Society's Child
National Action, who recently held a 'Miss Hitler' contest, teamed up with a Polish fascist group to run a "whites only" food bank for homeless people on Saturday night.
Anti-racism campaigners accused the fascist group of taking advantage of vulnerable people in a bid to spread a campaign of hate and division.
The extreme right-wing youth group emerged from the far right in 2013. It boasts of being "more radical than the BNP [British National Party]" and targets students and universities in the UK for members.
Elizabeth Mayor Christian Bollwage said the FBI was working to disarm one of five devices found in the same bag in a trash can by two men at around 8:30 p.m. Sunday near the Elizabeth train station. The men had reported seeing wires and a pipe coming out of the package, Bollwage said.
There was no immediate report of injuries or damage. The mayor warned that other explosions were expected.
Comment: Based upon what information?
Armed with a search warrant, FBI agents and police converged on an apartment above a fried chicken restaurant near the train station before 6 a.m. Monday. The apartment is linked to a man wanted for questioning in Saturday night's New York City bombing, which injured 29.
Investigators look over the bullet holes in the wounded police sergeant's patrol car, Saturday Sept. 17, 2016, on Sanson Street near South 52nd Street in West Philadelphia.
Philadelphia Police Commissioner Richard Ross identified the gunman Saturday as 25-year-old Nicholas Glenn, of West Philadelphia.
The shooting rampage started about 11:18 p.m. when Glenn walked up to a marked police cruiser at 52nd and Sansom Streets and just began firing, police said.
Sgt. Sylvia Young, 46, who was sitting inside the car, was shot several times after Glenn fired off 18 shots, Ross said at a Saturday afternoon news conference. Her gun was hit as well. A 19-year veteran assigned to North Philadelphia's 22d Police District, Young on Friday was working with a task force in West Philadelphia.
She and another officer, who was later shot - University of Pennsylvania officer Eddie Miller, 56, a former Philadelphia police sergeant who joined Penn's force two years ago - were both in stable condition Saturday at Penn Presbyterian Medical Center.
Children cry, it is what they do and Kaylb is no different. After he'd been bullied, Kaylb started crying just as the officer was walking by the classroom. Instead of allowing the teacher to simply calm Kaylb down, this hero public servant yanked the child out into the hallway. He then handcuffed him and dragged him to the principal's office where he'd sit for 15 minutes in handcuffs waiting on his mother.
According to the police officer's account, which sounds like any number of justifications for police violence, the child had been "out of control in his classroom and refused to follow my directions."
Apparently unable to calm down a 3′ 10″ 45 lb child, this officer violated Kaylb's right to be free from unreasonable seizures and excessive force, according to the lawsuit.
"Our children need trained and concerned figures in schools that know how to intervene. It's not okay to abuse your authority and handcuff kids as a means of discipline," said Tomesha Primm, Kalyb's mother. "As a parent, I want to make sure no other child - in Kansas City or anywhere else in the country - experiences what my son did."
When she got to school, Primm was horrified, as any parent would be, when she saw her little boy in handcuffs after being assaulted by a police officer.
"I couldn't believe it because I couldn't imagine they were allowed to do anything like that, or I would never have put him in there," said Primm. "He knew he didn't do anything wrong. He didn't know if the man was going to take him to jail."
"This child committed no crime, threatened no one, and posed no danger to anyone," said ACLU of Missouri Legal Director Tony Rothert. "Gratuitously handcuffing children is cowardly and violates the constitution."
After this incident, Kalyb was too scared to return to school, so Primm made the wise decision to pull him from the school as she was concerned for his safety. She homeschooled her son for the next two years.
According to the ACLU, this incident also violated state policy, which says that the use of restraints for elementary and secondary students should be used only in extreme circumstances or emergencies.
Considering Oakland had been one of the first departments in the country to outfit officers with body cams beginning in 2009, the quantity of irretrievable footage constitutes a tremendous loss.
Sgt. David Burke revealed the astonished flub as he testified Tuesday in the trial of two men accused of murdering Judy Salamon in 2013. Though body cam footage represented only a minor facet of that case, the revelation nonetheless evidences pitfalls common with fledgling technology.
"Nothing should have ever been lost from the system," Burke told the court, according to the San Francisco Chronicle. "The settings were set to never delete."
However, human error — not the technology, itself — was responsible for the vanishing the recordings.
Deputy District Attorney Butch Ford, prosecutor in the Salamon murder trial, told the court information technology workers attempting an upgrade of the police department's computer system — that stores 'dozens of terabytes of the body-worn camera footage' — checked the wrong box.
Instead of hitting "preserve everything," Ford explained, the hapless workers chose only "preserve."
The organization said in a statement the boats are on a course to pierce Israel's maritime control over Gaza's borders, and in doing so, raise awareness of conditions inside of the Strip.
"While our focus is on opposing the blockade against the Palestinian people of Gaza, we see this in the larger context of supporting the right to freedom of movement for all Palestinians," the group said on their website. "The Occupation daily violates the rights of Palestinians to move freely around their country and to leave and return to their country, as guaranteed by the Universal Declaration of Human Rights."
The Russian diplomatic missions in Ukraine have been targeted with several attacks by radical nationalists over the past few years. On Sunday, while citizens living in Russia exercised their right to vote for MPs and heads of several regions, the Russian Embassy in Kiev turned into a site of violent confrontation.
Embassy security was bolstered with an additional fence and metal shutters over the windows ahead of the election. Top Ukrainian officials and nationalist politicians condemned the election because it includes Crimea, the predominantly Russian former Ukrainian region that voted to break away from Kiev after an armed coup in 2013 imposed an anti-Russia government.
Comment: The Russian elections went smoothly except for in Ukraine: Russian Voting Disruptions Abroad Only Recorded in Ukraine - Official
Ukraine was the only country where cases of Russian nationals' voting rights violations were reported, Russia's Commissioner for Human Rights Tatyana Moskalkova said Sunday.
On Sunday, Russians voted to elect 450 members of parliament for the next five years. Late on Saturday, scuffles broke out outside the Russian Embassy in Kiev and the Russian consulate in Odesa was briefly besieged by anti-Russian radicals on Sunday.
"It appears to be the only case abroad whereby Russian nationals signaled about violations," Moskalkova said.
The commissioner added that she had sent letters regarding the situation to her Ukrainian counterpart, the UN and Council of Europe human rights commissioners and the EU representative in Russia. "[This was done] in order for the international community to give its assessment of the unprecedented incidents, committed in violation of international norms for ensuring diplomatic missions, whereby extremist groups prevented our citizens from coming to polling stations and giving their vote," she said.
A new YouGov poll released this week provides troubling news on the health and well-being of the Clinton candidacy based in large part to the physical ails of Hillary herself with opinions on whether the former Secretary of State is physically able to perform the duties of the presidency hitting an all-time low.
The nationwide survey of 1000 respondents with a margin of error of 4.6% showed that only 39% of people responded that Hillary's health is "good enough" to "serve effectively as president for the next four years" suggesting that the candidate has broken through the floor on a major question of her viability.
With health concerns mounting, email leaks hurting, and poll numbers tumbling, Hillary Clinton has had a tough couple weeks (poor thing)... but the news just got a little worse as Hillary's newest book, "Stronger Together," which provides a policy blueprint for where she hopes to take the country if she is elected president, sold just 2,912 copies in its first week on sale, according to Nielsen BookScan.
As The New York Times reports, both Mrs. Clinton and her running mate, Senator Tim Kaine, have promoted the book on the campaign trail, but the sales figure, which tallies about 80 percent of booksellers nationwide and does not include e-books, firmly makes the book what the publishing industry would consider a flop.
Comment: Looks like Killary is getting less and less popular by the minute.
Merkel's CDU party was beaten into third place with 19 percent, overtaken by the populist right-wing Alternative for Germany (AfD) party. AfD won 20.8 percent of the vote, coming second to the SPD, which won 30.6 percent of the vote, and — although reduced — allowed it to maintain control of the state in coalition with the CDU.
The defeat immediately brought calls for her to get tough on immigration, which has become the number one political issue, causing many Germans to move their support to nationalist parties, such as the AfD.
Comment: See also: Merkel CDU party beaten into third place by anti-migrant AfD in local election
Update: Merkel's CDU party set to lose seats in Berlin state vote - Exit poll
Germany's center-left Social Democrats (SPD) are leading in the election to the Berlin state parliament with 23 percent, while Chancellor Angela Merkel's Christian Democratic Union (CDU) is in for a big loss, an early exit poll showed Sunday.
The poll, conducted by Infratest dimap for national broadcaster ARD, predicted that support for Merkel's party dropped to 18 percent from 23.3 percent five years ago.
The third place is expected to go to either the far-left Linke (Left) party or the Greens who are both tied at 16.5 percent. The anti-migrant Alteranative fuer Deutschland (AfD) is projected to come fourth with 11.5 percent.
The turnout reached 53.1 percent as of 4 p.m. local time (14:00 GMT), exceeding by 7.1 percent the attendance registered during the previous state election five years ago, according to the electoral committee.
On Sunday, Berliners were electing 149 members to the state parliament. The election comes just two weeks after the AfD pushed the Christian Democrats into third place in the northeastern state of Mecklenburg-West Pomerania.














Comment: All-female flotilla tries to sail through 'criminal' Gaza blockade and raise awareness of Palestinians plight