Society's Child
TIMOTHY WILLIAMS, Jr.
A retired Senior Detective Supervisor with the Los Angeles Police Department, Williams who worked in the Robbery-Homicide Division. During his nearly 30-year career with the LAPD he worked and supervised robbery, sexual assault, and narcotics investigations. He testifies frequently in use of force cases across the country.
CHRISTINE COLE
Executive Director of the Crime and Justice Institute in Boston. CJI provides nonpartisan policy analysis, consulting and research on public safety issues. CJI also evaluates case studies in the use of force. Cole has worked in two police agencies as a community liaison/policy advisor and served as Chief of Staff at the Massachusetts Executive Office of Public Safety.
PROF. SETH STOUGHTON
An Associate Professor at the University of South Carolina School of Law. Stoughton's research focuses on the regulation of police and he has written for a number of national publications. He is a former officer with the Tallahassee Police Department.
VIDEO ANALYSIS
What follows is an analysis of the April 13, 2016 video from the sally port of the Ramsey County Jail. The video is shot by a deputy with a small video camera. This is standard operating procedure when a combative inmate is brought in for booking. The St. Paul Police Officers who arrested Terrell Wilson had radioed ahead to the jail that Wilson was combative and spitting. Wilson had been pepper sprayed by officers during his arrest.
In December, Navratilova responded to a tweet from one of her followers about female-identified biological males participating in women's sport: "Clearly that can't be right. You can't just proclaim yourself a female and be able to compete against women. There must be some standards, and having a penis and competing as a woman would not fit that standard." Rachel McKinnon, a male-born Canadian philosophy professor who competes against women as a transgender athlete, weighed in with a lengthy social-media dissertation, in which McKinnon informed Navratilova that "people's genitals are irrelevant to sports performance," and called her comments "transphobic."
In recent days, this fight has entered a new phase, with Navratilova's article being reported in other media outlets as if what she were saying was not just unreasonable but bigoted. CNN's coverage, for instance, declared: "Martina Navratilova criticized for comments about trans women in sport." At the BBC, meanwhile, producers allegedly rescinded an invitation to a guest who sought to defend Navratilova, and instead gave the air time to McKinnon, who declared that having a debate on the issue was tantamount to "a black person [debating] a KKK member on civil rights."
The report is titled "Sex Trafficking in Hawaii: The Stories of Survivors," which detailed the testimonials from multiple victims. One particularly disturbing part of the report was the fact that almost half of all the victims interviewed reported that police officers participated in their abuse and victimization.
"The corruption of members of the criminal justice system reported by the participants in the study was pervasive in their stories of being prostituted," the report noted.
The report found that the average age of those being trafficked is just 14-years-old, showing how early the abuse began.
One of the victims interviewed, who wished to remain anonymous for obvious reasons explained that "the same people that are charging you for prostitution are the people turning around and buying it from you."
Comment: Is it any wonder trust in the police is at an all time low? See also:
- Rewarding pathology: Oakland, California cops involved in coverup of child sex trafficking promoted and honored in secret ceremony
- Systemic coverup? Network of police pedophiles in Louisville, KY allowed to sexually abuse children for years
- As Hollywood gets the spotlight, media silent on rampant sex abuse by police
- NYPD sex crimes lieutenant indicted on over 80 counts of child sex abuse
- Pedophilia network: Cops busted raping and filming cadets to make child porn
The non-binding referendum saw a 52 percent turnout and some 72.2 percent of locals have said 'No' to the construction of a military base next to the fishing village of Henoko. Only 19 percent voted in favor of moving Futenma Marine Corps airbase to a new location, away from the densely populated Ginowan city, the prefecture reported.
But, despite the massive public opposition, the government of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe continues to insist that American presence on the island is vital to Japan's deterrence capabilities and ability to protect itself against potential adversaries.
Comment: More on the decision to "take the people's wishes seriously" on the Okinawa base - and then completely ignore them:
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said Feb. 25 that land reclamation work will continue for a new U.S. air station in Okinawa Prefecture despite a referendum showing 72 percent of islanders oppose the project.
"We will take the results seriously and will do our best to reduce (the prefecture's) burden of hosting U.S. military bases," Abe told reporters at the prime minister's office in Tokyo. "(But) we can't postpone (the relocation) any longer."
The new base will be built off the Henoko district of Nago to take over the functions of the U.S. Marine Corps Air Station Futenma located in a crowded residential area in Ginowan, also in Okinawa Prefecture.
The return to Japan of the land where the Futunma air station is located, and the relocation of its functions, was agreed upon by Japan and the United States in the 1990s. However, Okinawa residents and politicians have demanded that the functions be moved outside of their prefecture, which is currently home to about 70 percent of U.S. military facilities in Japan.
"We want (the people of Okinawa Prefecture) to understand that the relocation is not only intended to construct a new base off Henoko but also to transfer the functions of the Futenma air station and realize the return (of its land to Japan)," Abe said.
In the Feb. 24 prefectural referendum, 72.15 percent of voters opposed the land reclamation work off Henoko, 19.10 percent supported the project and 8.75 percent had "no opinion either way." The results of the vote are not legally binding.
Defense Minister Takeshi Iwaya on Feb. 25 echoed the sentiments of the prime minister.
"We want to proceed with the (land reclamation) work," Iwaya said.
On the night of Feb. 24, the ruling Liberal Democratic Party issued a statement under the name of Fumio Kishida, chairman of the party's Policy Research Council.
"We will take the results of the voting seriously," the statement said, adding that relocation work would proceed regardless of the outcome. "We want to make our utmost efforts so that the work can obtain the understanding and cooperation from the people of the prefecture."
Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga has said the original point of the relocation issue is to remove the dangers of the Futenma air station from the crowded area of Ginowan and have the land returned to Japan.
"Our idea of proceeding with the work remains unchanged," he said.
Even before the official campaign kicked off for the referendum, Suga had repeatedly cast doubts on the purpose of the vote.
"Discussions aren't being made on what should be done to prevent the Futenma air station from staying at its current site forever," he said.
The referendum asked voters whether they supported the land reclamation work off Henoko instead of whether they approved the relocation of the Futenma air station.
A senior central government official also said that a referendum that didn't ask voters about the pros and cons of the Futenma relocation was meaningless.
However, such criticism will likely fuel sentiment in the prefecture that the central government is continuing to ignore the will of the Okinawa people.
The central government has also failed to live up to its promise to the Okinawa prefectural government that operations at the Futenma air station would be halted within five years from mid-February 2014.
In fact, the central government still cannot show a schedule for when the Futenma operations will stop, and its emphasis on prioritizing safety in Ginowan is also falling flat.
It has been learned that the Defense Ministry started preparations to expand the land reclamation work off Henoko to deal with soft ground in wide areas of the seabed.
With the expanded work, the relocation project is expected to take many years to complete.
In his policy speech in 2018, Abe said, "We will side with the feelings of the Okinawa people and do our best to reduce the prefecture's burden of hosting (U.S. military) bases."
In his policy speech this year, however, he deleted the words "side with."
Over the year, Okinawa Prefecture has strengthened its opposition to the Futenma relocation plan by, for example, electing anti-base candidate Denny Tamaki as governor in September.
A by-election in the Lower House Okinawa No. 3 constituency is scheduled for April while the Upper House election will be held in summer.
Igor Malashenko was quite a prominent figure in the Russia of the 1990s. As a businessman, he was among the founders of one of Russia's biggest private TV channels, NTV. On the political side, he was responsible for public relations in Boris Yeltsin's 1996 re-election campaign, which he won despite starting with approval ratings in single digits. According to Yeltsin's daughter, Malashenko was offered the position of head of the presidential administration for the success.
After Yeltsin's retirement, Malashenko lived for a decade in the US, while keeping his media business in Russia and Israel, which included opposition media outlets. The entrepreneur returned to live in Russia in 2012, but kept his property in New York and Spain.
Comment: He can't have feared for his life much if he returned to live in Russia in 2012, and why would the Spanish authorities be in on this implausible conspiracy? Alas, Russia-gaters aren't looking for logic, reason, or even justice, they're simply looking for an excuse to smear Russia:
- Russiagate Conceals Israeli Meddling And Coming War With Iran
- Russia-Gate is state-sponsored paranoid propaganda
- Galloway: UK media attempts a "very British coup" against Corbyn with more unhinged anti-Russia hysterics
Michael Blackburn, who taught creative writing and English Literature at the University of Lincoln, has written a scathing piece on his blog in which he denounces "wannabe leftist politicos" and "social-justice types" for behaving like a "mob,"who seek to drive out dissenting views - like his.
They are now the witch hunters, but instead of condemning you, as the victim, to imprisonment, torture or death, you're banished to the soft gulag of shame, unemployment and the destruction of your reputation and career.
"There is an ongoing and significant risk to key parts of the Domain Name System (DNS) infrastructure," the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) said in a February 22 statement. DNS is responsible for routing internet traffic to its intended destination.
These attacks enable hostile parties to snoop on data being sent through the DNS, to redirect traffic to other locations and even to impersonate or "spoof" the destination website, ICANN specialists told AFP.
Comment: See also:
- Global Internet could crash in next 48 hours due to DNS changes
- America to hand off Internet DNS control in under two months
- Internet DNS flaw that could let hackers take over the Web gets "fixed"
- Expert hacker shows how easy it is to hack wireless tech
- WikiLeaks #Vault7: 'CIA's Cherry Bomb' targets wireless network
"We know you're the Rabbi of AMIA [Argentine Israelite Mutual Association]," was reportedly the last thing a masked man told Davidovich before the "savage" assault which left him hospitalized with serious injuries, including nine broken ribs.
AMIA, whose building was bombed in 1994, resulting in the deaths of 85 people, has expressed "deep unease" at the attack and what was said to Davidovich, who has headed the organization since 2013.
Proponents of gay marriage are hopeful following new marriage statistics released by France's National Institute of Statistics and Economic Studies Tuesday. The data for 2017 shows that 7,244 same sex marriages were officiated during the year.
On Twitter, one user expressed hope for a day when gay marriage would become so naturalized it would no longer even put in a separate category.

Tommy Robinson addresses a protest outside the BBC’s offices in Salford on Saturday.
The company said Robinson, whose real name is Stephen Yaxley-Lennon, broke rules that ban public calls for violence against people based on protected characteristics; rules that ban supporting or appearing with organised hate groups; and policies that prevent people from using the site to bully others.
The decision to ban Robinson from the social media sites could threaten his ability to reach large audiences. He is already banned from Twitter and the decision to cut him off from Instagram and Facebook will leave him reliant on YouTube as the only major online platform to provide him with a presence.














Comment: Political correctness is trumping scientific reality and those who are calling bullshit are in the minority. Is there any hope for humanity at all?
See also: