Society's Child
This comes as the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development prepares to enforce a smoking ban in all public housing across the country.
It may surprise some that Americans' support for bans on smoking in public places has not expanded since 2011.
But it's possible that the survey question's reference to "all public places" suggests a more expansive ban than many Americans are willing to endorse.
The initial video, released by Athens resident April Collins, went viral when she caught her nine-year-old cousin Eric being forced down and pinned to the ground by police when officers attended the residence to arrest the boy's father over a domestic violence dispute. The footage, uploaded to Facebook on Sunday, caused fury within the community - but the video was not all that it seemed.
In response, police shared their own footage, which showed a frantic Eric losing his temper and launching himself at an Athens-Clarke County officer on the Friday evening. In the video, the officer can be heard screaming "stop resisting" at the boy and "back off" to his panicked family members.
The smoking ban, which covers low-income housing that is federally subsidized but owned and operated by local public housing authorities (PHAs), applies to living units as well as common areas and extends to a zone 25 feet around each building. The policy is the result of a 2015 HUD rule that aimed to "improve indoor air quality in the housing, benefit the health of public housing tenants and PHA staff, reduce the risk of catastrophic fires, and lower overall maintenance costs." The lawsuit, which was organized by New York City Citizens Lobbying Against Smoker Harassment (NYC CLASH) and filed in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, argues that HUD has no business regulating indoor air quality or trying to dictate what people do in the privacy of their homes.
A ceasefire between the resistance group and the occupying entity was brokered Saturday following this weekend's heavy shelling by Israel during the 16th week of the ongoing Great Return March protests.
The occupying state also said it would open its blockade zone and expand the original fishing zone if the ceasefire was respected.
Four Palestinians were killed Friday and 120 injured following a series of attacks by the Israeli Occupying Forces (IOF) near the Gaza strip border. Among those killed were Mahmoud Khalil Qishta, 23, killed in Rafah; as well as Mohammed Riyad Farahza, 31, and Shahban Rihab Abu Khater, 26, both killed in Khan Younis.
The three were fighters with the Al-Qassam Brigades, a military wing of Hamas. A fourth Palestinian, Muhammad Badwan, 24, was shot in the chest as he was participating in protests on that same day in east Gaza City.
West Mercia police said two men from Wolverhampton aged 39 and 41 were charged with conspiring to commit grievous bodily harm, along with three men aged 25, 26, and 22.
They are due to appear at Kidderminster Magistrates' Court to be tried over the suspected attack, which saw corrosive substance being "sprayed or thrown" at the toddler on Saturday at 2:15pm in a Home Bargains in Worcester. The defendants cannot be named for legal reasons.
The victim was brought to the hospital with serious burns to his face and arms.
Comment: The BBC reports the father of the boy is among the five men charged in the case. Further details about the case have yet to emerge.
The announcement followed a meeting between the two countries' leaders President Cyril Ramaphosa and Chinese President Xi Jinping in Pretoria. Xi's state visit took place ahead of the 10th BRICS summit, scheduled for July 25-27. South Africa's biggest city of Johannesburg is set to welcome the heads of Brazil, Russia, India, and China.
"China is ready to invest and work with South Africa in various sectors, such as infrastructure development, ocean economy, green economy, science and technology, agriculture, environment and finance," Ramaphosa told journalists following the meeting.
The 139-page complaint was filed in Stamford Superior Court last week and first covered by the Stamford Advocate. The four anonymous plaintiffs are suing the Boy Scouts of America, the Connecticut Yankee Council, and the Fairfield County Council of Boy Scouts for allegedly failing to take appropriate measures to stop accused serial pedophile Waldron, or "Wally," Ackerman from allegedly preying on them.
Ackerman was, for years, a scoutmaster with Stamford Boy Scout Troop 38, which he led in the mid-1970s. The complaint claims that the Boy Scouts of America "had actual knowledge of the explosion of the pedophiles within scouting during the 1960s and 1970s nationwide."
Nassar is serving a 60-year federal sentence for possession child pornography and has also been handed a jail term of up to 175 years for molesting young athletes - which he will serve if he survives the federal sentence.
He filed two motions on Tuesday through his attorneys with Ingham County Circuit Court, where he was sentenced by Judge Rosemarie Aquilina back in January after testimony from more than 150 women.
One of the motions filed on behalf of Nassar seeks a re-sentencing to change what is claimed to be an invalid sentence, according to the Lansing State Journal.
Comment: Previously:
- 'Little girls don't stay little forever': Victims emotionally confront pedophile doctor Larry Nassar
- At least 40 athletes were molested by Nassar while the FBI was aware of the allegations yet allowed him to continue working
- "I just signed your death warrant": US Olympic doctor Nassar sentenced to 175yrs
- Entire USA Gymnastics board forced to resign amid Larry Nassar sex scandal
During a hearing at the US District Court for the District of Columbia on Wednesday, prosecutors said they wanted the protective order because they were worried about Butina's lawyers potentially leaking material to the media. They argued that the protective order would "facilitate the protection of the investigation."
Prosecutors said they had up to 12 terabytes of data to be provided on the case, with "four to six" terabytes - about 1.5 million files - ready to hand over to the defense "as soon as possible". The remaining four to six terabytes would be ready "in about two weeks," they said.
Comment: Previously:
- Joe Quinn on Sputnik: 'Deep State Wants Trump to Acknowledge Russian Collusion, Thus Undermine His Own Presidency'
- Joe Quinn on Sputnik: 'They're Not Really Fighting Against Russia, But Against Reality Itself'
- Bombshell revelation! Russian woman charged with being a lobbyist in Washington, DC
- Russian Foreign Ministry tweets out support of Maria Butina and Westerners freak out
- The case of Maria Butina - Cults and quadruple agents in Washington
- Lavrov: Charges against alleged spy Maria Butina were fabricated, release her
Crain's filing said that his marriage to the controversial pornographic actress "has become insupportable because of discord or conflict of personalities" and claimed that Daniels was putting his daughter "in imminent threat of serious and immediate physical or emotional harm" by taking her along on her nationwide strip club tour.
Daniels' lawyer Michael Avenatti said that the accuracy of the divorce claim is "vehemently disputed" and that Daniels' daughter "remains her number one priority." He also said that she "kindly asks for privacy" during the process "for the sake of her family."
For her part, Daniels responded a little differently: "I don't need or want privacy," she tweeted soon after Avenatti. "I want truth. And it will come out. I'm not afraid."
Crain has requested child support from Daniels and the sharing of their property assets. While the restraining order is in effect, Daniels' unsupervised access to their daughter will be restricted. Daniels is currently touring America's strip clubs.















Comment: Anti-smoking hysteria has truly infected the masses. Not only are the 'negative effects' of smoking tobacco mostly junk science but, for some people, smoking has been proven to be beneficial.