Tom Wright
Shared posts
Happy New Year’s Eve, from Liver!
Tom WrightDon't worry, Liver, take the night off on me.
Hope everyone enjoyed the holidays and ate as many cookies as I...
Tom WrightNot with No-Sweets-December!

Hope everyone enjoyed the holidays and ate as many cookies as I did….
The Hero We Deserve
Tom WrightThe silent protector.
Happy Holidays from Texts From Superheroes!
Tom WrightAh, holiday texts.
Happy Holidays from Texts From Superheroes!






Weekly Winner 12/15/14: emijmac
Tom WrightBig congrats to Emily on her win.
Texts From Superheroes Facebook | Twitter | Pinterest |...
Tom WrightThe fastest man alive...
Card Games
Tom WrightSometimes a two-foot novelty candy cane is just a two-foot novelty candy cane.

#1006 – Pink (13 Comments)
Tom WrightAccording to Disney Ate My Daughter, it's more complicated than that.
Hmm.
Pteranodon!!!!
Photo
Tom WrightI love being an adult. And I love it when all the students go home for the holidays, so there's less traffic.

Category: The Mercy Thompson Series (Friday 12/12/14)
Holiday math
Tom WrightMolly and I.
Category: The Mercy Thompson Series (Thursday 12/11/14)
Being A Cop Showed Me Just How Racist And Violent The Police Are

Redditt Hudson, a former cop, works for the NAACP and chairs the board of the Ethics Project. The views expressed here are his own.

Police officers drag away a protester to take him into custody during a demonstration against the grand jury decision. (Jim Young/Reuters)
As a kid, I got used to being stopped by the police. I grew up in an inner-ring suburb of St. Louis. It was the kind of place where officers routinely roughed up my friends and family for no good reason.
I hated the way cops treated me.
But I knew police weren’t all bad. One of my father’s closest friends was a cop. He became a mentor to me and encouraged me to join the force. He told me that I could use the police’s power and resources to help my community.
So in 1994, I joined the St. Louis Police Department. I quickly realized how naive I’d been. I was floored by the dysfunctional culture I encountered.
I won’t say all, but many of my peers were deeply racist.
One example: A couple of officers ran a Web site called St. Louis Coptalk, where officers could post about their experience and opinions. At some point during my career, it became so full of racist rants that the site administrator temporarily shut it down. Cops routinely called anyone of color a “thug,” whether they were the victim or just a bystander.
This attitude corrodes the way policing is done.
As a cop, it shouldn’t surprise you that people will curse at you, or be disappointed by your arrival. That’s part of the job. But too many times, officers saw young black and brown men as targets. They would respond with force to even minor offenses. And because cops are rarely held accountable for their actions, they didn’t think too hard about the consequences.
Once, I accompanied an officer on a call. At one home, a teenage boy answered the door. That officer accused him of harboring a robbery suspect, and demanded that he let her inside. When he refused, the officer yanked him onto the porch by his throat and began punching him.
Another officer met us and told the boy to stand. He replied that he couldn’t. So the officer slammed him against the house and cuffed him. When the boy again said he couldn’t walk, the officer grabbed him by his ankles and dragged him to the car. It turned out the boy had been on crutches when he answered the door, and couldn’t walk.
Back at the department, I complained to the sergeant. I wanted to report the misconduct. But my manager squashed the whole thing and told me to get back to work.
I, too, have faced mortal danger. I’ve been shot at and attacked. But I know it’s almost always possible to defuse a situation.
Once, a sergeant and I got a call about someone wielding a weapon in an apartment. When we showed up, we found someone sitting on the bed with a very large butcher knife. Rather than storming him and screaming “put the knife down” like my colleagues would have done, we kept our distance. We talked to him, tried to calm him down.
It became clear to us that he was dealing with mental illness. So eventually, we convinced him to come to the hospital with us.
I’m certain many other officers in the department would have escalated the situation fast. They would have screamed at him, gotten close to him, threatened him. And then, any movement from him, even an effort to drop the knife, would have been treated as an excuse to shoot until their clips were empty.
* * *
I liked my job, and I was good at it.
But more and more, I felt like I couldn’t do the work I set out to do. I was participating in a profoundly corrupt criminal justice system. I could not, in good conscience, participate in a system that was so intentionally unfair and racist. So after five years on the job, I quit.
Since I left, I’ve thought a lot about how to change the system. I’ve worked on police abuse, racial justice and criminal justice reform at the Missouri ACLU and other organizations.
Unfortunately, I don’t think better training alone will reduce police brutality. My fellow officers and I took plenty of classes on racial sensitivity and on limiting the use of force.
The problem is that cops aren’t held accountable for their actions, and they know it. These officers violate rights with impunity. They know there’s a different criminal justice system for civilians and police.
Even when officers get caught, they know they’ll be investigated by their friends, and put on paid leave. My colleagues would laughingly refer to this as a free vacation. It isn’t a punishment. And excessive force is almost always deemed acceptable in our courts and among our grand juries. Prosecutors are tight with law enforcement, and share the same values and ideas.
We could start to change that by mandating that a special prosecutor be appointed to try excessive force cases. And we need more independent oversight, with teeth. I have little confidence in internal investigations.
The number of people in uniform who will knowingly and maliciously violate your human rights is huge. At the Ferguson protests, people are chanting, “The whole damn system is guilty as hell.” I agree, and we have a lot of work to do.
More from PostEverything:
Category: The Mercy Thompson Series (Wednesday 12/10/14)
Category: The Mercy Thompson Series (Monday 12/8/14)
Category: The Mercy Thompson Series (Tuesday 12/9/14)
See a need; fill it. Meet Molly.
Tom WrightSuper-awesome.
Anyway, I want to tell you about someone who took her desire to help others and turned it into something big and awesome. This is my friend Molly:
She and her husband Tom have put on a board game convention the last two years, with all the proceeds going to Safe Place here in Austin. I'm going to let her tell you more about it.
Ok, people, if you like games and want to support this worthy cause, 1.) consider making a donation to SafePlace, and 2.) mark your calendars for next October. I'm going to see if we can get a table set up with the Cones of Dunshire.
3D Print A Life-Size Soccer Ball Droid From Star Wars: The Force Awakens
Tom WrightThe soccer ball droid is super-cheese. I was disappointed to see it in the trailer.
Are you already in love with the soccer ball droid from Star Wars: The Force Awakens? We got a look at the roly poly astromech in the teaser, and Thingiverse user lilykill has taken it upon herself to create a 1:1 scale 3D model of the new character. She made the ball droid’s head the same diameter as R2-D2’s. I can’t wait until someone downloads the file and prints a new friend.
(via 3D Print)
Star Wars Episode VII: The Flare Awakens [Video]
Tom WrightLove it.
Youtuber Tom Barker thought that the new “Star Wars: The Force Awakens” teaser needed more of J.J. Abrams’ trademark lens flare effects, so he fixed that.
[Tom Barker | Via The Awesomer]
“Star Wars: The Force Awakens” Trailer Gets George-Lucarized [Video]
Tom WrightThat was awesome.
The dark side... and trade negotiations.
















