Society's Child
Jazmine Headley sued the city in August alleging trauma and humiliation and seeking unspecified damages over the December 2018 incident at a Brooklyn benefits office.
In February, she testified before the city council, which offered her a public apology and passed legislation aimed at improving how people are treated at benefits offices and making the system more transparent.
On Friday, the Law Department said the city will pay to resolve the lawsuit.
"Through her intelligence, bravery, and grace, Jazmine Headley turned the worst ordeal of her life — and of any parent's — into an opportunity for change for the entire city," Headley's lawyers, Katherine Rosenfeld and Emma Freeman said in a statement.
"I've known Jeff for 15 years. Terrific guy," said fellow tycoon Donald Trump (New York, 10/28/02), adding: "It is even said that he likes beautiful women as much as I do, and many of them are on the younger side." Former President Bill Clinton was also close with Epstein.
Put short, a quantum computer developed by Google managed to perform a calculation in 200 seconds that would have taken the world's most powerful supercomputer 10,000 years. The research paper on the calculation is published in Nature, the world's leading multidisciplinary science journal, with the title "Quantum supremacy using a programmable superconducting processor."
Some scientists were ecstatic, with one comparing the moment to the Wright Brothers' first flight in 1903. Others were outraged. A group of 13 scientists signed a letter published in Nature, decrying the term "quantum supremacy" as racist.
"In our view, 'supremacy' has overtones of violence, neocolonialism and racism through its association with 'white supremacy,'" they wrote. "We call for the community to use 'quantum advantage' instead."
Comment: "A cesspool of absurdity" sounds about right. See also:
- War on free speech: University says using the term 'politically correct' is now a micro-aggression
- Political correctness gone insane: College prof declares words 'mom' and 'dad' not inclusive enough
- The bias of bias-reducing methods - bias training, bias reporting, and bias warnings do more harm than good
Charlotte resident Arlando M. Henderson, 29, allegedly had access to the vault at the Wells Fargo location where he worked and stole the sum over the course of at least 18 different occasions in 2019, according to a federal indictment filed in the U.S. District Court in the Western District of North Carolina on Nov. 19.
The vault he allegedly stole from contained cash deposits from customers, according to a news release by the FBI. Henderson was hired in April, and by July, he had allegedly stolen more than $70,000 in cash. The amounts he stole on an almost-daily basis in June and July alone ranged from $200 to $13,450, the court documents state.
Henderson was allegedly seen on his social media accounts posting several pictures of himself holding large stacks of cash through July and August, the court documents state. The stolen money was insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, according to the indictment.

More than 60% of the total population of the city have moved to a safe distance after discovery of the British bomb.
Corriere della Sera daily said the operation was the biggest peacetime evacuation in Italy, with more than 60% of the city's residents forced to vacate a "red zone" in a radius of 1,617 meters from where the bomb was found.
The British bomb, believed to have been dropped on the city in 1941, is 1 meter long and contains 40 kgs of dynamite, authorities said. It was found by chance last month during refurbishment works at a cinema theater.
Comment: Makes one wonder just how many bombs the Allies dropped in Europe! Just last week, the city of Turin was evacuated as another British WWII bomb was discovered. WWII bombs are continuously being found throughout Europe - and London has its share as well.
- Large crater found in field believed to be WWII bomb, caused minor earthquake
- Dangerous World War 2 Bombs Still Litter Germany's Landscape

A man runs past a burning bus that was set on fire by demonstrators during a protest against a new citizenship law, in New Delhi, India, December 15, 2019.
Several buses in south Delhi were set on fire by demonstrators on Saturday, according to local media reports.
A video published by NDTV, taken from the balcony of a building, shows a bus in the middle of the road engulfed in flames, as a huge plume of black smoke rises from the inferno.
Comment: More on the CAB and unrest:
- Indian military warns over spread of fake news as viral video on Assam protests found to depict 2017 mock drill
- India: Citizenship Bill 2019 becomes law with President Ram Nath Kovind's assent
- Indian parliament passes citizenship bill for non-Muslims - protests erupt in province of Assam
- US pressures India with sanctions over citizenship curb for Muslims
RT reports that police have broken into the grounds of Delhi's Jamia Millia Islama University, where much of the unrest has centered:
Videos have surfaced showing students attacking police with stones prior to the arrests:
There have been claims by students that Delhi police attacked or fired on students, but witnesses claim there was absolutely no firing.
Finland's finance minister has apologised for an Instagram poll in which she asked citizens whether captured women associated with Daesh* should be brought back from Syria.
There are at least 11 Finnish women, who travelled to Syria to join the jihadists, and over 30 of their children being held at the Kurdish-run al-Hol displacement camp in northeastern Syria.
Katri Kulmuni, the Centre Party leader who took over as minister just this week, posted an informal poll on Friday asking whether the government should allow those women to return, or just their children.
Comment: Ms. Kulmuni has now discovered how easily the PC police can be activated - no discussion is allowed nor is the general public given an opportunity to voice dissenting opinions.
- Experts warn statistics underestimate terror threat posed by ISIS women and children returning from Syria
- No 'housewife': UK 'jihadi bride' Shamima Begum was a gun-toting member of Daesh's morality police
- Daesh brides have to be isolated at Syrian refugee camp for assaulting 'infidels'
- German intel chief: Radicalized wives & kids of ISIS fighters 'must be identified as jihadis'

Greta Thunberg told cheering protesters today 'we will make sure we put world leaders against the wall' if they fail to take urgent action on climate change.
Comment: Put leaders against the wall and do what? Shoot them?
The Swedish teen activist was addressing the crowd at a Fridays for Future protest in Turin, Italy.
She arrived there from Madrid where she had been attending the UN climate summit but said she feared the event would not lead to change.
She said: 'Unfortunately, we probably already know the outcome. World leaders are still trying to run away from their responsibilities but we have to make sure they cannot do that.
'We will make sure that we put them against the wall and they will have to do their job to protect our futures.'
Comment: More on Greta (and the forces behind her):
- The elite machine running the Greta Thunberg climate show
- Greta the eco-grouch has no patience for democracy or your lifestyle
- Greta Thunberg is programmed to make you afraid, while big business makes a killing off it
An additional 570 infant deaths, compared to what would have been expected based on historical trends, were recorded in the country from 2014-2017.
About one-third of those deaths, which related to children under the age of one, were linked to rising poverty.
Rising infant mortality is unusual in high income countries, and international statistics show that infant mortality has continued to decline in most rich countries in recent years.
The results of a new study by researchers from the University of Liverpool, University of Leeds and Newcastle University, which analysed data from 2000-2017, have now been released.
Comment: And England just voted for another round of Dickensian era policies so the situation is likely to get even worse:
- Life expectancy for poorest girls in England falls for first time since 1920s
- In 2005 Boris Johnson wrote that UK's poorest communities are made-up of 'chavs, burglars, drug addicts, and losers'
- World economy is sleepwalking into a new financial crisis - Former BoE boss Mervyn King

A police officer fires a tear gas shell towards protestors during a protest against the Citizenship Amendment Bill, outside the Jamia Millia Islamia University in New Delhi, India, December 13, 2019.
The Indian Army tweeted on Saturday that people should avoid "lies and propaganda being spread on social media by harmful elements," as troops were redeployed to the state of Assam, which is engulfed in protests against the Citizenship Amendment Bill (CAB).












Comment: See also: Inept ABC 'searching staff emails' 'pressuring colleagues to turn against each other' as they freak out over the identity of the Amy Robach video leaker