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dentures
Prisoners in the Texas prison system lose teeth due to age, medical problems, trauma, and other issues. When they can no longer chew they are routinely denied dentures and served pureed cafeteria food. This can go on for their entire sentence. It is a dehumanizing practice designed to save money at the expense of human dignity. Texas is not alone among states in their poor treatment of prisoners. Photo credit: Freaktography / Flickr (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)

Toothless Texas Prisoners Sentenced to Eat Mush Indefinitely

Trump Admin's Anti-Iran Agenda ; Vulnerable Voting Machine Used in Half of US

Trump Admin's Anti-Iran Agenda ; Vulnerable Voting Machine Used in Half of US ...and More Picks 9/27

Turkey and Germany: On the Mend? (Dan)

This summer saw relations between Germany and Turkey at their lowest in years. But autumn has brought a change in relations between German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan. Here’s why.

Trump Lawyer Giuliani Says Iran’s Government Will Be Overthrown (Jimmy)

The author writes, “President Donald Trump’s personal lawyer Rudy Giuliani on Saturday said that US sanctions on Iran are leading to economic pain that could lead to a ‘successful revolution,’ contrasting with administration comments that government change in Tehran is not US policy.”

Pompeo, Bolton Headline Anti-Iran Group Event (Reader Luke)

The author writes, “US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and National Security Adviser John Bolton headlined an event at an ultra-hawkish anti-Iran lobby group on Tuesday, a few blocks away from where the UN is holding its annual General Assembly.”

MI5 Admits to ‘Unlawful’ Spying on Privacy International (Jimmy)

The author writes, “The security service MI5 acted unlawfully by intercepting and accessing private communications data belonging to the campaigning group Privacy International, Britain’s most secret court has ruled.”

Voting Machine Used in Half of US Is Vulnerable to Attack, Report Finds (Reader Luke)

The author writes, “Election machines used in more than half of US states carry a flaw disclosed more than a decade ago that makes them vulnerable to a cyberattack, according to a report to be delivered Thursday on Capitol Hill.”

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