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#terrorism watchlist
midnightfunk · 2 years
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prophetmutual · 1 year
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It actually kind of annoyed me that they didn't eat James tbh. after he christcoded himself for you?
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Barriss Offee Watchlist
WARNING: The following may contain spoilers for the Star Wars Expanded Universe, especially for several series*. Episodes are in an approximate timeline order (updated as of 5/10/24). 
*Series entries are listed as Season:Episode. 
The Clone Wars: 
"The Padawan Arc" (~22 BBY)
2:6 Weapons Factory
2:7 Legacy of Terror
2:8 Brain Invaders
"The Fallen Jedi Arc" (~20 BBY)
5:17 Sabotage
5:18 The Jedi Who Knew Too Much
5:19 To Catch a Jedi
5:20 The Wrong Jedi
Tales of The Empire (~19-8 BBY): 
Episode IV: Devoted
Episode V: Realization
Episode VI: The Way Out
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tearsofrefugees · 2 months
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furby-organist · 5 months
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// Do you think Alastor knows what a porn convention is
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cadmium-free · 1 year
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Day 7 of 26 with @neopetsdotcom:
Terror Train
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danielacarryon · 1 year
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An american werewolf in London (1981) Directed by John Landis
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Everytime a french politician call the left "terrorists" for not supporting Israel AND ALSO HAMAS, but the palestinians, I'm putting them on my list of people that will not survive the next terror.
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reasoningdaily · 2 years
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The Intercept: Police Harass Veteran on Terror Watchlist, Lawsuit Says
Saadiq Long was on his way to a night shift at the transportation company he works at when he saw flashing lights behind his car. Two police cruisers were signaling him to pull over. This would be the third time in just over a month that Long, a U.S. Air Force veteran with no criminal record, had been pulled over without explanation by Oklahoma City police officers. The stops frustrated Long. He suspected he was being targeted.
After wondering again why he’d been pulled over, this time would be different: He would get some answers, however unsettling, about why it was happening.
Long, 52, was initially told by an officer who stopped him that his car had been listed in a gang database. After waiting in his car for roughly 20 minutes, the officer, according to a video that Long made of the incident, came back with a different story. The police officer told Long that his car had come up as a “hit” in a national watchlist database, one that “automatically alerts us that this vehicle is under suspicion for a terrorist watchlist.” The cop said that Long’s presence on the watchlist, rather than any driving-related infraction or accusation of criminality, was why he had been pulled over.
Long is no stranger to harassment by federal authorities. In 2015, he sued the U.S. government over his placement on the Department of Homeland Security’s no-fly list, as well as the larger terrorist watchlist from which that database is built. Eventually, Long was told his name was removed from the no-fly list, but, as the traffic stops in Oklahoma indicate, he has remained on the broader terrorism watchlist. His lawsuit in federal court related to that watchlist is still ongoing.
More immediately, Long is trying to deal with the very local consequences of being on the federal watchlist.
The U.S. government’s terror lists are often thought of as a tool for protecting against foreign national security threats. Yet in Long’s case, his continued presence on the list, which is secret and has no clear avenues for an individual to be delisted, has now resulted in an unending cycle of harassment from local police in his hometown of Oklahoma City, where he lives with his family.
Since the December 30, 2022, stop where he was verbally informed that his car was on the terrorist watchlist, things have gotten much worse for Long. In subsequent stops, he has been pulled over, handcuffed, and placed in the back of a police cruiser. In one incident, Oklahoma City police officers leveled their guns at Long while blaring orders over a loudspeaker instructing Long to exit his vehicle.
Having failed thus far in his case against the federal government, Long is now suing the Oklahoma City Police Department over the traffic stops, as well as their use of the federal terrorist watchlist as a pretext to target his vehicle. (The Oklahoma City Police Department declined to comment on the case.)
“As Saadiq Long drives the roads of his city, the Oklahoma City Police Department has been watching, aiming its vast network of cameras and computers at him repeatedly,” the lawsuit says. “Using a secret, racist list of Muslims that the FBI illegally maintains, officers have repeatedly pulled Saadiq Long over, sometimes at gunpoint, unlawfully arresting him twice in the last two months.”
“Despite the fact that he has never been arrested or charged for any crime, due to his presence on this list, he has lost work licenses, been denied visas, and been prevented from flying on airplanes,” said Gadeir Abbas, an attorney with the Council on American-Islamic Relations who is representing Long. “The officers who are pulling him over are just doing it because their computers are telling them to do so due to his watchlisting status. He is not under investigation for anything, but this secret list is still terrorizing him whether on land or air.”
In 2013, Long was prevented from boarding a flight to Oklahoma from Qatar, where he then resided. A U.S. citizen and Air Force veteran, the denied flight to Qatar was when Long first discovered that he was on the DHS’s no-fly list. Ever since, he has faced detention and other harassment while traveling.
Long sued in 2015 to clear his name from this secret database. In 2020, Homeland Security informed Long that he had been removed from the no-fly list and would not be placed back on absent further information. The government argued in court that the removal of Long’s name from the no-fly list had rendered his claims moot. Yet his removal from the no-fly list has not meant his removal from the broader terrorism watchlisting database, nor from the dire consequences of his status.
Civil liberties advocates, who routinely challenge the constitutionality of the terrorism watchlist in court, have grown increasingly alarmed by the expansion of its use by local law enforcement agencies. In some cases, these local agencies have been tasked with both monitoring individuals assigned to the list and expanding its scope. In 2014, The Intercept published the government’s secret guidance for selecting individuals to the watchlist. Disclosures in a lawsuit from 2017 revealed that the watchlist had grown to 1.2 million people, the majority of whom are believed to be noncitizens and nonresidents of the United States.
Presence on the watchlist can generate numerous problems for those targeted, from harassment and detention while traveling to the type of routine law enforcement threats and harassment Long now faces.
“His experience, unfortunately, is very common for people who are still on watchlists, even if they are not on the no-fly list. It is par for the course for anyone on a watchlist to experience more aggressive traffic stops,” said Naz Ahmed, a staff attorney with the Creating Law Enforcement Accountability and Responsibility project at the City University of New York School of Law. “Officers are instructed not to do anything that gives away that a person they have pulled over is on a watchlist or to carry out warrantless searches. But you can imagine how an officer may react who doesn’t have much training on this subject, and does not see it commonly, when they come across someone in this situation.”
A 2016 report by Yale Law School and the American Civil Liberties Union found that the U.S. government had “drastically expanded a consolidated watchlisting system that includes hundreds of thousands of individuals based on secret evidence.” The report documented how the system was now being used and interpreted by local police forces who were frequently acting upon “potentially erroneous, inaccurate, or outdated information.” Unlike the no-fly list, which has some limited redress processes, the broader terrorism watchlist remains largely opaque and unchallengeable.
“The FBI accepts almost every single ‘nomination’ to its list submitted by anyone,” Long’s lawsuit says. “This is because the FBI uses a standard so low that, based on a string of speculative inferences, any person can be made to qualify.”
Long’s lawyers filed suit against the local police department in Oklahoma City on Thursday, to compel its officers to stop pulling him over based on his watchlisting status. Long is also asking for financial compensation for violations of his Fourth Amendment rights. (The Department of Homeland Security did not immediately respond to a request for comment about the suit.)
Despite his recent experiences, Long has continued driving to work, doing errands, and visiting family in Oklahoma City but with increasing trepidation about how his watchlisting status is being interpreted by local police. Some police officers have been apologetic while pulling him over; others have responded aggressively, treating him as a threat, pulling out weapons, and causing him to fear for his life.
“For the past year or two, I noticed that the Oklahoma City police often followed me while driving, though without pulling me over,” said Long. “I got kind of used to it, but just recently, within the last month and a half, that’s when this started turning into something much more serious.”
The most recent incident, when he was pulled over earlier this month by a group of police officers who drew guns on him and ordered him out of his vehicle — an incident that Long also caught on his own dashboard camera — was the most alarming in his recent series of run-ins. A video of the incident shows police officers yelling contradictory instructions at him for several minutes while standing with guns drawn behind his vehicle.
“I was wondering if they were going to make my wife a widow now for something so silly,” Long said, “just for me being on this list, when they themselves don’t even know why I’m on it.”
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fresh-snow · 10 months
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Nelson Mandela was in USA's terror watchlist until *2008. The guy who fought against apartheid state of South Africa, won a Nobel peace prize, became a president, a beloved character across the globe was in the terror watchlist of USA. So I wouldn't actually take murica's opinion about labeling a person or group of people as terrorists. Chances are they're actually fighting for the freedom of their country.
That's why they call Hamas terrorists instead of freedom fighters. In their eyes The Nelson Mandela was a terrorist.
Anyways as Nelson Mandela said
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Free Palestine 🇵🇸🍉
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katakaluptastrophy · 9 months
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The thing about having read our way through two previous books full of necromancers and weird eldritch shenanigans is that the absolute horror of what happens to John as a person doesn't quite register.
John's own glib, matter of fact narration tells the story as an apotheosis. He was doing great. He'd have fixed everything if only people had listened.
But reading between the lines in the John chapters, you glimpse something rather different.
John basically spends the first half of the Jod chapters sitting in the dark with his creepy yellow eyes, not eating or sleeping, literally stroking his favourite corpses and coming out with chill and fun statements about how he can feel their skin when he's away from them and he's 'waking up'. Cool, cool.
Passing swiftly over the cow dome, Presidential Puppet Pals, and the suitcase nuke, day to day life in the cow dome must have been fun... You're all on the Interpol watchlist, the Vatican is asking a lot of questions, the police are outside and John - who hasn't slept in a week and doesn't eat anymore and is probably wearing some kind of weird novelty tshirt - comes wandering past while you're eating breakfast, followed by a dozen silent, dead-eyed corpses like some kind of mother hen. He makes a cow joke, and then zones out because he got distracted by listening to the bacteria in your gut.
And then some guys die accidentally and it turns out he can eat death energy. So now he's got creepy Twilight eyes, an entourage of corpses, a cape, some very dodgy eyeliner, and he's barely breaking a sweat as he instantly kills over 100 people, says it was an accident, and then, dead serious, tells his followers to drag dead UN peacekeepers inside to add to his 'skeleton army'.
By the end, he's not slept or eaten in weeks, is tweaking his own bodily processes on the fly, is puppeting the dead US president and possibly an army of over a hundred corpses, monitoring G- in Melbourne, carrying on at least two conference calls, and helping to build barricades out of chairs.
And I just keep thinking how weird it must have been for his friends. How sometimes he would have seemed like the man they'd known and loved for so long, and sometimes he would seem different. Did they ever find themselves mourning the man he was? Did they ever stand there as he tuned into something they couldn't fathom, staring at them with those yellow eyes, and feel some awful, uncanny valley terror? Did he ever feel like he was losing himself? At what point did the cow jokes stop feeling like oh, classic John and start to be a reminder that his desire for vengeance and the scope of his powers were outstripping his remaining...perspective?...restraint?...humanity?
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reiskra · 2 years
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I love how much discussion around the problems of socialism are capitalist projections it's actually hilarious how ignorant some people are "communism is when no food" meanwhile capitalism prioritising profit over people and therefore wasting fuck tons of food while people starve even though we produce more than enough to feed humanity "communism is utopian," say the people who call for infinite growth on a finite planet ?? and now we have climate change I hope you're happy now lmao "you have no democracy under communism" enjoy your two-party corporate duopoly then ? that's democracy ? ok boomer ok I'll do my history homework now
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crabs-and-bongos · 2 months
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It's kinda wild that Tulsi Gabbard was put on a domestic terrorism watchlist and nobody cares. I guess Kamala really holds a grudge for Gabbard murdering her campaign during their debate.
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realasslesbian · 5 months
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What's really been eating me this week is that a teenage moidlet who assaulted a priest in a church (& who was subsequently tortured by the male members of that priest's congregation & when emergency services showed up the males of the congregation rioted & hospitalised several police officers who were trying to rescue this boy from getting anymore fingers cut off) THAT boy is now being charged with terrorism offences, which has activated the whole slew of terrorism laws in Australia, meaning he'll probably spend life in prison & everyone associated with him & his Islamic ideology are also being investigated.
MEANWHILE the incident not two days prior, where a grown man stabbed to death several women & a literal infant girl, in the deadliest mass murder in Australia since the Port Arthur massacre, in an attack clearly motivated by misogynist ideology, THAT'S not being called terrorism, the people who share the misogynist beliefs this man acted on are not being investigated, men are out here on articles about misogyny maybe being a factor brazenly commenting that "men aren't to blame, women r weak, blaming men is such a cop out, mental illness & religion boo hoo" & these misogynist terrorism apologists aren't ending up on any watchlists.
The priest that got non-fatally cut by a 16yo boy walked out the hospital the next day & lapped up all the praise bc he prayed over that boy while his congregation tortured him. On the same day this priest strolled out of the hospital another woman was killed by male violence (obviously that woman's death didn't make the news). But yeah nah, we can't treat misogyny as a violent, extremist ideology that poses more risk to national security than any other ideology, bc it's so widespread in this country that the only solution would be deporting every fucking man to Christmas Island.
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lasseling · 18 days
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Tulsi Gabbard confirms she was put on terrorist watch list after criticizing Kamala Harris
Former Hawaii Rep. Tulsi Gabbard shared her reaction to being placed on a domestic terror watchlist after criticizing Vice President Kamala Harris.
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expiredidealist · 3 months
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You should start a channel teaching us how to shoot, I'd watch it (ritualistically)
im already on a watchlist for domestic terrorism idk if thats a good idea
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