Society's ChildS

Fire

Milwaukee unrest continues: Police 'rescue' new shooting victim amid 2nd night of violent protests

milwaukee protest
© Aaron P. Bernstein / ReutersA gas station is seen burned down after disturbances following the police shooting of a man in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, U.S. August 14, 2016.
One person was shot and rushed to the hospital in Milwaukee where disturbances continued for a second night. The crowd has been throwing objects at officers, blocking roads and firing some shots, police said.


HAL9000

Russian long jumper Klishina wins appeal and allowed to compete at Rio Olympics

Russian long jumper Klishina
© Daria Klishina Anton Denisov / Sputnik
Long jumper Darya Klishina, the only Russian track and field athlete cleared to take part in the 2016 Olympics, but who was then banned from competing at the last minute by her athletic federation, has finally won her appeal and will join the Rio Games.

Early Monday morning, the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS), temporarily based at a beachfront hotel in Rio, ruled that Klishina is eligible to take part in the Olympics, overruling a last minute ban imposed on her by the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF). In rendering its decision, the court noted that Klishina has been training outside Russia for the last three years and passed drug testing regularly, the Associated Press reports.

The IAAF has confirmed that Klishina is now allowed to join the Games and will take part in qualifications on Tuesday.

Magnify

Two women sexually assaulted at music festival in US - right-wing media ignore story

terry pepiot jeremy janssen
© oregon.arrests.orgTerry Allen Pepiot (L), Jeremy Janssen
Two women were sexually abused at the Willamette Country Music Festival in the US city of Brownsville, Oregon this past weekend, with two men arrested for the assaults.

A 20-year-old woman reported the first incident early Sunday after she woke up naked in the RV in which she was staying with no memory of the night before.

Terry Allen Pepiot, a 56-year-old who was staying in the RV with the woman, admitted he sexually assaulted her. He was arrested for "unlawful sexual penetration."

A second 20-year-old woman reported a sexual assault on Sunday. She and a friend were drinking with a man they had just met. A few hours later, she woke up to find the man sexually assaulting her. Jeremy Russell Janssen, 37, was subsequently arrested for sex abuse.

Pistol

'Gunfire' scare in French Riviera resort sparks stampede injuring dozens

shooting france beach
© Jean Christophe Magnenet / AFPPeople sunbath on a beach in the French southeastern city of Juan les Pins, near Antibes
Forty people have reportedly been injured in a stampede in the French Mediterranean resort of Juan-les-Pins after fears of gunfire led to panic. The noise, however, was caused by firecrackers thrown from a nearby car, local media said.

There were "a lot of people running" in a "stampede caused by the panic" that "left dozens of people slightly injured," a local witness told AFP.

Comment: For more information on how the population has been traumatized by global terror attacks leading to this kind of PTSD-like behavior, see this article: Limbic Warfare and Martha Stout's "Paranoia Switch"


Arrow Down

State of Wyoming claims ownership of the wind so it can tax renewable energy firms out of existence

wyoming wind farm
Shortly after they realized the potential for wind energy creation in Wyoming, renewable energy companies began constructing turbines on private property and then selling the clean power they generated to the residents. However, shortly after their ventures began, Wyoming government officials, acting on behalf of fossil fuel interests, moved in for the kill.

The state legislature asked the question, "Who owns the wind?"

Without much debate, the Wyoming legislature quickly determined that the state does.

Unlike any other resource derived from the use of private property, which the property owner maintains from surface ownership, the state of Wyoming claims wind is different.

So, lawmakers decided to tax it. For the last several years, Wyoming has been taxing the power generated by wind turbines at $1 per megawatt.

Do not mistake this tax as part of the regular taxes that already apply to businesses like income tax and employment taxes. No, this is an entirely new tax based solely on the assertion by Wyoming officials that they own the wind.

"Wind is different than anything else. It's not like a mineral, which is something that sits there in the ground until you go after it," says Bob Whitton, chairman of the Renewable Energy Association of Landowners (REAL). "It's not like water that can be put in a lake or pond. The wind blows in and blows out and you can't put it in a pond, pipeline, truck or train and send it somewhere."

Beaker

Pharmaceuticals moving in? Cannabis vaporizer being tested by NHS could lead to 'properly regulated market in UK'

Medipen
© MediPen / Facebook
A cannabis product used by people suffering from various conditions is now being tested by the National Health Service (NHS) in a move it has been said could potentially shift perceptions of the drug.

The 'MediPen', which contains the active ingredient cannabidoil, an oil extracted from the cannabis plant, is legal in the UK because it is fully non-psychoactive and is used to relieve a variety of conditions including depression, anxiety and arthritis.

MediPen Ltd has reportedly been liaising with NHS production and regulatory support pharmacists who have been testing the oil over the last few months, according to the Independent.

A report on the testing process is due to be released, and could open the way for the beginning of a medical cannabis industry in the UK.

Cult

Orthodox Jews in London start fundraiser to stop children from leaving strict community and living with "irreligious parents"

orthodox jews
© Ronen Zvulun / Reuters
A group of British ultra-Orthodox Jews have launched a million-pound fundraising drive to stop "pure and holy children" from leaving the strict faith community and living with "irreligious parents."

The fundraising drive was set up to fund the legal fees of divorcing parents involved in child custody battles with ex-partners who want to join mainstream society, the Independent reports.

Flyers have been distributed in London's Stamford Hill calling for the Charedi community to back the bid, saying: "Rescue the Children Convention: We now need one million pounds and therefore the community is requested to join in with a minimum sum of ยฃ500."

The flyers were accompanied by a letter of support from a local rabbi stating that they wish to fight cases involving 17 children.

"To our great pain, and our misfortune, our community finds itself in a terrible situation - 17 of our pure and holy children where one of the parents, God rescue them, have gone out into an evil culture, and want to drag their children after them," the letter, as seen by the Independent, reads.

"This is a degree of apostasy and this situation has motivated our rabbis who are in Israel... to come here in a personal capacity to increase prayer and to gather money for legal fees, and to achieve this a convention has been organised of prayer and also to collect money."

Megaphone

SAS veteran Chris Ryan: Special forces soldiers were psychopathic and mixed with organized crime

SAS forces
© James Vellacot / Reuters
Soldiers in Britain's elite special forces regiment associated with organized crime gangs, sold ammunition and some may have been borderline psychopaths, SAS veteran Chris Ryan has claimed.

Ryan, famously the only soldier to escape a disastrous 1991 SAS mission in Iraq during which half the team died and the rest were captured, made his comments to Gloucestershire Live on August 9.

While publicizing his latest thriller, the soldier turned author said he had run into some dubious characters during his time in the regiment.

"There were people who would sell ammunition, there were people who had dubious backgrounds in terms of who they were mixing with outside of hours of the regiment, like family and friends involved in gangs or organized crime," he said.


Map

'Do you believe we are driving to war?' One night with the Syrian snipers in Aleppo

Syrian army soldiers
© Sputnik/ Michael Alaeddin
Russia's RIA Novosti correspondent Mikhail Alaeddin spent several days with Syrian Army soldiers on the frontline in the south-west of Aleppo, and witnessed their successful assault near the artillery school in the area. Here is his first-hand account.

Nightfall is the snipers' time at the frontline in Syria's Aleppo. The Syrian soldiers equipped with night sights receive the order to move up into positions where they will spend a long and sleepless night, the correspondent writes in his article for RIA Novosti.

The column is quick to get ready and contains five off-road vehicles of the Syrian Special Forces. One of the commanders allows the correspondent to "sit on the tail" of one of the two snipers.

The vehicles leave their positions with their lights switched off as the militants are just a few hundred meters away. The headlights are only switched on upon entering into the central blocks on the city, and to get there you have to drive through the whole city.

Bad Guys

Hospital run by Doctors Without Borders in Yemen hit by US/Saudi airstrike, killing and injuring up to 20 people

hajjah yemen
© Google maps
A hospital supported by Doctors Without Borders (MSF) has been hit by airstrikes in Yemen, the medical charity confirmed on Monday.

The hospital in the northwestern province of Hajjah was hit at 3.45pm local time (12:45 GMT), the Paris-based NGO said in a Twitter post, adding that the number of casualties is still unknown.

"Yes, we confirm the news. A hospital that is run by MSF was hit by a couple of airstrikes today at 3.45pm local time. Right now we don't have more information. Medical staff are attending the wounded," MSF spokesperson Malak Shaher told RT.

According to Yemeni officials cited by AP, at least 20 people have been killed and injured in the strike that hit the hospital.

MSF says it has supported the hospital since July 2015, adding that 4,611 patients have been treated at the facility.

The incident comes less than two days after MSF accused the Saudi-led coalition of killing 10 children and injuring 28 more in a strike that hit a school in the Houthi rebel stronghold of Saada in northern Yemen.

The coalition denied targeting the school and claimed it hit a rebel camp where underage fighters were trained, AFP reports.