Society's Child
Victoria Vanatter, of Springfield, Missouri, is currently being held in Greene County jail on a $150,000 bond after police charged her with 1st degree domestic assault.
The 19-year-old is purported to have stabbed her boyfriend multiple times on November 23, after the pair talked about vampires and carried out a "consensual" blood sucking, reported KYTV news.
"If my participation in this protest helps send one message, it is this: We must protect our fragile water resources for current and future generations," said Gabbard, who has been involved in environmental activism since her youth.
"Next weekend, the congresswoman will be joining thousands of veterans from across the country to stand in solidarity with the Standing Rock Sioux in North Dakota who are protesting the construction of the Dakota Access Pipeline through their tribal lands, with grave concerns about the contamination of their major water source," Gabbard's Press Secretary Emily Latimer confirmed in an email to the Observer.
Gabbard's announcement coincides with a planned deployment of over 2,000 military veterans to Standing Rock, scheduled for December 4. The veterans have coordinated their actions with the Oceti Sakowin elders, and a GoFundMe account set up to raise money for this mass action has raised over half million dollars.
Jose Rosado served on the Miami Gardens Police Department (MGPD) for over seven years, until he was terminated in June 2015.
Rosado has now sued the city, which he is accusing of violating the Whistleblower's Act, aimed at protecting people exposing wrongdoings.
In his lawsuit, the former officer has said that MGPD "had implemented, enforced, encouraged and, sanctioned a policy, practice, and/or custom of unconstitutional stop-and-frisks, searches, seizures, arrests and prosecutions of Black Males ages 15-30."
The new report, "The Great Palm Oil Scandal," released Wednesday, "investigates labour exploitation on plantations in Indonesia that provide palm oil to Wilmar, which is the world's largest processor and merchandiser of palm and lauric (palm kernel) oils and controls over 43% of the global palm oil trade."
Wilmar provides palm oil to Kellogg's and other producers of consumer goods.
The report states:
Amnesty International found serious human rights abuses on the plantations of Wilmar and its suppliers. These included forced labour and child labour, gender discrimination, as well as exploitative and dangerous working practices that put the health of workers at risk.
Witnesses said they saw a 'ball of fire' hundreds of metres high.
The fire broke out at the Sannazzaro de' Burgondi refinery, one of the biggest in Italy, just before 4pm local time.
The news agency ANSA said a cloud of black smoke was visible for six miles from the site of the blast in northern Italy.
The refinery is owned by Italy's national oil company, ENI, who said nobody was injured and there had not been an explosion.
But Angelo Bonelli, a Green MP, said: 'Too many refineries in our country suffer major accidents that pose an urgent need to investigate.'
He said today's accident was the third at the Sannazzaro refinery. There were fires on 2 and 6 July and he said the unions at the plant had denounced the lack of effective security due to staff shortages.
The U.S. government has slapped Carnival Corp.-owned cruise line Princess Cruises with an unprecedented $40 million penalty for illegally dumping oily water into the ocean off the coast of England in 2013 and trying to cover up the crime. Investigators later found the discharge was likely one of several instances where the ship spewed pollution into the Atlantic, including off the shores of U.S. ports from Texas to South Florida and along the Eastern Seaboard in 2012 and 2013.
Federal prosecutors called the sum the largest-ever settlement for a case where a vessel was deliberately polluting the environment. On Thursday, Assistant Attorney General John C. Cruden told reporters in Miami that the settlement is a clarion call to the cruise industry to follow international environmental laws.
"We are sending a strong message with this case to the entire industry," he said. "The message is that lying to the U.S. Coast Guard and polluting the marine environment will be identified, investigated and prosecuted."
The political filter misses the story completely. As usual.
Here's the real story. You need a business filter to see it clearly. In my corporate life I watched lots of new leaders replace old leaders. And there is one trick the good leaders do that bad leaders don't: They make some IMMEDIATE improvement that everyone can see. It has to be visible, relatively simple, and fast.
Why?
"Read and Repeat. This is the last hope. Save yourselves. If you don't evacuate those areas soon, you shall be finished off (or vanquished or destroyed). WE have provided you with a safe passage to exit. Take your decision fast. Save yourselves. You know that all have abandoned you and left you by yourselves to face your destiny and they won't provide you with any help. General Command of the army and armed forces."PS The word annihilation is very specific and has an equal Arabic equivalent "Ibadah" which does not appear in the original Arabic.
Comment: So rather than interpret this message for the mercy that it imparts (towards those arguably who deserve no mercy), it has become, rather, another tool of propaganda for the West and its "humanitarian" organizations.
On Wednesday, the Northern California District Court allowed the Internal Revenue Service to issue a "John Doe" summons to Coinbase in the pursuit of "information about US taxpayers who conducted transactions in a convertible virtual currency during the years 2013 to 2015," the US Department of Justice said. Coinbase is a virtual-currency exchange based in San Francisco, California.
Comment: The logic there is a bit off, by the same token they could say "Hey Google, we want everyone's email records because we're looking for possible violations of law by persons whose identities are unknown."
Multiple efforts in Congress to block the changes—which some worry will threaten basic privacy rights—were intercepted by Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas), Reuters reported.
Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.), with bipartisan support from fellow lawmakers, made a trio of attempts to prevent the implementation of a federal court procedure known as Rule 41.
Approved in May, the guideline makes it easier for the Justice Department to obtain warrants for remote electronic searches. It also allows judges to issue a single warrant authorizing government hacking of numerous devices around the world.
















Comment: See also: