Society's Child
"I'm pretty p***** off," opens Shkreli on his YouTube post introducing this tell-all website, pharmaskeletons.com. "This lobby group, PhRMA, thinks it's a good idea to come after me for the industry's problems. So I made a website called Pharmaskeletons.com, and you can see the industry has quite a history of problems."
"He believes debate should be encouraged about the truth of climate science..."
Comment: America is descending into a dark pit of hysteria. Check out:
- Behind the Headlines: Hating Trump: Why Is Trump So Polarizing?
- Trump administration orders EPA contract freeze, bars external communication
Known as blue privilege, there is an unwritten law among police officers: when they catch their fellow cop, or even their fellow cop's family member, breaking the law, they are let go without consequence.
Just two months ago, dashcam video was released showing preferential treatment of an Arkansas police chief who was let off — without so much as a warning — after speeding to an off-duty job as a referee at a football game.
The examples are unlimited.
In one case, in particular, an entire caravan of cops was given a pass for needless and dangerously speeding through town. An audio tape and video were published online of a conversation between a Washington State Patrol aircraft and a patrol car on the ground.
The aircraft kept identifying speeders while the ground unit would let them all go by since they were LEOs.
The teen had spit in Officer Michael Philip Soucheray II's face, according to the criminal complaint charging him with a misdemeanor.
Officers were trying to get the girl from an emergency shelter to a hospital because she was reported to be suicidal but was refusing to go, the complaint said. After Soucheray struck the teen with a closed fist, causing her pain, he grabbed the girl "by the jaw and/or face/neck area," the complaint said. He then called her a "(expletive) bitch," the court document continued.
Police Chief Todd Axtell placed Soucheray, 38, on paid administrative leave Monday. A police spokesman said they can't discuss the reason due to state law.
An internal affairs investigation was opened the day after the incident, and the police department asked the Dakota County sheriff's office to conduct a criminal investigation.

Protesters set fire to limousine in Washington, DC, destroying the livelihood of a Muslim immigrant.
Muhammad Ashraf, the owner of the company, Nationwide Chauffeured Services, is now speaking out against the protesters for what they did.
In an exclusive interview with Red Alert Politics, Ashraf said he wasn't a supporter of Donald Trump during his campaign, but Friday's protests were completely counter-productive.
"I have a different point of view," Ashraf told Red Alert. "I did not agree with many of the things he said, but that still does not give me the right to go and affect someone's livelihood."Ashraf noted that the Women's March on Washington and in other cities around the country was a model for how to peacefully protest.
"I really don't think we need to take this [violent] route."Ashraf's employee, Luis Villarroel, 58, was dropping a client off at their destination when things turned ugly. Protesters smashed doors and windows in the vicinity, but then turned their attention to Villarroel and the limo. People began pounding on the car and started throwing stones and bricks in his direction. The driver ended up going to the hospital for cuts on his hands and arms from glass being shattered by thrown projectiles.
Ashraf provided a few photos from the incident (Disclaimer - there is blood):
Michael O'Brien took the heavily bleeding Husky to an animal hospital in Cooper City after a witness insisted, but he told the veterinarian that the dog had run into a glass door, according to a police report. Nala, stabbed in a front leg, needed two blood transfusions and was resuscitated through CPR.
The veterinarian at the LeadER Animal Specialty Hospital was dubious of O'Brien's account when he brought the dog in on Nov. 8, and police said they launched an investigation after an anonymous caller contacted them five days later. O'Brien was arrested Friday.
Police interviewed a man on Jan. 5 who was in O'Brien's Sunrise apartment when the alleged incident occurred. That witness, Nicholas Richards, told police that O'Brien became enraged by his dog's barking and used a kitchen knife to repeatedly jab at the dog, who was inside a crate in the living room, the arrest report said.
The left doesn't say what a president is who does not enforce the laws on the books. But let's look at this from the standpoint of the immigration laws themselves. In 1965 a bill passed by the "racist" Congress and signed by the "racist" President Lyndon Johnson completely changed the racial composition of US legal immigration.
In 1960 75% of US legal immigration was European, 5% was Asian, and 19% was from Americas (Mexico, Central and South America and Caribbean Islands).
In 2013 10% of legal immigrants were European, 30% were Asian, 55% were from Americas, and 5% from Africa.
The 1965 Immigration and Nationality Act is a very strange law for racists to have enacted. Would racists pass a law, which has been on the books for 52 years, that fundamentally transformed the racial profile of the US by limiting white immigration, thereby ultimately consigning whites to minority status?
We could say the racists did not know what they were doing, or thought they were doing something else. However, the results have been obvious at least since 1980, and the law is still on the books.
The largest network ties together more than 350,000 accounts and further work suggests others may be even bigger.
UK researchers accidentally uncovered the lurking networks while probing Twitter to see how people use it.
Some of the accounts have been used to fake follower numbers, send spam and boost interest in trending topics.

Madonna performs at the Women's March in Washington U.S., January 21, 2017.
Let me say right up front that I am not one of those people who thinks celebrities should never talk about politics. I feel that all Americans, celebrities included, should share their thoughts as they see fit. Of course, I also believe that people, celebrities most especially due to the size of their audience, should be held to account for what they say. Which brings us to Madonna and the Women's March on Washington inauguration weekend.
At the anti-Trump/pro-woman event this past weekend, Madonna gave a profanity-laced speech where she said, in part, "Yes, I am angry. Yes, I am outraged. Yes, I've thought about blowing up the White House." No doubt the Secret Service are drawing straws right now to see who gets stuck with the miserable assignment of interviewing the erstwhile Material Girl. While most people will chalk up Madonna's statement as just a bit of emotionalist nonsense, the Secret Service, sadly for them, don't have that luxury.
While the 58-year-old, former pop princess isn't entirely culturally irrelevant, she can certainly see irrelevance from her backyard. Madonna's artistic insignificance aside, her diatribe at the rally this past weekend will no doubt bring her some much-desired attention, but it will also most certainly undermine the anti-Trump cause for which she alleges to be speaking.
Comment: See also:
- Liberal Hollywood hypocrite: Where was Meryl Streep when Obama was prosecuting whistleblowers & bombing weddings?
- Liberal left Hollywood meltdown: Ashley Judd's bizzaro 'Nasty Woman' performance
- Snowflake Michael Moore calls on liberals to unite for "100 days of resistance" against Trump
On Thursday, Jan. 19, 2017, a Twitter account belonging to Tracy Pickerill sent a series of tweets that included this reference to President-elect Donald Trump:
Individuals concerned about the threats contacted Denver police, who said they had forwarded the information to federal authorities to investigate. As of late Friday, no charges had been announced against Pickerill.
A Linkedin profile belonging to a Tracy Pickerill connected the profile to employment at MSU Denver, in addition to a listing for a Tracy Ann Pickerill in the A-Z Directory on the university's website, msudenver.edu. The listing was removed Friday morning, and the university's chief spokesperson, Cathy Lucas, told Met Report that there was no record of Tracy Pickerill on MSU Denver's payroll.
Subsequently, the Met Report obtained a March 2015 email that describes plans for a Tracy Pickerill to start work as an administrative assistant in the university's Office of Marketing and Communications. According to the email, which was sent to office staff members, Pickerill was hired to fill in on a temporary basis.














Comment: See also: