Society's Child
A group of students removed a portrait of the legendary playwright — widely regarded as the greatest writer and dramatist the world has ever known — and replaced it with a photo of Audre Lorde, a self-described "black, lesbian, mother, warrior, poet."
In her poem, "The Brown Menace or Poem to the Survival of Roaches," Lorde "likened blacks to cockroaches, hated, feared, and poisoned by whites," wrote poetryfoundation.org. Poetry critic Sandra M. Gilbert remarked that "it's not surprising that Lorde occasionally seems to be choking on her own anger."
So in the name of safe spaces and political correctness — actual education at American universities is once again trampled.
A group of armed masked men attacked security forces before barricading themselves in a medieval Crusader-era castle in the Jordanian city of Karak. Foreign tourists are believed to be trapped inside the historic site, and a security operation is ongoing.
At least five people were killed and nine others wounded in the attack in southern Jordan, AFP reported, citing security sources.
At least fourteen people, including a tourist from Malaysia, are among the hostages, local media say, adding that security forces have managed to free some of them.
Clinton, addressing donors in Manhattan on Thursday, claimed her surprise defeat in the presidential elections was the result of two events: Comey's announcing the reopening of an investigation into her use of a private email server, and the "unprecedented Russian plot to swing this election."
The Democratic contender ignored a host of internal problems associated with her presidential campaign as possible reasons for her landslide defeat.
Of his five children, she is peerless. During a family interview with Barbara Walters last year, Eric, Donald Jr. and Tiffany Trump all said Ivanka, 35, is their father's favorite. When asked, years ago, how he ranked Ivanka and his other daughter Tiffany, Trump said there was no contest.
"Come on!" he said. "Daddy's little girl!"
While the media has, as it should, assiduously reported on every official Cabinet appointment made by President-elect Trump, they have yet to vet the next administration's most significant, powerful player: Ivanka. She's not the first woman to sub for a first lady — most notably, Teddy Roosevelt's daughter Alice did — but none had the influence Ivanka likely will.
Forget adviser: Ivanka, now moving her family to DC, may be co-president.
TASS News Agency reports...
Hollywood star and animal rights activist Pamela Anderson said on Friday she could be interested in obtaining Russian citizenship.Pamela Anderson is an active member of the International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW).
During a TASS news conference Anderson had this to say about Russia...
"I have a Canadian passport and an American passport. I would gladly have a Russian passport. It would be easier to get here."
"I love Russia."
"I may have very strong connections with Russia. My mom is a little bit Russian, I guess, generations ago. So I feel a connection to the culture and people I think that Russians really get things done."

In this photo made Friday, Nov. 11, 2016, firefighters and medics try to help a man onto a stretcher after he was found semiconscious on the ground in St. Louis. The man is believed to be one of several hundred who have become ill recently in St. Louis after possibly using a latest version of synthetic marijuana, a man-made hallucinogen that experts believe is far more dangerous and unpredictable than the real thing.
Nearly 300 homeless people became ill last month in St. Louis due to the man-made hallucinogen that experts believe is far more dangerous and unpredictable than the real thing. Other outbreaks have occurred in New York City, Los Angeles and Austin, Texas.
"It was common for us to see reactions where they were violent, incoherent, sometimes catatonic on the ground," Austin police Lt. Kurt Thomas said.
The homeless are easy targets in a confined area, experts say. The drug is cheap - as little as $1 or $2 for a joint - more difficult to detect in drug tests and is a fast escape from a harsh reality.
Things got so bad in St. Louis last month that the region's largest provider of homeless services urged people to stop giving the homeless handouts, because they were worried the money would be used to buy the drug.
The man, identified as Usama Abdu, initially claimed that he had beaten his child because he had refused to wash, but later conceded that he was trying to blackmail his estranged wife into joining him in Greece. Initially appearing without a lawyer because no member of the Bar Association would represent him, the presiding judge had some harsh words for Abdu before sentencing him on Friday, politischios.gr reported.
"How a man can love his wife and not love the child this woman bore him? With what kind of heart did he do this? From what is this man made?"Judge Maria Tompazis asked the defendant. Abdu, in turn, offered up "a thousand apologies."
"What can I do to apologize?" he asked with tears in his eyes.
"He has hurt his own child," the judge replied. "This crying won't convince us."
Bushara as-Said Taha is 35 years old and lives in the district of al-Suqre, which was under terrorist control right from the beginning. Her house was broken down, her furniture was burnt and she herself ended up on the street. "We used to live freely and safely but then the terrorists came. They broke into our house and demanded that the men cooperate with terrorists. Whomever resisted them was tortured and killed. There were staged public executions in the main square of our quarter. We were seized with terror, it was as if the people had lost their mind," Bushara told Sputnik Arabic.
Tommy G. Thompson moved a trove of gold from the Atlantic Ocean in 1988, but years later was accused by his investors of cheating them out of their cut of the loot, leading FBI agents on a large manhunt with the treasure hunter eventually being caught.
Thompson went from living in a Florida mansion with his partner to staying in expensive hotels under a fake name.
Home for the treasure hunter is now an Ohio jail cell until he owns up to where he stashed the gold.
The gold in question came from the SS Central America, which sank to the bottom of the sea during a hurricane in 1857, where it remained for 130 years. Along with at least three tons of California gold it took with it to the sea floor, 425 people also died.
At the time of recovering the gold, Thompson was an engineer from Columbus, Ohio who built an underwater robot capable of diving 8,000ft to pull up the treasure.
His crew was able to recover rare 19th century coins, the ship's bell and "gold bars... 15 times bigger than the largest California gold bar previously known to exist," according to the Chicago Tribune.
Aged 30 at the time, he put his work down to "a celebration of American ideals: free enterprise and hard work."
His investors grew weary of his modest image and took him to court in the 2000s and Thompson was accused of selling most of the gold and keeping profits for himself.

Then-Brig. Gen. David Haight is seen in this undated photo. Haight, an Army Ranger, combat veteran and family man, led a double life: an 11-year affair and a "swinger lifestyle" of swapping sexual partners that put him at risk of blackmail and espionage, according to interviews and documents.
The Army fired Maj. Gen. David Haight from his job overseeing operations at European Command earlier this year after investigators uncovered his double life. Haight's post required him to have access to the military's classified capabilities to thwart Russian aggression, and his double life would have put him at risk of being blackmailed, several senior officials have said.
But Haight's dark secret came to light only after the military received anonymous tips about his 11-year extramarital affair and other sexual escapades and began investigating in December. Officials entrusted with the most sensitive information undergo background checks and lie-detector tests every five years, meaning Haight passed at least two while he was having an affair.
His case shows that a determined and capable liar can evade detection, experts say.
"It's disappointing to see senior officers behave this way, and that the system is unable to identify people with integrity problems," said Derek Reveron, professor of national security affairs at the Naval War College. "Adultery clearly illustrates someone who displays bad judgment and is untrustworthy — red flags in background investigations."
Comment: Army 'waited' for media reports on 'swinging' general before suspending his security clearance
An Army general who was fired for his role in a 'swinging' sex scandal, in which he used a government cellphone and email to conduct an affair, kept his security clearance for five months until the revelation emerged in the media, USA Today reports.Update: Army demotes 'swinging general' after investigation into affairs, lifestyle
But despite the apparent crackdown on Haight by the Army, the general was still allowed to keep his clearance to review classified information for five months after the Army Inspector General discovered details of Haight's secret, according to documents cited by USA Today. The media outlet noted that his clearance wasn't taken away until a day after the paper published details of the scandal and put the suspension in actual connection with their report.
"The Army waited to suspend the security clearance... until a day after revelations of his double life were published in USA TODAY, the Army has acknowledged," the outlet writes.
Citing two unnamed Army officials, the newspaper also said that Haight did not take a lie detector test at any point, as it was not a requirement for his job. Hence, he was allowed to keep his double life a secret for over a decade and was promoted three times during that time span.
The Army has stripped Maj. Gen. David Haight of three ranks, Army Secretary Eric Fanning said Friday, following revelations contained in documents and interviews of Haight's decade-long extramarital affair and "swinger lifestyle.
A board of his peers called for Haight to be busted to lieutenant colonel, a demotion that will cost him nearly $43,000 per year in pension pay. Fanning, in an interview, said he had accepted the recommendation after a panel of three officers reviewed Haight's conduct — and his secret second life — and determined that lieutenant colonel was the last rank in which he had served satisfactorily.
Fanning spent hours discussing the case with other general officers and read the investigative report twice before accepting the recommendation, he said.
"He's going to be retired as a lieutenant colonel," Fanning said. "Pretty big drop."
Haight's attorney, Army Lt. Col. Sara Root, said Haight deeply regrets the affair but strenuously denies that it affected his service through multiple combat tours.
"He's 100% devoted to his country," Root said. "He has sacrificed a lot for his country. He's not a threat to his country and would never do anything to harm it."












Comment: The vocal minority prevails again.
Professor explains the increase of 'precious snowflakes' - cites narcissism, over-nurturing
Virginia school bans 'Huckleberry Finn,' 'To Kill a Mockingbird' after 'precious snowflake's' complaint of racist language