Society's Child
Several NFL players, and even an entire team, have since joined Kaepernick in riding the bench or taking a knee as the national song plays before the start of football games, but most outrage still focuses on that peaceful protest — not the violent policing behind it.
In fact, the corporate media pundits most intent on chastising Kaepernick and the others deny police brutality is a problem — despite an epidemic-level number of beatings, shootings, maimings, and killings by officers across the United States.
For those feckless deniers, perhaps the following three examples will provide much-needed insight into why the tradition of standing for the Star Spangled Banner matters not one iota in comparison to the issue of ruthless, merciless policing with impunity.
The bombing happened in the village of Payee Khan, in the Mohmand region of the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) bordering Afghanistan.
"The suicide bomber was in a crowded mosque, he shouted, 'Allahu Akbar' (God is greatest) and then there was a huge blast," Naveed Akbar, deputy administrator of Mohmand Agency, told the news agency.
"A portion of the mosque and veranda collapsed in the blast and fell on worshippers. We are still retrieving bodies and the injured from rubble of the mosque building," he added.
No group immediately claimed responsibility for the bombing. The lawless area has long been a safe haven for militants of various allegiances, including the Taliban, Al-Qaeda and other jihadist groups.
The documents showed Michelle Martens told police that she had set up encounters with at least three men before the girl was drugged, raped and killed last month.
The single mother told investigators she didn't set up the sexual assaults for the money but did it because she enjoyed watching, according to the warrants. It's unclear how long she had been arranging meetings before Victoria Martens' death or if police have identified any of those men.
Police found the girl's dismembered body inside the apartment she shared with her mother on the day she was expected to celebrate her 10th birthday. The slaying ignited outcry and vigils.
Laura Bobbs, a local minister and spokeswoman for the family, cried when she learned about the details outlined in the search warrants.
"Jesus Christ. My poor baby, my poor baby," she exclaimed, referring to Victoria. "She never told us this was going on. I would ask her all the time, 'Are you OK?' She would tell me yes."
Bobbs reiterated Wednesday that there were no indications from Michelle Martens or the girl that anything was wrong.
"I would see this woman every day. There were no signs. How did she hide this from us?," she said. "This thing gets worse and worse and worse."
Michelle Martens, Fabian Gonzales and Jessica Kelley — a cousin of Gonzales' — have been charged with first-degree murder and aggravated criminal sex penetration of child under 13. Victoria was stabbed and strangled.

The Australian Psychological Society says researchers used ‘assessment techniques and procedures that have conveyed misleading and inaccurate messages about the abilities and capacities of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people’.
The Australian Psychological Society has made a formal apology to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people for decades of mistreatment through exploitative and disrespectful practices that contributed to the erosion of Indigenous culture.
The apology, delivered by director of the society's board, Tim Carey, acknowledged exploitation of Indigenous people by psychological researchers and "inappropriate use of assessment techniques and procedures that have conveyed misleading and inaccurate messages about the abilities and capacities of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people".
Carey, speaking at the Australian Psychological Society Congress in Melbourne on Thursday, said treatments were developed that "both implicitly and explicitly, dismissed the importance of culture in understanding and promoting social and emotional wellbeing".
Gunshots have been heard fired on 32nd street between 6th and 7th avenue in New York around 5 p.m in Midtown. Police and SWAT teams locked down the area.
The alternative media group, Unicorn Riot found themselves on the receiving end of the iron fist of Facebook censorship this week. During the middle of the group's live coverage of riot police clashing with protesters at a construction site of the Dakota Access pipeline, Facebook cut their feed and banned the livestream link from being shared anywhere on its network.
Unicorn Riot has been on the ground since the protests began, providing an uncensored glimpse into the militarized police state being constructed around the protesters. However, Facebook has now rejected their coverage noting that "our security systems detected to be unsafe."
According to reports, twenty-two protesters were arrested by police in riot gear, including two Unicorn Riot journalists.
The Wilkes-Barre Area School Board terminated Coughlin High School math and industrial arts teacher Brian Hampel, 44, for allegedly serving as a lookout for Stephen Stahl, who was convicted in January 2015 of having sex with a 16-year-old student in 2004, The Citizen's Voice reports.
Hampel, who had taught in the district since 1998 and ended with an annual salary of $84,001, has denied any knowledge of Stahl's relationship with the girl.
Accusations against Hampel first surfaced in testimony during Stahl's trial last year, and school officials later contracted with Scranton attorney Frank Tunis to conduct an investigation into whether school employees were aware of Stahl's crimes. Hampel's termination is the result of that investigation, WTAE reports.
Stahl, 49, was the dean of students and wrestling coach at Coughlin High School when he was suspended in February 2014 and fired a month later, the Times-Leader reports.
According to the news site:
Police had said he and the victim, then a 10th-grade student, began a sexual relationship that spanned more than a year, beginning in March 2004 and ending sometime prior to November 2005, when she told Stahl the relationship had to end.
The victim, who came forward nearly a decade after the relationship occurred, had told police that Stahl asked for her phone number and that the two later engaged in sexual intercourse at several locations, including a classroom closet during school hours.
The teenager, who is thought to have been using encrypted social media channels to communicate with a French Islamist militant Rachid Kassim was detained in eastern Paris on Wednesday. The suspect who turned 15 a few days ago has been on police watch list since April, officials said.
"We're working with extreme intensity to identify those we think are likely to carry out an attack," Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve told reporters. He warned that Islamic State group tended to recruit "younger and younger individuals" by using encrypted services.
Comment: It's all the US' fault: French president Hollande: 'US response to 9/11 only expanded global terrorism and brought chaos to France'
Zakieya Avery, 31, of Germantown, pleaded guilty this week to killing her 1-year-old son and daughter, 2, in January 2014 during a ritual she believed would drive evil spirits out of their bodies. Two of her other children were also injured.
Montgomery County Circuit Court Judge Terrence McGann ordered Avery held indefinitely in a psychiatric hospital after declaring her not criminally responsible, the spokesman said. The "not criminally responsible" finding is Maryland's version of not guilty by reason of insanity in other states.
Avery had pleaded guilty to two counts of first-degree murder and two counts of attempted first-degree murder. The two slain children were stabbed and strangled.
Avery's housemate, Monifa Sanford, was ordered committed to a psychiatric hospital last year after pleading guilty to her involvement in the killings.














Comment: This might be a valuable first step if the Australian Psychological Society worked with the government to make amends towards the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people through action. But how does a government compensate for such an egregious decades long oppression?