181 comments

  • whatshisface 4 hours ago

    I think this is an example of using slow trials as a nonjudicial weapon. The defendant did not break the law and isn't likely to be convicted (at least not on appeal), but they can hold him in jail for months because they got mad at his Facebook post.

    • _heimdall 4 hours ago

      That should be where the right to a speedy trial comes into play. If he is held in jail because he isn't released on bail, the best thing to do is repeatedly file motions for the speedy trial.

      • everforward 4 hours ago

        A speedy trial is much slower than you’d probably think. I can’t find specific guidelines for Tennessee beyond having the right to one. The federal guidelines are generally 30 days to make a specific charge, and 70 days from then to appear before a judge. That also doesn’t ensure the case goes to trial, just that you’ve had a hearing.

        Ie you can spend over 3 months in jail before an hearing and still be considered to have had a speedy trial. He’d have to wait til after that period to even file a motion for dismissal on speedy trial grounds, and then wait for the hearing on that to happen.

        This is part of why plea deals are so common. Even if he were somehow to be convicted, his sentence would probably be less than the speedy trial window. At a certain point, the prosecution will offer to bump it down to some kind of misdemeanor with jail time less than he’s already done so it’s time served. He may as well plead guilty to that because otherwise he’ll keep sitting in jail waiting on a trial and do more time for no reason.

        There’s no realistic route where he gets compensated for being wrongly prosecuted, even if he goes to trial and is found not guilty.

        The justice system is deeply, deeply flawed and unjust.

        • gamblor956 3 hours ago

          At the state level, if a defendant does not waive their right to a speedy trial, the time from being charged (arraignment) to trial is limited by law. It ranges from 30 days for misdemeanors to 6 months for felonies. .

          In California, the clock for a misdemeanor is 30 days if a defendant is taken into custody, or 45 days if not in custody. For a felony, it's 60 days from arraignment. If the defendant remains in custody after arrest, arraignment must occur within 48 hours of arrest, or on the first business day after the 48-hour period expires if it ends on a weekend or court holiday. If the defendant is freed from custody prior to arraignment, then arraignment can occur at a later date.

          In NY and most red states, the clock is approximately 6 months for felonies. Due to the longer clock, in many of these states the clock begins when the defendant is taken into custody (or the state has a shorter timeframe for trial for defendants in custody). Florida just changed its laws to make the clock start on arraignment, lengthened the time required for arraignment to 30 days for defendants in custody, and made the speedy trial right an affirmative right that the defendant must specifically assert. Unlike pretty much every other state, the clock also restarts if the prosecutor withdraws and re-files the same charges (in almost every other state, the clock is only started anew for new charges.) FL also made the consequences for violation of these rights a mere dismissal without prejudice. (TLDR: don't get arrested in Florida.)

          Most defense lawyers will advise clients to waive their speedy trial rights. This is for the lawyer's benefit, not the client's. It allows the lawyer to preserve their negotiating relationship with the prosecutor for future clients. In California, due to the shortened time frames, 99% of the time it is advisable to assert speedy trial rights (especially in felonies, but even in misdemeanors) because the prosecution usually can't get its act together in time. Some forensics can't even be completed in the 60 day window. The defense win rate in proceedings where the defendant asserts their speedy trial rights is so high that prosecutors will always offer a sweetheart plea deal to avoid going to trial.

          (Of course the obvious solution is for the prosecutors to just wait until they have an actual complete case before filing charges. But if they did that we wouldn't need speedy trial laws in the first place.)

      • bn-l an hour ago

        Bail is set at 2 million. So it’s a strategy

      • scythe 3 hours ago

        I think if there's a major constitutional right to be invoked here, it's the Eighth Amendment "excessive bail shall not be required". Two million dollars?! For a 61-year-old posting on Facebook? What kind of risk does he pose exactly?

        • estearum 33 minutes ago

          Pointing attention at the basic hypocrisy and complete lack of principle of Dear Leader's party is an existential risk!

        • someemptyspace 3 hours ago

          He can post again, so highly likely to "reoffend".

    • shredprez 4 hours ago

      Had the exact same thought. How is there not a reasonable maximum time you can hold someone pre-trial? As always, rich offenders walk free.

      • philjohn 4 hours ago

        IIRC some states have defined timeframes where charges are dismissed if the case is not brought to trial.

    • marcusb 4 hours ago

      As they say, you can beat the rap, but you can't beat the ride.

      • JumpCrisscross 4 hours ago

        > but you can't beat the ride

        You sure as hell can get paid for it afterwards.

        • overfeed 3 hours ago

          Those settlements need to come out of police retirement funds, to better align interests.

          • JumpCrisscross 2 hours ago

            > Those settlements need to come out of police retirement funds, to better align interests

            If the sheriff, DA and judge each thought this was a good idea, it's fair for the voters who hired them to take the hit.

            • tremon 34 minutes ago

              Are sheriff, DA and judge directly electable positions then? I thought they were appointed by the Council or Senate (no, I don't live in the US nor do I have any desire to).

              • dghlsakjg 21 minutes ago

                In some places in the states, yes, all three can be elected.

                Typically the sheriff is always elected, the DA almost always elected, and for the judges it depends, but if they aren’t elected they are appointed by elected officials.

                The other thing to remember is that the US judicial system varies tremendously by state. No two states are the same so there is no easy way to summarize it.

    • senkora 4 hours ago

      The process is the punishment.

    • IlikeKitties 4 hours ago

      And that's why there should be serious consequences for everyone involved in this prosecution and prosecutions like it. If the case is as described here, there should be jail time involved for kidnapping and false imprisonment. But any justice system always protects their own.

      • JumpCrisscross 4 hours ago

        > why there should be serious consequences for everyone involved

        Do we have names of the arresting officers, prosecutors and judge this is in front of?

        With that we can determine who above them is elected.

        • grafmax 3 hours ago

          I think you have a lot of faith in democratic processes at this point, despite widespread evidence such as this very article that they are being clearly undermined.

          • JumpCrisscross 3 hours ago

            > you have a lot of faith in democratic processes at this point

            I think civic laziness and nihilism, particularly in Silicon Valley, did a lot to get us to where we are.

        • culll_kuprey 3 hours ago

          > "numerous…teachers, parents and students" somehow interpreted Bushart's meme—with its citation in fine print about a previous school shooting at Perry High School in Perry, Iowa—as a threat to carry out a similar shooting at nearby Perry County High School.

          Wouldn’t matter. Those elected would likely be re elected. This wasn’t Trump advising some federal agency to bully someone he doesn’t like. It was the community organizing. This is the will of the people.

          • JumpCrisscross 3 hours ago

            > Wouldn’t matter. Those elected would likely be re elected

            This is just rationalising laziness and nihilism. They may get re-elected. That doesn't mean you can't create a lot of chaos and cost for them along the way.

            Like, I wish my adversaries would preëmptively conclude that even attempting to oppose me is not worth it.

            > This is the will of the people

            You're concluding this how?

            • IlikeKitties 43 minutes ago

              You are 100% correct. Just recently a single website that linked some e-mail addresses destroyed the EU Plans for chat control. Apathy and Cynicism would've led it happen but just the act of making one website and posting it at the right places, something everyone here could easily do, changed the course of law dramatically.

              That small victory really made me reconsider.

    • astura 4 hours ago

      Months? This shit can go on for years. Emanuel Fair spent 9 years in prison and was ultimately acquited.

      https://www.investigationdiscovery.com/crimefeed/seeking-jus...

  • beloch 4 hours ago

    People outside the U.S. should care about this because so much social media is based in the U.S..

    i.e. If you post an anti-MAGA meme to Facebook or reddit from an identifiable account you could be charged as this man was. Perhaps the U.S. will try to extradite you. (I would hope most nations have sensible checks and balances to prevent extradition over this sort of thing, but it would still be a PITA.) However, the U.S. might also choose to wait and then arrest you if you ever travel to or through the U.S..

    The U.S.'s slide away from freedom of speech could have a huge global impact on people who might think it doesn't effect them. We are far too reliant on American social media.

    Canada, the E.U., etc. should be looking at protections to prevent social media companies operating servers in their jurisdictions from sharing information with the U.S. government. It's no longer a hypothetical situation. There is a real threat that is clearly evident now.

    • tavavex 31 minutes ago

      > Perhaps the U.S. will try to extradite you. (I would hope most nations have sensible checks and balances to prevent extradition over this sort of thing, but it would still be a PITA.)

      I don't think there's any countries that allow extradition for actions that aren't crimes in their own country. Extradition treaties, as far as I know, aren't straightforward conveyor belts that let any countries hoover up anyone inconvenient for them, the requested countries don't want to let go of their own people for no reason, and can deny these requests as they see fit.

      Being held up at an entry point to the US is a real worry, but at this stage I feel like they're not quite psychotic enough to be causing international drama over a Facebook post, so actions like these will probably remain domestic for a while.

      The location where these websites are hosted probably doesn't matter - if you posted something the US doesn't like and you end up in a situation where they can get to you, no one would care about where exactly you posted it. All bets are off.

      • soueuls 9 minutes ago

        Yes many countries will decide to extradite for actions which are legal in said country.

        I am French, and we recently convinced Scotland to extradite a French man who was denying the existence of the Holocaust and gaz chamber, which is something you could do in Scotland if you do it without violence.

        So indeed it’s possible.

        But I don’t think it’s the same as extraditing for a meme.

    • bilegeek 3 hours ago

      > I would hope most nations have sensible checks and balances to prevent extradition over this sort of thing, but it would still be a PITA.

      EDIT: If you're an emigrant:

      More than just a PITA, you could still fail; see [1].

      Also - I can't find the source right now - I remember hearing about Russian emigrants in Europe being charged with serious crimes in absentia over criticism of the war, and they were slated for deportation because the bureaucracy still considered all such Russian warrants as valid. The US would probably be harder to excise in this regard.

      [1]https://www.dw.com/en/germany-shelters-russians-persecuted-f...

    • canucker2016 3 hours ago

      People outside the US can be in tons of trouble already for social media postings.

      UK and Germany come to mind where the police/law will go after people for what they post.

      That's just for developed countries. Consequences are worse in developing countries.

      • tavavex 27 minutes ago

        Which developing countries? I thought that many of those countries were either tied up with 'real', physical crime or just wouldn't care about internet stuff all that much. Lots of sketchy websites (like lots of piracy-related stuff) are hosted in countries where legal consequences are unlikely, even if it's illegal on paper. I can see how the more authoritarian countries can be going after social media posts based on grudges, but I'm wondering about which ones actively practice it - I don't know much about it.

  • yibg 4 hours ago

    Amazingly even this post is a reflection of the discourse around Kirk. There are replies equating any criticism of Kirk to celebrating his death and glossing over his past nasty behavior. All seems to detached from reality.

    • mullingitover 4 hours ago

      There is a group who has never debated anything in good faith, and they are certainly not about to start now.

    • tavavex 21 minutes ago

      This entire story is a culmination of this effect. If 'celebrating someone's death' was a crime in the US, there's no doubt they would've used that to accuse that man. But since that's not actually illegal, they had to bend it out of shape until his milquetoast barely-criticism could somehow be interpreted as an active threat against some random high school. It would be funny if this wasn't completely acceptable behavior now.

    • titanomachy 3 hours ago

      It doesn't matter. Charlie Kirk could have been the greatest saint of our generation, and it would still be unjust to imprison someone for posting a meme saying that they don't care about his death.

      • estearum 31 minutes ago

        It would be unjust to imprison or even have law enforcement knock on the door of a person who was celebrating in the streets that he died!

        This is completely out of bounds for the United States. But that's the Woke Right for ya.

    • krapp 4 hours ago
    • standardUser 4 hours ago

      It's a cudgel. It doesn't matter if it makes sense, it fits in your hand and you can whack your perceived enemies. As always, logic doesn't matter, only owning the libs matters.

    • tootie 4 hours ago

      Kirk, among many other right wing figures, have absolutely made light of past violence against Democrats. The discourse around Paul Pelosi was utterly vile and despicable. Nobody ever threatened his first amendment right to say horrendous things.

      • WickyNilliams 3 hours ago

        Not an American so I don't have a horse in the race. Didnt Kirk also describe Biden as a "tyrant" and that he should be given the death penalty [0]. Calling for the (then sitting) president to be put to death seems pretty extreme to me.

        [0] https://www.snopes.com/fact-check/charlie-kirk-biden-death-p...

        • ithkuil 2 hours ago

          Those who think that criticizing Kirk is always calling for this death, would this comment above also be considered violent?

          Or is this comment also unacceptable?

          Where is the demarcation?

          • tavavex 12 minutes ago

            The demarcation is that my side celebrating someone's death is reasonable, level-headed criticism that reflects the will of the people and how dire the situation is - you've just gotta consider what we're saying and think that both sides have valid points. On the other hand, your side not showing Kim Jong Il funeral levels of grieving towards my figurehead is extremist violent rhetoric that has no place anywhere in our society, it has to be punished; the deranged, crazed, murder-hungry perpetrators must be suppressed and removed before they kill someone. The demarcation is that I'm stronger than you. Rules and logical consistency don't matter when you have power.

            I only tried to be mildly cynical here, because I actually can't come up with any other justifications here. I don't think there's anything non-inflammatory that can justify this outside of ideological reasons. If anything can think of any, let me know.

      • nailer 4 hours ago

        FWIW I agree Kirk shouldn't have made fun of Paul Pelosi. I think Kirk probably wouldn't be proud of his own behaviour there.

        • JumpCrisscross 3 hours ago

          > think Kirk probably wouldn't be proud of his own behaviour there

          He had years to apologise. It could have meaningfully altered the temperature of our discourse, particularly among young men. He never did. Kirk gets no credit for amends he never made.

          • tastyface 3 hours ago

            This is how Charlie Kirk got on my radar:

            "Mere weeks before his death, Kirk reveled in Trump's deployment of federal troops to DC. 'Shock and awe. Force,' he wrote. 'We're taking our country back from these cockroaches.'"

            Cockroaches! Literally language of the Rwandan genocide. And it's a Christian saying this about other human beings? The man never changed.

            (Obviously, he should not have been shot. But his sanctification is repulsive.)

            • heavyset_go an hour ago

              In case the reference doesn't click[1]:

              > Twenty-five years ago this month, all hell broke loose in my country, which is tucked away in the Great Lakes region of Africa. Hordes of members of the Hutu ethnic majority, armed with machetes, spears, nail-studded clubs, and other rudimentary weapons, moved house to house in villages, hunting for Tutsis, the second largest of Rwanda’s three ethnic groups. The radio station RTLM, allied with leaders of the government, had been inciting Hutus against the Tutsi minority, repeatedly describing the latter as inyenzi, or “cockroaches,” and as inzoka, or “snakes.” The station, unfortunately, had many listeners.

              > The promoters of genocide used other metaphors to turn people against their neighbors. Hutus, by reputation, are shorter than Tutsis; radio broadcasters also urged Hutus to “cut down the tall trees.”

              > In urban centers, government soldiers and well-armed members of the Interahamwe militia affiliated with the ruling party set up roadblocks filtering out Tutsis and killing them by the roadside. It was an easy task to pick them out. Ever since independence from Belgium in 1962, national identification cards specified ethnicity.

              > Within 100 days, an estimated 1 million people, the overwhelming majority of whom were Tutsis, lay dead. The worst kind of hatred had been unleashed. What began with dehumanizing words ended in bloodshed.

              [1] https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2019/04/rwanda-sho...

            • nailer an hour ago

              You dislike Kirk because he called criminals cockroaches and that reminds you of the Rwandan genocide?

              ok

              • estearum 29 minutes ago

                Yes it is very bad to call your countrymen "cockroaches" even if they're criminals and you really don't like them. It's especially bad to do so atop a gargantuan media organization that looks to you for moral and political guidance.

                • nailer 15 minutes ago

                  Why is it bad to call criminals cockroaches? The vast majority of crime is immoral so it seems very fitting for a leader of a moral organisation.

                  • estearum 12 minutes ago

                    We use names for things to categorize them. We categorize things to inform how to treat them.

                    I think we should treat criminals differently from how we treat cockroaches, so we should use different names for them.

                    There's only one functional reason to refer to humans as cockroaches which is to dehumanize them. Dehumanizing humans is bad.

                    • nailer 10 minutes ago

                      It’s a moral imperative to call out evil. It’s a gross inversion to pretend otherwise.

                      • estearum 8 minutes ago

                        Are cockroaches (the insect) evil?

        • zzzeek 41 minutes ago

          NARRATOR: he was, in fact, proud of his behavior there, plainly visible by comparing such behavior to hundreds of other publicly recorded instances of such behavior for which he was also quite proud

          • nailer 11 minutes ago

            But that’s not true - it was uncharacteristic. There are many instances where he was kind to someone being openly aggressive towards him and one where he made fun of Paul Pelosi.

    • blockmarker 4 hours ago

      After seeing millions of comments on social media saying that Kirk deserved it, or had it coming, for things Kirk said, or even things that he did not actually say but others made up, it is normal to see any such comment as support for murder.

      • estearum 27 minutes ago

        Not only are such comments generally not support for murder, but I'll let you in on a little known fact:

        In the US Constitution there's a thing called the First Amendment.

        It actually protects your right to say that you support murder. Either a real historical one or a hypothetical future one.

        The more you know!

      • adrr 4 hours ago

        Were the posts about Kirk deserving it or posts critical of Kirk. People conflate the two. Most of the quotes weren't made up. He did call for political violence like the execution of Joe Biden and for a "patriot" to bail out the person who tried to murder Paul Pelosi.

      • standardUser 4 hours ago

        You speak as if you've never read a YouTube comment section before. Yet you say you've read millions of comments? Maybe consider not reading rage-bait garbage all night long and talk to real people instead.

  • estebarb 4 hours ago

    "Investigators believe Bushart was fully aware of the fear his post would cause and intentionally sought to create hysteria within the community"

    Someone tell the LHC at CERN folks to avoid Tennessee...

  • nomilk 4 hours ago

    I wish the article would show a screenshot of what was posted, however 'uncivil'.

    Found this on a linked facebook post - no clue if it's accurate.

    https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=25571453995778528&se...

    • geor9e 4 hours ago

      That is directly linked in the article, in the sentence "The image was one of several Bushart posted".

    • E-Reverance 4 hours ago

      The article has a hyperlink on it : "Bushart shared an image[1] of President Donald Trump with the quote"

      [1] https://x.com/aaronterr1/status/1970272191884468241

      • Animats 4 hours ago

        Google search for 'trump "get over it" cartoon shooting' turns up many cartoon images. This is a major meme.

    • rglover 4 hours ago

      If this is accurate, this whole thing is beyond hysterical. Irrespective of political beliefs, this is an insane thing to have happen in the U.S. (this example is innocuous speech protected under the 1st amendment).

      Spooky shit as it sets precedence for anyone to go after anyone for a social media post on any grounds. That's psychotic.

      • idle_zealot 3 hours ago

        > Irrespective of political beliefs,

        I wish people would stop pretending that this has nothing to do with politics. Belief that the rules should punish anyone you don't like and protect those you do is incredibly popular, and the dominant ideology of this administration and its supporters. It is a political belief, and nobody is seriously combatting it. Still we act as though there are two sides with a shared goal of creating a better world, and differing ideas of how to accomplish that. It's been pretty clearly demonstrated that the goal of this incarnation of the Republican party is an authoritarian police state dedicated to punishing and eradicating whomever they deem an "enemy within". And a lot of voters are ok with this, so long as it doesn't apply to them personally, so long as they're a favored party.

        The apparent hypocrisy is naked and insulting. They'll cry "cancel culture" and censorship over companies deciding not to platform bigots while cheering when the police kidnap protestors or outspoken political opponents. I say "apparent" because this all makes perfect sense when you realize that they never cared about free speech or anything else they claimed to. It was always about "good guys" getting to do whatever they want, and "bad guys" getting hurt. The friend-enemy distinction. No policy goals, no principled stance on issues, just a convenient facade.

  • JohnTHaller 4 hours ago

    Due to Tennessee law, he has to come up with $210,000 himself to get bail from a bondsmen. And he loses $10,000 of that permanently. TN law is designed to keep non-rich folks in jail. He likely won't get his trial for months in TN. Also by design.

    • JumpCrisscross 3 hours ago

      > he has to come up with $210,000 himself

      Source?

      • Legend2440 3 hours ago

        The linked article.

        • JumpCrisscross 3 hours ago

          Nothing in the law [1] requires he come up with that sum himself. (The qualifier implies e.g. a legal defence fund or even family member couldn't help.)

          [1] https://www.capitol.tn.gov/Bills/114/Bill/SB0464.pdf

          • tavavex 4 minutes ago

            That seems kind of pedantic. From what the original commenter said, my immediate interpretation of it was that the obligation to procure the money and pay up is on his side, not that the $200k must be 'his' in some other way. It doesn't matter what source he gets it from, but the bill is on him to pay.

  • Aloisius 4 hours ago

    The comments on this article are horrifying. It's clear people have lost their damn minds.

    • causal 4 hours ago

      A common theme in these comments is justifying retribution against the left as if everyone in the country is for or against one team or the other- when in reality many of us are in the middle and think injustice remains evil no matter who does it.

    • yibg 4 hours ago

      Funny thing is, I’m not 100% sure which “side” you are referring to…

    • oceansky 4 hours ago

      Which comments you have an issue with?

    • ZeroGravitas 4 hours ago

      Reason is a big part of how we got here. Billionaire funded climate denial etc. so they have big audience of idiots they've cultivated.

      • tootie 4 hours ago

        Libertarianism is often described as a broken clock and it's their time of the day again.

    • deadbabe 3 hours ago

      They’re bots.

    • squigz 4 hours ago

      Don't make the mistake of thinking comments on a random article are indicative of the way the population actually thinks. They may not even be real.

      • bongodongobob 4 hours ago

        They are real. I cleansed 100s of people from Facebook that were planning Charlie Kirk vigils and shit. It's real.

        • bigstrat2003 4 hours ago

          Are you seriously claiming it to be objectionable to mourn for a man who was murdered in cold blood? That's pretty fucked up if so.

          • standardUser 3 hours ago

            What concern of it is yours? Will you mourn whomever I ask you to mourn? Sounds like an absurd proposition.

          • JumpCrisscross 3 hours ago

            > claiming it to be objectionable to mourn for a man who was murdered

            To be fair, a vigil held in the wake of a death is in mourning. A "vigil" held today for Kirk is a right-wing rally.

        • JumpCrisscross 4 hours ago

          There is a huge difference between holding a vigil and demanding retribution.

      • BolexNOLA 4 hours ago

        I used to think that, then the last decade happened. The conspiracy theorists are in the halls of power now and their followers are frothing at the mouth for revenge against perceived enemies. The uncomfortable uncle at Thanksgiving is now driving national health policy and funding.

      • vkou 4 hours ago

        Oh, they are real, they aren't just bots, and they've all been emboldened.

        Go on these people's facebooks, or invite them to Thanksgiving, you'll see the same firehose of shit.

        • culll_kuprey 3 hours ago

          > Go on these people's facebooks, or invite them to Thanksgiving, you'll see the same firehose of shit.

          A fun game is to look at Facebook profiles selected from random comment sections.

          By doing this, I have come away with even less understanding of people’s believes, motivations, etc.

        • squigz 3 hours ago

          Profiles can be faked too

  • fennecbutt 10 minutes ago

    Ah republicans.

    No wonder 2025 is the first year that extremist left wing violence has exceeded extremist right wing violence for the first time in 30 years.

  • iancmceachern 5 hours ago

    No one is safe in this environment

    • nerdponx 4 hours ago

      Conservatives mostly can get away with anything right now.

      • mindslight 4 hours ago

        There's nothing "conservative" about the fascist movement. It's regressive / reactionary (to use Yarvin's own label).

        • Bratmon 4 hours ago

          This is a distinction without a difference. "Regressive", "reactionary", and "conservative" are three words that refer to the exact same people and mean the exact same thing.

          • mindslight 25 minutes ago

            No, the words mean different things. When used to refer to a group, those meanings confer connotations. The point is that we need to stop referring to people destroying our society as "conservative".

        • baobabKoodaa 4 hours ago

          Self-identified "conservatives" are pushing this wave of censorship and autocracy. You're not helping anyone with those rhetoric tricks.

          • mindslight an hour ago

            > Self-identified "conservatives" are pushing this wave of censorship and autocracy

            Yes, exactly! They are lying to themselves, and as a group. They're not conserving our society, but rather throwing it away. I'm not doing a rhetorical trick - they are doing a rhetorical trick, and I am calling it out.

          • JumpCrisscross 4 hours ago

            > Self-identified "conservatives" are pushing this wave of censorship and autocracy

            Are they? MAGA has made it a point to purge the former GOP of conservatives.

            • baobabKoodaa 4 hours ago

              I'm gonna need a source for that with specificity to the "conservative" self-identification.

              • JumpCrisscross 3 hours ago

                You’re the one who made the claim that “self-identified ‘conservatives’ are pushing this wave of censorship and autocracy.” Isn’t the burden of proof on you?

                In any case, we have polling around non-MAGA Republicans [1]. And contrasting Trump 1 and 2 seems to show how having non-MAGA Republicans, many of whom identified as conservative and didn’t endorse the 2020 coup attempt, makes a difference.

                [1] https://d3nkl3psvxxpe9.cloudfront.net/documents/econtoplines...

                • baobabKoodaa 3 hours ago

                  Here's one example of the MAGA crowd self-identifying as conservative: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conservative_Political_Action_...

                  • JumpCrisscross 2 hours ago

                    > Here's one example of the MAGA crowd self-identifying as conservative

                    Sorry, I didn't mean to imply no conservatives are MAGA. Just that I would be surprised if a majority of self-identifying conservatives identify with MAGA. (I wouldn't be surprised if a majority of former conservatives were now MAGA.)

                    The difference is meaningful, because by unifying MAGA and conservatives one loses resolution on a powerful breakaway faction. (The main reason we had a free and fair election in 2020 is because some Republicans upheld their oaths to the Constitution.)

            • boston_clone 4 hours ago

              This just in, the National Socialist Party of Germany in the 1930s is not actually Socialist !

              • JumpCrisscross 3 hours ago

                > the National Socialist Party of Germany in the 1930s is not actually Socialist

                Good comparison. One of the victims of the Night of the Long Knives were the Strasserists [1][2]. It’s absolutely legitimate to point out when the German Socialist movement was coöpted by Hitler.

                [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Night_of_the_Long_Knives

                [2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strasserism

                • baobabKoodaa 3 hours ago

                  No true socialist could do such a thing.

                  • JumpCrisscross 3 hours ago

                    > No true socialist could do such a thing

                    You’re really going to reduce a historical event to platitudes?

                    What people call themselves matters. It may not be strictly correct. But it’s an identity, and that predicts how they’ll align in a crisis or movement.

                    • baobabKoodaa 3 hours ago

                      It was a reference to "no true scottsman"

                      • JumpCrisscross 2 hours ago

                        > It was a reference to "no true scottsman"

                        I know. A platitude is a trite and obvious remark.

                        Whether the Nazis are true socialists is a red herring. The point is the people who called themselves socialist before the Nazis were systematically purged by the Nazis once they coöpted their party. It would be incorrect to say self-identified socialists were responsible for everything the Nazis did; it would be correct to say they enabled them to rise to power.

                        Most importantly, however, would be observing that right before the Nazis consolidated power, it was the former socialists who could have been peeled away, potentially to huge consequence.

  • DarkmSparks 4 hours ago

    $2m should be the minimum compensation he is entitled to when the dust settles.

  • onetimeusename 4 hours ago

    There is a little bit more context here in a different article where the sheriff explains how the posts were interpreted as a threat

    https://www.tennessean.com/story/news/2025/09/23/tennessee-l...

    • bonsai_spool 4 hours ago

      > There is a little bit more context here in a different article where the sheriff explains how the posts were interpreted as a threat

      > https://www.tennessean.com/story/news/2025/09/23/tennessee-l...

      There isn’t anything there that wasn’t in the original article.

      • onetimeusename an hour ago

        The Reason article said there was no reason to interpret this as a threat and that it was entirely just political. The article made it seem like the memes were held completely out of context. It mentioned there happens to be a nearby Perry High School just by chance but the nearby Perry High School is the central reason why this was interpreted as a threat. This was posted in a group that was organizing an event at the high school. I could see how someone might construe this as a threat more clearly from the tennessean article if they were being overly cautious. Also the sheriff mentioned the arrest was not done for legal speech content but more for the coincidental possibility this was a threat. Reason didn't elaborate on this.

        The Reason article is making this seem like it's entirely political and unreasonable. I don't think an arrest should have been made, that is too far. This seems like an unfortunate coincidence but someone looked at all this and reported it as a threat. The fact Perry High School's name is highly relevant here was not included.

    • 3eb7988a1663 3 hours ago

      The officer's fabricated justification there is just as weak as the referenced article.

  • api 9 minutes ago

    I remember when the far right claimed they were for free speech and against “cancel culture.”

    I’m curious. Have any of the people who actually bought into that been falling away? Has the 180 degree flip away from free speech actually popped the bubble for anyone?

  • JumpCrisscross 4 hours ago

    Is there a legal defence fund?

  • kleton 3 hours ago

    Here are some "I-told-you-so"s regarding Douglass Mackey's original guilty verdict for posting Twitter memes, who, since then, was acquitted on appeal. https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43531283

  • spacechild1 2 hours ago

    This is just crazy! Just look at the actual post: https://x.com/aaronterr1/status/1970272191884468241. There is no way this can be interpreted as "Threats of Mass Violence on School Property and Activities". How should anyone trust law enforcement and the judicial system when they fabricate cases like this?

    Once more, it demonstrates that MAGA only cares about free speech as long as it serves their own interest. This is almost comical when you think about J.D. Vance' speech in Munich.

    Thanks to reason.com for strongly calling out the BS!

  • ta12653421 4 hours ago

    Funfact:

    Icon backgroundcolor of targetsite reason.com seems to be the same as HN icon backgroundcolor :-D

    • oncallthrow 4 hours ago

      rgb(244, 108, 52) vs rgb(255, 102, 0)

      • ta12653421 3 hours ago

        Well, very quite in the (optical) range, I'd say? (-:

  • mft_ 3 hours ago

    Obviously an interesting test case for the US, especially in light of Vance, Musk, and Farage attacking the UK (especially) and the EU for apparently lacking free speech.

  • whearyou 3 hours ago

    If/when this gets tossed - does the have grounds to sue (and who would he be suing) on wrongful arrest, or something else?

  • bitsage 3 hours ago

    This thread is looking at this from a political angle, but he was arrested and charged for threats of mass violence. This seems to be a case of over zealous policing regarding school shootings in a very tense environment rather than a guy arrested over offensive memes.

    • overfeed 2 hours ago

      There's no "tense environment" around school shootings. Like the president said: We have to... on second thoughts, maybe I should not be quoting him either.

  • scoofy 2 hours ago

    How on earth does this get past a grand jury?!?

  • RickJWagner an hour ago

    I wish we could see all of the offending posts. Without that, it’s hard to tell if the messages are threatening or not.

  • anigbrowl 4 hours ago

    This Sheriff Weems is either a fool or a knave.

  • bigjobby 4 hours ago

    I want to be living in the 80s again. The world is an absolute shit show at the moment

    • Aloisius 2 hours ago

      The 1980s wasn't great either, depending on where you were you had: AIDS, the Cold War, crack epidemic, war on drugs/mass incarceration, Satanic Panic, Iran-Contra, Tiananmen Square, plane bombings, peak gang violence, MOVE bombings, S&L crisis, sky-high interest rates, a couple deep recessions with high unemployment, Chernobyl, the Iran-Iraq War, widespread homophobia, Ethiopian famine and civil war, etc.

      • throwaway173738 2 hours ago

        Of course it was called GRID instead of AIDS back then.

  • TrackerFF 4 hours ago

    I looked at the pictures, and even with no context, it was obvious that he was pointing out the hypocrisy of Trump with that meme.

    Ain't no way people looked at the picture, and genuinely thought "Is he threatening to shoot up the school?". But then again, there are some incredibly stupid people out there.

    To me, it mostly seems like manufactured outrage. Someone saw him posting edgy memes, got offended, and called to the cops that the guy was posting about doing a school shooting.

    • overfeed 4 hours ago

      He is being punished for his speech. His persecutors aren't bold enough yet to publicly proclaim their violation of his constitutional rights, hence the verbal gymnastics.

      • somenameforme 3 hours ago

        If you're not aware, credible threats of violence (or any criminal act) are not constitutionally protected. It's one of the very few exceptions to the 1st amendment. The Supreme Court has taken a very pro-free speech stance on this since it crops up fairly often with things like rappers, but it's not like some open and shut case because of the 1st Amendment. It will largely come down to whether the courts think he understood that it would be interpreted as a threat.

        • overfeed 3 hours ago

          The article discusses this, and explains why the sheriff is contorting the plain meaning of his 4-words and an image (about Kirk) into a threat of violence (to a nearby school). This won't stand in court, so they are punishing him before then.

    • baobabKoodaa 4 hours ago

      > Someone saw him posting edgy memes, got offended, and called to the cops that the guy was posting about doing a school shooting.

      I don't think even that happened. Most likely some law enforcement officials sat down at a table for a brainstorming session trying to figure out a pretext to jail this guy.

    • somenameforme 4 hours ago

      Without context, it seems like somebody obviously just sharing some tasteless memes, but the context is precisely what makes things not so clear. This is a former police officer (in other words: armed) who was obviously rather unhinged, a political extremist, lived near a Perry High School, and then posts an image that shows Trump saying "We have to get over it." with the subtext being "Donald Trump, on the Perry High School mass shooting, one day after." All under the title, "This seems relevant today..."

      It's very easy to see how people could genuinely interpret that as a credible threat of imminent violence. Imagine somebody similar in your area did the exact same thing except with your local high school's name. So this is going to be a very interesting case, because what it's going to come down to is the prosecution arguing that he was aware that it would be interpreted as a threat on the nearby Perry High School, while the defense will claim he shared the meme without understanding the perceived threat it might cause and assumed people would understand he was referencing a previous shooting that occurred at a different Perry High School.

      • throwaway173738 2 hours ago

        I actually agree with this, because there are a lot of people out there who are unaware of anything outside of the 50x50 mile area they live in.

      • crtasm 2 hours ago

        Where did you find this context? in particular

        >obviously rather unhinged, a political extremist

  • hyperhello 5 hours ago

    > Bushart did not elaborate, but the context seems clear: Why should I care about this shooting, when the sitting president said I should "get over" this other shooting?

    From one perspective, this is clearly bad governance. He's using his free speech rights that generations of us died for, to point out hypocrisy.

    I'm going to say it, and we'll see if I get arrested for it. Charlie Kirk was one of the useful idiots groomed from high school to push conservative propaganda. One of his assignments was to minimize the cultural impact of school shootings. He died in front of thousands in a school shooting.

    Maybe that irony is something and maybe it is nothing. But the essence of conservative propaganda, that will survive any individual propaganda and any individual regime, is the central idea that some of us have rights and freedoms and some of us don't. So any deviation from that idea must be punished very severely.

    • freedomben 4 hours ago

      Who groomed him, and who gave him the assignment to minimize the cultural impact of school shootings?

      • ceejayoz 4 hours ago

        Rush Limbaugh and Bill Montgomery for the first bit.

        The second bit he was hardly innovative on. That’s been a thing since at least Columbine.

      • 2OEH8eoCRo0 4 hours ago

        An uncaring algorithm that maximizes engagement.

    • eth0up 4 hours ago

      There's a large group of people saying that anyone who doesn't accept a guy from a couple thousand years ago into a primary organ in their chest area, that not only do they deserve to die, they will, and then be damned for eternity.

      Others openly suggest capital punishment for nonviolent crimes. E.g. narco boaters, repeat offenders, homeless (see: Killmeade), drugs etc. In fact, we have no sanctions on Singapore, a land where one can indeed be killed for fussing with drugs. There are of course, many other similar examples.

      Both the left, right and many between recommend death for many people, in a manner having nothing to do with self defense, response to murder or in alignment with current law. Ouch.

      We have a LOT OF PEOPLE TO ARREST! I expect hypocrisy to complicate the process a bit though.

      Edit: I should say, by the speed of the dvotes, I'll be on the hitlist too. And upholding the First Amendment and the rest of our Constitution is well worth it.

      • daseiner1 4 hours ago

        large-scale drug smuggling is absolutely a violent crime.

        • childintime 4 hours ago

          Then corruption should be on the list too.

          Corruption at the very top is what I'd like to see capital punishment for. Exclusively.

          • eth0up 4 hours ago

            There's a group that plays with Guilt by Association. It's fun. Until someone else does it. But the frenzy comes when everybody does it. And some just can't see that coming.

        • oceansky 2 hours ago

          How?

        • eth0up 4 hours ago

          Even when it isn't?

          Edit: what your type tends to be highly obtuse to, is the impending reality of blowback, where your warping of law is turned upon you. But it feels so good now, it must be worth it.

          Abuse of power has serious consequences.

    • rayiner 4 hours ago

      School shootings have gone up dramatically since the 1960s.[1] Since that time, the percentage of children with divorced parents had gone up dramatically, while the percentage of households with guns has gone down, significantly.[2]

      The conservative view simply is that this correlation is causal, while the liberal view is that the causation runs in the opposite direction of the correlation. That’s not “propaganda,” it’s one way of trying to make sense of the world.

      [1] https://www.theviolenceproject.org/data-on-social-media/numb...

      [2] https://www.vpc.org/studies/ownership.pdf

      • JumpCrisscross 4 hours ago

        > while the percentage of households with guns has gone down, significantly

        The civilian gun stock has grown significantly since the 60s [1]. These data, together, seem to imply a large (but declining) number of households with a couple of guns and a few households with a ridiculous number of guns.

        Of course, the dagger in your argument is that American divorce rates are not extraordinary [2]. Our gun ownership and school shooting rates are.

        Given school shooters [3] (and now political shooters) come from gun-owning households, it seems fair to pin the blame for these events on that fraction of one third of American households who maintain private armories.

        [1] https://www.thetrace.org/2023/03/guns-america-data-atf-total...

        [2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_divorce_r...

        [3] https://publications.aap.org/aapnews/news/27379/Study-Adoles...

        • rayiner 3 hours ago

          Surely the more relevant metric is the percentage of households with at least one gun? Guns are durable goods that people don’t dispose of, so of course they accumulate. My father in law has boats, old cars, and guns piling up around his house. But school shootings typically aren’t committed by people rummaging through their grandparents’ basements, right?

          Similarly, it surely is better to compare the same country over time instead of comparing different countries which differ in many additional respects? If your thesis that the availability of guns causes school shootings is true, you should expect to see school shootings going down in the U.S. as the practical availability of a gun goes down.

          • JumpCrisscross 2 hours ago

            > Surely the more relevant metric is the percentage of households with at least one gun?

            Why?

            > Similarly, it surely is better to compare the same country over time instead of comparing different countries which differ in many additional respects?

            Mass shootings are a distinctly American phenomenon. (One happened today. It probably won't make any front pages [1].) It absolutely makes sense to ask what we're doing wrong relative to other countries.

            > If your thesis that the availability of guns causes school shootings is true, you should expect to see school shootings going down in the U.S. as the practical availability of a gun goes down

            One would expect to see more school shootings in states with "more permissive firearm laws and higher rates of gun ownership" [2]. One does.

            I also challenge the notion that fewer households with more guns makes guns less available to kids. A household with one or two guns is probably keeping track of them in a way one with a new gun every Christmas is not.

            82% of school shooters don't grow up in stable homes [3]. Practically all of them are from gun homes. More critically, the prevalence of two-parent households has been going up since the mid-2000s [4]. So have mass shootings.

            (Kirk's assassin grew up in a stable home. He used the rifle his family gifted him to do the deed [5].)

            [1] https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c4gvgr7w2yko

            [2] https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35449898/

            [3] https://schoolshooters.info/sites/default/files/shooters_myt...

            [4] https://ifstudies.org/blog/the-resurgence-of-the-two-parent-...

            [5] https://people.com/tyler-robinson-received-rifle-as-gift-use...

        • robotresearcher 4 hours ago

          > Of course, the dagger in your argument is…

          Reading comprehension moment: the parent comment was carefully not claiming either side of the argument.

          Your response, and the downvotes, are as if they declared for the locally unpopular side. They did not.

          • maleldil 3 hours ago

            Suggesting both points of view as reasonable is an indication of what they really think.

          • JumpCrisscross 3 hours ago

            > Your response, and the downvotes

            I upvoted rayiner’s comment because it’s argued in good faith.

            (What would be in bad faith would be putting forward a third party’s flawed argument without pointing out the flaws for shits and giggles.)

            • rayiner 3 hours ago

              I certainly believe in the argument so no problem ascribing it to me.

              • JumpCrisscross 2 hours ago

                For what it's worth, I don't think the science on this is settled. I think the evidence swings towards too many irresponsible Americans having too many guns. But the single-family bias in school shooters is something I hadn't read about before.

                One takeaway from that evidence, however, could be that single-parent homes should have restrictions on how many guns they can own, what kind of guns those can be and how they must be stored. The fact that American single-family kids turn into school shooters, while the rest of the (rich) world's do not, continues to speak to a uniquely American nexus. The most obvious and evidenced one is our prevalence (and loose regulation) of guns.

          • mft_ 3 hours ago

            Not sure I agree, based on (more subtle?) reading comprehension.

            > The conservative view simply is that this correlation is causal, while the liberal view is that the causation runs in the opposite direction of the correlation.

            You're right that the poster doesn't make it clear (deliberately or not) but the use of the word "simply" feels sympathetic, and suggesting that the "liberal view" is that correlation and causation are opposed (when that would typically be counter-intuitive) sounds critical. At least, that was my comprehension of the post, as someone without any skin in the game.

      • card_zero 4 hours ago

        I noticed the increase over time too. In the 1920s, the era of Al Capone and friends shooting up restaurants with submachine guns, there were 10 incidents of school shootings. What's up with that? I guess the population was smaller ... was it 26 times smaller than the 2010s (259 incidents)? I checked, and in fact the difference is about a factor of 3, not 26.

        • jandrewrogers 3 hours ago

          The largest school massacre in US history[0] happened in the 1920s. It was accomplished with high explosives. There were several school bombings in the 1950s too but few shootings. For whatever reason, school shootings displaced school bombings in recent decades. It has been a long time since there has been a major school bombing.

          Bombings were the popular mode of creating mass casualties 50+ years ago even though actual machine-guns were widely available back then and almost completely unavailable for the last several decades.

          [0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bath_School_disaster

        • rayiner 3 hours ago

          The U.S. population has about tripled since 1920.

      • jandrewrogers 3 hours ago

        Up until the 1960s, almost all of the mass casualty events at schools, including the largest one in US history, were accomplished using explosives. If you only look at shootings you'll miss the bigger picture.

        The most interesting question that arises from this is why the switch from explosives to firearms by perpetrators of mass casualty events.

        It wasn't due to regulations on high-explosives, which were essentially cash-and-carry for the entire 20th century. On the other hand, regulation of firearms greatly increased starting in the 1960s.

      • wbl 4 hours ago

        Are the children in the divorced houses doing the shooting?

      • philjohn 4 hours ago
      • conception 4 hours ago

        Huh that’s interesting on gun ownership though is pretty flat, 5%ish decrease. But also hunting has dropped a lot but gun ownership hasn’t matched that trend so people are getting guns for non-hunting reasons at greater rates as well - weapons more than as tools.

  • nailer 4 hours ago

    The Kirk assassination was awful, as well as the plainly false things said about his life by some parts of the media. But nobody is obligated to have a particular political opinion and Kirk himself would have pointed out that civil disagreement is this man's right as an American.

    • watwut 4 hours ago

      Kirks career literally started with organised harasment of what they perceived as leftists professors. Kirk himself was pretty atrocious verbally to people he looked down at. And he wink wink condoned violence against husband of democrat.

      His murder was wrong. It is not true that he would be some kind of universal "civil disagreement" advocate.

      • nerdponx 4 hours ago

        Murdering bad people is probably wrong, up to certain limits. Arresting someone for saying that the victim was also a bad person is definitely unequivocally wrong.

        • nailer 3 hours ago

          I'm pretty sure murder is wrong.

      • nailer 4 hours ago

        Do you want to post an example? Kirk would defend students being harassed for unrelated political matters - eg the most recent case on his channel was an Agriculture major who had to take some kind of 'equity in agriculture' class and was being bothered by her professor for not being left leaning.

        • watwut 3 hours ago

          Kirk on the attack against Pelosi husband: “Why has he not been bailed out? [] By the way, if some amazing patriot out there in San Francisco or the Bay Area wants to really be a midterm hero, someone should go and bail this guy out,..." That was about attacker by the way. Like common, the start if Kirks career was making a list of "leftists professors" and promoting their harassment. Kirk literally intentionally created and promoted toxic culture we have now. That is who he was.

          Yeah, he would defend right winger or bigot. He would attack anyone not right wing. The rights of people who were not white conservatives did not concerned kirk. He was literally against civil rights, openly. Blacks are all stupid and trans are all groomers. They all should be fired.

          I have no idea about what happened between that "left leaning professor" and student. But there is about zero reason to believe what right wing activist like Kirk says about the issue. As far as he was concerned, left need not exist and need to be punished for existing.

  • standardUser 4 hours ago

    Trump's America. Don't forget to wipe your phone before travelling. You don't need to break any laws to have your life ruined, you just have to stumble into the crosshairs of the most vindictive leader we have ever had to endure.

  • vkou 5 hours ago

    The excuse for why he was arrested (some school in the area shares the same name as the one that Trump was downplaying a shooting at) is, of course utter bullshit.

    Its amazing how far people are willing to bend over backwards to explain how the speech of these public figures is harmless and non-threatening and none of us have anything to worry about (despite their actions putting the lie to it), but apply an entirely different set of standards to people criticising them.

    Much of Kirk's public life and the life of his political allies was devoted to minimizing the impact of and the empathy we should feel for school shootings (because the ends justify the means of furthering his political agenda). He went on to die in one.

    • NetMageSCW 4 hours ago

      What school shooting did he die in?

      • card_zero 4 hours ago

        #497 by my count, excluding non-fatal ones.

      • vkou 4 hours ago

        He was at a school, he got shot by a man who got a gun and took it to a school with intent to kill.

        This happens every day to other people, and the advice of him and his political allies has always been to get over it and to stop politicizing it. It would be great if they could collectively take it and stop politicizing it.

      • HDThoreaun 4 hours ago

        The utah valley university shooting

  • thegrim33 4 hours ago

    The guy made multiple posts, which, taken together, made people supposedly consider him as making threats. The journalist here decides to cover this story, but only mention the content of one of his posts, and completely ignoring and not mentioning the contents of the other posts.

    Surely the other posts are completely benign and there's nothing of interest in there, right? Surely the journalist had a reason for only reporting on the contents of one of his posts, and not the others, and that choice wasn't intentional in order to present a biased interpretation of reality. Surely.

    • baobabKoodaa 4 hours ago

      The other posts were linked in the story. They were your everyday internet meme stuff. No person genuinely thought that this guy was threatening to do a school shooting.

    • wtfwhateven 3 hours ago

      >Surely the journalist had a reason for only reporting on the contents of one of his posts, and not the others, and that choice wasn't intentional in order to present a biased interpretation of reality. Surely.

      Yes because the sheriff explicitly stated it was the trump quote picture, and nothing else, that got the man arrested, charged and thrown in a cage.

      https://www.tennessean.com/story/news/2025/09/23/tennessee-l...

      The article even links to the above.

      Makes me wonder if you even read the article or already knew what I just said and are being dishonest.