berman: Primaries are often designed to keep participation low. I mean, in New York, we were a poster child for this. If you wanted to vote in the Democratic primary for president in 2016 and were not a registered Democrat, you had to change your registration nine months before the primary. Who was thinking of whether they were going to be a registered Democrat nine months before the primary?

Holder: Just for the record, youre talking about nine months? I came out of the womb as a Democrat.

Glazer:So, the NDRC. How are you changing things at that one-to-one level?

Holder: We have a multipronged strategy. We file lawsuits where we can use the state laws or the federal laws to challenge gerrymandering.

Glazer: What do you say? Youre like, Bro, this is racist?

Holder: Oh, yeah. Because we bring cases on the basis of racial gerrymandering. Those are the cases, for instance, that we brought in Virginia, where federal courts found that in 11 districts within Virginia, the lines were drawn on a racial basis. And the Supreme Court, including Clarence Thomas, said that is something thats unconstitutional. The lines were redrawn and as a result of that, for the first time in like 40 years, Democrats now control both houses in the Virginia state legislature.

In 1963, two black students integrated the University of Alabama. Its a famous scene where George Wallace stood in the schoolhouse door. Robert Kennedy, attorney general of United States, to Katzenbach, the deputy attorney general of United States, was down there in Tuscaloosa, escort these two black students into the University of Alabama. And one of those two black students was my late sister in law, Vivian Malone.

Berman: One of the most powerful scenes, I think, in my book, is when I talk about when you went to Selma, Alabama, where John Lewis nearly died marching for voting rights, and you went to Brown Chapel Church, the church where Martin Luther King and so many others spoke. You went there as the first black attorney general and you were introduced by George Wallaces daughter, who voted for Barack Obama. That still, to this day, gives me chills.

Holder: I think its something you want to keep in mind, that change is possible. Just because things are not great right now, we cant give up. I dont want to hear people say, Im tired, Im worn out. Theres a bunch of patriots who formed this nation and took on the mightiest empire in the world and beat it. Theres a bunch of folks who got their skulls cracked, gave their lives so that we might have the opportunities that we now have. You cant have Dr. King, John Lewis saying, Im tired, its too hard, Im worn out.

Dr. King said the arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice. But heres the reality: It doesnt bend on its own. It only bends when people like us, people like you, put the hands on that arc and pull it toward justice to get to the place where we need to be.

Read this article:
Trump Is an Existential Threat: Ilana Glazer, Eric Holder, and 2020 - Mother Jones