Events
In 45 minutes, the entire CTA system will shut down to make it harder for wandering bands of hordes (my mom's expression) from continuing to cause havoc: Starting at 6:30 p.m., CTA will suspend service on all CTA bus routes and rail lines at the request of public safety officials. Service is expected to resume tomorrow morning. CTA will provide service updates via transitchicago.com. Earlier, the mayor and county officials claimed they had good evidence that much of the criminal behavior last night came...
A peaceful protest in downtown Chicago that began at 2pm yesterday devolved into violence by 8pm, leading to Mayor Lori Lightfoot imposing a 9pm to 6am curfew city-wide: “I want to express my disappointment and, really, my total disgust at the number of others who came to today’s protests armed for all-out battle.” Lightfoot singled out “the people who came armed with weapons,’’ calling them “criminals.“ “We can have zero tolerance for people who came prepared for a fight and tried to initiate and...
The Washington Post's Karen Attiah imagines how an American newspaper would cover the protests in Minnesota if it used the same tropes as typically found in Western articles on politics elsewhere: The country has been rocked by several viral videos depicting extrajudicial executions of black ethnic minorities by state security forces. Uprisings erupted in the northern city of Minneapolis after a video circulated online of the killing of a black man, George Floyd, after being attacked by a security force...
Shared streets in Chicago
ChicagoCOVID-19EntertainmentFoodGeneralGeographyTransport policyUrban planning
The city has started adding traffic controls to side streets in an effort to encourage outdoor recreation and social distancing: Earlier this week, officials said at least six streets are expected to be closed to through traffic and opened to the public. The move comes after weeks of transportation advocates asking the city to open up streets to pedestrians, giving them more room to walk, jog and ride bikes so they can safely social distance while outside during the pandemic. Advocates have long called...
Minneapolis police "inadvertently" arrest reporter live on air
GeneralJournalismLawPolicePoliticsTelevisionUS Politics
As CNN reporter Omar Jimenez and his crew asked riot police where they would like them to move early this morning, the police abruptly arrested the group: Minnesota Governor Tim Walz spoke with CNN president Jeffrey Zucker shortly after: Mr. Walz told Mr. Zucker that the arrest was “inadvertent” and “unacceptable,” according to CNN’s account of the call. By about 6:30 a.m. local time, the crew had been released and was back on television. “Everyone, to their credit, was pretty cordial,” Mr. Jimenez said...
President Trump today signed an executive order that will likely have no legal effect and could very well backfire on him, directing the Federal Communications Commission to revisit Section 230 of the Communication Decency Act: Under Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, online companies have broad immunity from liability for content created by their users. But the draft of the executive order, which refers to what it calls “selective censoring,” would allow the Commerce Department to try to...
This morning, the Labor Department reported 2.1 million new unemployment claims, bringing the total to almost 41 million since the pandemic hit the US. As horrifying as that number is, I actually wanted to highlight two articles that appeared today. The first, by Trump biographer Tony Schwartz in Medium, warns us that having a psychopathic president makes November's election "a true Armageddon:" The trait that most distinguishes psychopaths is the utter absence of conscience — the capacity to lie...
We hit a new milestone today. So, to put things in perspective, here are the number of Americans who have died from: European genocide of Native Americans (1492-1900), ~25 million over 500 years Motor vehicle accidents (1899-2018), 3.8 million over 119 years Firearms (intentional or accidental, 1968-2018), ~1.4 million over 50 years Civil War (1861-1865), 755,000 over 48 months Influenza pandemic (1918-1919), 675,000 over 15 months World War II (1941-1945), 418,500 over 45 months World War I...
The most powerful man in the world threw a hissy fit yesterday when Twitter finally—finally!—slapped a misinformation warning on one of his lies: President Donald Trump on Wednesday threatened social media companies with new regulation or even shuttering a day after Twitter added fact checks to two of his tweets. The president can’t unilaterally regulate or close the companies, which would require action by Congress or the Federal Communications Commission. But that didn't stop Trump from angrily...
Day 71
BeerChicagoCOVID-19EntertainmentEnvironmentGeneralHealthHistoryJokesPoliticsUS PoliticsWhisky
It's a little comforting to realize that we've only dealt with Covid-19 social distancing rules about 5% as long as we dealt with World War II (1,345 days from 7 December 1941 to 13 August 1945). It's still a grind. In the news today: Seasonal Chicago residents Monty and Rose Plover have laid four eggs on Montrose Beach, and will hopefully have four chicks around June 17th. There's a guy in North Side neighborhood Edgewater who posts a dad joke in his window every day. The Economist says "farewell for...
Copyright ©2026 Inner Drive Technology. Donate!