Dave Askins, who runs the excellent B Square Bulletin, seems to be everywhere. To that end, I googled, “superhero who can be in several places at one time.” It turns out several such characters from the Marvel and other universes have existed on comic book pages. There’ve been Multiple Man, who had the ability to split into several copies of himself from birth; Doctor Strange, a neurosurgeon who learned about astral projection and cloning; and The Flash, who was so speedy that he could seem to be in two places at once.

Multiple Man.
By the way, slogging through the various wiki and fan-sites dedicated to superheroes and the like, I was reminded how much I don’t care about the Marvel et al worlds. So many of the storylines and character descriptions in them depend on what’s called “the anything machine.” That is, whenever a character finds her or himself in hot water, there’s always some kind of device that they pull out of their…, well that they pull out, that saves them or humanity or whatever’s in peril that month. It all strikes me as a big cheat. Rather than digging into human behavior for answers to conflicts, comic book superheroes just get imaginary machines or powers that produce the Hollywood ending. Or the cliffhanger, whichever is called for.
Anyway, Dave Askins. He, or one of his minions (don’t all superheroes have minions or acolytes or apprentices?) was at the Friday anti-Flock, anti-ICE protest at courthouse square. Flock, BTW, is a high-tech surveillance software/hardware outfit, one of whose products these days is automated license plate recognition. It’s the tech that allows cars to zip through toll locations on Interstates and expressways without stopping to fling coins into collection boxes but also is being used by thousands of police departments around the world. These so-called ALPR gadgets let the cops find out, for instance, if a car is properly registered; civil libertarians worry it can be used as a mass-surveillance tool. Bloomington’s got the product but outcry from protesters and warnings from city council member Isak Nti Ansari have urged mayor Kerry Thomson to reconsider the city’s Flock contract.
[Dave Askins has appeared on Big Talk several times: here, here, and here.]
A similar outcry arose a few decades ago when Chicago started putting up 360º-range video cameras on street corners in rough neighborhoods. Back then, the outcry came from people who didn’t live in those neighborhoods. Those who did might have been made itchy by the initial appearances of the cameras but eventually came to embrace them when crime stats went down.
Thus far the government hasn’t used the cameras to track the movements of individuals but, who knows, some authoritarian mayor or police superintendent of the future may well shrug and say as long as the technology is available, why not use it?
That’s the argument protesters advanced Friday.
As for ICE, well, I needn’t explain why hundreds of thousands took to the streets around the nation Friday in opposition to it. By this late date, if I have to explain to you why ICE, as currently constituted under Li’l Duce, has to be resisted, you’ll never get it anyway. Like jazz.

Askins (or someone in his employ) took photos at the protest. Lo and behold, there appeared a fellow who’s made his presence felt at rallies and protests the last few years. He carries a big assault rifle; Indiana, of course, being one of the states that allows open firearm carry. Here he is:

Credit: B Square Bulletin
The fellow told B Square he’s carrying the artillery to protect the protesters. He did the same thing during 2020’s Black Lives Matter demonstrations around the courthouse. Back then, as well as Friday, no gun battles erupted which, I suppose, he can say is due to his armed presence.
It must be noted, though, that should gunfire break out at a mass protest, one holy hell of a lot of people are going to become what military planners like to euphemize as “collateral damage.” Only dumb luck can explain why such an unholy situation hasn’t developed yet in recent years.
This holy land of late has been experiencing a flip-flop regarding guns. After ICE iced that Good Samaritan protester, Alex Pretti, a little more than a week ago, the Trump-Reich’s line has held he was armed and dangerous so therefore had to be summarily executed. The anti-ICE contingent suddenly found themselves born-again 2nd Amendment enthusiasts, which I might have found laughable, save for the fact that somebody got riddled with bullets.
It’s another example of how today’s black and white can become tomorrow’s white and black. I mean, for example, the Democrats during and immediately after the Civil War were the party of segregation and state’s right. The Republicans — Lincoln’s party — had fought for federal supremacy and the end of slavery. Flash forward to the post World War II era the parties’ identities were reversed.
It’s as though Lewis Carroll was a documentarian.
He might be wearing a mask and have suddenly popped out from around a corner and shoved his snub-nosed Saturday night special into your ribs. He’d unburden you of all your valuables — your watch, your wedding ring, and necklace, too — if he was a conscientious crook.





