Mato Seihei no Slave (Chained Soldier) - New goods by Murakami with new illustrations. Release: April 2024
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RUHA BENJAMIN AND PRINCETON FACULTY WITNESSES SPEAK OUT ON CLIO HALL SIT-IN (excerpted)
That last paragraph is powerful.
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I desperately need context but please nobody give it to me
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Anata no Shiranai Koto - Rie Murakawa
Anime: Re:Zero kara Hajimeru Isekai Seikatsu
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My Lawyer Is Not So Easy (Ep 6)
When your lawyers watched too much Sailor Moon. 🌙
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☆ Mash Kyrielight // Fate/Grand Order “Grand New Year”
☆ 1/7 / Aniplex
☆ April 2019 ¥15,685 Aniplex+ exclusive
☆ Sculpt Yuuko~n Paint Murakawa Shoushin
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A Flower Aflame (2016) dir. Hiroshi Ando
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[06/01] HAPPY BIRTHDAY RIE MURAKAWA (RIESHON)!
Character: Arisa Matsuda (Million Live)
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Liberal law and order, with regard to policing in particular, operates with a specific grammar of racism. It starts from the belief that racism is an idea, a misconception, an emotional misfire that is seemingly lodged in individual police officers who are afflicted by stereotypes and irrationalities. These “racist bad apple” officers are seen as elements that contaminate policing—which is otherwise believed to be acceptable. The project of liberal reform then becomes one of sealing off or minimizing those contaminants. This “decontamination” is pursued through administrative tinkering: more monitoring through body cameras (as if we need more evidence of gendered, transphobic, and racist police violence), more training (as if a two-day police seminar could train the racism out of someone), or hiring more police officers of color (with the presumption that they’re going to behave very differently from white officers).
-- Naomi Murakawa in Policing the Planet: Why the Policing Crisis Led to Black Lives Matter
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