Friday, June 12, 2026

ANDREW BRANCA: A world-class Medical examiner in [Zimmerman] trial testified that the beating was "absolutely likely to inflict death or serious bodily injury." That makes it a deadly force attack, justifying Zimmerman's deadly force defense.

from Andrew Branca.

He's like, oh, let's look at all these poor black victims. Trayvon Martin: George Zimmerman was acquitted.

Tamir Rice: no indictment. Michael Brown: no indictment.

Philando Castile: officer was acquitted.

Freddie Gray: officers were acquitted or charges dropped.

Terrence Crutcher: officer was acquitted.

Sylville Smith: officer acquitted. 

Chikei "Rick" Chao was found not guilty after the shooting death of 14-year-old Cyrus Carmack-Belton in South Carolina.

The "returning wallet" case could not be verified, but many people confuse it with Ralph Yarl, the black teen shot after going to the wrong house.  In that case, the shooter later pleaded guilty, so it was not a not-guilty verdict.

00:31.  And it's a mystery to her.  The reason these people were not convicted or sentenced must be racism.  It has to be racism.  All these poor black boys.  All these poor black boys.  It must be racism.  Well, let's take a look, shall we, Genius?

Trayvon Martin: George Zimmerman was acquitted. George Zimmerman went to trial on a charge of malice murder.  Here is what he looked like at the scene. Trayvon Martin was trying to murder him to beat his head through a sidewalk.  Those are pictures of George Zimmerman's face.  His nose is broken sideways on his face.  The back of his head was against the sidewalk, so every punch was actually two blows: the punch to the front of his face with Trayvon Martin mounted on top of him, and then the blow of the back of his skull against the sidewalk.  George Zimmerman's face and the back of his head immediately after Trayvon Martin stopped trying to beat Zimmerman to death by beating Zimmerman's skull through a concrete sidewalk stopped Trayvon Martin was stopped only because of a 9 millimeter round shot by Zimmerman through Martin's demonic little heart murderous, little heart.  Zimmerman's nose was broken sideways on his face.  By the way, when the media printed these photos for the public, did you know they printed them in black and white, so you wouldn't know what you were seeing was blood?  Contemptible eyewitness testimony describe Trayvon Martin mounted on top of a fallen Zimmerman, beating him viciously.  The witness testified, "MMA ground and pound style."  Testified Zimmerman was screaming for his life, for help that never came.  A world-class Medical examiner in the trial testified that the beating was "absolutely likely to inflict death or serious bodily injury."  That makes it a deadly force attack, justifying Zimmerman's deadly force defense.  

Did Karmelo Anthony suffer a beating like this or anything everyone is testifying to the contact of Austin Metcalf to Carmelo characterized it as a "soft push."  And they were not in the dark alone they were surrounded by dozens of people including many black people we're supposed to believe we're supposed to believe that Carmelo Anthony had a reasonable belief that Austin Metcalf and Hunter Metcalf we're going to be allowed to be him to death in front of all those black people?

What about Tamir Rice?  Tamir Rice was a 12-year-old in Cleveland shot dead by police.  And you might be thinking to yourself, "Oh my God!  That sounds . . . how could police officers do that?  And there wasn't even an indictment?"  They shot a 12-year-old black boy, a little child . . .

STEPHEN COUGHLIN: What if the EU leadership does know, and that's why they did it? Because the do and they did.

MJ MURPHY: Every persuasion campaign has a conversion testimony

And there it is: soft intellectual optimism at the end.  It ends on openness rather than certainty, and that makes the whole discussion sound thoughtful, compassionate, exploratory, instead of ideological, and that lowers resistance dramatically. --MJ Murphy

The two women on the panel under review are Monica Lewinsky on the left, commenting about her interview with Dylan Mulvaney on her show called Reclaiming, and Lena Dunham on the right.   

The #MeToo movement was such a complicated moment where women . . . 

TRANSLATION:  let me begin in the safest possible moral territory so nobody questions me this is a classic credibility setup 

And we're not only confronting men but also confronting each other . . . 

All right, this is a sneaky pivot.  We started with male misconduct, and now somehow women disagreeing with women is the real emotional issue.

The way that they had failed each other and then we moved past that . . .

We moved past that.  So the translation here is the enlightened people evolved.  Keep up.  Progress.  Nobody wants to sound left behind.  

And what's interesting now is these conversations about now we have more conversations than ever about what gender is . . .

Notice how she just skips proving any of it.  We go straight from "gender identity exists" to "let's discuss the complexities." That's the NLP bypass.  Skip the foundation, start at the conclusion.  

But also this sort of tease every internet word gatekeeping of what being female is which is . . .

Calling biological definitions "gatekeeping" is hilarious. Women defining womanhood is now apparently running security at the nightclub.

This is kind of you know we know the word turf like what it is to say if you haven't been female in this extremely specific way that it is involves biology . . .

"extremely specific way involving biology" is such a funny way to describe being female.  Say that to the women in Afghanistan. "That's like calling gravity a very rigid falling preference."

And you are not welcome at this party . . .

And there it is.  There it is again.  Boundaries become cruelty disagreement becomes exclusion policy becomes Mean Girls behavior. 

I had Dylan Mulvaney on recently . . .

Celebrity emotional shield activated.  Once a likable personality enters the story disagreeing suddenly feels socially dangerous.

And you know it's it's an amazing her story is amazing . . .

Now we're going to do the gratuitous "she" and "her" pronouns.  This is just emotional preloading.  You are being told what to feel before you think.  

I think what she's . . . 

. . . she's incredible and what she experienced . . .

. . . also publicly 

. . . publicly . . . and she did so elegantly...

He, him.  We are not dissociating from reality, ladies.  We are not doing it. Dylan Mulvaney is a little faggot.  Yeah, I said it.  He's a little faggot.  If someone is polished enough, audiences confuse presentation with truth.  A TED Talk voice can hypnotize half the internet.  

And as someone who . . .

But not without a cost.

I'm pretty sure he cashed in pretty good.  But disagreeing now sounds like we're hurting vulnerable people.  This is emotional armor plating.  

Not without a cost.  And you know, as someone who has, you know, has multiple nuclear trans family members . . .

Oh yes the rhetorical infinity stone I know people personally now Chris is him feels like attacking Thanksgiving dinner.

It's been a big, a big education for me . . .

TRANSLATION: I evolved. Maybe you should too.  Every persuasion campaign has a conversion testimony. 

For me, to see, to be around that, I think, you know, I got to go speak at Trans Day of Visibility in DC last year with this amazing group called The Christopher Street Project, and the thing I expressed was just how having a trans sibling, having trans people in my life, has really opened up in this most expansive way.  It's like, I feel like I see in 4D now.  

This is spiritually hilarious.  We went from discussing public policy to "I have ascended dimensions." Disagreement now sounds spiritually unevolved.

About the possibilities of what . . . all of us hold this incredibly complicated . . . each of us have our own specific gender.

No we don't.  Once every person has their own personal custom gender, the category means literally nothing anymore.  We are basically at Build-A-Bear identity theory.

. . . That has to do with our experiences.  It has to do with how we felt as little kids.  It has to do with how we see ourselves, how we see other people, how we want to interact.  And so I think it's interesting.  Right now, feminism has never been more multifaceted and nuanced . . .

Notice the coding.  Notice the coding.  Expansive equals good.  Nuanced equals smart.  Biology equals mean and narrow. The language does all the work emotionally before the argument even starts.

Expansive but it's also deeply under threat...

And there's our threat framing.  Very common persuasion move.  Expand the emotional stakes until disagreement feels dangerous.

And we are having these conversations yet can't seem to dictate actual laws that affect our bodies . . .

Interesting switch.  Five minutes ago "womanhood was a floating metaphysical energy field," and now, suddenly, "our bodies."  The rhetoric toggles between identity and biology depending on which helps emotionally in the moment.

So it's a really, really, it's always a complicated time to be a woman . . .

Yeah, after redefining Womanhood beyond recognition, we circle back to good old female solidarity again.  It's rhetorical jazz.  

It's a very I think a very complicated but has a real rich vein of possibility at least for dialogue I'm curious how you feel.

And there it is: soft intellectual optimism at the end.  It ends on openness rather than certainty, and that makes the whole discussion sound thoughtful, compassionate, exploratory, instead of ideological, and that lowers resistance dramatically. 

The year is 1949.

The Nobel Prize in Medicine has just gone to the man who invented the lobotomy. Your doctor suggests one for your sister, who has not been herself since the baby came. It is the most celebrated advance in psychiatry of the age, and he is simply current. By the time the prize curdles into an embarrassment, close to twenty thousand Americans have had the operation, and proportionally more here in Britain. The year is 1956. Lay the baby down on his front, the doctor says. So does the most trusted childcare book ever written, the one on every new mother's shelf. On his back he might choke, the reasoning goes. Millions obey. The advice holds for nearly thirty years, long after the evidence has quietly turned, and a generation of cot deaths is counted before anyone thinks to roll the babies over. The year is 1966. A bestselling book informs your wife that menopause is a disease, that she is, in the author's word, a castrate, and that a small daily pill will keep her youthful and tolerable to live with. Her doctor agrees. The drug becomes one of the most prescribed in the country. Nobody mentions that the author sat on the payroll of the company that made it. That detail surfaces decades later, in the same year the landmark trial is halted early for raising rates of breast cancer, stroke and clots. The year is 1979. Your ulcer is caused by stress and sharp food, the doctor explains. Calm down, drink milk, take the antacid that happens to be the best-selling medicine on earth. Two Australians are about to prove that most ulcers are caused by a bacterium and cured by a fortnight of antibiotics. The profession laughs. One of them eventually drinks a beaker of the stuff to settle the matter. The establishment takes the better part of twenty years to stop laughing. The Nobel lands in 2005. The year is 1985. Butter is dangerous, the doctor says. Switch to margarine, it is modern, it is heart-healthy, the experts are united. The spread he nudges you toward is loaded with trans fats, which the next decade will identify as the genuinely dangerous one, and which will eventually be banned outright. The butter goes quietly back in the fridge. No correction is ever printed at the volume of the original warning. The year is 1992. There is a pyramid on the surgery wall, and the very same one in your grandchild's classroom. Bread, cereal, rice and pasta form the broad virtuous base, up to eleven servings a day. Fat is exiled to the tiny tip. The chart was reportedly held back a year while the relevant industries had their say. It is wrong at the bottom and wrong at the top. Now it is today. Your doctor has new guidelines, new studies, a fresh consensus, delivered with precisely the steady confidence of every guideline above. He believes it, and he has good reason to. So did every doctor in this thread. None of them were villains. Each was sincere, most were kind, and all were certain, reading from a map that somebody else had drawn and handed them. That is the part worth sitting with. So when the man in the white coat tells you what to eat, what to fear, and what to swallow every morning for the rest of your life, you are allowed to ask. Who paid for the study. What the evidence says beneath the headline. What he was just as certain about thirty years ago, and where that advice sits now. Then make up your own mind. Call it scepticism, or call it whatever your grandmother called it when she ignored the advert, kept the butter where it was, and lived to ninety-one. It has outlasted every consensus on this list. It will outlast this one too.

TOM LUONGO: Iran's fundamental mistake is thinking they are the real target of Trump's hostilities.