Society's Child
The origins of the case date back to 2010 when the Algerian woman married a French citizen in her home country of Algeria, and after four years made a request to authorities for French citizenship, La Croix reports.
The prefecture of Isere, where the woman lives, initially accepted her request to become a French citizen and in 2016 she was to attend a citizenship ceremony but during the ceremony, she refused to shake the hands of officials for "religious reasons."
The Louisiana Sheriff's Association admitted that thousands of inmates have been sitting in jail, awaiting a trial for more than a year.
Nearly half a million Americans are currently being held in jail while they are denied their constitutional rights to a speedy trial. The problem has become so pervasive that many critics of the American judicial system are up in arms over the phenomenon. In Louisiana alone, there are over 2,000 people who have been languishing in jail for more than a year, all waiting for the chance to prove their innocence.
The Louisiana Sheriff's Association was forced to clarify just how bad the problem is after its executive director, Mike Ranatza, overstated the number during a recent testimony on the issue. He clarified by breaking down the total number, and noting that of those 2,181 people:
- 1,507 had been held between one and two years without a trial
- 448 had been held between two and three years without a trial
- 141 had been held between three and four years without a trial
- 85 people had been held more than four years without a trial.
Comment: This system is really, really broken. That the horrors of prison are being visited upon individuals who have not been found to be guilty of anything is, in itself, criminal.
See also:
- Who Profits from Prison?: Louisiana - the World's Prison Capital
- Teen inmate raped by an adult cellmate & infected with HIV at Louisiana jail - lawsuit
- Guilty until proven innocent: Louisiana man freed after 37yrs in prison for crime he didn't commit
- Ridiculous! Louisiana man faces 20 years in prison for stealing $31 in candy bars
- Reefer madness continues: Half ounce of pot gets Louisiana man twenty years in prison
- Angola 2 mark forty years solitary in Louisiana prison for crime they didn't commit
Early in life I have noticed that no event is ever correctly reported in a newspaper, but in Spain, for the first time, I saw newspaper reports which did not bear any relation to the facts, not even the relationship which is implied in an ordinary lie. I saw great battles reported where there had been no fighting, and complete silence where hundreds of men had been killed. I saw troops who had fought bravely denounced as cowards and traitors, and others who had never seen a shot fired hailed as the heroes of imaginary victories; and I saw newspapers in London retailing these lies and eager intellectuals building emotional superstructures over events that had never happened. I saw, in fact, history being written not in terms of what happened but of what ought to have happened according to various 'party lines'.Last week saw an extreme intensifying of the warmongers' campaign against individuals who publicly hold and defend a different view than the powers-that-be want to promote. The campaign has a longer history but recently turned personal. It now endangers the life and livelihood of real people.
-- George Orwell, Looking back on the Spanish War, Chapter 4
In fall 2016 a smear campaign was launched against 200 websites which did not confirm to NATO propaganda. Prominent sites like Naked Capitalism were among them as well as this site:
This website, MoonofAlabama.org, is now listed as "Russian propaganda outlet" by some neoconned, NATO aligned, anonymous "Friendly Neighborhood Propaganda Identification Service" prominently promoted by today's Washington Post. The minions running that censorship list also watch over our "Russian propaganda" Twitter account @MoonofA.While the ProPornOT campaign was against websites the next and larger attack was a general defaming of specific content.
Police investigating Sunday morning's shooting believe that Reinking had suffered from mental health issues and have warned that they suspect he is still armed and thus extremely dangerous.
A naked man matching Reinking's description was spotted in the woods near the restaurant in the aftermath of the shooting, in which the death toll could have been far higher, were it not for an unnamed 29-year-old man who snatched the AR-15 style rifle out of the gunman's hands.
The Palestinian, identified as Fadi Mohammad al-Batsh, was assassinated in the Malaysian capital Kuala Lumpur on Saturday. Two suspects had awaited the victim for some 20 minutes and then gunned him down, fleeing the scene on a motorcycle, according to local police.
"The suspect fired 10 shots, four of which hit the lecturer in the head and body. He died on the spot. The police also found two empty bullet shells there," Kuala Lumpur Police chief Mazlan Lazim told reporters.
Al-Batsh, a 35-year-old lecturer with a private university, reportedly served as an imam at a local surau, a smaller Malaysian variant of a mosque. The police chief said the investigators would look into all possible theories on the events, including the potential involvement of Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS/ISIL) terrorists. While the identity of the perpetrators is still unknown, they are believed to be Caucasian, according to the Deputy Prime Minister Ahmad Zahid Hamidi.
"The lecturer, a permanent resident of this country, is believed to have become a liability for a country hostile to Palestine," the official said, suggesting that foreign intelligence might have been involved in the murder.
The immediate cause of the newsroom rebellion was a familiar one. The Post's owner, a New York-based hedge fund called Alden Global Capital, had demanded significant staff reductions and the Post's editorial-page editor asked, in an impassioned essay, whether "these heartbreaking instructions...represent the beginning of the end" for the Post. Then he issued a challenge: If the "vulture capitalists" at Alden Global aren't "willing to do good journalism here, [they] should sell the Post to owners who will."
I should acknowledge, at this juncture, that while I tend to believe journalists ought to refrain from biting the hands that feed them - and that includes subscribers as well as proprietors - I have no idea which side is right or wrong in this matter. It is entirely possible that, in the new digital age, Denver cannot sustain a plentifully staffed metropolitan daily newspaper - the Post's principal competitor, the Rocky Mountain News, closed its doors a decade ago - and it is equally possible that Alden Global Capital, in distant New York, is merely draining as much Colorado cash as it can.
Comment: The news industry is only as good as the quality and veracity of its product. Without training the mind to filter good information from bad (a skill that seems to be losing traction as MSM has proven and utilized) it becomes a mechanism to groom and control its society.
On 1 April this year, an inter-agency team from the United Nations (UN) entered Raqqa in what was the first UN visit to the city since ISIS's defeat. According to the website of the UN refugee agency, UNHCR: The UN team entering Raqqa city were shocked by the level of destruction, which exceeded anything they had ever seen before. A cascade of rubble lies along the streets with hardly a single building intact. It's worth repeating some of that again. The UN team found a level of destruction, which exceeded anything they had ever seen before.
Comment: We have a question for armchair analysts: are you not actually paying attention to the war in Syria, beyond what the western media reports about it?
Chanting slogans against the Israeli PM, hundreds of anti-government activists marched down the streets of Tel Aviv holding banners. "'Bibi take your hands off the supreme court', 'Corrupted, you don't have a mandate' and 'Bibi, organized crime, leave the supreme court alone'," they shouted.
The Knesset's next parliamentary session, which starts on April 29, will debate and vote on the bill, designed to curb the High Court's power. If adopted, the bill, based on the so-called 'British model', would allow only the Israeli parliament to cancel or change laws, limiting the Supreme Court's power to override the Knesset in approving legislation that could
potentially be unconstitutional.
Comment: Pathocracy: a form of government in which individuals with personality disorders (especially psychopathy) occupy positions of power and influence. The result is a totalitarian system characterized by a government turned against its own people.
That Israel is at this point, a vote away from an irreversible power grab, reveals the extent and prevalence of psychopathy at the highest levels of government and its disregard for the protection of the people it represents.
A lot has been written about the deep cultural and spiritual bonds between Britain and Zionism. Some have cited the roots of English Christian Zionism. Others point to the Balfour Declaration and its historical background. In 1956 Britain and France joined forces with Israel in an attempt to seize the Suez Canal.
By the early 2000s it was hard to determine where Israel ended and Britain began. Occasionally it seemed the BBC had been reduced to an Israeli propaganda unit. The once respected British newspaper morphed into a Guardian of Judea. Murdoch's Sky News didn't leave much room for speculation either.
Last week Sky News crudely cut off Jonathan Shaw, the former commander of the British Armed Forces, the second that Shaw went 'off script' and suggested that the Syrian regime might not have been behind the Douma 'gas attack.' The next day we learned that the British government had again engaged in a Zion-led immoral interventionist assault on an Arab country based on what seems to be just another false WMD claim.
Comment: Explanation: Britain is a mess.
Hundreds of Ecuadoreans marched for peace Thursday as the country continues to come to terms with the kidnapping and murder of two journalists and a driver from local newspaper El Comercio. The demonstrations took place amid the deployment of 10,000 Ecuadorean troops to the Ecuador-Colombia border in the northern province of Esmeraldas in response to the attacks of recent months.
Admiral John Merlo, the sole commander of the border zone operations, announced the details relating to the deployment Thursday. According to Admiral Merlo, the increased military and police presence has "lowered the intensity" of criminal activity in the last few days. It did not, however, prevent the kidnapping of two people in the area.
















Comment: Tough call. Seems like a pretty lame reason to be refusing someone citizenship. But at the same time, it also seems like the Muslim woman could have played the game, so to speak, and drop her orthodoxy temporarily to get what she was after. Considering the French are insistent on new citizens having a certain degree of assimilation, and that refusing a handshake is seen as insulting in the West, it seems like one would need to be willing to let certain customs slide in order to get in the door.
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