Society's ChildS


Handcuffs

Washington state proposes bill to abolish the death penalty

death penalty demonstration
© Carlos Barria / ReutersPeople attend a demonstration at the U.S. Supreme Court to mark the 40th anniversary of the first execution under contemporary laws at Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S., January 17, 2017.
Washington state's governor joined the state attorney general in an unusual bipartisan alliance to back legislation that would abolish the death penalty. They claim that capital punishment costs too much and doesn't deter crime.

The proposed bills would remove capital punishment as a sentencing option for aggravated murder, and mandate instead a sentence of life in prison without possibility of parole.

"Death penalty sentences are unequally applied in the state of Washington, they are frequently overturned and they are always costly," Governor Jay Inslee (D) said during a news conference at the Capitol in Olympia, Washington, on Monday. "I could not in good conscience allow executions to continue under my watch as governor under these conditions."

Inslee placed a moratorium on capital punishment in 2014. In 2015, the Washington Association of Prosecuting Attorneys called for a public vote on whether the state should keep the death penalty.

Inslee was joined at the news conference by former Republican Attorney General Rob McKenna and two members of the GOP-controlled state Senate.

"This issue transcends politics," state Attorney General Bob Ferguson, a Democrat, told reporters, according to the Seattle Times.

Comment: The death penalty is costly, not a deterrent to crime and unfairly meted out to minorities. One Justice went so far as to call it 'cruel and unusual' punishment:
The Eighth Amendment to the Constitution outlaws "cruel and unusual punishments." Although the Supreme Court has upheld the death penalty, some justices have concluded it violates the Eighth Amendment. In 1972, in Furman v. Georgia, the high court imposed a moratorium on the death penalty because it was arbitrarily imposed. Justice Potter Stewart wrote for the majority thate xecutions were "so wantonly and so freakishly imposed" that they are "cruel and unusual in the same way that being struck by lightning is cruel and unusual."



Snowflake Cold

One-day-old baby found dead in homeless mother's arms on freezing Portland, Oregon street

snowstorm
© Alex Milan Tracy / www.globallookpress.comA big snow storm in Portland, Oregon
A one-day-old homeless baby froze to death in his mother's arms on the streets of Portland, Oregon, bringing to five the number of people to succumb this year to the freezing conditions affecting the city.

The baby was found on January 9 but details of the infant's death emerged only on Monday, according to the Willamette Week, although the exact cause of death is disputed by authorities.

It's reported Portland Police responded to a 911 call shortly before 6am on January 9 after a passerby alerted them to a homeless woman pushing a shopping cart with a baby under her coat. According to the man, the woman was barefoot and only partially clothed.

A number of text messages from first responders indicate the baby was still alive when they arrived on the scene. "Baby is conscious and breathing okay, but has been outside this entire time. Baby is ice cold," read one text.

Smoking

Nanny state: Texas may may pass bill raising smoking age from 18 to 21

cigarettes smoking

Comment: Texas would do much better banning the poisons peddled by Big Pharma. Read on to see how the spin doctors demonize tobacco.


This could be the year Texas raises the smoking age to 21.

For a decade, the concept has been a pipe dream of Democrats and doctors bent on finding ways to keep Texans, especially kids, from picking up the habit. But this year it has backing from some powerful Republicans whose support could mean Texas will become just the third state to hike its smoking age above 19.

"We can move this bill forward," said Rep. John Zerwas, a Richmond Republican and physician who will champion the effort in the House. He will be joined by Rep. Donna Howard, D-Austin, and Sens. Joan Huffman, R-Houston, and Carlos Uresti, D-San Antonio, who will each file a bill.

'As good a chance as we've ever had'

Raising the minimum legal age to buy products like cigarettes and chewing tobacco has been the goal of Texas Democrats for at least a decade. But with Republicans decrying the effort as an infringement on personal liberty that could cost the state millions of dollars in lost tax revenue, the wish went up in smoke every time it was proposed.

Five times, Uresti has tried to convince fellow lawmakers that hiking the smoking age will save lives and reduce the state's health care costs in the long term. He started small in 2007, proposing Texas raise the tobacco purchase age to 19. He failed.

In 2009, he got his bill through the Senate, but it died in the House. In 2011, 2013 and 2015, the proposal never made it off the starting block. This year, with bipartisan support, Uresti said he's excited about possibly realizing this longtime goal.

"We have as good a chance as we've ever had," said Uresti. "I'm just glad. I welcome all the support we can get."

Comment: Smoking good quality tobacco has many health benefits, including improved cognition. Can't have the voters thinking too clearly now, can we?


Pistol

At least 27 killed as gunmen attack beach outside 2 tourist hotels in Tunisia

Image
© Screenshot from Google Maps
A beach outside two hotels in central Tunisia have been attacked, with at least 27 dead and panic being reported at the scene. Two gunmen armed with Kalashnikov rifles reportedly penetrated a private area and opened fire.

One of the hotels is the five-star Imperial Marhaba. The Interior Ministry at least 27 people are dead, foreigners among them.


Comment: Absolutely dreadful!

Update (Jan. 17, 2017):
Tunisian security forces "deliberately and unjustifiably" stalled in responding to a massacre of holidaymakers in which 38 tourists were killed, an inquest heard on Monday.

Local officers responding to reports of the attack at the five-star Riu Imperial Marhaba Hotel and the adjoining beach in Sousse in June 2015 "wasted a considerable amount of time in getting to the hotel," the hearing into the deaths of 30 Britons was told.

Samantha Leek QC, counsel to the inquest, said a report by a Tunisian judge had identified failings by local units after the killer, Seifeddine Rezgui, 22, opened fire with an automatic rifle.

The report by Judge Bechir Akremi, submitted to the coroner, includes evidence from an unnamed interior minister, who said some local security officers nearby had consciously slowed down their arrival.

"[The unnamed interior minister] said the units that should have intervened in the events deliberately and unjustifiably slowed down to delay their arrival at the hotel," Leek said, according to the Times.

"They had the ability to put an end to the attack before police arrived, but wasted a considerable amount of time getting to the hotel."

The court did not hear why police might have delayed their response.

Last year, six police officers, including the chief of the tourist protection unit and the officer who shot and killed Rezgui, were charged in relation to the slow response time, which is said to have been nearly 40 minutes because officers didn't have bulletproof vests.


Leek read out the names of the 38 victims, who were aged between 19 and 80 and included three generations of one family.

"On that day a gunman entered the hotel from the beach carrying an automatic weapon with a number of explosives.

"He systematically took the lives of 38 people who had traveled to Tunisia for enjoyment, luxury and relaxation; 38 people who had done nothing to provoke this attack, individually or collectively; 38 people who needlessly lost their lives."

During a detailed account of the murders using a 3D computer reconstruction of the hotel, grounds and surrounding area, Detective Superintendent Mark Gower guided the judge and the families of victims through the route taken by Rezgui, and the locations of each of the bodies.

Footage of the sea front showed terrified sunbathers and staff fleeing the beach as Rezgui fired rounds, killing 20 people, before he entered the grounds of the Marhaba, where he killed 10 people, and then going inside the hotel building, where eight were murdered.





Candle

Massive power outage causes commuter chaos in Amsterdam

Amsterdam blackout
© Via Instagram/adriunico
A mass power blackout hit large parts of Amsterdam, causing chaos for morning commuters as transport services ground to a halt and traffic bottlenecked around the city.

The power outage turned the lights out over the Dutch capital and surrounding areas in the early hours of the morning with a knock-on effect for trains, trams and metro services.

Locals were quick to share images online of the unlit city, showing Amsterdam draped in darkness.


The blackout began at 4:15 am, BNO News reports. A number of websites with servers in Amsterdam were affected by the outage, which forced the sites offline.

The fault originated at the Hemweg power plant in Amsterdam, utility company Liander said. The cause of the outage was not immediately known.

Family

Poll shows most Russians feel threat from external enemies

Cold Russian citizens
© Artem Zhitenev / Sputnik
Over two-thirds of Russians are sure that their country has enemies and over half the population think that these enemies pose a real threat, according to a recent poll conducted by independent research group the Levada Center.

When the Levada Center - the leading Russian independent company specializing in public opinion research - asked the public if it thought that Russia has enemies, 68 percent answered positively, with only 18 percent saying that in their opinion this statement was false. Just over half - 52 percent - of respondents said that the nation had both external and internal enemies, and estimated the threat coming from these enemies as real.

At the same time, 29 percent of those surveyed told researchers that they believe the image of external and internal enemies was just a "propaganda tool," deliberately exaggerated in order to manipulate public sentiment.

Comment: Americans are also fearful of Russia: New poll shows growing number of Americans see Russia as 'imminent threat'


Arrow Down

EU establishing "disproportionate and discriminatory laws" targeting Muslims and refugees

refugees migrants
© Marko Djurica / ReutersMigrants wait in line to receive a plate of free food during a snowfall outside a derelict customs warehouse in Belgrade, Serbia, January 11, 2017.
New counterterrorism laws adopted in 14 EU nations discriminate against Muslims and refugees, expose people to unchecked government surveillance, and drive Europe into a "deep and dangerous state of permanent securitization," Amnesty International said.

"In the wake of a series of appalling attacks, from Paris to Berlin, governments have rushed through a raft of disproportionate and discriminatory laws," John Dalhuisen, Amnesty International's director for Europe, said in a statement on Tuesday.

"Taken alone these individual counterterrorism measures are worrying enough, but when seen together, a disturbing picture emerges in which unchecked powers are trampling freedoms that have long been taken for granted," he added.

The human rights watchdog's latest report states that "discriminatory measures have had a disproportionate and profoundly negative impact on Muslims, foreign nationals or people perceived to be Muslim or foreign."

Discriminatory action by EU member states has been widely perceived as "acceptable" in the national security context, Amnesty said. In several countries, proposed or already adopted counterterrorism measures "have eroded the rule of law, enhanced executive powers, peeled away judicial controls, restricted freedom of expression and exposed everyone to unchecked government surveillance," it added.

Christmas Tree

Israeli Occupation Forces embark on uprooting 2000 trees on privately owned land for settlement road, Qalqilia

Trees
Israeli Occupation Forces (IOF) on Monday have embarked on uprooting about 2,000 trees planted on privately owned land east of Qalqilia city, northern West Bank, in order to open a new settlement road.

IOF this morning have announced the area as a closed military zone, and arrested international activists protesting that uprooting.

The illegal settlement road will through private Palestinian land and will take over about 104 dunums from Qalqilia city and Izbat Tbaib village.

Comment: See also:
  • Undercover Israeli forces detain children playing in West Bank refugee camp
  • War crime? Israel uses aerial herbicide spraying to destroy Gaza crops



Red Flag

Suicide bombers in Nigeria university attack included 12 year old girl

maiduguri
© Idris Mu'azu / Facebook
At least five people, including a university professor, were killed in a terrorist attack when three suicide bombers, among them a 12-year-old girl, targeted a university in northeast Nigeria.

The blasts took place early Monday morning in various areas of the University of Maiduguri, in the capital and largest city of Nigeria's northeastern Borno State. The incident has been confirmed by local police.

"Yes, I can confirm there was an explosion within the premises of the University of Maiduguri during the early morning prayers by the Muslim faithful," the spokesman of the police in Borno State, Victor Isuku, told local media.

The first explosion ripped through a mosque in the staff quarters area of the university, where professors were offering dawn prayers. That blast claimed the lives of five people, including the bomber, and injured 15 others, AP reports, citing Isuku.

Comment: Keep in mind that the likely perpetrator behind this attack, Boko Haram, is a creation of the CIA/Mossad/MI6:


Red Flag

Paid agitators: Ads running in numerous cities offer $2,500 per month for operatives to demonstrate at Trump inauguration

DemandProtest ad, anti-trump agitators
Demand Protest ads running seek operatives to "send a strong message" at presidential inauguration

Donald Trump may have a point about paid protesters: Job ads running in more than 20 cities offer $2,500 per month for agitators to demonstrate at this week's presidential inauguration events.

Demand Protest, a San Francisco company that bills itself as the "largest private grassroots support organization in the United States," posted identical ads Jan. 12 in multiple cities on Backpage.com seeking "operatives."

"Get paid fighting against Trump!" says the ad.

"We pay people already politically motivated to fight for the things they believe. You were going to take action anyways, why not do so with us!" the ad continues. "We are currently seeking operatives to help send a strong message at upcoming inauguration protests."

Comment: Hopefully the snowflakes' plans to create mayhem will fizzle, but things are looking grim at the moment: