Society's Child
But the presence of fat children on our screens masks the fact that we are currently facing an unnecessary global starvation epidemic. We live in a time of overabundant food production. Despite this, almost a billion people go hungry every day. These figures are no longer only applicable to the developing world.
According to recent statistics, one in five British children now lives below the poverty line. Speak to those working in paediatric medicine in Britain today and they'll tell you that A&E departments are not just hosting overweight children with health problems but, especially in school holiday time, kids that are seriously under-fed. Just hang on for a minute and think about that - malnourished children in this country. Isn't that, well, just a tad Dickensian? Dead right it is. And so, unfortunately, is the solution to this problem: the food bank.
The Trussell Trust, which runs most food banks, feeds more than a million people a year. The trust is a faith-based network supplemented by other voluntary anti-food poverty schemes, the majority of which are church-based.
There is nothing wrong with non-proselytising faith groups alleviating food poverty. After all, there are plenty of biblical examples supporting this ethic. But one may be forgiven for wondering where the state comes in to all this.
Before Christmas the much-anticipated parliamentary report on food poverty was published. Even "advanced Western economies" with "mature welfare states", it stated, are reliant on food banks. How has this happened?
Communal kitchens
To answer this question, we need to look at how Britain dealt with food poverty in the past. From research into egalitarian eating, it's clear this country faced a serious food problem due to trade disruption during World War I. In the centenary year of 2014, while the BBC and other broadcasters were busy sending reporters off to trudge the poppy-dotted battlefields for the umpteenth time, they ignored an aspect of the war which has great relevance for public health today: communal kitchens.
The communal kitchens of one hundred years ago grew out of wartime working class communities, where public dining ventures nourished the most needy at a time when food supplies were poor and nutritional standards low. These grassroots efforts evolved into state-supported "national kitchens" or "national restaurants". People brought a plate or bowl to a "distribution centre" and had it filled up with nutritious food for a modest fee. This rough-and-ready model soon evolved into cheap restaurants where people received hearty, fresh, nutritious meals at incredibly low prices.
There's nothing grey about Fifty Shades of Grey. It's all black.
Let me explain.
I help people who are broken inside. Unlike doctors who use x-rays or blood tests to determine why someone's in pain, the wounds I'm interested in are hidden. I ask questions, and listen carefully to the answers. That's how I discover why the person in front of me is "bleeding".
Years of careful listening have taught me a lot. One thing I've learned is that young people are utterly confused about love - finding it and keeping it. They make poor choices, and end up in lots of pain.
I don't want you to suffer like the people I see in my office, so I'm warning you about a new movie called Fifty Shades of Grey. Even if you don't see the film, its message is seeping into our culture, and could plant some dangerous ideas in your head. Be prepared.
Comment: Do yourself a favor: ignore E. L. James's trash novel and movie and read Sandra Brown's Women Who Love Psychopaths instead. See:
- The Unexamined Victim: Women Who Love Psychopaths
- SOTT Talk Radio: Women Who Love Psychopaths - With Sandra L. Brown
Shari Martin told WQAD that she decided not to take advantage of Iowa's Rape Shield Law that would have allowed her to file the lawsuit anonymously because she didn't have anything to be ashamed of.
"I want people to know this happens to regular people and I'm done," she explained. "I don't want to be a victim anymore. I want to come out and say I have nothing to be ashamed of. I did nothing wrong, and I was not able to consent."
In 2013, then-Officer Tovar had pulled over Martin's boyfriend's car for OWI after the two had been out drinking on Valentines Day. According to court and police records, Tovar had taken Martin back to her hotel room while her boyfriend was being booked into jail.
Martin said that she didn't even remember being in Tovar's patrol car. And when she woke up several hours later, she realized that she had been raped.
"I realized I was naked. I don't sleep naked. I started having a flashback. I came to and said, 'Oh my God, there was a police officer laying on me,'" she recalled.
A police investigation later determined that Tovar's DNA matched sperm found on Martin's hotel bedding and inside of her jeans.
In 2015, the words "servant" and "slave" have very negative connotations, and we typically don't use them very much.
Comment: Think you're not a slave?
Make no mistake: You are an American debt slave
Are You A Slave Of The System?
Thomas Reed claims he was first abducted in 1966 at age 6, along with his brother, from their home in Sheffield, taken inside a UFO and shown a projection of a willow tree.
Reed claims they were abducted again the following year and then later found in their driveway by their mother, who had been searching for the missing boys on horseback.
The boys' mother and grandmother were abducted along with the boys while driving their car two years later and taken to meet two ant-like figures and then placed in a cage before finding themselves back in their car, Reed claims.
The Great Barrington Historical Society & Museum formally inducted Reed's alien abduction stories, possibly becoming the first "mainstream" historical society in the U.S. to declare a UFO encounter to be historical fact, reported the Boston Globe.
"It means that we believe it is true," said Debbie Oppermann, director of the historical society.
According to LoHud.com, 22-year-old Sarah Tubbs said that she was sexually assaulted after an alcohol-fueled party on Jan. 26, 2014. Stony Brook badly botched its handling of the subsequent investigation, Tubbs says, and she is now suing the university for Title IX violations.
Tubbs — who graduated from the university in May — said that after the party in 2014, at which she had played drinking games and consumed multiple alcoholic beverages, she accompanied a male friend back to his dorm room with the intention of having sex.
When they arrived at his room, Tubbs' lawsuit says, she realized she was seriously intoxicated and told her companion that she did not want to engage in sexual activity at that time.
The male student reportedly ignored her and went on to orally sodomize her without her consent, to penetrate her vagina with his fingers and to attempt vaginal intercourse.
Tubbs said that she was only semi-conscious during the attack and at some points, she blacked out altogether.
"I froze and there were parts of the night where I couldn't fight because it's not an option," she said to LoHud.
Two days after the attack, Tubbs screwed up her courage and reported the assault to campus police. She was ordered to undergo a hospital rape exam first, then to return to the campus police office and report the rape.
Tubbs said she followed instructions, and two weeks after the assault, she filed a formal complaint. However, the officer who heard her complaint reportedly told her that his department could not help her because she did not scream "No!" or physically fight back.
Comment: The university is concerned about damage control and covering up the rape culture at universities. If you knew your daughter might be raped at a particular university, would you send her to that school?
I wish I'd never reported my rape
The new laws allow adults over 21 to consume small quantities of home-grown pot in private, though sales remain illegal.
Comment: It seems a little strange to legalize smoking marijuana but still have sales be illegal. They are either naive or dumb to think that people are not going to buy marijuana instead of growing it themselves. Have the Alaskan lawmakers beat their constituents to the punch on marijuana use?
Ballot initiatives legalizing personal marijuana consumption were approved by voters in Alaska, Oregon, and Washington, DC last November. Alaska's law went into effect on Tuesday, while Oregon's Measure 91 is scheduled to take effect in July this year.
Initiative 71 legalizing the private consumption of marijuana in DC will take effect later this week on Thursday, according to a statement released by Mayor Muriel Bowser [PDF].
According to the announcement by Mayor Bowser, adults aged 21 and older will be able to lawfully possess up to two ounces of marijuana and use it on private property. They will also be allowed to transfer up to one ounce of marijuana to another person, "as long as no money, goods or services are exchanged and the recipient is 21 years of age or older," and grow upwards of six plants a piece.
Comment: Another rather dumb insistence by DC legislators. No one is "transferring" marijuana freely to anyone else. Shouldn't they stop with the pretense already and allow the sales of a small amount if they are going to legalize consumption?

The main gate of the Auschwitz death camp complex in occupied-Poland. German prosecutors have charged a 94-year-old man with 3,681 counts of accessory to murder on allegations he worked as a sergeant at the camp.
Schwerin prosecutors' spokesman Stefan Urbanek said Monday the suspect was an SS sergeant who served as a medic in Auschwitz in an SS hospital. In that role, Urbanek said the man helped the extermination camp function and could thus be charged as an accessory to the 1944 killings.
Urbanek wouldn't release the suspect's name in line with privacy laws.
The man is one of 30 former Auschwitz suspects against whom federal investigators recommended in 2013 that state prosecutors pursue charges under a new precedent in German law.
His attorney, Peter-Michael Diestel, told the Bild newspaper there's no evidence of any "concrete criminal act" by his client.
Comment: The hunt will never end until everyone still alive from WWII is dead.
The children's parents are in the midst of a divorce and custody battle, so Mary wanted to do something nice for the children. She decided to deliver a gift in a neutral setting.
"I hadn't seen my granddaughters for some time and I wanted to see them, and so I baked some cupcakes and bought some cookies for my granddaughters' classroom," Mary said.
When she arrived at the school she was met by a rude Clovis Unified police officer who told her that she was not allowed to visit the children because there was a restraining order against her. In reality, there was no restraining order against her and no legal reason to keep her out of the school.
The officer was either lying or was totally mistaken about the situation.
Comment: This is so heartbreaking and completely uncalled for! There doesn't seem to be any humanity left in the United States.
Public defender wants deputy charged for dragging woman through hallway by her feet.
Deputy says he feared woman was going to cause a commotion, so he dragged her.
A veteran Broward Sheriff's deputy who dragged a mentally incompetent woman through a courthouse hallway by the shackles around her ankles is now on restricted duty. Christopher Johnson, who joined the department in 1988, will not have contact with inmates until an Internal Affairs investigation is complete, the Sheriff's Office said. Johnson was recorded pulling Dasyl Jeanette Rios, 28, by the chain binding her feet together on the third floor of the Broward courthouse Monday morning.
Broward Sheriff Scott Israel issued a statement six hours later questioning Johnson's conduct.
"I am concerned by the way the deputy handled this situation, because there were other courses of action he could have taken," Sheriff Scott Israel said. "Internal Affairs has initiated a complete and comprehensive investigation, and the deputy has been placed on restricted duty pending the outcome."The incident was caught on cellphone video by attorney Bill Gelin, who was in the hallway as the events unfolded. Witnesses and some who saw the video afterward decried the deputy's conduct as inhumane. Public Defender Howard Finkelstein called it criminal.
Rios, 28, who had just been declared mentally incompetent during a trespassing and criminal mischief case, sobs and pleads with Johnson in the video. "Stop! You're hurting me!" she screams. "You're ****ing hurting me! I hate my life! I wish they would kill me already! Why do I have to be alive?" "I gave you a chance ..." Johnson says. "You didn't give nobody a chance," she yells back. "All I wanted to do was sob for a few minutes — cry. That's all I wanted to do was cry for a few minutes."














Comment: This might be a wonderful idea as the number of people relying on food banks has increased exponentially in the past few years. As the authors mention, people do lack cooking skills and often don't even have adequate facilities for even heating food. Many people, particularly the elderly, would benefit from the social interaction as often they are completely shut off from their communities.