NYC

New York City Restricted Dogs on the Subway, so People Started Doing This

(ANTIMEDIA) Drug laws are often highlighted as examples of the failure of prohibition. From the United States’ notorious – and ineffective — ban on alcohol in the 1920s to the current restrictions on cannabis, it’s easy to see how such laws fail to produce the intended results.
But New Yorkers have recently provided another, cuter example of this dynamic: they’re bucking a ban on animals in the subway.

Porkins Policy Radio episode 83 WTC 93 Anniversary and Death of The Blind Sheikh with Tom Secker

Tom Secker joins me for a discussion of the 24th anniversary of World Trade Center Bombing and the recent death Omar Abdel-Rahman aka The Blind Sheikh. We begin by discussing the official theory that the government has presented: that a group of young self radicalized Muslim men bombed the WTC, and had no apparent connection to international terrorism. Tom then breaks down aspects to the official conspiracy theory. We talk about the whole issue of FBI informant Emad Salem and the erroneous allegations that he was allowed to bomb the World Trade Center.