Society's Child
Izabel Laxamana jumped off an overpass on Interstate 5 on Friday, May 29. She died the following day at a Seattle hospital.
Days before, her father, Jeff, reportedly posted a YouTube video of an apparently sullen Izabel.
So he decided to start a petition to air his grievances to the Miami-Dade Expressway Authority (MDX). He expected 100 signatures at most. But now, seven months later, it's been signed more than 12,000 times. He plans to deliver it soon to Mayor Carlos Gimenez.
"I'd never made a petition before, and I didn't expect anything," Gonzalez says. "I have no idea how it got so many signatures, but it just shows how people are feeling."
The new tolls began November 15, with a charge at every entrance and exit on the Dolphin and Airport expressways. Previously, all traffic heading west was toll-free, and many motorists never paid a single toll. Now, every car traveling on the two roads pays.
Comment: The powers that be, whether local or federal, seem hellbent on making life as difficult as possible for the average Joe while building their own bank accounts.
Obama Administration opens door to tolls on interstate highways - they need more money to put in their pockets
This time, it was unexpected "simulated explosions" that rattled residents in a neighborhood of Flint, Michigan after the U.S. Army initiated training without warning the locals - despite the fact that the drills, which will last until June 12, had been planned for six months.
Comment: Why does the US military needs such intensive, years-long training for "combat in urban areas"? Preparing for martial law, perhaps?
- Black hawks used In military training exercise in Miami
- Operation 'Jade Helm': Are US special forces training for martial law?
- US: Los Angeles Hosts Military Training Exercises
- Preparing for martial law? Texas jittery over US military drill
- U.S. Military performing drills in public, Army manual states need to 'reeducate dissidents on U.S. soil'

A 12 foot effigy of the BAE chairman at the 'people's jury' protest outside the BAE AGM.
Corporations have already established a growing foothold in many UK schools, but the idea of Europe's biggest arms company running a school still seems like something out of an Orwellian nightmare.
However, it may be about to happen in Barrow, Cumbria, where BAE Systems is on the verge of taking over Furness Academy. The proposal is currently going through due diligence before being opened to a consultation with stakeholders, parents and staff, where it is expected to be supported. If it is agreed, BAE will become the school's sole sponsor later this year. They will also take responsibility for the 'strategic direction' of the school.
Education isn't just about grades, it's also about promoting values, informing perspectives and expanding minds. Could a weapons manufacturer ever act in the best interests of school children? How can a company that profits from international hostility ever be trusted to teach about areas like conflict resolution or the human cost of war?
BAE has a shameful, inglorious history of corruption and deals with dictators. It has been the subject of investigations across a number of countries and was fined $400 million in the US for bribery. It has also sold weapons to human rights abusers and dubious regimes across the world, including Saudi Arabia,Libya, Bahrain and Egypt.
Despite all of the ramifications for education, the move has been welcomed by local MP John Woodcock, who greeted it as a "really exciting" development. Furness Academy's acting head called it "a fantastic opportunity."
Comment: The US is also prey to this disturbing trend. The attraction is the same: lack of opportunities for work leads to the preying on young people to join the military.
Mosby told The Baltimore Sun that prosecutors "have a duty to ensure a fair and impartial process for all parties involved" and "will not be baited into litigating this case through the media."
Attorneys for the police officers oppose the "gag order," saying that the move suggests the state is trying to hide something in the autopsy report. Furthermore, they point to the fact that Mosby herself made a big show of announcing the charges to the media.
"Mrs. Mosby is the one who did an announcement discussing what she said the evidence was in a nationally televised speech," Ivan Bates, attorney for Sergeant Alicia White, told the Sun. "Now that it is time to turn over the evidence, to ask for a protective order is beyond disingenuous."
"It's as if she wants to do everything to make sure our clients do not get a fair trial," Bates added.
Mosby charged Lieutenant Brian Rice, Sergeant White, and officers Caesar Goodson Jr, William Porter, Edward Nero, and Garrett Miller with crimes and misdemeanors ranging from misconduct to "depraved-heart murder" on May 1.
Thousands of demonstrators flocked to the streets of Germany on Thursday ahead of the G7 summit in Bavaria. The main rally took place in Munich, with participants accusing world leaders of failing to act on major global issues.
The demonstrators had a long list of complaints and demands for G7 leaders, ranging from poverty reduction to climate change and rescuing migrants in the Mediterranean.
"The G7 politics means neo-liberal economic policies, war and militarization, exploitation, poverty and hunger, environmental degradation, and [shutting out] refugees," the group Stop G7 Elmau 2015 wrote on its website.
Protesters marched through Munich while carrying signs reading: "The world is not a commodity," and "Stop TTIP (Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership)."
Some wore masks depicted the faces of G7 leaders while holding an "Even it up - Time to end extreme inequality" banner.
A giant pesticide bottle was also part of the demonstration, protesting against Monsanto - the controversial agrichemical company known for its genetically modified organisms (GMOs).
On the forefront of the protesters' agenda was the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP), a trade deal which is currently under negotiation between Europe and the US.
Protests against the deal come as little surprise, despite it having Chancellor Angela Merkel's support. A recent survey found that around 43 percent of Germans believe the deal would be bad for the country, Deutsche Welle reported.
'Dark day for democracy': Wikileaks releases 17 docs exposing secret TiSA trade deal http://t.co/EHDsZkoXBp pic.twitter.com/yyxly6sVFb— RT (@RT_com) June 4, 2015Mario Tolosa was the child's soccer coach when he raped the child. He had been sentenced to six years, but the judges cut that sentence almost in half because Tolosa couldn't be held responsible for "the warped sexual development of the minor child." The six-year-old was called a cross-dresser by the judges before they went on to say:
"it is clear that the child's sexual choice—despite his young age and in light of the considerable testimony of those close to him—had already been made."
The Toronto lawyer, who previously launched cases against Marc Nadon's Supreme Court appointment and recent changes to the Citizenship Act, vowed to fight the Anti-Terrorism Act on constitutional grounds.
Several hundred people attended the rally in Toronto on May 30. Galati listed five ways in which he says the bill infringes on Canadians' constitutional rights, and called for citizens to withhold their votes to parties and politicians that have supported it.
"We at the Constitutional Rights Centre will challenge the constitutionality of this bill and encourage other organizations to do the same," Galati said.
Comment: Galati's other recent challenges are related to the lawsuit against the Bank of Canada which was hijacked from the Canadian people.
Officials say they are trying to determine what happened, but local media sources have already begun spinning the story to favor the officer involved.
The local media has more information than the police have given out to everyone, but numerous sources have already begun conjecture about the collision happening "after" the police chase. We asked the Delaware Sheriff's department and the Chester Police if they had made any such claim, and they told us they had not.
Right now, they say they have turned the investigation over to the Delaware County District Attorney's Office. They tell us that this is the normal procedure in any police related fatality case.
The community and the victim's family say they want answers now. Specifically, they want to know how the officer could have possibly been justified in running over the suspect, identified as 24-year-old Sherman Byrd.
This all happened at around 8:30 Wednesday night, after a 55-year-old woman reported having her cell phone stolen.
Sheriff's deputies were nearby. They said they saw a suspect on bike who looked like the man the victim had reported.
They claim they are confident Byrd was the culprit, but they have no other evidence than their hunch and the fact that he had a weapon. Byrd's family say it is ridiculous to imagine he would have robbed anyone.
The grim discovery was made by users of Clissold Park, in Stoke Newington, who were concerned the flesh belonged to one of the goats kept in an enclosure inside the park.
Josey Wales uploaded images of the flesh to Facebook with the message: "What appears to me skinned goat found in Clissold Park - has been there for a few days apparently.
"This is not a goat skin rug - there is flesh still attached to it.
"Have any goats been stolen locally or [in] the surrounding areas?"












Comment: A parent's role is to love their children and provide them with unconditional support and encouragement. Not tear them down with cruel punishments that are broadcasted for all the world to see. No matter the misdeed, no parent should publicly shame their child.