police abuses
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On Bryan Stevenson’s Just Mercy.
Just Mercy: an achingly-beautiful account of the arduous pursuit of justice for all.
abuses of power, brain plasticity, Bryan Stevenson, children sentenced to death in prison, civil rights march, death penalty, EJI, Equal Justice Initiative, execution, false conviction, Ferretcraft, heroic human rights worker trading card game, innocents condemned to death, Just Mercy, Lydia Cacho, Midwest Pages to Prisoners, New Life New Leaf, police abuses, post traumatic stress disorder, PTSD, racial disparities in the criminal justice system, racial injustice, Slavery Inc, solitary confinement, state-sponsored murder in the United States, the human potential for growth and change, Walter McMillian trial, with liberty and justice for all, wrongful imprisonment -
On Linda Tirado’s Hand to Mouth (until devolving into senseless tangents about cash transfers as medicine, the U.S. criminal justice system, work as exercise, and flawed science).
As long as you think feeling angry is fun (does it say awful things about my personality that I do?), Linda Tirado’s Hand to Mouth is a fun little book. Unlike Barbara Ehrenreich’s Nickel and Dimed, Tirado’s main focus isn’t analyzing why people are poor — she states, bluntly and in my opinion correctly, that the…
academic doublethink, academic science, Alia Crum, An Investigation of Exercise and the Placebo Effect, at-will employment, bizarre data interpretation, court fees, Dixie Stanforth, economic injustice, Ellen Langer, Emily Willingham, Evil Dave versus Regular Dave, Exercise and the Placebo Effect, flawed science, Hand to Mouth, hotel cleaning as exercise, John Oliver, Linda Tirado, low-wage work, Mindset matters, municipal fees, On the Run, overcriminalization, police abuses, poverty, psychology, replication crisis, scientific studies that can’t be replicated, speeding, The New Jim Crow, Tirado, traffic laws, Walter Scott, work as exercise, worker protections
