sam-c January 18, 2021 (6:10 pm)
What a heartbreaking day for these people, their families and loved ones. So sorry to hear about this and hope they receive support and love from those around them.
Mike January 18, 2021 (7:09 pm)
Thank you SPD and citizens that stepped up to help.
Alki resident January 18, 2021 (7:23 pm)
It takes a village. You all are hero’s and thank you for saving him. Prayers for his heart and mind. Hurts to see how young he is.
L January 18, 2021 (8:04 pm)
Thank you spd and sfd. Maybe this will make people think twice before demonizing our police?
Alison January 18, 2021 (8:11 pm)
❤️
Grateful
Kalo January 17, 2021 (8:41 am)
The “not open to comments or dialogue “ is a WSF mo at informational meetings. At their “input” meetings with ridership, they “listen”, then did whatever they damn well pleased! Slippery outfit, WSF is!
S January 17, 2021 (11:13 am)
WSF listens to the Fauntleroy Community, West Seattle, Vashon, Southworth, then makes decisions that balance the needs of ALL constituents. Not getting everything you want doesn’t mean they are not listening. It just means that the world doesn’t revolve around you alone. I can’t figure out if this over-the-top language by FCA means they really don’t understand that, or if it’s just part of a negotiating strategy where you ask for the moon in the hopes of getting something in between. Either way, it’s wrong.
Date: Tuesday January 19th
Time: 6 pm- 7 pm
The West Seattle Crime Prevention Council gives community members a chance to ask questions and to bring up community concerns to the leadership of the Seattle Police Department’s Southwest Precinct (often including the Precinct Captain- Captain Grossman and Crime Prevention Coordinator- Jennifer Danner).
The tentative agenda for the January WSCPA meeting is as follows:
6pm- 6:30pm Crime Update from Captain Grossman
6:30pm- 6:55pm Q&A with SW Precinct leadership
6:55pm- 7pm Closing comments Captain Grossman will also be introducing our new SW Precinct 2nd Watch Lieutenant- Lt. Dorothy Kim!
Please use the Microsoft Teams link below to join the meeting next week.
Image zoom Credit: Getty Images/InStyle.com
Of all the photos of the carnage in the U.S. Capitol building yesterday, there are a few I just can t seem to shake. There s the picture of four bullet holes in the glass of the door leading to the House steps, and the one of an insurrectionist with his feet propped on Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi s desk.
And then there s an image as perplexing as it is disturbing, of a man with his face painted with stars and stripes, a horned helmet made of fur pelts on his head, his bare chest and arms displaying Norse-symbol tattoos. In the photo, he stands at the dais on the Senate floor, a spear in his left hand, to which he has affixed an American flag. Where s Pence, show yourself! he boomed from the seat that the Vice President had occupied just moments earlier.
Strange Horizons
Nancy Drew continues the CW’s recent assault upon my childhood. Much like the reboots
Riverdale (2017–present),
The Chilling Adventures of Sabrina (2018–present, moving from the CW to Netflix), and
Katy Keene (2020–present), the show shares very little with its original texts. While names are retained and the overall focus remains that of a female detective solving mysteries in her fictional home town, by and large it’s actually helpful if the viewer knows nothing about the original series or any of its various reboots through the years. While the show has a variety of Easter egg references with examples including the local high school being named Keene High (for Carolyn Keene), an episode titled “Nancy Drew and the Hidden Staircase” intended to hearken a nostalgic viewer to the second Nancy Drew book written in the 1930s, and a contemporary visual reference to the book cover for “The Secret in the Old Attic” the characters are largely unreco