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From Safe Haven to Systemic Betrayal: How San Diego’s Polinsky Children’s Center Failed the Smiel Family

Hundreds of lawsuits, state violations, and survivor accounts paint a devastating portrait of San Diego County’s flagship children’s shelter — the same facility where Giselle Smiel’s kids were taken before being handed to their abusive father.
Polinsky’s story reveals how California’s “child-protection” pipeline can deliver children straight back into danger.

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Inside People v. Smiel: When Process Becomes the Story

Giselle Smiel faces five felonies, including kidnapping, for picking up her crying child at a San Diego school. Her defense argues there was no force or substantial movement, pointing to lack of evidence and jurisdictional issues. Advocates highlight constitutional violations and ADA neglect in her arrest, seeking dismissal of charges and oversight on family-court mechanisms in criminal cases.

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The Socialist Surge: Democrats’ Dangerous Dance with Disaster

A rise in socialist candidates is reshaping the Democratic Party in America, driven by young voters disillusioned by capitalism. While their proposals of wealth taxes and city-run programs resonate emotionally, they often overlook practical implications and economic realities. Conservatives view this as an opportunity to counter the movement effectively.

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Supervised Visitation in Westchester County: A Probation-Run Program That Proves False Arrest

In 2018, Marc Fishman was falsely arrested during a supervised visitation with his son, igniting a lawsuit over civil rights and disability discrimination. Under Westchester County policy, his probation officer was present, but law enforcement acted without her approval, highlighting systemic issues in the county’s handling of supervised visitation and civil rights violations.

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The Disabilities You Don’t See — and the Systems That Still Don’t See Us

The article addresses the plight of individuals with invisible disabilities in America, highlighting systemic bias in courts and workplaces. Despite the ADA’s provisions, many face barriers due to outdated perceptions and bureaucratic inefficiencies, resulting in detrimental outcomes. Advocates emphasize the need for better enforcement and understanding of these disabilities.

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The Ramp, Not the Ribbon-Cutting: How an Edmond Playground Exposed a Civil Rights Problem in Plain Sight

Parents and educators at Will Rogers Elementary in Edmond, Oklahoma, are advocating for true ADA compliance in playground design, highlighting that recent installations fail to provide equal access for children with disabilities. The case reflects broader systemic issues of compliance neglect and retaliation against advocates, exposing a culture prioritizing image over inclusivity.

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The “No Kings” Movement: Grassroots Idealism Meets Billionaire Backing

What began as a cry for democracy has quietly become a case study in modern political theater. The “No Kings” movement, draped in slogans of equality and resistance, presents itself as a spontaneous uprising of everyday Americans—but the money trail tells another story.

Behind the sea of homemade signs stand some of the wealthiest figures in American politics: Soros, Wyss, Walton, and the Arabella network. Their multimillion-dollar grants bankroll the same “grassroots” protests that claim to fight billionaire influence. It’s a paradox that defines our political age—movements against power, powered by power itself.

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Maryland Democrats Are Contesting Every Seat. Will the GOP Even Show Up?

The Maryland Democratic Party, led by Chair Steuart Pittman and Governor Wes Moore, is launching a “Contest Every Seat” campaign for the 2026 elections, aiming to field candidates statewide. Meanwhile, Maryland Republicans are struggling to form a cohesive strategy, risking continued political marginalization amidst Democratic dominance and precision gerrymandering.

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A Department in Decay: How Prince George’s County Police Became a Case Study in Institutional Failure

Prince George’s County’s police department sits at the uneasy intersection of race, power, and accountability — a majority-Black force in a majority-Black county still haunted by decades of corruption and cover-ups. From the $20 million William Green shooting settlement to this month’s $2.35 million verdict for whistleblower Mohamed Magassouba, the pattern is clear: misconduct isn’t the exception, it’s the expense of doing business. “A Department in Decay” traces how internal retaliation, political favoritism, and taxpayer-funded damage control have replaced real reform — and why even honest cops are paying the price.

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