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Two more women come forward with allegations Trump harassed them

trump
© Mike Segar / Reuters
Republican U.S. presidential nominee Donald Trump arrives at a campaign rally in Ambridge, Pennsylvania, October 10, 2016.
Summer Zervos is the latest woman to allege Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump was sexually inappropriate with her. Zervos appeared on the fifth season of The Apprentice and claims to have remained in contact with Trump after the show ended.

During a press conference with attorney Gloria Allred, Zervos detailed the alleged harassment she received at the hands of Trump when she met with him to discuss working together. She claims that in 2007, she and Trump met in California where he proceeded to make unwanted sexual advances on her.

"I had the utmost admiration for Trump," Zervos explained at the Friday press conference, "even after I was fired, I continued to see him as a possible mentor and a potential employer."

The two remained in contact after she left the show. In 2007, she was visiting New York City and contacted Trump to meet with her for lunch. He was unavailable for the lunch meeting, but instead invited her to his office where she claims he greeted her by kissing her on the lips.


Comment: As for the impact all this is having on the polls, here's some recent data from Rasmussen Reports:
At the close of a week that began with him trailing by seven points, Donald Trump still holds a slight lead over Hillary Clinton in today's White House Watch survey despite a flurry of news reports alleging a history of sexual harassment on his part.

The latest Rasmussen Reports national telephone and online survey of Likely U.S. Voters shows Trump with 43% support to Clinton's 41%. ... Clinton held a seven-point lead on Monday - 45% to 38% - following the airing of an 11-year-old video showing Trump making graphic sexual remarks about women. But as voters began responding to Sunday night's debate, her lead dropped to five points on Tuesday and four points on Wednesday. Trump edged ahead yesterday.
...
Clinton jumped on the release of the video with Trump's sexual comments to say it shows her Republican rival's demeaning attitude toward women. But Trump countered that Clinton was an enabler who allowed her husband, former President Bill Clinton, to sexually assault women for years. Voters tend to agree with Trump that Bill Clinton's behavior was worse, but not surprisingly there's a sharp partisan difference of opinion. This survey, however, was taken prior to the latest allegations against Trump.
The polling data above suggests something fascinating. Are Democrats really more inclined to think the allegations against Trump (unwanted touching and kissing) are somehow worse than those of Bill & Hillary (rape, threats, and cover-ups)? Or do they just refuse to believe negative allegations about their own candidate? Oh the cognitive dissonance of Party politics! From Barb Oakley's Evil Genes:
A recent imaging study by psychologist Drew Westen and his colleagues at Emory University provides firm support for the existence of emotional reasoning. Just prior to the 2004 Bush-Kerry presidential elections, two groups of subjects were recruited - fifteen ardent Democrats and fifteen ardent Republicans. Each was presented with conflicting and seemingly damaging statements about their candidate, as well as about more neutral targets such as actor Tom Hanks (who, it appears, is a likable guy for people of all political persuasions). Unsurprisingly,when the participants were asked to draw a logical conclusion about a candidate from the other - "wrong" - political party, the participants found a way to arrive at a conclusion that made the candidate look bad, even though logic should have mitigated the particular circumstances and allowed them to reach a different conclusion. Here's where it gets interesting.

When this "emote control" began to occur, parts of the brain normally involved in reasoning were not activated. Instead, a constellation of activations occurred in the same areas of the brain where punishment, pain, and negative emotions are experienced (that is, in the left insula, lateral frontal cortex, and ventromedial prefrontal cortex). Once a way was found to ignore information that could not be rationally discounted, the neural punishment areas turned off, and the participant received a blast of activation in the circuits involving rewards - akin to the high an addict receives when getting his fix.

In essence, the participants were not about to let facts get in the way of their hot-button decision making and quick buzz of reward. "None of the circuits involved in conscious reasoning were particularly engaged," says Westen. "Essentially, it appears as if partisans twirl the cognitive kaleidoscope until they get the conclusions they want, and then they get massively reinforced for it, with the elimination of negative emotional states and activation of positive ones." {...}

Ultimately, Westen and his colleagues believe that "emotionally biased reasoning leads to the 'stamping in' or reinforcement of a defensive belief, associating the participant's 'revisionist' account of the data with positive emotion or relief and elimination of distress. 'The result is that partisan beliefs are calcified, and the person can learn very little from new data,'" Westen says. Westen's remarkable study showed that neural information processing related to what he terms "motivated reasoning" ... appears to be qualitatively different from reasoning when a person has no strong emotional stake in the conclusions to be reached.

The study is thus the first to describe the neural processes that underlie political judgment and decision making, as well as to describe processes involving emote control, psychological defense, confirmatory bias, and some forms of cognitive dissonance. The significance of these findings ranges beyond the study of politics: "Everyone from executives and judges to scientists and politicians may reason to emotionally biased judgments when they have a vested interest in how to interpret 'the facts,'" according to Westen.
See also:


Stop

It's time to stop glamorizing prostitution says sex trafficking survivor

sextrafficking
© The Woman's Photographer, Lauren Trantham
When I was 18 years old, I fell in love. I had met a man near the University of Oregon campus who seemed to love me as much as I loved him.

Even though I was a promising high school student, varsity athlete and on the honor role, I had a vulnerability. I found myself, between high school and college, pregnant, unwed and now suddenly trying to figure out my future. He seemed to have all the answers, promises and security. He hooked me in with ideals of white picket fences and a home where my child and I could thrive.

This is how countless girls and women are defrauded and forced into prostitution, and it's the story of the vast majority of those whose bodies are bought and sold into prostitution. Many people envision human trafficking as kidnapped children in developing countries, but the reality of modern slavery exists among us in our very own communities.

Handcuffs

Media spin: Beating of Chicago police officer and what she might have done differently... (VIDEO)

media spin
The officer decided not to shoot her assailant because she was worried about the 'scrutiny' she might face, Police Supt. Eddie Johnson said

Graphic dashcam and bodycam video has been released showing a suburban man — allegedly high on PCP — punching and body-slamming Chicago police officers as they tried to handcuff him earlier this month.

More than three hours of footage of the brutal incident were released Friday by the Chicago Police Department after authorities said a female officer who was beaten unconscious didn't shoot her attacker because she feared she might face backlash.

The footage begins as two officers attempt to take Parta Huff, of Maywood, into custody after he allegedly crashed his vehicle into a liquor store.

The officers in the 15th District were on patrol when they came across a traffic accident near the intersection of South Cicero Avenue and West Roosevelt Road, authorities said.


Comment: As you'll see from the video, the officers waste no time: first they swear at him and then begin to physically restrain him. If Parta Huff had just driven his car into a liquor store, it's entirely possible that he was still in shock and unable to respond cogently to the police. But such reasonable possibilities are utterly lost on cops, it seems.

The article states that Huff was high on PCP at the time, but there was no way the officers could have known that as well. And, in any case, what justification did the police have for getting physical so quickly?



Comment: Aside from the terrible injuries the officer and the assailant sustained in what appears like standard stupid police procedure, the problem with this story can be summed up in the first and last lines of the article - as though the policewoman would have been correct to - and should have - shot (and possibly killed) Huff. But because of the negative (i.e. critically objective) response to such an action, she was afraid to. The underlying message seems to be that an extrajudicial killing in this case would have been the correct thing to do, but all those pesky voices from society who believe that it's wrong would have made the officer's life afterwards too difficult - therefore, those voices of criticism put the officer's life in jeopardy. This is the media slant, and like so much else we're seeing in the news today, these whores for authoritarianism are sucking the life right out of humanity.


Health

More than 1 million will lose Obamacare plans as insurers quit

Obamacare and money graphic
A growing number of people in Obamacare are finding out their health insurance plans will disappear from the program next year, forcing them to find new coverage even as options shrink and prices rise.

At least 1.4 million people in 32 states will lose the Obamacare plan they have now, according to state officials contacted by Bloomberg. That's largely caused by Aetna Inc., United Health Group Inc. and some state or regional insurers quitting the law's markets for individual coverage.

Sign-ups for Obamacare coverage begin next month. Fallout from the quitting insurers has emerged as the latest threat to the law, which is also a major focal point in the U.S. presidential election. While it's not clear what all the consequences of the departing insurers will be, interviews with regulators and insurance customers suggest that plans will be fewer and more expensive, and may not include the same doctors and hospitals.

It may also mean that instead of growing in 2017, Obamacare could shrink. As of March 31, the law covered 11.1 million people; an Oct. 13 S&P Global Ratings report predicted that enrollment next year will range from an 8 percent decline to a 4 percent gain.

Eye 1

2 Wisconsin men charged with attempting to give Islamic State material support

FBI cameramen
© Gaston De Cardenas / Reuters
Two men were arrested in Texas while allegedly attempting to travel to Mexico, where they planned to continue overseas to join fighters for the Islamic State.

The Department of Justice (DOJ) announced in a press release Friday that the two men, Jason Michael Ludke and Yosvany Padylla-Conde, are being charged with attempting to provide material support to the Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS/ISIL). Padylla-Conde is facing an additional charge of aiding and abetting Ludke's attempt to provide material support.

Ludke, 35, and Padylla-Conde, 30, were arrested near San Angelo, Texas, where they allegedly planned to cross the border into Mexico in order to obtain documents to travel to Syria in order to join IS. The FBI was alerted to their intentions after an undercover agent received a friend request from Ludke, who told the agent of his intentions to travel to Syria and Iraq, Reuters reported.

In an affidavit, the agent claimed that Ludke had expressed his support for Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, head of IS, and had pledged allegiance to him in a video he sent to the agent.

Special Agent in Charge Justin Tolomeo of the FBI's Milwaukee Division said in a statement, "Terrorism remains the FBI's top priority in keeping Americans safe. The arrest of these two individuals from Wisconsin, underscores how the real threat of terrorism can occur anywhere, at anytime."

However, after his arrest, Ludke told agents that he and Padylla-Conde had left Wisconsin in September, because they were unable to find work and were facing eviction. The men are now facing up to 20 years in prison, along with fines of up to $250,000.

Comment: 'It will be a bloodbath': 3 'militia' men charged with conspiracy to bomb Somali refugees living in Kansas


Eye 1

'It will be a bloodbath': 3 'militia' men charged with conspiracy to bomb Somali refugees living in Kansas

mosque Kansas
© Adam Shrimplin / Reuters
The interior of a mosque located within an apartment complex, which federal authorities allege was to be targeted in a bomb plot by three Kansas men, is seen in Garden City, Kansas, U.S. October 14, 2016.
Three members of the Kansas Security Force and the Crusaders stand accused of planning to bomb some 120 Somali Muslim refugees living in an apartment complex adjacent to a mosque, according to the Department of Justice.

The acting US attorney for the District of Kansas, Tom Beall, announced on Friday that Curtis Allen, 49, Patrick Stein, 47, and Gavin Wright, 49, would be charged for planning an attack scheduled for November 9, just one day after the presidential election. A bombing was to take place at a Muslim community center in Garden City, Kansas.

Beall said the men stashed away a large amount of firearms and ammunition, according to KWCH.

Their plan included parking vehicles at each of the four corners of the apartment complex.

Stein was quoted from a recorded June 2016 phone call as saying, "The only f***ing way this country's ever going to get turned around is it will be a bloodbath and it will be a nasty, messy motherf***er. Unless a lot more people in this country wake up and smell the f***ing coffee and decide they want this country back ... we might be too late, if they do wake up ... I think we can get it done. But it ain't going to be nothing nice about it," according to the criminal complaint affidavit provided by KAKE.

Since February, the FBI has conducted a domestic terrorism probe into the overlapping "militia groups" Kansas Security Force and the Crusaders, "whose members support and espouse sovereign citizen, anti-government, anti-Muslim, and anti-immigrant extremist beliefs," according to the affidavit.

Comment: The informant provided automatic weapons to the group planning on carrying out the attack, which means it's possible the 'informant' was doing a little more than informing.


Star of David

'Occupation must end': Israeli rights group demands UN Security Council take action

Palestinian camp
© Ammar Awad / Reuters
A prominent Israeli human rights group has called on the UN Security Council to help end the country's occupation of Palestinian territory.

"Israel will not cease being an oppressor simply by waking up one day and realizing the brutality of its policies," Hagai El-Ad, executive director of B'Tselem group said on Friday.

Palestinian lives in Gaza, the West Bank, and East Jerusalem have been under full Israeli control for the past 49 years "and counting," he told an informal council meeting on "Illegal Israeli Settlements: Obstacles to Peace and the Two-State Solution" on Friday.

With the 50th anniversary approaching next year, "the rights of Palestinians must be realized, the occupation must end, the UN Security Council must act, and the time is now," he said.

Comment: More fuel to the fire: Netanyahu mocks UNESCO motion to name Temple Mount by its Arabic name


Cell Phone

Samsung Note 7 phones to be banned from all airlines even if switched off

samsung note 7
Airline passengers who try to carry Samsung Electronics Co. Note 7 smartphones on flights will have them confiscated and may face fines under an emergency U.S. order that significantly expands restrictions on the devices linked to almost 100 incidents of overheating and fires.

The devices won't be allowed aboard passenger or cargo aircraft even if they've been shut off, the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration and the Federal Aviation Administration announced Friday. Flight restrictions will be extended to each of the 1.9 million Note 7s sold in the U.S. starting at noon New York time on Saturday.

"We recognize that banning these phones from airlines will inconvenience some passengers, but the safety of all those aboard an aircraft must take priority," U.S. Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx said in a statement. "We are taking this additional step because even one fire incident in flight poses a high risk of severe personal injury and puts many lives at risk."

Attention

'Unconstitutional': Florida Supreme Court strikes down death penalty legislation

Florida death penalty
© Stephen Lam / Reuters
The fates of 385 inmates sitting on death row in Florida, as well as those about to go on trial for murder, is in limbo - Florida's top court declared the state's death penalty statute unconstitutional.

By a 5-2 vote the Florida Supreme Court struck down a newly enacted state law allowing a defendant to be sentenced to death as along as 10 out of 12 jurors recommended it.

"The Act ... is unconstitutional because it requires that only ten jurors recommend death as opposed to the constitutionally required unanimous, twelve-member jury," the court wrote on Friday striking down the law for pending prosecutions in the state, according to Orlando Sentinel. "Accordingly, it cannot be applied to pending prosecutions."

Comment: See also: More proof the drug war is not over: Death penalty for heroin dealers?


Stop

Buckeye State announces plans to stop doing business with Wells Fargo

Wells Fargo
© Rick Wilking / Reuters
Ohio Governor John Kasich became the first state-level Republican to take action against Wells Fargo after suspending the big bank from doing business with the state. This makes the Buckeye State the third to officially halt business with the bank.

The Wells Fargo fraudulent accounts scandal continues to rock the bank and jeopardize its business dealings. After allegations against the San Francisco-based bank revealed that employees had opened up unauthorized customer accounts to reach sales targets, the fallout resulted in Wells Fargo losing the ability to work with state bonds.

Governor Kasich (R) said in a statement, "while Wells Fargo only does limited retail banking in Ohio, it does regularly seek state bond business so I have instructed my administration to seek services from other banks instead."

Comment: See also: OSHA accused of neglecting federal whistleblowers' rights and protection