Society's Child
Shannon Morris, Melissa Lee and Kevin Rafferty are seeking unspecified damages in federal court, AP reports. They filed a complaint last week in which they stated that they were retaliated against after they had objected to the lab's current DNA test and called for the adoption of a more modern and accurate procedure. The agency allegedly refused to acknowledge any flaws in the current system and urged them to keep their mouths shut, they said.
The three claim that the police department was not eager to employ the new method, known as TrueAllele system, which would guarantee better accuracy. Scientists say the police were satisfied with the old testing procedure as it reportedly secured more convictions.

Another domino falls: Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards signs an order expanding Louisiana's Medicaid program on Jan. 12, his first day in office.
The big insurer UnitedHealth Group has even whined about losing so many millions it's thinking about withdrawing from the Obamacare marketplace as soon as next year. Others, including Anthem and Aetna, have mentioned that their exchange business isn't yet profitable, though they're not talking about pulling the plug.
It seems that insurers are perfectly happy and prosperous competing in the markets where the government is the payer.Here's what they haven't been saying so loudly: They're making scads of money from Obamacare — so much that almost universally, they're expanding their participation.
- Healthcare analyst Andrew Sprung
What's the catch? The big profits have come not from the insurance exchanges, but via the ACA's Medicaid expansion, in which the largest insurers have been playing a major role. The same insurance executives who go out of their way to badmouth the ACA's individual exchange plans talk as though they can't get enough of the Medicaid business, especially its managed care component.
Philosopher, semiologist, master of epic erudition, medieval aesthetic specialist, fiction and non-fiction writer, Eco oscillated gleefully between the roles of "Apocalyptic and Integrated" — the title of one of his seminal books (1964). His trademark touch was a delightfully erudite synthesis of tragic optimism — as if he was the supreme erudite dreamer.
Not only he wrote numerous, priceless essays on aesthetics, linguistics and philosophy, and criticized in depth the global mediascape; he was also a best-selling fiction author, from The Name of the Rose (1980) — 14 million copies sold — to Foucault's Pendulum (1988).
Before he became Il Professore, enjoying iconic status, Eco plunged deep into St. Thomas Aquinas, ceased to believe in God and parted ways with the Catholic Church ("Thomas Aquinas miraculously cured me of my faith.") His 1954 philosophy thesis at the University of Turin — guided by a master, Luigi Pareyson — was on Aquinas's aesthetics.
Last year, the Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport in the US state of Georgia handled 22.7 million passengers, more than Beijing, Dubai or Tokyo. However, due to the lack of Transportation Security Administration (TSA) staff, many of those passengers experienced very long wait times.
Should the TSA refuse to increase the number of staff at the airport, Hartsfield-Jackson's management will have to privatize the screening staff, General Manager Miguel Southwell has said.
In a letter to TSA administrator Peter Neffenger, Southwell said despite efforts to decrease traveler wait times at security checkpoints, "things appear to be only getting worse."
"It is for this reason that we are giving serious consideration to your agency's Screening Partnership Program" (SPP), which allows US airports to apply for "qualified private contractors," he wrote in a letter sent February 12, and obtained by WSBTV on Thursday.
Hartsfield-Jackson staff have conducted "exhaustive research with current SPP airports," the manager said. "Barring the implementation of some transformational technology or a dramatic shift in staffing allowances in the next 60 days, Hartsfield-Jackson will take steps to launch SPP," Southwell said.

People attend an anti-government rally at Independence Square in central Kiev, Ukraine, February 21, 2016.
Hundreds of people joined the protest on the Kiev's central Maidan square on Sunday on the second anniversary of the bloody Euromaidan riots that led to an overthrow of the government in 2014 and major unrest in the country.
The number of protesters, according to TASS, amounted to about 300 people, while AP puts their numbers at about 1,000. The rally was organized by a group of nationalists called 'Revolutionary Right Forces' that consists of the former members of a different far-right organization, including the ultra-nationalist Right Sector movement as well as the Azov volunteer militia battalion, which sports many far-right zealots in its ranks.
Comment: Meanwhile, from Poroshenko:
The President of Ukraine, Petro Poroshenko, considers the events of Maidan-3 ("Popular Assembly" and their riots at Russian banks and Moscow's representative offices) a provocation by the Kremlin, reports "Ridus". He believes that the activists received instructions and slogans from Moscow.He doesn't disappoint!
"The Kremlin propaganda has done everything to make this day look different. But this provocation of theirs did not work", — said the Ukrainian President.

Transit users cue to board a Coast Mountain bus at the Surrey Central Exchange, one station in the Translink infrastructure in Surrey, B.C. Thursday March 12, 2015.
The bus was at 96th Avenue and King George Blvd. when four passengers told the driver they "were not feeling well."
"Preliminary witness accounts suggested that the patrons on the bus may have been exposed to an unknown substance," said the press release. "However, subsequent checks by the Surrey Fire Department and investigating agencies found no evidence of any hazardous materials.The patrons were treated and released at scene."
Reports indicated an unknown powder was left on the bus that may have caused some passengers to cough.

Fire fighters try to extinguish a fire at a former hotel that was under reconstruction to become a home for asylum seekers on February 21, 2016 in Bautzen east of Dresden.
"In the early hours of Sunday a fire broke out at the Husarenhof , which is currently under reconstruction and planned to be used as a refugee center in the future," Thomas Knaup, Bautzen Police spokesperson, told RT's Ruptly video agency.
Previously, Husarenhof was a hotel and restaurant.
There were no casualties as a result of the incident as the building was empty due to the time.
"The causes of the fire are still not clear," Knaup said, adding that a criminal investigation has been initiated.
Comment: Absolutely heartless.
Children's charity Plan UK found that 22 percent of women reported having suffered unwanted sexual touching, groping, flashing, sexual assault or rape while they were "in or around" school.
The disturbing findings, based on over 3,700 interviews including more than 2,000 women, indicate that 61 percent of the women who said they were sexually harassed never reported the abuse.
Though the charity says girls are "especially vulnerable" to sexual violence and bullying at school, the results of the survey suggest a third of adults of both genders have suffered unwanted sexual contact while at school.
The protesters, holding signs reading "No" or "Protect Henoko" and chanting "Don't build the base" staged a rally against the Japan's government intention to relocate the functioning US marine base Futenma, stationed in a densely populated area of Ginowan, to a facility in Henoko, also on Okinawa.
Over 28,000 people joined the rally, according to Kyodo news agency. Opposition rallies were also held in the cities of Toyama, Okayama, Sapporo, Nagoya and Osaka.
Comment: The Japanese have had more than enough of the US military presence:
- US Okinawan military base secretly contaminating local waterways with toxic chemicals
- U.S. troops are stationed in Japan to protect the nation - but to sex workers in Okinawa, they bring fear, not security
- Okinawa: Tokyo's move to resume work on US base is 'illegal invasion'
- Japan considers cutbacks to funding of US military bases
- Permission to relocate Okinawan US military base withdrawn by island's governor
The jihadist militant group seems to be experiencing grave financial difficulties: it is having trouble meeting its expenses due to Russian airstrikes ruining its oil infrastructure and low oil prices, forcing the group to cut salaries in half and start accepting only US dollars for payments, according to AP report.
The long-cherished dream of Daesh to have its own gold, silver and copper-backed currency seems to be forgotten thing of the past. The Islamist group is apparently suffering from a shortage of cash, the agency reports citing some residents escaping from Raqqa, the group's stronghold in Syria.
It has reportedly cut salaries by half across its self-declared caliphate and has urged the residents of Raqqa to pay for "taxes" and utility fees, such as water and electricity, in black-market American dollars. Reports also suggest that the militants are now releasing detainees for a cut-rate price of $500 each. There are shortages of necessities, electricity is rationed and prices for basic commodities are spiraling out of reach.
Comment: Economic resources are shrinking for IS/Daesh as countries shut down its many sources of funds. Its faux economy is based on extortion, robberies, ransom and smuggling, embezzlement, taxation of territories under their military control, and devalued oil. Without any real and long-lasting, productive and positive means of legitimate income, IS/Daesh is dependent and self-defeating. It has to continue all the above to remain viable -- a closed and dwindling economic loop.











Comment: Delays caused by strip searches, unwarranted pat-downs and molesting passengers. Are there enough terrorists going to, or inside the U.S., to justify the existence of the TSA?