Anonymous ID: 2187a3 Feb. 17, 2022, 6:55 a.m. No.15649380   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun

https://www.newsnationnow.com/entertainment-news/hutchins-lawyer-baldwin-blaming-others-for-rust-shooting/

On the heels of Hutchins' family filing a wrongful death lawsuit against Baldwin and others on Tuesday, the family's attorney, Brian Panish, appeared on "Dan Abrams Live," where he claimed the "30 Rock" star "is continuing to do what he's done throughout this โ€“ blaming others."

"He's not accepting any responsibility," Panish said, adding that Baldwin, 63, "refused any gun safety training, number one."

"Number two, he pointed a gun at someone on a set. You don't do that without plexiglass and other precautions. Number three, why were there bullets in the gun to begin with whether they were fake or real? It was only a lineup. There was no intention for him to shoot the weapon. He wasn't supposed to shoot the weapon. Nobody expected him to do that, yet he recklessly fired the weapon while pointing it at three people, killed one and injured another," Panish added.

Anonymous ID: 2187a3 Feb. 17, 2022, 7:10 a.m. No.15649474   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun   >>9498 >>9499 >>9546

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/ottawa/police-chief-diane-deans-1.6354150

Diane Deans ousted from oversight board in overhaul of Ottawa's police leadership

One day after Ottawa's police chief resigned in the midst of historic civil unrest, city council voted to overhaul the police board and remove chair Diane Deans in a meeting full of high drama and vitriolic accusations.

The surprise move was labelled as a way to "restore public trust" nearly three weeks into protests that have rocked the capital.

But in a council term that has seen years of divisiveness and petty moments, many councillors characterized this move as a "political stunt" and said they were "disgusted" by Mayor Jim Watson, with a few even calling for him to resign.

"You're destabilizing the oversight body for Ottawa Police in the middle of the biggest crisis in this city's history," charged Deans. "That is being ridiculously political."

Following a vote of 15 to nine, Deans will be replaced by one of council's longest serving members and close allies of the mayor, former police board chair Eli El-Chantiry.

The police services board is set to meet Thursday to elect a new chair to replace Deans, a seven-term councillor who plans to run for mayor.

The motion, put forward by councillors Scott Moffatt and Laura Dudas, suggested the board had "not been effective" in its oversight of the police.

An interim board "with more experience with emergency operations" would let Steve Bell, who has been serving as police chief for a day, end the on-going illegal protests.

At the heart of the dispute โ€” one of the ugliest seen during this term of council โ€” was the leaked news that the board had swiftly hired an interim police chief from outside the city without a competition, and without telling council.

"We have an individual, who was a former chief, who's going to come to Ottawa โ€” who obviously doesn't know our city โ€” in the midst of the biggest crisis in our city's history, and he's bringing a bunch of consultants with him," Watson told reporters after the seven-hour council meeting.

"How much is this costing? How did this individual get chosen? Who are these consultants they're bringing? There are a lot of questions. And I think a lot of people thought they had lost confidence in the police board."

But a number of council members charged that the move was not about a loss of confidence in the board. Deans and the mayor have sparred on many occasions. Recently, he criticized her for trying to trim the increase to the 2022 police budget.

"You know what makes me the saddest of all?" asked Deans as the vote approached. "You're unseating a progressive board that was bringing about important and progressive change in policing in Ottawa. And you're going back to the 1950sโ€ฆ and old-school law and order."

Anonymous ID: 2187a3 Feb. 17, 2022, 7:23 a.m. No.15649551   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun   >>9569

>>15649505

>https://www.canada.ca/en/canadian-heritage/services/art-monuments/monuments/holocaust.html

Holocaust Drone Footage

The camera moves toward the name of the monument which is inscribed on a large rectangular slab of concrete: National Holocaust Monument. The sun glints behind the sign. The camera rises over the top of the monument; then we see stairs leading up to a terrace. The camera now pans right and we see a mural of a barbed-wire fence of Auschwitz-Birkenau, the largest of the Nazi killing centres. The camera then moves to the largest mural, which depicts an abandoned rail bed in Treblinka that was used to transport Jews to the killing centre.

Anonymous ID: 2187a3 Feb. 17, 2022, 7:27 a.m. No.15649569   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun   >>9600

>>15649551

>https://www.canada.ca/en/canadian-heritage/services/art-monuments/monuments/holocaust.html

Design team: Lord Cultural Resources (cultural planners), Daniel Libeskind (architect), Edward Burtynsky (artist-photographer), Claude Cormier (landscape architect) and Doris Bergen (Holocaust scholar).

 

https://www.lord.ca/

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daniel_Libeskind

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doris_Bergen

Anonymous ID: 2187a3 Feb. 17, 2022, 7:33 a.m. No.15649600   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun

>>15649569

>https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daniel_Libeskind

While much of Libeskind's work has been well-received, it has also been the subject of often severe criticism. Critics often describe Libeskind's work as deconstructivist. Critics charge that it reflects a limited architectural vocabulary of jagged edges, sharp angles and tortured geometries, that can fall into cliche, and that it ignores location and context. In 2008 Los Angeles Times critic Christopher Hawthorne wrote: "Anyone looking for signs that Daniel Libeskind's work might deepen profoundly over time, or shift in some surprising direction, has mostly been doing so in vain." In 2006, in the New York Times Nicolai Ouroussoff stated: "his worst buildings, like a 2002 war museum in England suggesting the shards of a fractured globe, can seem like a caricature of his own aesthetic." In the UK magazine Building Design, Owen Hatherley wrote of Libeskind's students' union for London Metropolitan University: "All of its vaulting, aggressive gestures were designed to 'put London Met on the map', and to give an image of fearless modernity with, however, little of consequence." William JR Curtis in Architectural Review called his Run Run Shaw Creative Media Centre "a pile-up of Libeskindian clichรฉs without sense, form or meaning" and wrote that his Hyundai Development Corporation Headquarters delivered "a trite and noisy corporate message".