Society's Child
While the "haves" have fully returned to their pre-crisis behavior of paying for everything from higher education, cars and luxury homes with cash, and fully leveraging their investment portfolios, the rest of the consumer sector has changed dramatically over the past six years.
Upper-middle class "aspirational wealthy" families who were overexposed to the housing bubble continue to see debt of all kinds as a negative. Rather than using lower interest rates to purchase larger homes, if not vacation homes, they have instead opted to convert their 30-year mortgages to 10- and 15-year loans with essentially equal monthly payments terms. Lower interest rates have translated into faster loan amortization rather than economic growth. Well into the recovery, the focus of the upper-middle class remains on less, rather than more, credit, and - thanks to demographics - less, rather than more, home, too.
Using BLS data, Reddit user Dan Ling compiled the chart you've been waiting for.
Medical professionals, denoted in hot pink, dominate the upper reaches of the chart, with the top-earning anesthesiologists raking in average annual wages of $235,100.
Videos posted online show the scofflaw rancher's supporters explaining their ideologies in lengthy lectures, such as one posted earlier this month that shows "private attorney general" Jeff Ball explaining that laws don't apply to individuals if they understand how to rebut them.
"I want to give you guys the basic chain of command, all right?" said Ball, of the Citizens Action Network. "Up at the top of this tree is the creator, whoever your creator is, that's where the creator's at. The one below that is you, okay? So your original contract was with the creator."
Ball's lecture mingles "sovereign citizen" rhetoric with conspiracy theories promoted by perennial presidential candidate Lyndon LaRouche.
"The earth is our inheritance, OK, but what these guys are trying to do is third-party their way into it," Ball said. "So here's how they want you to believe the chain of command goes: God, the Vatican, Washington, D.C., the city of London."
"We all need to stomp out balkanization. No Spanish radio stations, no Spanish billboards, no Spanish TV stations, no Spanish newspapers," Superintendent of Public Instruction John Huppenthal (R) wrote anonymously shortly after being elected.
"This is America, speak English," he demanded. "I don't mind them selling Mexican food as long as the menus are mostly in English. And, I'm not being humorous or racist."
In 2010, Huppenthal called for the dismantling of the state's Mexican-American Studies (MAS) program. He then helped write a law outlawing programs that he believed "promote resentment," like MAS.
Over 23,000 Ukrainian refugees have fled to Russia, Deputy Prime Minister Olga Golodets said on Wednesday, June 25.
"We have set up 262 camps for temporary accommodation of refugees from Ukraine and 23,286 people are staying in them," she said. "This number is constantly changing because regions ... are making job offers and some refugees are changing their status to Russian citizenship and moving to Russian regions for permanent residence," the minister said.
It was six in the morning when city contractors showed up unannounced at Charity Hicks' house.
Since spring, up to 3000 Detroit households per week have been getting their water shut-off - for owing as little as $150 or two months in bills. Now it was the turn of Charity's block - and the contractor wouldn't stand to wait an hour for her pregnant neighbour to fill up some jugs.
"Where's your water termination notice?" Charity demanded, after staggering to the contractor's truck. A widely-respected African-American community leader, she has been at the forefront of campaigns to ensure Detroiters' right to public, accessible water.
The contractor's answer was to drive away, knocking Charity over and injuring her leg. Two white policemen soon arrived - not to take her report, but to arrest her. Mocking Charity for questioning the water shut-offs, they brought her to jail, where she spent two days before being released without charge.
Welcome to Detroit's water war - in which upward of 150,000 customers, late on bills that have increased 119 percent in the last decade, are now threatened with shut-offs. Local activists estimate this could impact nearly half of Detroit's mostly poor and black population - between 200,000 and 300,000 people.
"There are people who can't cook, can't clean, people coming off surgery who can't wash. This is an affront to human dignity," Charity said in an interview with Kate Levy. To make matters worse, children risk being taken by welfare authorities from any home without running water.
Denying water to thousands, as a sweltering summer approaches, might be bad enough in itself. But these shut-offs are no mere exercise in cost-recovery.

French former doctor at the Bayonne hospital Nicolas Bonnemaison (C), flanked by his wife Julie (L) and his lawyers Benoit Ducos-Ader (C, second ground) and Arnaud Dupin (R), leaves the courthouse of Pau, southwestern France, after been acquitted on June 25, 2014
The jurors answered all 14 questions negatively, thus clearing Bonnemaison of all charges, according to Le Monde. The lawyers called the emergency doctor to "put his white coat back on again."
Following the announcement of the verdict, taken after four hours of deliberation, the room cheered, while Bonnemaison stood smiling, hand in hand with his lawyer, AFP reported.
In May 2014 a SWAT team blew a hole in this baby's chest-Bounkham Phonesavanh survived a flashbang grenade blast which landed in his crib after a unit raided the house where his family was staying after their own home burnt down. A new report by the American Civil Liberties Unit found that seven civilians were killed and 46 people have been injured in SWAT raids since 2010.Baby Bou is fighting for his life, still covered in burns with a wound that exposes his ribs.

Sergei Glazyev, Adviser to the President of the Russian Federation on Regional Economic Integration
Kiev's new government will sign a free trade agreement with the EU on Friday June 27, after the previous government failed to sign the agreement in November leading to public protest and near all-out civil war.
"There is no doubt that by signing this agreement it will result in an acute devaluation of the hryvnia, an inflation surge and in turn hyperinflation, and a drop in living standards," Glazyev said on Tuesday.
Glazyev, an outspoken opponent of Ukraine joining the EU's orbit, echoed President Putin's warning that Ukraine will no longer be able to import goods from Russia duty-free. Glazyev calculated last year, before the dispute with Russia began, that flooding Ukraine's economy with European goods could cost the country $4 billion, or 2 percent of its GDP.

Portland Imam Mohamed Sheikh Abdirahman Kariye, who is one of 15 men who say their rights were violated because they are on the U.S. government's no-fly list, leaves the United Sates Court of Appeals following oral arguments on the ACLU No Fly List challenge, in Portland, Ore. A federal judge has ruled Tuesday, June 24, 2014, that the U.S. government violated the rights of 13 people on its no-fly list by depriving them of their constitutional right to travel, and gave them no adequate way to challenge their placement on the list.
More than a dozen Muslims sued after learning they were likely on the list - something the government still won't confirm - and they found their only recourse was to fill out an online appeal form.
Then on Tuesday, a federal judge in Oregon ruled that the Department of Homeland Security must give people a better avenue to pursue a claim that they were wrongly put on the list.
Now, the government can seek some way around U.S. District Judge Anna Brown's order. Or, they can do what she asked.
But Brown didn't want to dictate the rules. In fact, federal prosecutors specifically told her in court, "We urge you not to take over the policymaking."
Comment: Is the tide turning against the psychopaths in power?











Comment: "The cashless society is already here. The question now is how far will society allow it to penetrate and completely control each and every aspect of their day to day lives."
The cashless society is almost here - and with some very sinister implications