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US poverty Levels: 49.7 million are poor, and 80% of the total population is near poverty

US poor
© AP photo
If you live in the United States, there is a good chance that you are now living in poverty or near poverty. Nearly 50 million Americans, (49.7 Million), are living below the poverty line, with 80% of the entire U.S. population living near poverty or below it.

That near poverty statistic is perhaps more startling than the 50 million Americans below the poverty line, because it translates to a full 80% of the population struggling with joblessness, near-poverty or reliance on government assistance to help make ends meet.

Light Saber

Hawaiian university orders student to stop handing out pocket Constitutions - student counters with lawsuit

Pocket U.S. Constitution
© Cato Institute

The always formidable defenders of free speech at the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education (FIRE) filed a lawsuit in federal court today on behalf of a student who committed the heinous crime of handing out wee copies of the U.S. Constitution at the University of Hawaii at Hilo:
The complaint alleges that on January 16, 2014, plaintiff Merritt Burch, who is president of the UH Hilo chapter of Young Americans for Liberty (YAL), and a fellow student YAL member were participating in an outdoor event where student groups set up tables to distribute literature. Observing other students walking around and handing out items, Burch and her friend walked out from behind YAL's table to likewise hand out Constitutions and YAL information cards. A UH Hilo administrator ordered Burch and her companion to stop approaching students and get back behind their table, dismissing Burch's protest about her constitutional rights.
This is my favorite part, where the university administation tells Burch to go hand out her darned Constitutions on a tiny muddy plot on the edge of campus because "this isn't really the '60s anymore."
A week later, in an orientation meeting for student organizations, another administrator reiterated the rule against passing out literature. Burch and Vizzone were told that if they wanted to protest, the proper place to do so would be in UH Hilo's "free speech zone," a sloping, one-third acre area on the edge of campus. The "free speech zone" represents approximately 0.26 percent of UH Hilo's total area and is muddy and prone to flooding in Hilo's frequent rain. The administrator further observed, "This isn't really the '60s anymore" and "people can't really protest like that anymore."

Burch and Vizzone are challenging the denial of their right to hand out literature and policies restricting the distribution of literature. The suit also challenges UH Hilo's "free speech zone," a separate policy requiring students to request permission seven working days prior to engaging in expressive activity in two central outdoor areas on campus, and the failure of UH Hilo officials to adequately train administrators on the rights of college students.
Want to start your very own kampus kerfuffle? Grab a handful of pocket Constitutions from the Cato Institute for a dollar a pop.

Or maybe get one from a friendly cop?

[Editor's note: This video was produced by ReasonTV for educational purposes.]


Comment: All border stops should go like this.


Eye 2

Symbolic? French reptile warehouse destroyed in blaze near Toulouse

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As many as 30,000 snakes, iguanas, lizards and turtles perished as a blaze ripped through a warehouse in a town in the south of France. It is not clear how the fire started.

The blaze swept through the warehouse in the early hours of Sunday morning and according to local media reports killed between 20,000 to 30,000 animals who were being stored there.

The warehouse, situated in the town of Saint-Sulpice-La-Point, not far from Toulouse belonged to the company Savannah, one of the main wholesalers of reptiles and turtles in France.

According to firefighters the blaze started at 2am and quickly destroyed the 4,000 square metre depot, where numerous species of snakes, iguanas, turtles and other reptiles were being stored.

A video from France TV showed that the roof of part of the warehouse had collapsed.

Only a few turtles were said to have survived the inferno.

Authorities are still investigating the cause of the blaze and have not ruled out arson.


Eye 1

Psychopathic murderer Ira Einhorn started Earth Day

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© Courtesy of Temple's Urban Archives.
Einhorn greeting Earth Day crowds in 1970.
Okay, so maybe "started" is a strong word. And technically Ira Einhorn didn't murder anyone until 1977, seven years after the above photo, taken during the first Earth Day celebration at Belmont Plateau, in Fairmount Park.

Nevertheless, the West Oak Lane native, more colorfully known as "The Unicorn Killer," was a major fixture in radical West Philly counterculture movements in the 1970s and a force that helped organize the first Earth Day.

Before he brutally murdered Bryn Mawr graduate Holly Maddux for having the nerve to break up with a guy who actually instructed people to refer to him as "the Unicorn", Einhorn (German for "one horn") taught UPenn courses on the use of psychedelics and ran for mayor. Maddux's body was found locked inside a trunk in Einhorn's residence by then-homicide detective (and now-Upper Darby Police Superintendent) Michael Chitwood, in Powelton Village, a hotbed for political activism. Einhorn's apartment was just blocks away from the site of the first MOVE bombing.

Eye 1

Italy: Verona's mayor Flavio Tosi threatens fines for those who feed homeless

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Verona's mayor, Flavio Tosi, also blamed a local homeless charity for attracting hungry vagrants with food handouts
Homeless people living in the centre of Verona are to be cleared out like pigeons after the city's right-wing mayor announced plans to introduce fines of €500 (£411) for those found feeding the vagrants.

Flavio Tosi, the first citizen of the pretty northern city forever associated with Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet, said the rising numbers of homeless in a central piazza was posing a "risk to public health".

And he blamed a local homeless charity for attracting them there with food handouts.

"Near to Piazza Dante there's a garden where for some time the Ronda della Carita [charity] has been sending food parcels," said Mr Tosi, a member of the rabble-rousing Northern League.

"Now there are 20 or more [homeless] sleeping there and they use it like their own toilet. The situation has become unmanageable; for this reason I've had to introduce this ban," the mayor said.

Dominoes

A whistleblower's tale of the new minimum wage economy

walmart
© AP Photo/Steve Helber
Walmart co-manager Mary Brinkley adjusts a sign on a computer display in her store in Richmond, Virginia
There are many sides to whistleblowing. The one that most people don't know about is the very personal cost, prison aside, including the high cost of lawyers and the strain on family relations, that follows the decision to risk it all in an act of conscience. Here's a part of my own story I've not talked about much before.

At age 53, everything changed. Following my whistleblowing first book, We Meant Well: How I Helped Lose the Battle for the Hearts and Minds of the Iraqi People, I was run out of the good job I had held for more than twenty years with the US Department of State. As one of its threats, State also took aim at the pension and benefits I'd earned, even as it forced me into retirement. Would my family and I lose everything I'd worked for as part of the retaliation campaign State was waging? I was worried. That pension was the thing I'd counted on to provide for us and it remained in jeopardy for many months. I was scared.

My skill set was pretty specific to my old job. The market was tough in the Washington, DC area for someone with a suspended security clearance. Nobody with a salaried job to offer seemed interested in an old guy, and I needed some money. All the signs pointed one way - toward the retail economy and a minimum wage job.

Red Flag

U.S. workers were once massacred fighting for the protections being rolled back today

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© Library of Congress, Washington, DC
Ruins of the Ludlow camp in Colorado, 1914.
Editor's note: Sunday marked the 100th anniversary of the Ludlow Massacre. For more information about this landmark event in US labor history, visit PBS' "American Experience."

On April 20, 1914, the Colorado National Guard and a private militia employed by the Colorado Fuel & Iron Company (CF&I) opened fire on a tent camp of striking coal miners at Ludlow, Colo. At least 19 people died in the camp that day, mostly women and children.

A century later, the bloody incident might seem a relic of the distant past, but the Ludlow Massacre retains a powerful, disturbing and growing relevance to the present. After a century of struggling against powerful interests to make American workplaces safer and corporations responsive to their employees, the US is rapidly returning to the conditions of rampant exploitation that contributed to Ludlow.

That's especially true in mining, where a coordinated union-busting campaign, the corporate capture of federal regulatory agencies, and widespread environmental degradation leave coal miners unsafe and mining communities struggling to deal with the massive environmental impact of modern mining practices.

A century ago, miners led the fight for workers' rights. The Gilded Age of the late 19th and early 20th centuries was a period of great upheaval for the American working class. For decades, the United Mine Workers of America (UMWA) had worked to organize the nation's coal miners. Its success often hinged on whether the government helped mining companies crush strikes or protected workers. In 1897, deputies in Luzerne County, Pa., killed 19 striking miners in the Lattimer Massacre. But five years later, when Pennsylvania miners struck again, President Theodore Roosevelt intervened on their behalf, providing them with a partial victory. Roosevelt's actions, while hardly indicative a new pro-labor federal government, reflected a growing belief that labor deserved a fair shake.

Heart - Black

Ancient Indian village in California discovered, then paved over to build $55 million housing project

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An ancient American Indian village and burial site in California that was older than King Tut's tomb was discovered and then paved over so that a $55 million housing project could move forward.

The San Francisco Chronicle reported that the ancient site was found at the location of the Rose Lane development in Larkspur. The site reportedly contained a "treasure trove" of details about Coast Miwok life from as long as 4,500 years ago.

But all of the 600 human burials, the tools, the musical instruments and other items were reburied so that development could continue.

"This was a site of considerable archaeological value," archaeologist Dwight Simons, who helped analyze the site, told the Chronicle. "My estimate of bones and fragments in the entire site was easily over a million, and probably more than that. It was staggering."

After developers discovered the significance of the land in 2010, archaeologists and American Indian monitors were brought in as required by the California Environmental Quality Act. American Indian leaders were the ones who reportedly decided how the artifacts would be handled.

Chart Pie

More black men are in prison today than were slaves back in 1850

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© Zhiphopcleveland.com
More black men are behind bars or under the watch of the criminal justice system than there were enslaved in 1850, according to the author of a book about racial discrimination and criminal justice.

Ohio State University law professor and civil rights activist Michelle Alexander highlighted the troubling statistic while speaking in front of an audience at the Pasadena Branch of the American Civil Liberties Union, Elev8 reports.

Alexander, the author of "The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness," reportedly claimed there are more African American men in prison and jail, or on probation and parole, than were slaves before the start of the Civil War.

More than 846,000 black men were incarcerated in 2008, according to U.S. Bureau of Justice estimates reported by NewsOne. African Americans make up 13.6 percent of the U.S. population according to census data, but black men reportedly make up 40.2 percent of all prison inmates.

Newspaper

Allegations against director Bryan Singer may involve a lot of well known names

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© Showbiz411
It was none other than Dana Giacchetto who was behind the financing of a video company owned by Marc Collins-Rector, named in the stunning lawsuit filed against "X Men" director Bryan Singer this week.

As soon as I saw the name Marc Collins-Rector, I knew that a big piece of an old jigsaw puzzle had finally been found.

Michael Egan alleges rape and all kinds of sexual horrors by Singer and others at a Hollywood estate in 1999-2000. Collins- Rector owned the estate, formerly owned by rapper and felon Marion "Suge" Knight.

Egan would have been a teen then. His allegations fit in with another story I was reporting at that time, about criminal business manager and Ponzi schemer Dana Giacchetto (Leonardo DiCaprio and Mike Ovitz's former BFF) and a company called DEN - Digital Entertainment Network, which was owned by Collins- Rector.