Society's Child
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.
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.

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.
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.
"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
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."
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."
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."
Rocco Siffredi — nicknamed the "Italian Stallion" — will document his training in the reality show, "Universita del Porno," to air in Italy, Perfil.com reports.
Classes will be in session on the set of "Siffredi Hard Academy," in which the porn veteran will instruct a group of 21 hopefuls on different techniques and tactics on how to be a believeable porn actor on screen.
Comment: As if the world of porn wasn't bad enough, now it is being advertised on reality TV as something for young men and women to aspire to. Porn advocates may argue that the sex on screen is consensual and celebrates choice, however the evidence against porn far outweighs the deluded and deranged arguments for it. Mary Anne Layden of the University of Pennsylvania who specializes in sexual trauma says in this article that 'pornography has been a factor in every case of sexual violence that she has treated as a psychotherapist.' Porn is anti-feminist, anti-human and most of all kills love. For further reading:
- The Health & Wellness Show: The Death of Intimacy: Porn and the Ponerization of Sex
- This Is Your Brain On Porn
- Fifty shades of filth: The glorification and acceptance of pornography reveals society's moral bankruptcy
- Courage to quit: Outgrowing pornography and waking up to your true self
- Porn in US 'a public health crisis'
- "Being raped for a living": Chris Hedges interview with former prostitute Rachel Moran dispels the myths of sex work
Video footage of the torturous incident shows Swink so tightly restrained in the chair, she is hardly able to move her head; but that didn't stop Sgt. Judith L. Sealey from entering the isolation cell and unleashing pepper-spray in the 25-year-old's face — at near point-blank range — for seemingly no reason but sadistic pleasure.
Swink acknowledged to the Washington Post she had, indeed, been drinking heavily at home that evening when police arrested her, and was still somewhat intoxicated when cameras recorded what happened. But she doesn't understand what brought on the senseless attack.
"It felt like somebody just crushed up fresh peppers and made me use them as face cream," Swink told the Post. "It took my breath away. You're fighting for air. I remember my mouth was filling with a thick slobber, like foaming up — and that was also blocking my airway."
"Can you do shit like that?" the homeowner asked one of the cops. "I mean, we gotta pay for the fucking windows? That's some shit right there." Acting on an anonymous tip about a drug lord, the police found less than a gram of weed in the bottom of a book bag and arrested the homeowner's 22-year-old son, a student at nearby Denmark Technical College.
"He was supposed to be a drug kingpin. Come to find out he was there with his mom and dad, sister and her 4-month-old baby," said filmmaker Craig Atkinson, whose new documentary, "Do Not Resist," addresses the militarization of law enforcement. The film currently is playing in New York theaters and opens in Los Angeles Friday, with other markets to follow.
Such pointless raids were the norm rather than the exception in about a half a dozen ride-alongs on which Atkinson and his crew went. But while the cops found almost no drugs, they did seize $876 through a controversial policing practice known as civil asset forfeiture.














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