Society's ChildS


Dollars

Court orders Johnson & Johnson to pay $72 million to family in ovarian cancer case

baby powder
© Lucas Jackson / Reuters
A Missouri court has ordered pharmaceutical giant Johnson & Johnson to pay $72 million in damages to the family of a woman who claimed that the company's talcum powder caused the ovarian cancer that killed her within three years.

Alabama resident Jacqueline Salter Fox filed a lawsuit prior to her death in October 2015. Her complaint was part of a broader claim in Missouri, which involved nearly 60 people.

Following Fox's death at the age of 62, her son took over as a plaintiff in the case. Fox's family will now receive $10 million in actual damages and $62 million in punitive damages, a circuit court in St. Louis ruled on Monday.

In her suit, Fox said she had used Baby Powder and Shower to Shower for feminine hygiene for more than 35 years before being diagnosed with ovarian cancer three years ago. Her attorneys argued that Fox's terminal ovarian cancer was directly caused by the talc inside the personal hygiene products.

Apple Red

Hell freezing over? Top police website stands with Apple against the FBI

FBI and Apple graphic
PoliceOne.com, which describes itself as "the #1 resource for law enforcement online," has sided with Apple — instead of the FBI — in the ongoing encryption debate over the iPhone used by one of the San Bernardino shooters.

PoliceOne Editor-in-Chief Paul Wyllie penned an op-ed on Thursday, titled, "Rapid Response: Why Apple shouldn't give in to the FBI.," The article explains "the FBI wants Apple to disable the auto-erase function in the operating system (which erases the device completely if too many incorrect passwords are attempted) and remove the time delay between the input of password attempts (which would ostensibly speed up the brute-force method of attempting to unlock the phone)."

Info

YouGov survey reveals more Britons support socialism than capitalism

Britain's opposition Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn
© Neil Hall / Reuters
Capitalism is falling out favor with Britons, while the popularity of socialism is on the rise, a new YouGov survey has revealed.

The survey found that a small majority of British people preferred socialism, with 36 percent responding that they held a favorable view of the ideology, compared with 32 percent who said that they viewed it negatively.

Cell Phone

Microsoft founder Bill Gates supports FBI access to San Bernardino iPhone for 'this specific case'

Bill Gates
© Saul Loeb / AFPBill Gates, co-chair of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and founder of Microsoft.
Microsoft founder Bill Gates supports both sides of the debate between the FBI and Apple over unlocking the iPhone at the heart of the San Bernardino shooting case ‒ but only in this "specific case," he says. And that puts him at odds with Silicon Valley.

At issue is the work cellphone of Syed Rizwan Farook ‒ who, along with his wife, carried out the December terrorist attack in California. The FBI ‒ supported by a judge's ruling ‒ and the Department of Justice want Apple to help it hack into the phone. The tech company insists that this will "unprecedented step which threatens the security of our customers," as CEO Tim Cook wrote in an open letter.

Comment: See also: Tampering with evidence? Apple execs say San Bernardino iPhone password changed while in government custody


Bad Guys

NATO destroyed Libyan medical system, now 1 million near death due to lack of life-saving medicines

Libya
© AP Photo/ Mohamed Salama
UN humanitarian officials warned that a million people in Libya may soon require emergency assistance due to shortages of life-saving medicines.

An absence of any central authority in post-Gaddafi Libya, and the endless fighting between a large number of militias, is cultivating chaos in the country. Hospitals in Libya are either not functioning or in very poor condition due to anarchy following the 2011 insurrection that toppled Gaddafi.

"Our estimation is that by the end of March, Libya may run out of life saving medications which will impact about one million people," UN humanitarian coordinator for Libya Ali Al-Za'tari told Reuters on Monday. "If there is no medication and medical supplies coming in, that will be a real issue for Libya."

Comment: Compare the results of NATO's 'humanitarian intervention' slaughter with what Libya had under the alleged 'tyranny' of Gaddafi:
Libya shared ½ of all the its oil revenue with its 5.5 million population. All medical care was free, if you could not get the care you needed in Libya then you could travel wherever you needed with a family member and all costs and expenses were fully paid. Education was free and if you wanted to go outside to another University that was paid in full with a stipend. When a Libyan couple got married they received a $46,000 gift from the government to start their lives. Their first home, a 2,500 sq foot condominium cost 10% of their salary for 20 years and then it was theirs. Gasoline was 44 cents a gallon, all utilities were free. If you were hungry and had no money they hadhuge stores of food where you could get rice, milk, cheese, flour and money to buy meat. The average salary in Libya was the highest in Africa, higher than China or India at $15,800 a year. If you had a college education and could not find a job you received that money until you found a job.

The truth about Gaddafi's Libya, NATO's bombing, and the Benghazi 'consulate' attack



Pi

How do you fix schools? Maybe just give them more money

School lockers
Modern education reformers often repeat the idea that simply throwing more money at public schools isn't enough to improve them. As the Eric Hanushek, an economist at Stanford's conservative Hoover Institution who's done a great deal of academic writing on the subject, puts it, "We know that there's not much relationship between spending and performance." Rather than funnel more dollars to public education, the thinking goes, we need to change how funding gets used (which, in the minds of many, means strict standards enforced by a boatload of testing, plus weaker teachers' unions).

Palette

Heil Trump: British street artist gives 'The Donald' the Hitler treatment to "give voters the wake up call they need"

Trump Hitler artwork
© pegasusart / InstagramThe artwork was painted on the side of the Hen and Chicken pub in Bristol.
London street artist Pegasus has sent a clear message that he believes Donald Trump is a tyrant in the making. The artwork depicting the Republican presidential hopeful in the guise of Adolf Hitler was painted on the side of a pub in Bristol.

Pegasus told Mashable that the piece took five days from design to implementation and hopes that it will "give voters the wake up call they need."

Comment: Not a bad interpretation at all! It's nice to see artists helping people understand what it is they're really seeing!

See also: Obama (correctly) depicted as a murderous devil in downtown Moscow public video installation


Fire

Explosion and collapse at British power station: One dead, three missing

Didcot Power station collapse
Didcot Power station collapsed during demolition operation
One person has died and three people are missing following the collapse of a building at Didcot A Power Station. A major incident was declared at the site in south Oxfordshire after initial reports of an explosion at 16:00 GMT.

Thames Valley Fire Control Service confirmed the fatality and also reported four people were injured in a "very severe incident". The decommissioned Didcot A plant closed in 2013 and demolition work has been taking place.

Bad Guys

Fate of Latin American child immigrants unknown as US government fails to track them

US Child refugees
© Jorge Cabrera / Reuters
The US government agency charged with handling the influx of child refugees that have arrived along the US-Mexico border in recent years does not have a system for tracking the kids, nor does it maintain complete case files, according to a federal report.

The Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR), an agency with the US Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), is tasked with placing unaccompanied child migrants with sponsors while their hearings in immigration courts are pending. More than 125,000 such children have been captured at the border since 2011. This flood of refugees has put tremendous strain on ORR, a new report by the US Government Accountability Office has found, echoing previous media reports and congressional investigations regarding substandard government handling of child placement and claims of abuse.

ORR has often left child refugee case files incomplete, complicating efforts to ensure children are receiving proper care or medical services, GAO reported. Furthermore, contractors and non-profits allowed to run shelters and locate sponsor for child refugees have not received adequate oversight. GAO investigators found that ORR staff visited only 12 of 133 shelter sites in 2014, and only 22 of 140 sites as of August 2015.

Comment: These children, just as those refugees in Europe, are victims of US wars which have created a path of global destruction, and it's obvious the plight of these vulnerable children is of no concern to those whose only real agenda is global chaos and plunder.


Stormtrooper

For the wealthiest, a private tax system that saves them billions

Daniel S. Loeb, shown with his wife, Margaret, runs the $17 billion Third Point hedge fund. Mr. Loeb, who has owned a home in East Hampton, has contributed to Jeb Bush’s super PAC and given $1 million to the American Unity Super PAC
Daniel S. Loeb, shown with his wife, Margaret, runs the $17 billion Third Point hedge fund. Mr. Loeb, who has owned a home in East Hampton, has contributed to Jeb Bush’s super PAC and given $1 million to the American Unity Super PAC
The hedge fund magnates Daniel S. Loeb, Louis Moore Bacon and Steven A. Cohen have much in common. They have managed billions of dollars in capital, earning vast fortunes. They have invested large sums in art — and millions more in political candidates.

Moreover, each has exploited an esoteric tax loophole that saved them millions in taxes. The trick? Route the money to Bermuda and back.

With inequality at its highest levels in nearly a century and public debate rising over whether the government should respond to it through higher taxes on the wealthy, the very richest Americans have financed a sophisticated and astonishingly effective apparatus for shielding their fortunes. Some call it the "income defense industry," consisting of a high-priced phalanx of lawyers, estate planners, lobbyists and anti-tax activists who exploit and defend a dizzying array of tax maneuvers, virtually none of them available to taxpayers of more modest means.

In recent years, this apparatus has become one of the most powerful avenues of influence for wealthy Americans of all political stripes, including Mr. Loeb and Mr. Cohen, who give heavily to Republicans, and the liberal billionaire George Soros, who has called for higher levies on the rich while at the same time using tax loopholes to bolster his own fortune.

All are among a small group providing much of the early cash for the 2016 presidential campaign.