Society's Child
Police said Tuesday they indicted the model for procedural fraud, slanderous denunciation and extortion.
Her former partner Estivens Alves is accused of disclosing erotic content, which was then published online.
Trindade went to Sao Paulo police to accuse Neymar of raping her at a Paris hotel in May. Neymar denied the accusation and said their relations were consensual.
Prosecutors officially closed the investigation against Neymar earlier this month, citing a lack of evidence against him.
The Associated Press doesn't name alleged sexual assault victims unless they make their identities public, which Trindade did in several interviews.
Just moments before entering the arena for the 'Battle of Bendigo' match between Jeff Horn and Michael Zerafa on August 31 in Victoria, ring girl trio Demey Maconachie, Kalista Thomas and Tammy Bills were told they would be banned from entering the ring altogether.
The reason? Female advocate groups and local politicians had joined forced to condemn the role as "objectifying" women, without consulting first the girls in question. The solution? The three women were to be replaced by male 'fight progress managers', putting them out of work in favor of under-qualified men.
Comment: Fighting dirty: Feminists are replacing ring girls with men to create the patriarchy they crave
Of those lobbying to block the ring girls that night was councillor Yvonne Wrigglesworth, who claimed the girls were nothing but "token trophy women," telling the local Bendigo Advertiser, "it's not OK that we have young females portrayed in this way."
Still, there was some good news for smokers because we learned that two out of three smokers will die which I suppose means that one in three smokers won't die!
You can't get such good odds on immortality any other way.
And that shows how ridiculous the claims of the anti-smokers have become.
They can make whatever ludicrous or outrageous threats of death and disease they like without the slightest question or criticism and that is extremely unhealthy in a democracy.
No one else is allowed to go around threatening and frightening people like that.
The claim about youth's transformative commitment to radical environmental change is — based on informal observation — bunk. The cardinal rule when it comes to environmental virtue-signaling is that people give up what they're willing to give up. Young people are no different. If being environmentally sound required sacrificing anything that a self-described environmental warrior actually valued, the conversation would quickly change to a different topic. One's own habits are necessary; it's everyone else's that need to change.
This always-unreached threshold for environmental sacrifice is particularly notable on the part of celebrity Greens, with their fortress-like SUVs, multiple residences, and massive carbon footprints — whether it's the cavalcade of yachts and private jets that brought such luminaries as Leonardo DiCaprio, Mark Zuckerberg, and Katy Perry to Google's three-day climate-change summit in Sicily this July; environmental crusaders Prince Harry and Meghan Markle jetting off to Elton John's French estate; or Reliable Sources host Brian Stelter's "quick day trip" to Los Angeles from New York just ahead of the CNN climate-change debate. A police caravan drives New York City mayor Bill de Blasio 11 miles from his mayoral mansion in Manhattan to his favorite gym in Brooklyn. "Everyone in their own life has to change their own habits to start protecting the earth," he has intoned, but taking the subway is not one of those changes appropriate for him.
The official explanation for this event is that Moslem terrorists somehow confounded all the usual security procedures and 'attacked America' because they 'hated our freedoms.'
This version of the meaning behind 9/11 was the catalyst for the perpetual war currently being waged, the ultimate fail-safe irrefutable argument to silence criticism of the Patriot Act, Guantanamo and the creeping emergence of fascism in the Western world.
Comment: See also:
- University of Alaska study 'definitively' concludes that fire could NOT have caused the World Trade Center Building 7 collapse on 9/11
- Fire did not bring it down: 2-Year peer reviewed study refutes official report on WTC-7 collapse, supports controlled demo
- Ex-CIA analyst: Putin warned Bush about impending attack two days before 9/11
- 241 NYPD officers died from 9/11 illnesses, 10x the number killed in WTC attack
- The 'Never Forget' mantra of September 11
- New book gathers high-level testimony that CIA/NSA actively prevented sharing of intel that would stop 9/11
- Why 9/11 Truth is More Relevant Than Ever
These data are from Gallup's annual Work and Education poll, conducted Aug. 1-14.
The pharmaceutical industry has unseated the federal government as the lowest-rated industry this year, in terms of its net-positive score; the government has been last or tied for last from 2011 through 2018. The healthcare industry's negative ratings also exceed its positive ratings by double digits, while the advertising and public relations industry's net rating is barely negative.
Comment: Perhaps, if Big Pharma really care to turn their image around, they could cut their ties with Satan himself and try working for good instead of evil. In the past, such moves have been good for public perception, on the rare instances they've been tried.
See also:
- Pittance: Purdue Pharma offers $10-12 billion to settle opioid lawsuits
- Big Pharma oligopoly: American diabetics forced to travel to Canada for affordable insulin
- Pharma company to pay $225 million to settle opioid court cases
- 'Largest cartel case in US history': Big Pharma collusion caused generic drug prices to rise by as much as 1,000%
- Zombie Nation: 46% of Americans have taken a Pharma drug within the last month
- A case study of how Pharma is killing science
- FDA medical adviser: 'Congress is owned by pharma'
A California woman is the subject of a search on Maui, and a second person has been missing in Hawaii for a little more than a week.
Khiara Henry, 23, of San Diego, was last seen on July 21 when she rented a car in Kahului, according to a news release from August 5 from the Maui Police Department. She missed her July 29 flight home.
Her vehicle was found at the Waianapanapa Park area, the release said. Her daypack, phone and car key were not in it.
Comment: More on the missing persons:
"Nobody actually has seen Kyle since they saw him at the bathroom overlook on Friday morning going down into the valley. There's hundreds of people in the valley if not more because it's a three day weekend and people hiking and camping and everything and nobody has seen him. So everybody's baffled," Kyle's father, Steve Brittain, wrote in a Facebook post.See also: Hawaii woman missing for 2 weeks found alive in forest, spotted from helicopter
"I get a lot of questions about who Kyle is," he added. "Kyle is a healer. Kyle knows what love is. Kyle will help you when you're down. Kyle doesn't understand anger and resentment. Since he was born, people have said that Kyle has an old soul. They are right."
Search teams and dozens of volunteers have been scouring the valley for more than a week to find Kyle. Helicopters and search dogs are involved in the efforts, KHON reported. Rescuers who helped find yoga teacher Amanda Eller earlier this year have joined the search, according to KHON. A Facebook page called Find Kyle Brittain shows searchers in the valley, and Steve shared a Facebook photo of a bright green shirt that read "BRING KYLE HOME."
"Trying to sleep, knowing that he's out there, is killing me," Steve told NBC News on Sunday. "I was up at 3:30 this morning looking at the stars, praying that we can find him today."
Police are asking anyone with information to call the Honokaʻa Police Station at (808) 775-7533.
Following immediately after the California Senate passed SB 276 in Sacramento on Monday, which effectively removes medical exemptions in the state (even for those with previous life-threatening reactions to vaccines), a protest erupted at the state capital in front of Gov. Newsom's office, who would sign the bill later that day. Earlier, five protestors were arrested for exercising their First Amendment right of peaceful protest — a painful irony, considering that the removal of religious exemptions also violates the First Amendment rights, which is why they were protesting in the first place.
Comment: See also:
- Objective:Health - ITN: Fluoride Makes You Stupid | RFK JR Hits Back | Tech Censorship
- Jessica Biel joins anti-vaccine activist RFK Jr. to lobby against California pro-vaccination bill
- Terrifying Tech: Acts against health freedom you'll probably never learn about
- Health freedom and the government's real war on natural health
It could let the student parties cross-examine each other, which would be cheaper but could subject students to "further harm or harassment." Or it could let their "agents" handle cross-examination, most likely lawyers, and either pay for representation itself or let students hire their own lawyers.
The university chose the cheaper option.
UMich is facing blowback from both pro-accuser and due-process advocates for implementing an interim policy that is considered even worse than the process struck down by the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.
Young people are often heralded for their good intentions and their love of social causes. What we're less experienced with, like all humans, is multiple-stage planning — the kind of forethought it takes to anticipate not just what to do, but the unintended consequences of doing it.
The issues we're most passionate about — or afraid of — are the hardest to see clearly. For example, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) was dismissive of those who point out "the costs" of combating climate change.
Her certainty that anticipated problems years down the road necessitate immediate sacrifice ignores the principle of unseen consequences. It feels good to advocate for immediate, sweeping change, but the costs — the trade-offs — of implementing long-term climate plans would be near-term tragedy for millions around the world.
Comment: The author has a point - even if she sometimes uses bad examples (like the use of cancer-causing pesticides) to make it. Without objective data and a perspective that isn't motivated by the feel-good emotions of "doing good", or a power and profit motive that lies behind many of those advocating for sweeping economic and environmental policies, people are quite likely to make quality of life worse for many.















Comment: RT adds: More fallout from the perhaps well-intentioned #MeToo movement. Unfortunately, "believe all women" often translates to "don't believe any man". But news flash for the ideologically possessed: some men are rapists, some women lie. It's not pretty, but that's life.