Re: Positive News from the USA
Posted: 31 Mar 2015 05:50
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H_8y0WLm78U
Monica Lewinsky: The price of shame
Monica Lewinsky: The price of shame
Consortium of Indian Defence Websites
https://forums.bharat-rakshak.com/
If you're murdered in America, there's a 1 in 3 chance that the police won't identify your killer.
To use the FBI's terminology, the national "clearance rate" for homicide today is 64.1 percent. Fifty years ago, it was more than 90 percent.
And that's worse than it sounds, because "clearance" doesn't equal conviction: It's just the term that police use to describe cases that end with an arrest, or in which a culprit is otherwise identified without the possibility of arrest — if the suspect has died, for example.
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Since at least the 1980s, police have complained about a growing "no snitch" culture, especially in minority communities. They say the reluctance of potential witnesses makes it hard to identify suspects.
But some experts say that explanation may be too pat. University of Maryland criminologist Charles Wellford points out that police are still very effective at clearing certain kinds of murders.
"Take, for example, homicides of police officers in the course of their duty," he says. On paper, they're the kind of homicide that's hardest to solve — "they're frequently done in communities that generally have low clearance rates. ... They're stranger-to-stranger homicides; they [have] high potential of retaliation [for] witnesses." And yet, Wellford says, they're almost always cleared.
What that tells Wellford is that clearance rates are a matter of priorities.
It is not an open season on witch hunting, but what's better than punishing non-believers to demonstrate something positive and keep the flock together at the same time! Read the comments, too, if you don't get it...
“Expanding access to preventive health care, recognizing the effects of poverty, racism, and the environment, and legislation based on public health instead of on morality and religion would decrease the suffering and deaths of both infants and women in Indiana.”
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This legislation isn’t limited to Indiana—37 other states have passed similar laws, opening the door for more unjust treatment of pregnant women.
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Officials in Minnesota say a man who copped to masturbating in a co-worker's coffee because he was attracted to her ....
The woman told police she inspected her desk and noticed a strong odor that resembled urine, but was a bit different and strange.She said her coffee smelled the same way and noted that she had had an ongoing issue with a experiencing a foul taste in her coffee.![]()
Etc. etc. - the weird situation seems to be about believers v/s Atheists, Christians v/s gays, etc.Even the most religious states like Mississippi and Alabama have secular meetup groups, although many keep quiet and require long drives to attend.
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wo neighbors in Georgia whose jaws dropped when they saw each other at an atheist gathering. Each had assumed that the other was a good, God-fearing Baptist.)
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It’s no fun debating fundamentalists
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People will think you worship Satan
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Part and parcel of REAL AMERICA.the laws still on the books EXCLUDING atheists from holding office in many states...is not imaginary.
The law in Arkansas, preventing atheists from testifying in court...is not imaginary.
AoA! Eeph I write to Eph Bee Eye giving my naam as Barbara Bach...Snowden: U.S. government has your nude photos
A white North Charleston police officer in South Carolina has been charged with the murder of a 50-year-old black man on Saturday, marking a remarkably swift move for justice in a fatal police incident.
Footage of the shooting, which occurred around 9.30 am after Walter Scott was pulled over for a traffic violation, shows officer Michael Slager firing eight times at Scott, who is running away. Slager initially told police he shot Scott because he feared for his life while the two fought over Slager’s stun gun.
Michael Slager’s booking photo. Photograph: Charleston County sheriff's office
After Scott is shot, the video also appears to show the police officer picking an object off the ground and dropping it next to Scott’s body. Scott does not appear in possession of the stun gun at any point in the video.
The footage was posted online by Charleston’s Post & Courier on Tuesday, and filmed by an anonymous bystander. It appears to show that a stun gun wire has already been deployed, but falls out as Scott runs away from Slager, who pulls out his firearm and shoots until Scott falls to the ground. The officer then walks over to the body and appears to talk into his radio. He reaches the body and shouts: “Put your hands behind your back now, put your hands behind your back”. Scott is motionless, his face down in the ground.
The uncounted: why the US can't keep track of people killed by police
The officer then appears to shout “Put your hands behind your back” again before picking up Scott’s limp arms and placing them in what look like handcuffs.
Slager then moves away from the body and picks up an item from the ground, near where he fired the shots. At this point another officer arrives on the scene and stands over Scott’s body.
Slager walks back over to the body and appears to drop the item he has picked up next to Scott’s body.
According to an incident file, reported by local TV news, Slager said over the radio that he deployed his Taser and “seconds later” he said: “Shots fired and the subject is down. He took my Taser.”
Neither officer appears to be aware they are being filmed, and the cameraperson seems to place his finger over the lens a number of times. It does not appear that Slager checks Scott’s pulse until three minutes and three seconds into the film.
Slager had initially released a statement through his lawyer, claiming he had “followed all the proper procedures and policies of the North Charleston police department”.
But at a press conference on Tuesday, North Charleston mayor Keith Summey told reporters that Slager had made a “bad decision”.![]()
Link to video: officer who shot man in the back made ‘a bad decision’, says mayor.
“When you’re wrong, you’re wrong,” Summey said as quoted by the Post and Courier. “When you make a bad decision, don’t care if you’re behind the shield or a citizen on the street, you have to live with that decision.”
North Charleston police chief Eddie Driggers said officer Slager, 33, had been arrested and charged with murder.
The Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division have launched also launched investigation into the shooting.
“The Department of Justice Civil Rights Division and the South Carolina U.S. Attorney’s Office will work with the FBI in the investigation. The Department of Justice will take appropriate action in light of the evidence and developments in the state case,” the Justice Department said in a statement.
Calls to the North Charleston police and the state law enforcement division – the outside organisation investigating the shooting – went unanswered on Tuesday.
The murder charges against Slager come amid a national debate on police practice after a spate of high profile death police killings around the country.
President Barack Obama convened a national police task force in the wake of death of unarmed teenager Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri, last August, which sparked a wave of unrest in the small city and protests across the country.
The task force recommended a variety of criminal justice reforms last month, including that local law enforcement agencies report each officer involved shooting to federal government when they occur. At present there are no official national statistics on officer involved fatalities as local agencies are not required to provide information to the federal government.
Also in South Carolina, the Associated Press reported that a white police officer was charged on Tuesday in the case of a 68-year-old black man who was shot to death last year. A grand jury had earlier chosen to indict North Augusta officer Justin Craven on a charge of misconduct in office, rather than the manslaughter indictment sought by prosecutors, in the February 2014 death of Ernest Satterwhite. The new charge, discharging a gun into an occupied vehicle, is a felony.
All said & done, really pathetic state of affairs. I haven't worked in the research side so didn't know of this at all. I do know (from friends etc) that research is usually very driven by individuals & i thought some institutes must be better off. I was mistaken I guess..Shreeman wrote:You spend what you have earned. If you want to step up, face the mafia then get ready to be ruined. You are not white, and no media will come to your rescue. It doesnt matter what the truth is, you will be ruined in every possible way. Your entire life will be spread open like a suitcase at the TSA station at an airport. And the lawyers will give you the guantanamo treatment.
Anyone who knew you willmove two states over just to avoid talking to you. Worse of all, if they cant buy you, they will buy your lawyers!
edit -- Totem pole? What totem pole? You call the chinese sweatshops they run research labs? Have you looked at the amount of fraud that goes on at *name your favorite institution*? This particular story was laughed at when first reported here on positive news. Check up front on this thread. The tenure holders here were the first to stab in the back.
Pretty depressing.. so you are saying the chance to even do better isn't really there..Shreeman wrote:Having visited the "better" IITs in some detail, I can assure you they are staffed to the gills by US tenure-rejects (my grad. school housemate, among others) and well below the standard of even the rotting carcass that is US academia. Education is pretty dead in the age of app development and wikipedia and MBAs and khan academy and udacity. Medical education is truly dead and buried.
Its just not important, unlike religion or language or skin color for people to care.
A Jewish POTUS might come last.Gus wrote:massa has a black man as prez. there will probably be a woman as prez. and even a gay guy soon, but the atheist will be the last of all these.