







Being sick sucks, but a good cough that you can feel actually dislodging stuff in your lungs is so satisfying.


I can’t get to 50% on anything without Bon Jovi’s “Livin’ On a Prayer” playing in my head.


If the Last of Us fungus grew their (its?) industrial base, it would be unstoppable.


Lil Caesar’s also sucks. Even if we grant that he found some amazing pizza in the US, it’s hardly a straight line from bending the knee to the west to delicious pizza. Just look at the US itself outside of NYC.


I used to make up stupid action movies, then get into them in my head, leading to a supervisor sending me home early for stomping around the antiques store all intense-like.


All of the things you’re doing are respectable uses of your time already. In what direction would you want the “better” to go?



Malaysia, some of the visible land might be Indonesia.
I take a lot of pictures but it looks like very few are clouds. They’re beautiful but I think pretty much everyone takes them for granted. If a cloud came around at something like eclipse frequency, hotels for miles around would be booked for months ahead of the event.


I think you might be overestimating the difficulty of getting an intellectual at your party. A lot of cases involving non-household names surely boiled down to the intellectual having no competing plans.


God, imagine an aphex twin limo of these pulling up at the HSR and hopping in one?


High level management seems like the easiest thing to replace with an LLM. They’re not applying any sort of specialized knowledge, just some combination of playing it safe and wrecking policy due to their hallucinations.


In Memphis, volunteers document Task Force arrests and provide aid to those left behind Civil Rights, Immigration Dec 03, 2025 | 6:00 am ET By Anita Wadhwani
In Memphis, volunteers document Task Force arrests and provide aid to those left behind
Description Tennessee National Guard patrol a shopping complex in Memphis as part of the Memphis Safe Task Force on Nov. 21, 2025. (Photo: John Partipilo/Tennessee Lookout)
MEMPHIS — The alert went out to volunteers at about 8 p.m. on a Friday: a woman hiding in a closet with her twin toddlers was on the phone to a community hotline unsure what to do as dozens of federal and local law enforcement officers converged outside, demanding entry.
Yuleiny Escobar, a volunteer for Vecindarios 901, which operates the hotline, hustled over to the woman’s home, located in the same heavily Latino Berclair neighborhood as her own.
A tow truck driver blocked the road leading to the house at the request of law enforcement, blaring the pro-police anthem, “Bad Boys.” By the time Escobar reached the home, a Border Patrol officer and a U.S. Marshal each held a toddler in one arm as their mother was placed inside an unmarked SUV. Holes in the home’s windows marked entry points for chemical agents that had been thrown inside to force the family out, neighbors told Escobar.
Memphis V901, video courtesy of Yuleiny Escobar.
Escobar pulled out her phone and began recording.
“These are scenes people need to see, as a reflection of our state and our country right now,” Escobar said. Thousands of Memphians now rely on the videos, photos and eyewitness reports by volunteers with Vencendarios 901 — V901 for short — to chronicle the activities of the Memphis Safe Task Force, the multi-agency law enforcement force launched Sept. 15 by President Donald Trump.
V901 was established as a rapid response network to report on Immigration and Customs Enforcement activities during the first Trump administration’s crackdown on immigration. In Trump’s second term, the all-volunteer V901 has kicked into high gear.
Seven years ago, V901 received three to five calls per day from Memphis residents reporting immigration enforcement activities to its hotline, said Hunter Demster, a longtime local activist who co-founded the effort seven years ago with Maria Oceja, a community organizer.
“Now we’re getting up to 140 calls a day,” he said. “The vast majority of calls are people scared to leave their houses or pulled over. But we’ve also pushed this number out at community events and, now, the average person sees something and calls us.”
Tracking the task force
V901 dispatchers answer calls while volunteers drive two-hour patrol shifts to confirm reported Task Force actions before they are sent out as text blasts and social media posts. The information serves both as a warning to avoid locations with a heavy law enforcement presence and an ongoing documentation of Task Force activity.
About 100 people a month have attended V901 volunteer training since the Task Force launched, Demster said. The group is diverse, but Demster said he has noticed more older white women and individuals motivated by their religious faith have turned out to help in recent months.
A broken window with holes in it.
Holes in the window of a Memphis home where neighbors said members of the Memphis Safe Task Force threw chemical agents to force an immigrant family with young children outside (Photo: Courtesy of Yuleiny Escobar)
Hundreds of videos and photos posted by volunteers to the group’s Instagram and Facebook pages have captured traffic stops, forcible home entries and arrests that have taken place since September.
V901 volunteers continue to stay in touch with families impacted by an arrest, linking them to counseling, food pantries, legal assistance and help navigating the online Immigration and Customs Enforcement locator system to track detained loved ones and add money to their inmate accounts, Demster said.
Volunteers are also trained to try to obtain car keys after traffic stops to ensure vehicles get to family members instead of being towed by private companies that typically refuse to release a car to anyone who is not the registered owner.
The day after the mother with toddlers was detained was her twins’ birthday, Demster said. V901 volunteers bought them presents. Their mother was later released with an ankle monitor and reunited with her children, he said. The woman’s 16-year-old niece, driven home from the laundromat by a family friend in a car that law enforcement pursued to the home that night, remains in ICE custody and is subject to deportation, he said.
A balding man with glasses holds a phone in his right hand and points to it with his left.
Hunter Demster, cofounder of Vencendarios901, the all volunteer effort monitoring actions of the Memphis Safe Task Force, shows videos volunteers have taken of ICE activity Nov. 21, 2025. (Photo: John Partipilo/Tennessee Lookout)
Activist Hunter Demster shares videos of ICE activity in Memphis
Photographs by John Partipilo/Tennessee Lookout
Task Force targets Hispanic neighborhoods
On a different Friday night, just before Thanksgiving, Demster and fellow volunteer Lucii Chambless took a shift driving the streets of the Berclair neighborhood watching for signs of Task Force activity.
A half dozen members of the Tennessee National Guard strolled up and down a sidewalk in front of a busy Kroger store on Summer Avenue, the main commercial route through the Berclair neighborhood. Guard personnel lingered in front of a van parked in an empty lot in the hip and artsy Cooper-Young neighborhood. In neither location would Guard personnel respond to questions about their assignment, referring questions to a public information officer.
The National Guard, whose presence in the city is being challenged in court by the Shelby County mayor and other elected Democrats, typically serves in a support role, Demster said.
Task Force law enforcement actions follow a pattern that distinguishes them from other police work, Demster said. Task Force stops typically are initiated by Memphis police, state troopers and Shelby County Sheriff deputies, while Homeland Security Investigations and ICE officers either ride along with them or follow in unmarked dark-colored vehicles. Task Force traffic stops that Demster has observed have included up to ten unmarked vehicles driven by federal agents identifiable by their uniforms.
A Black man in a military uniform.
Tennessee National Guard patrol different sections of Memphis., They are carrying side arms and tasers.
Photographs by John Partipilo/Tennessee Lookout
Most of the stops reported by V901 volunteers appear to be aimed at drivers in two of Memphis’ biggest Hispanic neighborhoods: Hickory Hill and Berclair, he said.
The Memphis Safe Task Force has made over 3,100 arrests, 1,900 of them for nonviolent offenses, and initiated more than 35,000 traffic stops since Oct. 1, according to a dashboard maintained by the city that has received community pushback for its lack of detail.
The data made public by the city and U.S. Marshals office, which spearheads the task force, does not include the locations of arrests or demographic data on individuals arrested. Task Force officials initially reported immigration arrest numbers but have since stopped providing that data.
In the absence of data, Demster said V901 volunteers said they have witnessed immigration arrests as a key priority. “They may say this isn’t strictly an ICE operation, but when you flood the two largest Hispanic communities in the city, we see it’s an ICE operation under the false pretenses of we’re here to stop violent criminals,” he said.
Tennessee highlighted in a map of the U.S.
Published on
Tennessee Lookout
Nashville, TN


In this context, the only possible dark truth about the fashion industry would be that everyone’s secretly straight. Which seems too funny for this hellworld until something similar is purported three segments down.
It does seem like the least harmful form of homophobia in a way, though. Like two dudes can get married and live together for years and years and if the political winds shift and they’re facing persecution, they can still be like “just kidding lol” and go back to being roommates who just can’t land girlfriends.


Fighting with a booking site. If they stick to their guns and rip me off, I’ll have no choice but to swear them off and . . . go back to their competitor, whom I’ve also sworn off for ripping me off. Fuck.


I thought I saw all the Smiling Friends episodes.