Society's Child
Campus police said a shooting occurred at Spartanburg Methodist College on Monday night.
The shooting happened around 8:30 p.m. near Powell Mill Road.
The coroner was called to the scene. SLED said a Spartanburg Methodist College officer was involved. Agents and crime scene technicians were headed to the scene.
SLED said one person was dead and another was in custody. An officer responded to a report of a car break-in. The officer encountered two people in a vehicle and attempted to detain them.
The officer fired after reported being struck by the fleeing vehicle, according to SLED.
America's public schools are the training ground for our next generation of engineers, doctors, artists, lawyers, and other professions that form our dynamic economy. Schools are also here to nurture our children, to allow them to grow, explore and have fun in an environment that is conducive to personal freedom.
But a troubling cultural undercurrent has been creeping into our education system, converting the educational experience into something that can range from the gratuitously stressful to downright racist and cruel, from high-stakes testing to the school-to-prison pipeline.
Parents are bravely standing up to these trends in a growing number of ways.
Breaking the School-to-Prison Pipeline
Recent events at Spring Valley High School in South Carolina have cast a spotlight on the increasing utilization of police officers in public schools for disciplinary tasks that used to be handled by teachers, administrators and parents. Protesters outside the state capitol called for the prosecution of the officer involved, and many said a wider institutional system that is over-policing schools is to blame. As budgetary pressures weigh down on schools, some districts are cutting back on these school resource officer (SRO) programs, as they are called.
Schools in Chico, Calif. canceled their SRO program for the first time in 15 years, thanks to budget shortfalls in April 2013. Sometimes police departments themselves are withdrawing.
"The incident occurred in one of the rooms in the academy building, located on Leninsky Prospekt. A tank with Freon exploded. As a result, one person died," the source said. The Moscow police press service confirmed the incident, TASS reported.
An unidentified adviser to the president of the Russian Academy of Sciences also told TASS about the explosion, claiming an employee servicing refrigeration equipment — which uses Freon gas — "made a technical error" while conducting maintenance.
The unnamed woman was kidnapped from her home on Martinique Avenue in New Orleans earlier that same day, and taken to Perez-Roque's rear apartment in a shotgun home, where he held her before she was able to free herself and flee. However, police believe two men were involved in the kidnapping, and are still searching for the second man.
Police say the victim worked with Perez-Roque and had turned him down when he expressed interest in dating her.
Kenner police Lt Brian McGregor described the home as a 'house of horrors'.'We found restraints. They've got false walls and everything else inside the house,' McGregor told the New Orleans Advocate. 'That's pretty much what it is, a house of horrors. Who wants to be restrained? Who wants to be tied up in somebody else's house?' On Friday, Perez-Roque came to the woman's house on Martinique Avenue and kidnapped her, bringing her back to his apartment where he gagged her, placed a bag over her head and tied her to a chair inside the apartment.
The woman told police that at one point, she heard two men whispering in Spanish about leaving the apartment. She was eventually able to free one of her hands and take the bag off her head to find that she was sitting directly across from a picture of herself. The woman then managed to take off all of the restraints and she ran out of the house.
Unfortunately one of the men saw her and started chasing her and nearly succeeded in recapturing her when a Good Samaritan intervened Gary Messina told WWL that he was driving down the street with his wife and son when he saw the man chasing the woman and knew something was wrong. 'I just jumped out of the car to try to stop the guy from pulling her back. As soon as I jumped out of the car he looked at me and he had her around the neck in a headlock and just wasn't going to let her go' Messina explained. The man eventually fled when Messina screamed that the police were on the way.
David Mahoney is $21,000 (£13,650) in debt. Not from credit cards. Not from school loans.
He's accumulated the massive tab because of the days he spent locked up in the local jail in Marion, Ohio, which is a small town with a major heroin epidemic. Mahoney, a lanky 41-year-old, has struggled with addiction since he was a teenager, eventually stealing to fuel his habit. He got caught a lot, even burgling the same bar twice.
"The urge to use cocaine and crack - that's what it led to it. Once I start using there's no going back for me," he says.
Today, he's 14 months sober, and is a resident and employee of the Arnita Pittman Community Recovery Center, a sober living house on the northern edge of town. His counsellor says he is doing "awesome" and he hopes to one day to become an addiction counsellor himself.
But while Mahoney may have left his habits behind, he can't shake his debt. It has accumulated over 15 years of trouble with the law and is a separate charge from the restitution he must pay to the victims he stole from, or any administrative costs he has incurred by going to court.
It comes from a daily "pay-to-stay" fee - sometimes called "pay for stay" - that he was charged by the local jail, the Multi-County Correctional Center. He was charged $50 each day he spent in jail, plus a $100 booking fee. It works almost as if he checked into a hotel and got a bill when he checked out.
"Obviously, it's my fault I'm in the situation I am in. I'm trying to start over," he says. "People that end up in jail are usually down on their luck anyway. They're going through some trials and tribulations in life. Why focus on the people who are already struggling?"
In 2000, it was revealed that the harvesting and processing of the cacao plant was left to children, often unpaid and living in slavery. Imprisoned, forced to go to the bathroom on the roof or in a cup and malnourished, children would either be sold into it for $30 or be kidnapped, thinking they were applying for some sort of paying job.
The rules and regulations are so lax there that there is no government to step in and stop the atrocities. This horrific state of child slavery is also the perfect cheap labor for candy companies that want to sell you chocolate for dirt cheap prices. Why do you think it only costs $1 for a chocolate bar?
The information was revealed in the documentary, Slavery: A Global Investigation, which can be watched here:

Joint (Arab) List MK Hanin Zoabi speaks at a Kristallnacht commemoration event in Amsterdam's Jewish quarter.
Denouncing Israel for "racist policies" against the Palestinians, firebrand MK Hanin Zoabi of the Joint (Arab) List party accused the Jewish state of crimes akin to those committed by the Nazis. She was speaking at an event marking the anniversary of Kristallnacht in the heart of Amsterdam's decimated Jewish quarter on Sunday.
Organized by the city's far-left Platform Stop Racism and Exclusion, the commemoration drew more than 200 attendees, with dozens of them wearing kippot or draped in Israeli flags.
Leading up to Zoabi's speech, several organizers delivered remarks comparing the Holocaust to Israel's treatment of Palestinians. At least half a dozen pro-Israel protesters were escorted from the gathering by security personnel and uniformed Amsterdam city police, when at various points they yelled in protest of the speakers' condemnations of Israel.
At an event devoid of signs and banners, there was not a Palestinian flag in sight as mournful Yiddish songs were performed by a klezmer trio leading up to Zoabi's keynote speech.
"I am not an immigrant in my homeland," chanted Zoabi to applause from the crowd, which waited almost an hour for her remarks.
Calling herself "one of 120,000 of her people who were not expelled by Israel in 1948," Zoabi — who was born in Nazareth in 1969 — lashed the Jewish state for creating "more than 80 laws" that discriminate against Palestinians.
The Israeli rules, said Zoabi, are similar to the conditions under which Jews lived at the time of the 1938 Kristallnacht pogrom in Germany.
Comment: Hanin Zoabi is not alone:
- Former Pink Floyd frontman sparks fury by [accurately] comparing Israelis to Nazis
- The Jewish Holocaust and the Palestinian Holocaust
Tuscaloosa police were called about 3 a.m. Saturday to the apartment after a neighbor complained about loud music, and video recordings show students refusing to let officers enter the apartment, reported AL.com.The students also refused to leave, and an officer grabs one of them and yanks him outside before barging into the residence.
The students, all of most of whom appear to be white, asked the officers whether they had a right to enter and search the apartment, and they asked whether they were being arrested or detained."I respect your authority, but you are not allowed in my apartment," one student tells an officer, who complains that he is not respecting his authority. "I am answering your questions in a timely manner."
The officer tries to grab the student, who steps back out of the doorway, and the officer steps through the door and takes out his Taser."I don't have to have a warrant," the officer shouts, and several students inside remind him that he does. "You're under arrest for harassment for grabbing my arm, so get outside now!"
Comment: One thing that the police in the U.S. do consistently and proficiently is terrorize its citizens. It's tantamount to State-sanctioned terrorism.
SOTT Exclusive: 'A few bad apples' - the false paradigm excusing sadistic behavior by police or government officials in positions of authority

General view of King Abdullah bin Al Hussein Training Center where a Jordanian officer went on a shooting spree on Monday in Mwaqar near Amman, Jordan, November 9, 2015.
Earlier reports said two Americans and one South African national were killed in the attack, while two Americans and four Jordanians were injured.
The attacker was a senior co-trainer who had the rank of captain, a Jordanian security source said, as cited by Reuters.
The attack took place at Mwaqar camp, funded by Washington - a facility for training Iraqi and Palestinian special security forces. Earlier reports had claimed that the assailant committed suicide after killing the contractors. However, Mohammad Momani said that the attacker had been shot dead shot by security forces.
The attacker's identity has not been officially disclosed. However, he was identified as 29-year-old Anwar Abu Zaid by his brother, Fadi, who spoke to AP. Fadi Abu Zaid said that his brother, who has a wife and two children - a boy and a girl - joined law enforcement when he was 18, was mentally stable and "not an extremist at all." Abu Zaid went to work as usual on Monday morning, his brother said.
An investigation has been launched into "the reasons behind the crime", Momani said in a statement released by Jordan's Petra news agency. The US and Jordan will be closely cooperating on an investigation into the incident, President Obama said in a statement. "We take this very seriously and will be working closely with the Jordanians to determine exactly what happened," Obama said during a meeting with Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu at the White House on Monday.
In most cases, he was able to avoid a whole lot of legal trouble and public scrutiny due to his media celebrity and his close ties to the power of the royal family.
The fallout from the Jimmy Savile case has probably just begun, but the backlash has already been considerable for anyone who has dared to speak out on the issue, with some people at the BBC even losing their jobs.
Comment: Another example of how the media is so complicit in covering up the high crimes of anyone who is a part of, or favored by, the Elite.
See also:
- The BBC: Protecting Pedophiles and War Criminals Since 2004
- JimmySavile scandal exposes pedophile network at heart of British establishment
- What about the pedophiles in government? Jimmy Savile police investigate sex offence claims against 25 celebrities and expect to arrest six over next few weeks
- Jimmy Savile scandal: BBC director general engulfed by 'tsunami of filth'
- British celebrity icon Jimmy Savile sexually abused up to a thousand children on BBC premises
- The Prince and the pedophile: Charles' connections to pedophilia networks













Comment: Yet Finland, with such high academic achievements is an eeeeevil socialist country. Addressing the poverty issue has always been a hard sell in 'Murrica. You get what you pay for?