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Mon, 08 Nov 2021
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Turkey to drop Darwin's 'controversial & redundant' theory of evolution from schoolbooks

Charles Darwin
© Wikipedia
Charles Darwin
Turkey is set to drop the "controversial" theory of evolution from the high school curriculum to better reflect local and national values, making it the second predominantly Muslim country after Saudi Arabia to not teach students Darwin's theory.

Educators in Turkey argue that Charles Darwin's theory is too complex for teenagers to understand and that they should wait until they enter college to be able to comprehend and discuss secular scientific discourse. Starting from the 2019 school year, biology textbooks will, therefore, ditch a national curriculum chapter about the concept.
"We have excluded controversial subjects for students at an age unable yet to understand the issues' scientific background. As the students at ninth grade are not endowed with antecedents to discuss the 'Origin of Life and Evolution' section in biology classes, this section will be delayed until undergraduate study," head of the Education Ministry's curriculum board, Alpaslan Durmus revealed this week, according to Hurriyet Daily.

Candle

French journalist Veronique Robert dies after landmine blast in ISIS-besieged Mosul

French journalist
A journalist who was injured in an explosion while covering Islamic State atrocities in Mosul has succumbed to her wounds, her employers, France Televisions, report. The same landmine blast killed two of her colleagues.
"It's with great sadness, we announce... the death of journalist Veronique Robert who succumbed to her wounds after an explosion in Mosul, Iraq," public national television broadcaster France Televisions‏ said in a statement on Saturday. Robert, 54, was a Swiss-born reporter, working for French media.
Earlier in June, the journalist and her colleagues were accompanying Iraqi special forces in Mosul, where Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS/ISIL) has set numerous booby traps.

The journalists were working for #5 Bis Productions company filming the program Envoye Special for France 2 TV channel.

Comment: See also: Iraqi troops storm west Mosul's ISIS-held Old City where an estimated 150,000 civilians are trapped


Eye 2

Google ends Gmail snooping, has all the personalized data to gain advertising edge

Google
© Lucy Nicholson / Reuters
Google has unexpectedly announced that it will no longer read Gmail users' messages to gain an advertising edge. And it appears the internet giant's sudden change of heart may have been motivated by plans to better serve their most important clients.

Google is referring people to its paid business email model, titled 'G Suite,' as a reference point for how Gmail will provide ads to its users from now on.

"This decision brings Gmail ads in line with how we personalize ads for other google products," Google's Senior VP for Google Cloud, Diane Greene, said in a blog post Friday.

Google says there will still be ads provided, but not from the content of the user's email account if they switch it off in their personal settings, according to a blog post on Google's website.

Heart - Black

Seattle police spokesman discusses the tragedy of the Charleena Lyles murder...while playing a first-person shooting game

Officer Sean Whitcomb
© Mike Siegel/The Seattle Times
Officer Sean Whitcomb is a Seattle Police Department spokesman.
A video showing Seattle police Officer Sean Whitcomb talking about the fatal police shooting of Charleena Lyles — while he was playing a video game — has been removed from the department's Twitch and YouTube accounts.


The video, first posted Thursday, was part of a weekly outreach effort by the Seattle Police Department called "Fuzzfeed206," in which as many as three department public-information officers play the multiplayer, first-person shooter game "Destiny" and talk about police-related issues.

The episode garnered some criticism on social media after it was posted, but Whitcomb declined to comment Friday about the video or why it was removed.

Whitcomb told the website GeekWire that in wake of the criticism he was ending the use of Twitch for community outreach.

"We're certainly listening and hearing what people have said on other social platforms about this feed," Whitcomb told GeekWire. "So that is one reason why we are suspending it. Any good that can come of this would be neutralized by any additional pain it might cause."

Question

'When someone tells me my son is dead, I believe them': Coroner's mistake causes family to bury the wrong person

Frank Kerrigan

Frank Kerrigan holds onto a a funeral card for his son, Frank. In May the Orange County Sheriff-Coroner’s Office claimed his son Frank had died and was buried.
"Your son is alive."

Frank J. Kerrigan, 82, couldn't believe what he was hearing. It was May 23, at night, and he clutched the phone at his home in Wildomar.

On the line was Bill Shinker, a long-time family friend. Shinker also had been a pall bearer, just 11 days earlier, at the funeral of Kerrigan's son, Frank M. Kerrigan.

Only now it seemed that the younger Frank, who was standing on the patio of Shinker's former home in Stanton, had risen from the grave.

"Bill put my son on the phone," Kerrigan recalled. "He said 'Hi Dad'."

War Whore

15 cops injured as mob of 150 people goes on rampage in Magdeburg, Germany overnight

German cops
© Fabrizio Bensch
A mob of about 150 people, some "rather drunk and aggressive young people," went on a rampage in the city of Magdeburg in eastern Germany. The crowd threw bottles and stones in "a massive and targeted attack" that injured fifteen officers, local police said.

The rampage began on Friday night at around 2:00am local time, state police of Saxony-Anhalt said in a statement.

Police officers who arrived at Magdeburg's Hasselbach Square were bullied, offended, and threatened by a mob of 150 people, who began throwing stones and bottles at the reinforcements.

Handcuffs

Federal agents arrest Staten Island doctor for running opioid pill mill

David Taylor Staten Island pill mill
Federal agents and police officers arrested Dr. David Taylor, 74, and two others for allegedly running a pill mill on Hylan Boulevard on Staten Island. The doctor diverted 4 million pills with a street value of $40 million to Staten Islanders, according to authorities.

The pain management specialist allegedly took money and goods, including single malt whiskey, for the prescriptions. The Feds said the doctor would write scripts for oxycodone and Xanax without an examination, MRIs, or medical records.

DEA Special Agent in Charge James J. Hunt said: "It is alleged that millions of dollars' worth of pain medication was diverted onto the streets of Staten Island, enabling addiction and overdoses on the borough. These arrests will impact Staten Island's opioid market by shutting down an illicit pill distribution operation located at the heart of the borough."

Bullseye

Threatened, stalked and assaulted: 30 GOP Congressmen have been targeted since May

Steve Scalise
© AP
House Majority Whip Steve Scalise (R., La.)
A total of 30 Republican members of Congress have either been attacked or revealed that they were the victim of a death threat since the beginning of May.

May 8: Wendi Wright, 35, was arrested after stalking Rep. David Kustoff (Tenn.) and trying to run him off the road. After pulling over, Wright "began to scream and strike the windows on Kustoff's car and even reached inside the vehicle."

May 9: Virginia Rep. Tom Garrett needed heavy security at a town hall after receiving a series of death threats in May that police "deemed to be credible and real."

"This is how we're going to kill your wife," one message said. Others detailed how they would kill his children, and even his dog.

May 12: A town hall participant accosted North Dakota Rep. Kevin Cramer, shoving fake dollar bills into his suit jacket. A Kramer supporter grabbed the same man by the neck. Both men were ejected by law enforcement, but neither were charged.

Handcuffs

Prison labor industry: Why the US cannot reduce its reliance on mass incarceration

Prison labor
© Buycott
The Federal Prison Industries (FPI) under the brand UNICORE operates approximately 52 factories (prisons) across the United States. Prisoners manufacture or assemble a number of products for the US military, homeland security, and federal agencies according to the UNICORE/FPI website. They produce furniture, clothing and circuit boards in addition to providing computer aided design services and call center support for private companies.

UNICORE/FPI makes its pitch for employing call center support personnel to firms thinking about off-shoring their call center functions. The logic is that, hey!, they may be prisoners, but it's keeping the jobs in the USA that matters. Fair enough. That approach cuts out the middleman though, those Americans desperate for any kind of work but, through no fault of their own, are not behind prison bars and employable by UNICORE/FPI.

Sure, it seems a heartless statement and there are any number of angles to take on why the USA is the world's number one incarcerator: Capitalism, racism, social and political injustice, a pay-as-you-go legal system, bone-headed policy makers, prison lobbyists, the death penalty, employment/unemployment, drugs, gangs, costs/prices and a host of behavioral, psychological and environmental issues that I have missed.

Inevitably the black hole that is money eventually sucks in and corrupts everyone from those in local communities desperate for the work a prison facility provides to those investors who profit from the prison industry. They earn their livelihoods and take their profits from the misery and labor squeezed from their human property — those prisoners who self-destructed and others who are serving terms way too long for the crime committed.

Comment: 'Made in the USA': Companies are making a killing by using prison labor


Cell Phone

Man's video of police attack saves him in court

police chokehold
Justice has finally prevailed for a San Diego man who was charged with multiple crimes after he was viciously attacked by a plainclothes cop in an apparent fit of road rage. Refusing to admit to doing anything wrong for the incident that took place in May of 2015, Robert Branch took his case to court and was found not guilty on all counts.

Branch, 27, faced felony and misdemeanor charges including resisting an officer by force, attempting to spray the detective with pepper spray and failing to provide his driver's license and registration.

At 9 am Friday morning, the jury read the verdict as Branch became visibly relieved.
"It's been a journey for me, I've been going through so much," he told reporters. "I can still feel my heart pounding."
As the San Diego Tribune reports, Branch thanked the jury and his lawyer Marc Kohnen, adding that he planned to go home and hug his 1-year-old daughter.