Society's ChildS


Nuke

Japan's 'hottest' export this year, radioactive cars, keep turning up in Central Asia

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© David McKelvey
A total of 70 used cars imported from Japan and found to have increased levels of radiation are being stored in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan, and cannot be sent back, according to Silk Road Reporters citing local news outlets. Car retailers in Kyrgyzstan, who have been importing significant numbers of used cars from Japan for resale in the country, have been finding cars that exhibit levels of radiation above normal. Several batches of cars have been seized by the government during the last three years and have at times been sent back to Japan through an agreement with the Japanese government. However, irradiated cars keep turning up in Bishkek, the capital, and not all of them are being detected in a timely manner.

"These cars cannot be dispatched back. Neither China nor Japan will accept them. For this reason, we have to keep them here and deal with their further disposal," Tolo Isakov, director of the Disease Prevention Department in Bishkek, told the AKIpress news outlet, according to Silk Road Reporters.

Question

Japanese cucumber glows in the dark, sparks concern from internet

Glowing Pickle
© imgurKGTBaTE
One netizen in Japan created quite a pickle recently, after posting these photos online in an internet chat forum. The accompanying thread, titled "the pickled cucumbers my mum made are glowing in the dark", caught the attention of hundreds of users, who began discussing possible causes for the mysterious luminescence. Speculation ranged from light-hearted banter, questioning whether the dawn of cognitive vegetables had finally arrived, to more serious concerns about radiation. What do you think caused the unique phenomenon?

A look at reader reactions unearthed some gems, including:
"This is simply the sign of a good pickle. It's a well-known fact that good quality pickles glow in the dark."

"LED cucumbers!"

"Could it be a result of pesticides?"

"Looks like you've discovered STAP cells!"

"These are some awesome quantum pickles."

"Beware! RADIATION!"

"Do your mum and dad glow in the dark too? (Ouch!)"
The glow was evident in both light and dark environments

Handcuffs

Mother of two facing 11.5 years in prison for honest mistake

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© ChasingNJShaneen Allen is now facing a decade of jail time for admitting she had her gun with her during a routine traffic stop
Chasing New Jersey first brought you the story of Shaneen Allen, the single mother from Philadelphia who didn't know it was illegal to bring the gun she was legally licensed to carry in Philly into New Jersey. When she got pulled over for a minor traffic offense she told the police about the gun and was arrested facing a mandatory three-year sentence.

After hearing about the case, most people thought there's no way she would do time for an honest mistake. Well, yesterday she was in court and she can now face a maximum sentence of 11.5 years in prison. Ten years for possession of a weapon and another 18 months for possession of the bullets.

Allen's attorney Evan Nappen discussed how a person with no prior offenses could end up spending a decade behind bars for being honest.

"New Jersey's gun law is as unforgiving as a prosecutor or judge wants to make it. Either of those two, the judge or the prosecutor could have taken steps to relieve Shaneen from this situation, but it didn't happen," he said.

Heart

Robin Williams commits suicide according to Marin County Sheriff's office

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Comedic actor Robin Williams died at his Northern California home Monday, law enforcement officials said. Williams was 63.

Coroner investigators suspect "the death to be a suicide due to asphyxia," according to a statement from the Marin County, California, Sheriff's office.

"Robin Williams passed away this morning," his media representative Mara Buxbaum told CNN.

"He has been battling severe depression of late. This is a tragic and sudden loss. The family respectfully asks for their privacy as they grieve during this very difficult time."

Camera

International journalist organizations urge release of Russian photographer abducted in Ukraine

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© RIA NovostiRossiya Segodnya special photojournalist Andrei Stenin. Photo by Damir Bulatov. Archive photo.
The International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) and the European Federation of Journalists (EFJ) voiced concern over the safety of Russian photographer Andrey Stenin, who has been missing for almost a week after reportedly being detained in E. Ukraine.

"We join our Russian affiliate, the Russian Union of Journalists (RUJ), to express our serious concern for the well-being of our colleague Andrei Stenin," said IFJ President Jim Boumelha, according to the organization's statement.

"If he has been detained in Ukraine then we appeal for whoever is holding him to release him immediately. He is a journalist, not a soldier, and as such is entitled to move freely and report the truth without the threat of intimidation, violence or detention," Bourmelha stressed.

Stenin, an experienced war photo-correspondent and employee of major news agency Rossiya Segodnya (Ria Novosti), was declared missing almost a week ago. Stenin was in the country working on a photo assignment.

The journalist is believed to have been with self-defense forces before he disappeared. An anonymous source in Donetsk told Ria Novosti that Stenin had been abducted by Ukrainian security forces.

Attention

Kiev forces bomb the Ukrainian city of Lugansk into ruins: No electricity, water, or communications

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© AFP PhotoA woman cooks over a campfire due to gas cuts in her building on August 3, 2014 in eastern Ukrainian city of Popasna, Lugansk region
250,000 people have been left without water, electricity and communications for over a week in the eastern Ukrainian city of Lugansk. The town is subject to siege conditions and under heavy bombardment.

"We're being bombed so severely, there's hardly anything left to bomb. People are running out of money. How are we supposed to survive in this heat? What if some sort of epidemic breaks out? What should we do?" local woman Nadezhda Essaulinka exclaimed, emotionally.

The local administration says that "pension, salaries, and social benefits haven't been paid. Some employees haven't received their salaries for a month - others for over two-and-a-half months."

Most of the shops in the city are closed, and produce is sold in the streets.

No deliveries of food, medical supplies, or fuel have been reported, according to the Itar-Tass news agency.

Phones are down all over the city and the locations that still have it are sometimes marked with "Shelling zone" signs, RT's Maria Finoshina said.

A city resident blamed Kiev for what is happening to them.

"We used to have food and water. But now Kiev has completely destroyed our city. There's no water and electricity now, there's nothing," Lidia Ostroverkhova told RT.

Roses

7 Year old boy survives shark attack in Lake Pontchartrain, LA

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© WAFB-TV
It was to be a day of sailing and on New Orleans' Lake Pontchartrain.

But after Shelly Trentacosta and her family ventured out to the middle of the lake with a friend's sailboat Friday, the calm conditions - along with the clear water - made it even better for swimming, NOLA.com noted.

So the anchor went down and the family jumped in, the paper said.

Trentacosta's 7-year-old son, Trent, was enjoying himself along with everybody else - until the screaming started.

"The kids were bunched up together playing, and Trent just started screaming," his mother told NOLA. "We started swimming to him, and I didn't know what was going on. I grabbed his leg, and there was a lot of blood."

Trentacosta got her boy back into the boat but couldn't tell exactly what happened as his foot was covered with blood, the paper noted.

But once she got Trent to a doctor, NOLA noted they got the surprising news - he was bitten by a shark. His cleaned-up foot revealed the bite marks on his heel and big toe.

Che Guevara

Hacktivists target Ferguson, Missouri after police kill unarmed teenager

anonymous
© AFP Photo / Jose Cabezas
Hacktivists have set their sights on the town of Ferguson, Missouri after police there on Saturday shot and killed an unarmed man, 18-year-old Michael Brown, elevating a wave of protests that have occurred in the days since to the digital realm.

Demonstrations and vigils across the St. Louis, MO suburb have taken place ever since Saturday afternoon's incident in which Brown was shot eight times by a Ferguson cop after an altercation allegedly occurred between the two, reportedly just days before the victim was expected to begin college. By Sunday, however, peaceful protests aimed at raising awareness of the shooting death began to turn violent in the city of barely 20,000, and local law enforcement responded to reports of riots and looting by deploying SWAT teams and heavily weaponized police.

Comment: The US has turned into a police state where cops have become so maliciously violent that anyone can be killed for little to no reason, and generally there are no repercussions for their outrageous behavior.

Missouri teen murdered by police for not walking on the sidewalk - protest ensues
Why have police in America turned into such ruthless thugs?
Top 10 astonishing U.S. police brutality videos caught on surveillance cameras
Human rights activist and international lawyer: U.S. police agencies use same brutal tactics that Israeli police use in Gaza


Handcuffs

American held without bail after tweeting support for Islamic State

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© ReutersCustomers wait in line at the Terminal at JFK airport in New York
An American accused of conspiring to aid the militant group Islamic State was ordered by a New York judge to be held without bail after he was arrested at John F. Kennedy International Airport earlier this month, according to the New York Daily News.

Donald Ray Morgan was arrested by FBI agents on August 2 at Kennedy Airport when he returned to the United States following an eight-month stay in Lebanon where his wife lives, the Daily News reported.

Morgan was allegedly attempting to broker deals for military-style weapons and ammunition in his home state of North Carolina. He was indicted for possessing a firearm as a felon since he has a previous conviction in North Carolina for firing a gun.

Yet officials also cited concern over his aggressive rants on Twitter under the name "Abu Omar Al Amreeki" during his time in the Middle East.

At a bail hearing last week, assistant Brooklyn US Attorney Nadia Moore painted Morgan as too dangerous to return to North Carolina.

"It's possible that he traffics in guns to people in this organization (Islamic State)," Moore said in Brooklyn Federal Court before Magistrate Ramon Reyes. Islamic State is also known as ISIS, or Islamic State in Iraq and Syria.

Stock Up

Despite sanctions, Russia's GDP increased in second quarter of 2014

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© RIA Novosti / Vladimir Astapkovich
Russia's gross domestic product (GDP) increased by 0.8 percent between April and June, compared to the same period last year, according to a preliminary estimate by Russian statistics bureau Rosstat.

The announcement was made by Rosstat on Monday, and is only a preliminary reading. A final, revised calculation will follow.

The growth is enough to escape falling into a technical recession (two consecutive quarters of contracted growth) but still disappoints the Ministry of Economic Development's baseline estimate that the Russian economy would grow by 1.1 percent in the second quarter.

In the first quarter of 2014, between January and March, Russia's seasonally adjusted GDP fell by 0.5 percent.