Society's ChildS


Pumpkin 2

Universities issue warnings against politically incorrect Halloween costumes, offering counseling to 'traumatized' students

offensive halloween costumes,
The University of Florida wants students to know that if they're offended or scared by Halloween, there's counselors on hand to walk them through the traumatic experience.

"October brings fall weather and Halloween," the university wrote in a blog titled "Halloween Costume Choices" posted to its website Monday.

"If you choose to participate in Halloween activities, we encourage you to think about your choices of costumes and themes. Some Halloween costumes reinforce stereotypes of particular races, genders, cultures, or religions," it continues. "Regardless of intent, these costumes can perpetuate negative stereotypes, causing harm and offense to groups of people."

The university then urges students to keep their costumes in check in the name of inclusion and diversity.

Handcuffs

Man who refused to become MI5 informant convicted of planning to join IS in secret trial

UK court room
© Luke MacGregor / Reuters
A man who rejected an offer from MI5 to become an informant has been convicted of planning to join Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS/ISIL) in a secretive trial at the Old Bailey.

Secret justice, which many claim is at odds with the most fundamental principles of British law, is becoming increasingly normalized.

The latest trial of this kind was that of Somali-born Anas Abdalla, who was alleged to have attempted to smuggle himself out of the UK in 2013 to join IS.

Abdalla was found in a truck full of cannisters at Dover and claimed he was trying to escape years of harassment by MI5 officers who were attempting to recruit him.

The secrecy order specifically pertained to "any evidence which is called by the prosecution which confirms or denies any allegation of contact, or attempted contact, between MI5 and [Abdalla]," and "any allegation... that [Abdalla] would not be allowed by MI5 to live and progress normal expectations and achievements in life."

Given the level of secrecy, it not is not possible to report on the specific evidence, but Abdalla was convicted of preparing to join IS.

It emerged during the trial that Abdalla had come to believe the security services had caused his girlfriend to leave him, his bank card to stop working and jobs to fall through.

"This is the stuff of nightmares from which there is no escape. This is what happens when you are targeted by the security services and decline to cooperate,"Rajiv Menon QC told the jury as part of Abdalla's defence.

Megaphone

RT breaking story on 6th batch of Podesta emails before Wikileaks announcement leads to internet losing their mind, claiming conspiracy

RT newsroom
© Evgeny Biyatov / SputnikRT newsroom
RT breaking the latest Podesta emails before WikiLeaks sparked accusations of collusion with the whistleblowing organization. Actually, no conspiracies were involved - just good journalism.

Having discovered over 1,800 emails date-stamped October 13 on the WikiLeaks site, RT sprung into action.


Wikileaks followed shortly after by tweeting that #PodestaEmails6 were now available.


Comment: It sure is interesting how those who conspire to deceive will project their own actions onto the rest of the world. Clinton's people should focus on how bad the Podesta emails make her and her campaign advisors look, not on some false conspiracy of collusion between RT and Wikileaks or Putin and Trump.


Briefcase

United Russia plans to form a 'zero reading' council for controversial drafts to ensure new laws are sensible and necessary

Dmitry Medvedev United Russia Party
© Dmitry Astakhov / Reuters Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev, chairman of the United Russia Party, speaks at the joint meeting of the party's supreme council and general council.
The majority caucus United Russia party has announced plans to launch a special council that would filter populist and "fake" initiatives as well as bills that replicate existing laws.

Raisa Karmazina - the curator of the group of MPs that United Russia plans to use to form the council - told the Izvestia daily that the new body would look into any legislative proposal and decide if it's really necessary, what its consequences would be, and whether Russian legislation already contains something similar. "The experts' task will be not just to approve or reject the bills, they will brief the lawmakers about existing norms," Karmazina said.

MP Nikolai Pankov, who is poised to head the 'zero reading' council within the United Russia caucus, told Izvestia that the decision to launch the body had been made because the composition of the State Duma had changed significantly.

"Over 60 percent of MPs sitting in the committee that I head were elected for the first time - both on our party lists and in single-candidate constituencies. However, they demonstrate the desire to participate in lawmaking activities, and to help them we will discuss all new initiatives with invited experts," he said.

Pankov emphasized that experts would pay special attention to bills drafted by MPs with no previous Duma experience.

Comment: Ensuring that lawmakers abide by common sense and logic when writing laws, what a novel idea.


Butterfly

Misdirection: New York Times report - Two women accuse Trump of inappropriate touching - UPDATE

Donald Trump in 1994
© APDonald Trump in 1994.
Two women told The New York Times in a report published Wednesday night that Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump touched them inappropriately, allegations that were swiftly followed by a similar claim in People magazine.

The Times reported that Jessica Leeds and Rachel Crooks each had encounters with Trump in which he groped or kissed them without their consent. One of the alleged incidents occurred in 2005, the other more than 30 years ago.

People Magazine published a report later Wednesday night by one of its writers, Natasha Stoynoff, in which she alleged that she had been physically attacked by Trump at Mar-A-Lago while she was on assignment in December 2005 writing a profile of his first anniversary with his wife, Melania.

Comment: Things like this detract from real victims of real assaults. How is it that the media will go after a politician for allegedly kissing someone "almost on the lips", but ignore high-level pedophile rings: This is how far American Politics has fallen. On the one hand you have the sleazy frat boy Donald Trump, or on the other hand the corrupt and criminal Hilary Clinton. All we can say is: "Cthulhu for President - why settle for a lesser evil."

Update: Three MSM propaganda outlets put out stories of 5 women: NYT, NBC, People. NYT contained the most descriptive reports. But it's looking like NYT might've been trolled (or they're trolling the public all on their own). Jessica Leeds's account just happens to be nearly word-for-word identical to another sexual assault case from two years ago, and a Velvet Underground song. What do our readers think?




Heart - Black

Rape culture: Judge gives man convicted of raping his 12yo daughter probation instead of jail time

Martin Blake
© FacebookMartin Blake was sentenced to probation for raping a 12-year-old girl
Martin Joseph Blake admitting in court to raping his own child. But despite his horrendous crime, he's getting off with probation.

Blake, 40, of Glasgow, Montana, was initially charged with three felony counts of incest for raping his 12-year-old daughter on multiple occasions. He pleaded guilty to one felony incest charge in order to have the other two felonies dismissed.

As part of his guilty plea, Blake was sentenced to 30 years in prison, with all 30 years suspended in place of probation and having to register as a sex offender. Valley County prosecuting attorney Dylan Jensen recommended 100 years in state prison with 75 years suspended as part of a plea agreement, meaning Blake would spend 25 years in prison.

However, in his ruling, Judge John C. McKeon defended the light sentence as "quite restrictive," and said the sentence was appropriate given Blake's support from family, friends, and the community. Under Judge McKeon's sentence, Blake will serve 60 days in jail, with credit for 17 days of time served, meaning he only has to spend 43 days in prison. The kid-gloves treatment Blake received despite the crime is indicative of how embedded rape culture and white privilege is in the American judicial system.

Comment: The judge should be disbarred for giving such a light sentence for such a heinous crime, made even worse that the victim was his own daughter. This man is a danger to society and should be behind bars. He should be spending years behind bars, not days. The poor girl has now been taught that the justice system can't protect her from dangerous criminals. The judge was apparently more concerned with the defendant's future than the victim's. It is sadly a common attitude that many judges take. Until these judges face repercussions for their mockery of the justice system, we will continue to see rapists go free and victims left without any support.


Eye 2

Teen stabbed by masked assailant as 'Killer clown' craze reaches Sweden

creepy killer clown
© Vincent Kessler / Reuters
Swedish police have launched a manhunt after a 19-year-old was stabbed by a man wearing a clown mask south of Goteborg on Thursday night. The attack is thought to be connected with the worldwide 'killer clown' craze tormenting communities this Halloween season.

The attacker, who wore a clown mask, blue jeans and a yellow jacket during the assault in Varberg, in the south west of the country, wounded the teen's shoulder with a sharp object, according to local paper GP.

Although police dog units were dispatched overnight, the attacker still hasn't been found.

Red Flag

Election hysteria: Americans say 2016 election a 'major form of stress'

trump killary
There's good news for Americans who find themselves waking up in a cold sweat at 3 a.m. to check the latest polls: You are not alone.

More than half of you—on both sides of the aisle—say the 2016 election is a major source of stress, according to a new survey from the American Psychological Association. "Historically, work, money, and the economy are the top three," said clinical psychologist Lynn Bufka, part of the APA's Stress in America team, which has been conducting surveys of what freaks us out the most for 10 years. "Now it's right up there."


Comment: People are so stressed that it's actually contributing to headaches and other illnesses.


In addition to the overall pervasiveness of news about the presidential election—non-stop coverage for more than a year now—Bufka cites several potential reasons Americans are more worried this year. To start, there's the tenor of the campaigns, which are arguably more negative and accusatory than any other in modern history. "In general," she said, "humans like harmony." Not a lot of that going around this year.

Snakes in Suits

Head of UK child sex abuse inquiry denies making racist remarks and treating staff with contempt

Lowell Goddard
© Suzanne Plunkett / ReutersNew Zealand high court judge Lowell Goddard
Dame Lowell Goddard has denied saying Britain has so many pedophiles "because it has so many Asian men" and making other racist remarks while she was head of the UK's biggest public inquiry.

According to the Times, Goddard, who is from New Zealand, also voiced shock at the size of the Britain's ethnic minority population and complained of having to travel 50 miles (80km) from London to see a white face.

The newspaper also claims Goddard, who resigned as chairwoman of the Independent Inquiry into Child Sex Abuse in August, treated staff with contempt and often flew into rages, reducing the inquiry's operation to "near paralysis."

She also reportedly claimed not to be part of the establishment, but was overly impressed by "breeding," judged people according to their social status and nursed a deep reverence for the royal family.

Gift

Prison officials try to stop drones from delivering contraband to inmates

drones
© Google
Prison inmates, a remarkably ingenious bunch, are disrupting long-standing methods of smuggling drugs, porn and cellphones the same way online retailers hope to one day deliver socks and underwear to American homes — through the air, with drones.

By coordinating with wingmen on the outside for shipments of contraband, inmates can bypass the need to bribe corrupt guards or persuade family members to hide forbidden items in body ­cavities.

Though nobody is precisely sure just how many drones are landing every day in prisons, the threat is global. Last year, there was a melee at an Ohio prison after a drone dropped heroin into the exercise yard. In April, security cameras at a London prison recorded a drone delivering drugs directly to an inmate's window.