Society's ChildS

Fire

Powerful gas blast rocks residential building in southern Russia, one person killed and 11 injured

Volgograd explosion
© Kirill Braga / Sputnik Emergency Ministry crew members are seen near the residential building on Kosmonavtov Street in Volgograd destroyed in a household gas explosion
At least one person has been killed and 11 injured when a powerful gas blast rocked a residential building in the southern Russian city of Volgograd, the Emergencies Ministry said, adding that at least four people may be trapped in the rubble.

Those injured have been taken to hospitals in Volgograd following the incident, the Health Ministry said.

The blast occurred at around 11:50 MSK (0850 GMT) Sunday on the seventh floor of an apartment block on Cosmonauts Street, Russia's Emergency Ministry said. At least 38 apartments were destroyed in the blast.

Snakes in Suits

'Parliament throws 45,000 meals in the bin while 70,000 London kids go hungry' - Labour MP

Parliament_food waste
© RT
Parliament wasted 45,000 meals last year as tens of thousands of children go hungry across London, an MP has said.

New figures that reveal the staggering amount of food waste in the British parliament have prompted calls for MPs to donate their unused meals to those in need.

Shadow Commons Leader Chris Bryant called on the government to give uneaten meals to local food banks in the capital.


"Last year 1.2 million sausages were sent to landfill in Rhondda Cynon Taf alone, which is why it is great that the local council is now signing everybody up to proper food recycling," the Welsh Labour MP said.

"But new figures show that this House last year wasted 45,000 meals that were just tipped in the bin.

Comment: There seems to be no place in most governments that is not an obscene waste.


Stormtrooper

Unable to stop criminals, Texas cops now pull you over for "driving safely" to "reward" you

Texas Cops now pull you over
© The Free Thought Project
Police in Lakeview, Texas are routinely conducting traffic stops without probable cause that a violation has occurred - and have packaged these unlawful detentions in a way that has earned media approval.

The pretext offered by the department is its "Doing it Right Safe Driving Campaign," through which officers who lurk in the shadows like rapists stop drivers who appear to be following all of the rules are stopped and then given Starbucks gift certificates - but only if a scan of the driver's license and registration reveals no outstanding warrants or violations. The confused and anxious motorists are not told the purpose of the traffic stop until the officer returns with the surprise gift - which is actually a species of Trojan Horse that permits the officer to sneak a peek at the driver's record without a legally valid reason.

"Recently, we've seen a lot of negative things about the police," explained Lakeview Police Chief David Hotchkiss to the Baxter Bulletin newspaper. "I just wanted to do something that let the community see us doing something good and let us look for drivers doing good things."

The idea earned the approval of Lakeview mayor Dennis Behling and the City Council, and attracted the interest of local citizens who donated the money to buy gift certificates ranging in price from $15 to $25 dollars apiece.

According to Chief Hotchkiss, the "Doing it Right" initiative offers "an opportunity to interact with people for a positive reason. For the community, it allowed them to interact with us when there was nothing wrong and we were giving them a gift. That allowed us to start relationships on a positive note and that's great." The Chief expressed satisfaction over "looking for someone doing something right."

If this were the case, of course, police who stopped drivers for the supposed purpose of commending them for their careful and responsible conduct would not be reviewing their records in search of something "wrong."

Attention

California has a huge natural gas leak and crews can't stop it yet

Natural gas rig
© Dean Musgrove/Los Angeles Daily News/AP/PoolCrews from SoCalGas and outside experts work on a relief well at the Aliso Canyon facility above the Porter Ranch area of Los Angeles, on December 9, 2015.
While the world was hammering out a historic agreement to curb carbon emissions - urged along by California, no less - the state was dealing with an embarrassing belch of its own. Methane, a greenhouse gas 70 times more potent than carbon dioxide, has been leaking out of a natural gas storage site in southern California for nearly two months, and a fix won't arrive until spring.

The site is leaking up to 145,000 pounds per hour, according to the California Air Resources Board. In just the first month, that's added up to 80,000 tons, or about a quarter of the state's ordinary methane emissions over the same period. The Federal Aviation Administration recently banned low-flying planes from flying over the site, since engines plus combustible gas equals kaboom.

Comment: See also: Two months in, Porter Ranch gas leak compared to BP Gulf oil spill and Massive natural gas leak in Southern California could take months to plug


Heart - Black

Heartless Denver police force dozens of homeless out of their warm, dry tents into snowstorm

In the early morning of December 15th, Denver police forced dozens of homeless community members of Resurrection Village into blizzard conditions
Denver PD homeless
© Unicorn Riot
In the early morning of December 15th, Denver police forced dozens of homeless community members of Resurrection Village into blizzard conditions. Since their tiny homes action on Oct. 24th, Resurrection Village members have been sleeping near various unused empty lots owned by the Denver Housing Authority and had set up tents the night before to provide temporary shelter from the impending snowstorm.
Denver PD homeless
© Unicorn Riot
Unicorn Riot was at the scene of the newly fashioned tent city and documented Denver Police threatening everyone with arrest if they did not dismantle their camp.

Police arrived around 6 am in the midst of hard snowfall and brutal winds while everyone was warm, dry and sleeping.DPD then ordered the community to dismantle their tents and disperse. We were able to live stream the encounter:


Attention

Two months in, Porter Ranch gas leak compared to BP Gulf oil spill

porter ranch
© Unknown
The smell came from the canyons and drifted over their neighborhoods in late October, but most residents who live in the gated communities of Porter Ranch thought the northerly gusts of wind common to their area would sweep the stench of rotten eggs away.

Instead, the odor persisted.

It became a phantom that haunted them during their twilight jogs and on their morning walks on dusty horse trails. It was there in their dens where they watched TV and in bedrooms where their children slept. It was even there on the playgrounds of nearby elementary schools.

"It was smelling really bad," said Susan Gorman-Chang, who along with her husband, George, has lived in Porter Ranch for more than 20 years. Now, the couple has chosen to leave the area. "Our neighbor called the fire department. It was that bad."

The Southern California Gas Co. knew what was happening a day before the fire department was called. They knew methane was leaking from a 40-year-old well in Aliso Canyon above the Santa Susana Mountains, that it was spewing tons of gas into the air. Several days later, they informed residents through letters that the agency would plug the leak as fast as possible.

Eight weeks after that call was made, the leak continues. It has caused massive disruption in the northwestern San Fernando Valley community of Porter Ranch, an affluent community of nearly 31,000 residents about 28 miles from downtown Los Angeles. More than 1,800 families have been relocated by the gas company and more than 1,000 remain on a waiting list. Some say they can't remember a displacement of residents this large since the Northridge earthquake in 1994, when 20,000 people were left homeless. Two local elementary schools have been impacted, with nearly 2,000 schoolchildren and staff slated to be moved to other schools in January.

Enough methane gas is being released to fill the Empire State building each day, state officials have said, and the concern has even reached the Federal Aviation Administration, which issued temporary flight restrictions over the area for small aircraft and helicopters.

The gas company has apologized but has said the leak may take four months to plug and to create a relief well.

"It's like the BP spill on land," said environmental activist Erin Brockovich, who was made famous by successfully battling Pacific Gas and Electric Co. over groundwater contamination in the community of Hinkley in the Inland Empire in 1996. "I've really never seen anything like this. I think the magnitude is enormous. Its like a volcano, and the gas is like the lava that can't be shut off."

Stormtrooper

Los Angeles deputy shoots partner, blames suspect; both kill suspect in retaliation

Los Angeles deputies shoot unarmed man
23-year-old Noel Aguilar laying dead on the ground, shot 3 times in the back by Los Angeles gestapo
A disturbing video emerged Friday showing two Los Angeles sheriff's deputies killing a man after they had chased him for riding a bicycle while wearing headphones.

The incident took place more than a year ago with the Los Angeles Sheriff's Department initially telling the media that they shot and killed 23-year-old Noel Aguilar, a "known gang member," after he pulled out a gun and shot a deputy.

But now a video shows the two deputies struggling to arrest Aguilar when one deputy pulls out his gun and shoots the second deputy before placing his gun back into its holster, then placing the blame on Aguilar.

Camcorder

Controlling the data is key in Rahm Emanuel's Chicago surveillance state

Rahm Emanuel
Power circulates differently in the digital age. It's all about controlling the digital traces โ€” collecting, mining, sharing, exposing, delaying, or erasing the data. Inevitably, some handling will occur in ordinary politics. But when the data are manipulated in order to obstruct criminal justice or steal an election, then it's no longer ordinary politics; it becomes a cover-up.

With each new day, there is growing evidence of a cover-up in Chicago.

First, late on Friday night, December 4, 2015, Chicago's mayor, Rahm Emanuel, released hundreds of pages of police reports from the October 2014 Laquan McDonald murder โ€” including false statements by police officers who were at the scene of the crime. The data dump came at such a late hour that the Chicago Tribune was not able to report on the massive discrepancies between those statements and the dashcam video of McDonald's death until an article posted early Saturday morning, at 1:25 a.m., while most of the city was asleep.

Vader

High school boy shot to death while shielding three girls from barrage of bullets

Zaevion Dobson
© Fulton FootbalZaevion William Dobson, 15, died as he shielded three girls from gunfire in Knoxville, Tennessee. The girls were not hurt.
The three Tennessee teens spared from a barrage of bullets by a heroic high school football star's death dive never had a chance to say thank you.

Zaevion Dobson, 15, was dead barely an instant after jumping atop the girls, acting as a human shield after running off a Knoxville porch to surrender his young life for theirs.

Survivor Faith Gordon recounted how Dobson appeared from nowhere Thursday night, and how his body laid lifelessly on top of her when the shooting stopped.

"I kinda like pulled on him and I was like 'You can get up now' ... He didn't get up, so I just went upstairs, and I came back to make sure everything was real and I looked at him and he was shot in the head," Gordon told WVLT-TV.

She later sent a Twitter tribute to Dobson: "You're my hero, I'll never forget you."

Her pal Kiara Rucker, speaking to WVLT, echoed Gordon's praise of the heroic 10th-grade student.

"If it wasn't for Zaevion, if he would have just ran off the porch, we would have probably been shot," Rucker said.

Che Guevara

Venezuela's election and the Revolution that will not be undone

Venezuela election

This is not a revolution that can be undone with one election, nor can it be simply legislated out of existence.


Much has been written about the outcome of Venezuela's Dec. 6 legislative elections, with many of the analyses justifiably focusing on the shortcomings of the Socialist Party (PSUV) and the difficulty of the current state of affairs in the country. Indeed, even before the political body was cold, post-mortem examinations abounded in the corporate and alternative media, with dissections of seemingly every aspect of the Bolivarian Republic's political, economic, and social life.

But what these journalists and political analysts often overlook is the determination of the core of the Bolivarian Revolution, the radical base that is committed to preserving what Hugo Chavez began building more than 17 years ago. This is not a revolution that can be undone with one election, nor can it be simply legislated out of existence. This Revolution will not, as some cynics have argued, be brought down by the weight of its own contradictions, or by internal rot and corruption, or by external forces such as assassinations and economic destabilization.

Comment: It seems that despite the spirit that lives on in the hearts of many Chavistas, the subversion outlined above will take its toll:

See: Death of Chavismo in Venezuela: Election of right-wingers heralds privatization, pillage, and pro-Americanism as well as: