Society's ChildS


Laptop

Chinese try to cure internet addiction with boot camps

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Students receive a group punishment during a military-style close-order drill class at the Qide Education Center in Beijing February 19, 2014
Military style boot-camps are flourishing in China in order to break teenagers of their internet addiction. Some 250 camps are now functioning in the country alone - and the idea may spread.

"My parents wanted me to study at home all day, and I was not allowed to play outside,"
one teenager, who gave only his surname, Wang, told Reuters. He said that resultantly he turned to the Internet to escape the competitive societal pressures.

"As I became addicted to the game, my school grades tumbled. But I gained another feeling of achievement by advancing to the next level in the game," Wang said.

He admitted to once playing for more than three days in a row during which he slept for only one hour.

Bad Guys

Police animal cruelty: Furious man confronts police after learning they killed his dog

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Screenshot from RT video
Residents in Salt Lake City, Utah are up in arms after a local police officer shot and killed a man's beloved pet dog last month while responding to a missing child report.

Authorities found the displaced toddler unharmed and sleeping inside its home around 30 minutes after they entered the yard of Sean Kendall on June 18 and killed his 110-pound Weimaraner, "Geist."

The incident has since managed to garner the attention of animal lovers in and out of Salt Lake City after Kendall published on the web a cell phone video he recorded as he accosted the police outside his home moments after learning what had happened.

"About 15 minutes ago, I got a phone call from Utah Animal Control, calling to tell me that an officer had shot and killed my dog," Kendall says in the beginning of the clip. "He was inside my backyard in a fenced-off area. What was the cause for the officer to shoot and kill my dog?"

Comment: Pets are being killed more and more often by police officers, see the following articles:

- Baltimore police officer charged after slitting restrained dog's throat
- The police will kill your dog
- Police Out of Control! Officers fatally shoot family's dog after responding to home's alarm system
- Detroit police kill puppy in couple's backyard while chasing suspect, arrest dog owner when asked questions
- Man calls to report a burglary, police arrive and shoot his dog in the head
- Florida police break into wrong backyard, shoot owner's dog
- Michigan police shoot dog 8 times after barking complaint
- Dog shot and killed by police officer in front of owner and her 2-Year-old son
- Police State: Graphic video shows California police shooting dog during arrest
- Central Texas dog shot by police officer after warrant mix-up
- Austin Police Officer Fatally Shoots Dog After Going To Wrong Address

Also listen in to the latest SOTT Talk Radio Show: Para-military Police State: U.S. cops out of control?


Bomb

Oops! Ou est la bombe? French cops 'lose explosives' in airport during training and can't find them

Marseille airport
© AFP Photo / Anne-Christine Poujoulat
French police put a block of explosives at Marseille Airport during training exercises...and forgot where they hid it, says a leaked report. The authorities have been searching for the perilous package for a week to no avail.

The explosives were lost somewhere in the cargo area in Marseille Provence Airport in the second-largest French city, reported French media.

The deadly substance was hidden during exercises in which the local gendarmes were training police dogs to find explosives. However, the sniffer dogs didn't seem to be trained well enough to find the substances. Neither were the officers, who forgot where they put no less than 100 grams of C-4 military explosives.

"All searches to find the material have failed," the police source said. It is yet unclear whether fully-trained police dogs had been used to help find the substances.

A criminal investigation has been launched to find out who is responsible for the incident, said local police, adding that the culprit could be subject to "administrative penalties and lawsuits."

The preliminary inquiry said that "there was a negligent supervision" of the training exercise.

Footprints

NYPD 'cannibal cop' to walk free after judge overturns conviction

Federal Courthouse in Manhattan
© AFP Photo / Stan HondaView of Federal Courthouse in Manhattan where the trial of New York Police Department officer Gilberto Valle, accused of conspiring to kidnap women that he planned to cook and eat, began February 25, 2013 in New York
A former New York Police Department officer convicted of planning to kidnap and rape women before killing and eating them is set to go free after a federal judge overturned his conviction.

According to Reuters, the so-called "Cannibal Cop" Gilberto Valle was acquitted by US District Judge Paul Gardephe on Monday. Valle has been in prison since he was arrested in 2012, and potentially faced life behind bars on kidnapping conspiracy charges.

In his opinion, Judge Gardephe stated that the evidence used to originally convict Valle did not sufficiently prove that the former officer acted on what his attorneys said were sexual, cannibalistic fantasies involving women he never met, as well as his wife.

"The evidentiary record is such that it is more likely than not the case that all of Valle's Internet communications about kidnapping are fantasy role-play," the judge wrote.

Gardephe did uphold Valle's conviction on a less serious charge, which alleged that he used the NYPD's federal database to collect information on various women he intended to target. That conviction carried a sentence of up to one year in prison, but since Valle has been in jail since 2012, he can be set free as early as Tuesday.

Although prosecutors originally argued that Valle's access of the NYPD database signaled that the former officer was taking steps to carry out his lurid plan - they also claimed he had searched the internet in order to learn about using chloroform to knock someone unconscious - defense attorneys said his involvement with a dark fetish website was simply fantasy. When Valle appealed his conviction, his lawyers claimed the jury could not differentiate between the details of his fantasy and real steps toward making it a reality.

Gardephe also pointed to the fact that no one was ever harmed to justify the idea that evidence in the case was lacking.
"No one was ever kidnapped, no attempted kidnapping ever took place, and no real-world, non-Internet -based steps were ever taken to kidnap anyone," he wrote, according to the New York Post.

"Dates for 'planned' kidnappings pass without comment, without discussion, without explanation, and with no follow-up. The only plausible explanation for the lack of comment on inquiry about allegedly agreed-upon and scheduled kidnappings is that Valle and the others engaged in these chats understood that no kidnapping would actually take place."

Arrow Up

Common sense prevails: New York court rules cities may pass own laws to ban fracking

fracking
© AFP Photo / David Mcnew
Municipalities within New York can pass local laws to ban hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, the state's top appeals court affirmed Monday.

The 5-2 decision this week out of the New York Court of Appeals now means that cities and towns across the Empire State can pass local zoning rules prohibiting the controversial natural gas-extraction process, much to the chagrin of energy companies that accused those restrictions of being illegal.

Dryden and Middlefield - two upstate New York towns - became the target of litigation after fracking operations planned within their borders were preemptively aborted as a result of recently-enacted drilling bans.

The plaintiffs - Norse Energy Corp. and a rural dairy farmer - responded to the bans in Dryden and Middlefield by asking the courts to acknowledge that towns can't enact local laws imposing restrictions on the oil and gas industry.

Agreeing with three lower courts, the majority of the state's appellate panel said local officials legally passed the anti-fracking bills.

Comment: As the evidence mounts that fracking contaminates ground water and causes earthquakes, more brave individuals are taking a stance against the practice in spite of the oil industry's massive propaganda campaign.


Heart - Black

Blaming the victim: Mexican woman charged with murder for self-defense against rapist

Yakiri Rubí Rubio
Yakiri Rubí Rubio
A Mexican woman is currently on trial for killing her rapist in self-defense.

The woman, 21-year-old Yakiri Rubí Rubio, was abducted at knifepoint by two men on December 9, 2013 in her hometown of Mexico City, Mexico. According to Upside Down World, 37-year-old attacker Miguel Angel Anaya began raping her at a nearby hotel. Rubio fought back against Anaya, ultimately stabbing him in the abdomen and neck with the knife he had been carrying. Anaya and his accomplice, brother Luis Omar Anaya, both fled on their motorcycles. Rubio was able to make her way to the nearby Public Prosecutor's Office to report the crime.

While Rubio was in the office, Luis Anaya arrived and accused Rubio of murdering her brother. The man claimed that Rubio had known and been lovers with his brother, a claim which Rubio denies because she is homosexual.

Still, the woman was charged with homicide. Although her charges were reduced to "legitimate self-defense with excessive violence" and she was released on $10,000 bail, she still faces fines to be paid to Anaya's family and ten years of possible jail time.

Comment: Mexico is not the only country where women are ill-treated after experiencing something as traumatic as rape. The culture has been so ponerized that even women engage in this heinous treatment.

Men who hate women: Punishing rape victims with jail time
A Needed Revolution: Rape and U.S. Justice
Sexual Predators in the Police Targeting Victims They are Supposed to be Helping
Would-be judge in hot water for suggesting rape victims enjoy it


Heart

Trapped motorist saved from burning SUV by heroic man who pried door open with bare hands

Bob Renning
A Minnesota man used his bare hands to pry open a passenger-side door of a burning sport utility vehicle and save a trapped motorist from near-certain death, police said Tuesday.

The incident has left police marveling at the actions of Bob Renning, 52, who - apparently fueled by a burst of adrenaline - pried open the door of Minneapolis resident Michael Johannes's 2006 Chevrolet TrailBlazer on Sunday evening.

"To say his actions were heroic would be putting it lightly," said Lieutenant Eric Roeske, spokesman for the Minnesota State Patrol. "He almost certainly saved Mr. Johannes from a horrible death."

Book 2

Federal judge rejects Kentucky's same-sex marriage ban based illogically on stable birth rate and economic stability

kentucky decision gay marriage
© AP Photo/Timothy D. EasleyLuke Barlowe, front left, his partner, Jim Meade, rear left, Randy Johnson, front right, and his partner Paul Campion answer questions from reporters following the announcement from U.S. District Judge John G. Heyburn striking down Kentucky's same-sex marriage ban Wednesday, Feb. 12, 2014, in Louisville, Ky. Heyburn stated that the state's law approved by voters in 2004 treated "gay and lesbian persons differently in a way that demeans them."
Kentucky could become the first southern state to allow same-sex marriage after a federal judge determined arguments supporting a ban on such relationships were bewildering and irrational.

U.S. District Judge John G. Heyburn II ruled in favor of two gay Louisville couples who challenged the state's 2004 constitutional amendment and a similar 1998 law violated the constitutional guarantee of equal protection under the law.

"In America, even sincere and long-hold religious beliefs do not trump the constitutional rights of those who happen to have been out-voted," Heyburn wrote in his ruling.

The judge sharply rejected the only justification for the ban offered by Democratic Gov. Steve Beshear's lawyers - who argued that traditional marriage contributed to a stable birth rate and the state's long-term economic stability.

"These arguments are not those of serious people," Heyburn said.

"Though it seems almost unnecessary to explain, here are the reasons why," Heyburn continued. "Even assuming the state has a legitimate interest in promoting procreation, the Court fails to see, and Defendant never explains, how the exclusion of same-sex couples from marriage has any effect whatsoever on procreation among heterosexual spouses. Excluding same-sex couples from marriage does not change the number of heterosexual couples who choose to get married, the number who choose to have children, or the number of children they have."

Binoculars

Electronic Frontier Foundation flies airship over NSA data center to protest mass surveillance

EFF airship
© Unknown
EFF, Greenpeace, and the Tenth Amendment Center flew an airship over the NSA's Utah data center on Friday. Heralded as "the first-ever anti-surveillance air force," the 135-foot-long thermal airship carried activists from EFF and Greenpeace with the message: "NSA Illegal Spying Below."

Stock Down

Americans fed up with all branches of U.S. gov't

gallup poll
© Gallup
Americans' confidence in all three branches of the U.S. government has fallen, reaching record lows for the Supreme Court (30%) and Congress (7%), and a six-year low for the presidency (29%). The presidency had the largest drop of the three branches this year, down seven percentage points from its previous rating of 36%.

These data come from a June 5-8 Gallup poll asking Americans about their confidence in 16 U.S. institutions -- within government, business, and society -- that they either read about or interact with.

While Gallup recently reported a historically low rating of Congress, Americans have always had less confidence in Congress than in the other two branches of government. The Supreme Court and the presidency have alternated being the most trusted branch of government since 1991, the first year Gallup began asking regularly about all three branches.

But on a relative basis, Americans' confidence in all three is eroding. Since June 2013, confidence has fallen seven points for the presidency, four points for the Supreme Court, and three points for Congress. Confidence in each of the three branches of government had already fallen from 2012 to 2013.

Confidence in the presidency is now the lowest it has been under President Barack Obama, as is confidence in Congress and the Supreme Court, given their historical lows. When Obama first took office in 2009, each of the three branches saw a jump in confidence from their dismally low ratings in George W. Bush's final two years in the White House.