Society's Child
"We are looking into the circumstances surrounding the death of this child," said Brooklyn DA spokesman Jerry Schmetterer.
The unidentified infant died Sept. 28, 2011, at Maimonides Hospital, according to a spokeswoman for the city Medical Examiner, who confirmed the death after a News inquiry.
The cause of death was listed as "disseminated herpes simplex virus Type 1, complicating ritual circumcision with oral suction."
Mayor Bloomberg Tuesday defended that finding.
"The doctors who found this are objective and independent scientists who don't answer to anyone, including whoever is Mayor," he told reporters at an unrelated event in The Bronx.
Just when you thought the inter-generational tyranny couldn't possibly deteriorate further, here is a piece that'll make you feel simultaneously ill, depressed and outraged.
Blankfein walks around professing to be doing God's work. I never thought God's work was a negative externality that subjected teens to predators in exchange for shelter.
Amazing how the innocent third parties were decimated by a handful of psychopaths so they can jet around in Gulfstream V's with gold faucets. (Hat tip Sax over at Chris Martenson's)
Anne Stattelman, Director of Posada, says that the numbers are indicative of Pueblo County's high poverty rate, reportedly one of the highest in the state. According to the 2010 Census, the county has the highest child poverty rates in the state, an alarming 31 percent.
Stattelman says over they years the rate of ten percent for students reporting they were homeless sometime during the school year, has been fairly consistent. Where she becomes even more concerned is the number of those who do not have a family is growing.
Stattelman says many teens turn to unsafe adults who provide shelter or basic needs in return for favors, including sexual favors.

View from a hidden camera shows volunteers for a clinical drug trial in a waiting room of one of the companies that conducts the studies.
When Indian firms working for pharmaceutical companies need test subjects, they often turn to Nadia, who has carved a small niche for himself as a recruiter in the international drug-testing industry.
"Companies call me or send me text messages," he told Dateline NBC correspondent Chris Hansen.
Self-confident and well-groomed with gelled hair and tight-fitting designer jeans, Nadia said he is paid about $12 for every recruit he brings to the three Indian research labs with whom he works. In a region of western Indian where the average worker earns 50 cents a day, that's good money.
"I don't feel guilty," Nadia said. "I believe conducting these studies is a humanitarian effort. So many people benefit from (the) advancement of medicine."
Drug trial outsourcing to foreign countries is rapidly becoming an attractive alternative for U.S. pharmaceutical companies looking to save millions of dollars, avoid regulatory scrutiny and tap into a seemingly endless supply of drug study participants.
But a year-long Dateline investigation into one of the preferred destinations for overseas drug trials, India, raises questions about lax regulatory oversight in these studies, the integrity of some of the companies contracted to run them and the reliability of the data they produce.
The Cleveland Plain Dealer called the race for Kaptur near midnight. With 84 percent of precincts reporting, Kaptur led Kucinich 60 percent to 36 percent.
Kaptur and Kucinich were drawn into the same district after slow population growth forced Ohio to contract two seats in congressional redistricting last year. Kucinich ran strong in his Cuyahoga County base outside Cleveland, but Kaptur more than made up the difference around her home in Toledo and the sliver of territory between the two cities that was new to both representatives.
Kaptur's victory puts her in pole position for the top Democratic slot on the powerful House Appropriations Committee next year. She is the second-ranking Democrat on the committee now, but ranking member Norm Dicks, D-Wash., announced last week that he will retire at the end of this Congress.
The result will also end Kucinich's eight-term career in Congress. First elected in 1998, Kucinich used his time in the House to advocate liberal causes, often pushing the Democratic Party from the left on issues like health care reform and the Iraq War. But Kaptur's campaign used Kucinich's reputation as a liberal crusader against him in their merged seat race, repeating that Kucinich was a "show horse" while Kaptur more consistently brought federal money home to the district. For more, go to Hotline On Call.
The Dow Jones industrial average fell 204 points, marking the worst day of the year for the blue-chip index and the first decline of more than 200 points since Nov. 22.
The CBOE Volatility Index, Wall Street's "anxiety gauge," jumped above its 50-day average for the first time since November. A dozen stocks fell for every issue that rose on the New York Stock Exchange, with bank and mining shares among the top decliners.
Equities' recent gains have been supported in part by expectations that Europe's credit crisis will be contained and China's economy will avoid a hard landing. Recent data seem to undermine these assumptions, at least in part.
"It's one of those days when we are seeing bits of negative news come into one, all at the same time," said Randy Frederick, director of trading and derivatives at the Schwab Center for Financial Research.
The lawsuit, filed Tuesday in U.S. District Court in Washington, accuses the military of having a "high tolerance for sexual predators in their ranks" and fostering a hostile environment that discourages victims of sexual assault from coming forward and punishes them when they do. The suit claims the Defense Department has failed to take aggressive steps to confront the problem despite public statements suggesting otherwise.
The eight women include an active-duty enlisted Marine and seven others who served in the Navy and Marine Corps. Seven women allege that a comrade raped or tried to sexually assault them, including in a commanding officer's office after a pub crawl in Washington and inside a Naval Air Station barracks room in Florida. The eighth says she was harassed and threatened while deployed to Iraq, only to be told by a superior that "this happens all the time."
"There (are) no circumstances under which women who are brave enough and patriotic enough to stand up and defend this nation should have to be subjected to being called 'slut, whore, walking mattress,'" said Susan Burke, a lawyer representing the women. "This is the year 2012. This kind of conduct is not acceptable."
Two senior journalists working for Rupert Murdoch's News International have apparently attempted suicide as pressure mounts at the scandal-hit publisher of the now-defunct News of the World.
Three sources close to the company told Reuters on Tuesday the two journalists at the Sun daily appeared to have tried to take their own lives. Investigations sparked by a phone-hacking scandal continue to expose dubious practices by present and past employees.
Eleven current and former staff of the Sun, Britain's best-selling daily tabloid, have been arrested this year on suspicion of bribing police or civil servants for tip-offs.
Speaking to Philidelphia Daily News on Monday, attorney Max Kennerly with The Beasley Firm said, "His statements implied facts about somebody's sex life, that she was promiscuous and trading sex for money." Kennerly added that Limbaugh's "false statements of fact" could lead to his downfall and financial penalties for Clear Channel Communications, which broadcasts his show.
Update: Kennerly has also published an essay explaining his rationale for advocating a slander suit against Limbaugh. Read it here.
The directives put forth in S.B. 507 would see the state board creating educational materials that condemn "nonmarital parenthood." Associated third party groups that receive state grants would also be required to include that message in their own literature.
Those materials, along with pamphlets issued by third party groups that receive state grants, would also be required to "emphasize the role of fathers" in safeguarding a child's well being.
The requirement is a bit startling, especially to single parents who ended their marriage to prevent child abuse or neglect. And that's not a small group of people either: 31 percent of Wisconsin parents are single, according to the Annie E. Casey Foundation.
The bill's author, state Sen. Glenn Grothman (R), did not respond to a request for comment.
(H/T: RH Reality Check)

A freezer full of plant tissue cultures in petri dishes, at Monsanto, will soon spawn a new generation of plants genetically altered to resist certain pests in this 1996 file photo.
Many companies in the food and biotechnology industry, including Creve Coeur-based Monsanto Co., want to keep it that way. But they'll have to fend off a growing push for labels on genetically modified products that's gaining traction in Washington and state capitals.
At least 18 states are now considering laws that would make the labels mandatory, including Illinois and California, the country's biggest market. Earlier this year, pro-labeling advocates marched from New York to Washington. Late last fall, about 500 groups, including some of the country's biggest consumer organizations, banded together as the Just Label It campaign. Also last fall, the Washington-based Center for Food Safety filed a petition with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, calling for the agency to require labels. As of this week, the petition had 850,000 signatures of support, the most ever for a federal food petition.










Comment: They bastardize a decent, thinking human being with Liberal, Left wing.. this is a tragedy.