Society's Child
In an op-ed published Thursday in USA Today, Swalwell (D-California) proposed a $15 billion buyback program for "assault weapons," as well as criminal prosecution of anyone who chooses to keep their guns.
"So basically Swalwell wants a war. Because that's what you would get," airborne veteran and gun pundit Joe Biggs commented on Twitter - to which Swalwell replied that the government would win such a war, because it has atomic weapons.
"And it would be a short war my friend. The government has nukes. Too many of them. But they're legit," the congressman wrote.
Snohomish County Judge Linda Krese was "surprised" and "outraged" by the deficiency in Washington's state law which only allowed her to sentence Brian Varela to 34 months in prison - the maximum judgment for an individual with no prior criminal record.
Varela pleaded guilty to second-degree manslaughter, third-degree rape, and unlawful disposal of remains of Alyssa Noceda last February. According to case documents, the 20-year-old, who was known to use and sell drugs, invited the teenage victim to a house party where he offered her narcotics.
Canadian oil producers have now maxed out their storage capacity, and the Canadian glut continues to grow while they wait for a solution to the pipeline problem to materialize. As pipeline space is at a premium and storage has hit maximum capacity, oil prices have fallen dramatically, and the differentials that had previously been hitting heavy oil hard in Canada (now at below $18 a barrel for the first time since 2016) have now spread to light oil and upgraded synthetic oil sands crude as well, leaving overall Canadian oil prices at record lows.
Mary Curnock Cook, who was chief executive of Ucas until last year, said the fact that boys are falling behind in education is a national scandal - yet it is such an "unfashionable" topic to discuss that it has become "normalised".
Girls outperform boys in all aspects of education, from primary school to GCSEs and A-level results. Last year, 57 per cent of women went to university compared to 43 per cent of men, a gap that has widened significantly over the last decade.
Comment: With the rise of rabid feminism, boys are being left behind. It's a despicable state of affairs when the fight for 'equality' means destroying the opportunities for the formerly 'privileged' group.
See also:
- How feminists ruin the lives and the futures of boys
- Venker: Feminism is the last thing in the world boys need
- The Health & Wellness Show: Dudes in Distress: The State of Men and Boys in the West
- Boys Adrift: The boys are not alright
- Boys and men are disappearing from the field of psychology
- The four horrible factors of our culture that are destroying boys
- The blame for the downfall of men and boys falls squarely on the shoulders of feminists
Mufasa the white lion has been in the care of South Africa's WildForLife rehabilitation charity since being rescued from a private owner in 2015 by officials from the North West Department of the Environment.
But the white lion is now caught in a bizarre custody battle, with the government agency refusing to move the animal to a new recommended reserve, prompting Mufasa's former vet to state their fears that he might be auctioned off.
According to the Sunday Times, Tjitske Schouwstra, owner of WildForLife and former carer for Mufasa, requested that the rare lion be sent to a new sanctuary in Limpopo. However, the request was rejected by authorities in South Africa, leading to speculation that Mufasa could be sold to the highest bidder - potentially trophy hunters - in an effort to reclaim costs ran up during a previous legal wrangle with the former private owner.
Seven former graduate students are suing the school, alleging staff "willfully ignored" more than 10 years' worth of complaints about the institutionalized sexual harassment infecting the Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences from top to bottom. When students did complain -about groping, harassing comments, even rape- administrators failed to act, hinting instead at unpleasant consequences for the complainants.
The plaintiffs are seeking $70 million in damages and want the New Hampshire ivy to adopt policies that would prevent a repeat of such abuse. Lawyer Deborah Marcuse explained the suit, filed Thursday, was a last-ditch effort to make Dartmouth a place where women can "be safe and able to, as they say, put their heads down and do science."
The first turbine of the new hydroelectric power plant to be built on the dam has been installed, even though it is only 75 meters tall, just less than a quarter of its projected height, which will reach a staggering 335 meters by 2026, surpassing the height of the existing tallest dam -China's Jinping-I- by 30 meters, and the famous Hoover Dam in the US by some 115 meters.
In Tijuana, for example, a U.S. reporter for the Desert Sun tweeted about the metering policy for migrants claiming asylum.
The metering is vital because it can operate alongside other asylum reforms to reduce the number of migrants who are released into the U.S. economy before their claims for asylum are heard by U.S. judges.
Comment: Sara Carter follows up with a report from Ami Horowitz on the ground with the caravan:
Horowitz took to the streets alongside the Central American migrants to speak with those hoping to enter the United States as asylum seekers, hearing first-hand accounts of their journey north.
"We've been hearing a lot about the 'migrant caravan' in the news... A lot has been said about this caravan, so I've decided to go down and find out for myself," says Horowitz.
"Despite the framing of the caravan being full of women and children, the reality on the ground is quite different. Approximately 90% to 95% are male," he adds.
People took to social media on Saturday morning complaining about the smell as the facility, located in the southeast of Moscow, was seen burning. Emergency services told RIA Novosti that flames more than 10 meters high are raging in at least two spots at the refinery, one of which is an incinerator.
The new rules define sexual harassment under Title IX, the federal civil rights law that prohibits sex-based discrimination in federally funded education programs, and set out due process protections, the Department of Education announced on Friday.
"Every survivor of sexual violence must be taken seriously, and every student accused of sexual misconduct must know that guilt is not predetermined," DeVos said in the announcement. "We can, and must, condemn sexual violence and punish those who perpetrate it, while ensuring a fair grievance process. Those are not mutually exclusive ideas. They are the very essence of how Americans understand justice to function."
The proposed changes will be open to public comments for 60 days after publication in the Federal Register, but the backlash has already started on social media, where it was denounced by former Obama adviser Valerie Jarett, the Human Rights Campaign, and even the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU).
Comment: Translation of the critics' responses: "It is fair to assume everyone accused of sexual misconduct is guilty. It is immoral to consider that they may be innocent."















Comment: At least in this instance the Judge acknowledged the punishment was woefully inadequate - it's actually a travesty - but the fact that far too often the letter of the law takes precedence over common sense is a damning reflection on our society:
- Penn State administrators sentenced to only a few months in jail for their role in covering up child rape
- Former cop caught with images of children being raped, walks free from court
- Cop gets slap on wrist for murder of 6yo boy-his dad's the asst. DA
- Unbelievable! Alabama cop receives a slap on the wrist after raping a car crash victim
- Stanford swimmer who raped unconscious woman gets 3 months
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