Shared posts

04 Dec 02:32

There Are Damn Few Shades of Gray in the Death of Eric Garner

by Kevin Drum

I may have mixed feelings about Ferguson, Ray Rice, and the UVA rape case, but God almighty, that's not a problem with the killing of Eric Garner, is it? We have a trivial offense, a minuscule level of "resisting arrest," a banned chokehold, five cops around, no life threatening situation by any stretch of the imagination, and yet—one dead guy, who spent the last minute of his existence pleading for his life. But despite all that, along with a medical examiner's judgment of homicide by chokehold, there's no indictment of the police officer responsible.

This is not like Ferguson. Regardless of how you feel personally about what happened there, I think there was virtually no chance that officer Darren Wilson would ever have been convicted in the death of Michael Brown. The evidence was just too inconsistent and the standard for guilt too high. That makes it at least arguable that the grand jury did the right thing when it failed to indict.

Nothing like that can be said here. Daniel Pantaleo, the police officer who applied the chokehold to Garner, might have won a trial, but he might have lost it too. That being the case, there's little excuse for not letting a jury do its job and make a finding of fact in this case. Instead, Garner's death was treated as little more than an annoyance to be swept away. If we needed any evidence that police officers can pretty much kill anyone they want with impunity, this is it.

23 Mar 23:57

This Machine Sucks Balls

by Brian Benchoff

312

The best career choice anyone could ever make – aside from the richest astronaut to ever win the Super Bowl – is the designer of the kinetic art installations found in science centers that roll billiard balls along tracks, around loops, and through conveyors in a perpetual display of physics and mechanics. [Niklas Roy] isn’t quite at that level yet, but he has come up with a new twist on an old idea: a machine that literally sucks balls from a ball pit into transparent tubes, sending them whizzing around the installation space.

The installation consists of eighty meters of plastic tubing suspended in the staircase of Potocki Palace in Kraków. Electronically, the installation is extremely simple; a PIR sensor turns on a vacuum cleaner whenever someone is in the ball pit. This sucks balls up through a hose, around the space, and into a bin suspended over the pit. Pull a lever, and the balls stored in the bin are dispensed onto the person vacuuming up thousands of balls below.

Image source, with video below.


Filed under: misc hacks
17 Jun 07:28

That’s Bunk!

by admin