Welcome to Sott.net
Mon, 08 Nov 2021
The World for People who Think

Society's Child
Map

Clipboard

Judges sign letter accusing American Bar Association of hiding controversy on campus sex rules

More than 100 legal professionals sign letter
judgement
© Blogtrepreneur/Flickr
The American Bar Association is voting on a resolution this week to recommend the addition of "affirmative consent" to the criminal code. The sexual-consent standard, which flips the burden of proof to the accused, is common in college Title IX policies.

But the ABA is facing blowback from 100 members of the American Law Institute, an elite organization composed of professors, attorneys, judges and other legal professionals.

The authors of Resolution 114 and its accompanying report falsely portrayed the ALI's own vote on affirmative consent three years ago, according to a letter from ALI members to ABA President Robert Carlson.

Even more noteworthy, nine signatories are current or retired judges - eight of them at the appellate level. A few more are affiliated with organizations that represent judges.

Propaganda

Report: Monsanto paid Google to bury unfavorable news

roundup google
© Monsanto/Victor Tangermann
Monsanto, the agrochemical company that's attained notoriety for its agricultural pesticides and genetically modified organisms, reportedly worked overtime to discredit investigative journalists criticizing the company — and even paid the search giant Google to suppress the findings.

Carey Gillam, a journalist with Reuters, was reporting on the health effects of Monsanto's products a few years back. As part of a massive damage-control campaign, the company worked to discredit her work as much as possible, according to an investigation by The Guardian. Perhaps most troubling: the company reportedly paid Google to promote search results that questioned Gillam's findings — a disturbing look into how readily the flow of online information can be manipulated.

Comment: It's not surprising that Monsanto would take steps like these for damage control. Neither is it surprising that Google's search results are open to the highest bidder. What's surprising is that people don't really seem to care.

See also:


Flashlight

Simultaneous wind farm and gas-fired power station failures blamed for Britain's worst power cuts in years - Millions affected

blackout UK

Commuters had to use the torches on their phones as they walked in complete darkness at Clapham Junction during a power cut.
One of the worst power cuts to hit Britain in years caused transport chaos across the country last night and hit the energy supplies of almost a million people.

Traffic lights stopped working, trains were cancelled, and stations were evacuated after a technical fault at two power generators run by National Grid triggered a 'major incident'.

On Friday evening, there were reports that the problems may have been caused by issues at a gas-fired power station - and at a wind farm off the coast of Yorkshire.

'What happened is a major offshore wind generation site and a gas turbine failed at the same time,' Devrim Celal, of Upside Energy in London, a contractor with National Grid, was reported saying. 'There was a significant shortage of generation, and that sudden drop created ripple effects across the country.'

Comment: It's amazing how one wide-scale power outage can reveal the fragility of our modern society. People complaining about taxi rides, kids being out past their bedtime, weak phone signals and even looting as soon as the security cameras go down, clearly have a lot to learn. If and when something truly catastrophic goes down, the majority of people are truly lost.

See also: 'Unexpected and unusual' major blackout knocks out power to swathes of UK


Eye 1

Nanny state: Gov pledges to end smoking in England by 2030

smoking
© Alamy
The government is pledging to end smoking in England by 2030 as part of a range of measures to tackle the causes of preventable ill health.

Promoting physical activity, developing guidelines on sleep and targeting those at risk of diabetes are also set out as priorities in the green paper.

The policy document aims to reduce the number of years spent in poor health.

Currently men and women spend over a fifth of their lives in ill health - 19 years for women and 16 for men.

Those in deprived areas experience the longest periods of poor health.

Comment: More from the BBC:
Who are the smokers that haven't quit?

In 1974, almost half of all adults in the UK smoked. For many, spending time in smoke-filled homes, pubs and workplaces was simply a part of daily life.

Today, that figure has fallen to 15%. The government has pledged to end smoking in England altogether by 2030.


Smoking rates have dropped whereas stress, obesity and cancer related deaths are soaring.


But some people remain much more likely to smoke than others.

People living on a low income are disproportionately likely to smoke, for example. One in three social housing residents and one in four manual workers smokes, compared with one in 10 of those in professional or managerial jobs.
smokers  uk
Smoking rates also differ considerably around the country. Only 8.6% of those in East Devon smoke, for example, compared with 21.8% in Dundee.

This regional divide is startlingly illustrated by the proportion of women who smoke while pregnant.

In England, one in 10 pregnant women smoke. But within this there are huge variations - ranging from one in 50 in some wealthy parts of London to one in four in Blackpool, one of the most deprived areas.

People with mental health problems are similarly affected. This group is 50% more likely to smoke than the rest of the population, a gap that has been widening.


There is evidence that smoking can be beneficial to those who suffer from particular mental illnesses, and it's likely they're self-medicating.


Because smoking is so uniquely harmful, this translates into major differences in illness and early death.

One US study suggested smoking accounted for two-thirds of the life expectancy shortfall among people with mental health problems, 10 years of lost life. These findings are likely to apply to other countries too.

Another study indicated the poorest men in England and Wales were twice as likely to die between the ages of 35 and 69 as the richest - and their death was almost five times more likely to be caused by smoking.


Although fewer people are smoking than ever before, life expectancy has fallen, notably this has occurred alongside soaring levels of poverty, leading one to conclude that poverty, not smoking, is the leading cause of death: Life expectancy for poorest girls in England falls for first time since 1920s


Why are these groups more at risk?

In recent years, the UK has introduced policies that appear to have helped many smokers quit and deterred others from starting.

The smoking ban was introduced in 2007, alongside a raising of the minimum purchasing age to 18.

Taxes on a £10 pack of 20 cigarettes have increased to over 80% of the retail price, while the packaging and display of tobacco products have become increasingly restricted and advertising banned.

Wales is targeting a 16% smoking rate by 2020, while the Scottish government aims to create a "tobacco-free" generation by 2034 and Northern Ireland is also aiming to eradicate smoking altogether, in addition to England's pledge to end smoking by 2030.

Stop-smoking services providing support and medication have also been offered nationwide, contributing to the fall in overall smoking rates.

Yet they have been less effective for poorer and mentally ill smokers, even if they are as likely to try to quit as other groups.

The reasons for this are varied and complex.

These groups can have higher levels of dependence, making it harder to give up. They are also more likely to be around other smokers, normalising the behaviour and making it harder to quit successfully.

They may also have to deal with stress factors such as income instability, poor housing and living in run‐down neighbourhoods.


Stress and the factors mentioned above are significant causes of ill health.


At the same time, stop-smoking services, which appear to have helped reduce inequalities, have disappeared in many areas, with an estimated 30% funding cut in England between 2014-15 and 2017-18 .

Financial incentives

For these reasons, a different approach may be needed.

Some clear recommendations have been made to stop the third of mentally ill people who smoke from being left behind. Many can be applied to other at-risk groups.

Free, tailored individual support, including advice, mobile stop-smoking services and online resources, has been shown to be effective, as have financial incentives such as making cigarettes more expensive and offering smokers cash to quit.

Price increases appear to work best in combination with support such as counselling and smoking alternatives such as electronic cigarettes or nicotine patches.

E-cigarettes, in particular, have become more popular in recent years. Public Health England suggests these products carry a fraction of smoking's risk and every year could be contributing to between 22,000 and 57,000 people quitting smoking.


Doctors asking patients if they smoke could also help identify would-be quitters who don't want to bother the NHS or are facing multiple health conditions.

Why is this so important?

Reducing smoking among the most disadvantaged is one of the most important ways to reduce health inequalities.

Alongside shortening life expectancy through disease and illness, smoking can also negatively affect mental health.

Giving up is associated with reduced depression, anxiety and stress, while boosting overall quality of life.

The addiction is often passed from one generation to the next, meaning children who grow up around smokers are much more likely to take it up themselves.

On top of this, smoking is expensive and can trap people into cycles of poverty.


Smoking traps people in 'cycles of poverty'?? As admitted above, nearly 80% of the cost of tobacco is a government mandated tax.


While far fewer people smoke now than in the past, there are still seven million smokers in the UK.

Studies suggest most long-term smokers die from a smoking-related disease.


It's quite telling that even with all the money invested into anti-smoking propaganda, the best they can do is claim that 'studies suggest', because they can't prove something that isn't true.


Every year in England, 80,000 people die from the effects of smoking, making it the number one risk factor for ill health and early death.

With more than 200 deaths per day, this is equivalent to a plane crashing every day.
About this piece

This analysis piece was commissioned by the BBC from an expert working for an outside organisation.

Dr Leonie Brose is a senior lecturer at the National Addiction Centre, King's College London.
It's bears repeating: Smoking rates have plummeted yet diseases and illnesses of all kinds are on the rise, and so, evidently, tobacco - with it's numerous, proven health benefits - is not to blame. While poverty continues to rise and quality of life deteriorates throughout the Western world, rather than coordinate a plan to alleviate the causes of this suffering, governments are instead prioritising the banning of tobacco.

The anti-smoking agenda is nothing new and much of the theory and coercive techniques come thanks from the Nazi Germany. Those lauding the anti-smoking agenda should be careful what they wish for:

See: Also check out SOTT radio's: The Health & Wellness Show: The Truth about Tobacco and the Benefits of Nicotine


Pistol

'Unreal scene': Manhunt starts for gunman who kills 2 after crash on Houston highway

Houston shooting

Houston police are searching for a man who they say opened fire on Interstate 10 during rush hour. A man shot and killed two men
Houston police were searching Friday for a gunman who shot and killed two men in a rush-hour crash on a Texas freeway before he was chased off by a witness who opened fire on the suspect.

Police said it is unclear whether the original incident was a case of road rage, or whether the individuals knew each other. Houston Police Assistant Chief Bobby Dobbins noted that narcotics were found in the targeted car.

"A major accident makes you mad on the way home, but seeing something like this to a normal citizen ... witnesses are very disturbed," Dobbins said.

Police described the gunman on Friday as an Hispanic male, possibly in his early 20s, about 5 feet, 7 inches tall, and wearing a red shirt. He fled in a dark-colored sedan with a companion.

The melee erupted around 6 p.m. on eastbound Interstate 10 in Houston when the gunman's car, in which two people were riding, struck the victims' silver Nissan from the side, spinning it around and forcing it off the roadway. As the car rolled downhill, the gunman — armed with what one witness told police was a long gun, similar to a semi-automatic AR-15 rifle — jumped from his vehicle and began firing.

Comment: It sounds like it could be gang-related, especially if the shooters first deliberately rammed the 'target' vehicle off the road. Also, they finished them off, execution-style.

In fact, police said they found narcotics in the victims' vehicle:




Wolf

Large tranche of files released in Ghislane Maxwell lawsuit contain lurid claims about Jeffrey Epstein

Ghislaine Maxwell
© Laura Cavanaugh/Getty Images
Ghislaine Maxwell was alleged to have recruited Virginia Giuffre to work as a masseuse for Jeffrey Epstein when the latter was 15.
A large tranche of documents released on Friday from a lawsuit against Ghislaine Maxwell - who allegedly procured girls for financier Jeffrey Epstein - contains both lurid claims and denials of world leaders' involvement in his alleged sex trafficking.

Virginia Giuffre, who is among Epstein's many accusers, sued Maxwell in 2015, alleging the British socialite and daughter of the former media tycoon Robert Maxwell defamed her by claiming she was a liar in her accusations against Maxwell and Epstein.

Giuffre has accused Maxwell of recruiting her to work as Epstein's masseuse at age 15, when the teen was a locker-room attendant at Donald Trump's Mar-a-Lago club in south Florida.

Eye 1

Suspect in crash that killed Colorado father of five was facing deportation, driving without license

Miguel Ramirez Valiente, left, Sean Buchanan, right

Miguel Ramirez Valiente, left, Sean Buchanan, right
Eight months after he sought sanctuary from a Colorado Springs church to avoid deportation, Miguel Ramirez Valiente stands accused of careless driving with a revoked license in a crash that claimed the life of a father of five.

Now, those who know Ramirez Valiente say he never should have been driving.

"It took people saying, 'You need to say something about this to get that family help and justice,' and that's when we made the call," said a close acquaintance of Ramirez Valiente, who asked to have her identity protected for her safety. "My heart broke for this family because this could be prevented."

Last Friday, Sean Buchanan, a father of five, was riding his motorcycle on Highway 83 when Colorado State Patrol troopers said another driver swerved into his lane and killed him.

Arrow Up

Man serving life for murder freed on deal over new evidence

Adam Braseel
A Tennessee man serving life in prison for murder has been freed after 12 years over a fingerprint pointing to another man.

News outlets report 36-year-old Adam Braseel accepted a deal last month allowing him to maintain his innocence and get time served for felony aggravated assault. He now says he wants a pardon.

Rainbow

Polish archbishop says LGBT 'rainbow plague' is threatening country - UPDATE: Second archbishop speaks out against 'revolutionary ideology'

polish gay pride
© Reuters / Agencja Gazeta/Slawomir Kaminski
People take part in the annual "Equality Parade" rally of the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender (LGBT) rights supporters in Warsaw, Poland June 3, 2017.
The archbishop of Krakow in southern Poland is facing backlash for comparing the "red plague" of Communism to the gay rights movement, describing the latter as a "rainbow plague" brainwashing his countrymen.

"Our land is no longer affected by the red plague, which does not mean that there is no new one that wants to control our souls, hearts and minds," Archbishop Marek Jedraszewski said on Thursday, delivering a mass to mark the 75th anniversary of the Warsaw uprising against the Nazi occupation.

Jedraszewski argued that the communist ideology and the LGTB-championed ideas of equal rights for sexual minorities are effectively rooted in the same source.

"Not Marxist, Bolshevik, but born of the same spirit, neo-Marxist," he said, calling the global gay rights campaign that has rolled down to Poland a "rainbow disease."

The cleric's outburst predictably drew ire from the liberal opposition to and critics of the ruling conservative Law and Justice (PiS) party.

Comment: The archbishop is on to something. The 'anything goes' mentality -- even in the so-called private sphere of human sexuality -- leads to societal chaos.

The demise of Western Civilization: "Gender fluidity" as a harbinger for Postmodernist Hell

Update 8 Aug 2019

A second Polish archbishop has joined Jedraszewski in 'coming out'.

Archbishop Stanisław Gądecki, who serves as chairman of the Polish Episcopate, has published a missive stating that, while Catholics should not discriminate against 'sexual minorities', LGBT ideology must be rejected, as it advocates a revolution in social customs.

Gądecki also wrote that:
"Sexual minorities are our brothers and sisters for whom Christ gave his life and who also wants to be saved, but respect for specific people cannot lead to the acceptance of an ideology that aims to revolutionize social customs and interpersonal relationships."



Briefcase

Ann Arbor, Michigan: School lawsuit claims white administrators subjected to 'hostility and harassment'

Shannon Blick
© PCMD News
Former principal of Lawton Elementary School, Shannon Blick
The former principal of a University of Michigan-area elementary school has filed a "reverse discrimination" lawsuit alleging that white administrators were subjected to "hostility and harassment" due to their race.

Shannon Blick's suit against the Ann Arbor Public School District also alleges black administrators' promotions and advancements were "accelerated" to the "detriment of white administrators," and that the district did not adequately investigate (reverse) discrimination complaints.

According to The Michigan Daily, Blick, formerly head of Lawton Elementary School, claims she had an "exemplary employment record" and "highly effective" evaluation ratings. Blick says her harassment began in April after being tipped off that the head of human resources was investigating her over an embezzlement matter involving a school janitor.

In addition, Ann Arbor Director of Elementary Education Dawn Linden allegedly told Blick that if she didn't dissuade parents who supported her from showing up at a board meeting, "outrageous, humiliating, inhumane and patently false accusations" from her personnel file would be FOIA'd by an MLive.com reporter.