mi Jim Cummings Jr., lifelong Republican and founder of Indiana Black Expo, dies at age 90 By rssfeeds.indystar.com Published On :: Fri, 24 Apr 2020 20:53:18 +0000 James "Jim" Cummings Jr., who was the last living founder of Indiana Black Expo., died late Thursday at age 90 of a heart attack. Full Article
mi 'There's no playbook': What local governments can legally limit during coronavirus By rssfeeds.indystar.com Published On :: Thu, 30 Apr 2020 09:00:16 +0000 The most important decisions during a public health emergency are more likely to be made by Indiana's governor and local officials than the president. Full Article
mi Presumptive Democratic nominee for Indiana governor says it's unsafe to reopen economy now By rssfeeds.indystar.com Published On :: Sat, 02 May 2020 21:33:29 +0000 Woody Myers, the presumptive Democratic nominee for governor, thinks Gov. Eric Holcomb is making a big mistake in how he's reopening the economy. Full Article
mi Democrat Woody Myers misses initial deadline to choose running mate By rssfeeds.indystar.com Published On :: Thu, 07 May 2020 12:08:12 +0000 the Indiana Democratic State Central Committee decided to push back the noon Tuesday deadline to 10 a.m. Friday. Full Article
mi Colts select Michigan ILB Glasgow By rssfeeds.indystar.com Published On :: Sat, 25 Apr 2020 23:01:42 +0000 The Indianapolis Colts select Michigan inside linebacker Jordan Glasgow. Full Article
mi Colts' sixth-rounder Jordan Glasgow would be third member of his family to play in NFL By rssfeeds.indystar.com Published On :: Sun, 26 Apr 2020 15:58:23 +0000 Glasgow is likely to see his initial playing time on special teams Full Article
mi Doyel and Derek podcast: Colts draft, ESPN-on-Eason crime, NBA coming back — sort of By rssfeeds.indystar.com Published On :: Mon, 27 Apr 2020 18:17:18 +0000 Gregg got a boxing heavy bag for his birthday, and he's ready to beat up Derek — hey, that's what he said! — on the latest Doyel and Derek Podcast. Full Article
mi Stock watch: Offseason additions have big ramifications on Colts veterans By rssfeeds.indystar.com Published On :: Thu, 30 Apr 2020 15:43:39 +0000 Which Colts incumbents benefited the most from an offseason of change? And who's now in a tougher position than they were at season's end? Full Article
mi Colts hold virtual sessions during pandemic By rssfeeds.indystar.com Published On :: Wed, 06 May 2020 15:35:05 +0000 Indianapolis Colts linebacker Darius Leonard discusses the team's workouts during the pandemic. Full Article
mi Why Colts' RBs Jonathan Taylor and Marlon Mack might bring out the best of Philip Rivers By rssfeeds.indystar.com Published On :: Tue, 05 May 2020 13:17:07 +0000 When the Chargers legend isn't carrying a team on his back, Rivers has been far more efficient. Full Article
mi Colts QB Philip Rivers lands 'peace of mind,' post-NFL life as Alabama high school coach By rssfeeds.indystar.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 21:12:59 +0000 Rivers has been named the coach in waiting at St. Michael Catholic High School in Fairhope, according to an AL.com report. Full Article
mi ABB and employees donate to the International Committee of the Red Cross By www.abb.com Published On :: Tue, 7 Apr 2020 08:00:00 GMT 2020-04-07 - Full Article
mi ABB wins $100 million framework contract to strengthen South America’s power grid By www.abb.com Published On :: Tue, 14 Apr 2020 12:00:00 GMT 2020-04-14 - Full Article
mi İngiliz ekonomisi küçülüyor By www.bbc.co.uk Published On :: 2009-07-27T09:41:24+00:00 İngiltere'de ekonominin yılın 2. çeyreğinde de binde 8 küçülmesi, resesyondan çabuk çıkılabileceğine yönelik umutları azalttı. Almanya'nın ise resesyondan çıkma yolunda olduğu belirtiliyor. Full Article Story News
mi Guardian: Atatürk'ün mirasına darbe By www.bbc.co.uk Published On :: 2009-07-29T06:45:53+00:00 Guardian yazarı Simon Tisdall, Türkiye'deki Kürt açılımı tartışmalarını ele aldığı yazısında, Atatürk'ün mirasına Başbakan Erdoğan'ın en büyük darbeyi vurmak üzere olabileceğini öne sürüyor. Full Article Story Press Review
mi Dünya Gündemi By www.bbc.co.uk Published On :: 2009-07-25T21:06:31+00:00 Dünya Gündemi'ni Çarşamba ve Cuma günleri 10:30'da, Cumartesi günleri 20:30'da NTV'de izleyebilirsiniz. Full Article Cluster In Depth
mi Nijerya'da İslamcı militanlara operasyon By www.bbc.co.uk Published On :: 2009-07-29T05:15:54+00:00 Nijerya, ülkenin kuzeyinde hafta sonu başlayan ve 100 kişinin ölümüne neden olan isyan hareketini bastırmaya çalışıyor. Ordu, radikal İslamcıların üslendiği Maiduguri kentini topçu ateşine tuttu. Full Article Story News
mi USS Bataan: Mission uncertain? By www.bbc.co.uk Published On :: Thu, 24 Mar 2011 16:52:52 +0000 Norfolk, Virginia Two tugs play around the USS Bataan, guiding her out of port, the beginning of her long journey to the Mediterranean off the coast of Libya. Sailors and Marines line her decks, standing to attention while relatives say their goodbyes from another ship on the quayside. One woman rubs her hands up and down the arms of her young son, comforting herself with the repetitive motion as much as him. Another waves as the ship departs, waves as it moves into the open waters, and is still waving as it shrinks into the distance. There are tears, as those who remain behind hug each other in support. One woman tells me: "Every time they go it is like a little bit taken out of a puzzle. That puzzle is your life. And they never come back the same." The pain of parting for probably around a year must be great. But this mission is not like Afghanistan, or in the past Iraq, where those leaving would definitely see action. Indeed, no-one seems certain what they are going to do. Not, as is sometimes the case, because they are unwilling to discuss a military operation. They really don't know. I ask a couple of Marines if they think they will be landing. "Couldn't really tell you," says one. Do they know what the mission is? They shake their heads. Several tell me they are surprised. They were due to go out to the area soon anyway but the Libyan crisis has cut short their time at home. "Yes, sir, honestly a little bit surprised, but you're ready for anything in the navy." "We only got two weeks' notice, it's really sudden," said another. "I am a little surprised, they're very surprised too, it's a Libyan civil war, I don't quite know what we're doing there," one mother, here to see off her son, tells me. They are, at least, designed to be ready for anything. The USS Bataan, along with the USS Mesa Verde and USS Whidbey Island make up an amphibious ready group. The Bataan, which looks to my untutored eye like a small aircraft carrier, is an amphibious assault craft. On board are about 800 Marines (2,200 in the three ships), 26 aircraft, mostly helicopters, and a 600-bed hospital. They would have been going out to the Med anyway, later in the year, to replace the USS Kearsarge. She's used to being a jack of all trades, delivering troops to the Iraq war, then acting as a Harrier carrier, and helping with the crisis after Hurricane Katrina and the Haiti earthquake. Minutes before he boarded the ship I asked the Commodore of Amphibious Squadron Six, Capt Steven Yoder, if he knew what the mission was. "Right now it's undetermined. We arrive on station, we will be asked to do any of the missions we're trained to. They run from humanitarian assistance to maritime and security operations," he says. I ask the Marines' commanding officer, Col Eric Steidl, what their mission will be, given that the UN resolution and President Barack Obama have been quite clear that there will be no boots on the ground, especially not American boots. "I don't make policy decisions, I do what 'higher' tells me to do. Does that mean they will have nothing to do? That's not for me to say," he tells me. In any war, the individual fighting men and women and their units don't know exactly what they are going to be doing and how that might change. It is a cliche to say no battle plan survives contact with the enemy. But in the Libyan crisis, there is greater uncertainty. The natural evolution of any conflict is further fogged by the uncertainty of what happens if Col Muammar Gaddafi doesn't lose quickly, and fears that the mission will change. Nonetheless, those 2,200 Marines had better be prepared for a dull and uneventful trip. If they ever come off the front ramp of this landing craft, if they are ever deployed, it will be in defiance of the UN's resolution. Mr Obama's words are clear, but the US military likes to be prepared for anything. Full Article
mi The cost of compromise By www.bbc.co.uk Published On :: Wed, 06 Apr 2011 20:51:58 +0000 Washington teeters on the brink. If there is no agreement on a budget by midnight on Friday, the federal government will shut down. While cops and soldiers, air traffic controllers and others deemed essential won't down tools this is serious, at least according to the Obama administration. A senior administration official has told us loans to small businesses and home buyers will stop, which will have an impact on an already fragile housing market. Military and civilian workers won't be paid. The lions at the zoo will be fed (and unlike last time their waste should be collected) but the gates won't open to visitors. National parks will close. This is, of course, the most serious, as I am planning a vacation to one of them next week. I am just back from the Capitol, and talking to people at a Tea Party rally. Their view might be summed up as "bring it on!" They were chanting "Shut it down!" Several made the point that if non-essential parts of the government shut down, they'd be quite happy. If it's not essential, the view is, then the government shouldn't be doing it anyway. I suspect there will be a deal. There is too much for both sides to lose in the blame game that would follow. But the strength of the Tea Party has already made it hard for their leadership to compromise, and will make selling any deal tough. President Barack Obama and the Democrats don't have quite the same problem but the cuts he has accepted have already upset supporters. Compromise is a peculiar business, I reflected as I started reading a book called At the Edge of the Precipice, by Robert Remini, the former historian of the US House of Representatives. It is about the 1850 compromise over slavery. He writes that the man at the centre of this, Henry Clay, "understood the importance of compromise... each side must feel that it has gained something that is essential to its interest as the result of the compromise. To achieve that goal each side must surrender something important to the opposing side. Both sides can then claim victory." His contention is that compromise prevented an early civil war that the North would have lost, having neither leadership nor material to win at that stage. The argument is that it prevented the splitting of the US into two nations and thus was a good move. All history is hindsight, but I am uncertain about praising an agreement on the grounds that it turned out that it came unstuck later with better results. It was hardly the argument at the time. And compromises depend who is at the table. The compromise was between white gentlemen, while the slaves themselves had no say. Perhaps they might have had some thoughts about the value of compromise. What's this got to do with today's politics? Simply that like Mr Remini, most Americans admire politicians who can behave with dignity and find a way through a difficult problem, by giving and taking. Bipartisanship is one of the highest ideals of US politics. But many of the politicians might question the morality of this. Enough of them might see the matters of practicality and principle at stake as too important to allow the other side to claim any sort of victory. Full Article
mi In-state defensive lineman Rodney McGraw flips commitment from IU to Penn State By rssfeeds.indystar.com Published On :: Sun, 03 May 2020 19:20:41 +0000 McGraw, a three-star defensive end, announced his decision Sunday via Twitter. Full Article
mi Faith, family and basketball lead Jordache Mavunga back home to UIndy By rssfeeds.indystar.com Published On :: Sun, 03 May 2020 20:00:10 +0000 Faith, family and basketball lead Jordache Mavunga back home to UIndy Full Article
mi 'Mind Your Banners' podcast: IU basketball and pandemic talk By rssfeeds.indystar.com Published On :: Wed, 08 Apr 2020 23:31:37 +0000 Zach Osterman and Chronic Hoosier discuss the commitment of big man Logan Duncomb in the latest 'Mind Your Banners' podcast Full Article
mi NCAA said spring-sport seniors can get extra year. One school says they can't. Why it might not be alone. By rssfeeds.indystar.com Published On :: Thu, 09 Apr 2020 22:03:08 +0000 Wisconsin AD Barry Alvarez announced his school will not submit waivers for spring-sport seniors to regain a year of eligibility. Full Article
mi Tennessee prep standout Chloe Moore-McNeil commits to IU women's basketball By rssfeeds.indystar.com Published On :: Sat, 11 Apr 2020 13:55:18 +0000 Indiana women's basketball roster retooling has hit overdrive the past few days. Full Article
mi Signing day in a pandemic: For IU women's basketball commit it was 'pure joy' and a lot of honking By rssfeeds.indystar.com Published On :: Thu, 16 Apr 2020 12:46:43 +0000 Tennessee standout Chloe Moore-McNeil signed with Indiana basketball on Wednesday. Full Article
mi Emmitt Holt's incredible journey includes 'nightmare' in Indiana By rssfeeds.indystar.com Published On :: Thu, 16 Apr 2020 13:14:34 +0000 Webster's Emmitt Holt spent 64 days in the hospital, lost 50 pounds, had eight feet of intestines removed and returned to play college basketball. Full Article
mi Bob Knight called Michael Jordan 'the best basketball player I've ever seen play' long before most By rssfeeds.indystar.com Published On :: Mon, 20 Apr 2020 14:01:07 +0000 IU basketball coaching legend got to see Michael Jordan up close as part of the 1984 U.S. Olympic team; Knight came away quite impressed. Full Article
mi Tom Allen on a 2020 IU football season: 'I'm an optimistic guy' By rssfeeds.indystar.com Published On :: Thu, 23 Apr 2020 12:29:16 +0000 Tom Allen discusses how the Hoosiers move toward the fall when they can't work together. 'It's a universal challenge.' Full Article
mi When Michael Jordan collided with Bloomington, Bob Knight and the Olympic Trials in 1984 By rssfeeds.indystar.com Published On :: Mon, 27 Apr 2020 15:31:09 +0000 Michael Jordan spent the spring of 1984 in Bloomington before he became Michael Jordan Full Article
mi IU basketball forward Justin Smith declares for NBA draft, retains eligibility By rssfeeds.indystar.com Published On :: Wed, 29 Apr 2020 14:49:06 +0000 A fixture in IU's starting lineup for most of the past two years, Smith averaged 10.4 points and 5.2 rebounds per game in 2019-20. Full Article
mi 'Mind Your Banners' podcast: Time to answer your questions By rssfeeds.indystar.com Published On :: Wed, 29 Apr 2020 19:41:16 +0000 IU Insider Zach Osterman sits down with Chronic Hoosier to answer your questions, talking everything from IU sports to Btown eats to memories and more Full Article
mi Michigan RB David Holloman commits to IU football By rssfeeds.indystar.com Published On :: Fri, 01 May 2020 12:34:44 +0000 Holloman, a three-star prospect from Auburn Hills, also had offers from West Virginia, Nebraska, Maryland, Iowa State, and Central Michigan, among others. Full Article
mi In-state defensive lineman Rodney McGraw flips commitment from IU to Penn State By rssfeeds.indystar.com Published On :: Sun, 03 May 2020 19:20:41 +0000 McGraw, a three-star defensive end, announced his decision Sunday via Twitter. Full Article
mi Coronavirus pandemic rocks Indiana lodging industry as hotels lay off hundreds of workers By rssfeeds.indystar.com Published On :: Thu, 26 Mar 2020 17:28:43 +0000 Layoffs are mounting in the hospitality industry. "It's worst than 9/11," says the president of the Indiana Restaurant and Lodging Association. Full Article
mi Indianapolis announces $10 million fund for small-business loans during coronavirus crisis By rssfeeds.indystar.com Published On :: Wed, 01 Apr 2020 18:09:10 +0000 The city of Indianapolis and the Indy Chamber announced a $10 million rapid response loan fund for small businesses during the coronavirus pandemic. Full Article
mi The coronavirus pandemic is hitting landlords and small-business owners. Now rent is due. By rssfeeds.indystar.com Published On :: Thu, 02 Apr 2020 20:14:39 +0000 The financial disruptions from the coronavirus pandemic are growing. April brings new challenges for renters, homeowners and small-business owners. Full Article
mi Simon Property Group slashes executive pay due to coronavirus pandemic By rssfeeds.indystar.com Published On :: Fri, 03 Apr 2020 17:34:32 +0000 Securities and Exchange Commission filings detail executive pay cuts for Simon Property Group executives as forced closures impact business operations Full Article
mi Grocery store operating hours, latest shopping changes during the coronavirus pandemic By rssfeeds.indystar.com Published On :: Wed, 29 Apr 2020 17:40:57 +0000 Here's how grocery stores are trying to accommodate shoppers with new hours, special times for at-risk customers and other changes as of April 29. Full Article
mi Cummins is using Wisconsin facility to aid respirator production during COVID-19 outbreak By rssfeeds.indystar.com Published On :: Tue, 14 Apr 2020 20:36:00 +0000 Cummins is partnering with Minnesota-based 3M to make filters for use in respirators used during the COVID-19 outbreak. Full Article
mi Restaurants are selling groceries during the coronavirus pandemic. Here's what's available. By rssfeeds.indystar.com Published On :: Fri, 17 Apr 2020 12:24:02 +0000 Restaurants struggling during the coronavirus pandemic are becoming grocery stores to survive. Here's where to score groceries around Indianapolis. Full Article
mi Why Indiana's March unemployment rate is so low amid empty streets and empty stores By rssfeeds.indystar.com Published On :: Fri, 17 Apr 2020 19:13:43 +0000 More than 22 million Americans are out of work because of how the coronavirus has shut down much of the economy. Full Article
mi Indiana coal company with ties to Trump administration gets $10 million in coronavirus aid By rssfeeds.indystar.com Published On :: Fri, 24 Apr 2020 12:35:59 +0000 The parent company of Indiana's second largest coal company, with ties to the Trump administration, landed $10 million in coronavirus relief aid. Full Article
mi Emmis Communications board votes to leave Nasdaq By rssfeeds.indystar.com Published On :: Fri, 24 Apr 2020 23:52:14 +0000 Emmis hopes to reduce expenses, focus on growth. Full Article
mi U.S. unemployment rate climbs to 14.7% in April, with 20.5 million jobs lost By rssfeeds.indystar.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 18:47:20 +0000 The unemployment rate in the United States is surging because of business closures and disruptions related to the coronavirus pandemic. Full Article
mi Honda to start resuming production at U.S. plants Monday By rssfeeds.indystar.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 21:19:24 +0000 Honda announced Friday it would start resuming production at its U.S. and Canada plants, including one in Greensburg. Full Article
mi Katrina Trinko: Put family, not shopping, first on Thanksgiving By rssfeeds.indystar.com Published On :: Mon, 24 Nov 2014 21:59:52 +0000 Consumers could fight back by not shopping on Thanksgiving. Full Article
mi Cognizant Expects To Lose Between $50 Million and $70 Million Following Ransomware Attack By rss.slashdot.org Published On :: 2020-05-09T01:10:00+00:00 IT services provider Cognizant said in an earnings call this week that a ransomware incident that took place last month in April 2020 will negatively impact its Q2 revenue. ZDNet reports: "While we anticipate that the revenue impact related to this issue will be largely resolved by the middle of the quarter, we do anticipate the revenue and corresponding margin impact to be in the range of $50 million to $70 million for the quarter," said Karen McLoughlin, Cognizant Chief Financial Officer in an earnings call yesterday. McLoughlin also expects the incident to incur additional and unforeseen legal, consulting, and other costs associated with the investigation, service restoration, and remediation of the breach. The Cognizant CFO says the company has now fully recovered from the ransomware infection and restored the majority of its services. Speaking on the ransomware attack, Cognizant CEO Brian Humphries said the incident only impacted its internal network, but not customer systems. More precisely, Humphries said the ransomware incident impacted (1) Cognizant's select system supporting employees' work from home setups and (2) the provisioning of laptops that Cognizant was using to support its work from home capabilities during the COVID-19 pandemic. Humphries said staff moved quickly to take down all impacted systems, which impacted Cognizant's billing system for a period of time. Some customer services were taken down as a precaution. Read more of this story at Slashdot. Full Article
mi US Military Is Furious At FCC Over 5G Plan That Could Interfere With GPS By rss.slashdot.org Published On :: 2020-05-09T13:00:00+00:00 An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: GPS is facing a major interference threat from a 5G network approved by the Federal Communications Commission, U.S. military officials told Congress in a hearing on Wednesday. In testimony to the Senate Committee on Armed Services, Department of Defense Chief Information Officer Dana Deasy disputed the FCC's claims that conditions imposed on the Ligado network will protect GPS from interference. When the FCC approved Ligado's plan last month, the agency required a 23MHz guard band to provide a buffer between the Ligado cellular network and GPS. Deasy argued that this guard band won't prevent interference with GPS signals. Results from tests by federal agencies show that "conditions in this FCC order will not prevent impacts to millions of GPS receivers across the United States, with massive complaints expected to come," Deasy said. The FCC unanimously approved Ligado's application, but the decision is facing congressional scrutiny. "I do not think it is a good idea to place at risk the GPS signals that enable our national and economic security for the benefit of one company and its investors," Sen. James Inhofe (R-Okla.) said at the hearing, according to CNBC. "This is about much more than risking our military readiness and capabilities. Interfering with GPS will hurt the entire American economy." A spokesperson for FCC Chairman Ajit Pai called the military's concerns "baseless fear-mongering" in a statement quoted by Multichannel News. "The FCC made a unanimous, bipartisan decision based on sound engineering principles," the spokesperson said. The FCC said "the metric used by the Department of Defense to measure harmful interference does not, in fact, measure harmful interference," and that "testing on which they are relying took place at dramatically higher power levels than the FCC approved." "Ligado said Wednesday in a statement that it has gone to great lengths to prevent interference and will provide 'a 24/7 monitoring capability, a hotline, a stop buzzer or kill switch' and will 'repair or replace at Ligado's cost any government device shown to be susceptible to harmful interference,'" CNBC reported. The FCC also said it imposed a power limit of 9.8dBW on Ligado's downlink operations -- "a greater than 99 percent reduction from what Ligado proposed in its 2015 application," Pai said. Read more of this story at Slashdot. Full Article
mi Caddis Fly Larvae Are Now Building Shelters Out of Microplastics By rss.slashdot.org Published On :: 2020-05-09T14:34:00+00:00 An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: Crawling along the world's river bottoms, the larvae of the caddis fly suffer a perpetual housing crisis. To protect themselves from predators, they gather up sand grains and other sediment and paste them all together with silk, forming a cone that holds their worm-like bodies. As they mature and elongate, they have to continuously add material to the case -- think of it like adding rooms to your home for the rest of your life, or at least until you turn into an adult insect. If the caddis fly larva somehow loses its case, it's got to start from scratch, and that's quite the precarious situation for a defenseless tube of flesh. And now, the microplastic menace is piling onto the caddis fly's list of tribulations. Microplastic particles -- pieces of plastic under 5 millimeters long -- have already corrupted many of Earth's environments, including the formerly pristine Arctic and deep-sea sediments. In a study published last year, researchers in Germany reported finding microplastic particles in the cases of caddis flies in the wild. Then, last month, they published the troubling results of lab experiments that found the more microplastic particles a caddis fly larva incorporates into its case, the weaker that structure becomes. That could open up caddis flies to greater predation, sending ripple effects through river ecosystems. In the lab, the researchers found that the larvae chose to use two kinds of microplastics to build their cases, likely because the plastic is lighter than the sand, so it's not as hard to lift. The problem is that the cases with more plastic and less sand collapse more easily, weakening the larvae's protection from predatory fish, among other things. A more long-term concern is bioaccumulation. "A small fish eats a larva, a bigger fish eats the smaller fish, all the way on up, and the concentrations of microplastic and associated toxins accumulate over time," the report says. "The bigger predators that people eat, like tuna, may be absorbing those microplastics and the chemicals they leach." The study has been published in the journal Environmental Science and Pollution Research. Read more of this story at Slashdot. Full Article
mi 'Video Vigilante' Arrested After Filming a Hospital's Emergency Ramp By rss.slashdot.org Published On :: 2020-05-09T15:34:00+00:00 The Boston Herald writes that a "video vigilante faces numerous charges after being arrested outside Massachusetts General Hospital where police say he was recording the emergency ramp at the height of the coronavirus pandemic." schwit1 shares their report: John L. McCullough, 41, was charged with trespassing, disturbing the peace and threats to do bodily harm after police say he refused to stop recording Sunday evening. "I informed him that I could not make him stop filming but I asked him to stop out of respect to patient privacy," the arresting officer wrote in a police report obtained by the Herald through a public records request. The next day the newspaper's senior editor posted a follow-up: John L. McCullough told the Herald Tuesday evening he is a First Amendment crusader who takes videos of police and posts them to YouTube. That's what got him a June 2 arraignment date. "I understand how people may feel, but that doesn't mean I should be locked up," McCullough said... "Did I break the law? No. I may have been rude," he added. "I understand people may feel jittery, but where peoples' feelings start my rights don't stop...." Cambridge civil-rights attorney Harvey Silverglate said McCullough will probably have his case tossed, even if what he was doing is seen as crass. "There's no amendment in the Constitution called the humanity amendment," said Silverglate. "It's a free country and you have a right to be a jerk." But taking video outside a hospital during a pandemic and as people try to social distance — and first responders, including the police, face all-too-real health risks — is "pretty distasteful," Silverglate added. Still, he added the judge will "have to throw it out." He added it's "punishment itself" to go to court in this climate. McCullough, records state, does not have an attorney yet. He did say he's ready to plead his case. "Don't be brainwashed," he added, "and it shouldn't be a problem when a black man has a camera." The Herald suggests one more interesting detail. "McCullough said '20 other cameras' were probably rolling at the same time as he was — alluding to security cameras in the area." Read more of this story at Slashdot. Full Article