Society's Child
On the Thursday broadcast of Wallbuilders Live, David Barton explained that biblical principles - and not sexism - were behind not allowing women to vote prior to 1920.
"So family government precedes civil government and you watch that as colonists came to America, they voted by families," he said. "And you have to remember back then, husband and wife, I mean the two were considered one. That is the biblical precept... That is a family, that is voting. And so the head of the family is traditionally considered to be the husband and even biblically still continues to be so."

Murder investigation: Investment banker Gary Clarence is flying back to the UK from South Africa after three of his four children were found dead at home (pictured here with his twin sons).
- Tania Clarence described as devoted mother who 'doted on her children'
- 42-year-old was arrested on suspicion of murder and remains in custody
- Police found bodies of Ben and Max, both 3, and Olivia, 4, in SW London
- All three children suffered from spinal muscular atrophy, friends reveal
- Gary Clarence, 43, had travelled to South Africa with their eldest daughter
Tania Clarence, 42, was last night described as a devoted mother who 'doted on her children'.
She was arrested after police discovered the lifeless bodies of three-year-olds Ben and Max and four-year-old Olivia at the family's £2million home in south-west London.
Friends said all three children suffered the degenerative condition spinal muscular atrophy - sometimes described as 'floppy baby syndrome' - and received specialist care around the clock.

"Recently, there have been several high profile cases involving the rights of parents and various state agencies. State agencies are tearing children away from parents if they seek a second medical opinion or decide against giving their child a dangerous psychotropic drug." — Congressman Steve Stockman
Such medical institutions include the National Institute of Health, state agencies, medical facilities, and hospitals. This bill would direct the Inspector General of Health and Human Services to withhold funds from these institutions for the aforementioned reasons.
The story of Justina Pelletier, who has mitochondrial disease and was declared a ward of the state over a custody battle regarding a subjective psychotropic drug diagnosis, motivated Congressman Stockman to introduce the legislation.
Lou and Linda Pelletier brought their daughter, Justina, to Boston Children's Hospital for flu-like symptoms in February 2013. Justina had been diagnosed with and receiving treatment for Mitochondrial Disease, a genetic medical condition, since 2011. Less than 24 hours after being admitted to Boston Children's Hospital, mental health workers disagreed with the Mitochondrial Disease diagnosis and insisted she had a psychiatric disorder called Somatoform (though there are no fool-proof medical or genetic tests to validate this as a legitimate medical condition).
Comment: Just how deep does the rabbit hole goes? See Head of Mass. Social Services agency at center of Pelletier case resigns. Children dead and tortured. For more information, watch:
Gilmour Academy, St. Edward High School, and St. Ignatius High School announced the new policy to students and their parents on Monday. The schools will use Psychemedics Corporation for the drug tests on hair follicles. Psychemedics president and CEO Raymond Kubacki is the brother of St. Edward president James Kubacki.
K.C. McKenna, vice president of admissions and marketing at St. Edward High School, told the Cleveland Scene that the decision to work with Psychemedics came after several years of research led by an internal committee made up of members of the board of trustees, a faculty member, and members of the administration.
"Certainly, Jim knew a little more about the process because of his brother being involved, but his brother being CEO of that company in no way led to us making the decision to use Psychemedics," he said.
"From Day One, I told them this was my brother's company," the St. Edward's president told the Plain Dealer. But in their announcements, the schools made no mention of a connection between anyone at the schools and Psychemedics.
"The short answer is Gilmour was very much aware of that connection from the beginning and it was never an issue," Gilmour spokesman Devin Schlickmann told the Plain Dealer.
"How we picked the company isn't of interest to high school boys," St. Ignatius spokeswoman Lisa Metro said. "They're more interested in how it's going to play out to them." Metro also revealed why the committee decided to go with Psychemedics: "They were the only lab with full FDA clearance to do the testing we were looking for," she added.
The schools said the drug testing is preventative, and not evidence of substance abuse among students, according to a statement on the St. Edward website. "The schools decided to initiate drug testing out of a deep concern for the health and well-being of students," the statement says. "The primary purpose for this initiative is to give students another reason to say "no" to the pressures of using illegal drugs and to help them remain substance-free. This initiative is simply one more component in our student wellness efforts."
Nevertheless - and perhaps because of such activities - USAID is well aware of the economic trends they need to address and/or manage. So, when their top science advisor speaks, it is essential to hear what he is saying. Disregarding any overarching agenda, let's see what is in store for the global food supply, according to Dr. Fred Davies, advisor for the bureau of food security and a Texas A&M AgriLife Regents Professor of Horticultural Sciences.
According to a new national survey by Rasmussen, 53 percent of likely US voters think that neither political party truly represents the American people. The poll shows that the two-party system is losing ground with Americans - six months ago, in October, only 46 percent of questioned voters said that neither party represents Americans.
RT's Lindsay France spoke with 2012 Libertarian Party presidential candidate Gary Johnson about Americans' lack of representation in the halls of political power.
RT: Now let's talk about this lack of representation. Seventy-two percent say it would be better if the country didn't elect the incumbents to Congress this year in November. If they don't trust either party, the incumbents or the new guys, what's the alternative?
Gary Johnson: Well, first of all, I agree with the poll. I think this is what we're all witnessing. I think term limits would really be a silver bullet, the notion that people would get in, do the right thing and get out. And then, Lindsay, you know, a couple of issues of late that really left all the politicians behind: the marriage equality, nobody was standing up for that; the marijuana legalization, the state of Washington, the state of Colorado moving ahead of all politicians; and then if you look at Libya and Syria, the president's ready to go in militarily, Congress is ready to dot the i's and cross the t's on how to do that and, lo and behold, 80 percent of Americans don't want to do that. Well that's a good thing. I just wish that Congress would catch up to the fact that this spending is not sustainable and, if they don't fix this, we're going to find ourselves in a monetary crisis. We're going to find ourselves without a country.
RT: Well, let's talk about government trust among young voters, those between the ages of about 18 and 29. A new poll surveying young Americans' political attitudes released by Harvard University's Institute of Politics [on] Tuesday, found that the millennials' 'composite trust index,' it's called, which is the level of trust, on average, in six different public institutions: the presidency, the US military, the Supreme Court, the federal government, and the United Nations, it's dropped dramatically in just two years...from 39 two years ago down to 31 in mid-April...How do politicians come back from this sort of a drop? We're talking about the young generation, the young voters here.
Brandon Carpenter, 28, told The Huffington Post Tuesday that he and 21-year-old Logan Laliberte, both of Maine, had hopped off a freight train and were walking through the town of Sulphur, Louisiana, with Carpenter's dog -- a 14-month-old Labrador, Newfoundland, golden retriever mix named Arzy Kensington -- when it started raining. The men were on their way to visit friends in Lake Charles.
They climbed into the back of a parked box truck in the near-empty parking lot of the Southwest Daily News to take shelter, Carpenter said. Before long, a police car pulled up and an officer, gun drawn, ordered them out of the truck.
The officer, Brian Thierbach of the Sulphur Police Department, spotted Arzy and told the men to "get your dog," according to Carpenter. He said the officer watched him tie Arzy to a nearby fence with a 3 1/2-foot leash before Thierbach handcuffed both men, ordered them to the ground facing away from Arzy, and asked, "Is this dog going to bite me or attack me?"
"No," Carpenter said he responded. "He is an incredibly friendly dog."
Twenty seconds later, Carpenter told HuffPost, he heard a single shot.
Eric Midkiff, Southwest Daily News circulation manager, said his boss phoned him around 7 a.m., asking if he knew anything about the men in the parking lot. Midkiff "took off" and headed to the office, and by the time he arrived, "the officer already had Brandon and the other guy on the ground."
Midkiff, 33, told HuffPost he stayed about 20 feet from the men, and heard Thierbach asking if the dog was going to attack. Midkiff said Thierbach was standing on the bumper of the box truck petting Arzy.
"The dog was rubbing up against the cop," Midkiff said. "He would rub the dog's back and then push him away. All of a sudden, he just jumped down and shot the dog in the head."
Midkiff said he could see both Thierbach and the dog clearly. "That dog did not bite that officer," he said. "The dog was wagging his tail, his tongue was hanging out."
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Gilberto Powell says the police were following him in their cruiser as he was walking home. The police report says the officers decided to stop Gilberto after they noticed a "bulge" in Gilberto's pants. After an officer tried to conduct a patdown, the report claims Gilberto attempted to flee.
Gilberto denies trying to run away and says he did everything the officer asked him to do. What happened next resulted in the photograph above.

Alexia Pearce and her son Nathan, three, who was born premature, photographed at their home in Petersfield.
Alexia Pearce adores her 'gorgeous' three-year-old son, yet she is aware that his life - a life blighted by cerebral palsy and chronic lung disease - is unlikely to last long into his teens. In this moving account, she asks: are we always right to save premature babies?
Alexia Pearce looks at her three-year-old son Nathan every day and feels the same rush of guilt. Guilt that she chose to let him live when he was born too early, just 23 weeks into her pregnancy. "If I'd known then what I know now about what extremely premature babies have to go though, I would not have chosen that for my little boy.
"I would have wanted them to give him to me and for him to pass away in my arms. I find the whole issue of what he has been put through, what he continues to be put through, very difficult. I feel very guilty that I took that decision, postponing the inevitable."












Comment: Funny that people like Barton can't consider the idea that certain 'biblical principles' are inherently sexist!