Society's ChildS


Pistol

Man shot by police Friday was chasing robber

A man who was shot by a Baltimore Police officer on Friday morning in West Baltimore was at the time fighting with a man who had just robbed him at gunpoint, police said Monday.

Both have been criminally charged for their roles in the incident.

Police said Friday that officers were handling a domestic violence call around 7 a.m. when they heard gunshots nearby and rushed to the scene to find two men struggling in the street, at the intersection of North Fremont Avenue and West Fayette Street.

One of them was holding two guns, and cash littered the ground. The man holding the guns refused to drop the weapon, and was shot by an officer, police said.

According to charging documents provided by police, Alexander Brown, 24, had been robbed at gunpoint by Xavian Chriscoe, 36, and an unknown accomplice, who told him to hand over cash his belongings "or you gonna catch all six of these," referring to bullets.

Brown handed over his property - $90 cash, an ID, and a bank card - and the two men fled, police said. Brown then pulled a .38 caliber revolver from his pants leg and fired four shots at Chriscoe and the other man as he gave chase.

Brown wrestled away Chriscoe's .32 caliber revolver and the two began to struggle over the weapons. Officers heard shots - police say Chriscoe had a graze wound to the side of his head - and saw Brown standing over Chriscoe, holding a gun to his head.

Police say Officer Valentine Nagovich, 41, an 11-year veteran, fired multiple shots, striking Brown in the left forearm.

Brown was taken into custody, but told the officers that Chriscoe had robbed him. Both were detained, and officers found Brown's driver's license in Chriscoe's possession. Police said video of the incident captured from a camera showed what appeared to be Chriscoe and the second, unknown person robbing Brown.

Brown, of the 4500 block of Shamrock Ave., is charged with first-degree assault and multiple handgun charges for firing at Chriscoe after being robbed. Chriscoe, meanwhile, of the 1700 block of Bloomingdale Ave., was armed robbery, assault, and handgun charges.

Both men are being held without bond, and attorneys were not listed in court records.

Gold Coins

Marching towards the cashless society: JP Morgan & Chase Co. to charge customers for handling cash deposits

charges for cash deposits
Beginning August 1st of this year, JP Morgan & Chase Co. will charge their customers for depositing cash into their accounts.

According to an internal document sent to account holders, in less than a month from now "the fee for all types of Cash Deposit Processing (CDP) will be $0.25 per $100 [deposited]. The CDP fee will only apply after you exceed your account's cash deposit limit."

One reason for Chase to charge their customers a fee on cash deposits may reside in the fact that the major banks are "charging customers who deposit lots of cash."

Wherein Chase is charging customers for every $100 in cash deposited, other banks are charging on every cash deposit of $10,000; or $0.20 on every $100 deposited.

Kris Dawsey, economist for Goldman Sachs, warned about banks charging customers fees for simply depositing cash into their account in 2013.

When asked about a meeting of the Federal Reserve (Fed) Board and the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC), wherein it was revealed that the 0.25% annual interest rate on money that the banks keep in the Fed would be reduced, Dawsey said: "One risk is that the move could prompt charges ... on bank deposits."

Last November, Kristin Lemkau, spokesperson for JP Morgan & Chase Co said: "We have no intention of charging for retail customer deposits."

However this promise has not been kept.

Chess

Russia may impose retaliatory sanctions against West if third wave of isolation measures is introduced

Valentina Matviyenko
© Russia's Federation CouncilFederation Council Speaker Valentina Matviyenko
Russia sees no need for retaliatory sanctions against the West but such a move is possible if a third wave of measures to isolate Moscow is introduced, the speaker of Russia's upper house has said, according to RIA Novosti.

"We do not think it is necessary to adopt retaliatory sanctions, although they have been prepared, considered and weighed. If our partners threatening us with a third round of sanctions do not stop, time may come when we will have to respond," Federation Council Speaker Valentina Matviyenko said in the Pravo Znat (Right to Know) program on TVC news channel on Saturday.

"But I do not want such a scenario to take place," she added.

Isolating Russia is impossible as it has been integrated into the world economy and is a member of the UN Security Council.

Today European countries are not interested in severing ties with Russia, she stated.

Comment:
Russia has secret document spelling out reaction to ridiculous sanctions
Russia's Federal Assembly considers sanctions against U.S. businesses
EU halts third round of sanctions against Russia; Hollande pretends to take the moral highground


Books

The new school curriculum: Reading, riting & recreational sex

schoolbooks
© photodisc
In recent years, the news has been flooded with more and more stories of sex infiltrating our schools. The stories range from those about questionable sex education curriculum to teachers having inappropriate relationships with students.

Last week was no different. Here's a small sampling of shocking occurrences from around the United States.

At Woodland Park Middle School in San Marcos, CA, 8th graders were forced to participate in a classroom activity that has parents furious.

The story was reported to 10News by the parents of a 14-year-old student who said that as part of a sex education lesson, students were told to stand under signs labeled "smiled at, hugged, kissed, above the waist, below the waist, and all the way."

Comment: This is called the ponerization of society where psychopathic traits, such as child sexual exploitation, are passed off as normal and acceptable to the general public.


Blackbox

National opinions changing: Is being gay a result of nature or nurture?

gay gene
If homosexuality is caused be genes, researchers haven't found them yet. 42% of Americans believe gays are 'born that way', but scientists still don't have a definitive answer.
The gay rights movement has advanced with head-spinning speed in recent years.

"Hate crimes" now include attacks on individuals because of their sexual orientation. Government and employment benefits now are extended to same-sex couples. The US military has scrapped its "don't ask, don't tell" ban on openly-gay service members.

A string of federal judges - most recently in Wisconsin this week - have ruled state bans on same-sex marriage unconstitutional. Nineteen states and the District of Columbia now have what advocates call "freedom to marry." Gay judges, lawmakers, and other public figures are serving openly.

"US public opinion about gays has changed drastically in recent decades on the issues of marriage equality and LGBT acceptance as a whole, possibly related to the fact that three in four Americans say they have a friend, relative, or coworker who has told them that he or she is gay," Gallup reported recently.

Public support for same-sex marriage has reached an all-time high of 55 percent - more significantly, nearly 80 percent among young adults. Approval of gay or lesbian relations jumped 19 percent between 2001 and 2013 (from 40 percent to 59 percent, again according to Gallup).

Still, Americans are about evenly divided on whether homosexuality is something a portion of the population is born with or, instead, it is a characteristic resulting from upbringing and environment - present before birth or acquired.

Comment: The gay rights movement has largely been a success, based on the above statistics. But like every other ideological movement, there is a psychopathic element with motives far removed from those popularized with the general public, and even those fighting for and from within the movement itself. For more details see Pierre Lescaudron's article Mummy, why is Daddy wearing a dress? Daddy, why does Mummy have a moustache?

As for the science, since the question about gays has been raised, what about a more fundamental question: what is the cause of human sexuality in general, including heterosexuality? Is it fully genetic? The result of behavioral imprinting? The fact is, we don't even know that.


Newspaper

'Tell the police the revolution has begun': Couple commits suicide after Las Vegas shooting spree

walmart shooting las vegas
© twitter.com user ‏@reviewjournal
Two Las Vegas police officers and a civilian have been reportedly killed in a shooting spree that started at a pizza restaurant and spilled over to a neighboring Walmart store. Two suspects - a man and a woman - are reportedly down.

The two shooters have committed suicide, according to police. Suspects told shoppers they were part of a "revolution" and wanted a shootout with Metro police force - and had a "suicide pact." Their bodies were found in the back of the store.

Details are yet to emerge, but police sources told Las Vegas Review-Journal that the two officers were killed by a man and a woman who approached them at the CiCi's Pizza just before 11:38 am local time.

As the couple was leaving the restaurant, one yelled "This is the start of a revolution!" witnesses report. The shooters stripped the officers of their weapons and ammunition and went into the Walmart at 201 North Nellis.

Pistol

Police are more dangerous to citizens than criminals

I have learned over the years that when one's mind is made up, this diminishes fear; knowing what must be done does away with fear. -- Rosa Parks
police
Americans face a new crisis: police violence against citizens is escalating, blurring the line between criminal and public servant.

Escalating violence against American citizens by police has reached a bifurcation point; Americans are feeling the heat and are beginning to realize something must be done to deescalate police or soon America will join the ranks of hell holes of police crime and violence like Mexico, Haiti, Russia, Uzbekistan and elsewhere where police are independent gangs, violent and undisciplined and devolving into something closer to pirates - stealing property directly from their victims.

Horror stories of police murdering, beating, raping and plundering citizens are daily news in a cities large and small. One city, Albuquerque, NM is now murdering more people per capita than NYPD during arrests, yet NYC is 14 times more populated.

V

Thousands riot in India as heat wave prompts power cuts

Image
© AP / Rajesh Kumar SinghAn Indian cycle rickshaw puller drinks water on a hot day in Allahabad, India, Saturday, June 7, 2014
Thousands of people enraged by power cuts during an extreme heat wave rioted across northern India, setting electricity substations on fire and taking power company officials hostage, officials said Saturday.

The impoverished state of Uttar Pradesh has never had enough power for its 200 million people -- about the population of Brazil -- and many receive only a few hours a day under normal conditions, while 63 per cent of homes have no access to electricity at all.

But recent temperatures that soared to 47 degrees Celsius have caused power demand to spike at 11,000 megawatts -- far higher than the state's 8,000 MW capacity -- triggering blackouts that shut down fans, city water pumps and air conditioners.

Thousands of people stormed an electricity substation Friday near the state capital of Lucknow, ransacking offices and taking several workers hostage for 18 hours until police intervened Saturday morning, state utility official Narendra Nath Mullick said.

Elsewhere, an angry crowd set fire to an electricity substation in Gonda, 180 kilometres southeast of Lucknow. It took three hours for firefighters to put out the flames on Friday. Another substation was set on fire in Gorakhpur, 320 kilometres southeast of Lucknow.

Info

Report from the frontlines in S.E. Ukraine June 7th and 8th by Juan

June 7th combat SITREP by "Juan"

Grad missile systems
© UnknownUkrainian army uses multiple launch rocket systems "Grad" against the population
Question by The Saker
: Did the Border Control Headquarters really fall to Donbas Army?

Juan's reply: Yes, done deal since yesterday morning. Lots of vids showing Donbas Army allowing the prisoners to leave after they changed in to civilian clothes and some vids showing Donbas Army going through the building and armories. Found was a got a ton of weapons and ammo including RPG's and MG's, at least two BTR's in good condition, several trucks and GAZ jeeps, at least one amphibious tracked vehicle that runs and a treasure trove of documents.

It was the officers who fought, the young boys mostly didn't or at best half heartedly. In actual fact most of the conscripts (Border Service and Militsiya are mostly draftees like the Army) were locked in a room until the fighting was over.

Donbas also took two army bases that same day. So score for that day is Donbas lost Krasni Limon and took Border Control HQ, two army bases and took control of about 90 kilometers of border when the actual border guards on duty loaded up all in to their cars and went to Rostov across the border with their families.

Easter Egg 2

World's biggest tumour weighing 30lbs and the size of a watermelon is removed from the uterus of Indian woman

Image
Surgeons in India have removed what is thought to be the world's biggest ever uterine tumour. The giant growth was removed from the womb of a 52-year-old woman identified only as Latha.
The world's biggest uterine tumour, weighing 30lbs and measuring 21 inches in diameter, has been removed from an Indian woman.

Doctors in the southern city of Chennai performed a complex operation on a 52-year-old woman identified as Latha.

She had been suffering breathlessness and fatigue for several years but had no idea the giant tumour - similar to the size of a watermelon - was growing inside her.

A month ago, the 52-year-old arrivied at Chennai's Kumaran Hospital, bleeding heavily.

Doctors ran tests and discovered she was severely anaemic, before detecting a 'large fibroid' growth attached to the outer surface of the uterus, which was putting pressure on her body and causing her symptoms.

Dr Mani Mekalai, head of the hospital's department of obstetrics and gynaecology, said the team were 'shocked' to find the massive growth.

She said: 'In medical parlance, this is called a super giant uterine fibroid and the largest one removed before this, in Africa weight 21lbs.