Society's Child
"You cut it or you leave," the headmaster reportedly told the student, as reported by newspaper Le Parisien. The head teacher also reportedly claimed that the student's beard is an apparent "sign of radicalization."
When the headmaster first asked the student to shave or shorten his facial hair, the young man, 21, explained that he had been cultivating his beard for two years for religious reasons.
"The Prophet [Muhammed] was wearing one. It is something important to me," the student, who wanted to remain unidentified out of fear of "being stigmatized even more," told Le Parisien, recalling his conversation with the head teacher.
He also added that the head teacher's "threats put pressure" on him and he "ended up" writing a letter to inform him that he was leaving the school. According to Le Parisien, the student has not attended school since October 13.
Clearly, this is a challenging time for policing," Chief Terrence M. Cunningham of the Wellesley Police Department in Massachusetts told a massive convention audience in San Diego on Monday.
Cunningham is the top police chief of the IACP, which represents some 18,000 police chiefs worldwide, many of whom attended the conference where all attendees reportedly rose to their feet in applause for Cunningham's address, an apology on behalf of the organization to minorities "for the actions of the past and the role that our profession has played in society's historical mistreatment of communities of color."
Reactions on social media and from civil rights organizations as well as from other police organizations were not as unanimous as the reception in San Diego.
"We at the International Red Cross have offices in the north. Our teams are there, and we will be ready to provide emergency relief - food, hygiene kits, cutlery, stoves, blankets, anything these people are going to need. Today we can provide up to 300,000. We are increasing our stocks because we expect it to be huge," told RT Sarah Alzawqari, ICRC spokesperson for Iraq.
There are currently 3 million internally-displaced people in Iraq. The ICRC is concerned that the number may increase by a third, as people flee Mosul, the Iraqi stronghold of Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS/ISIL).
Offering help & support
Countless RT readers sent messages of support and solidarity to the RT UK team, with quite a few offering services to RT to help fight the indignation.
The In Their Own Words series was created to spark conversation on U.S. college campuses seldom featured in the mainstream media. Thus far nine college campuses, including University of California-Berkeley, have agree to publish ads in their campus newspapers.
PalAd intern Maggie Liu said, "As a college student living on a politically-active campus, I know firsthand how little young people know about the reality of the situation. I hope these ads will bring some much-needed dialogue to campuses across the country."
This is the latest frontier of a rapidly growing industry. Since January, more than 200,000 posts per month on Instagram, a picture-sharing app owned by Facebook, have been tagged with "#ad", "#sp" or "#sponsored", according to Captiv8, an analytics platform that connects brands to social media "influencers". Hiring such influencers allows companies to reach a vast network of potential customers: Mr. Ronaldo has a combined following of 240 million people across Facebook, Instagram and Twitter.
Thomas Dart, the sheriff of Cook County jail, knows Ms Aldridge will end up back in his cells soon because there is nowhere else for her to go. She is sentenced, like so many seriously mentally ill people in America, to rotate in and out of correctional facilities until she dies. Prisons and jails are the main mental-health facilities in the country, something Sheriff Dart describes as an "abomination". He is also angry about how fiscally reckless it is. At only 42, Ms Aldridge has already cost taxpayers $719,436 for her arrests and incarcerations.
Schlosberg was arrested in Walhalla, North Dakota on Tuesday for filming activists shutting down a tar sands pipeline, part of a nationwide solidarity action organized on behalf of those battling the Dakota Access Pipeline.
"The actions of the North Dakota Police force are not just a violation of the climate, but a violation of the constitution."The filmmaker was held without access to a lawyer for 48 hours, her colleague Josh Fox wrote in the Nation, and her footage was confiscated by the police.
—Josh Fox,Gasland filmmaker
Schlosberg was then charged Friday with three felonies, the Huffington Post reported: "conspiracy to theft of property, conspiracy to theft of services and conspiracy to tampering with or damaging a public service. Together, the charges carry 45 years in maximum prison sentences."
The research was carried out by the social media research firm Brandwatch and looked at 19 million tweets over a four-year period to assess the levels of anti-woman sentiment expressed online.
The study found that over that period there were 3 million posts which contained terms abusive to women - with women most likely to have posted them.
Brandwatch located the worst offenders in Bangor, Northern Ireland, and Merthyr Tydfil, Wales.
Last month, Apperson, 38, was convicted by a Seminole County, Florida, jury of attempted second-degree murder, shooting into an occupied vehicle and aggravated assault with a firearm. On Monday morning, Circuit Judge Debra S. Nelson sentenced him to 20 years in prison, according to the Orlando Sentinel, which is the state minimum for shooting at another person.
On May 11, 2015, Apperson and Zimmerman were driving separate vehicles side-by-side on Lake Mary Boulevard in Sanford, Florida. Apperson says Zimmerman pointed a gun at him, an allegation Zimmerman has denied. Apperson then fired his own gun in what he has called self-defense.
The bullet went through the passenger's side window and was lodged in Zimmerman's car frame, just above the window. Zimmerman suffered minor injuries from glass or metal debris, the Sentinel reported.
"The crux here is Mr. Apperson's blatant disregard for my life, any life ... anybody driving up and down Lake Mary Boulevard," Zimmerman told Judge Nelson on Monday, alleging that Apperson had "joyfully bragged" about killing Zimmerman that day.
Comment: George Zimmerman really does seem to be followed by dangerous and illegal activity. If it was just one time it be labeled a coincidence or bad luck but after that it's a pattern and one has to look at the person as being the problem.















Comment: So in short, question everything, including motives because some people's motives are purely financial.