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Month: October 2025

Oh god, Annie

I have to say…not a big fan of the circle of life lately.

Diane Keaton has died. She was 79.

PEOPLE can confirm the legendary actress died in California on Saturday, Oct. 11. “There are no further details available at this time, and her family has asked for privacy in this moment of great sadness,” a spokesperson tells PEOPLE.

Keaton rose to fame in the 1970s thanks to her role in The Godfather films and her collaborations with director Woody Allen. She won an Oscar for Best Actress for 1977’s Annie Hall. Her long career included movies like The First Wives Club, multiple collaborations with director Nancy Meyers and the Book Club franchise.

The actress was born in Los Angeles in 1946 as Diane Hall, and was the oldest of four children. Her father was a civil engineer, while her mom stayed at home. […]

Keaton performed in plays in high school, and after graduating in 1964, she pursued drama in college. But she soon dropped out and moved to New York to try to make her way in theater. She took her mother’s maiden name, Keaton, for her professional name, because there was already a Diane Hall registered with Actors’ Equity. […]

Her film debut was in 1970’s Lovers and Other Strangers, but her big break came when Francis Ford Coppola cast her as Kay Adams, the girlfriend of Al Pacino’s Michael Corleone, in The Godfather, released in 1972. The movie was based on the novel by Mario Puzo but Keaton didn’t read the bestseller before her audition and didn’t really know what the film was about.

“I think the kindest thing that someone’s ever done for me … is that I got cast to be in The Godfather and I didn’t even read it. I didn’t know a single thing,” she told PEOPLE in 2022. “I just was going around auditioning. I think that was amazing for me. And then I had to kind of read the book.” […]

Looking back on her career, Keaton told PEOPLE in 2019, “I don’t know anything, and I haven’t learned. Getting older hasn’t made me wiser. Without acting I would have been a misfit.”

Keaton never married. “Today I was thinking, I’m the only one in my generation of actresses who has been a single woman all her life,” she explained to PEOPLE in 2019. “I’m really glad I didn’t get married. I’m an oddball. I remember in high school, this guy came up to me and said, ‘One day you’re going to make a good wife.’ And I thought, ‘I don’t want to be a wife. No.’”

I’m taking this one personally. Frankly, I don’t know where to start. She was in so many of the films that formed me as a cineaste. I was weaned on the New Hollywood, and she was one of the key players. For all you youngsters in the audience…what is this “New Hollywood” I speak of, you may ask? In a 2017 essay about the demise of neighborhood movie theaters, I wrote:

Some of my fondest memories of the movie-going experience involve neighborhood theaters; particularly during a 3-year period of my life (1979-1982) when I was living in San Francisco. But I need to back up for a moment. I had moved to the Bay Area from Fairbanks, Alaska, which was not the ideal environment for a movie buff. At the time I moved from Fairbanks, there were only two single-screen movie theaters in town. To add insult to injury, we were usually several months behind the Lower 48 on first-run features (it took us nearly a year to even get Star Wars).

Keep in mind, there was no cable service in the market, and VCRs were a still a few years down the road. There were occasional midnight movie screenings at the University of Alaska, and the odd B-movie gem on late night TV (which we had to watch in real time, with 500 commercials to suffer through)…but that was it. Sometimes, I’d gather up a coterie of my culture vulture pals for the 260-mile drive to Anchorage, where there were more theaters for us to dip our beaks into.

Consequently, due to the lack of venues, I was reading more about movies, than watching them. I remember poring over back issues of The New Yorker at the public library, soaking up Penelope Gilliat and Pauline Kael; but it seemed requisite to  live in NYC (or L.A.) to catch all these cool art-house and foreign movies they were raving about  (most of those films just didn’t make it out up to the frozen tundra). And so it was that I “missed” a lot of 60s and 70s cinema.

Needless to say, when I moved to San Francisco, which had a plethora of fabulous neighborhood theaters in 1979, I quickly set about making up the deficit. While I had a lot of favorite haunts (The Surf, The Balboa, The Castro, and the Red Victorian loom large in my memory), there were two venerable (if a tad dodgy) downtown venues in particular where I spent an unhealthy amount of time in the dank and the dark with snoring bums who used the auditoriums as a $2 flop: The Roxie and The Strand.

That’s because they were “repertory” houses; meaning they played older films (frequently double and triple bills, usually curated by some kind of theme). That 3 years I spent in the dark was my film school; that’s how I got caught up with Francis Ford Coppola, Stanley Kubrick, Martin Scorsese, Robert Altman, Hal Ashby, Terrence Malick, Woody Allen, Sidney Lumet, Peter Bogdanovich, Werner Herzog, Ken Russell, Lindsay Anderson, Wim Wenders, Michael Ritchie, Brian De Palma, etc.

Keaton has been a fixture in my film universe since 1972, the year I saw my first ‘R’-rated feature at age 16. That film was, of course, The Godfather. I’d like to be able to brag that I was able to “sneak in”, but this was a military base (Theater #1 at Fort Wainwright, Alaska) so I had to be accompanied by a parent or guardian; hence I tagged along with my best bud and his parents.

However, it wasn’t until 5 years later that I became truly smitten with Keaton, thanks to her star-making turn in Woody Allen’s classic romantic comedy Annie Hall (I mean…who didn’t?)

Effortless charm. It wasn’t until after I saw Annie Hall in 1977 that I discovered Allen’s “earlier, funny” films with Keaton. One of my favorites from this period is his satire Sleeper:

Someone once famously observed regarding another screen partnership: “Sure [Fred Astaire] was great, but don’t forget that Ginger Rogers did everything he did…backwards and in high heels.” While she and Allen are not dancing, per se in that particular scene from Sleeper, Keaton holds her own with skillful comic timing (physical comedy is a dance of sorts).

Another gem from this period is Love and Death (1975). I love Keaton’s line delivery here:

Keaton knocked it out of the park again with her performance in Manhattan (1979).

Of course, Keaton’s career cannot be defined solely by her work with Allen, nor be relegated to playing a series of kooky and lovable characters. She proved herself to be a fine dramatic actor as well. She directed several films, including the unique 1987 documentary Heaven (tough to track down, but a recommended watch). She also explored other horizons as a creative artist, e.g. she published a book of still photography in 1980 called Reservations.

More “oddballs” the caliber of Diane Keaton, please. She will be missed.

Here are some more recommendations:

Looking for Mr. Goodbar – Considering that she was still basking in the critical accolades for her audience-pleasing Oscar-winning performance as the kooky and lovable Annie Hall, it was a bold career move for Diane Keaton to immediately follow it up with a leap  into the relative darkness of Looking for Mr. Goodbar.

Writer-director Richard Brooks adapted his 1977 drama/neo-noir from a novel by Judith Rossner (which was based on the sensationalized  real-life 1973 murder of a 28-year old NYC  schoolteacher). Keaton gives an outstanding performance as a young woman with a repressive Catholic upbringing who moves to  a seedy downtown apartment to escape the verbal abuse and restrictive rules laid down by her tyrannical father (Richard Kiley).

Her newfound sense of freedom and self-confidence sparks a sexual awakening; she soon slips into a double-life, teaching deaf children at an inner-city school by day, and cruising the singles bars at night looking for casual sex (and discovering recreational drugs along the way). When she begins juggling relationships with two men (Richard Gere and William Atherton), her life begins to take a darker turn. Tuesday Weld gives one of her best performances as Keaton’s sister.

The film divided critics at the time; some were upset at Brooks’ deviation from Rossner’s novel (I can’t speak for that, as I’ve never read it). Others appeared chagrined that the film (for them at least) lacked a moral center. Speaking as someone who turned 21 the year the film came out, I’d say it captures the zeitgeist of the “Me Decade” to a tee; I see it as a companion piece to John Badham’s Saturday Night Fever.

Play it Again, Sam – I don’t know what it is about this particular Woody Allen vehicle (directed by Herbert Ross), but no matter how many times I have viewed it, I laugh just as hard at all the one-liners as I did the first time I saw it.  Annie Hall and Manhattan may be his most highly lauded and artistically accomplished projects, but for pure “laughs per minute”, I would nominate this 1972 entry, with a screenplay adapted by Allen from his own original stage version.

Allen plays a film buff with a Humphrey Bogart obsession. He fantasizes he’s getting pointers from Bogie’s ghost (played to perfection by Jerry Lacy) who advises him on how to “be a man” and attract the perfect mate. He gets more pragmatic assistance from his best friends, a married couple (Diane Keaton and Tony Roberts) who fix him up with a series of women (the depictions of the various dating disasters are hilarious beyond description). A classic.

Shoot the Moon– Be forewarned: Alan Parker’s 1982 drama about the deterioration of a marriage pulls no punches (it is right out as a “date night” movie). Albert Finney co-stars with Diane Keaton as a couple with four kids whose marriage is about to go kaput. As in Kramer vs. Kramer, the film essentially opens with the split, and then focuses on the immediate emotional aftershocks and its profound impact on all family members. Absolutely heartbreaking, but beautifully acted by a skilled cast that includes Karen Allen, Peter Weller, and Dana Hill. Bo Goldman scripted, and Michael Seresin’s cinematography is lovely (the Marin County environs almost becomes a character itself).

Reds – It’s a testament to Warren Beatty’s conviction and legendary powers of persuasion that he was able to convince a major Hollywood studio to back a 3 ½ hour biopic about a relatively obscure American Communist (who is buried in the Kremlin, no less). As we know now, of course, this 1981 film turned out to be a critical success, and garnered a dozen Oscar nominations (it won three, including Best Director).

Diane Keaton turns in one of her best performances as Reed’s lover, writer and feminist Louise Bryant. Maureen Stapleton earned a Best Supporting Actress trophy with her portrayal of activist Emma Goldman. Jack Nicholson is perfect as the mercurial playwright Eugene O’Neill.  Beatty assembled an amazing group of surviving participants, whose anecdotal recollections are interwoven throughout, like a Greek Chorus of living history.

Memorable scene here:

Also recommended:

Interiors

The Little Drummer Girl

Crimes of the Heart

Baby Boom

Something’s Gotta Give

More reviews at Den of Cinema

Dennis Hartley

Oops

Yesterday:

Today:

It’s tough to be Secretary of War when you’re hungover.

The Humanity

I am hoping for a Cubs win today so they meet the Dodgers for the NLCS series. L.A. and Chicago are at the heart of Trump’s crackdown and both cities should feature Latin music, give out free tacos, and otherwise celebrate the Latino culture in their communities —- and in baseball.

Make a statement MLB. After all, the most American of all sports is full of immigrants!!! The humanity!

Move Over Loomer, Alex Jones Is In The House

Alex Jones and Ed Martin are seen together in a photo posted to Jones' X account on September 14.
Alex Jones and DOJ Vengeance Specialist Ed Martin last month

Trump’s favorite DOJ henchman goes there:

A top Justice Department official has retracted a letter he sent to an FBI agent who responded to the Sandy Hook Elementary School massacre that suggested the agent was being investigated in relation to a defamation lawsuit against Alex Jones.

In a letter to William Aldenberg’s attorney last week, President Donald Trump ally Ed Martin implied the agent was being scrutinized because of his role in a major lawsuit led by families of victims that resulted in a $1.4 billion judgment against the conspiracy theorist Jones.

Aldenberg, who was one of the first responders the day of the 2012 elementary school massacre, was a plaintiff in the lawsuit. He and the families testified that they faced years of harassment and threats from those who believed Jones’ lies that the shooting, which killed 20 first graders and six adults, was a hoax.

Martin initially told Aldenberg’s attorney that he had questions about the agent benefiting financially from the lawsuit and ominously warned that “there are criminal laws protecting the citizens from actions by government employees who may be acting for personal benefit.”

“I encourage you to review those,” Martin wrote, according to a copy of the letter Jones posted on X.

But in a new letter addressed to attorney Christopher Mattei on Wednesday, Martin withdrew his initial letter entirely.

In a brief note, CNN first reported, Martin wrote that there is no investigation of Aldenberg and “because of this, I hereby withdraw my request for information from you or your former client.”

Martin was ordered by Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche to retract the letter, according to a person familiar with the matter.

Martin had met with Jones earlier last month. That’s the picture above. Apparently, the freak whined to Martin that he’s been railroaded by the Deep State.

I guess it’s good news that there actually does seem to be a red line for Todd Blanche. But we had to go all the way to Alex Jones to find it.

You Could Be Next

There are countless similar incidents to what Tom described below happening to Americans and others all over the country. Here’s another one. Oh, and by the way, they’re lying about it:

“They put me on suicide watch and they put me in the cell, I’m naked, in like a hospital dress and just a concrete bed with like a mattress, like a thin mattress and, they leave the light on 24/7, there’s a glass door, and officers just always standing, like sitting out there, the psychiatric nurse comes and checks on me once a day, and so from Friday morning to Sunday afternoon when I’m released, I’m literally on In that cell, naked just in that room, with the light on this real, like this is a nightmare.”

He wrote this:

Civil rights in America have always been about one thing: holding power accountable when it strips people of their dignity and freedom. They are not privileges that government agents get to decide whether to honor. What happened to me wasn’t just a mistake—it was a violation of the very protections that our Constitution guarantees.

On July 10, I was on my way to work when ICE agents engulfed my car in tear gas, smashed my driver-side window, and pepper-sprayed my face. They dragged me out, threw me to the ground, and even while I was complying, one agent kneeled on my neck and another kneeled on my back as others stood by and watched.

I spent three nights and three days in federal custody. During that time, I was never told what I was charged with, was not allowed to shower despite being covered in tear gas and pepper spray, had no phone call to my family, and no access to an attorney. I was placed on suicide watch and missed my daughter’s third birthday. No explanation. No charges. No apology. One day, I was just told, “you’re free to go.”

For me as a veteran, this is more than just a personal injustice—it’s a constitutional affront. We are taught that America stands apart because of its rule of law and protection of rights. If the government can strip those rights from us without consequence, it undermines the very system we claim makes our country stand apart.

As of now, I have submitted claims under the Federal Tort Claims Act (FTCA) to federal agencies related to my wrongful detention by federal officers. These claims describe my unlawful detention, including the officers’ use of excessive force, the denial of a hearing with a judge, the denial of access to legal counsel and any other contact with the outside world, and the denial of basic necessities.

While the claims are under review by the relevant federal authorities, I am continuing to speak out. I do it for two reasons. First, because I believe that Americans of all ideological stripes would agree that the government can’t just make people disappear without any process or explanation. Second, because I want to give the government a chance to admit that they were wrong.

So far the government has not done so. Instead, in response to an op-ed I published in the San Francisco Chronicle, DHS claimed that during the July 10 operation in Camarillo, CA, I “became violent and refused to comply with law enforcement,” blocked their route, and was arrested for assault. They stated that US citizens are not being “wrongfully” arrested by ICE, that their enforcement operations are highly targeted, and that their personnel conduct due diligence to know who they are targeting. DHS also framed criticisms of the operation as “smears” against ICE officers, alleging such claims have contributed to an increase in assaults on law enforcement.

DHS’s statement ignores reality and is designed to demonize and villainize people who don’t let the government trample over their rights, and aren’t afraid to speak the truth. First, I was not violent, I simply asked the officers to let me pass through because I needed to get to work; and I also complied with ICE’s demands by backing up my car. Second, the statement ignores the three days I spent in federal custody with no charges, no phone call to my family, no access to a judge or an attorney, no shower, and no explanation for their actions. It is deeply troubling that a government agency would publicly deny these facts while portraying my experience as a threat or attack on officers. The truth is that I am a US citizen and a veteran, and I will continue to pursue accountability for the rights that were violated that day.

This fight is not just about my case—it’s about ensuring that there is recourse when people are silenced, detained, or dehumanized by the very government meant to protect us. The legal system must allow accountability when government agencies overstep their authority.

Incidents like this are proof that civil rights protections in America are only as strong as our willingness to enforce them. What happens when government agencies act as though the Constitution doesn’t apply to them? Agencies like ICE cannot be allowed to operate in the shadows, unchecked and unaccountable. Civil rights mean nothing if those in power face no consequences for violating them. Accountability is the only way forward.

I don’t want to be cynical or pessimistic, I really don’t. But I’m finding it hard to picture how this accountability takes place. We thought we were holding the January 6th rioters and Donald Trump to account. Look at what we’ve got. The American people just didn’t care enough about the Constitution, democracy, the rule of law or any of the other guarantees of their freedoms to uphold them. They voted for the huckster because egg prices were too high.

Maybe this horrific power grab change all that but I’m not sanguine. Roughly half the country will remain appalled and frankly, in danger as this progresses. The other half will be ecstatic to see it. Unless there is a catastrophe on the scale of depression or war, I’m not sure how that changes. And in those circumstances it’s just as easy for things to go the wrong way.

In the meantime, we just have to resist however we can. What choice do we have?

Bizarro World Turned Inside Out

…When the propaganda machine starts screaming at its own inventor, something is breaking. Loudly.

I need a drink. A big one.

Now I need another one:

Liars Decry ‘Untrue Smears’

Situation could escalate. Frogs could multiply.

As is often true of liars, bullies, and extremist conservatives, they can dish it out but cannot take it (Raw Story):

The White House is pushing back against residents of Washington, D.C. over a new campaign to mark locations around the city where Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents had “kidnapped” suspected migrants.

“ICE ABDUCTED SOMEONE HERE,” read one hand-made sign tied to a telephone poll, which also bore the date and time of the suspected arrest, along with contact information for residents to share information on other suspected ICE arrests, The Washington Post reported Saturday.

The campaign did not go over well in the White House, with spokesperson Abigail Jackson condemning the signs as another example of rhetoric that increases violence against federal officers, calling them “untrue smears,” and that claims that ICE is “kidnapping people” were “false” in an email to The Washington Post.

You mean like the “untrue smears” the White House dispenses daily, Karoline Leavitt, Stephen Miller, Kristi Noem, and Donald Trump?

The Post adds:

ICE is has acted “heroically” and “with the utmost professionalism,” [Jackson] said, and that those accusing agents of violating civil rights are sympathizing with undocumented immigrants and criminals.

Professionalism like this, Ms. Jackson? No, those accusing agents of violating civil rights worry that they might be next.

DHS spokeswoman Tricia McLaughlin tells the Post in an email, “ICE is not ‘kidnapping’ illegal aliens…. These smears are leading to our officers facing a 1000% increase in assaults against them including terrorist attacks, cars being used as weapons, and bounties on their heads.”

The same Trump administration has claimed for months it could lower drug prices by 1000%, by 1,400 to 1,500%. Trump 2.0’s credibility with statistics has also been reduced by 1,400 to 1,500%.

* * * * *

Have you fought dictatorship today?

50501 
May Day Strong
No King’s One Million Rising movement – Next national day of protest Oct. 18
Freedom Over Fascism Toolkit
The Resistance Lab
Choose Democracy
Indivisible: A Guide to Democracy on the Brink 
You Have Power
Chop Wood, Carry Water
Thirty lonely but beautiful actions
Attending a Protest Surveillance Self-Defense

“Officially In The Hide-Your-Neighbors Stage”

The lawless are enforcing the law

My overpass sign from Friday rush hour. Many fewer cheerful honks, waves, and thumbs-ups this week for some reason.

The immortal words of the late Mayor Richard J. Daley of Chicago seem oddly pertinent this morning:

“The policeman isn’t there to create disorder; the policeman is there to preserve disorder.”

Two videos that fluttered over the transom last night turn Daley’s malapropism into truth-telling in a time when truth lies bleeding out in the gutter. For those unfamiliar, Daley was defending Chicago Police who were busting the heads of anti-war protesters in Grant Park during the 1968 Democratic Convention.

Decades later, the police determined to preserve disorder in Chicago are Kristi Noem’s ICEmen. They seem less like lawmen than thugs Noem recruited from prison gangs. Handed federal authority, they behave as though intoxicated with it. Working for ICE, they get to bust heads under color of law and draw bonuses for doing it. All while committing crimes with reckless abandon and unqualified immunity.

Set aside for the moment the fates of the victims of ICE/CBP manhandles in these two videos from Chicago. Focus on driving that would promptly land you or me in jail.

The first clip comes from digital creator Erubiel Espinoza. Agents are in the process of detaining someone while neighbors honk their horns in disapproval. Several unmarked vehicles block the street, including a white Jeep Wagoneer(?) sitting crosswise across the street. The Wagoneer whips around in an arc away from the camera into the opposite lane and into the path of a passing (black) sedan that impacts the Wagoneer on the passenger side.

The Wagoneer pulls forward. CBP agents pour out, guns drawn. They yank the stunned and screaming woman driver out of her vehicle, throw her to the pavement and arrest her for the accident they caused. CBP drives off with the victim, leaving her wrecked car in the middle of the street.

The second video from Friday morning you have likely seen. ICE arrested WGN News editor/producer Debbie Brockman for another alleged “assault on a federal law enforcement officer” (Chicago Tribune):

On Friday evening, WGN issued a statement that its employee had been released from ICE detention.

“Earlier today, a WGN-TV creative services employee was detained by ICE,” the station said. “She has since been released, and no charges were filed against her. Out of respect for her privacy, we will have no further statements about this incident.”

But again, watch the masked ICEmen drive as if they are legally bulletproof.

An unmarked silver Chrysler minivan (New Jersey tags) sits angled in the street, partially blocking traffic. A black Chevy SUV sits partially blocking the ICEmen’s exit. It’s not clear if the woman driver is blocked from moving by the Chrysler and other traffic. They shout at her to move, but it’s not clear that she can. So the ICEmen drive away, tires squealing as they sideswipe her car and tear off the bumper.

I would be charged. You would be charged. But the lawless are enforcing the law.

In a society of laws, both incidents of reckless property damage would require the victims be made whole. Good luck with that. The first incident, I’m told, was reported to the Chicago Police Department.

But the most disturbing story from Friday night comes regarding the apartment raid on the South Shore. Author Madiba Dennie announced ominously on Bluesky, “aaand we are officially in the hide-your-neighbors stage.”

During a military-style raid on a building in Chicago’s South Shore, one resident heard a knock on his door. 

It wasn’t the feds —  it was a mom and her 7-year-old daughter, pleading for help. He let them hide in his unit for the next 3 days. chicago.suntimes.com/immigration/…

Sophie Sherry (@sophiesherry.bsky.social) 2025-10-10T19:33:50.668Z

From the Chicago Sun-Times:

Amid the smoke bombs and screams that ricocheted throughout a South Shore building last month during a massive military-style immigration raid, one man heard a knock on his door.

On the other side was a mom and her 7-year-old daughter, pleading for his help.

“I wasn’t planning on letting her stay, but I didn’t know what the hell was going on,” the man said of his Venezuelan migrant neighbors. But he quickly relented. The little girl was inconsolable and hid under his bed.

“I didn’t want them to take her,” said the man, who didn’t want to be named because he fears he’ll be targeted by federal authorities for his actions.

“I gave her my bedroom, and I just told her, ‘Just stay there. Don’t open, don’t, shh, just stay quiet,’” he recalled telling the mom and daughter as he choked back tears.

The man was wise to remain anonymous. The government may come looking to charge him anyway.

* * * * *

Have you fought dictatorship today?

50501 
May Day Strong
No King’s One Million Rising movement – Next national day of protest Oct. 18
Freedom Over Fascism Toolkit
The Resistance Lab
Choose Democracy
Indivisible: A Guide to Democracy on the Brink 
You Have Power
Chop Wood, Carry Water
Thirty lonely but beautiful actions
Attending a Protest Surveillance Self-Defense

Friday Night Soother

They aren’t cats and they aren’t dogs. They evolved uniquely on Madagascar:

They are very cute but they are also apex predators and especially love the taste of lemur. 🙁 But hey, everybody’s gotta eat…

Anyway, more adorable pups:

We Are All Terrorists Now

This is about one thing and one thing alone — to score political points with the terrorist wing of their party, which is set to hold a hate America rally in DC next week.” Tom Emmer

As Jon Favreau wrote in response to that outrageous comment:

A top Republican in Congress just called millions of Americans terrorists. The last No Kings protests saw 4-6 million people turn out. They were peaceful. They were joyful. There were American flags everywhere. Those of us who will be participating next weekend in what Emmer calls a “hate rally” for “terrorists” love our country – particularly its promise that we’re all created equal, that we all have the right to speak freely, to enjoy equal protection under the law, to believe what we want, and to choose our leaders without fear of reprisal.

The No Kings protests are happening because Emmer and Trump and his regime are trampling on those rights and freedoms.

It’s clearly a talking point. Get a load of this crapola:

I think we know what a hate America rally in DC looks like, don’t we? And it wasn’t perpetrated by Antifamas or whatever hysterical nonsense these people are calling it:

If you haven’t planned on going to a protest near you next weekend, this may be the time to get off the couch. If millions and millions of people show up all over the country to peacefully protest they can’t beat and jail all of us.

You can find one near you here: No Kings