Society's Child
An officer saw the children, who range in age from six to eight, playing in a park alone and said they waved her over when the eight-year-old got stuck in a toddler's swing, which required assistance from fire rescue personnel to get him out. She also said they played near a road and in water along the lakefront.
When Richardson, 28, returned to the park, she was arrested. She told the officers that she had gone to a food bank and didn't think it would take as long as it had. She's now facing four counts of negligent child abuse without bodily harm.
While the situation for her children is far less than ideal, Police Chief Gary Hester had strong words for her. "I met some pretty mature 6, 7, 8-year-olds but you don't leave them unattended," he said. "I guess the question we should be asking is this 28-year-old mother, should she be left unattended. Doesn't look like she's mature enough to be a parent. She's being supervised today in the county jail. Hopefully she learns her lesson."
The number of homeschools has jumped 27 percent since the 2011-12 school year, NewsObserver.com reports. As of last year, 98,172 North Carolinian children were homeschooled; that's 2,400 students more than the number who attended a private school.
While the sputtering economy is the reason families are choosing homeschooling over private schooling, the nationalized learning experiment (Common Core) is the main reason families are leaving the public schools in the first place. "Common Core is a big factor that I hear people talk about," Beth Herbert, founder of Lighthouse Christian Homeschool Association, told NewsObserver.com.
"They're not happy with the work their kids are coming home with. They've decided to take their children home." In-the-know parents understand that Common Core's plodding approach to math instruction leaves students unprepared for college study in STEM courses - science, technology, engineering and math.
According to the victim's girlfriend, the police had shot Crawford before they even gave him a chance to put down the gun.
"We was just talking. He said he was at the video games playing videos and he went over there by the toy section where the toy guns were. And the next thing I know, he said, 'It's not real,' and the police start shooting and they said, 'Get on the ground,' but he was already on the ground because they had shot him, and I could hear him just crying and screaming. I feel like they shot him down like he was not even human," LeeCee Johnson, the victim's girlfriend told reporters.
"He had a lot of family members that cared about him, and his kids. They're not going to be able to know their dad. They're too young, only 4 months and a year old, to even know how wonderful he was to them," she added.
Walmart has now spent months explaining away the poor performance of its U.S. division. In the first quarter it blamed the weather; in Q4 2013 it cited cuts to government benefits and increased taxes; and in Q3 2014 it gave perhaps the vaguest excuse of all, a "challenging global economy and negative currency exchange rate fluctuations." In a sign that it might be finally shouldering some responsibility for its results, Walmart a few weeks ago ousted U.S. chief Bill Simon and appointed former Walmart Asia head Greg Foran to replace him.

Mugshot of U.S. District Court Judge Mark Fuller after his arrest on a misdemeanor battery charge in Atlanta on Sunday.
Legal experts say federal judicial rules don't include a provision for withholding the pay of U.S. District Judge Mark Fuller while a disciplinary committee reviews the case.

Local resident Viktor Shevchenko walks outside a building damaged by a recent shelling in the Ukrainian eastern city of Slaviansk July 1, 2014.
This is reported by one of very few residents of Slavyansk who, trusting Ukrainian official propaganda, made the decision to return to his native city. The picture that he saw is terrifying. He realized that the information about residents of Slavyansk returning home is nothing but a vile lie.
"Please, heed our plea! The people have disappeared from Slavyansk!
"I am a native of Slavyansk, residing here already for twenty-seven years. Or better to say 'I was residing', having left the town three months ago, when it was becoming dangerous to stay. During this time I found refuge with relatives in Odessa. I made a decision to return when all the Ukrainian media started saying that everything in Slavyansk was back to normal, that over sixty percent of residents have come back.
"In the three months of my absence my apartment remained untouched by shells from the junta's bombardment or by its marauding thugs. I had already started to unpack when I heard the sound of my neighbour's doors opening across the hallway. I thought it must have been my neighbour, Sergey Ivanovich, but then I saw a young man unknown to me. To my question about his identity he replied that he was Sergey Ivanovich's son.
"Small problem here - my neighbour's son died in a car accident three years ago - and he happened to be my childhood friend. I decided to pay a visit to my other neighbours and ask who this guy really is, perhaps truly a son about whom I had no idea.
In its investigation, the channel helped to bring the daily brutality suffered by inmates to millions of viewers across the globe, keeping the scandal in the headlines when many in the mainstream media ignored or downplayed the story. In May 2013, President Barack Obama promised to begin letting go prisoners who were cleared for release in January 2010. However, since that promise made over 440 days ago, only 17 of the 86 have been allowed to leave.
RT's #Gitmo coverage earns network its THIRD Emmy nomination [VIDEO] http://t.co/PfYNPOclUL @ManilaChan
- RT America (@RT_America) August 13, 2014
.@RT_com received #iEmmy nod in 2012 for reporting on #OWS & in 2010 for coverage of Pres. Obama's visit to Russia. http://t.co/2Aq6pFZMnw
- RT Press Office (@RT_PressOffice_) August 13, 2014

At left, a riot police officer aims his weapon while demonstrators protest. At right, a protester carries what appears to be a Molotov cocktail.
A man lights a rag in a bottle and prepares to throw a Molotov cocktail; militarized police sit atop armored vehicles, guns drawn and aimed at protestors who have their hands raised. Both are volatile images, and both confirm aspects of the truth: There are provocateurs among the mostly peaceful protestors, and the police have adopted a terrifyingly aggressive posture in relation to the citizens they supposedly serve.
But these images aren't coming from Egypt or the Gaza Strip or Ukraine. These are our own, homegrown documents of social unrest and they can't, like images from more distant lands, be kept safely at bay.
The manipulation of photography has become so complex and widespread that images from conflict zones often tend to cancel each other out. Propaganda has trickled down from the state to the D.I.Y. level, and it's hard to tell the difference between the two.
The resulting frustration, our inability to be certain of the authenticity of the image and the accuracy of the caption, is in many ways a relief: If we can't be sure whether the bloodied corpse of a dead child was the result of a bomb from Hamas, or the Israeli army, we push it aside, grateful not to have to take a moral position on the conflict. The self-canceling nature of images releases us from the responsibility to think things through.
Yet another huge money laundering scandal hits British multinational banking group HSBC, this time in Argentina. The Federal tax office has uncovered scores of bogus transactions involving illegal assets and has filed a lawsuit against HSBC.
Local political leaders are now criticizing the government for failure to prevent money laundering, which, according to the Financial Action Task Force, is spreading across the country. Argentina's tax authority, AFIP, raided the HSBC Argentina headquarters in downtown Buenos Aires and its main offices across the city, but couldn't find all the documents it needed. The bank claims the documents were destroyed in a fire back in February but officials are investigating the claim. Opposition leaders hope the probe on HSBC is just the first step in a much wider investigation into the operations of the British financial group in Argentina. This is not the first time HSBC comes under a criminal investigation as it has been recently hit by a host of scandals internationally. The huge police raid at its Argentina headquarters is certainly another blow to its now poor reputation. Only in Latin America, the British bank is now facing several lawsuits on money laundering related to drug trafficking in Mexico and Colombia.
Comment: No surprise here. HSBC is one of the main facilitators of criminal behavior world-wide.
- Criminal behavior: HSBC targets account of Syrian refugees in the UK
- Drug Money Banking, Terror Dealings Exposed at HSBC
- Global banks are the financial services wing of the drug cartels
Whether or not anything will come of it is another matter:
- Gangster Bankers: World-scale money laundering for drugs and terrorism but too big to jail

Palestinian boy Mohammed Wahdan, whom medics said was wounded in Israeli shelling, receives psychological care at Shifa hospital in Gaza City August 14, 2014.
For seven straight minutes the children, peppered with burns and shrapnel wounds sustained in Israeli shelling that hit their home in north Gaza, stare at him blankly, emotionless.
Eventually, as Hamouda gently teases them, pretending to mix up their names and holding out a present while another counselor sings quietly, a smile creeps across Mohammed's face and the older one, Omar, cries out his name.











Comment: Every day the situation in East Ukraine sounds more and more like that of Palestine: ethnic cleansing.