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Fri, 05 Nov 2021
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New Jersey hit-and-run suspect had her license suspended 52 times

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New Jersey police said the suspect in a hit-and-run incident over the weekend has had 52 driver's license suspensions and 16 moving violations since getting her license in 1986.

WCAU-TV reported on Monday that authorities arrested 44-year-old Michele Toussaint in connection with the incident that hospitalized Catherine Calalang, 28, and her 20-year-old cousin, Laurene Jiminez.

Toussaint is accused of driving on a suspended license when she hit the two women on Saturday.

Health

Driving under the influence of NyQuil banned in New Hampshire

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If a cold has you feeling woozy and you take NyQuil or Sundafed to make it through your drive home, you could be a criminal in New Hampshire.

A new law that took effect at the beginning of 2013 bans driving under the influence of not just illegal drugs, alcohol and prescription painkillers, but all over-the-counter drugs as well, along with "any other chemical substance, natural or synthetic, which impairs a person's ability to drive."

That means driving on Sudafed or NyQuil or even ibuprofen is out of the question if it affects your mental state, according to The Eagle-Tribune.

Pirates

Unionist riots in Short Strand, Belfast - history repeating itself

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Thugs
As so often has been the case in the past, when unionism in the Six Counties finds itself facing any form of internal turmoil, it inevitably strikes out at what can be perceived, in unionist eyes at least, as a common enemy.

Those unfortunate enough to be on the receiving end of such reactionary violence are, more often than not, nationalists living in isolated and vulnerable communities.

Saturday (January 12) was the latest manifestation of this unpalatable reality when up to 1,000 unionists, allegedly engaged in a 'peaceful' protest connected with the ongoing controversy over the flying of the British flag, launched yet another orchestrated physical assault against residents and homes in the Short Strand area of Belfast.

Those who live in more sophisticated societies will not readily appreciate the fear and the terror which these organised sectarian forays engender in such a vulnerable, minority community.

Heart

Remembering Internet prodigy and activist Aaron Swartz (1986-2013): Your life is an inspiration

Aaron Swartz
© The Guardian
Aaron Swartz (1986-2013)
It takes a person like Aaron Swartz to remind you how little you are actually doing to bring forth social, political and economic justice in this increasingly insane and sick world. I'm not exaggerating when I say his life was an inspiration. At 14 years old he helped start the RSS feed system, which so many now use to read content online. He also co-founded Reddit, and its sale to Conde Nast is what afforded him the resources to dedicate his life to the defense of a free and open internet. His most remarkable success in this regard was the creation of the organization Demand Progress, which was instrumental in defeating the internet censorship bill know as SOPA (the Stop Online Piracy Act).

He ran afoul of the law due to his actions in the fall of 2010 when he downloaded millions of academic journal articles from the nonprofit online database JSTOR. While JSTOR could have pursued charges against Aaron for his activities, they decided against it. However, our Federal Government was not so kind. They decided to make an example of Aaron and charged him with multiple felonies. Charges that carried up to 35 years in prison and $1 million in fines. Aaron was found dead in his Brooklyn apartment this past Friday, in an apparent suicide.

If you had asked me about Aaron Swartz three days ago I could have told you none of the above. This is despite the fact that I now spend pretty much all of my time trying to read through news and understand the true nature of the world around me. Even more pathetically, it is despite the fact that a close friend of mine had met Aaron this past summer and was trying to coordinate a time for us all to meet. Sadly, we never connected.

As part of my tribute to Aaron, I will commit myself even more fully to the cause of freedom in America. I spent the last 12 hours reading about him and I have compiled some of the most interesting excerpts from various sources below. Please take the time.

Stock Down

The myth of human progress

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© Mr. Fish
Clive Hamilton in his "Requiem for a Species: Why We Resist the Truth About Climate Change" describes a dark relief that comes from accepting that "catastrophic climate change is virtually certain." This obliteration of "false hopes," he says, requires an intellectual knowledge and an emotional knowledge. The first is attainable. The second, because it means that those we love, including our children, are almost certainly doomed to insecurity, misery and suffering within a few decades, if not a few years, is much harder to acquire. To emotionally accept impending disaster, to attain the gut-level understanding that the power elite will not respond rationally to the devastation of the ecosystem, is as difficult to accept as our own mortality. The most daunting existential struggle of our time is to ingest this awful truth - intellectually and emotionally - and continue to resist the forces that are destroying us.

The human species, led by white Europeans and Euro-Americans, has been on a 500-year-long planetwide rampage of conquering, plundering, looting, exploiting and polluting the Earth - as well as killing the indigenous communities that stood in the way. But the game is up. The technical and scientific forces that created a life of unparalleled luxury - as well as unrivaled military and economic power - for the industrial elites are the forces that now doom us. The mania for ceaseless economic expansion and exploitation has become a curse, a death sentence. But even as our economic and environmental systems unravel, after the hottest year in the contiguous 48 states since record keeping began 107 years ago, we lack the emotional and intellectual creativity to shut down the engine of global capitalism. We have bound ourselves to a doomsday machine that grinds forward, as the draft report of the National Climate Assessment and Development Advisory Committee illustrates.

Comment: While excellent points are made in this article, it's important to realise that 'climate change' is not a man-made development in the narrative created for us by elites who couldn't care less for the planet, much less other people. The equation - humans + CO2 = climate change - misses the bigger point that we influence both the terrestrial environment and the broader cosmic environment by our individual and collective actions. Stay tuned for an announcement of the release of a new book by author and amateur historian Laura Knight-Jadczyk's - Horns of Moses - in which she shows that past civilizations rose and fell in tandem with periodic cataclysm, and that past efforts to cope with exactly the kinds of crises we find ourselves mired in as a species today involved desperately contrived rituals to appease the storm gods (i.e. comets) in an effort to purify or in some way arrest the moral decay of society. Needless to say, the efforts of elites in the past were futile because the rot begins long before the arrival of catastrophic intervention by the 'gods'.


Attention

Food prices 'going up' across the US due to natural climate change

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Will Black Fridays become black everydays as food prices continue to climb?
The severe drought that swept through much of the U.S. last year is continuing into 2013, threatening to cripple economic growth while forcing consumers to pay higher food prices.

"The drought will have a significant impact on prices, especially beef, pork and chicken," said Ernie Gross, an economic professor at Creighton University and who studies farming issues.

"Forecasts are for a four percent (price) increase in food this year, but I think that's on the low side if the drought continues," Gross said. "Food prices will likely be going up much more than the forecast."

Lack of rain and extremely warm temperatures - thought to be from global warming as well as natural climate changes - are blamed for the drought.

Last year's severe weather put nearly 80 percent of the continental United States in drought conditions - the worst in 50 years. Particularly hard it areas include the Midwest states of Illinois, Iowa, Minnesota, Nebraska, Kansas, as well as Oklahoma, Texas, Arkansas and many parts of Colorado and California.

House

Insiders reveal deep flaws with foreclosure review project

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© Credit: Wikimedia
Reports from insiders say system to find justice for burned homeowners was "a facade".

Last week Salon reported that 10 major banks, including Bank of America, Wells Fargo and JPMorgan Chase, agreed to pay a settlement of $3.3 billion in cash to 3.8 million mortgage borrowers who were foreclosed upon in 2009 or 2010. The settlement came after the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) and the Federal Reserve Board closed down a vast project of independent reviews aimed to correctly determine how homeowners were burned and how much compensation they should receive.

The independent auditing project was deemed too costly, so instead - to the dismay of a number of commentators and homeowner advocates - the mortgage companies themselves will determine distribution of the $3.3 billion settlement sum. "It is just incomprehensible to me that they could not find a third party that has the wherewithal and independence to fairly determine what the damage is to homeowners," John Taylor, president of the National Community Reinvestment Coalition, said when the settlement was announced.

Handcuffs

California boy found responsible for murder of neo-Nazi father at age 10

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© Photograph: Sandy Huffaker/AP
Jeff Hall, holds a neo-Nazi flag at Sycamore Highlands Park near his home in Riverside, California, in 2010.
Judge finds boy, now 12, accountable for second-degree murder after trial that centred on child's grasp of right and wrong.

A California judge found Monday that a boy was responsible for the second-degree murder of his white supremacist father when the defendant was just 10.

Prosecutors had argued at trial that the boy, now 12, knew what he was doing when he shot 32-year-old Jeff Hall - a regional leader of the National Socialist Movement - and the slaying was premeditated.

Defense attorney Matthew Hardy countered that his client grew up in an abusive and violent environment and learned it was acceptable to kill people who were a threat. Hardy contended the boy thought if he shot his dad, the violence would end.

The boy, who is not being identified by the Associated Press because of his age, did not testify at the trial.

Sheriff

Kentucky Sheriff to feds: "You are never going to pull guns out of Jackson County"

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}As I wrote on Jan. 11, Jackson County Kentucky Sheriff Denny Peyman has made it clear that gun laws which violate the United States Constitution or the Kentucky Constitution will not be enforced in his county.

On Jan. 12, he followed this up with a press conference in which he explained that a Sheriff's powers are predominant over the powers of federal and state agents. When he says these things he drives gun-grabbers batty because he says them with the conviction that rests on knowledge, and he has no intention of backing down.

Comment: While the Kentucky sheriff may feel like he can stand his ground against the Feds, the fact is that no matter what laws he feels are on his side, if the government wants to take their guns away there is very little that any sheriff can do about it.


Display

Anonymous hacks MIT in honor of info activist Aaron Swartz

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© Reuters / Noah Berger
Aaron Swartz
Members of the hacktivist movement Anonymous gained access to MIT's website over the weekend and published a statement celebrating recently deceased info activist Aaron Swartz while attacking the justice system that stood to imprison him for decades.

Swartz, who co-founded both the website Reddit and the activism organization Demand Progress, passed away Friday of a reported suicide. And while he openly discussed his bouts with depression in the past, Swartz' parents and advocates alike have suggested that a serious legal fight that has dominated the activist's life in recent years played a role in his passing.

The 26-year-old Harvard fellow was slated to appear in federal court during the coming weeks because the United States says he illegally download millions of academic papers from the website JSTOR, presumably for public distribution, while logged onto the computer network of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. David Segal, the executive director of Demand Progress, originally equated it to "checking too many books out of the library." If convicted, however, Swartz could have been sentenced to upwards of 35 years in prison.

In a statement published shortly after his death, the family of the activist said, "Aaron's death is not simply a personal tragedy. It is the product of a criminal justice system rife with intimidation and prosecutorial overreach. Decisions made by officials in the Massachusetts US Attorney's office and at MIT contributed to his death."