2011.07.10 16:55 akharon Richland, Kennewick, Pasco & the surrounding area
2013.08.27 07:56 Scuze Tri-City Trees
2024.05.21 16:23 Zealousideal_Ice3130 Accused of threatening coworkers, put on the news, SJPD really tried….
2024.05.21 16:18 Tooth_Grinder88 Reinvestigating Species - False Widow. Kennewick, WA.
Looking at the photo this seems to be a male false widow but curious what others think. submitted by Tooth_Grinder88 to spiders [link] [comments] |
2024.05.21 15:53 Whey-Men Calif. -- Riverside County has reached a $7.5 million settlement with the family of a man who died after a violent confrontation with law enforcement while in jail.
submitted by Whey-Men to prisons [link] [comments]
2024.05.21 15:06 cometshoney Willie Higgins
Legal electrocution submitted by cometshoney to DeathCertificates [link] [comments] |
2024.05.21 15:03 LeftyOnenut Patina is overated
I'm usually not that guy. I dig a good patina as much as the next man. But, and hear me out, you stop in a small family owned Ace Hardware that's been around for decades to pick up a 1/2" notch trowel, and happen upon two NOS Plumb replacement hatchet handles marked $4 with a crusty tag from the distant 1900's, you have some hard choices to make. Dug through my bucket of assorted axe, hatchet, and hammer heads, that accumulate from buying lots of tools for one plane or chisel you want from it the way one does, and found a damn near new Plumb half hatchet head with barely a scratch on it. Grabbed a chunk from the scrap bin and chiseled a wedge for it out of some Osage orange, of course, being that I'm in the town of Osage in Osage County, on the Osage Reservation it seemed an apt choice. But who wants to hang a "almost looks new" head on a mint retro handle like this. Pretty sure the light horsemen would jail a man for that sort of thing. Just didn't seem right. So, I sanded it all the way up to 3000 grit and then buffed it with a bit of polishing compound until it has a mirror finish so shiny you can see the ghosts of your forefather's shake their heads in shame behind you. Sorry, but I like my shiny new choppy poundy thing. submitted by LeftyOnenut to Tools [link] [comments] |
2024.05.21 14:22 Moonbeam0773 Judge allows Kouri Richins’ defense attorneys to quit criminal case (and Lisa Darden indicates withdrawal due to conflict of interest)
The Kamas mom may need to find new lawyers after her defense team withdrew from her murder case. submitted by Moonbeam0773 to KouriRichins [link] [comments] Third District Judge Richard Mrazik made the ruling during a closed hearing Monday, May 20. Kouri Richins, the Kamas mother of three charged with murdering her husband, had been represented by attorneys from Salt Lake City-based Ray Quinney & Nebeker. In court papers filed May 17, Richins’ attorneys said an “irreconcilable and nonwaivable situation” made it impossible for them to continue to represent her. Mrazik granted the request, but public court records offer no details about his reasoning. Lead defense attorney Skye Lazaro declined to comment after the hearing. Lisa Darden, Richins’ mother, told KPCW the issue was related to conflicts of interest, not whether their family is able to pay for her daughter’s defense. Richins now has three choices: represent herself, find a new attorney or ask the court to appoint a public defender. It was not immediately clear May 20 how long the withdrawal of Richins’ defense team might delay the case. Richins remains in the Summit County jail, where she has been held without bond since her arrest more than a year ago. A hearing to determine whether the former real estate agent would stand trial for the alleged poisoning of her husband Eric Richins initially scheduled for May 15 was postponed. Her lawyers filed a petition to withdraw two days later. Summit County Attorney Margaret Olson declined to comment after the May 20 hearing, but said the judge will hold another hearing on May 24 at 10 a.m. Mrazik closed the May 20 hearing after defense attorneys said it would involve confidential information that may impede Richins’ right to a fair trial. She faces 11 felony counts, including aggravated murder and attempted murder, in connection with the March 2022 overdose death of her husband Eric Richins. She would go on to write a children’s book about grief. No plea has been entered to the charges, but both Richins and her family have maintained her innocence. If she is tried and convicted of the charges, she could spend the rest of her life in jail. Separate from the criminal charges, Richins has been tied up in civil court with Eric Richins’ family over his money and estate. Court records show her attorneys withdrew from the estate case in April and all other civil cases May 17. |
2024.05.21 08:40 Strong_Tell499 Whatcom County, WA is hiring Special Projects Manager - Construction US
submitted by Strong_Tell499 to USJobLeads [link] [comments]
2024.05.21 08:07 cherrymachete Suspect arrested 30 years after elderly woman found stabbed to death in her home
Thanks to meticulously preserved DNA evidence, police have arrested a murder suspect over 30 years after a woman was killed in her home. submitted by cherrymachete to TrueCrimeDiscussion [link] [comments] Rose Hnath, 78, was found on the floor of her Pennsylvania home on 21 January 1989. She had been beaten and stabbed to death. Ms Hnath had tried to fight off whoever had broken into her home in the Coplay section of North Whitehall Township, investigators said, but they were unable to pinpoint a suspect until this year. On Thursday, Lehigh County District Attorney Gavin P Holihan announced that Michael Breisch, 65, had been arrested on suspicion of her murder. "Although [the case] went cold, it was never forgotten and it was never put aside," the District Attorney said at a press conference. Police were called out to Ms Hnath’s home after her family went to check on her when she failed to show up for her regular church service. They found her with multiple stab wounds and other signs of trauma. Her home had also been ransacked and it appeared as if the victim had tried to fight off her attacker. In doing so, Mr Holihan said she aided officers in collecting vital evidence on her killer. Mr Holihan praised the work of officers at the time of the murder for collecting and preserving vital evidence that was used to identify the suspect using a new form of DNA testing not available in 1989. That evidence included a knife and pellet gun found near the crime scene, which police believed could have been used by whoever killed Ms Hnath. "They didn’t know that the pieces they collected would somehow be able to be tested for touch DNA. But they did their job and did it well... It’s a testament to the work they did then," the DA added. Mr Holihan explained that DNA touch testing was used to match the evidence to Mr Breisch, meaning very small samples left behind on the preserved items were able to be tested at a level not possible 30 years ago. Back then, the suspect was supposed to have been held at a community corrections facility in nearby Allentown. He was arrested and charged with escaping from that facility 10 days after Ms Hnath’s murder. After his arrest in Ohio, Mr Breisch was extradited to Pennsylvania, where he is being held at the Lehigh County Jail pending an initial hearing on 21 May. As for Ms Hnath’s family, the district attorney said they were “gratified and relieved” that an arrest had finally been made. |
2024.05.21 07:49 menacetwoosociety 87 or 91 and above?
Question 🙋♂️ submitted by menacetwoosociety to f150 [link] [comments] My co-worker is against using 87 on his 22 3.5 eb and only does 93 and tells me I am going to end up screwing up my engine soon. I told him I go between both (one week I pump 87 next 91) and this is my 2nd eb truck and have not had any issues at all with the previous one (19 2.7 eb) which I had about 100k when i traded it for the 23 tremor 3.5 eb. Should I be only pumping 91 and above? There are so many mixed feelings on this topic regarding fuel and no clear right or wrong. I often see folks asking for tunes and others saying they’ve been using 87 forever without issues. Well today I did 91 and also got my self a bottle of bourbon 🥃 |
2024.05.21 07:06 nosotros_road_sodium Home Depot to pay $1.3 million for fire code violations after arson destroyed San Jose store
SAN JOSE — Home Depot will pay $1.3 million after an investigation found that a bevy of fire code violations, including non-functioning sprinklers, helped a 2022 arson fire completely destroy a South San Jose store and pollute the air for several days in surrounding neighborhoods, authorities said.Full story from the Mercury News (gift link)
That dollar amount includes $850,000 in civil penalties and $150,000 that will go toward fire prevention education and outreach in the South Bay, according to the Santa Clara County District Attorney’s Office. It was the DA’s Bureau of Investigations that examined reported failures in fire-suppression systems at the home-improvement giant’s Blossom Hill Road location, which was leveled by fast-moving flames on April 9, 2022.
“Fire code violations are potential tragedies in waiting. Ignoring them isn’t just risky; it’s reckless,” District Attorney Jeff Rosen said in a statement. “It risks far more than property. It risks lives.”
An investigation, which was headed by the San Jose Fire Department and grew to include the federal Bureau of Alcohol Tobacco Firearms and Explosives, determined that the fire was deliberately set in the store’s lumber section. Dyllin Jaycruz Gogue, 29, has been charged with arson and is being held without bail in the Elmwood men’s jail in Milpitas, though his case has remained in an early plea-entering stage in the two years since.
2024.05.21 07:00 Noahnovanoah Seeking inputs
2024.05.21 06:29 Dense-Ad-3247 Don't be dumb like me
2024.05.21 06:07 Crowsbeak-Returns We're probably going to lose another of great word now. https://www.teenvogue.com/story/the-sinister-history-of-the-word-moron-explained
The Sinister History of the Word "Moron," Explained
It's much more than just a casual insult.
By Marlena Scott
September 12, 2017FWHTTB The science of eugenics and sex life, the regeneration of the human race (1914)Z4 Collection / Alamy Stock Photo
OG History is a Teen Vogue series where we unearth history not told through a white, cisheteropatriarchal lens. In this piece, writer Marlena Scott explores the history of of the word "moron," which is tied to the eugenics movement in the United States.
"Moron" is commonly used to describe someone who has made a decision that is perceived as unwise, or to scold oneself over a mistake or slipup. Whichever way the word is flung around, the origins of "moron" are far more sinister.
The term is attributed to psychologist and eugenicist Henry H. Goddard, who used it to describe “feeble-minded” individuals. It is closely tied to the United States’s involvement in eugenics, a scientific term, meaning "well-born," that describes the belief that the human population can be controlled by breeding to increase the occurrence of desirable heritable characteristics. It focuses on eliminating “undesirable” individuals, singling out unmarried mothers, people of color, the poor, and those with disabilities. In the United States, eugenics influenced much of the immigration and segregation policies in the 20th century. "Moron" and other words like it — such as "idiot" — were used to support racist, classist ideas and to advance white supremacy behind the mask of scientific advancement.
According to a report from NPR's Code Switch, "moron" was born of Goddard’s fascination with intelligence and his desire to measure what it was and what it was not. In the early 20th century, psychologists grouped people who fell behind the ideal measure of intelligence into three categories that we now recognize as casual insults: “imbecile,” “idiot,” and “feeble-minded.” Goddard, unsatisfied with the existing terms, coined "moron" to embody both low intelligence and behavioral deviance. None of these endured as medical terms, but at the time they were enough to institutionalize someone and sterilize them as a means to prevent them from reproducing.
Goddard organized patients by disease, habit, or condition, as laid out in his 1911 work, Heredity of Feeblemindedness. He analyzed and coded families with the following qualities: "A, alcoholic (habitual drunkard); B, blind; C, criminal; D, deaf; Dwf, dwarf; E, epileptic; F, feeble-minded, either black letter, or white letter on black ground (the former when sex is unknown); I, insane; M, migraine; N, normal; Sx, grave sexual offender; Sy, syphilitic; T, tuberculous; W, wanderer, tramp, or truant." Goddard wrote of one family: “The offspring of the feeble-minded woman and this feeble-minded man were three feeble-minded children and two others who died in infancy. An illegitimate child of this woman is feeble-minded and a criminal.”
"The idiot is not our greatest problem. He is indeed loathsome. ... Nevertheless, he lives his life and is done. He does not continue the race with a line of children like himself. ... It is the moron type that makes for us our great problem," Goddard said in 1912.
The volume of immigrants coming into the country during the early 20th century was the highest it had ever been. According to the U.S. Census Bureau, between 1901 and 1910, 8,795,400 people immigrated to the United States, primarily from the area then known as Austria-Hungary, Italy, and Germany. It was essential to Goddard's work to ensure there were no "feeble-minded morons" in the bunch, so he sent assistants to Ellis Island in 1913 to observe and identify "morons" according to his methods. As previously mentioned, one of Goddard's methods included a pseudoscientific coded guide that looked something like a family tree. Goddard would study families, code their behavior by letter, and draw conclusions that the feeble-mindedness or blindness or deafness of the preceding generation would affect the children. According NPR's Code Switch, 40% of Italians, Hungarians, and Jewish people that were tested qualified as "morons" and were deported in 1913. Deportations doubled the following year.
WATCH
Those labeled "moron" could be institutionalized, deported, or sterilized in order to create a race of humans deemed superior by those in positions of influence and power, according to a New Yorker piece on the history of eugenics. Eugenics was widely embraced in academia and even celebrated at the World's Fair. In the first half of the 20th century, this movement in the U.S. led to the involuntary sterilization of around 60,000 people, mostly women of child-bearing age, who were subjectively deemed unfit to reproduce.
Federally funded sterilization programs were legalized in 32 states. The state of Virginia passed its Eugenical Sterilization Act in 1924, and to test the legality of the law, Carrie Buck, a poor 17-year-old girl from Charlottesville, was sent to the Virginia Colony for Epileptics and Feeble-Minded — an asylum for those deemed so-called "morons" where her mother, Emma, had been admitted just a few years prior. Carrie was pregnant as the result of rape and, after giving birth, was sterilized at the colony with no understanding of what was happening to her. The move was backed by law and further supported by the Supreme Court, as demonstrated in the 1927 Buck v. Bell case, in which the court ruled that the sterilization of the "unfit" — including the intellectually disabled — did not violate the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. After observing Buck, her mother, and her grandmother — all poor white women — Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. delivered the opinion of the court, writing, "three generations of imbeciles was enough." This decision has never been overturned.
If this thought process sounds grossly aligned with ideals promoted in Nazi Germany, that’s because it is — but eugenics and the attempt to discontinue “feeble” bloodlines is American-bred. In the 1930s, Nazi leadership turned to American eugenics as inspiration in developing tactics to ensure the erasure of European Jews. In Mein Kampf, Adolf Hilter wrote, “There is today one state in which at least weak beginnings toward a better conception [of immigration] are noticeable. Of course, it is not our model German Republic, but [the U.S.] …”
Southern black women were sterilized en masse, often without consent, for much of the 20th century. It was a practice so common that it received a nickname: a "Mississippi appendectomy." The sterilization of Native Americans occurred as late as the 1980s. While some states have formally apologized for their role in the practice, the desire to control “undesirable” groups still persists among some in the U.S., leaving vulnerable populations at risk.
In May, Sam Benningfield, a general sessions judge in Tennessee, announced that he would offer shorter prison sentences to inmates — a population largely impacted by the nation's ongoing opioid crisis — who would undergo vasectomies or receive the birth control implant Nexplanon. "I'm trying to help these folks begin to think about taking responsibility for their life and giving them a leg up — you know, when they get out of jail — to perhaps rehabilitate themselves and not be burdened again with unwanted children and all that comes with that," Benningfield told CBS News. In July, the judge pulled the offer following protest from health officials and civil rights attorneys, according to The Washington Post.
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Nine decades after Carrie Buck was sterilized, white nationalists, white supremacists, neo-Nazis, and the so-called "alt-right" gathered in her hometown for "Unite the Right" rallies on August 11 and 12. Many of those present called for a "purer" race of human beings and chanted phrases like, "You will not replace us." The weekend ended in violence and the death of Heather Heyer, a 32-year-old woman who was killed when a driver slammed into a crowd of anti-racism counterprotesters.
2024.05.21 03:58 YaintPaintTX Vehicle Pursuit in Blaine County on Monday, May 20th, 2024
2024.05.21 03:45 Pitiful-Current9234 Harford county inmate death May 6 2024
2024.05.21 03:33 J-Chapman Old News – Mob Murder at Doherty Hotel
Clare Sentinel 1938-05-20 submitted by J-Chapman to Clare_MI [link] [comments] ISAIAH LEEBOVE SHOT AND KILLED HERE SATURDAY EVENING JACK LIVINGSTON, OIL PROMOTER HELD IN CLARE COUNTY JAIL TO ANSWER CHARGES OF MURDER Byron Geller, Clare Attorney, Also Suffers Wounds from Same Gun Shooting Affray Takes Place in Grill Room of Hotel Doherty https://preview.redd.it/ltshe0ldbo1d1.jpg?width=2178&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=7e3f0c339a91ece65d1dd9be86ef77b00488d739 The city of Clare and community was thrown into a stage of excitement last Saturday night when it became known that Isaiah Leebove, 42, chairman of the Board of Directors of the Mammoth Producing and Refining Corporation of this city, had been shot and killed and Attorney Byron Geller had suffered two bullet wounds in the left thigh at the hands of Jack Livingston, 45, also an oil promoter, who has made his home occasionally at the hotel for the past eight years. The shooting affray took place in the grill room of Hotel Doherty at 10:15 o’clock. Mr. and Mrs. Geller had taken a seat opposite each other at a table in a booth at the west side of the room. A few minutes later Mr. Leebove and his nephew, Sam Braunstein, entered and shared the booth with them. At this time Mr. Livingston who was sitting at a table with a Mr. and Mrs. Marr near the center of the room, excused himself and left. A short time later he returned and resumed his seat. In the course of a few minutes he again left his chair and stepping quickly to the booth occupied by the four people fired three shots in succession at Leebove. One of the bullets passed through Leebove’s left arm into his chest, piercing a rib, into his heart and completely through the body. Another passed through his left forearm and through the fleshy portion between the thumb and forefinger of his right hand. It is thought that it was this bullet that entered Mr. Geller’s thigh, glazing the pelvis bone. The third bullet is thought to have inflicted the flesh wound in the upper part of Mr. Geller’s leg. With the words “Jack! Jack!—why”, Mr. Leebove fell from his seat to the floor and died instantly. At this point Mr. Braunstein jumped to his feet and grabbed Livingston's arms and held them up so as to prevent more damage at the same time forcing him toward the door of the lobby. Here Livingston turned the butt of the gun away from him and handed same to Harry Wehrly, assistant manager of the hotel. During this time Mr. Geller had dropped to the floor and crawled on his hands and knees to the south side of the room and several minutes elapsed before it was discovered he had been injured. After his wounds had been examined, he was rushed to the Clare County General Hospital where late reports are to the effect that he is recovering nicely. After being taken to his room by bellhop Stanley Parish, Livingston's first request was that he send his father a telegram and it was during the wording of this that Chief of Police William Dunlop came in and made the arrest, which Livingston talked calmly and without regret as to his act. When informed that he had also wounded Mr. Geller he stated that he was sorry, that he considered Mr. Geller his friend and would not harm him for the world. Accompanied by Mayor Dunlop, the Chief of Police ushered Livingston to the rear of the hotel where Sheriff George Bates, his deputy Robert Caster and state police took charge of the prisoner and rushed him to the county jail at Harrison. Coroner A. N. Friz removed the body of Mr. Leebove to his undertaking rooms and impaneled a jury consisting of Wallace Johnson, John Kesckman, Paul Koch, Leo Brown, Frank Irwin and Alex McKinnon for an inquest that was held in the auditorium of the city hall Monday forenoon. Eight witnesses were summoned, but only two were heard, Mrs. Byron Geller and Dr. B. J. Sanford, who with Dr. F. G. Slattery performed the autopsy Sunday forenoon. After being out nearly three-quarters of an hour, the jury returned with a verdict of “Isaiah Leebove died as the result of a gunshot wound which pierced the heart.” Mr. Leebove's body laid in state in the Doherty Funeral Home for a brief period Sunday evening and was then taken by funeral car to Pittsburg for the funeral services and interment on Tuesday. Samuel Garfield and C. W. Clark attended the rites and acted as pallbearers. Mrs. Leebove, wife of the slain man, was driven to Mt. Pleasant Monday morning, where she boarded the private planed of Walter L. McClanahan for the flight to Pittsburgh, Pa. Acquaintances of Leebove and Livingston state that trouble has been brewing between the two men since they severed business connections several years ago. Livingston has maintained a room at the hotel buying and selling oil leases. He was a jolly nature and delighted in practical jokes. Both men have many friends in Clare and throughout central Michigan. Attorney Byron Geller, former reporter for a Detroit newspaper, and twice assistant attorney general, came to Clare about April 1st and entered private practice in the offices vacated by Attorney Theo. G. Bowler. About three weeks ago he was united in marriage to Miss Elizabeth Geller, of this city, who is almost constantly at his bedside. During his short stay here he has made many friends who join in wishing him a speedy recovery. Samuel A. Braunstein was born in Pittsburgh, Penn., where he attended school. He was graduated from the University of Pittsburgh in 1928, and was connected with a prominent Pittsburgh investment company until 1934, when he came to Clare as office manager for the Mammoth Petroleum Corporation. He is at the present time Vice President of the Mammoth Producing and Refining Corporation. During his residence here he has won many friends and is admired for his efficient business methods. --- Isaiah Leebove was born in Pittsburgh, November 27, 1894, where he received his primary and high school education. He was graduated from the law school of Cumberland University, Lebanon, Tenn., and was admitted to the bar by the Texas Supreme Court, July 3, 1916. Mr. Leebove practiced law in Texas and Oklahoma until November 20, 1921, when he moved to New York City. He was admitted to the New York bar June 7, 1922, and among the numerous endorsements was one from Associate Justice William Pierson of the Supreme Court of Texas. He was also endorsed by Louis H. Solomon, a prominent New York attorney, who had retained Mr. Leebove as counsel while investigating oil properties in Oklahoma. The high class recommendations given Mr. Leebove by prominent attorneys who had known him intimately, have him entry into the leading circles of his profession, and he entered into partnership with a prominent law firm having offices on Fifth Avenue. He never severed his connections with this firm and has often been called to the city for purposes of consultation and advice. Mr. Leebove's contact with the oil industry in the west gave him an intimate insight into that business and he came to Michigan during the early days of the oil development in this section. He interested himself in some of the drilling projects in the wildcat territory to the north of Clare and also in the proven field in Vernon, located four miles to the south of the city. Several years ago Mr. Leebove purchased the home of Walter Pettit, known as “Wildwood,” and he has added to the bungalow until it has become one of the finest of modern residences in this section of the state. Improvements were under way on this property at the time of his death. The original ten acres that he purchased has been landscaped and improved and is a show place of this section. He purchased addition acreage and there is a game preserve on the property that is well stocked with all kinds of native wildlife. Mr. Leebove has been very successful in his business and the Mammoth Producing and Refining Corporation, which he organized and of which he has always been the directing head, is the largest independent producer east of the Mississippi River. The company occupies for its offices the entire second floor of the Citizens State Bank building. Last December, Mr. Leebove purchased the Clare County Savings Bank building and up until the time of his death had not revealed his plans in this investment. Mr. Leebove had always been affiliated with the Democratic Party but his public activities in politics were limited to the campaigns of former Governor William A. Comstock, whom he regarded as one of his best and nearest friends. He often expressed himself to his friends as being entirely uninterested in any office or political position. Mr. Leebove was quiet and unassuming in his appearance and manner and made few close associates. He kept his own counsel and was loath to giving out information of his business affairs. He was interested in the welfare of the community in which he made his home and contributed generously to all civic programs and undertakings. Mr. Leebove gave much to charity but never advertised the fact and would not permit any publicity of his gifts. Last Christmas, Mr. and Mrs. Leebove gave hundreds of dollars in clothing and food to needy families and children of this community. In the death of Isaiah Leebove, this city has lost one of its most loyal supporters. The esteem and respect in which he was held in this city was shown about two years ago when some interests in the state assailed his reputation and a special meeting of the City Council was held and a resolution expressing confidence in his honesty and public-spiritedness was unanimously adopted by that body. The body laid in state in the Doherty Funeral Home for a brief period Sunday evening and was then taken by funeral car to Pittsburgh for the funeral services and interment. |
2024.05.21 01:59 Dinglederple I believe that my father (attorney) has manipulated my case.
2024.05.20 23:56 Whey-Men An Iowa police officer who was recently sentenced to up to 19 years in prison for repeatedly stalking and harassing a woman called her nine times from the Polk County Jail after his latest arrest, in violation of a no-contact order, according to court records.
submitted by Whey-Men to prisons [link] [comments]
2024.05.20 23:36 Terp-Twirp Cuyahoga County Council votes again for a contract they have already said isn’t working.
County Executive Chris Ronayne is seeking Council’s approval to extend the MetroHealth medical contract inside the jail. County council has expressed how costly the contract has been on the Sheriff’s department and County itself. Here we go again!!!! Do these council members really mean what they say or have said? This extension will be for an additional 25 million plus and not to exceeding 110 million… The Sheriff’s department is taxed daily with hospital runs to Metro. Mandates for overtime soar for deputies having to stay with inmates while being admitted for 24 hour observation. submitted by Terp-Twirp to ClevelandScene [link] [comments] |
2024.05.20 21:53 Better_Word_4378 Fuck the cops in that shit town
2024.05.20 21:20 AfflictedArtist Interpol Live May 7th
Literally the best setlist I could’ve possibly asked for. I’d say currently right now Interpol is at their best and highest peak performance in terms of live shows/performances. I’ve seen them before, but this time they were absolutely on fire. They were so tight and played every song exactly as it is on the record. Chris was on drums for this show and he just keeps timing so perfectly it’s second to none. The entire band was on point that night. It was good song after good song. I know some people have said Chris plays the songs “too accurately” , but he just plays them exactly how they are on the records. Guy is amazing and he’s super talented, works really hard to play at the level that he does. Deserves all the credit. submitted by AfflictedArtist to Interpol [link] [comments] |
2024.05.20 20:59 Neither_Relative_252 Contractor split