Society's Child
Nevada rancher Cliven Bundy and his sons were released by a federal judge in Las Vegas, after she dismissed with prejudice all charges against them. Prosecutors' failure to disclose evidence had led to a mistrial.
US District Court Judge Gloria Navarro ruled Monday that the government committed "flagrant prosecutorial misconduct" in the process against Bundy and his sons in relation to the 2014 armed standoff with federal agents over grazing rights.
But for the most part, as I said, that was all well and good... at least as long as the weather was pleasant. Now, however, as I'm sure any of you living in the northeast are aware, there's a blistering bubble of arctic air throwing the region into a deep freeze. Suddenly the power grid is experiencing strains which aren't generally seen in more clement weather conditions. So how are they responding? Local Hartford, Vermont blogger Meredith Angwin has been keeping an eye on the grid and she's seeing an alarming trend (or at least alarming to environmentalists). As the temperature dropped, wind energy production waned just as demand was rising. And the local power companies responded by... burning oil.
Johnson wrote the innocuous post to highlight how pervasive anti-Russian prejudice is in the public discourse right now:
Johnson then received a message from Facebook informing him that he has been temporarily blocked from posting for 30 days, and will not be able to post on Facebook in the meantime.
Comment: Facebook's anti-racism algorithms seem to have trouble discerning irony.
When referencing prostitution, we are talking about the mutually beneficial exchange of sexual favors for money by two or more consenting partners; not forced human trafficking.
The study, titled: Decriminalizing Indoor Prostitution: Implications for Sexual Violence and Public Health examined a period of time in Rhode Island in which the state accidentally decriminalized prostitution.
In an incredibly ironic move, Rhode Island lawmakers sought in 2003 to strengthen its laws on prostitution. When the law was rewritten, however, its careful wording accidentally left out the language to explicitly forbid indoor prostitution. This created a loophole which essentially legalized indoor prostitution.
Because changes in government come at such a gruelingly slow pace, this newly created loophole - effectively the function of a bureaucratic typo - stayed on the books for a whopping six years after they noticed it.
Laurie Rubel implicates both meritocracy and "color-blindness" as ideological precepts that hold back racial minorities from succeeding in math classes in an article for the peer-reviewed Journal of Mathematics Education.
Rubel, who taught high school math for nine years before becoming a professor, argues that while meritocracy is commonly linked to hard work and talent, it also "functions as a tool of whiteness" because it "ignores systemic barriers and institutional structures that prevent opportunity and success."
Comment: Laurie Rubel contends that the only solution to the race gap in test scores is to teach social justice instead of math. Then everyone will be equally libtarded!
For the second straight year, the U.S. port city ranked No. 1 on a Top 50 Bed Bug Cities list compiled by Atlanta-based pest control services company Orkin LLC.
The list, released Monday, is based on the most residential and commercial treatments for the seed-sized bloodsuckers from December 2016 to November 2017, and reflects a rising number of infestations across the U.S., according to Tim Husen, an Orkin entomologist.

Across all 50 states, we have seen expenditures creep up over the last 10 years in every category.
Unfortunately, this optimistic news is somewhat undercut by worsening financial trajectories at the state government level from coast to coast. The nation is not in as good a shape as it seems.
Recently updated government financial disclosures show alarming levels of red ink on statehouse ledger books across the country. A 2017 analysis shows $1.5 trillion in state debt, a 15 percent increase over the previous year and part of a long-term worsening trend. In the last year, only seven states reported improved financials, while three were unchanged, and 40 are on a troubling downward trajectory.
The 55-page indictment delivered by the Vienna Public Prosecutor's Office and cited by Austrian media, alleges that Lorenz, now 18, pledged allegiance to Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS/ISIL) in the summer of 2016, and began contacting even younger boys in a bid to recruit them.
The 12-year-old resident of the town Ludwigshafen in Rhineland, Germany, with whom the 18-year-old had formed a bond, left a bag filled with unlit fireworks and nails near at a Christmas market on 26 November 2016, and outside the city hall a week later on December 3, when he was caught.
Investigators say the explosives would not have detonated on its own, but said Lorenz talked the the perpetrator through every step of the planned attack - from helping him prepare and successfully test the bomb; encouraging him to pick a market instead of a church; as well as writing to him on Whatsapp: "Put on a thick jacket... Then go behind a hut and light and run," minutes before the scheduled explosion.

This April 22, 2008, file photo shows an exterior view of the T. Don Hutto Residential Center in Taylor, Texas. Laura Monterrosa who is housed at the detention facility waiting to find out if she'll be allowed to stay in the United States, has accused a guard at the facility of groping her and suggesting they have sex. As the national discussion of sexual misconduct grows, advocates for immigrants say they hope the conversation will include immigrant detention facilities. They point to the FBI announcing in December 2017, that it had opened a civil rights investigation into Monterrosa's case as a positive sign.
Months after accusing a female guard at the facility of groping her and suggesting they have sex, Monterrosa says she still sees the guard in the dining hall and other parts of the facility. She recalled in a recent interview what the guard had said to her.
The progressive policy group Policy Matters Ohio stated, as of August, Amazon had 1,430 workers and family members on food stamps, which helps low-income people purchase food. It ranks 19th on a list of 50 large employers in the state, according to the group.
Since a typical beneficiary gets benefits for roughly two people, that means the online retail giant has about 700 workers on the program in Ohio, The Columbus Dispatch reports:
To be on the list, a company has to have a large number of workers in the state. In addition, that company has to have a significant number of workers who don't make much money or maybe work part time.
Workers getting food stamps in essence becomes an additional taxpayer subsidy for the companies that pay low wages, said Zach Schiller, Policy Matters' research director.
"We've appreciated having more employment, but maybe we should be focusing economic development dollars on good jobs. It's pretty clear that a lot of these jobs are not good jobs," he said. "That should raise a policy question for our public officials, and that's why we think its worth pointing out."
Comment: This isn't the first (nor the last) story we'll read about the shoddy ways Amazon treats its employees:
- Black Friday strike: Amazon workers in Germany and Italy walk off the job
- Intolerable working conditions at Amazon's newest warehouse - UPDATE
- What is Amazon doing to its workers? Customer finds disturbing 'help me' note inside package
- Sott Exclusive: Not Even Pretending Not to be Evil: Amazon Amasses an Army of Slaves, Drones and Bots
- Amazon drivers launch legal challenge over working conditions: up to 200 parcels a day with no breaks while earning less than minimum wage














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