Society's Child
Superior Court Judge David Lampe denied the State of California's request for a preliminary injunction that sought to force bakeshop owner Cathy Miller to design a wedding cake for a gay couple.
"For this court to force such compliance would do violence to the essentials of Free Speech guaranteed under the First Amendment," Lampe ruled, according to a press release sent to The Daily Caller News Foundation. The injunction also posited that if Miller refused to design the cake, the state would force her to close her Tastries Bakery shop altogether.
The controversial change, which is due to come into force by July 1 this year, will see the limit cut on all roads on which the two carriageways are not separated by a physical barrier.
This will account for more than 400,000km of roads across the country, and government proponents - including Prime Minister Edouard Philippe - say the reduction in speed will save around 350-400 lives a year by July 2020.
Comment: They don't know that. It's actually just another means of spending money the govt doesn't have in order to levy more taxes.
Comment: See also:
- France: Phone use illegal in cars even when vehicle is stopped - hands-free sets allowed
- Speed traps: Nothing to do with safety, everything to do with revenue generation
YouTube's news senior product manager Geoff Samek says that YouTube wants to help "grow news and support news publishers on YouTube in a responsible way". As one of the initial steps that YouTube is taking to foster legitimate news content on their platform, they intend to introduce numerous other steps as the year move forward.
The Court of Appeal has ruled that it is illegal to speak on or use your smartphone in your hand while in your car, even if you are stopped, pulled over, and with your hazard lights on.
The rule comes after the court judged that a stopped car is still considered to be "in circulation" even if it is pulled over at the side of the road with its engine off and hazard lights on.
Comment: While its understandable that using a phone when driving is distracting and potentially dangerous - so using your driving time to catch up with old friends is probably not advisable - legislating every action a person takes only leads to learned helplessness where people slowly become unable to think for themselves. And generally, when people think a law is unreasonable, where possible, they tend to disobey it:
- New Arizona law will allow cops to fine and jail car passengers for not carrying identification
- New Jersey hopes to cash in by fining people who eat and drink while driving
- The basic laws of human stupidity
- Compelled speech comes to Canada: Citizens using the 'wrong' gender pronoun could be accused of hate crimes
- Lorry driver killed motorist by crashing into his truck while looking at pornography on his phone
- Americans admit to dangerous distractions while driving
- AAA study finds distracted driving a huge factor in teen driver crashes
Syria's official news agency SANA said the military responded to "a new Israeli aggression" near the capital.
The Syrian military did not disclose any information about casualties or damage resulting from the Israeli strike.
Comment: Last night, the Israeli military conducted several missile strikes on the Syrian Army's positions in the western countryside of Damascus.
According to a military source in Damascus, the Israeli missiles targeted the area around the Iranian base in the town of Jamraya.
The source added that a number of these missiles hit their targets, while a few others were intercepted by the Syrian Air Defense units in Damascus.
The video below shows the Syrian Air Defense intercepting one of the Israeli missiles in rural Damascus:
N. Korea to hold 'intimidating' military parade the day before Olympics opening ceremony in S. Korea
Striking satellite images, captured on February 6, appear to show preparations for the parade in the North Korean capital, Pyongyang. Deimos Imaging, an UrtheCast Company, have identified armored vehicles and equipment in the photos captured by their satellite, as well as apparent troop formations on the ground.
The lead-up to the Winter Olympics has seen a thawing in relations between the two states. On Sunday a unified Korean women's ice hockey team played their first warm-up game ahead of the tournament. Last month a delegation from the DPRK, including pop star-turned diplomat Hyon Song-wol, travelled south to inspect Olympic venues.
The report - released on Sunday by the Iranian Center for Strategic Studies, a research arm for President Hassan Rouhani - compares data from 2006, 2007, 2010, and 2014. The most recent poll, which surveyed 1,167 respondents, found that 49.2 percent of participants believed wearing a headscarf should be a private matter.
In addition, the 2014 poll found that just 39 percent of respondents believed the government should press charges against women who were caught without a hijab in public. That number was significantly lower than in 2006, when about half of the population believed charges should be filed in such cases.
Comment: Sounds like Rouhani is taking steps to challenge Iran's religious hardliners. Good. It's one thing to oppose the Great Satan, but it's another thing altogether to cut off your nose to spite your face.
Below is a screen capture of the post which advocates killing children for being bad. The post reads as follows: "Parents, Please stop telling your children that we will haul them off to jail if they are bad. We are far more likely to shoot them, regardless of how they behave. ...Far more likely."
Kloppe was shot in the abdomen by an unidentified, six-year female veteran of the force in her North Side home as officers attempted to disarm and subdue her.
According to San Antonio Police Chief William McManus, Kloppe had a history of mental illness.
Police initially responded to the residence after Kloppe called to report someone was stalking her.
Officers found Kloppe locked in her bedroom holding a Glock pistol. McManus said Kloppe raised her gun to her head and a struggle with police ensued.
Last April, Smithville police attempted to pull Dial over for driving on a suspended license. Only minutes later, police would kill the unarmed man over this minor traffic offense.
Dial was driving a 1976 pickup truck when police turned on their lights to pull him over. Instead of stopping, he continued on. The low-speed chase lasted only a few minutes until police rammed him off the road and shot him in the head. Dial was unarmed.
Michael's widow, Robyn Dial told local media that she couldn't believe how quick a stop over a suspended license escalated to her husband being kill by police. Dial explained that her husband feared the police, so he chose to keep driving-a decision that would seal his fate forever.















Comment: The forced group-think penalties suggested by the State of California are rather heavy-handed. 'Design the cake or close down your business - First Amendment be damned'. Here's more on the Jack Phillips case: