Society's Child
David Turpin, 57, and Louise Anna Turpin, 49, are each being held on $9 million bail after authorities discovered 13 malnourished siblings held captive in their house in Perris, California, according to a news release by the Sheriff's Department in Riverside County. Perris is around 70 miles east of Los Angeles.
Both parents are being held at Robert Presley Detention Center in Riverside on nine felony counts each of torture and 10 felony counts each of child endangerment. They were booked into jail Monday morning after being arrested on Sunday night at about 9pm local time, inmate records indicate, KTLA reports.
The video begins with two officers holding a suspect face down on the ground in between the rails of a handicap access ramp. "We're done trying to talk to you," one of the officers says and then claims the suspect tried to tackle the two officers.
Incredulously, the suspect responds with his own question saying, "I tackled two of ya'll to the ground? Are you serious?" The man couldn't seem to comprehend why he was being held down.
Andrew Grant is the man behind the camera and explained what happened to KGTV news.
We need your help! On Jan. 15, @PimaAnimalCare responded to a call involving this dog, who was found hanging from a tree. If you have any info on the dog or tips on the incident, contact PACC at 724-5990 or call the 88-CRIME hotline at (520) 882-7463. https://t.co/nlEunhuPJk pic.twitter.com/jtHifB2ZepPima County spokeswoman Marcia Zamorano said in a statement that a 15-year-old girl spotted the dog on Monday after she heard it whimpering from the tree. The teen climbed up and freed the dog from material wrapped around its neck.
- Official Pima County (@pimaarizona) January 16, 2018
Last week, Facebook announced that they will be keeping all their users in happy little bubbles that won't show them anything controversial, thus ensuring an entire social media platform devoted to pictures of what people are eating for dinner. Illustrating just how unwelcome this change was, after Facebook announced it's changing the algorithm to focus on friends and family while excluding news and information, the company saw a near-instant drop of 4.4 percent - costing Mark Zuckerberg nearly $3.3 billion.
In a Facebook post last Thursday night, Zuckerberg said that public content from brands had inundated news feeds, overtaking posts from personal connections. By the end of Friday, Facebook shares were trading at $179.37, down more than 4.4 percent from Thursday's price of $187.77, according to a report in Newsweek.
Comment: See: Zuckerberg sees his net worth drop by billions after recent Facebook news feed announcement
"Video and other public content have exploded on Facebook in the past couple of years," wrote Zuckerberg in his post. "Since there's more public content than posts from your friends and family, the balance of what's in News Feed has shifted away from the most important thing Facebook can do - help us connect with each other."
Well, feminists, it's time to stop "feministsplaining" sex to men.
The #MeToo movement has been good for America. It's good that women who have been sexually assaulted and abused are coming forward; it's good that we're finally having conversations about the nature of consent and the problems with a casual hookup culture that obfuscates sexual responsibility. But the #MeToo movement hasn't stopped there. Men are now being pilloried for the sin of taking women too literally -- of not reading women's minds.
Comment: For more on the Aziz Ansari affair see J. Martin's Sott Focus: Even Ethnic Male Feminists Aren't Safe From #MeToo
Dr Joanna Williams: The first problem [with the #MeToo campaign] is that it blurs all kinds of behaviors some of which are incredible serious - some of the accusations against Harvey Weinstein for instance. You know, these are very serious accusations of sexual assault, of sexual abuse and they need to be treated very seriously, they need to be taken to courts of law, people need to be put in prison, essentially if found guilty for carrying out these crimes.
The problem with #MeToo is that it takes these serious crimes and it blurs them with a whole host of behaviors which are less criminal. For example, the classic example is knee touching, clumsy flirtation, unwanted kisses - these are not the same criminal acts. That's the first problem, in blurring of these behaviors together it actually trivializes rape, trivializes some of the most serious crimes.
Mujahid Arshid, 33, pleaded not guilty at the Old Bailey via videolink after Celine Dookhran, 19, was found dead in July, in what prosecutors have described as a gruesome "honor killing."
Her body was discovered in a freezer in a £1.5-million ($2-million) house in Kingston.
Arshid, of no fixed address, appeared in court charged with murder, rape and kidnap.
He is also charged with the sexual assault, rape, kidnap and attempted murder of a second woman, who cannot be identified for legal reasons. She managed to escape and sound the alarm.
Comment: Update (Jan.17): The murder trial is underway and even more disturbing details are being revealed about this heinous act. The uncle was apparently so obsessed with his niece that he decided that if he couldn't have her, no one could. This was not, as first reported, an "honor killing" over the teen's relationship with an Libyan Muslim. Instead, it was about a man who let his imagination take over and due to his "criminal mind" it led him to brutally murdering a family member.

It's already hard enough to get people to read the terms of service for the apps they use, and experts are skeptical we could expect any better of someone crossing into the boundary of a smart city neighbourhood, where sensors and data collection abound.
But before long, Quayside may be one of the most sensor-laden neighbourhoods in North America, thanks to Alphabet's Sidewalk Labs, which has been working on a plan to redevelop the area from the ground up into a test bed for smart city technology.
It's being imagined as the sort of place where garbage cans and recycling bins can keep track of when and how often they're used, environmental probes can measure noise and pollution over time and cameras can collect data to model and improve the flow of cars, people, buses and bikes throughout the day.

People attend a far-right summer festival in the village of Viereck, August 11, 2012
The stunning revelation came into the spotlight earlier this week after Germany's Focus magazine published a report citing an assessment of the domestic intelligence agency, the BfV.
Responding to Focus' request for comment, the BfV, the agency in charge of monitoring extremist groups threatening constitutional order, said the number of Reichsbuerger (Citizens of the Reich in German) members had grown to 15,600 as of January - with the figure marking a dramatic increase of more than 50 percent within one year.
This time it rehashes second-hand evidence that Moscow was intending to drug its footballers. The newspaper continues to pioneer its own brand of highly efficient journalism, which allows for provocative and defamatory accusations to be made, without the need for an actual source or evidence.
The claims, nonchalantly tossed into the public domain, are that "Russia doped all its international football teams," and that the host country "planned to swap urine samples at the 2018 World Cup so that its footballers could take drugs with impunity."
Apparently, those allegations come from everyone's favorite mustachioed Russian whistleblower Grigory Rodchenkov. Although not exactly from him, because he's currently hidden away by the US witness protection program, presumably sharing pasta recipes with Italian Americans.













Comment: The childrens' aunt shares more: Update: RT reports Turpins enter not guilty plea: