Society's Child
Nestlé has become infamous for trying to privatize (steal) water from over 50 springs throughout the United States, though residents in the small towns they monopolize have tried fighting back.
In a recent turn for the worse, a federal judge in California just gave the corporation permission to continue drawing water from the San Bernardino National Forest despite holding a permit that expired in 1988.
Activists were hopeful, that on at least one accession, they could stop Nestlé from taking water from drought-stricken California. The Courage Campaign Institute (CCI), the Center for Biological Diversity (CBD), and the Story of Stuff Project (SSP) launched a lawsuit in 2015 against the U.S. Forest Service for allowing Nestlé to keep drawing water.
They are the only two states that require law enforcement to report all in-custody deaths, but it seems enforcing the law is trickier than anyone imagined. Research from Texas State University in San Marco found that the two states did not report hundreds of deaths that involved officers during a 10-year period.
Texas was found to have failed to report 220 use-of-force fatalities, and California had 440 unreported deaths from 2005 to 2015, according to the Houston Chronicle.
Both Texas and California attorneys general confirmed that many hundreds of cases were missing. While failing to file such a report is a misdemeanor in Texas, there is no punishment for it in California.
Comment: All of these terms, use-of-force fatalities, officer-involved-deaths, in-custody-deaths. One could be led to believe they're all the same thing. Ahh, the simple world of the activist - how black and white it all must seem.
Logistics soldiers Sergeant Craig Davenport and Corporal Stephen Suffield stole kit worth up to £44,000 from storehouses of the elite special forces unit.
After stealing to order using a Facebook group called 'Boy's Toys,' they then sold it to paintball park owner Andrew Stevens who shipped the cutting edge gear off to buyers in Japan and elsewhere in the Far East.
Comment: A bit on the hysterical side. Both meanings of the word actually...

A photograph of suspect John Felix is displayed at a news conference as members of the law enforcement community stand near a photo of slain Palm Springs Police officer Lesley Zerebny following the Saturday shooting deaths of Zerebny and Office Jose Vega in Palm Springs, California. October 9, 2016.
"He came over and asked for help," said Frances Serrano, a neighbor of the alleged gunman's father. She said he told her that his son had a gun and wanted to shoot police officers.
"My son is inside and we're scared, he's acting crazy," Serrano said the father, Santos Felix, told her, according to the Associated Press. When it was suggested that they call the police, he said, "Yeah, he already knows they are coming, and he is going to shoot them."
Four Palm Springs police officers followed up on the emergency call about a family disturbance on Saturday afternoon when the gunman, John Felix, shot at police through the closed door of his house. In that exchange two police officers were shot and killed, and a third was wounded.
This round of prison strikes—there will be more—has had little outside support and press coverage. There have been few protests outside prison walls. Prison authorities—unlike during the 1971 Attica uprising when the press was allowed into the yard to interview the rebellious prisoners—have shut out a compliant media. They have identified strike leaders and placed them in isolation. Whole prisons in states such as Texas were put on lockdown on the eve of the strike. It is hard to know how many prisoners are still on strike, just as it is hard to know how many stopped work or started to fast on Sept. 9.
Before the strike I was able to speak to prisoner leaders including Melvin Ray, James Pleasant and Robert Earl Council, all of whom led work stoppages in Alabama prisons in January 2014 as part of the Free Alabama Movement, as well as Siddique Hasan, one of five leaders of the April 1993 uprising at the Southern Ohio Correctional Facility at Lucasville, Ohio. (The Ohio revolt saw prisoners take control of the facility for 11 days after numerous grievances, including complaints about deaths allegedly caused by beatings from guards, went unanswered.) Now, authorities have cut off the access of these and other prisoner leaders to the press and the rest of the outside world. I have not been able to communicate with the four men since the strike began.
As San Francisco 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick's protest against police brutality inspires scores of athletes to join him, millions of pro football fans are mounting their own boycott: the size of the NFL's audience so far this season has shrunk by double-digits.
According to Sporting News online, TV ratings for NBC's "Sunday Night Football," which has been the top-rated prime-time show for five consecutive years has plunged 10 percent. In addition, viewers of CBS' "Thursday Night Football" has dropped by 15 percent from last year. These are the lowest ratings in seven years.
Comment: The mainstream media is falling all over itself to assure us that Killary is now 'way ahead of Trump in the polls' following her 'win' in the 2nd debate.
But does the American public agree with the pundits?
According to online polls scoring the second presidential debate Sunday night, Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump had a landslide win over Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton.
With about 659,000 votes in, Trump led Clinton 58.64 percent to 41.36 percent in the Drudge Report Poll.
Comment: There's more...
This one's from Time Magazine:
And from WNEP.com, a Pennsylvania news outlet:
And from NJ.com, a New Jersey news outlet:
And from Inquisitr.com:
See also: Mainstream media unanimously supports Killary, but online polls suggest huge majority of Americans support Trump

Despite collecting almost half a billion dollars in donations after the 2010 Haiti earthquake, the ARC built only six permanent homes
As the death count after Hurricane Matthew approaches 900 and reports of deadly cholera outbreaks begin to surface, Haitians have sent out desperate pleas for help.
Government officials estimate at least 350,000 people needed assistance after the devastating storm.
Yet accompanying many requests for aid comes a warning - do not give your money to the American Red Cross (ARC).
Trust in the ARC, and in foreign aid more widely, has been badly shaken by a 2015 report that found donations had been squandered.
Despite collecting nearly half a billion dollars to provide relief after the 2010 Haiti earthquake and pledging to build 700 permanent homes, the ARC has been accused of only building six.
"In the coming days, many of you are going to write and ask me how you can 'help Haiti'," one woman said on Twitter after the hurricane, "Do not give to the American Red Cross."
During the Second World War, at the same time that millions of Ukrainians fought Nazi Germany in the ranks of the Red Army, several hundred thousand nationalists from groups including the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists (OUN) and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA) collaborated with Nazi forces in their occupation of what had been Polish and Soviet Ukrainian territory. In addition to a series of murderous campaigns against Jews, Gypsies, Soviet POWs and anti-fascist Ukrainians, UPA nationalists conducted a mass campaign of ethnic cleansing targeting the Polish minority in western Ukraine.
Clinton was discussing the Republican Party candidate Donald Trump's controversial position on global warming during a rally on Saturday when the outburst was recorded.
Clinton opened a sentence by saying, "No one can dispute the fact," to which a protester intercepted, "That you're a rapist!" This was followed by another protester who chimed in, "Bill Clinton is a rapist!"
The moment was captured on Today's TMJ4 Facebook Live broadcast of the event.
Comment: Although Alex Jones seems to be gaining some sort of advertisement from encouraging people to get his t-shirts on television, the message itself is worth repeating: "Bill Clinton is a rapist". For further reading:
- Man shouts, 'Bill Clinton is a rapist!' during live Fox News broadcast before being dragged away by security
- Woman who claims Bill Clinton raped her, fears for her life
- Clinton rape accuser drops twitter bomb on Chelsea: "Your father was, and probably still is, a sexual predator"
- Bill Clinton sexual assault accusers unite against NBC's whitewashing of his dirty deeds

















Comment: Nestle continues stealing world's water during drought
Nestle has become another much hated corporation for its complete disregard for people and the environment. Despite years of drought, the company continues to suck millions of gallons a year from California aquifers with no restrictions. It pays the same rate as an average residential water user, but is then able to sell it back at mammoth profits.
See also: