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  • Of Course The Country Was Stolen

    Of Course The Country Was Stolen

    The acclaimed singer and songwriter Billie Eilish recently caused a furor by declaring that “no one is illegal on stolen land” in her acceptance speech at the Grammy Awards, adding “Fuck ICE.” Many men furiously denounced Eilish, treating her as out of her depth. Kevin O’Leary of Shark Tank gave her the advice to “shut your mouth and just entertain.Bill Maher essentially called her stupid, pointing out that Eilish “didn’t go to school” (she was homeschooled) and wondering whether she meant we should “go back to living in teepees.”

  • Open Letter to Tech Companies: Protect Your Users From Lawless DHS Subpoenas

    We are calling on technology companies like Meta and Google to stand up for their users by resisting the Department of Homeland Security’s (DHS) lawless administrative subpoenas for user data. 

    In the past year, DHS has consistently targeted people engaged in First Amendment activity. Among other things, the agency has issued subpoenas to technology companies to unmask or locate people who have documented ICE’s activities in their community, criticized the government, or attended protests.   

    These subpoenas are unlawful, and the government knowns it. When a handful of users challenged a few of them in court with the help of ACLU affiliates in Northern California and Pennsylvania, DHS withdrew them rather than waiting for a decision. 

    These subpoenas are unlawful, and the government knowns it.

    But it is difficult for the average user to fight back on their own. Quashing a subpoena is a fast-moving process that requires lawyers and resources. Not everyone can afford a lawyer on a moment’s notice, and non-profits and pro-bono attorneys have already been stretched to near capacity during the Trump administration.  

     That is why we, joined by the ACLU of Northern California, have asked several large tech platforms to do more to protect their users, including: 

    1.  Insist on court intervention and an order before complying with a DHS subpoena, because the agency has already proved that its legal process is often unlawful and unconstitutional;  
    2. Give users as much notice as possible when they are the target of a subpoena, so the user can seek help. While many companies have already made this promise, there are high-profile examples of it not happening—ultimately stripping users of their day in court;  
    3. Resist gag orders that would prevent companies from notifying their users that they are a target of a subpoena. 

     We sent the letter to Amazon, Apple, Discord, Google, Meta, Microsoft, Reddit, SNAP, TikTok, and X.  

     Recipients are not legally compelled to comply with administrative subpoenas absent a court order 

     An administrative subpoena is an investigative tool available to federal agencies like DHS. Many times, these are sent to technology companies to obtain user data. A subpoena cannot be used to obtain the content of communications, but they have been used to try and obtain some basic subscriber information like name, address, IP address, length of service, and session times.  

    Unlike a search warrant, an administrative subpoena is not approved by a judge. If a technology company refuses to comply, an agency’s only recourse is to drop it or go to court and try to convince a judge that the request is lawful. That is what we are asking companies to do—simply require court intervention and not obey in advance. 

    It is unclear how many administrative subpoenas DHS has issued in the past year. Subpoenas can come from many places—including civil courts, grand juries, criminal trials, and administrative agencies like DHS. Altogether, Google received 28,622 and Meta received 14,520 subpoenas in the first half of 2025, according to their transparency reports. The numbers are not broken out by type.   

    DHS is abusing its authority to issue subpoenas 

    In the past year, DHS has used these subpoenas to target protected speech. The following are just a few of the known examples. 

    On April 1, 2025, DHS sent a subpoena to Google in an attempt to locate a Cornell PhD student in the United States on a student visa. The student was likely targeted because of his brief attendance at a protest the year before. Google complied with the subpoena without giving the student an opportunity to challenge it. While Google promises to give users prior notice, it sometimes breaks that promise to avoid delay. This must stop.   

    In September 2025, DHS sent a subpoena and summons to Meta to try to unmask anonymous users behind Instagram accounts that tracked ICE activity in communities in California and Pennsylvania. The users—with the help of the ACLU and its state affiliates— challenged the subpoenas in court, and DHS withdrew the subpoenas before a court could make a ruling. In the Pennsylvania case, DHS tried to use legal authority that its own inspector general had already criticized in a lengthy report.  

    In October 2025, DHS sent Google a subpoena demanding information about a retiree who criticized the agency’s policies. The retiree had sent an email asking the agency to use common sense and decency in a high-profile asylum case. In a shocking turn, federal agents later appeared on that person’s doorstep. The ACLU is currently challenging the subpoena.  

    Read the full letter here

  • Patch Tuesday, February 2026 Edition

    Patch Tuesday, February 2026 Edition

    Microsoft today released updates to fix more than 50 security holes in its Windows operating systems and other software, including patches for a whopping six “zero-day” vulnerabilities that attackers are already exploiting in the wild.

    Zero-day #1 this month is CVE-2026-21510, a security feature bypass vulnerability in Windows Shell wherein a single click on a malicious link can quietly bypass Windows protections and run attacker-controlled content without warning or consent dialogs. CVE-2026-21510 affects all currently supported versions of Windows.

    The zero-day flaw CVE-2026-21513 is a security bypass bug targeting MSHTML, the proprietary engine of the default Web browser in Windows. CVE-2026-21514 is a related security feature bypass in Microsoft Word.

    The zero-day CVE-2026-21533 allows local attackers to elevate their user privileges to “SYSTEM” level access in Windows Remote Desktop Services. CVE-2026-21519 is a zero-day elevation of privilege flaw in the Desktop Window Manager (DWM), a key component of Windows that organizes windows on a user’s screen. Microsoft fixed a different zero-day in DWM just last month.

    The sixth zero-day is CVE-2026-21525, a potentially disruptive denial-of-service vulnerability in the Windows Remote Access Connection Manager, the service responsible for maintaining VPN connections to corporate networks.

    Chris Goettl at Ivanti reminds us Microsoft has issued several out-of-band security updates since January’s Patch Tuesday. On January 17, Microsoft pushed a fix that resolved a credential prompt failure when attempting remote desktop or remote application connections. On January 26, Microsoft patched a zero-day security feature bypass vulnerability (CVE-2026-21509) in Microsoft Office.

    Kev Breen at Immersive notes that this month’s Patch Tuesday includes several fixes for remote code execution vulnerabilities affecting GitHub Copilot and multiple integrated development environments (IDEs), including VS Code, Visual Studio, and JetBrains products. The relevant CVEs are CVE-2026-21516, CVE-2026-21523, and CVE-2026-21256.

    Breen said the AI vulnerabilities Microsoft patched this month stem from a command injection flaw that can be triggered through prompt injection, or tricking the AI agent into doing something it shouldn’t — like executing malicious code or commands.

    “Developers are high-value targets for threat actors, as they often have access to sensitive data such as API keys and secrets that function as keys to critical infrastructure, including privileged AWS or Azure API keys,” Breen said. “When organizations enable developers and automation pipelines to use LLMs and agentic AI, a malicious prompt can have significant impact. This does not mean organizations should stop using AI. It does mean developers should understand the risks, teams should clearly identify which systems and workflows have access to AI agents, and least-privilege principles should be applied to limit the blast radius if developer secrets are compromised.”

    The SANS Internet Storm Center has a clickable breakdown of each individual fix this month from Microsoft, indexed by severity and CVSS score. Enterprise Windows admins involved in testing patches before rolling them out should keep an eye on askwoody.com, which often has the skinny on wonky updates. Please don’t neglect to back up your data if it has been a while since you’ve done that, and feel free to sound off in the comments if you experience problems installing any of these fixes.

  • Kyrgyz President Removes Close Ally From Top Security Post

    In a surprising move, Kyrgyz President Sadyr Japarov dismissed his once-close ally Kamchybek Tashiev from his posts as head of the State Committee for National Security (GKNB) and deputy head of the Cabinet of Ministers, the Presidential Administration announced Tuesday.

    The administration said three of Tashiev’s deputies were also dismissed.

    Japarov’s press secretary said the President acted “in the interest of the state,” and to “prevent a split in society, including between government structures, but on the contrary, to strengthen unity,” according to Kaktus news outlet.

    Tashiev has not commented on his dismissal.

    He was appointed GKNB head in October 2020, shortly after Japarov was released from prison following the uprising. Since then, Kyrgyzstan’s security service has become one of the country’s most powerful state institutions, overseeing numerous arrests of journalists and activists.

    The dismissal was unexpected. In a recent documentary about Japarov, Tashiev said, “only death can separate him from his friendship with Sadyr Japarov,,” adding that their shared goals and paths were unbreakable despite efforts by others to divide them.

    Their alliance dates back to the 2010s and was shaped by joint opposition activities in parliament. In 2012, they were detained while trying to climb the White House fence during a rally calling for the nationalization of Kyrgyzstan’s Kumtor gold deposit.

    Japarov was later freed from prison on the night of October 5-6, 2020, by supporters including Tashiev, amid protests following parliamentary elections.

  • EU Considers Sanctions on Georgia’s Kulevi Port Over Russian Oil Links

    The European Union is considering sanctions on a Georgian port accused of handling Russian oil, as part of a new package of measures against Moscow, RFE/RL reported on Monday.

    The outlet cited a European Commission proposal outlining measures against the port of Kulevi in Georgia, alongside other facilities in Russia and Indonesia. 

    EU member states have not yet approved the proposal, which would form part ofhe bloc’s 20th package of sanctions against Russia since Moscow’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine. If adopted, the measures would bar EU companies and individuals from conducting business with these ports. 

    According to RFE/RL, the proposal alleges that Kulevi has received Russian oil imports via “vessels that employ irregular and high-risk shipping practices.” The draft package also includes sanctions targeting ships linked to Russia’s so-called “shadow fleet.” 

    Vakhtang Partsvania, a professor at the Caucasus University in Tbilisi, told OCCRP’s Georgian member center Monitori that the proposed sanctions would “touch the entire logistics through this port.” Such a move, he added, would make Kulevi “unattractive to international shipping and isolated from the global financial and insurance system.”

    Kulevi oil terminal has long been operated by the State Oil Company of Azerbaijan Republic (SOCAR). In a response to Monitori, Tamar Javakhishvili, SOCAR Energy Georgia’s Deputy General Director for Marketing and Communications said that the terminal’s operations would be restricted in the event of sanctions. 

    “The terminal [Kulevi] is owned by SOCAR, while it has independent management. In reality, this matter needs to be clarified with the state authorities,” she added. According to the company’s official website, the terminal is operated by SOCAR’s another subsidiary, Black Sea Terminal LLC. 

    Responding to RFE/RL’s reporting, Georgian Prime Minister Irakli Kobakhidze said the government was “ready to present detailed information to the European Commission” regarding the proposed sanctions: “Of course, we do not believe that anything is happening [at Kulevi] that contradicts sanctions policy,” he added.

    Shipments of Russian crude oil to the Kulevi oil terminal began at the end of 2025. Upon arrival, the oil was transferred to the new Kulevi refinery, operated by the Georgian firm Black Sea Petroleum.

    Officially, Black Sea Petroleum belongs to Georgian designer and former model Maka Asatiani and Davit Potskhveria, the nephew of her husband Konstantine Gogelia, who is himself a member of the company’s supervisory board and Asatiani’s authorized representative. 

    Last year, the investigative outlet Proekt revealed that Asatiani’s son from her first marriage is a business partner of the son of Vladimir Alekseyev, the first deputy chief of Russia’s GRU military intelligence.

    The Chairman of the Supervisory Board at Black Sea Petroleum is the former Minister of Economy and former Vice Prime Minister, Levan Davitashvili. 

    Reporters were unable to reach the company for comment. 

  • Corruption Threatens Democracies Worldwide, Transparency International Warns

    Corruption is surging worldwide, threatening public trust, enabling organized crime, and weakening democratic institutions, Transparency International warned Tuesday in its 2025 Corruption Perceptions Index (CPI). 

    Experts say shrinking civic space and faltering accountability are fueling the problem, putting governance—and citizens—at risk.

    Since its inception, Transparency International’s CPI has become the leading global indicator of the perception of public sector corruption. The index scores 182 countries and territories, using data from 13 external sources, including the World Bank, World Economic Forum, private risk and consulting companies, think tanks, and others. Scores range from zero to 100, with zero indicating very corrupt governance and 100 very clean.

    Countries perceived as the least corrupt in 2025 include Denmark (89), Finland (88), Singapore (84), New Zealand (81), Norway (81), and Australia (76), setting the global benchmark for clean governance.

    Eastern Europe and Central Asia are struggling with a decade of stalled reforms. The region scores just 34, with six countries significantly worsening and only seven improving. Weak institutions, concentration of power, and undue influence on the judiciary are eroding public oversight. 

    Across the Western Balkans, opaque investment decisions and secret deals have exposed public funds to corruption. In Serbia, the Prosecution for Organized Crime faces government pressure and smear campaigns, while in Bosnia and Herzegovina, political influence over judicial appointments continues to block reform.

    Lidija Prokić, Regional Advisor for Eastern and South East Europe, pointed out that corruption thrives where democracy is weakened and accountability fails. Ukraine (36) and Moldova (42) stand out as rare examples of progress, where strong civil society and independent institutions have driven meaningful reforms.

    Western Europe and the European Union have seen anti-corruption progress stall, with the regional average CPI dropping from 66 to 64 over the past decade. Key EU states, including the UK (70), France (66), and Spain (55), have experienced backsliding, while Hungary (40) and Slovakia (48) weaken safeguards against political influence and corruption investigations. 

    Transparency International warns that weakened oversight and attacks on civil society are making abuses harder to detect.

    Flora Cresswell, Regional Advisor for Western Europe, highlighted that Europe should raise its anti-corruption ambitions rather than lower them amid current geopolitical challenges.

    The Americas continue to struggle, with a regional average of 42. Corruption has allowed organized crime to infiltrate politics in Colombia (37), Mexico (27), and Brazil (35), undermining security and human rights. Fragile states like Haiti (16) and Nicaragua (14) remain plagued by entrenched corruption. Even stronger democracies, including Costa Rica (56) and Uruguay (73), face growing threats from criminal networks.

    Asia-Pacific averages 45, with widespread governance failures and limited accountability fueling public frustration. The Philippines (32) lost funds to a fake flood relief project, Indonesia (34) saw deadly anti-government protests, and Nepal (34) toppled its government amid social unrest linked to corruption. 

    TI’s CPI claims that fragile states such as Afghanistan (16), Myanmar (16), and North Korea (15) remain at the bottom, where restricted civic space and opaque political systems leave corruption unchecked.

    Such a situation, according to Ilham Mohamed, Asia Pacific Adviser, is fueling corruption across the region, with weak law enforcement, opaque political funding, and unaccountable leadership. She added that leaders must respond to growing public demand for stronger governance and democracy.

    The Middle East and North Africa also remain vulnerable. Even the region’s highest scorers—United Arab Emirates (69), Qatar (58), and Saudi Arabia (57)—are dependent on leaders’ political will to implement reforms. Syria (15), Libya (13), and Yemen (13) remain entrenched in corruption amid conflict and institutional weakness, according to the report.

    Sub-Saharan Africa scores lowest globally, averaging 32. Governments fail to protect public funds or deliver services effectively. Somalia (9) and South Sudan (9) are at the bottom, while Madagascar (25) recently saw a youth-led uprising against entrenched corruption. Angola has improved slightly but remains at the lower end of the index. Paul Banoba, TI’s regional advisor, noted that public sector corruption always hits the most vulnerable people the hardest.

  • Eurojust-Backed Raids Uncover $364 Million Cross-Border Money Laundering Network

    French and Romanian authorities have arrested 13 people suspected of laundering at least 306 million euros ($364 million) in proceeds from drug trafficking and other crimes, Eurojust said.

    The group is believed to have operated between 2018 and 2024 through a cross-border network spanning France and Romania. Eurojust said the suspects allegedly funneled large sums through accounts of companies under their control.

    In Romania, part of the funds was invested in real estate, often registered in the names of third parties to conceal beneficial ownership. Authorities seized more than 400,000 euros in cash, along with jewelry, luxury watches and mobile phones.

  • Ex-Maldives Leader Pitched $25 Million Island Deal to Epstein, Files Show

    Former President Mohamed Waheed of the Maldives pitched a private island investment worth $25 million to Jeffrey Epstein, according to newly released records from the U.S. Justice Department, adding to a growing body of material showing how Epstein cultivated ties with political and business figures around the world even after his 2008 conviction.

    “You will have a small stunningly beautiful island with about 10 villas, each with three or four bedrooms,” Waheed wrote to Epstein referring to Fuggiri, a small island in the Maldives, on May 18, 2014, eight months after leaving office. The project would target “Middle Eastern royal families and our rich Russian clients,” he said. Waheed signed off: “Best regards to you and your beautiful students.”

    Epstein expressed interest and asked about the budget, the records show, though there is no indication the deal moved forward. In 2015, the Maldivian government leased Fuggiri for resort development to a Dubai-based company, Classic Citi Island Holdings, without a competitive bidding process.

    The island later became the subject of an investigation by the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project, which found that the company behind the lease was controlled by Indian businessmen Amit and Avinash Kumar Gandhi through a network of shell companies revealed in the Pandora Papers. Former President Abdulla Yameen, who succeeded Waheed, is currently on trial in the Maldives, accused of accepting a $1.1 million bribe in connection with the no-bid lease of Fuggiri. He has denied wrongdoing.

    The newly released Epstein files also identify Waheed’s business partner on the proposed resort projects as Ibrahim Mohamed Didi, a prominent Maldivian developer. Didi acted as an intermediary with Sultan Ahmed bin Sulayem, the chief executive of the Dubai ports operator DP World, according to the documents. Bin Sulayem appears frequently in Epstein’s correspondence, and text messages show Waheed was in contact with both men during the same period. 

    In one exchange from June 2012, Waheed told Epstein he was “meeting Sultan this evening on his boat,” to which Epstein replied, “I know sultan is there.” Records indicate bin Sulayem visited the Maldives in 2014 to discuss port investments with Yameen, who had succeeded Waheed in November 2013.

    The correspondence between Waheed and Epstein began in September 2011, when Mr. Waheed was serving as vice president. After meeting Epstein during the United Nations General Assembly in New York, Mr. Waheed sent a message saying it was “refreshing to meet someone without any pretenses.” Epstein responded, “We will have fun.” Their exchanges continued until at least early 2016 and included dinners at Epstein’s Manhattan townhouse, holiday greetings and New Year’s messages.

    Mr. Waheed resigned this month from his role as a presidential special envoy after the emails became public. In a statement, he said his interactions with Epstein were “strictly professional,” not social, and that he had been unaware of Epstein’s 2008 conviction at the time.

    Mr. Waheed’s son, Jeffrey Salim Waheed, who attended a meeting with Epstein in 2014, said in a statement that the family learned of the full extent of Epstein’s crimes only years later. “Epstein was a monster,” he said. “But we only knew the depth of his depravity long after we stopped engaging with him.”

    The documents do not suggest that the proposed island investment was completed or that Mr. Waheed was involved in any criminal activity. But they offer a detailed glimpse of how Epstein continued to position himself as a financier and dealmaker, drawing in former heads of state and well-connected intermediaries even as his past conduct was a matter of public record.

  • Let’s Legalize Public Drinking

    Let’s Legalize Public Drinking

    This article is written by Miles Kampf-Lassin, Senior Editor at In These Times, a magazine that has spent more than 50 years telling the stories corporate media ignores, with a deep focus on labor, rural communities, and investigative reporting. If you enjoy this piece, In These Times is well worth your time. For a limited time, Current Affairs readers can get a full year subscription for just $15.

     

    The aromas of freshly stewed gumbo and boiled crawfish wafted out onto the street in front of Broadview Seafood at the edge of New Orleans’ Seventh Ward. On Ash Wednesday, as I recovered from the revelry of Mardi Gras, I salivated as I considered my meal: Should I pick up some crab legs? A po’boy, with freshly fried shrimp enveloped in a crunchy French roll? All important questions, but my first order was the most essential—an ice cold tallboy of a hazy IPA. And since I was in one of the few bastions of legal public drinking in America, I purchased it to go.

    Having received my bounty of gumbo, crawfish, and a po’boy, my beer cradled under my arm, I considered my next move. Grateful for the lax public drinking laws, I had a full range of options: walk up the nearby iconic Esplanade Ave and sit in oak-laden Fortier Park, surrounded by stately 19th-century mansions and brightly decorated homes; or walk a bit further west and sit on the banks of Bayou St. John. I chose instead to bring my banquet to the pastoral City Park, joined by friends. We splayed out in the park, talking and eating and laughing—all while freely sipping alcoholic beverages in public, without fear of reprisal.

    It was a joyous experience. But currently, such experiences are limited to those living in or visiting the Crescent City and a small number of other locales around the country. This is a travesty: we all should be able to drink in public.

    But today, 87 years after the ratification of the 21st Amendment, we’re still living with vestiges of a Prohibition-era legal framework, where alcohol consumption is severely constrained and policed. Alongside the nationwide minimum drinking age of 21, almost every state has established strict regulations banning public drinking, commonly referred to as “open container” laws.

    It’s time to repeal these outdated disciplinary laws and realize the unfinished work of the Prohibition repeal movement by finally legalizing public drinking across the United States.

     

     

    Socialists Fought for Your Right to Drink

    To understand why our public drinking laws are so repressive, we have to go back to the American movement to ban booze. From its origins, the Prohibition movement was animated by a puritanical spirit.

    The late 19th century saw temperance activists, many motivated by strict religious codes, push for total abstinence regarding consumption of alcohol, considering it a personal sin. Religious revivalists of the time saw the movement as an opening to secure a level of political legitimacy.

    As James Morone writes in Hellfire Nation: The Politics of Sin in American History, “Prohibition offered them their one link to national authority, the one public commitment to resisting moral decay.”

    That attitude percolated up into legal rulings, such as the 1887 Supreme Court decision in Mugler v. Kansas that claimed, “public morals[…] may be endangered by the general use of intoxicating drinks” and that “the idleness, disorder, pauperism and crime existing in the country, are, in some degree[…] traceable to this evil.”

    But it wasn’t just religious influence that led to virulent anti-alcohol agitation—it was also the logic of capitalist accumulation. Leading economists of the time, such as Simon Patten and Irving Fisher, also pushed for Prohibition in the early twentieth century as a means of boosting worker productivity and, as Fisher dubiously argued, adding a supposed $6 billion to the US economy.

    Combined with feminist activists, who saw prohibition as a way to combat the male-only drinking culture of saloons and domestic violence carried out by drunken husbands against their wives and other women, this combination of arguments eventually led to the passage in Congress of both the 18th Amendment and the Volstead Act to enforce it, which went into effect on January 17, 1920.

    Of course, rather than actually stamping out alcohol consumption, these laws simply pushed it underground, as a latticework of bootlegging and home distilling became commonplace in the years that followed ratification. The result was a spike in organized crime around illicit alcohol distribution, as well as disease and death deriving from poisonous forms of black-market booze—consequences of shoving alcohol consumption (as well as the consumption of any other kind of drug) into the dark corners of society.

    But Prohibition also had its fierce opponents. Throughout U.S. history, the cause of liberalizing drinking laws has been taken up by socialists and other left-wing leaders who’ve fought to allow Americans the freedom to drink as they please.

    Prohibition wasn’t officially ended in the United States until the ratification of the 21st Amendment on December 5, 1933. But three years earlier, in 1929, Wisconsin residents had already embraced the legal consumption of alcohol when voters repealed the Severson Act, the state’s Prohibition enforcement law. The leader in overturning that Act was Milwaukee socialist assemblyman Thomas Duncan, who first introduced legislation calling for a referendum on the question. Duncan was a member of the “sewer socialists,” known for effective public works, who governed Milwaukee for 50 years, beginning in the early 20th century.

    Ahead of the vote, Duncan warned that if the referendum was defeated, the “state will be delivered over, bodily, to the Klu Klux Klan (KKK) and the Anti-Saloon League (ASL), to do as they will with it”—a reference to the violent enforcement of prohibition laws by the KKK and ASL, through both political and extralegal means. The plebiscite was ultimately backed by 64 percent of residents.

    Duncan wasn’t the only left-wing Milwaukeean to push for legalized drinking. He was joined by six other assemblymen and three state senators, all socialists, and the decision was embraced by Mayor Daniel Hoan, also a socialist.

    In 1932, the Socialist Party voted three to one to add to its official platform a plank reading: “Repeal the Eighteenth Amendment and take over the liquor industry under government ownership and control.”

    The following year’s repeal was a major stride toward expanding personal freedom and curtailing the criminalization of alcohol. By the time Duncan and his fellow Milwaukee socialists successfully overturned Prohibition in Wisconsin, support for the liquor moratorium was already diminishing among American voters. Yet even after repeal in 1933, individual states were still allowed to ban or restrict alcohol sales and use, which led to “dry” counties where booze is prohibited—many of which still exist today—along with a bevy of other laws designed to limit alcohol use.

    Punishing the Poor for Having a Brew

    The current regime of public drinking laws has led to a system of enforcement that disproportionately punishes Americans based around racial and economic lines. As Niki Ganong, author of The Field Guide to Drinking in America, recently told Eater of open container regulations: “It’s another racist law used almost universally against the poor, it’s usually an excuse for police to stop and investigate.”

    As the New York Times reports, in 2011 New York City police issued 124,498 summonses for drinking in public, “far more than for any other violation.” Unsurprisingly, in one month in Brooklyn, 85 percent of summonses were issued to blacks and Latinos, while 4 percent were issued to whites (who make up 36 percent of the borough’s population).

    The findings led New York judge Noach Dear to write in a court decision: “I am hereby recommending that the practices and policies of the N.Y.P.D. with respect to enforcement of the open container law be scrutinized and immediately stopped if found to be discriminatory.”

    Racial disparity in the application of drinking laws tracks across the rest of the country, as does outsized enforcement in poor and working-class communities. These disparities helped motivate New Orleans lawmakers to finally shuffle off the coil of public drinking laws in 2001. As Henry Grabar writes, “the New Orleans City Council repealed the city’s open container law, which had been enforced with an 80-20 racial bias, after a black man carrying a beer was shot and killed by police.”

    Many modern open container laws derive from previous “public drunkenness” and “vagrancy” ordinances that criminalized not just alcoholism, but also poverty and homelessness. In 1953, Chicago established such a law against “drinking in the public way” as a means of expelling what were called “bottle gangs”—groups of men who were, in reality, often doing nothing more than congregating on city streets.

    In the 1960s, as the Civil Rights Movement gained momentum, the racially motivated enforcement of these laws was contested in court, and many were ruled unconstitutional. As a result, rather than outlawing “drunkenness,” in subsequent years, many cities and municipalities moved to instead simply ban the act of public drinking itself.

    These new laws fit into a broader pattern of “broken windows” policing that took hold of much of American policing in the 1980s and beyond, viewing petty violations like open alcohol consumption as a pathway to criminality. In effect, they offer law enforcement new opportunities to ticket and detain large numbers of people for doing nothing wrong or socially harmful while hanging out in public. As Grabar points out, the language of New York’s bill banning open containers was hardly subtle: “When New York City banned open containers from its streets in 1979, lawmakers were quite explicit about the law’s intent: ‘We do not recklessly expect the police to give a summons to a Con Ed worker having a beer with his lunch,’ a sponsor of the bill told the Times. ‘This is for those young hoodlums with wine bottles who harass our women and intimidate our senior citizens.’”

    This motive continues to inform the law’s enforcement. In the period from January 2020 to July 2020, 91 percent of public drinking tickets handed out by the NYPD went to Black and Latinx New Yorkers, even as the Covid-19 pandemic ravaged the city. The takeaway is clear: These laws have never been meant to improve public safety, but rather give police tools to target those who they see fit. This unjust order will continue to produce racist and biased outcomes, until it’s overturned.

    As an alternative to open container laws, some cities such as Louisville and Memphis have embraced so-called “entertainment districts.” Yet these spaces, often just a few city blocks, are not bastions of freedom. They’re ultimately profit centers—often administered by private companies and littered with mega developments—that restrict, rather than expand, personal autonomy.

    Instead, we should end disciplinary policies toward public drinking outright and liberate our public spaces, allowing all adults to publicly enjoy alcoholic beverages, if and when they desire. The New Orleans model could easily be replicated in cities and municipalities nationwide.

    Of course, behaviors that risk the safety of the public like driving while intoxicated shouldn’t be allowed or encouraged. And alcohol addiction is a manifest problem in America, which requires deep investments in recovery and mental health programs. A Medicare for All system, for example, could go a long way toward making these necessary public health advancements. But such problems already exist in the United States, and are not being solved by the execution of open container laws.

    Full Repeal, Full Stop

    The repeal of public drinking regulations was made all the more urgent due to the Covid-19 pandemic, which upended the US bar and restaurant industries.

    Rather than embrace a robust system of testing and contact tracing as most every other developed country did, President Trump decided instead to treat the virus as a pesky distraction, refusing to take even the basic steps to get the pandemic under control. Facing these conditions, the social distancing measures necessary to suppress Covid-19 made it all but impossible to reopen indoor dining and drinking establishments in areas where the virus was still circulating.

    As a result, many cities relaxed enforcement of open container laws, and some—such as Alexandria, Virginia, Chicago, and New York City—passed new ordinances allowing for the sale of to-go cocktails along with other more liberal codes around alcohol vending and consumption. As the BBC reports, in an effort to lower the jail population to prevent further spread of Covid, “Baltimore, Maryland has said it will dismiss pending criminal charges for people arrested for many non-violent crimes, including breaking open container laws.”

    Such changes are welcome, but they don’t get to the heart of the issue. Even if criminal charges are dismissed, or you’re allowed to purchase a gin and tonic to go, that doesn’t change the fact that public drinking has remained an illegal act in these areas. Instead, what’s needed is a full repeal of open container laws.

    Such a change has been proposed in New York by socialist state senator Julia Salazar, who in July 2020 introduced Senate Bill S8675 that “Makes it lawful for a person to possess an open container of alcohol and consume alcohol in public during the Covid-19 pandemic.” As the justification section of the bill lays out:

    “In many places throughout the world, open consumption of alcohol is permitted. In New York the police and others turn a blind eye if the imbiber is drinking a glass of wine while listening to the New York Philharmonic on the great lawn in Central Park, but if you’re a young person on the beach at Coney Island drinking a nutcracker or a beer on your block with friends, you can get a ticket. That’s discrimination and hypocrisy.”

    The section continues, asserting of the bill, “It only makes sense since the city has already permitted thousands of bars to serve drinks to-go. Where do we think they’re being consumed?” Salazar has continued to re-introduce the bill in subsequent years.

     

     

    Today, Drinking in Public. Tomorrow, Publicly Owned Drinking.

    There’s nothing radical about allowing people to drink alcohol outdoors. Public drinking is a victimless act (save for yourself, if one too many cocktails leads to a hangover or an ill-advised late-night text to an ex).

    The cause of repealing inordinate drinking laws has been unfulfilled for over a century. Such a repeal could help us develop a healthier relationship to intoxicating spirits, taking alcohol consumption out of the shadows.

    It could also allow us to imagine even deeper and more radical changes in our relationship to booze, like who controls its production—and who gets to share in the revenue. Even prior to passage of the 18th Amendment, prohibition was already the law of the land in many states, leading American socialist leader Eugene V. Debs to write in 1916:

    “Socialize the liquor business, take out the profit, and let it be controlled by the state, as Socialism proposes, and there will be a summary end to the evil, but never through prohibitionary legislation. There is far too much ‘prohibition’ in the world and often the spirit of it is bigoted and tyrannical. There are tens of thousands of laws on the statute books which prohibit almost everything conceivable, and for all the good they do they would better be repealed.”

    In the hundred-plus years since Debs wrote those words, we’ve continued to live under far too much prohibition. Let’s instead choose freedom, and legalize public drinking.

     

    This article was first published at Jacobin, as “Let Us Drink in Public.”

     

  • Coalition Urges California to Revoke Permits for Federal License Plate Reader Surveillance

    Group led by EFF and Imperial Valley Equity & Justice Asks Gov. Newsom and Caltrans Director to Act Immediately

    SAN FRANCISCO – California must revoke permits allowing federal agencies such as Customs and Border Patrol (CBP) and the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) to put automated license plate readers along border highways, a coalition led by the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) and Imperial Valley Equity & Justice (IVEJ) demanded today. 

    In a letter to Gov. Gavin Newsom and California Department of Transportation (Caltrans) Director Dina El-Tawansy, the coalition notes that this invasive mass surveillance – automated license plate readers (ALPRs) often disguised as traffic barrels – puts both residents and migrants at risk of harassment, abuse, detention, and deportation.  

    “With USBP (U.S. Border Patrol) Chief Greg Bovino reported to be returning to El Centro sector, after leading a brutal campaign against immigrants and U.S. citizens alike in Los Angeles, Chicago, and Minneapolis, it is urgent that your administration take action,” the letter says. “Caltrans must revoke any permits issued to USBP. CBP, and DEA for these surveillance devices and effectuate their removal.” 

    Coalition members signing the letter include the California Nurses Association; American Federation of Teachers Guild, Local 1931; ACLU California Action; Fight for the Future; Electronic Privacy Information Center; Just Futures Law; Jobs to Move America; Project on Government Oversight; American Friends Service Committee U.S./Mexico Border Program; Survivors of Torture, International; Partnership for the Advancement of New Americans; Border Angels; Southern California Immigration Project; Trust SD Coalition; Alliance San Diego; San Diego Immigrant Rights Consortium; Showing Up for Racial Justice San Diego; San Diego Privacy; Oakland Privacy; Japanese American Citizens League and its Florin-Sacramento Valley, San Francisco, South Bay, Berkeley, Torrance, and Greater Pasadena chapters; Democratic Socialists of America- San Diego; Center for Human Rights and Privacy; The Becoming Project Inc.; Imperial Valley for Palestine; Imperial Liberation Collaborative; Comité de Acción del Valle Inc.; CBFD Indivisible; South Bay People Power; and queercasa. 

    California law prevents state and local agencies from sharing ALPR data with out-of-state agencies, including federal agencies involved in immigration enforcement. However, USBP, CBP, and DEA are bypassing these regulations by installing their own ALPRs. 

    EFF researchers have released a map of more than 40 of these covert ALPRs along highways in San Diego and Imperial counties that are believed to belong to federal agencies engaged in immigration enforcement.  In response to a June 2025 public records request, Caltrans has released several documents showing CBP and DEA have applied for permits for ALPRs, with more expected as Caltrans continues to locate records responsive to the request. 

    “California must not allow Border Patrol and other federal agencies to use surveillance on our roadways to unleash violence and intimidation on San Diego and Imperial Valley residents,” the letter says. “We ask that your administration investigate and release the relevant permits, revoke them, and initiate the removal of these devices. No further permits for ALPRs or tactical checkpoints should be approved for USBP, CBP, or DEA.” 

    “The State of California must not allow Border Patrol to exploit our public roads and bypass state law,” said Sergio Ojeda, IVEJ’s Lead Community Organizer for Racial and Economic Justice Programs.  “It’s time to stop federal agencies from installing hidden cameras that they use to track, target and harass our communities for travelling between Imperial Valley, San Diego and Yuma.” 

    For the letter: https://www.eff.org/document/coalition-letter-re-covert-alprs

    For the map of the covert ALPRs: https://www.eff.org/covertALPRmap

    For high-res images of two of the covert ALPRs: https://www.eff.org/node/111725

    For more about ALPRs: https://sls.eff.org/technologies/automated-license-plate-readers-alprs 

     

    Contact: 
    Dave
    Maass
    Director of Investigations