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#1-Ashli Babbit's Mom, Micki Witthoeft (9/7/22)

Episode 1 of the Political Prisoner Podcast Hosted by Jake Lang podcast, hosted by Jake Lang, titled "#1-Ashli Babbit's Mom, Micki Witthoeft (9/7/22)" was published on September 7, 2022 and runs 36 minutes.

September 7, 2022 ·36m · Political Prisoner Podcast Hosted by Jake Lang

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On this inaugural episode, Jake interviews Micki Witthoeft, Ashli Babbitt’s mother. Ashli Babbitt was murdered on January 6, 2021, by Capitol Police Lt. Mike Byrd in cold blood. Micki has been holding nightly vigils outside the DC Gulag in support of the political prisoners detained indefinitely inside by their government. Micki told Jake if her daughter was alive today, she would be outside the prison speaking out against this shocking injustice.  Please SUBSCRIBE & SHARE! Please visit J6solid.com to get more information about the upcoming J6 Solidarity Event on September 24th in DC. Please visit J6legal.org to make a donation for J6 defendants to get adequate legal help!

On this inaugural episode, Jake interviews Micki Witthoeft, Ashli Babbitt’s mother. Ashli Babbitt was murdered on January 6, 2021, by Capitol Police Lt. Mike Byrd in cold blood. Micki has been holding nightly vigils outside the DC Gulag in support of the political prisoners detained indefinitely inside by their government. Micki told Jake if her daughter was alive today, she would be outside the prison speaking out against this shocking injustice. 


Please SUBSCRIBE & SHARE!

Please visit J6solid.com to get more information about the upcoming J6 Solidarity Event on September 24th in DC.

Please visit J6legal.org to make a donation for J6 defendants to get adequate legal help!


Student thinkers of Political Prisoners Charles Vo We have discussed the limits of existing theories of punishment for example deterrence, rehabilitation, incapacitation, and retribution for making sense of the incarceration of these individuals. However, their writings show and demonstrate to us that there is perhaps a deeper meaning behind incarceration. From Bomb to Ballot: The History of Sinn Féin Daily Mail In 1981, ten young men starved themselves to death in a prison on the outskirts of Belfast. They were all members of the Irish Republican Army, and had been protesting their right to be treated as political prisoners. Their deaths shocked the world. The Hunger Strikes made martyrs of the young republican men who died and were the apex of a thirty year conflict in Ireland that – by its conclusion – had claimed the lives of 3,500 people, and gained a euphemism: The Troubles. The strikes also marked the moment that a little-known nationalist fringe group named Sinn Féin was catapulted from obscurity into the mainstream. Four decades later, Sinn Féin made history when it won the popular vote in the Ireland’s 2020 General Election and came within touching distance of taking power on both sides of the Irish border. Now, with the country on the eve of another election, Sinn Féin should be riding high in the polls. Instead, they are bogged down in chaos and disorder. Criticised f Amnesty's In Their Own Words Amnesty International UK Exclusive remarkable real-life stories from around the world. From Chelsea Manning in high-security military prison, to the longest-serving solitary prisoner in the US, these are the voices you need to hear. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. Doin Time Marisa An open forum, presenting information and discussion around issues faced by prisoners in the criminal justice system and migration detention centres.
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