Society's ChildS


Alarm Clock

SOTT Focus: Xenophobic Self-Destruction Or, How the Odyssey and the Old and New Testaments Can Predict Our Future

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Sinkholes and wild fires started by meteorites. Sound familiar? It should.
Weird title, huh? How in the world can "fear of strangers", which is touted by our revered leaders as our best protection, be the cause of self-destruction? And what does it have to do with the Odyssey, the Old and New Testaments?

It's pretty simple, actually.

One of the dominant themes of the Odyssey, which also appears in the Old and New Testaments, is hospitality and knowing how to treat a stranger if you are the host, and knowing how, as a guest, you ought to respond to good or bad hospitality.

Handcuffs

Elderly nun among anti-nuke peace activists sentenced to prison‏

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© AFP Photo / Brendan Smialowski
A US judge has handed down sentences to three peace activists, including an 84-year-old nun, who were convicted of breaking into a Tennessee defense facility where enrichment material for nuclear weapons is held, and staging a protest on federal property.

Sister Megan Rice, 84, Greg Boertje-Obed, 57, and Michael Walli, 63, were found guilty in May of destroying US government property and causing more than $1,000 in damage to federal property in the demonstration.

Comment: The government sure are embarrassed over this one! They'd better hope she doesn't plan on a daring escape from her highly secure jail.


Question

Part of Sixth Avenue shut down due to electrified doorknobs & grates

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© Caroline Vallila
Several blocks of Sixth Avenue in the 20s are currently closed off to drivers and pedestrians due to an electrical malfunction that's sending stray voltage into sidewalk grates and doorknobs of nearby buildings.

Pistol

New Mexico begins training cops to use more deadly force, not less

Colonel Jack
© NM DPSColonel Jack Jones.

New Mexico - All new police cadets will be trained to use more deadly force, thanks to a new curriculum by director of the state's Law Enforcement Academy. That training emphasis will take place in a cadet program that has been shortened by six full weeks.

Jack Jones, a retired Army colonel, was granted sole authority by the LEA over the training curriculum given to all of New Mexico's new recruits. He says the old model was too restrictive with the use of deadly force.

"Evil has come to the state of New Mexico. Evil has come to the Southwest. Evil has come to the United States," Jones said to the Santa Fe New Mexican.

A former instructor named Phillip Gallegos says he was fired by Jones because he refused to teach cadets Jones' controversial philosophy about shooting fleeing vehicles.

"This is the thing - why are you shooting at a car? You should be shooting at the individual that is shooting at you," Gallegos said.

Snakes in Suits

Mortgages: Shoddy paperwork, erroneous fees and wrongful evictions: Complaints by homeowners rise‏

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© Daniel Rosenbaum/New York TimesWanda Darden, at home in Riverdale, Md. Her mortgage has bounced among three loan servicers, leading to increasing mix-ups. “I either get conflicting answers or no answer at all,” she said.
A growing number of homeowners trying to avert foreclosure are confronting problems on a new front as the mortgage industry undergoes a seismic shift.

Shoddy paperwork, erroneous fees and wrongful evictions - the same abuses that dogged the nation's largest banks and led to a $26 billion settlement with federal authorities in 2012 - are now cropping up among the specialty firms that collect mortgage payments, according to dozens of foreclosure lawsuits and interviews with borrowers, federal and state regulators and housing lawyers.

These companies are known as servicers, but they do far more than transfer payments from borrowers to lenders. They have great power in deciding whether homeowners can win a mortgage modification or must hand over their home in a foreclosure.

Comment: Indeed, how much more of this organized pathology can the people take?
Portland, Oregon: Angry residents wave pitchforks, torches in protest of Mayor's crackdown on homelessness
100,000 protest against austerity cuts in North Carolina


Video

Flashback Documentary: The dark side of chocolate


The Dark Side of Chocolate is a 2010 documentary film about the exploitation and slave trading of African children to harvest chocolate still occurring nearly ten years after the cocoa industry pledged to end it.

Synopsis

In 2001, the Chocolate Manufacturers Association formed an action plan entitled the Harkin-Engel Protocol that would aim to end the worse forms of child trafficking and slave labor.However, child trafficking still continued in countries in West Africa. Authorities and companies denied it happened. Due to this conflicting outlook, the filmmakers went undercover to discover the truth. The film starts with its two filmmakers investigating independently by journeying to the western coast of Africa to the country of Mali, the country where children were rumored to be smuggled from and then transported to the Ivory Coast. The team of journalists aimed to investigate human trafficking and child labor in the Ivory Coast and its effects on the worldwide chocolate industry.

Cow Skull

Yellowstone National Park: The bison slaughter begins

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© Kansas City Star
Yellowstone National Park transferred 20 bison to a Montana Indian tribe for slaughter on Wednesday, marking the first such action this winter under a plan to drastically reduce the size of the largest genetically pure bison population in the U.S.

The transfer was first disclosed by the Buffalo Field Campaign, a wildlife advocacy group, and confirmed by park officials.

Five more bison that had been captured were to be turned over to the U.S. Department of Agriculture on Thursday for use in an experimental animal contraception program, said park spokesman Al Nash.

Yellowstone administrators plan to slaughter up to 600 bison this winter if harsh weather conditions inside the 2.2-million-acre park spur a large migration of the animals to lower elevations in Montana. It's part of a multiyear plan to reduce the population from an estimated 4,600 animals to about 3,000, under an agreement between federal and state officials signed in 2000.

Tens of millions of bison once roamed the North American Plains before overhunting drove them to near extinction by the early 1900s. Yellowstone is one of the few places where they survive in the wild.

Question

Strange, snake-like image captured on radar off the Australian coast

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© Bureau of Meteorology via ABC NewsThis radar image shows the “Rottnest Monster,” which was later determined to be the work of a military exercise.
A strange, snake-like image appeared on weather radar in the ocean off the coast of Australia near Rottnest Island Wednesday, baffling meteorologists. Theories as to what could cause such a phenomenon swirled. But now the government is coming forward with an explanation.

Neil Bennett with Australia's Bureau of Meteorology told ABC News he ruled out the S shape being caused by a cloud or rain echo.

"They don't take on S shapes and things like that," he said.

With meteorological causes debunked, some went as far to speculate that it could be a giant sea creature, dubbing it the "Rottnest Monster" or "Rottness Monster," a play off of the Loch Ness monster.

RT @weather_wa: Another #Perth Sighting Of The #RottNessMonster This Arvo: http://t.co/oKnlbf80vXFebruary 12, 2014 10:22am via Tweetbot for iOS ReplyRetweet Favorite@TheWAWGThe WA Weather Group

Our very own Sea Serpent; take that Nessie!!! #RottnessMonster#Rottnesthttp://t.co/2B5ARPfTRGFebruary 12, 2014 2:48am via web ReplyRetweetFavorite@CatholicBeauty_Emily.

#Rottnessmonster - Australia's Loch Ness!February 12, 2014 3:37am via Twitter for Android ReplyRetweetFavorite@floodxlandfloodland

Rainbow

Gay rights in Russia and the former Soviet republics

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© AP
Laws aimed at LGBT community in the former Soviet Union

The sortable table below shows major laws aimed at the LGBT community in the 15 countries that once made up Soviet Union. The five categories are not intended to be comprehensive. Click on the column headers to sort the table.

The Winter Olympic Games in Sochi have brought attention to a recently enacted Russian law banning the distribution of gay "propaganda" to minors. The statute has been widely criticized by Western politicians, Olympic athletes, celebrities and others.

Among the 15 countries that used to comprise the Soviet Union, Russia is not the only state to restrict LGBT speech. Laws restricting "homosexual propaganda" also have been enacted in Lithuania and in parts of Moldova.

A number of former Soviet republics are generally more restrictive of LGBT rights. For instance, in the central Asian nations of Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan, sexual activity between men is banned and punishable by imprisonment. (The law does not address gay women.) And while Russia gives transgendered people the right to change their genders, sex changes are outlawed in six former Soviet republics.

V

Perennial agitators 'Pussy Riot' attacked by Cossacks at Sochi Olympics

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© AFP
The two best known members of Pussy Riot said they clashed with plain clothes police and Cossacks Wednesday when they tried to stage an action in the centre of Winter Olympics host city Sochi.

The scuffles came a day after members Nadezhda Tolokonnikova and Maria Alyokhina were detained by police in Sochi for several hours on Tuesday in connection with a theft case.

Cossacks, clad in their national clothes, are often seen helping the police with their work in the south of Russia in line with a tradition dating back to Tsarist times.

Plain clothed members of the security forces used tear gas in the clashes, Tolokonnikova's husband Pyotr Verzilov wrote on Twitter.

Comment: You've got to wonder, who's funding these unemployed artists' trips to New York, Europe and Sochi?...