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As protests continue, Steven W Thrasher visits the 'scene of a crime that is not the scene of a crime' and looks ahead to a movement that isn't going to end anytime soon
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#FergusonNext What President Obama told me about the movement
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When a space startup has twice the force for a fraction of the cost, you know the relic of an American superpower has given way to a fantasy of exceptionalism
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Jessica Valenti: Of all the people’s experiences we should be listening to right now, white people are at the bottom of the totem pole
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Oliver Burkeman: In the future, maybe you’ll be able to respond to everything. For now, tame the information overload by turning off those notifications
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Policing in America: sharpening the conflict
The Guardian viewThe collective emancipation Martin Luther King envisaged for African Americans never came about. The result has been chronic confrontation on the streets
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Stephen Hawking is right to say AI poses a risk to our species. But we must also progress
#FergusonNext
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When my fellow young leaders and I walked into the Oval Office this week, the president said we shouldn't demand too much, too soon
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Black men are not dying at the hands of (mostly) white cops – nor are those cops being excused from legal responsibility – because of mutual ‘distrust’
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Pretending that we should keep calm and carry on – that we even can – is a bigger fantasy than Santa Claus
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When even video evidence of another police killing doesn’t lead to indictments anymore, you know we need to upend this miscarriage of justice
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Protesting the death of Michael Brown is not a political act, no matter what the pundits say. These are five men who don’t want to die for being black. This is personal
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Black Power may have devolved into a fight to exist, but what if that’s a good thing? Ferguson’s young protesters are moving forward in all the right ways
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More money for body-cams, ‘valuable’ mini-tanks, seizing billions from citizens – these aren’t the solutions we’re looking for, Mr President
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It’s absurd that a nation’s new, yet old, encounter with its most destructive division can be summed up by this soppy picture of a tearful hug
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If the US really wants to curb police violence after Ferguson, it should learn from the UK’s national review of officers’ use of force. Because it’s working
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The cases are unrelated, but there are parallels. The power of the accused is set against the credibility of the victim
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Do not accept the Ferguson police officer’s retirement. Just keep talking about his phantasmagorical fear of the black body – or else
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I asked my white Facebook friends why they’ve been so afraid to share their feelings on race. The excuses weren’t good enough
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We’ve seen versions of the Ferguson commission before. But we can’t do much about segregation and inequality until we stop talking around our divisions
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We can still get justice for Mike Brown: end the government's reckless 'ghetto' policy
Rev Jesse JacksonThe issue now is not Ferguson’s unfortunately violent protests. The issue is the root of the anger behind them -
The infantry is back on the streets while my fellow politicians are home for the holidays. The least we can do is quit handing cops the tools of war, free of charge
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Without changes to police conduct policy, norms and disciplinary actions, mandatory body cameras will never ensure victims get real justice
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The Missouri grand jury’s decision has sent a message to the world that black lives do not matter. Fists up. The cops still shoot
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The fact that people expected a white cop like Darren Wilson to escape trial shows the process is a sham
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Politicians have found themselves on the wrong side of the gap between the fantasy of what the law does and the reality that people live
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Patrisse Cullors and Darnell L Moore: A grand jury has confirmed America’s addiction to violence and racism. It’s time to go beyond one officer and one place. Here is how the healing might begin
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The police officer who shot dead an unarmed black 18-year-old in Ferguson, Missouri, leading to weeks of unrest, will not face state criminal charges, it was announced on Monday
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#FergusonNext America's on edge about Ferguson. But justice is about what comes after that
Tony Messenger in St LouisThere will come a day soon when the protests, in whatever shape they take, fall off the front page. No matter what happens, justice will still be possible -
The hard truth about no justice for Michael Brown is that we must reassess our expectations
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'I could have been Mike Brown': your stories of racial profiling by the world's police
Tony Messenger in St Louis and Matt Sullivan in New YorkYou told us: ‘Broken’ taillights. Bullying. Brutality. All for the apparent crime of living while black. These are your stories
talking points
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The lingerie retailer’s ‘fashion show’ had the air of a Playboy mansion party minus the weird old man in a silk bathrobe
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Go ask Megyn Kelly. This is what happens when logic and proportion get subjected to six straight hours of victim-blaming
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For all of the court cases and conservative rhetoric, we’re failing global norms on nearly every policy that would support mothers, parents and families
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Kevin B Blackistone: The NFL was disturbingly ignorant about the abuse, but the league failed to lead on racial discrimination and fairness in employment when it allowed mob rule to dictate its discipline
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in case you missed
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Black, gay and shot dead in his own car: this is another Missouri killing we should talk about
Zach Stafford in Kansas CityIt’s not Ferguson. It’s not Serial. But the case of 22-year-old Dionte Greene raises complex questions about race, class, police conduct and sexual taboos. Are we too afraid to answer them? -
The now-disgraced CBC radio star fondled and abused me for years. He got away with it because management decided to protect their celebrity
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Nostalgic TV shows you barely remember. Snacks you had to buy from humans. How can you not love life when everything’s just a Google search away?
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Terrible train delays. Absurdly high prices. Monday. If you think about it, a little moaning goes a long way
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The actor's history of bizarre behavior doesn't mean we should take his allegations less seriously. That would be as bad as dismissing them because he is a man
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Beyond Sasha and Malia Should you ever criticize teenagers for what they wear?
The PanelWere Elizabeth Lauten's comments about Obama just those of a foolish adult or a toxic revelation? Our panel considers the evidence
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Richard Allen Smith: People trust war veterans, but companies just see money to be made. Non-profits need to be more careful of ‘camo-washing’
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Philosopher Slavoj Žižek argues that what we see as our freedom is actually governed by a complex series of conditions
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Internet giants are exploring new ways to raise cash from their users, but harvesting our data remains key to their strategy
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Jessica Valenti: The courts may decide that sending threats over social media isn’t threatening enough to be a crime. Silicon Valley needs to step up or lose customers
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Western powers were quick to back military action in the Middle East. Now food aid has run out they urgently need to step up the humanitarian response
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Emma Brockes: Notebook: The Broadway musical, The Last Ship, is struggling and there’s only one way to save it. Sting has to join the cast himself
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Tamir Rice’s mother will have to bury her 12-year-old son. Do I have to tell my son to accept being treated as less than human to preserve his life?
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Claudia Astorino: Intersex people exist, and we’re fighting for our basic human rights. Stop treating us as props and oddities
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Jess Zimmerman: When so many of our interactions happen online, it becomes increasingly difficult to let unwired loved ones into our lives
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Does anyone piss you off more than classist snobs who send back food, yell at the waiter and blame it on their personality? ‘Type A’ isn’t a type – it’s the ultimate humblebrag
popular
global view
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Chancellor George Osborne has credibility – but the spectre of 1930s-style cuts may be too much for voters to accept
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Jonathan Freedland: The chancellor has credibility. But the spectre of 1930s-style cuts may be too much for voters to accept
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Editorial: There’s no way of bringing back the old manufacturing jobs, but shrewd investment in arts and culture can create a different kind of industry
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Dominic Carman: When my father defended him in court, the great Liberal seemed to be on trial for his sexuality. Today it wouldn’t matter
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Michael Clarke: Regin malware and the Sony Pictures hacking show how vulnerable the west feels about its cyber dominance
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Deborah Orr: The allegations against Cosby seemed more disturbing because he is black. Clearly I see black celebrities as under a greater obligation to be exemplars – and that’s wrong, because it suggests black failings are more serious than white ones
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Giles Fraser: It seems that making the human stand out as morally particular requires some sort of leap of faith
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Alex Andreou: Good riddance to these nasty symbols, but the stigma towards homeless people by city officials and care workers are harder to shift
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Marina Hyde: Giving birth in hospital these days is a hallucinatorily exhausting experience – and the cuts mean it’s about to get even worse
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Ian Jack: The story of low-income tenants facing 400% rent hikes thanks to a profit-hungry consortium seemed just the kind of cause Londoners would rally behind. But even with Russell Brand in the vanguard, the barricades remain unstormed
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Rhiannon Lucy Cosslett: So Nigel Farage thinks breastfeeding mothers should go and sit in the corner. But why stop there if you don’t want women to offend?
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Hilary Devey: Under my brief reign, our youth-obsessed culture would pass its sell-by date – and education policy would wise up
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Laura Kay: You told us: The neighbours responded to our polite requests by making as much noise as humanly possible, shredding my nerves
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Hugh Muir: The absurd ban on sending books to prisoners has been overturned thanks to the chief executive of the Howard League for Penal Reform
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George Osborne has accused the BBC of using hyperbole in its coverage of spending cuts. The BBC said its coverage was fair and balanced, and that it asked the questions its audience wanted answers to. Which of the two would you put your trust in?
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Richard Seymour: The party must successfully spell out who the enemy is and why, or it will fail to speak to disaffected Labour voters. It’s time to get its hands dirty
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Hugh Muir: First thoughts: The UK has chosen sanctions as a weapon against Russia, so why are we now inviting cultural exchanges?
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Cyd Sturgess: We’ve been righteously stuffed by his U-turn on tuition fees and would like him to lose his Sheffield Hallam seat as payback
New voices, new opinions