Society's ChildS


Bad Guys

Right out of the Nazi playbook! Danish parliament approves cruel measures to confiscate refugees' valuables and delay family reunification

Migrants waiting on a train
© Claus FiskerMigrants, mainly from Syria, prepare to board a train headed for Sweden, at Padborg station in southern Denmark, then to the camps...
The Danish parliament has passed measures aimed at deterring refugees from seeking asylum, including the confiscation of their valuables and a delay in family reunifications. The move has received widespread condemnation from human rights organizations.

Asylum seekers arriving in Denmark will now have to hand over cash exceeding 10,000 kroner (US$1,450) and any personal items valued at more than that amount. This is more than three times the 3,000 kroner ($435) that was originally proposed. However, wedding rings and other sentimental items will be exempt from confiscation.

Integration Minister Inger Stojberg said the goal of the new legislation is for Denmark to become "significantly less attractive for asylum-seekers," AFP reported.

The center-right Danish government says the measures are aimed at covering the cost of each asylum seeker's support from the state, and is similar to requirements for Danish citizens receiving welfare benefits. However, Danes are not subject to the kinds of searches proposed in the new refugee law.

Some have compared the new measures to the confiscation of gold and other valuables from Jews by the Nazis during the Holocaust. But Prime Minister Lars Lokke Rasmussen of the right-wing Venstre party has shrugged off the criticism, calling it the "most misunderstood bill in Denmark's history."


Comment: Karma is a bitch, Lars.


The new legislation will also prevent refugees from applying to be reunited with their family for three years, and will only give Syrian war refugees one year's protection. "I'm afraid that it will lead to an incentive structure where refugees bring their children with them," parliament member Mette Gjerskov told Berlingske newspaper. Berlingske said ahead of the vote that she was one of three Social Democrats planning to vote against their own party. "We have seen plenty of children in rubber boats on the Mediterranean," the lawmaker added. International human rights organizations have also condemned the three-year delay for reunification applications.


Comment: Yes, and plenty more elsewhere. Many have suffered and died due to ignorance of psychopathy.


Comment: In a global pathocracy, your country is invaded, bombed and destroyed and its assets are stolen; you lose touch with your family and friends or they're killed due to the occupation. And, if you run, the pathocrats will take your personal belongings and then lock you up in a 'special camp'.

The above comparison to Nazi Germany is 100% accurate. What happened there was on a micro-social scale. The rampant paranoia and hatred of Muslims is the same as what happened to the Jews, but NOW we are seeing it on a macro-social scale - the entire planet. This is such a gruesome agenda by the psychopaths in power.


Handcuffs

Leader of Oregon occupation Ammon Bundy and three others arrested

Ammon Bundy
© AP Photo/Rick BowmerAmmon Bundy, one of the sons of Nevada rancher Cliven Bundy, speaks during an interview at Malheur National Wildlife Refuge, Tuesday, Jan. 5, 2016, near Burns, Ore. Law enforcement had yet to take any action Tuesday against a group numbering close to two dozen, led by Bundy and his brother, who are upset over federal land policy.
KATU News has learned the leader of the armed occupation at Malheur Wildlife Refuge has been arrested, along with three other individuals Tuesday evening.

Sources tell KATU News there was some sort of engagement involving shots fired as the militia group was on its way to a meeting in John Day.

Highway 395 is closed between Burns and John Day.

The details of the arrest have not yet been released, but officials say there are injuries in the area.

Bundy and dozens of other individuals occupied the wildlife refuge earlier this month after two local ranchers were sent to prison for setting fires on federal land.

Alarm Clock

False alarm! No active shooter found at San Diego Naval Medical Center; shelter in place orders lifted

active shooter san diego
All shelter in place orders at the Naval Medical Center San Diego following reports of an active shooter have been lifted with no evidence of an attacker or gunfire found, authorities said Tuesday.

The order was lifted for a last building on the campus about 4 p.m. following a search by police and K9 units, officials said.

No sign of casualties or other evidence of a shooting were been found in a sweep of the entire facility.

There is "nothing which substantiates" reports of a shooting, said Navy Capt. Curt Jones, commanding officer of Naval Base San Diego, at a news conference Tuesday.

Reports of a possible active shooter about 8:22 a.m. caused the medical center to issue an alert telling hospital occupants to "run, hide or fight."

Comment: Hysterical response or just acting out of "an abundance of caution" considering that the US is practically a shooting gallery?

Breaking: San Diego's Naval Medical Center on lockdown; reports of active shooter


Heart - Black

Photo of Phoenix high school students spelling out racial slur sparks outrage

Six senior girls photographed spelling out racial slur.
© CBS AFFILIATE KPHOSix senior girls photographed spelling out racial slur.
Some members of the NAACP protested outside a suburban Phoenix school Monday after a photo of students spelling out a racial slur with T-shirts showed up on social media last week.

The photo showed six smiling Desert Vista High School senior girls with their arms around each other, wearing black shirts with letters or asterisks written on them in gold tape.

Vader

Lawsuits claim Disney colluded to replace U.S. workers with immigrants

Leo Perrero was laid off a year ago from his technology job at Walt Disney World in Orlando, Fla.
© Brian Blanco for The New York Times Leo Perrero was laid off a year ago from his technology job at Walt Disney World in Orlando, Fla.
Even after Leo Perrero was laid off a year ago from his technology job at Walt Disney World in Orlando, Fla. — and spent his final months there training a temporary immigrant from India to do his work — he still hoped to find a new position in the vast entertainment company.

But Mr. Perrero discovered that despite his high performance ratings, he and most of the other 250 tech workers Disney dismissed would not be rehired for at least a year, and probably never.

Now he and Dena Moore, another American laid off by Disney at that time, have filed lawsuits in federal court in Tampa, Fla., against Disney and two global consulting companies, HCL and Cognizant, which brought in foreign workers who replaced them. They claim the companies colluded to break the law by using temporary H-1B visas to bring in immigrant workers, knowing that Americans would be displaced.

"I don't have to be angry or cause drama," said Ms. Moore, 53, who had worked at Disney for 10 years. "But they are just doing things to save a buck, and it's making Americans poor."

Vader

Swedish doctor on trial for keeping woman in bunker

Swedish doctor's bunker
© Swedish Police/TT via APUndated police handout image made available on Monday Jan. 25, 2016 of the interior of the soundproof bunker made by a Swedish Doctor in southern Sweden. The Swedish doctor who admitted to abducting a woman and locking her up in a home-made bunker, had planned the crime for years and may have tried to capture other victims, prosecutors said as the trial started Monday.
A Swedish doctor went on trial on rape and kidnapping charges Monday after admitting to imprisoning a woman in a home-made bunker in what his defense lawyer said was a desperate attempt to find a girlfriend.

Prosecutors said the 38-year-old man had planned the crime for years and may have tried to capture other victims before sedating and abducting the woman during a date in Stockholm.

The victim, who is around 30, didn't suffer serious physical injuries during her week long abduction. But she was deeply traumatized by the ordeal and stressed about having to face him in court, said her lawyer, Jens Hogstrom.

"She's having a very hard time right now," Hogstrom told The Associated Press during a break in the proceedings. "She's got post-traumatic stress, flashbacks from what happened. She has nightmares."

The doctor, whose name wasn't published in Sweden in line with privacy rules, has confessed to almost everything in the indictment, but denies having raped the woman while she was unconscious.

Attention

'Women no longer feel safe': German city bans migrants from nightclubs after sexual harassment allegations

nightclub complaints
© Fabrizio Bensch / Reuters
The German city of Freiburg says it is banning migrants from its nightclubs due to complaints by women of sexual harassment at the hands of asylum seekers and the stabbing of a bouncer by a migrant.

One woman told the Badische Zeitung that she had been in a club in December, when a large group of African men accosted her.

"I was surrounded and marginalized while dancing," she said."The situation was full of male violence. I felt threatened."

There have also been reports of petty theft occurring in nightspots around the city, which is located in southwestern Germany on the Swiss border.

Comment: See more: New Year's in Cologne: Sexual crime and the radicalizing of European society


Gold Seal

Due process is dead: The mirage of justice in America's court system

Steven Avery mugshot
© NetflixThe online documentary “Making a Murderer” illuminates the corruption and unfairness of the American system of justice. Above, Steven Avery, one of the subjects of the film.
If you are poor, you will almost never go to trial—instead you will be forced to accept a plea deal offered by government prosecutors. If you are poor, the word of the police, who are not averse to fabricating or tampering with evidence, manipulating witnesses and planting guns or drugs, will be accepted in a courtroom as if it was the word of God. If you are poor, and especially if you are of color, almost anyone who can verify your innocence will have a police record of some kind and thereby will be invalidated as a witness. If you are poor, you will be railroaded in an assembly-line production, from a town or city where there are no jobs, through the police stations, county jails and courts directly into prison. And if you are poor, because you don't have money for adequate legal defense, you will serve sentences that are decades longer than those for equivalent crimes anywhere else in the industrialized world.

If you are a poor person of color in America you understand this with a visceral fear. You have no chance. Being poor has become a crime. And this makes mass incarceration the most pressing civil rights issue of our era.

The 10-part online documentary "Making a Murderer," by writer-directors Moira Demos and Laura Ricciardi, chronicles the endemic corruption of the judicial system. The film focuses on the case of Steven Avery and his nephew, Brendan Dassey, who were given life sentences for murder without any tangible evidence linking them to the crime. As admirable as the documentary was, however, it focused on a case where the main defendant, Avery, had competent defense. He was also white. The blatant corruption of, and probable conspiracy by, the Manitowoc County Sheriff's Office in Wisconsin and then-Calumet County District Attorney Ken Kratz is nothing compared with what goes on in the well-oiled and deeply cynical system in place in inner-city courts. The accused in poor urban centers are lined up daily like sheep in a chute and shipped to prison with a startling alacrity. The attempts by those who put Avery and Dassey behind bars to vilify them further after the release of the film misses the point: The two men, like most of the rest of the poor behind bars in the United States, did not receive a fair trial. Whether they did or did not murder Teresa Halbach—and the film makes a strong case that they did not—is a moot point.

Eye 2

Ex-cop pleads guilty to killing woman and ditching body on the highway stuffed in a suitcase

Steven Zelich
© Sean Krajacic / APSteven Zelich appears in court in Kenosha, Wis., in 2014.
A former suburban Milwaukee police officer accused of killing two women and ditching their bodies in suitcases along a rural Wisconsin highway pleaded guilty Monday in one of their deaths.

Steven Zelich could spend the rest of his life behind bars after admitting to reckless homicide and other charges in the 2012 strangulation death of Jenny Gamez. Authorities said the 19-year-old Oregon woman died during a sexual encounter in Kenosha, and that Zelich hid her body before dumping it in 2014.

Details of the case are similar to accusations Zelich faces in the 2013 death of Laura Simonson in Minnesota. Authorities say Zelich met both women online, choked them at hotels and stashed their bodies in suitcases in the trunk of his car before dumping them along the side of the highway.

Zelich, 54, faces two counts of hiding a corpse in Walworth County, where the suitcases were found by highway workers mowing the grass in June 2014. After those charges are resolved, Minnesota prosecutors could move to extradite him so he can face trial in Simonson's death.

Snowflake

She's snow-k; Woman stranded in car, buried in snow for 3 days, rescued

Buried by snow
© Maryland National Guard
An unidentified woman has been rescued after being trapped in her car amid the heavy snow that hit Accokeek, Maryland over the weekend. The woman was trapped on Friday and waited until Monday for a rescue crew to dig her out.

The woman was conscious and uninjured when she was found, officials told WJLA. The reason her car was trapped or why she was in the car is yet unknown.

Comment: See more: 28 inches of snow, floods, emergency in New York: Deadly snowstorm 'Jonas' hits US East Coast