Society's ChildS


Gold Coins

Alleged founder of online drug marketplace Silk Road indicted

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© Google+Ross William Ulbricht – alleged founder of Silk Road.
Ross William Ulbricht has been indicted on charges he was the mastermind behind Silk Road, a website alleged by US prosecutors to have brokered more than $US1bn in transactions for illegal drugs and services.

An indictment unsealed in New York on Tuesday charges Ulbricht, 29, with drug trafficking, computer hacking, money laundering and other counts.

A lawyer for Ulbricht, Joshua Dratel, said his client would plead not guilty on Friday. "The indictment was expected and does not contain any new factual allegations," Dratel said in a statement.

Handcuffs

Video: Cop frames innocent man for DUI at U.K. fracking protests

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© Steve Spy (Youtube)Miscarriage of Justice: if you see this officer at a campsite, steer well clear of him.
This incident took place at Barton Moss, near Manchester, England, on the site of a peaceful anti-fracking protest. The UK police officer shown in this video has been caught red-handed on a power-trip gone too far, or so it seemed. What eventually transpires is even worse than that.

First the officer in question (pictured below) clearly shoves the cameraman knocking him to the ground - and appears unbothered by what he has done, but he's only getting warmed up. Not content to merely to harass and intimidate (that's come to be expected by police in the new corporate security state), he then attempts to frame the man filming on a fake DUI charge - only the victim was actually a pedestrian walking on a public footpath.

Handcuffs

Disgruntled TSA officer at Houston airport arrested, accused of 'making terroristic threat'

Jeno Mouton
© HPDJeno Mouton
Houston police arrested a Transportation Security Administration officer accused of making a threat to fellow employees at Bush Intercontinental Airport.

The incident reportedly happened on Jan. 25 in the security checkpoint area of Terminal C.

Jeno Mouton, of Houston, allegedly told a TSA supervisor that "he would rather vent than to come back and shoot up the place," according to an arrest affidavit.

Investigators said Mouton, who is a long-time employee, allegedly made the comment while he was on-duty and working in the capacity of a TSA officer.

Music

Senator wants Justin Bieber deported

bieber justin
© JAG GUNDU/Getty ImagesJustin Bieber's arrest isn't the only controversy giving Canadian officials headaches.
Sen. Mark Warner is not a Belieber.

Although the whitehouse.gov petition to deport Canadian pop star Justin Bieber has already surpassed the 100,000-signature threshold that triggers a White House response, the Democrat from Virginia told FM 99 he wants to add his name. "As a dad with three daughters, is there some place I can sign?"

Then Warner followed up with this gem of a tweet:
It's true: I'm not a #Belieber. "Senator Mark Warner offers to sign petition to deport Justin Bieber" http://t.co/KQwY6hcN1a

- Mark Warner (@MarkWarner) February 4, 2014

2 + 2 = 4

Common Core Panelist: "The Children Belong to All of Us"

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Last Friday, a panel discussion at the Center for American Progress (CAP), a liberal think tank, was held to promote Common Core and discuss those who oppose it.

Paul Reville, the former secretary of education for Massachusetts and a Common Core supporter, was one of the panelists.

He shared his thoughts on opponents of the curriculum, stating that critics were a "tiny minority" who opposed standards altogether, which was unfair because "the children belong to all of us."

"The children belong to all of us."

Unbelievable, isn't it? In case you need to hear it to believe it, here's video proof:

Comment: See: The Untold History of Modern U.S. Education


Evil Rays

Dr. Magda Havas: What's new in the electrosmog world?

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One new study and four policy decisions as of January 2014 are newsworthy.

The scientific study shows long-term exposure to Wi-Fi alters testes and sperm in rats.

The three policy decisions from the USA, Italy and Germany are likely to reduce local exposure to radio frequency radiation. The fourth from Brussels is likely to increase exposure.

Smoking

Bhutan's U-turn on tobacco ban

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Bhutan's second parliament is likely to set the history of 'ban lift' as it takes steps to do so one after another. Very recently the country lifted ban on import of furniture and alcohol.

Now the country's Upper House resolves that ban on import of tobacco must end. In a majority resolution on Monday (3 February 2014), the house said ban on import and sale of tobacco products must end to control the black market.

Bhutan had gained fame for being the first country to completely ban on manufacturing, import and sale of any tobacco products. However, the government also received harsh criticism for sending a monk behind bar for years on charge of carrying tobacco products worth Nu 120.

After public outcry over the harshness of the law, the first elected parliament of the country showed some leniency towards tobacco consumers. Many send to jail for selling tobacco were subsequently released on king's order.

Stormtrooper

Scenes from a militarized America: Iowa family 'terrorized'

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Watch this video, taken from a police raid in Des Moines, Iowa. Send it to some people. When critics (like me) warn about the dangers of police militarization, this is what we're talking about. You'll see the raid team, dressed in battle-dress uniforms, helmets and face-covering balaclava hoods take down the family's door with a battering ram. You'll see them storm the home with ballistics shields, guns at the ready. More troubling still, you'll see not one but two officers attempt to prevent the family from having an independent record of the raid, one by destroying a surveillance camera, another by blocking another camera's lens.


Bad Guys

Cop uses stun gun on accident victim, causing him to go into seizure

Chicago police Sgt Schultz
© Photo supplied to CBSBlue Island Police Sgt. Schultz used a stun gun on Donald Flores, the victim of a hit-and-run crash in 2012.
A Blue Island police officer used a stun gun on the victim of a hit-and-run crash, and the victim says the incident changed his life forever.

CBS 2′s Marissa Bailey reports on allegations of excessive force

Donald Flores needed help after a June 2012 hit-and-run incident. Instead, he says, police caused him further injury.

"I just wanted to go home to basically die, where I felt more at peace," Flores says

Dazed and covered in blood, he was walking home when he came upon Blue Island Police who had been called to do a well-being check on him.

"The first two officers, they did the right thing," Flores says.

But then he encountered Sgt. Schultz. Flores says the sergeant screamed at him, "'Are you out of your effin' mind? You're bleeding.

Arrow Down

More than 200 dead or starving alpacas discovered on Oregon farm

Alpacas
© Care2Alpacas
I am sad to be bringing you yet another story of animal abuse. This one comes from Falls City, a small community in Oregon, located about 30 miles southeast of San Antonio, with a population of under 700.

The owners of Jocelyn's Alpacas Ranch have each been indicted on 18 animal abuse charges after more than 200 starving or dead alpacas were found on their Falls City farm in December 2013.

Alpacas are rare and exotic creatures that have been considered a treasure of the Andes Mountains for more than 6,000 years. They look like small llamas or long-necked camels with no humps. Easily domesticated, alpacas are friendly, gentle and curious.

And yet they suffered this terrible abuse. The Polk County Itemizer-Observer reports that Jocelyn and Robert Silver were arraigned two weeks ago on identical charges, which include one count of felony first-degree animal neglect, one count of second-degree animal neglect and 16 counts of misdemeanor first-degree animal neglect.

Polk County Sheriff's Office began looking into conditions on the farm after receiving complaints from neighbors and the Animal Legal Defense Fund in early December. An initial investigation of the property found evidence of malnutrition in the animals.

"In this pasture there was no green forage growing anywhere," wrote Deputy John Kincaid in an affidavit requesting a search warrant. "The trees in this pasture appeared to be devoid of bark (as high as the animals could reach)."

Once a warrant was granted for a "herd health check" with a licensed veterinarian, investigators found even more evidence of mistreatment, including dozens of dead alpacas and many others that were emaciated and weak.

What a horrible, horrible tragedy, but such tales are not uncommon.