Society's Child
St. Joseph County, Indiana - An Indiana woman bought a can of green beans on sale for 69 cents, and what she found inside will keep her and her family from ever eating canned green beans again.
"We eat a lot of green beans. We do. We did. Nobody wants anymore now," said Gloria Chubb.
Gloria, a retired nurse, is disgusted by what she served up at the dinner table for her and her son.
"It was meatloaf, mashed potatoes, gravy and green beans," she said.
It was what was in the can of Meijer green beans that made them both lose their appetite.
Protests between police and demonstrators continued into the night in front of the parliament building in Madrid.
Around 1,000 demonstrators tried to shut down the government in a protest over the country's austerity measures and tax hikes.
The protest turned violent earlier in the day after demonstrators tried to tear down the barrier that blocked the entrance to parliament.
The protest happened on the same day the country's unemployment figures were released... a record 27 percent with more than six million people out of work.
Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy is expected to announce further reforms to help cut Spain's deficit later on Friday.
The American people made a pact with the devil in the weeks and months following 9/11 when they bought the Bush-era argument that by surrendering liberty they could buy safety. But that type of pact has never enhanced either liberty or safety, and its fruits are always bitter.
he Constitution is the supreme law of the land. It was written to create and to restrain the federal government. Every person who works for any government in the U.S. has taken an oath of fidelity to the Constitution, not unlike the presidential oath, which induces a promise to preserve, protect and defend the Constitution.
The chief and final interpreter of the Constitution is the Supreme Court. One may not always agree with its interpretations, but they are, as legal scholars sometimes say, "infallible because they are final." Those interpretations are particularly final when we have relied on them for generations.
One of those rulings underscores the primacy of constitutional protections, no matter the environment in which they are claimed. Indeed, after the Civil War had ended and President Lincoln was dead, the Supreme Court in a case called Ex parte Milligan (1866) rebuked and reversed Lincoln's unilateral assaults on personal freedoms in the North and in so doing reminded us that the Constitution was written for good times and for bad, and its protections cover all persons at all times and under all circumstances who have any contact, voluntary or not, with the government.
A tank containing diesel fuel at the Marathon Detroit Refinery has reportedly exploded, forcing a mandatory evacuation order for a nearby area. No injuries have been reported so far.
The fire is located in one of the refinery's smaller tanks, Marathon spokesman Shane Pochard has told the Detroit Free Press.
Marathon's own fire crew are battling the flames, along with first responders from Detroit and surrounding areas, Pochard said.
It is unknown if anyone was injured or how the fire started, Pochard said.
A HazMat team from the Detroit Fire Department and Senior Fire Chief Carl Smith are at the scene.
Reports of the explosion came in just before 6 pm local time.
Marathon, based in Findlay, Ohio, has 7 refineries.
"Police have blocked Fort Street off by I-75 south ... oh my goodness ... there's an ambulance out here, a fireman standing outside, you know, it doesn't look like they are trying to get close. They are not trying to go in there," one listener told the local radio station
"If you dress like a whore, act like a whore, you're probably going to get raped," Saxton told the Arizona Daily Wildcat. "I think that girls that dress and act like it, they should realize that they do have partial responsibility, because I believe that they're pretty much asking for it."
Saxton, who is majoring in religious studies, often preaches on campus under the name "Brother Dean Samuel."

Police Commissioner Ray Kelly uses a sketch drawing to show where part of a planes landing gear was found, Friday, April 26, 2013, in New York.
Surveyors checking a narrow alley between two buildings in a neighborhood several hundred meters from the site of the disastrous attack on September 11, 2001, found what appeared to be a portion of an airliner's landing gear.
The large piece of metal debris - more than 150 centimeters long and about 43 cm wide - is at the bottom of a space between the two buildings that is less than 46 cm wide. Rope attached to what appears to be a broken pulley is wrapped around part of the landing gear, indicating the wreckage may have been lowered to its current resting place from the roof of one of the two buildings.
Police said wreckage and debris from the explosions and fires resulting from the September 11 attacks had been found during the weeks and months after the attacks in 2001. They said they would attempt to remove the landing gear during the coming week, after checks to make sure the alley does not contain any hazardous materials or toxins.
Sherrie Gavan, 54, tried everything to keep her son, Clayton, away from heroin, his drug of choice. She slept next to him while he went through withdrawals, put him in a new school and even took him to work with her. She finally just decided to go after the source and attacked Joshua Loyd, the person who got her son his stuff. As a result of her actions, she may now be facing a $1,000 fine and a year in jail.
"I don't know what happens from here," Sherrie said after the verdict was handed down. "I just know you can't protect your child anymore." The jury took about two hours to make their decision.










Comment: Is there a symbolic significance to the fact that the Marathon Detroit Refinery explodes a few days after bombs go off in the Boston marathon? After the recent explosion of a fertilizer plant in Texas, does anyone think that there have been a little too many things exploding in the US lately?
Sometimes the Universe speaks with symbols, but who is listening?