Society's Child
The Ukrainian government had been adamant that this was little more than a 'Trojan Horse' being used to transport Russian military hardware to anti-government troops in the east of the country. Trucks 'inspection' showed they were carrying quite a different load.
The convoy is long - with 270 trucks in all. They are trying to bring much needed supplies to the city of Lugansk, which has been without electricity, gas and water for weeks, following constant shelling from Ukrainian government forces.
The New York City Police Department has arrested at least four people during a peaceful rally intended to pay tribute to Michael Brown and others who have suffered from police brutality.
Thousands of protesters left their original rally location at New York's Union Square and descended upon Times Square, ignoring police orders to stay on the sidewalk. As a result, police began cordoning protesters at 42nd Street and 9th Avenue. Demonstrators flooded social media, complaining that officers had kettled them and refused to let them go. No police in riot gear were at the scene, however, nor was any tear gas used as in Ferguson, Missouri, on Wednesday.

People hold signs during a rally in Tel Aviv's Rabin Square, to show solidarity with residents of Israel's southern communities, who have been targeted by Palestinian rockets and mortar salvoes, August 14, 2014.
An estimated 10,000 Israelis gathered in Rabin Square for first major demonstration since Operation Protective Edge began on July 8, officially to protect Israeli civilians from the barrage of rockets launched from the militant organization on the Gaza strip.
Nine police departments across the state signed up last month to take part in a Tweet Smart campaign, and the officials involved hope it'll be enough to keep eyewitnesses from accidentally ruining law enforcement operations by broadcasting policy activity over Twitter.
"Please don't tweet about the movements of responding police officers, or post pictures," Washington State Patrol Chief John R. Batiste said in a statement last month. "Sooner or later we'll have an emergency where the suspect is watching social media. That could allow an offender to escape, or possibly even cost an officer their life."
"If it's safe to do so, go ahead and take pictures of our deputies in action," added Kitsap County Sheriff Steve Boyer. "We're very proud of the work they do. We'd simply ask that you wait to post those pictures until the emergency is over."
According to the July 29-dated statement, police officers have already witnessed events in which tweets from witnesses, good intentioned or otherwise, have complicated law enforcement operations. In particular, the statement reads, the search for a gunman in Canada and the police response to an Oregon school shooting spawned social media reactions that left Washington state searching for a solution.
Across the country in Alexandria, Virginia, the Center for Social Media's Nancy Korb told the Associated Press that the concerns coming out of the Pacific Northwest are far from unwarranted.
"All members of the public may not understand the implications of tweeting out a picture of SWAT team activity," she told the AP. "It's a real safety issue, not only for officers but anyone in the vicinity."
"It's not that they don't want the public to share information," Korb added. "It's the timing of it."
Dutch man, 91, returns Israel's Righteous Among the Nations medal after six relatives killed in Gaza

The Hall of Names at the Yad Vashem Holocaust museum in Jerusalem, which awards the Righteous Among the Nations medal to gentiles who saved Jews from the Nazis during World War II.
A 91-year-old Dutch man who was declared a Righteous Among the Nations for saving a Jew during the German occupation on Wednesday returned his medal and certificate because six of his relatives were killed by an Israeli bombing in the Gaza Strip last month.
In 2011, the Yad Vashem Holocaust museum declared Henk Zanoli and his late mother, Johana Zanoli-Smit, Righteous Among the Nations for having saved a Jewish child, Elhanan Pinto, during the Nazi occupation of Holland. Pinto, born in 1932, was hidden by the Zanoli family from the spring of 1943 until the Allies liberated Holland in 1945. His parents perished in Nazi death camps.
In hiding a Jewish child, the Zanoli family took a double risk, because it was already under Nazi scrutiny for having opposed the German occupation. Zanoli's father was sent to the Dachau concentration camp in 1941 due to his opposition to the occupation, and he subsequently died at the Mauthausen concentration camp in February 1945. Henk Zanoli's brother-in-law was executed because of his involvement in the Dutch resistance, and one of his brothers had a Jewish fiancée, who was also killed by the Nazis.
Zanoli's great-niece, Angelique Eijpe, is a Dutch diplomat who currently serves as deputy head of her country's diplomatic mission in Oman. Her husband, economist Isma'il Ziadah, was born in the al-Bureij refugee camp in central Gaza. The couple has three children. Ziadah's parents were born in Fallujah, on whose lands the town of Kiryat Gat now sits. His father died in 1987.
On Sunday, July 20, an Israeli fighter jet dropped a bomb on the Ziadah family's home in al-Bureij. The bomb killed the family matriarch, Muftiyah, 70; three of her sons, Jamil, Omar and Youssef; Jamil's wife, Bayan; and their 12-year-old son, Shaaban. The bombing thus orphaned Jamal and Bayan's other five children, four daughters and a son, while bereaving Omar's two sons and Youssef's three sons and a daughter of their fathers. The bombing also killed Mohammed Maqadmeh, who happened to be visiting the family that day.
In a statement published at OK.gov, Fallin said, "This 'Black Mass' is a disgusting mockery of the Catholic faith, and it should be equally repellent to Catholics and non-Catholics alike."
"It may be protected by the First Amendment," she went on, "but that doesn't mean we can't condemn it in the strongest terms possible for the moral outrage which it is. It is shocking and disgusting that a group of New York City 'satanists' would travel all the way to Oklahoma to peddle their filth here. I pray they realize how hurtful their actions are and cancel this event."
When Oklahoma officials passed special laws allowing for the display of faith-based monuments and statuary at the state Capitol, they inadvertently paved the way for The Satanic Temple, a religious group based in the New York City, to establish an official presence on the Capitol's grounds.
The Satanists unveiled a plan for a 7-foot, goat-headed statue of the pagan deity Baphomet, who was appropriated as the symbol of the Satanic Church in the early 20th century. Because the state ruled that faith-based symbology and monuments are welcome on public property, the state government was forced to make room for the Satanic monument.
A statement released by the Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) on Tuesday said that the incident occurred while an officer was conducting an "investigative stop" on Monday evening at around 8:12 p.m. The statement said that a "struggle ensued," and the officer opened fire.
The gunshot victim was transported to a nearby hospital, where he later died. Lt. Ellis Imaizumi had initially said on Monday that the officer sustained minor injuries, but the official statement indicated that no officers were hurt during the shooting.
Family of the deceased identified him to KTLA as 24-year-old Ezell Ford. The man's mother, Tritobia Ford, has described her son as "mentally challenged."
"My heart is so heavy," Tritobia Ford told the station. "My son was a good kid. He didn't deserve to die the way he did."
A man who identified himself as a cousin said that he was laying down on the pavement, and the officer shot him in the back three times. "They laid him out and for whatever reason, they shot him in the back, knowing mentally, he has complications," the man explained. "Every officer in this area, from the Newton Division, knows that - that this child has mental problems."

Protesters confront police during an impromptu rally on Sunday, Aug. 10, 2014, following the shooting of Michael Brown, 18, by police in Ferguson, Mo.
MSNBC reported that around 1:00 a.m., St. Louis County Police responded to a report of gunshots and of five or six African-American men toting shotguns and wearing ski masks.
Officers told MSNBC that when they arrived on the scene, a group of men there scattered and ran. One of them reportedly pointed a handgun at police, which they said gave them no option other than to shoot. The suspect was injured and taken to an area hospital in police custody.
Police also said that an area woman was injured in a drive-by shooting earlier in the night, but that neither shooting appeared to be related to the protests that took place in Ferguson on Tuesday.
On Saturday, a Ferguson police officer shot and killed unarmed black teen Michael Brown. Witness and police accounts of the killing differ sharply. Police claim that Brown attacked a police officer, who fired on him in self-defense.
A loaf of bread and a few choice words on Sunday evening now have Danielle Wolf in hot water.
Wolf, age 22, moved to South Carolina with her family 3 weeks ago but a night at a grocery store has her wanting to move back to Ohio.
"He was like, 'You're under arrest'...right in front of kids, in front of my husband, in front of customers." said Wolf, of the North Augusta Department of Public Safety who arrested her.
Wolf recalls the night she was arrested and charged with disorderly conduct at the Kroger store located on Knox Avenue, in North Augusta.
She says a woman shopping in the store followed Wolf and her family. "She's like, 'you said the f-word', and I'm like, 'when did I say this to my kids?" Wolf told us.
According to the incident report, Wolf was shopping at Kroger with her kids around 10:15 pm Sunday, going down the bread aisle, when they kept squeezing the bread -- and that's when she said the word that got her arrested.
"It's seems a little extreme," said Amy Sawicz, who shops at the store.
Fellow shopper Terry Hunt said, "parents, we don't guide our children in the proper way."
Wolf says that's not what happened. "She's like, 'you told that they were smashing the bread', and I said 'no' I said that to my husband, that he was smashing the bread by throwing the frozen pizzas on top of it," said Wolf.
According to North Augusta law, disorderly conduct generally means, to "utter, while in a state of anger, in the presence of another, any bawdy, lewd or obscene words or epithets."
Koppenhaver is a former UFC fighter currently on the run from police after being accused of viciously attacking his ex-girlfriend, adult performer Christy Mack.
Comment: Domestic violence is a combination of kidnapping, brainwashing, assault, and torture. Neanderthal-type "men" have been using these ruthless reproductive tactics and it's only relatively recently that society has come to explicitly condemn their tactics. But there's still an undercurrent of "hear no evil speak no evil," from politics to the family, that serves this dynamic of betrayal.
Family members still tend to blame the victim, due to a lack of understanding the disturbed character and the psychopath, and because it's often safer to get the victim and her abuser out of the picture due to the damage he causes. The gold seal goes to men like Joe Rogan for speaking out against these predators.












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