Society's Child
Thomas Washburn, 54, who teaches at Adams Elementary School in Mesa, was arrested Wednesday when the incident reportedly occurred.
Police said something upset Washburn, who started shouting in the classroom filled with two dozen youngsters. The outburst frightened the victim and she hid her face in the top of her shirt, officers said.
The victim's mother said her daughter was born prematurely and is "developmentally delayed," according to a police report.
Officers said Washburn told the girl to take her face out of the shirt and when she did not comply, he went to her and completely removed her shirt, leaving her naked from the waist up in front of her classmates for about 10 minutes.
The girl broke down crying, police said. Washburn eventually returned her clothing.
Narrated by Goodman Green
On Sept. 11 last year, up to 1 million people were evacuated from Lower Manhattan by water "in an emergent network of private and publicly owned watercraft--a previously unplanned activity." It was an American Dunkirk, like the epic rescue of the British army at Dunkirk in 1940 by an armada of similar craft.
The purpose of the proposed union would have been to demand higher wages and the right to strike. It would have been formed under the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers (IAMAW).
Mary Osako, a spokeswoman from Amazon, said, "With today's vote against third-party representation, our employees have made it clear that they prefer a direct connection with Amazon. This direct connection is the most effective way to understand and respond to the wants and needs of our employees. Amazon's culture and business model are based on rapid innovation, flexibility, and open lines of direct communication between managers and associates."
After the union was shot down, IAMAW accused Amazon of pressuring their workers to not unionize.

Travis the chimp went berserk in 2009, mauling his owner’s friend, Charla Nash.
It was a bloodbath.
Raised by Sandy Herold in Stamford, Conn., essentially from birth, Travis was thought to have been fully socialized and not pose a threat to his human masters who regarded him as one of the family.
The tremendously powerful primate could open doors using keys, ate at the dinner table with a glass of wine and adored ice cream. He was a big fan of baseball, could drive a car, enjoyed painting and even took baths with Herold.
But on Feb. 16, 2009, Travis snapped.
The Yale Project on Climate Change Communication study found the number has risen to 23 percent, up 7 percentage points since April 2013.
The latest survey, taken in November 2013, finds that the majority of Americans - 63 percent - do believe in climate change, and 53 percent are 'somewhat' or 'very' worried about the consequences.
'The great majority of climate scientists have concluded that global warming is happening, mostly human caused and, if left unchecked, will have serious consequences for human societies and the natural world,' the report's authors said.
Comment: It's unsurprising more people are questioning the global warming political doctrine, although it may very well be more than 23% of Americans. The problem with conducting surveys as these is when questions are based on faulty and limiting assumptions, which prevents an accurate measurement of the situation. It should be obvious the planet is experiencing dramatic changes, but global warming 'science' falls flat in trying to explain them and actively omits evidence that doesn't fit it's theory. Check out these articles for some of the reasons why more people might be questioning the status quo:
Volcanic eruptions, rising CO2, boiling oceans, and why man-made global warming is not even wrong
The top seven global warming alarmist setbacks in 2013
Ice age cometh: No warming left to deny... Global cooling takes over... CET annual mean temperature plunges 1°C since 2000
From 'Hiding the Decline' to 'Burying the Pause': Man-made Global Warming is still a lie

Cecilia Abadie outside the San Diego traffic court where a ticket for driving while wearing Google Glass was thrown out.
A San Diego traffic court has thrown out the case against a woman who authorities said was driving while wearing Google Glass.
Commissioner John Blair ruled that Cecilia Abadie was not guilty because the code she was cited for required proof that the device was in operation. Blair found there was no proof beyond a reasonable doubt.
Abadie is believed to be the first motorist cited for wearing Google Glass while driving. She was also found not guilty of speeding.
Abadie, a software developer, said she was among 30,000 people called "explorers" selected to try out Google Glass before the technology goes on sale. The device on a frame worn like glasses features a thumbnail-size transparent display above the right eye. The frames are equipped with a camera, a display and a computer that responds to voice commands.
Greg Snider said he was driving in downtown Houston around 2 p.m., when he pulled into a parking lot at Commerce and La Branch to take a business call.
"That's when the homeless man came up to me. He said, 'Hey my name is Dave. I'm from Dallas. I'm down on my luck. Do you have any change,'" said Snider.
Snider said he gave the man some change and drove off.
"I had no idea at all what was about to happen," said Snider.

In 2004, former Oregon Gov. Neil Goldschmidt admits to having sex with a teen-aged neighbor nearly 30 years earlier.
But she appeared intelligent, well-spoken and quick-witted. She seemed kind.
I was at my desk at The Oregonian, where I was working as a columnist in 2004, when the call came that would lead me to Neil Goldschmidt's victim.
A woman I'd written about a few years earlier was on the line. She had another story for me, she said. Her best friend since childhood was Goldschmidt's victim, and she wanted to tell her story.
Comment: Having gotten away with this crime, the former governor remained one of the most powerful people in Oregon and is now retired from public life, but continues to prey on others.

Palestinians children holds bread and pots on January 8, 2014, as they take part in a protest against the poor living conditions at the Yarmuk refugee camp in the Syrian capital Damascus, on January 8, 2014, in Rafah town in the southern Gaza Strip.
Rebels control swathes of Yarmuk, but for months government forces have imposed a suffocating siege on the camp, where some 20,000 Palestinians live despite terrible shortages.
Palestinian labour minister Ahmad Majdalani, who was visiting Damascus to negotiate aid access to the camp, said its Palestinian residents must not be used as "hostages" in the conflict.
An aid convoy heading to Yarmuk was targeted on Monday "some 100 metres (yards) away from the agreed meeting point," on the edges of the camp, Majdalani said at a press conference in Damascus.
He said "the source of fire was known... to be controlled by Al-Nusra Front, Ahrar al-Sham and Suqur al-Golan," directly accusing rebel groups battling Assad's troops.
Yet here's the grim reality facing black America today:











Comment: The above appears to have been written in the run-up to the first anniversary of 9/11.
This is very interesting research because it reveals the contrast between how the psychopathic mind sees the world (and wishfully believes that normal people see it too by casting their hysterical, paranoid net far and wide through the media) with how the inherently social human perceives and responds to its environment. We note with sadness, however, that humanity's propensity to "seek information from one another and make inquiries" didn't extend far enough to question what really happened on 9/11.
Perhaps another way of looking at it is that yes, people do ask questions, but they have long since been dumbed down through atrocious diets and overwhelmed by a daily dose of lies, which have combined to subvert these natural pro-social traits towards support of unnatural warfare and torture of fellow humans.