Society's Child
"To better inform our target glide path, I want to know what it truly costs to produce the aircraft. The number of quality escapes and what we call production line defects needs to get better," said Vice Admiral Mat Winter, who leads the F-35 Joint Program Office, as quoted by CNBC.
Body cams, according to some studies, may serve to reduce corruption and violence from certain police officers. However, as a body cam video out of Florida illustrates, a camera on this cop didn't even deter his desire to commit theft. Now, we know why he felt like he could record himself stealing -- he would get away with it.
Deputy John Braman, formerly with the Volusia County Sheriff's Office, was charged last year after he was caught stealing money from a man he arrested.
According to the Daytona Beach News-Journal, the 35-year-old former deputy recently entered no contest pleas to petty theft, official misconduct and grand theft for the crimes he recorded himself committing. He will get no jail time.
Dr. Eduardo Montana, 55, pleaded guilty in a Boston court hearing to disclosing 280 patients' "individually identifiable health information" to Aegerion. Last September, the company was fined over $35 million to resolve criminal charges linked to the mismarketing of its drug Juxtapid. Montana will be sentenced on June 4 and faces up to a year in prison, Reuters reports.
Aegerion conspired to surreptitiously gather patient data in order to determine their suitability for the product. Juxtapid, which received FDA approval in 2012, is only suitable for use for patients with a rare lipid disorder. However, both defendants willingly targeted patients that did not suffer from the condition. After providing patient data, Montana requested a $236,000 grant from Aegerion, which the company declined.
The salary for politicians is set to go up by just under £1,400 from April next year to £77,379.
It means their pay will have risen by around £11,000 in three years.
A 1.4 per cent pay rise in 2017 came on top of a 1.3 per cent uplift in 2016, and a big boost from £67,000 to £74,000 in July 2015.
Comment: A pay rise? For what?? MPs are swamped in never ending scandals and the state of politics has revealed corruption to be par for the course. Abroad they've supported an illegal and relentless war on the Middle East, with Syria and Iraq already costing £1.7 billion - not forgetting the countless innocent civilians who have been slaughtered - and that's not including Afghanistan, Libya, Yemen - though UK arms manufacturers are making a profit, of course - and all that when some of their biggest projects demonstrate just how inept (and fraudulent) the system really is.
Meanwhile at home public services are suffering 'austerity' with at least a fifth of workers surviving on below poverty level wages, foodbank use has skyrocketed, as has homelessness, the cost of living has exploded, quality of life deteriorates even further, and the economy is in freefall.
A mixture of healthy skepticism and a lack of evidence looks to be shifting the debate around just how much influence alleged Russian bots on social media have on such political phenomena as Brexit or Trump.
It may have the uncomfortable effect of forcing nations like Britain and America to face up to the realities of their current political situations. The idea of Russian bots and Russian interference has become a convenient crutch to avoid responsibility.
Comment: The Russian bot narrative has been absolutely ludicrous from its outset, so it's nice to see a mainstream shill-outlet like Buzzfeed actually start to question it. Rather than take it as a sign of change, however, it's probably better to assume it's just a minor blip on the radar that will eventually self-correct.
See:
- Complicit media enable Rep. Adam Schiff's Russian bot conspiracy theories
- Confessions of a 'Kremlin-linked' Twitter bot in the age of neo-McCarthyism
- Black activist says Twitter banned her as 'Russian bot'- looking to sue
- State Department troll farm uses 'Russian menace' to justify huge cash infusion
According to local media, the policy is in line with an official request by the Central Bank of Iran (CBI) and is specifically meant to address fluctuations in market rates of the US dollar.
The CBI's director of Foreign Exchange Rules and Policies Affairs, Mehdi Kasraeipour, was quoted by IRNA news agency as saying the move had become effective from Wednesday by virtue of a letter sent to the Ministry of Industry, Mines and Trade.
He explained it wouldn't create major trouble for traders because the share of the greenback in Iran's trade activities was not high. "It's been for a long time that Iran's banking sector cannot use the dollar as a result of the sanctions," said Kasraeipour.
At the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) this past weekend, media crusader James O'Keefe headlined an hour-long panel on social media censorship, arguing that it targeted mostly conservatives.
"They really make sure you don't see any differing views," O'Keefe said at the panel.
Comment: Partisan social media is indeed a huge problem, as anyone who doesn't toe the liberal party line on any given issue is under threat of censorship. Eventually, it may come to pass that the truth will simply not be accessible on existing social media, at which point other options may become more desirable.
See also:
- YouTube shuts down conservative channels, says it was an 'accident'
- The great YouTube purge continues: Top conservative channels shut down in February
- As Facebook continues to blunder, new social media platform 'Steemit' pays you to participate
- 'Truth about Tech': Former social media execs launch campaign against 'erosive' social networks
- Facebook censorship pushing alt media to new social networking platforms
How did white farmers get the land in the first place?
Dutch Calvinist settlers first landed on the Cape of Good Hope in 1652 and soon began setting up farms in the arable regions around Cape Town. Over the following decades the number of Dutch (and some German and French) settlers grew. They continuously claimed land from the local Khoikhoi until the entire cape was colonized.
The British seized the region in 1795, sparking a long running conflict with the original Dutch settlers, now known as the Boers. To escape British rule the Boers pushed deeper north and northeast, claiming land in the present-day provinces of Free State and Natal. Eventually they established independent Boer republics.
Comment: Good luck with that. As Zimbabwe found, merely redistributing land is not the answer. When they kicked the white farmers out, they also lost all the knowledge and skills of those people. Zimbabwe was on the verge of famine for years. Ramaphosa will need the wisdom of Solomon to avoid South Africa replicating that situation.
- South African president pledges to seize white farmers land without compensation and redistribute to black citizens
- Reparations: South Africa's Assembly approves land expropriation without compensation
- South Africa's white genocide is a never-ending nightmare
- South Africa: Why hatred of whites is here to stay
- Mandela ended political apartheid in South Africa, but economic apartheid continues
"As we work to hire rapidly and ramp up our policy enforcement teams throughout 2018, newer members may misapply some of our policies resulting in mistaken removals," a YouTube spokesperson told Bloomberg. "We're continuing to enforce our existing policies regarding harmful and dangerous content, they have not changed. We'll reinstate any videos that were removed in error."
However, many did not see it this way. Several outspoken conservative personalities voiced their disdain for the snafu, accusing YouTube of bias in the wake of the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High school shooting.
Comment: As Jack Posobiec tweets above, it's awfully strange that liberal commentators never seem to be the targets of these "accidents".
See also:
- The great YouTube purge continues: Top conservative channels shut down in February
- YouTube CEO Susan Wojcicki says Facebook should 'get back to baby pictures'
- YouTube to start labeling propaganda videos posted by state-funded media
- Youtube continues its war on information, implements greater controls over video creators
- How Facebook, Youtube, Twitter and Google silence and crush dissent
David Hogg, the telegenic 17-year-old who survived the shooting in Parkland, is not a crisis actor, an FBI plant, or the secret brainchild of a Soros-backed CNN plot. He's a political advocate engaged in a political debate, and he should be treated as such.
Since the multiple murders at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, Hogg has emerged as a sort of Schrödinger's Pundit, whose status within the debate sits contingent upon his critics' willingness to push back. The game being played with his testimony - by adults, not by Hogg - is as transparent as it is cynical. For ten days now, Hogg has been as permanent a fixture on the nation's TV screens as anyone bar the president. In each appearance, he has been invited without reply to share his ideas on our public policy. This he has done, emphatically.















Comment: This is not a 'bad apple' situation. The sense of entitlement is pervasive in policing today. And why not? The chance of being charged let alone prosecuted is almost infinitesimal.