Nashville release police bodycam video of Christmas Day terror attack

From Malcontentment Happy Hour, December 28, 2020

Police officers act with courage and professionalism in the face of terror bombing chaos

Nashville PD released bodycam video of the Christmas Day domestic terrorism bombing. First responders don’t run away from the loud noises and screams, they run toward them. We talk about Anthony Q. Warner, his connections to AT&T, and dive into some of the Q and election conspiracies.

EDITOR NOTE: Anthony Q. Warner was misidentified in our notes as “Andrew” Q. Warner. We apologize for this error. — Watch live at https://www.twitch.tv/malcontentmenttango

WARNING: Graphic video with scenes of violence related to terrorist activity.

Indigenous peoples race time and COVID to save their languages

From Malcontentment Happy Hour, December 28, 2020

Tribal nations fight fear and distrust to immunize native language speakers and elders from COVID

Hundreds of indigenous dialects are at risk of disappearing forever as the number of native speakers dwindles. COVID has placed a special urgency to protect native speakers and tribal elders to keep traditions, and language, alive.

Driver screams racial slurs as he drives through Seattle protesters

From Malcontentment Happy Hour, December 28, 2020

Seattle police fail to take action as driver threatens pedestrians on December 27

On December 27 a driver cuts through Seattle Police and protesters, utters racial insults, and after almost hitting several pedestrians drives off. Despite Seattle Police assuring multiple people they would, “take care of it,” officers let the driver speed off unsafely and take no action.

WARNING: Violent actions and racial slurs.

Delays in stimulus package create unemployment chaos

From Malcontentment Happy Hour, December 28, 2020

President Donald Trump signs the COVID Relief bill and Omnibus spending bill, but the delay has created chaos

After almost a week of delays, and allowing the December 26, 2020 unemployment deadline to pass, President Donald Trump signed the COVID Relief and Omnibus Spending bill on Sunday evening. The delay in signing pushed over 12 million Americans over an unemployment cliff and has caused chaos for employment security.

In Washington state, Governor Jay Inslee and Employment Security is providing a one-time payment of $550 for PUA recipients as a bridge to coming federal assistance.

Malcontentment Happy Hour: December 28, 2020

Our live webcast from the Seattle Anarchist Jurisdiction

The show from December 28, 2020, featured guest host, Jennifer Smith.

  • Federal stimulus package follies and how it impacts Washington state unemployment
  • Red truck racist incident at protest march in Seattle
  • Saving indigenous language speakers from COVID-19
  • Nashville body cam video from December 25, 2020, and Andrew Q Warner
  • Behind the Pole – December 27, 2020 protest march

Washington state provides temporary unemployment benefits to 100K

[OLYMPIA] (Malcontent News) – The $892B COVID Relief package and the $1.4T Omnibus spending bill went unsigned by President Donald Trump on Saturday, cutting off unemployment benefits for up to 14 million Americans. In Washington state, over 100,000 people collecting Pandemic Unemployment Assistance, or PUA, had their benefits end today. If the bills go unsigned through Monday, a partial government shutdown will sideline up to 2.1 million federal employees despite the raging COVID pandemic and the potential terrorist attack in Nashville on Christmas.

On Sunday, Governor Jay Inslee announced emergency aid for many collecting PUA. According to the state, residents on PUA should continue to file to receive a flat payment of $550 next week. If the federal government continues to not respond to the ongoing crisis, a $50 million fund is expected to last about four weeks.

While federal law requires unemployment to be paid on a sliding scale based on income, the emergency aid is a fixed payment. State officials indicated the average PUA check before federal funding expired was $300.

Thurston County prosecutor refuses to charge Forest Machala

Thurston County prosecutor has elected not to charge Forest Machala with assault in the first degree or any other felony. On December 5, 2020, Machala was arrested for shooting a Black 20-year old counterprotester while attending a “stop the steal” anti-mask protest in Olympia. Washington State Police decided there was sufficient evidence to support the assault in the first degree charge, the equivalent of attempted murder in Washington state, based on eyewitness accounts, testimony of the victim, and video in the area.

The prosecutor’s actions send the charges back to the Washington State Patrol to request more evidence to support the charge. Machala was released on $50,000 bail shortly after being arrested. He has been staying in Bellingham as part of the conditions of his release. Prosecutors also dropped the restraining order between Machala and the shooting victim, and Machala can begin the process to have his guns returned to him.

The city prosecutor’s office in Olympia is closed for Christmas, so no comment is available on whether the city will pursue misdemeanor or gross misdemeanor charges against Machala. Stephen Kurtz was also arrested on December 5 for gross misdemeanor assault and failure to disperse. He was charged by the city of Olympia and is out on $1000 bail. In the Kurtz case, multiple journalists caught him brandishing a handgun, which police also witnessed.

Malcontentment Happy Hour: December 24, 2020

Our live webcast from the Seattle Anarchist Jurisdiction

The show from December 24, 2020, featured guest host, Jennifer Smith.

  • The police shooting of Andre Hill in Columbus, Ohio
  • Donald Trump puts 5M into poverty by refusing to sign the COVID Relief package and Omnibus bills
  • December is the deadliest month for COVID, and the IHME increases its projections
  • The incredible journey of Deb Haaland

Minorities and poor more likely to be accused of Abusive Head Trauma

Shaken-Baby Syndrome, now called Abusive Head Trauma (AHT), is rooted in questionable science. Doctors, nurses, and social workers sometimes make snap decisions when an infant arrives in an emergency department. Multiple organizations, including the Innocence Project, are questioning hundreds of convictions that have disproportionately impact BIPOC and low-income families. Hundreds of families dealing with the trauma of an injured child have been thrown into a social services machine unfairly over the last decade. Biased investigators, some lacking medical training, treat them as guilty until proven guilty.

It is estimated that 1200 to 1400 cases of AHT are diagnosed in the United States annually. About 200 of those cases will go to a criminal trial. In some ways, the nightmare is worse for families accused of child abuse but never enter the criminal justice system. In many states, Child Protective Services have near extrajudicial powers. Families are torn apart, careers ruined, and adults placed on known abuser lists that follow them for life.

In the medical community, a group of three medical conditions is considered the triad of AHT. Bleeding around the brain, retinal bleeding, and brain damage, when presented together, were historically considered a significant indicator of child abuse. However, the medical community is advised to do a comprehensive medical examination, including MRI and CAT Scan, before considering AHT.

Norman Guthkelch, a retired neurosurgeon, was one of the doctors who helped coin the term “shaken-baby syndrome” in 1971. Twenty years later, he started defending families wrongly accused of abuse as gaps in the research began to reveal itself.

The truth is infants and toddlers do get violently shaken by abusive parents. Other telltale signs include pattern bruises, severely bruised buttocks, cauliflower ears, and unexplained injuries such as cigarette burns. However, what has been learned since 1971 is some medical conditions can explain the “triad” where abuse played no role.

Ironically, some doctors are against doing additional tests because pediatric patients are challenging. MRI and CAT Scans require a patient to lie still, a challenge with an infant, let alone one who may be having seizures. Infants with brain bleeding and brain damage can have severe complications if sedated because anesthetics can worsen their medical condition. 

In a survey conducted by the National Institute of Health, 71% of nurses indicated they could spot child abuse in a patient, despite having no specific training. The same paper showed that once medical professionals determined abuse was the cause, diagnostic testing stopped. 

According to the Journal of the American Medical Association, bias may play a role and who gets accused. Minority parents, white single parents, and poor white parents are more likely to be accused and convicted of child abuse. However, there is no evidence to support these groups commit more abuse. On the contrary, multiple studies show that white, middle-class, and wealthy parents are more likely to get a pass from the medical community.

A frequent indicator of AHT beyond the triad, and bruises, is multiple visits to emergency departments for increasingly worsening injuries. White families with both adults present are far less likely to be accused of abuse. By some studies, the difference could be as much as 35% to 40%. According to JAMA, “While minority children had higher rates of abusive fractures in our sample, they were also more likely to be evaluated and reported for suspected abuse, even after controlling for the likelihood of abusive injury. This suggests that racial differences do exist in the evaluation and reporting of pediatric fractures for child abuse, particularly in toddlers with accidental injuries.”

Some hospitals have formed medical teams that specialize in child abuse cases and AHT. Interestingly, in hospitals that created these teams, child abuse diagnosis increased, as much as 400% over a decade. Child abuse advocates justify this increase by stating that either abuse has grown over the last 20 years or that many cases when undiagnosed.

However, as far back as 1985, research showed that the system for identifying abuse at hospitals is flawed and bias. To quote the study, “To

the extent that we selectively invoke agents of the state to police the lives of poor and non-White families, [medical professionals] may be inappropriately and unfairly condemning these families as evil. In selectively ignoring the prevalence of child abuse in more affluent, majority homes, we may be perpetuating a myth that child abusers are out there.”

One of the challenges medical professionals have is deciding if a relatively minor injury on an infant or toddler is abuse. Accidents do happen; infants do have undiagnosed issues that may present themselves after birth. In the United States, post-natal care is far shorter than in other industrialized nations. But, multiple studies show that white, wealthy parents are far less likely to raise abuse questions until the abuse reaches a severe level.

Parents wrongly accused of abuse face additional challenges. In a bitter irony, hiring a lawyer, questioning diagnosis, asking for second opinions, and refusing to speak to investigators are all considered confirmation signs of abuse. The steps that the legal community recommends raises suspicion. Being accused of child abuse is traumatic in itself. Unemotional responses, disconnecting from the conversation, and other actions, which can be coping skills, are also seen as supporting the trauma finding.

Making an unbiased finding of child abuse is a challenge because most people are inherently biased when it comes to children’s welfare. Combined with racial and income bias and the rapid decision making required for a critically injured patient, the question of legitimacy around AHT diagnoses will continue. 

Chris Guenzler arraigned on first-degree assault charges

[OLYMPIA] (Malcontent News) – Chris Guenzler was arraigned today in Thurston County superior court on assault, first-degree while armed with a deadly weapon. Guenzler entered a plea of not guilty through attorney Angela Colaitua. Judge Carol Murphy kept bail at $50,000 for the single charge.

On December 5, 2020, Guenzler attended an anti-mask and “stop the steal” protest in Olympia, Washington, which turned violent. During a brawl between protesters and counter-protesters, protesters fired paintball guns, deployed bear mace, and struck people with flagpoles. During this incident, Guenzler drew a pistol and fired a single shot into the crowd, grazing a person. Protesters from both sides made an audible gasp, while others hid behind cars.

Guenzler’s social media footprint shows strong alignment to the Trump campaign and far-right organizations. He is a graduate of Port Orchard High School, and according to his social media profile, he attended Kitsap High School for some time. His profile shows an affinity to sexualized content, guns, Trump, and white supremacy.

The next court date is January 6, 2021, with a trial date of February 16, 2020.