Society's Child
The FBI became aware of Nassar in July 2015 when it was contacted by USA Gymnastics, which trains athletes for the Olympics. But he wasn't publicly exposed until The Indianapolis Star published allegations by a victim in 2016, The New York Times reported.
In the meantime, Nassar continued to see young female athletes, especially gymnasts, or dancers while working at Michigan State University. USA Gymnastics, where he was a team doctor, cut ties with him in 2015.
On Monday, senior Chinese Army officers met with the chairman of Japan's Sasakawa Peace Foundation in charge of the program, Yohei Sasakawa, in Beijing, according to Japanese media citing an official. The sides also stressed that the move would promote bilateral defense cooperation, Sasakawa said.
The program is said to be resuming in April, with the Chinese People's Liberation Army (PLA) personnel visiting Japan. The education exchanges are to continue for the next five years.
According to KFOR, Kathleen Dawn West was found slain outside her Calera, Ala., home that she shared with her husband and 12-year-old daughter.
Police are investigating the incident as a homicide.
West, 42, was discovered by a neighbor in the morning on Jan. 13. She was wearing only a sports bra and was bleeding from the head, Fox 13 reported.
And yet the Democratic establishment remains unamused. Weeks ago, House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., infamously referred to $1,000 in extra salary as "crumbs," only to double down on the term in recent days. She even described Americans' tax savings as a "little piece of cheese" in a "little mouse trap" (set, presumably, by Republicans).
Former Democratic National Committee Chairwoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz recently echoed Pelosi's sentiment: "I'm not sure that $1,000 goes very far for almost anyone."
Really? Not only do their comments illustrate a complete disconnect between elitist Democrats and the middle class, but they also fly in the face of economic reality. For many Americans, an extra $1,000 translates to a monthly rent payment, 20 or more refills of the family car's gas tank, or a long-overdue vacation. It may even mean more cash on hand to handle an emergency, or to support an elderly relative or a sick child.
Both residents and officials in the neighboring jurisdiction of San Pedro have long pointed out how Los Angeles deputies take "problem" citizens and "dump" them in their jurisdiction instead of using Los Angeles resources to deal with the issue.
In this instance, the man being dumped on the side of the road was severely mentally ill and had an outstanding warrant for a transit system violation.

More than 500 suspects were arrested and 56 people were rescued during a statewide human-trafficking crackdown, officials said.
The Los Angeles County Regional Human Trafficking Task Forces announced the arrests of 510 suspects during the three-day sweep, called Operation Reclaim and Rebuild.
During the operation, which took place between Jan. 25 and 27, the task force said 45 adults and 11 girls were rescued.
Among the 510 suspects arrested, 30 are suspected traffickers and 178 are alleged "johns."
The task force is housed by the L.A. County Sheriff's Department and is a collaboration of more than 85 federal, state, county and local law enforcement and nonprofit community organizations.
Ghassan Daghlas, who is responsible for the settlement file in the northern West Bank, said that settlers from the settlement of "Rahalim" uprooted 100 olive trees from the Yasuf lands in the Asharat area south of the village.
He added that the trees belonged to Mohammed Saleh Jazi from the village, located near the Za'tara checkpoint.
Settlement researcher Khalid Maali said that the settlement of Rahalim is the 25 th settlement in the Salfit governorate. It was recently established and is the center of the governorates of Ramallah, Nablus and Salfit.
Comment: On January 13, Haaretz reported:
Masked Israeli Settlers Filmed Destroying Palestinian Olive Trees
Soldiers eventually intervened, but no arrests were made in what Palestinians claim is the latest incident of settler violence since this week's deadly terror attack that claimed a rabbi's life
Israeli settlers destroyed on Saturday dozens of Palestinian-owned olive trees in the West Bank, Palestinians said. According to Palestinians from the Hawara region, masked settlers from the settlement of Yitzhar arrived at the area and started targeting the old trees.
In a video taken by Palestinians at the scene, a group of masked men can be seen breaking tree trunks and branches.
The video, filmed with from a distance of hundreds of meters, also shows a group of soldiers standing by and witnessing the incident. At a later stage, after the trees have already been damaged, the soldiers intervene.
The Israel Defense Forces confirmed that "30 masked settlers went to Hawara this afternoon." The army said that a few trees were damaged and that forces stepped in to disperse them. No arrests were made, though forces were at the scene and, as noted, intervened.
Keep updated: Sign up to our newsletter Email* Since the shooting attack earlier this week in which Palestinian terrorists killed Rabbi Raziel Shevach from the illegal outpost Havat Gilad, at least eight similar incidents took place. In one instance, following the funeral for the slain rabbi, settlers descended on the Palestinian town of Praata. The group reportedly broke locals' windows. None were arrested in the incident.
As the day of the event approached, the Dutch media characterized the gathering as 'new-right' and 'far-right'. Author, freelance researcher, and teacher Chris Aalberts, for example, opined that the event's organizers could not claim that it would be an open debate because the whole line-up of speakers was 'right-wing'. Huub Bellemakers, a member of the left political party Groenlinks, noted that "From the look of the organizers, the speakers, the introductions and the definition of the problem, it is clear that it's a new-right meeting." Bellemakers was invited to attend the event, but declined to do so.
The left's characterization of the event is interesting because the organizers' original concept was to have both left-wing and right-wing speakers come together to discuss this important issue, and hopefully come up with possible solutions. But almost all left-wing guest-speakers declined to attend, which obviously left an impression of the event being a right-wing gathering. The left in the Netherlands - the most densely-populated country in the Western world - apparently doesn't want to discuss immigration in an open and honest way.
This course is the only general introductory statistics class offered at Pomona. Other introductory classes have a specific applied focus, like Biostatistics, Economic Statistics, or Statistics for Politics and International Relations.
The new additions to the Introduction to Statistics syllabus were advertised last semester via posters placed around campus emphasizing the social justice aspect of the course.
Comment: Further reading: Scientific explanation for 'libtards'? Conservatives have more complex moral compass than liberals
He polled over 130,000 conservatives and liberals on moral issues and found that while conservatives rely on all six foundations equally in making moral judgments, liberals favor care, liberty, and fairness, and were often indifferent to concerns of sanctity, loyalty, and authority. Libertarians, relying primarily on the liberty foundation, had the smallest moral domain of all, which probably explains a great deal - certainly Ayn Rand.














Comment: See also: