Society's Child
In recent years, it has invaded and occupied - either by military assault or by coup, but in either case followed by installing (or trying to install) a new regime there - a number of countries, especially Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya, Syria, Ukraine, and Yemen.
U.S. propaganda says that its invasions and military occupations (and it denies its coups) are to benefit the people in the invaded and militarily occupied countries, or to bring them 'democracy', and are not done merely to benefit the people who control the U.S. Government (which itself is not a democracy, and even the neoconservative - pro-invasion or "imperialistic" - American magazine The Atlantic has finally acknowledged this fact, even though it contradicts their continuing neoconservatism).
Polling and other evidences within the invaded/occupied countries shows the opposite of the U.S. claim: America's invasions/occupations (after World War II, and especially after 2000) destroy those countries, not help them.
Allegheny County election officials were criticized for failures last election cycle
Republicans are citing numerous problems at polling sites in Tuesday's special election in Pennsylvania, which remains too close to officially call but appears to be trending toward an extremely narrow victory for Democrat Conor Lamb.
Lamb currently leads Republican Rick Saccone by just 627 votes and there are still absentee and provisional ballots that have not been tabulated, but Republicans are already preparing for the likely recount and even a possible lawsuit regarding issues at polling sites, according to a Republican source familiar with the deliberations.
"We're actively investigating three instances and likely to file court action on them," the source said.

January Neatherlin was just sentenced to 21 years and four months for drugging kids at an illegal day care facility in Bend, OR.
When police arrived at her Little Giggles day care, they [found] seven children younger than five unattended. As with the Illinois case involving Kidde Junction, Neatherlin used melatonin to induce sleep in the children. It turns out that she also misrepresented to parents that she was a registered nurse.
The Drug Enforcement Administration began investigating NYPD Officer Yessenia Jimenez, 31, in January after they found the phone number of her boyfriend, Luis Soto, 33, on the cell phone of a narcotics trafficking suspect.
The investigation concluded that Jimenez and Soto were conducting a heroin trafficking operation that stemmed Mexico to New York. The New York Daily News reported that the pair was arrested this week after they made a trip to Massachusetts to meet with a heroin trafficker.
DEA, NYPD, and state police task force officers confronted Soto around 2 a.m. on Tuesday after he returned from the trip and was seen unloading bags from the trunk of his car, outside of the couple's apartment building in the Soundview neighborhood in Bronx, New York.
Jimenez was sitting in the passenger seat of the car with a purse as her feet that contained $25,000 in cash and the Glock 9-mm gun issued to her from the NYPD-and paid for by taxpayers.
"They fired at us, they did not want us to flee at all, they fired at the car wheels so that we could not flee... There was no flour, no bread, no water at all. They let no one out," one man told RT's Ruptly video agency near Hush Nasri.
"They [militants] were living with us, next to our houses and inside them. They would open a road amongst the houses to be able to move. They would not leave, and we would not dare to say 'get out.' Then the shelling was over and it is us who became part of the human shields. We were not allowed to move," a woman told Ruptly.
The armed groups holding out in Eastern Ghouta, a militant-held suburb near the Syrian capital of Damascus, continued to fire at civilians even as they were fleeing their homes, leaving several people injured.
Known as "little tiger", cat meat is considered lucky and a source of strength and feline-like agility in the south-east Asian country.
Some of the cats are wearing collars, suggesting they could have been snatched from loving homes before awaiting their fate of being killed, cooked and sold.
One of the pictures shows the tragic animals being drowned in a cage which is submerged in water.
Australian Michele Brown, the CEO of Fight Dog Meat charity, has now released the shocking pictures in a bid to raise awareness of the little-known cat meat trade.
Skiers and snowboarders were forced to jump from the faulty chairlift on Friday as their seats hurtled backwards down the mountain, with some people falling from carriages at speed, in what one witness likened to "a scene from a Final Destination film".
Videos of the accident at Gudauri resort in Georgia show a pile-up of broken and twisted chairs at the bottom of the lift as bystanders scream at people to jump.
Ryan Wilkinson, 24, from Kent, was queuing at the bottom of the lift with a group of friends when he saw the incident happen. He said the ski lift had been closed for repairs all week, but reopened on Friday morning.

A picture of Rio de Janeiro's city councillor Marielle Franco, 38, who was shot dead, is seen outside the city council chamber in Rio de Janeiro
Marielle Franco, 38, a rising star in the Socialism and Liberty Party (PSOL), was killed along with her driver on Rio's dangerous north side around 9:30 p.m. Wednesday night. Her press secretary survived the shooting.
Just weeks ago, the federal government decreed that Brazil's army would take over all security operations through the end of the year in Rio, where murders have risen sharply. Franco, part of a commission to oversee the military intervention, harshly criticized the move on Sunday, saying it could worsen police violence against residents.
"It is far too soon to say, but we are obviously looking at this as a murder in response to her political work, that is a main theory," said a Rio de Janeiro public prosecutor, who spoke on condition that he not be named as he was not authorized to discuss the case.

In this frame from video, emergency personnel work at the scene of a collapsed bridge in the Miami area, Thursday, March 15, 2018.
Officials later indicated during a news conference that the homicide unit of the Miami-Dade Police Department would take over the investigation at a later time.
The bridge, located at the 109th Ave and 8th Street, was just completed on Saturday.
Comment: Latest news is that at least 6 people are dead.
UPDATE: A bridge engineer reported cracks two days before the collapse:
Damning new evidence reveals that an engineer working on the pedestrian bridge in Greater Miami, Florida, that collapsed on Thursday had attempted to report damage days before the incident took place.
Just three days after the Florida International University bridge, designed by FIGG Bridge Engineers, "swung into place," the project's lead engineer, Denney Pate, left a voicemail message for a colleague to report structural fissures.
No one was available to hear the March 13 message until Friday, one day after the bridge collapsed, killing at least six people and leaving a massive pile of rubble on an eight-lane highway. Nine others were taken to local hospitals, authorities reported.
The Florida Department of Transportation (FDOT) released a statement with a short transcript of Pate's voicemail and explanation of events leading up to the catastrophe.
"Um, so, uh, we've taken a look at it and, uh, obviously some repairs or whatever will have to be done but from a safety perspective we don't see that there's any issue there so we're not concerned about it from that perspective although obviously the cracking is not good and something's going to have to be, ya know, done to repair that," Pate said in the voicemail.
The department stressed that "the responsibility to identify and address life-safety issues and properly communicate them is the sole responsibility of the FIU design-build team," adding that "FIGG and the FIU design build team never alerted FDOT of any life-safety issue regarding the FIU pedestrian bridge prior to collapse."
"We are heartbroken by the loss of life and injuries, and are carefully examining the steps that our team has taken in the interest of our overarching concern for public safety. The evaluation was based on the best available information at that time and indicated that there were no safety issues."
The bridge, which was due for completion in 2019, was engineered to allow students to cross the busy road without holding up traffic. The impetus for the project came after a vehicle hit and killed an FIU student last year.
One witness posted dashcam footage of the disaster on Instagram.
US Senator Marco Rubio (R-FL) tweeted about the incident: "At the time of the collapse construction crews were working on the diagonal beam at the north end of bridge applying [post-tensioning] force to strengthen it."
FIGG also released a statement in light of the tragedy, claiming that "no other bridge designed by Figg Bridge Engineers has ever experienced such a collapse." Yet, the same company was responsible for a collapse of a 90-ton segment of another bridge in Virginia in 2012, which left four workers with minor injuries.
"Our deepest sympathies are with all those affected by this accident. We will fully cooperate with every appropriate authority in reviewing what happened and why. In our 40-year history, nothing like this has ever happened before. Our entire team mourns the loss of life and injuries associated with this devastating tragedy, and our prayers go out to all involved."
Miami-Dade Police Director Juan Perez stated that the process of retrieving bodies and removing the debris was "very slow."
FIU President Mark B. Rosenberg reassured others that the school would conduct its own investigation. He said that FIU contractors were certified by the state and followed all essential protocols while building the bridge.
"Obviously, everybody is in shock here," said Rosenberg, who had been a public champion of the project. "We just want answers, and we're going to get answers."
"If anybody's done anything wrong, we'll hold them accountable," Florida Governor Rick Scott said.
The US Department of Transportation financed the $14.2 million bridge as part of a $19.4 million Transportation Investment Generating Economic Recovery grant, CBS Miami reports. Several agencies co-funded project, including the Federal Highway Administration and Florida Department of Transportation Local Agency Program as well Florida International University. The bridge used accelerated building techniques to expedite the construction process.
A lack of context
Campus Safety Magazine reports that the University of Virginia contracts with a service called Social Sentinel for $18,500 a year to monitor its students' public social media posts. It works by scanning student social media accounts based on a "library of harm" of thousands of words curated by Social Sentinel in addition to words tailored to the specific school contracting with them. Posts from students containing words on these lists are forwarded to the police, who then decide whether or not to investigate the students.
"We look at the whole context of the post," says University of Virginia police officer and crime analyst Beth Davis.
And therein lies a major problem. The "whole context" of a post is almost never available to someone as far removed from the post as an officer or school administrator reading it. Innocuous or inside jokes, and a whole host of other protected speech, will often be completely lost on them and could appear threatening without that crucial context.












Comment: Overkill, sheesh! We can't even get Hillary in Jail and this was just melatonin!!!