Society's Child
The nonprofit group NYC Coalition for Accountably Now wants voters to decide whether New York City's Department of Buildings should investigate the collapse of any building taller than 20 stories dating back to Sept. 11, 2001, reported Crain's New York Business.
The measure does not include the Twin Towers, so only the collapse of 7 World Trade Center would fit the description laid out by activists, who have raised hundreds of thousands of dollars in their campaign to force an investigation.
The group's executive director insists his organization wants only to find out why 7 WTC collapsed and prevent future building collapses.
Tyler Brandt said his boss had been verbally abusive to him since the 16-year-old began working at a Mexican restaurant in Yankton, reported KELO-TV.
"I've been very vulnerable, and I've been allowing him to say things to me that shouldn't be said, and after a while I was just worried about being terminated from my position at Taco John's," the teen said.
The verbal abuse escalated, the teen said, and the manager pulled him into his office and gave Brandt a nametag that read "Gaytard."
"I put it on because I didn't want to upset him, and I felt that if I did do anything to upset him, it would cause me to lose my job because he'd be looking for ways to fire me," Brandt said.
Police told the Chronicle that they received a frantic 911 call around 2:00 p.m. on Tuesday from a woman who was screaming that her baby was dead. When officers arrived at the residence, the woman was outside. She told police that two of her children were dead.
Inside the house, however, officers found three bodies. Police said they removed multiple handguns and rifles from the scene and are conducting ballistics tests to determine which ones were used in the killings.
"I have had a fair amount of experience over my career in attempting to understand and manage risk," said Paulson, alluding to the 2008 financial collapse. "In many ways the climate bubble is actually more cruel and more perverse."

The athletic teenager, Lanna Hamann, died in Mexico on June 14 after drinking a Red Bull while dehydrated.
A healthy Arizona teenage girl mysteriously died after drinking an energy drink while vacationing with friends in Mexico, reports say.
Lanna Hamann, a 16-year-old student at Sunrise Mountain High School in Peoria, was rushed to a Rocky Point hospital on June 14 during a weekend trip with a friend and their parents.
The athletic teen, who played softball, was hanging out on the beach when she went into cardiac arrest and died.
While there are already great tools to help informed voters look into what special interests are impacting local and national politics, such as those by the Sunlight Foundation, the new web browser tool is possibly the easiest way so far to get a glimpse into the often shady underpinnings of corporate contributions.
The plugin automatically highlights the name of any US lawmaker as you browse through the web, and a simple hover produces a popup window with a quick rundown of where that politician's money is coming from.
"In economics, [the mainstream] rely on experts who don't know what they are talking about," explains Professor Steve Keen in this brief but compelling documentary discussing 'when the herd turns'. "Herd behavior is a fundamental aspect of capitalism," Keen chides, but it is left our of conventional economic theory "because they don't believe it;" instead having faith that investors are all "rational individuals" (e.g. willing to pay 112x for OpenTable), which he notes, means "[economists] can't foresee any crisis in the future." The reality is - "we do have herd behavior" and people will follow the herd off a cliff unless they are aware its going to happen. "Contrary to herd wisdom, financial crisis are not unpredictable black swans..."
Serious questions have been raised after two teenagers were left unattended in a courthouse holding cell in Douglas County, Georgia over the weekend. The teens were left with no food or even toilet paper.
The teens, ages 16 and 17, appeared before a judge Friday afternoon, one for a probation violation and the other on a vehicle theft charge, according to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Neither suspect's parents showed up for court, so the two were supposed to be transported back to the Marietta Youth Detention Center, Douglas County Sheriff Phil Miller said during a press conference.
But somehow, that transport never happened.
Instead, the two teenagers were left alone for nearly three days in the courthouse. Their holding cell contained only benches and a window on the door facing the building's basement. There was a bathroom, allowing the teens access to water, but there was no toilet paper.
"As a law enforcement agency that taps itself as a professional agency, I'm as embarrassed today as I can possibly be," Miller said.
Deputies left for the weekend without noticing the teens.
"Nobody that works in security is supposed to leave that building at night without checking the cells, and it's not a hard job to do," Miller added.
The cells have a color-coded light system that alerts deputies when a cell is locked and someone is inside. Security officers should have noticed the red lights on the teenagers' cell.
"We, not following our policy, allowed this to happen and we're wrong," said Miller. "We're going to do everything in my power to correct it."
Deputies discovered the two hungry teens when they returned to work on Monday. They were immediately fed and attended to, Miller said.
The sheriff's department is investigating eight to 10 officers involved in the incident, and Miller said that some may lose their jobs, based on the results of the internal investigation.
It's a story Only On 2.
Amy Johnson spoke to the couple who have tried everything, including legal measures, to get the nanny out.
Johnson was there when the woman was served legal papers in the home in the 1200 block of North Vallejo Way.
The couple, Marcel and Ralph Bracamonte, told Johnson the first couple of months with the nanny "were good," but she soon stopped working and complained of health issues.
At this point, they said they asked the 64-year-old nanny to leave, but Diane Stretton refused to go. They said they served her with legal papers, but they turned out to be the wrong legal papers.
For the time being, officials told the couple the nanny can come and go as she pleases.
Police told Bracamonte there was nothing they could do.
"They told me it was now a civil matter," Bracamonte said, "and I have to [legally] evict her. So this lady is welcome inside my house, anytime she wants, to eat my food anytime she wants and harass me basically. I'm now a victim in my home and it's completely legal."
Just one question, that never seems to get an answer. Why do all these "so called" beneficial trade agreements doom the United States to a permanent balance of trade deficit?













Comment: Paying attention to the devastating effects of climate change and acting to provide a measure of food safety for the populace would be a good plan. Unfortunately these businessmen apparently lack understanding that the world has been cooling for the past 17 years, and that climate change may be of an entirely different order. Considering that this report has been prepared by and for the 1%, it is doubtful that protecting the populace is of any concern at all, protecting profits is more likely their primary concern. People worldwide are already experiencing the effects of soaring food prices.
Fire and Ice: The Day After Tomorrow
Rising food prices - not just your imagination
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Food prices in U.S. to skyrocket in 2014
Global food system vulnerable due to growing population and climate change