Society's ChildS


Ambulance

Two killed, 30 injured in Amtrak crash near Philadelphia

amtrak
© Patrick Fallon / ReutersFile photo
Two people have died and 30 suffered injuries when an Amtrak train collided with a backhoe on the tracks and a car derailed near Philadelphia, officials said. Service has been suspended along the Northeast Corridor in Pennsylvania and New Jersey.

There were 341 passengers and seven crewmembers on board Palmetto train 89 at the time of the incident, which took place in Chester, Delaware County.

Officials confirmed two people have died on the train traveling from New York to Savannah, Georgia, without revealing the identities of the victims.

Sheriff

"You gonna pay for this one, boy": Black couple subjected to roadside cavity and strip search

Aiken police stop
© NoStopVids01 / YouTube
White police officers in the small South Carolina city of Aiken recorded themselves exposing an African-American driver's breasts and "searching" her partner's rectum, as revealed in a video released by the Washington Post.

Dashcam video of the October 2014 incident show local cops pulling over a vehicle under the guise of driving with a temporary paper license plate, which is not illegal in South Carolina.

Trigger warning: This video contains racist language and images of what's been called police harassment

Airplane Paper

Hundreds of weed activists light up outside the White House in protest of drug laws

marijuana advocates
© Mike Theiler / AFPMarijuana legalization advocates light up in front of the White House.
Hundreds of demonstrators gathered outside the White House to smoke marijuana this week, calling on the government to legalize the drug.

Protesters carried a 51-foot inflatable "joint" and sparked up Friday, asking President Barack Obama to remove cannabis from the "Schedule 1" list of controlled substances, which also includes harder drugs such as heroin.

Comment: All drug laws are unjust and should be overturned. However, having legalized marijuana is no excuse to get blazed while completely ignoring the shenanigans that are going on within the White House and the exportation of said shenanigans throughout the world. Being able to legally smoke marijuana is not going to stop the spread of fascism but it may help people feel better about it.


Eye 2

Total surveillance: Police want to use business and residential cameras for neighborhood spying

Surveillance Cameras
© EPA
Police found Deanna Pagel, 52, dead in the street in March 2015.

Evidence was scant - until a resident who lived in the south Victoria neighborhood approached police with footage from a house surveillance camera that showed a vehicle in the vicinity that night.

"We had nothing," said Victoria Police Chief J.J. Craig. "No eyewitnesses. And all of sudden that video became available."

In hopes of replicating such a lead, police are encouraging residents and business owners who have installed outdoor surveillance cameras to register the equipment with the department.

"There's an awful lot of surveillance video equipment out there being used by businesses and residents," Craig said. "It seemed like a good time to partner with the community."

Comment: Enlisting public participation by using the threat of crime is just another insidious tactic being used to gain mass acceptance of the police state and total control of the population.


Hardhat

Another study confirms that fracking contaminates groundwater making it unsafe to drink

fracking
© Andrew Cullen / Reuters Workers monitor water tanks at a Hess fracking site near Williston, North Dakota
A Stanford University study shows that fracking can pollute underground drinking water. Using publicly available data and reports, researchers found organic compounds used in hydraulic fracturing were migrating into groundwater from unlined pits.

"This is a wake-up call," said lead author Dominic DiGiulio, a visiting scholar at the Stanford School of Earth, Energy & Environmental Sciences in a released statement. "It's perfectly legal to inject stimulation fluids into underground drinking water resources. This may be causing widespread impacts on drinking water resources."

The process of hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, involves injecting, at high pressure, water blended with chemicals such as benzene and xylene. This chemical mix is then used to blast apart the shale rock to release oil or gas. The method creates wastewater which is generally stored in pits near the operating well site.

Comment: This latest study simply confirms the evidence that has been mounting for years of the enormous health and environmental risks from the practice of fracking. The EPA seems to be little more than an arm of the O&G industry, having done nothing but assist in the obfuscation of the truth by claiming that the practice does not pose widespread risks.


Eye 1

Missouri man harassed and fined for front-yard garden

front garden
A family in Sugar Creek, Missouri grew the beautiful vegetable garden in the photo above.

They've been given four days to tear out the entire garden or face a fine.

Why? Because it is in their front yard, and city officials and a few neighbors don't like it.

Nathan Athans said he planted the garden in his front yard because it gets optimal sunlight. His backyard only gets sunshine for about two hours per day, and only in certain areas.

Athans told KSHB that he grows several different types of vegetables on his lawn and loves tending to his garden.

Comment: The state requires absolute dependence. No self sufficiency allowed.


Stock Down

Italy losing a massive €3.5 billion annually thanks to Russian sanctions

Italy
© Sputnik/ Natalia Seliverstova
Due of anti-Russia sanctions, Italy's economy is suffering €3.5 billion (US$4 billion) in losses annually, according to the Vice President of Association of Italian Entrepreneurs, Vittorio Torrembini.

Italy used to export €11 billion (US$12.5 billion) worth of goods to Russia every year, but currently it exports approximately €7.5 billion (US$8.5), Torrembini said in an interview with RIA Novosti.

According to Torrembini, losses in the agricultural sector haven't been that significant, but cuts in export of equipment for oil and gas production, processing industries, metalwork have done enough damage.

Comment: Further reading:


Arrow Down

No, it's not a joke - Selling air reaches new levels of crazy

Jar of Air
© Ebay, UK
The unscientific belief that air can be captured and bottled, sold, and then breathed in by another for reasons of health or to capture an aroma has reached new heights of silliness, with London air being sold by the jar.

Why someone would want to breathe in London air, with London's poor standing in terms of global pollution, is the initial puzzlement. By January 8 2016, London had taken just one week to reach its pollution target for the whole of the year.

However, selling bottled air has become a craze, particularly among the Chines middle-class, under the misapprehension that taking a gulp of air from a jar or can is in some way healthy. As an example, a Canadian company (called Vitality Air), which started out bottling Rocky Mountains air as a joke, has seen its product fly off the shelves in pollution-hit China. Here a 7.7 liter can of air taken from Banff National Park sells for 100 yuan ($15). This is 50 times more expensive than a bottle of mineral water in China.

Cities like Beijing and Shanghai are certainly smog-polluted; however, the short duration and quantity of so-called "clean air" that is taken in would have no long-term health benefit for the person drawing it in. This is if the air, from a particular locale, can be really captured and bottled.

Now adding to the new wave of air-bottling industries, a website has been set up which appears to sell bottled London air — for £20 ($25) per jar. The website, called 'ShoreditchAir', stocks air from some different London regions. According to the Evening Standard these are: Brixton air, Croydon air, and two varieties of Shoreditch air — morning or afternoon. This website is not clamming any health benefits. Instead it seeks to capture the smell of the area, allowing users to have an enriched experience of breathing in the gas combinations from different areas of London.

Comment: Canadian startup selling bottled air in China


Piggy Bank

World's richest banker charged with corruption in bribery scheme

Joseph Safra
© ReutersJoseph Safra.
Brazilian prosecutors have filed corruption charges against billionaire Joseph Safra for involvement in an alleged scheme to pay off government auditors.

The authorities said the financier was not directly involved in the alleged corruption, but there is evidence an employee was acting on his instructions. The charges are reportedly based on recorded telephone conversations between Safra company's executive and tax officials.

According to the authorities, Safra was aware of the plan by executives at his banking group in Brazil to pay $4.2 million in bribes to help reduce a tax bill.

Prosecutors also filed charges against five other people.

Candy Cane

Shoplifter facing felony charge of 20 years to life after stealing $31 worth of candy

candy
© maryam lashgari / Flickr
One man found out his life could be worth as little as $31 after stealing that much in candy. The New Orleans shoplifter faces 20 years to life for the crime.

Jacobia Grimes, 34, was spotted by a store manager stuffing his pockets full of chocolates at about 2:30pm on December 9, according to the New Orleans Advocate. He willingly emptied his pockets and did not resist during the arrest.

On February 3, his crime was boosted to the status of a felony deserving of two years' incarceration. Grimes is a career shoplifter, and state law allows the system more leeway if a man has been convicted of "theft of goods" at least twice before.