Society's Child
The presidents of Argentina and Bolivia led the ceremony of the unveiling of the statue of the Bolivian war of independence heroine. The statue is a present from Bolivia and replaces a statue of Christopher Columbus brought down.
The presidents of Argentina and Bolivia have unveiled a statue of Bolivian war of independence heroine Juana Azurduy.
It is a history typical of six European empires in the areas of genocide and plunder.
Genocide: 1. the deliberate killing of a large group of people, especially those of a particular ethnic group or nation. plural: genocides [Google Dictionary]Americans hoping to make US mass murderous crimes against humanity that are prosecutable under Nuremberg Principles law appear to be less than genocide, attempt to employ the old and outdated dictionary meaning of genocide wherein its scope and intention is defined as the utter and complete extermination of a group, race or nation.
The USA, like its parent colonial power the British Empire, before it, has had its undeservedly wealthy elite through their private speculative investment banks continually investing in genocide in order to both maintain its power over society, accumulate capital and extend its power wherever and whenever regardless of laws, regardless whether religious, common or statutory.
According to her lawyer, Sam Cammack, the charges were all eventually dropped and there never was any marijuana.
Corley hired Cammack in an ongoing civil case against Harris County for the despicable violations perpetrated by public servants.
As a result of an investigation by the Civil Rights Division of the Harris County District Attorney's office into the incident, two of the three officers involved have been charged with Official Oppression, a Class A misdemeanor. The defendants, Ronaldine Pierre (33) and William Strong (36), could face up to a year in jail — a ridiculously insignificant punishment for such a gruesome crime.
Comment: The cops are charged with "Official Oppression" and it's a misdemeanor?? What about a more appropriate charge of sexual assault.

Bedouins attend Friday prayer under a tent in the Al-Araqib village, located between Beersheba and Rahat in the Israeli Negev desert.
"A large number of Israeli police accompanied with bulldozers stormed the village [on Wednesday] at dawn and demolished all the houses, tents and other facilities," local activist Aziz Al-Touri told The Middle East Monitor media outlet.
Israeli authorities claimed that they leveled the village because it was constructed on state land and didn't have the necessary building permits.
Another activist, Saleem Araqeeb, said that the demolition of the village went ahead despite a decision by the Israeli Higher Court of Justice that ruled al-Araqib's lands don't belong to the state, as quoted by the International Middle East Media Center.
He added that after the decision, Israeli authorities filed another lawsuit urging the court to order al-Araqib's residents to pay a daily fine of 5,000 shekels (around $1280).
Moreover, the villagers have also been sued for the cost of the first eight demolitions of their village, for which Israel is seeking 1.8 million shekels ($467,000), Al-Jazeera reported.
Last month, the Supreme Court ruled that police can't forcibly draw blood from individuals suspected of drunken driving without a warrant. However, DUI checkpoints across the country now have judges on site, or on call to issue immediate warrants for cops to take your blood.
Under the pretense of catching drunk drivers, police will be patrolling the streets and setting up checkpoints all over the country this weekend. In some cases they will arrest drunk drivers, in others, they will search and arrest nonviolent drug offenders, while other people may get citations for problems with their vehicle or registration.
We are under constant surveillance, our every move under a microscope by government goons, "protecting us" from "terrorists."
We are under the constant threat of violence from the state for possessing a plant, or having a tail light out, or simply walking down the street.
Americans are constantly paranoid of those blue and red lights popping up in the rearview mirror that most always end in extortion and could very well end with a visit to the hospital, being locked in a cage, or worse.
"We live in one of the most un-free systems on earth," said the black revolutionary and author Mumia Abu-Jamal, whom I visited Saturday.
"Mass incarceration is a reality endured by millions of people in prison and in the systems of repression that exist outside of prison. What does freedom mean to poor people who cannot walk freely down a street? What does freedom mean when they cannot find work? What does freedom mean when there is no justice in the courts? What does freedom mean when black people cannot attend a Bible study in a church without the fear of being murdered? Where is this American freedom they keep telling us about? I don't see it. Black folks are more in danger, and being killed in even greater numbers, than during the reign of terror that was lynching and Jim Crow."
Comment: Read more from Mumia and listen to his broadcasts - Live from Death Row prison radio
- The Unsilenced Voice of a 'Long-Distance Revolutionary'
- Attack on First Amendment Rights: 'Mumia Bill' in Pennsylvania lets prisoners be sued over speech
Janna Jihad, as she is known, is something of a veteran. She began her reporting career at the age of seven.
"There were not enough journalists covering things that happened, like when my friend was killed and when lots of people were injured. Others were arrested and things like that, and it was not reported by anybody," she told RT.

Screenshot of The Guardian’s ‘The Counted’ project, which tracks killings by Police in the United States.
The Washington Post, which tracks fatal shootings by police as part of its Fatal Force project, reports that there have already been 20 more fatal shootings this year compared to the same period of 2015.
In April, the Post's Fatal Force project won a Pulitzer Prize, journalism's most prestigious award, in the national reporting category. The project originated when Post staff realized that no government agency tracks police violence, reported Paul Farhi:
"After covering several high-profile incidents involving the killings of civilians by police officers in 2014, Washington Post staff writer Wesley Lowery was surprised to discover that there were no official statistics about such fatalities. So Lowery pitched an idea to his editors: The newspaper, he suggested, should collect the information itself and analyze it for patterns in law enforcement."
The Oglala Sioux Tribe and activists scored a win on May 26, when federal administrative judges ruled that Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) staff has failed to take "a hard look" at cultural resources in recommending renewal of a uranium mining license for Crow Butte Mine, near here. The decision delays permitting.
The tribe, intervening in the license renewal application for the mine in Dawes County, Nebraska, adjacent to the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation, argued that the staff recommended approval in violation of its rights under the National Historic Preservation Act and National Environmental Protection Act, or NEPA.
Resolving in favor of the tribe's argument, an oversight panel established by the Atomic Licensing and Safety Board ruled: "The NRC staff has not met its identification obligations" under the two laws, "nor has the NRC staff, in its environmental assessment, undertaken a hard look under NEPA at cultural resources within the license area."













Comment: See also: 4th of July DUI Checkpoint: Drug dogs, Searched without consent, Rights taken away while innocent