Seattle Settles With 2020 BLM Rioters, Giving Them $10 Million Over ‘Excessive Force’ Claims
The city of Seattle, Washington will pay rioters who demonstrated in the name of "Black Lives Matter" $10 million.
The city of Seattle has dismantled the Black Lives Matter Memorial Garden after rampant homelessness and drug use overran the area, posing significant risks to the public.
In 2020, amid heightened racial tensions and anti-police fervor, Seattle activists established the garden in Cal Anderson Park, located in Capitol Hill, the home of the infamous former Capitol Hill Autonomous Zone. Organizers of the garden claimed it was intended to memorialize victims of police violence and to provide organic food for underserved communities.
However, seemingly from the beginning, the garden has been plagued by violence and filth, creating significant "public health and public safety issues" in the area, a statement from Seattle Parks and Recreation claimed. According to the statement, members of Seattle's Unified Care Team have conducted 76 tent encampment removals in just the past year alone "to keep public spaces clean, open, and accessible to all."
The garden has also become a hotspot for illicit drug use, creating other issues for area residents. Other problems in the garden include "vandalism of Cal Anderson public bathrooms" and an infestation of rodents, the statement said.
To alleviate these problems and to begin much-needed maintenance projects, such as "reseeding the area and turf restoration," the city decided to remove the garden entirely.
Early Wednesday morning, parks and rec officials and a team of Seattle police officers cordoned off the area and began removing the garden. Black Star Farmers, the group that has been entrusted with maintaining the garden for the past three years, briefly filmed the removal process and urged followers to "come to the garden now" and denounce "the violent destruction of this beautiful garden."
The parks and rec department defended the removal decision, calling the garden "temporary" and "makeshift" and insisting that officials had been "in frequent communication with community activists since 2020 offering alternative locations for a garden, both within Cal Anderson Park, as well as in other Seattle parks," to no avail. The department had intended to remove the garden back in October but delayed the move after receiving serious pushback from groups like Black Star Farmers.
While BSF has claimed that removing the garden is yet another example of "egregious exploitation" foisted on the world by American "neoliberal free trade policies and excessive militarism," according to the parks and rec statement, other so-called black activists claimed they didn't even know the garden existed and claimed that BSF had been "hijacking" the BLM "movement."
"I wasn’t aware that there was a garden in remembrance of victims of police use of deadly force, which makes me wonder if this garden is truly reflective of impacted families," said Katrina Johnson, a cousin of Charleena Lyles, the pregnant mother of four who was fatally shot by police in 2017.
"To make a garden without reaching out to families and even letting them know about it tells me that this is not about our loved ones but about folks hijacking the movement and trying to make a name for themselves off of our pain and that is simply not OK," she added.
Darrell Powell, the president of the Seattle/King County chapter of the NAACP, expressed similar sentiments. "The black community is unaware of the existence of the garden, and the garden does not represent in any meaningful sense the vast number of Black Lives extinguished by police violence," he said. He also characterized the garden as "another example of white co-opting."
Seattle Parks and Recreation indicated that Seattle Mayor Bruce Harrell will partner with black leaders to "conceptualize a new commemorative garden at Cal Anderson Park." It is unclear when construction of such a new garden might begin.
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Advisers to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration are convening Tuesday and Wednesday for closed-door meetings to discuss the prospect of approving artificial wombs for use in human trials. The FDA's Pediatric Advisory Committee will chiefly address what kind of data scientists will have to produce in the trials and what sort of regulations may be needed.
The unnatural process by which a creature is grown inside a fluid-filled pod, as opposed to inside a symbiotic mother, has been pitched by companies like Vitara Biomedical as a means of increasing survival and improving outcomes for premature babies.
While some scientists are excited by the prospect of potentially helping struggling babies, critics have noted the technology will inevitably result in legal and ethical quandaries.
Nevertheless, Nature reported that researchers at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia — a hospital that apparently offers medical sex-change interventions to children as young as 8 — are ready to move on from performing artificial womb experiments involving lambs. The lamb CHOP researchers are specifically seeking approval for the first human clinical trials of their extra-uterine environment for newborn development, or EXTEND.
This early technology would not yet entirely eliminate the mother from the equation. Rather than growing a human being from conception to birth, as was horrifyingly depicted in the science fiction film "The Matrix," the CHOP researchers "hope that simulating some elements of a natural womb will increase survival and improve outcomes for extremely premature babies. In humans, that's anything earlier than 28 weeks of gestation — less than 70% of the way to full term, which is typically between 37 and 40 weeks," according to Nature.
Bloomberg reported that premature lambs kept inside the fake womb for up to four weeks were able to develop normally.
Scientists at the University of Toronto executed similar experiments but instead on fetal pigs, having concluded that "there are several questions that remain with regards to the feasibility of translating [fetal sheep] results to human subjects."
Alan Flake, a fetal surgeon at CHOP who has taken the lead on the effort to dehumanize pregnancy, predicted in a 2017 video, "If it’s as successful as we think it can be, ultimately, the majority of pregnancies that are predicted at-risk for extreme prematurity would be delivered early onto our system rather than being delivered premature onto a ventilator."
Recreating the Womb: New Hope for Premature Babiesyoutu.be
A number of CHOP researchers have since joined Vitara Biomedical, a startup that has raised $100 million to develop EXTEND, thanks in large part to First Spark Ventures, a venture capital firm co-founded by former Google CEO Eric Schmidt.
To transition a baby from its mother to the pod, doctors would perform a C-section, albeit of a more complicated variety.
To ensure the baby remains in a "fetus-like state," such that the digestive system does not activate and fluid doesn't drain from its lungs, the surgeons must jab tubes into the baby's umbilical blood vessels then immediately dunk it into a so-called "biobag" filled with a sterile fluid that mimics that found in a real amniotic sack.
The tubes that had been inserted into the baby's umbilical blood vessels would provide it with nutrition, while a so-called membrane oxygenator would provide the baby with oxygen.
George Mychaliska, a pediatric fetal surgeon and researcher at the University of Michigan, told Bloomberg, "It makes sense that if you recreate the fetal environment, babies’ survival rate will increase and, hopefully, their long-term morbidities or health consequences will be diminished."
Nature indicated that there may be implications for abortion and its legality, particularly since fake wombs might make it such that fetal viability extends far earlier than currently recognized.
Earlier this year, pro-abortion radicals noted in Wired that while so-called ectogenesis would "enable people with wombs to reproduce as easily as cisgender men do: without risks to their physical health, their economic safety, or their bodily autonomy," the technology "could significantly weaken abortion policies worldwide."
The article's authors, Rosalind Moran and Jolie Zhou, bemoaned the possibility that without recourse to the "my body, my choice," argument, it may no longer be socially acceptable or legal for women to slaughter their unborn babies.
"Successful ectogenesis would render the fetus viable at a very early stage, possibly even from conception. If ectogenesis—even partial ectogenesis—becomes available, it would then be possible for an unwanted fetus to be transferred into an artificial womb to continue developing without harming a woman’s bodily autonomy, depending on how the fetus is removed," the two pro-abortion radicals wrote. "In this way, women would be able to end their pregnancy without resorting to traditional abortion. Given this option, if a woman chooses traditional abortion regardless, the abortion will appear more like an intentional killing."
Just as the new technology might prove lifesaving, to Zhou and Moran's dismay, it could alternatively expose the unborn grown in scientists' glorified Ziploc bags to various abuses on account of inevitable legal loopholes.
Chloe Romanis, a biolawyer at Durham Law School in the United Kingdom, told Nature that the babies grown in the fake wombs will not be fetuses in the conventional sense.
"The name we give to these new unprecedented patients has implications for rights that the law and society affords," said Romanis.
The FDA advisory meeting takes place at a time in American medicine when it appears many are keen to separate babies from their mothers or, at the very least, pregnancy from women.
In June, the American Medical Association published a peer-reviewed paper in its Journal of Ethics floating the suggestion that there's no moral reason why taxpayers should not subsidize the provision of wombs from dead or living women to transvestites so that they can carry babies.
Could artificial wombs help save premature babies?youtu.be
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A Black Lives Matter protester who demonstrated at Seattle's CHOP autonomous zone last summer has been charged with hate crimes against Asian-American women, KOMO-TV reported.
Seattle police arrested Christopher Hamner last month for two alleged incidents of anti-Asian hate attacks, the station said.
Pamela Cole told KOMO that Hamner threatened her and her young children when she tried to drive past him.
"He just opens his door and starts yelling at me 'F you, you Asian B! 'F you' kind of thing," Cole recalled to the station. "And then he pulls in the parking lot and comes charging at us."
Investigators said Hamner made similar anti-Asian hate threats to two other women just days later, KOMO added.
Cole noted to KCPQ-TV that Hamner also yelled at her, "Get out! Get out! Get out!" and that "me and my kids [were] just stuck" and that she felt "so helpless and defenseless as a mom."
Nevertheless, KOMO reported that Hamner often was seen protesting with Black Lives Matter last summer and that he posted videos of himself on his social media accounts demonstrating at CHOP, the left-wing militant "autonomous zone" in downtown Seattle controlled by BLM and Antifa.
"Of course it strikes me as hypocritical, but I wasn't surprised to be completely honest," Cole told the station. "I wasn't shocked about it."
KOMO spoke with some leaders of the city's racial justice protests who remember Hamner, and they said he always seemed to be on the fringe. The station said one leader remembers his "creepy stares," and another characterized his actions as coming "out of left field."
Cole told KOMO she reached out to Hamner's employers at a VA hospital to try to get him help since she doesn't believe putting him behind bars will do him any good.
"At the end of the day if he goes to jail, he still comes out as a racist full of hate," she noted to the station. "Nothing's changed. He didn't learn anything. ... There was no rehab in it, so to me it's pointless."
KOMO said Hamner remains in custody and is due to enter a plea on hate crime charges Thursday morning.
Stop Asian Hate rally held in Seattleyoutu.be