College Proposes Banning Emotional Support Animals From Classrooms, Offices

Via The College Fix,

The University of Minnesota has proposed banning emotional support animals from campus classrooms, labs, and offices, a policy which has been under consideration for about two years.

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Service animals for people with disabilities would still be permitted under the new policy, and emotional support pets would continue to be allowed in campus housing pending approval by the Disability Resource Center, according to the Star Tribune.

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University Services Chief of Staff Paige Rohman said emotional support animals “can cause a disturbance if they bark, lunge or go to the bathroom on campus,” and are “problematic for people with allergies or those of the Muslim faith who view dog saliva as unclean.”

Sophomore Sophia DeGarmo, who is studying animal science, lived with her dog Riley in campus housing last year to help address her depression, anxiety and panic disorder. She said she often brought the cavapoo to class but never caused any disruptions.

“The only time a professor said anything was when I said it was his birthday and one of them wanted to sing happy birthday,” she said.

The proposed policy includes exceptions to permit animals that are used during instruction, animals that are receiving medical treatment on campus and animals serving as official NCAA mascots or participating in patriotic ceremonies.

Utilization of emotional support animals has taken off in recent years; for example, in one year at Yale use increased from one animal to fourteen.

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After Donald Trump’s surprise election victory in 2016, the University of Pennsylvania brought in puppies and kittens for students to cuddle in a coping “Breathing Space.”

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To assist in “de-stressing” during exam week, the University of Oklahoma brought in some “therapy dogs,” while at Montana State a bunch of animals — including a 900-pound donkey named Oliver — were available at the campus library to help students chill out.

Read the Star Tribune story.

Talk Nation Radio: Roy Eidelson on How the 1% Manipulate Our Understanding

Roy Eidelson, PhD, is the former executive director of the University of Pennsylvania’s Solomon Asch Center for Study of Ethnopolitical Conflict and a past president of Psychologists for Social Responsibility. His work focuses on applying psychological knowledge to issues of social justice and political change. His writing has appeared in a variety of scholarly peer-reviewed journals and other outlets including the Washington Post and Los Angeles Times. He is the author of Political Mind Games: How the 1% Manipulate Our Understanding of What’s Happening, What’s Right, and What’s Possible. Follow him online at royeidelson.com and @royeidelson.

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The Shutdown of the GM Lordstown Plant: A Corporate Crime

Tuesday, March 5, will be the last day of production at the General Motors Lordstown, Ohio, plant as the last Chevy Cruze sedan rolls out of the 6.2 million-square-foot complex, halfway between Cleveland, Ohio, and Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

The closure of …

The post The Shutdown of the GM Lordstown Plant: A Corporate Crime appeared first on Global Research.

Report: Steelers WR Brown to sit down with team owner

February 15, 2019

Pittsburgh Steelers wide receiver Antonio Brown, who has requested a trade, will meet with team owner Art Rooney II, according to a report Friday from Ian Rapoport of the NFL Network.

Rooney is in Florida, where he owns a home, and has been hoping to at least open a line of communication with the disgruntled wideout, Rapoport reported. Brown initially declined before deciding to take the meeting.

Brown last week wrote on Twitter: “Thank you SteelerNation for a big 9 years … time to move on and forward,” adding the hashtag #NewDemands.

He is due a $2.5 million roster bonus on March 17.

Brown, a four-time All-Pro, has been embroiled in a dispute with the Steelers. He did not play in the final game of the regular season after missing a walk-through practice.

Brown, 30, has three years remaining on a five-year, $72.7 million contract extension that he signed before the 2017 campaign. He has surpassed 100 receptions and 1,000 receiving yards in each of the past six seasons, and in 2018 he caught 104 passes for 1,297 yards and a career-high 15 touchdowns.

Rooney, in a meeting with Pittsburgh-area media on Jan. 16, said he would be willing to discuss Brown’s return to the Steelers, but there are “not that many signs out there that that’s going to happen.” Rooney told reporters he and Brown had not talked since the end of the season and he didn’t expect him to return.

“I would have liked to have had the opportunity to talk to him and understand where he is,” Rooney said at the time. “Maybe that will happen at some point, who knows?”

Brown has been involved in recent off-field incidents, including a citation for reckless driving in Pennsylvania and an allegation of pushing the mother of his daughter to the ground in Hollywood, Fla., according to a police report. The woman did not press charges and Brown was not arrested.

Brown has 837 career catches for 11,207 yards and 74 touchdowns in nine seasons with the Steelers.

–Field Level Media

Pennsylvania college demands that white male students not be allowed to speak in class

(Natural News) Yet another entitled, black female (this one embarrassingly overweight) recently decided to exercise her black privilege in being a vocal and unabashed racist against white people on her college campus. Leda Fisher, a student at Dickinson College in Carlisle, Pennsylvania, was somehow granted permission by the school’s newspaper, The Dickinson, to publish an…

Republican senators pressure Trump’s EPA pick over biofuels

February 13, 2019

By Humeyra Pamuk

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Five Republican senators are warning President Donald Trump’s new pick to run the Environmental Protection Agency, Andrew Wheeler, that their support for his nomination may hinge on his biofuels policy.

The senators, all from states hosting oil refineries, said they want to be assured that Wheeler would work to reduce the regulatory costs for oil companies of complying with the U.S. Renewable Fuel Standard before they decide on whether to back him as permanent chief of the EPA.

The Renewable Fuel Standard requires oil refiners to blend increasing amounts of biofuels like corn-based ethanol into their fuel each year, or purchase blending credits from those who do. The measure is intended to help farmers and reduce U.S. dependence on foreign energy sources, but oil refining companies – like Valero Energy Corp and billionaire investor Carl Icahn’s CVR Energy Inc – complain it costs them a fortune.

“Without an adequate proposal to meaningfully lower the regulatory burden … we will have serious concerns with your nomination,” the five Republican senators said in a letter to Wheeler dated Feb. 11.

The letter was signed by Ted Cruz of Texas, Pat Toomey of Pennsylvania, Michael Lee of Utah, as well as both John Kennedy and Bill Cassidy of Louisiana.

The five were due to meet with Wheeler later on Wednesday night to discuss biofuels, according to two sources familiar with the matter.

The EPA is working on a number of critical adjustments to its biofuel policy that are of interest to the oil industry, including resetting targets for annual biofuels blending volumes, lifting a summertime ban on higher-ethanol blends of gasoline, and proposing measures to limit speculation in the blending credit market.

In their letter, the senators asked Wheeler to provide his views on these and other issues before Feb. 22.

Wheeler, a longtime Washington insider and former coal lobbyist, took the reins at EPA on an interim basis in July after his predecessor, Scott Pruitt, resigned in a storm of controversy over his high spending on first-class travel, round-the-clock security, and office equipment.

Trump nominated him in January, but a full vote of the Senate is required for his confirmation.

(Reporting by Humeyra Pamuk in Washington; Writing by Richard Valdmanis; Editing by Matthew Lewis)

LIBTARD FAIL: Left-wing college Photoshops picture of students to replace white students with Asian, Muslim faces

(Natural News) In a racist attempt to portray less white and more brown on its campus, York College of Pennsylvania recently made the decision to alter a photo of a group of students at the school that was taken for advertising purposes, replacing two of the white students in the picture with an Asian student…

Obesity-related cancers rising fastest among millennials, study finds

Some cancers are rising in millennials. Obesity might be why
Linda Carroll

Mirroring the decades-long increase in obesity rates in the U.S., cancers that are thought to be driven at least in part by excess weight are also on the rise among people under age 50, a new study suggests.

Rates for six of 12 cancers related to obesity have been increasing in successive generations of young adults, with the sharpest increases in the youngest age groups, researchers reported Sunday in The Lancet Public Health.

The new study may serve as a warning that if the obesity epidemic continues, there will be an explosion of these fat-sensitive cancers in the years to come, said the study’s senior author, Dr. Ahmedin Jemal, scientific vice president of surveillance and health services research at the American Cancer Society.

“This finding signals an increased burden of obesity-related cancers in older adults in the future and calls for actions to mitigate this burden,” he said in an email.

The researchers analyzed data from a central database of state cancer registries, focusing on new diagnoses of 30 types of cancer, 12 of which are associated with excess weight, from 1995 to 2014. They had complete data from 25 states that represent about two-thirds of the U.S. population.

In that 20-year period, there were about 14.7 million new cases of the 30 cancers. For at least eight cancers, including smoking-related and HIV-associated cancers, the incidence rates dropped.

But for six of the 12 obesity-related cancers — colorectal, endometrial, gallbladder, kidney, pancreas and multiple myeloma — there was a steady increase in incidence over the years, with larger increases in younger adults.

The annual rise in new cases of kidney cancer, for example, was 6.23 percent among people aged 25-29, but about 3 percent in the 45-49 age group. Similarly, pancreatic cancer incidence rose 4.3 percent each year for 25- to 29-year-olds but less than 1 percent annually among people aged 45-49.

Overall, rates of colorectal, endometrial, pancreatic and gallbladder cancers in millennials — young adults born around 1985 — were about double the rates seen in people born in the 1950s at the same age, the researchers note.

Especially striking was the rising rate of kidney cancers. Millennials were nearly five times as likely as baby boomers to develop cancer of the kidneys.

In contrast, for all but two of the 18 cancers not related to obesity, rates either stabilized or declined in successive younger birth cohorts.

Jemal said he hopes that the new findings will sound an alarm for doctors treating young adults. “Less than half of primary care physicians regularly assess body mass index despite national screening recommendations,” he said. “Further, only a third of patients report receiving a diagnosis or weight loss counseling.”

Public health measures, such as restrictions on advertising of unhealthy calorie-laden foods, could also help, as well as more campaigns to promote healthy lifestyle choices, Jemal said.

The cancer-obesity issue “is a really important topic because we’ve had an obesity crisis now for a number of decades,” said John Jakicic, a professor and director of the Healthy Lifestyle Institute at the University of Pittsburgh in Pennsylvania. “At some point we started to see that diabetes was tracking with obesity. What we’re seeing now is something similar with respect to certain cancers.”

Cancer prevention will most likely involve “prevention of other things that might precipitate cancer,” said Jakicic, who wasn’t involved in the study. And while researchers don’t yet know exactly how obesity may be driving up cancer rates, it’s “critically important” to see observational studies that show an association between the two, he noted.

Obesity-related cancers rising fastest among millennials, study finds

Some cancers are rising in millennials. Obesity might be why
Linda Carroll

Mirroring the decades-long increase in obesity rates in the U.S., cancers that are thought to be driven at least in part by excess weight are also on the rise among people under age 50, a new study suggests.

Rates for six of 12 cancers related to obesity have been increasing in successive generations of young adults, with the sharpest increases in the youngest age groups, researchers reported Sunday in The Lancet Public Health.

The new study may serve as a warning that if the obesity epidemic continues, there will be an explosion of these fat-sensitive cancers in the years to come, said the study’s senior author, Dr. Ahmedin Jemal, scientific vice president of surveillance and health services research at the American Cancer Society.

“This finding signals an increased burden of obesity-related cancers in older adults in the future and calls for actions to mitigate this burden,” he said in an email.

The researchers analyzed data from a central database of state cancer registries, focusing on new diagnoses of 30 types of cancer, 12 of which are associated with excess weight, from 1995 to 2014. They had complete data from 25 states that represent about two-thirds of the U.S. population.

In that 20-year period, there were about 14.7 million new cases of the 30 cancers. For at least eight cancers, including smoking-related and HIV-associated cancers, the incidence rates dropped.

But for six of the 12 obesity-related cancers — colorectal, endometrial, gallbladder, kidney, pancreas and multiple myeloma — there was a steady increase in incidence over the years, with larger increases in younger adults.

The annual rise in new cases of kidney cancer, for example, was 6.23 percent among people aged 25-29, but about 3 percent in the 45-49 age group. Similarly, pancreatic cancer incidence rose 4.3 percent each year for 25- to 29-year-olds but less than 1 percent annually among people aged 45-49.

Overall, rates of colorectal, endometrial, pancreatic and gallbladder cancers in millennials — young adults born around 1985 — were about double the rates seen in people born in the 1950s at the same age, the researchers note.

Especially striking was the rising rate of kidney cancers. Millennials were nearly five times as likely as baby boomers to develop cancer of the kidneys.

In contrast, for all but two of the 18 cancers not related to obesity, rates either stabilized or declined in successive younger birth cohorts.

Jemal said he hopes that the new findings will sound an alarm for doctors treating young adults. “Less than half of primary care physicians regularly assess body mass index despite national screening recommendations,” he said. “Further, only a third of patients report receiving a diagnosis or weight loss counseling.”

Public health measures, such as restrictions on advertising of unhealthy calorie-laden foods, could also help, as well as more campaigns to promote healthy lifestyle choices, Jemal said.

The cancer-obesity issue “is a really important topic because we’ve had an obesity crisis now for a number of decades,” said John Jakicic, a professor and director of the Healthy Lifestyle Institute at the University of Pittsburgh in Pennsylvania. “At some point we started to see that diabetes was tracking with obesity. What we’re seeing now is something similar with respect to certain cancers.”

Cancer prevention will most likely involve “prevention of other things that might precipitate cancer,” said Jakicic, who wasn’t involved in the study. And while researchers don’t yet know exactly how obesity may be driving up cancer rates, it’s “critically important” to see observational studies that show an association between the two, he noted.

‘Frost quakes’ sound scary, but what are they? Here’s the science behind the noises you might be hearing.

MichelleTebbetts.png

JESSIE MCDONOUGH, WHP

DILLSBURG, Pa. (CIRCA via WHP) — It’s so cold, the ground could be cracking underneath your feet. Apparently, it’s a thing, and it’s been reported in Pennsylvania.

A phenomenon caused by bitter cold and extra moisture, geologist Jeri Jones is calling it a “frost quake.”

Michelle Tebbetts was crocheting a blanket when she was startled by a big bang.

“It sounded like a big piece of furniture fell over … and I’m thinking: What did the cats knock over that was that big and that loud?” Tebbetts said.

After Tebbetts, who lives in Dillsburg, checked the whole house and found nothing out of place, she reported the activity to Jones, a professor at York College of Pennsylvania.

“I said well maybe it was an earthquake, so I got a hold of Jeri Jones, and he said he’s gotten a bunch of calls from people. He said you are having a frost quake,” Tebbetts said.

Up until 2009, frost quakes were only felt in 12 other states and into Canada, according to Jones.

JeriJones.png

WHP
York College professor and geologist Jeri Jones explained that frost quakes can occur when water in the ground freezes quickly, expands and cracks the ground, causing “booms” that people can hear.

“These frost quakes are a situation where the ground is not frozen totally, but it’s oversaturated and subfreezing temperatures begin. The ground and water will freeze and expand, and it actually puts out a little explosion and people hear these booms,” Jones said.

Now, more and more people are reporting frost quakes in Pennsylvania.

“These frost quakes, they sound more like a boom or a bang, and then we get a little shake in the house,” said Steven Tebbetts, Michelle’s husband.

This is not the first time the couple has felt tremors at their home. Millersburg University even installed a seismograph in the Tebbetts’ backyard.

“Who knew that Dillsburg would be the California of the East,” Steven said.

Jones has assured the family that this time, it was a frost quake, not an earthquake.

According to Jones, the tremors were too deep to be a mine collapse and too shallow to be an earthquake.

Pittsburgh Gun Battle Heats Up: Citizens Want Impeachment, Criminal Charges Against Mayor

n Pittsburgh, the citizens are angry and concerned over sweeping gun regulations proposed by the city’s council and supported by the Mayor.

Source: 

In Pittsburgh, liberty-loving citizens are fighting the city’s proposed gun control plans, and have threatened charges against councilmembers. However, they’re also filing a petition to have Mayor Bill Peduto impeached and criminally charged over his vision for a disarmed population.

Republican ward Chair Brooke Nadonley, of Mt. Washington, and Val Finnell, of Firearms Owners Against Crime, worked to file a petition at the Allegheny County Courthouse on Monday that would remove Peduto from office.

“One of the grounds of his malfeasance, which would be the attempt to manipulate and change Pennsylvania gun laws,” Nadonley said.

Although there is a chance that impeachment would fail, it looks extremely likely that private criminal complaints could be filed against councilmembers and the mayor for their plans to strip citizens of their Second Amendment and state gun rights.

It would be up to the Allegheny County District Attorney Stephen Zappala whether to pursue them, but Zappala recently weighed in on the side of the constitution.

Previously, the DA wrote to the city council that their proposed gun legislation in the city of Pittsburgh cannot be legally passed.

According to Zappala, what they’re proposing is against the law.

“I was hoping this wouldn’t be a battle, it’s more of a courtesy as I’ve said before, but they just don’t have the authority to do this at this level,” Zappala said.

The excessive assault weapons ban would make it “unlawful to manufacture, sell, purchase, transport, carry, store or otherwise hold in one’s possession an assault weapon within the City, such as the Colt semi-automatic rifle used in the Tree of Life shooting,” a December letter said. It didn’t take long for liberal to exploit that tragedy.

An accessories, ammunition and modification ban would bar items such as bump stocks, armor-penetrating bullets, sawed-off rifles and large capacity magazines, as well.

“I understand the desire of local governments to be proactive in reducing gun violence and the opportunities to cause the type of pain, suffering, and dead, which recently occurred in the City of Pittsburgh,” Zappala said in his Jan. 9 letter.

“I believe, however, that the legislative effort needs to come from the General Assembly of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania and that the legislation currently before Council, if passed, will be found unconstitutional.”

However, Nadonley and Finnell aren’t waiting for the city to enact illegal laws and then fight it in court. They met briefly with Zappala about filing a private criminal complaint against council and the mayor if the legislation passes.

“He was extremely helpful, he told us exactly where and how to file it, and also he made some comments that he was very supportive of the second amendment,” Finnell said.

As for impeachment proceedings, the pair were told they needed to file a motion along with the petition of signatures, but PA law states that only elected officials can conduct impeachment proceedings.

The mayor’s spokesman called it a joke, “…some opponents of the city’s proposed reforms would rather make goofy attempts to harass elected officials than actually engage in constructive debate on how to prevent the gun massacres.”

Apparently, actually caring about the views and concerns of people who want to retain the liberties outlined in the law is a ‘waste of time.’

“We are willing to go to battle over this just as our council and mayor are attempting to violate Pennsylvania law,” Nadonley said.

She plans to meet with a lawyer and file the forms to begin Peduto’s impeachment process.

If a judge allows them to proceed, there would be a citizens’ review committee who would ultimately report to the Pittsburgh City Council. A presiding judge would make the final decision.

Second U.S. judge blocks Trump administration birth control rules

January 14, 2019

By Nate Raymond

(Reuters) – A federal judge in Pennsylvania on Monday blocked the Trump administration from enforcing new rules allowing employers to obtain exemptions from an Obamacare requirement that they provide health insurance that covers women’s birth control.

U.S. District Judge Wendy Beetlestone in Philadelphia issued a nationwide injunction preventing the rules from taking effect, a day after another judge issued a more limited ruling blocking their enforcement in 13 states and the District of Columbia.

The rules would let businesses or nonprofits lodge religious or moral objections to obtain exemptions from the Obamacare mandate that employers provide contraceptive coverage in health insurance with no copayment.

“The negative effects of even a short period of decreased access to no-cost contraceptive services are irreversible,” Beetlestone said.

The rules were issued by the U.S. Departments of Health and Human Services (HHS), Labor and Treasury and were set to take effect on Monday.

They have been the subject of lawsuits by several Democratic attorneys general, including those in Pennsylvania and New Jersey, whose case was before Beetlestone.

The judge wrote that the rules exceeded the scope of 2010’s Affordable Care Act, popularly known as Obamacare, which she said prohibits HHS from providing such exemptions.

She said a nationwide injunction blocking the rules’ enforcement was necessary given the harm states would face if they went into effect. Beetlestone cited the costs the states would shoulder to provide contraceptive coverage to women themselves if the rules took effect.

About 70,500 women would lose coverage, putting them at risk of unintended pregnancies, Beetlestone wrote.

The U.S. Department of Justice, which has defended the rules in court, is expected to appeal. “Religious organizations should not be forced to violate their mission and deeply-held beliefs,” it said in a statement.

The lawsuit was filed after Republican President Donald Trump’s administration in October 2017 unveiled interim rules that targeted the contraceptive mandate implemented as part of Obamacare.

Beetlestone in December 2017 issued a preliminary injunction from blocking those interim rules from being enforced. The administration subsequently issued similar, final rules that supplanted the interim ones.

Beetlestone’s decision on Monday came after U.S. District Judge Haywood Gilliam in Oakland, California, issued a preliminary injunction on Sunday to prevent the rules from taking effect.

But Gilliam limited his ruling’s impact to the specific states pursuing the lawsuit before him. He previously issued a nationwide injunction against the interim rules, but a federal appeals court later narrowed its scope.

(Reporting by Nate Raymond in Boston; Editing by Grant McCool, Alexia Garamfalvi and Bill Berkrot)

NEW! Intuitive and Paranormal Investigator Constantine St. Michael 01-13-19

Constantine is an intuitive and sees, hears, and feels beyond the five physical senses. He helps the living understand the dead and the dead understand themselves.

The foundation for Constantine’s work is knowing and understanding the true nature of reality. He claims ‘only then can we know and understand the phenomena we investigate’.

Constantine works independently and also as a team member of Deadline Paranormal. Deadline Paranormal is based in northeast Pennsylvania and is composed of active and retired law-enforcement personnel as well as a clinical psychologist.

He’s also assisted law enforcement by aiding in criminal investigations.As an intuitive, Constantine can remotely pre-read investigation sites, photographs, situations, or people and, typically when on site, begin the investigation process with a walk through, trying to know who and what our clients are dealing with. He can work remotely for individuals and Paranormal teams who are sincere in their desire to understand. He has a process for remote work using conscious triangulation and neutral information. If requested, he can travel to an investigation site or situation with appropriate arrangements.

“The search for truth is more precious than its possession.” – Albert Einstein

Inquiries through www.deadlineparanormal.com or on Facebook at Constantine St. Michael.

It’s STARTING: A Grocery Store in Indiana SAYS They Can’t Process Food Stamp Payments Due to Govt. Shutdown

by Daisy Luther, The Organic Prepper: We weren’t expecting to see a loss of food stamp benefits until the end of January, but a grocery store in Indiana reported they are unable to process EBT payments and a store in Pennsylvania is unable to have necessary paperwork approved for them to continue accepting EBT. In […]

The post It’s STARTING: A Grocery Store in Indiana SAYS They Can’t Process Food Stamp Payments Due to Govt. Shutdown appeared first on SGT Report.

Online child porn leader severely beaten, killed in Michigan federal detention center ,

Christian Maire targeted more than 100 underage girls nationwide

Source:

A man sentenced to 40 years in prison for leading an international child pornography ring was severely beaten and died following a fight with several inmates at federal detention center in southeast Michigan, the Detroit Free Press reported.

Christian Maire, 40, was pronounced dead at the Milan detention center, which is about 45 miles southwest of Detroit. The detention center is located next to the low-security Milan prison. Maire was from Binghamton, New York.

What was the crime?

Maire’s case drew national attention after federal prosecutors showed how he and a group of other men manipulated and lured more than 100 girls nationwide into their underage porn ring. An Oakland County, Michigan, girl helped the FBI dismantle the operation in 2017.

The victims ranged in age from 10 to 17.

The men coerced the girls into performing sex acts on camera and held “trust-building” sessions that involved winning a victim’s trust if she was suicidal or was cutting herself, for example.

They recruited victims by pretending to be teenage boys. First, they stole pictures online and set up fake profiles. Next, they “scoured popular social media sites looking for targets. Their hunting grounds included Gifyo, Periscope, YouNow, and MyLOL.com, which describes itself as ‘the No. 1 teen dating site in the U.S., Australia, U.K. and Canada,’ ” the Detroit Free Press reported.

In December, Maire, a married father of two from New York, “sobbed in court, telling the judge, ‘I am sick,’ ” as he begged for a chance to redeem himself, according to reports.

Details on his death were not immediately released, but it was labeled an apparent homicide. Visiting hours at the prison were suspended and it was placed on “limited operational status,” the Detroit Free Press reported.

Three inmates involved in the fight sustained serious injuries and two prison staffers had minor injuries.

Who else was sentenced?

Before sentencing, U.S. District Judge Stephen Murphy said in December. “The amount of psychological damage done to the victims is of a very serious concern. This behavior deserves an extremely serious punishment.”

The Detroit Free Press listed the others in the child porn ring and their sentences, as follows:

  • Arthur Simpatico, 47, of Mississauga, Ontario, Canada; sentenced to 38 years.
  • Jonathan Negroni Rodriguez, 37, of West Hollywood, California; was sentenced to 35 years.
  • Michal Figura, 36, of Swarthmore, Pennsylvania; sentenced to 31¼ years.
  • Odell Ortega, 37, of Miami; sentenced to 37½ years.
  • Brett Jonathan Sinta, 36, of Hickory, North Carolina; sentenced to 30½ years.
  • Caleb Young, 38, of Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio; sentenced to 30 years.
  • Daniel Walton, 34 Saginaw, Texas; sentenced to 30½ years.

Pope Francis Quietly Releases Names of over 1,000 Priests Accused of Child Rape

Pope Francis quietly released names of over 1,000 priests accused of child rape

Pope Francis has quietly released the names of over 1,000 pedophiles priests who have been accused of raping children.

Almost 50 dioceses and religious orders across the United States were given permission by the Vatican to release the names of Catholic officials who sexually abused children in the wake of the Pennsylvania report.

Abc.net.au reports: The Associated Press also found nearly 20 local, state or federal investigations, either criminal or civil, have also been launched since the release of the Pennsylvania grand jury findings.

Those investigations could lead to more names and more damning accusations, as well as fines against dioceses and court-ordered safety measures.

The Pennsylvania investigation, led by state Attorney-General Josh Shapiro, identified nearly 300 “predator priests” dating back seven decades and accused church leaders of covering up abuse, in some cases by returning priests to duty after short stays in treatment centres or by reassigning them.

Advocates said the report had a big impact because it was the largest to date in scope, encompassing most of the state.

“People saw what happened in these parishes in Pennsylvania and said, ‘That happened in my parish too’,” said Tim Lennon, national president of the board of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, or SNAP.

The recently disclosed accusations date back six or seven decades in some cases, with the oldest from the 1910s in Louisiana.

Most of the priests were long ago removed from ministry.

An Associated Press examination found that more than 60 per cent are dead and in most cases, the statute of limitations for bringing criminal charges or suing has run out.

Nevertheless, advocates say exposing molesters nearly two decades after the scandal first erupted in Boston in 2002 is an encouraging step, in part because it gives some victims a sense of vindication after decades of official silence or denials.

Also, it could increase pressure on dioceses to set up victims’ compensation funds, as the church has done in Pennsylvania already, and it could result in the removal of molesters from positions outside the church that give them access to children.

“This is a milestone,” said Joe McLean, who filed a lawsuit with other victims seeking to compel the US Conference of Catholic Bishops to release files on alleged abusers nationwide.

Pope Francis calls for unity in US church

In his Christmas address last month, Pope Francis made an unprecedented call for priests who had abused children to turn themselves in and vowed the church would “never again” hide their crimes. The world’s bishops will hold a summit at the Vatican next month to forge a comprehensive response to the crisis.

Pope Francis has since called on the US church to show unity as it tries to tackle a sexual abuse crisis, saying internal bickering had to end over the scandal which has decimated the credibility of the American Church.

In a long and highly unusual letter sent as US bishops started a week-long retreat to reflect on the spreading crisis, the Pope said the handling of the scandal showed the urgent need for a new approach to management and mindset within the church.

“God’s faithful people and the church’s mission continue to suffer greatly as a result of abuses of power and conscience and sexual abuse, and the poor way that they were handled,” the Pope wrote, adding bishops had “concentrated more on pointing fingers than on seeking paths of reconciliation”.

Details released vary across dioceses

The biggest list of names has come from the Jesuits West Province, a religious order that encompasses nine Western states. It identified 111 priests.

The New Orleans archdiocese and the diocese of Syracuse, New York, named 61 and 57 respectively.

The Great Falls-Billings, Montana, diocese disclosed 47 names, including those of a few nuns, while the Los Angeles archdiocese reported more than 50 from the past decade or so.

Some dioceses, like Peoria, Illinois, released only names with no information on the allegations or the church’s response.

Others detailed such things as parish assignments, numbers and dates of allegations — including an Omaha priest with 20 to 35 accusations against him — and attempts at treatment, restriction and punishment.

In the 16 years between the Boston scandal and the Pennsylvania investigation, only about 30 dioceses around the country had released lists of priests they deemed credibly accused of abuse.

Most of those dioceses came clean because they were forced to do so by lawsuits or bankruptcy filings.

Some dioceses declined to name any deceased priests, since they could not defend themselves, and some would not identify any clergy members at all.

While praising the release of names, many experts said the lists were often incomplete.

Terence McKiernan, co-director of BishopAccountability.org, which has tracked abuse for more than a decade, said many dioceses have left off names of known abusers his group has published in its online database.

“It’s not enough,” Pennsylvania’s Mr Shapiro agreed.

Mr Shapiro said he has spoken to 45 other attorneys-general since his report, and 14 had publicly acknowledged some form of investigation.

The $1.2 Trillion College Debt Crisis Is CRIPPLING The Economy

A whopping two-thirds of American college students graduate school already deeply in debt. But the decision to go into debt to pay for a college degree is a $1.2 trillion crisis that’s crippling the economy.

According to The Institute for College Access and Success (TICAS) Project on Student Debt, the average borrower will graduate with $26,600 in student loan debt. That means, that before a dollar is made using the degree, most Americans will owe money to someone else. The trend is not doing the economy any favors either. One in 10 graduates will accumulate more than $40,000 in debt and 1% of graduates will accumulate over $100,000 in student loan debt.

According to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, student loan debt has reached a new milestone, crossing the $1.2 trillion mark — $1 trillion of that in federal student loan debt in 2013. That debt currently stands at a whopping $1.5 trillion.  And according to a report by Forbes, this is a negative sum game for both the borrowers and the economy.  Although taking out massive amounts of debt for college is now the new normal, it’s crippling the economy and the personal financial situations of millions of borrowers.

However, the Pittsburg Post-Gazette says there isn’t a student loan crisis in a recent op-ed. But this information is coming from those who profit off of student loans, such as college presidents.  But others say that this is simply a matter of supply and demand and there is more demand than supply.  Additional options should be presented to those who have become intent on debt rather than a mandated degree.  Educating students on the power of debt should also be considered to help stave off and eventually eliminate this problem.

“There has been a big shift in terms of who should bear the burden of the cost of education,” said Benjamin Keys, a Wharton real estate professor with a specialty in household finance and debt. “We know the stories of our parents, that they could earn enough working as a lifeguard in the summer to pay for a semester of college. The growth of tuition costs relative to teen wages — indeed, all wages — has veered sharply upwards.”

“We’ve come to a place where most students have to borrow in order to pay the cost of completing a bachelor’s degree,” said University of Pennsylvania professor Laura W. Perna, executive director of Penn’s Alliance for Higher Education and Democracy.

Of course, that’s little consolation to those who cannot pay for the degree they went into debt to finance. The student loan dynamic is without a doubt changing the culture of the country.  People no longer view debt as something they need to avoid to eliminate slavery to the lender, but something as “necessary” to get ahead.  Perhaps this is also why people cannot imagine their life without enslavement to the government.  They have been conditioned to believe this is “normal.”

 

Democrats Desperate for Presidential Candidates

The current top contenders for 2020 Democratic presidential candidates include Joe Biden, Bernie Sanders, Beto O’Rourke.

By S.T. Patrick

The Democratic Party has caught “Betomania,” and it’s spreading all the way to a potential 2020 nomination for president. One prominent Democrat has yet to purchase his own ticket for the Beto bandwagon. Outgoing Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel is hesitant about the early hype of Rep. Beto O’Rourke (D-Texas). The former chief of staff to President Barack Obama questioned the wisdom of getting behind O’Rourke, who just lost a surprisingly close Senate race to Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas).

“If Beto O’Rourke wants to go and run for president, God bless him. He should put his hat in and make his case,” Emanuel recently told MSNBC. “But, he lost. You don’t usually promote a loser to the top of party.”

Emanuel, a power player in the Democratic Party, was on MSNBC to publicly support Rep. Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) in her effort to once again become House speaker. “Nancy Pelosi led the Democratic Party for the last two years from a really bad election in 2016,” Emanuel said. “I’m from Chicago. Maybe I’m really old school, but to the victor go the spoils.”

When asked if a presidential run is possible, O’Rourke has responded that “anything is possible.” A “Draft Beto 2020 PAC” has already been formed by Lauren Pardi, Will Herberich, and Adam Webster, three Democratic strategists based in the Northeast.

“Make no mistake about it,” the strategists wrote, “Beto can win. A recent Politico poll showed that among the field of potential Democratic candidates, Beto was third—behind only Vice President Joe Biden and [Vermont] Sen. Bernie Sanders. . . . Our goal is to show Beto that there is support for his candidacy, starting here in New England.”

In 2016, Emanuel supported Hillary Clinton over both Biden and Sanders. If Mrs. Clinton runs again, he may re-up his support or he may go another direction. It’s feasible that he could run, himself, though there are few Democratic strategists predicting an Emanuel campaign. The strategy at this point would be to appear cold and unimpressed by all potential candidates. In doing so, Emanuel’s support becomes more valuable and could earn him a better position within his chosen candidate’s administration. In politics, support is a commodity. The wise political move is to use it as such, especially when a candidate needs a boost among the party faithful in the primary polls.

Drowning in IRS debt? The MacPherson Group could be a lifesaver!

While Obama has not yet endorsed even the possibility of an O’Rourke run—and did not officially endorse his Senate candidacy—the former president has recently made some glowing remarks about the Democratic Party’s favorite new hope.

“It felt as if he based his statements and his positions on what he believed,” Obama said. “And that, you’d like to think, is normally how things work. Sadly, it’s not.”

When O’Rourke was a city councilman in El Paso in 2008, he broke with his local party faithful and supported Obama over Mrs. Clinton in the primaries. Like Obama and Trump, he would hope to catch a sort of “rock star vibe” that pushes candidates through primaries in this new millennium. He has already embraced social media and eschewed consultants, preferring an online presence to a sizeable staff.

In a November poll of Democratic voters, O’Rourke ranked third among 21 other choices. Biden ranked first with Sanders coming in a strong second. Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), Sen. Kamala Harris (D-Calif.), Sen. Corey Booker (D-N.J.), and former mayor of New York City Michael Bloomberg were the only other candidates to receive over 1% in the poll. Whispers within the party are still discussing the remote possibility of a billionaire celebrity run by someone such as television production mogul Oprah Winfrey or Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg.

The Democratic Party may be in the midst of an identity crisis, still guessing what it will be in 2020. Will it be the blatantly Democratic Socialist party of Sanders and 28-year-old Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) or will it move toward a more popular centrism as it did in Pennsylvania when 34-year-old Rep. Conor Lamb (D-Penn.) flipped a long-held Republican seat in conservative southwestern Pennsylvania? Lamb, a former Marine and federal prosecutor, pushed his military service and moderate views on issues to a victory.

As the Democrats learned in November, they underestimate President Trump at their own expense. Chastising him has only strengthened his base. Antagonizing the base will only further the separation and drive moderates to the right. In a country rife with polarization, both parties will still have to seek those in the middle to win in 2020.

S.T. Patrick holds degrees in both journalism and social studies education. He spent 10 years as an educator and now hosts the “Midnight Writer News Show.” His email is [email protected].

Michigan’s Most Fervent Tea Partiers Backed Santorum

If they prefer a big-government social conservative, what’s the point of their movement?

By Conor Friedersdorf, The Atlantic

CNN’s Michigan exit poll had a nugget of information that caught my eye: Republican voters who “strongly supported” the tea party favored Rick Santorum. Forty-five percent of that subgroup cast a ballot for the former Pennsylvania senator. Mitt Romney came in second place, winning 37 percent of strong tea party supporters, Newt Gingrich won 11 percent of their vote, and Ron Paul finished last with 6 percent.

These results underscore the chasm that separates what tea partiers say they care about and their revealed preferences. Visit some of the websites for regional tea party-affiliated groups in the state. The Southwest Michigan Patriots are typical. The “core principles” they list: limited government, separation of powers, protection of individual rights, fiscal responsibility and transparency, free trade and commerce, and taxes. Or look at the core principles listed by the Tea Party of West Michigan:

  1. To preserve the economic future for our children.
  2. To work for a return to the principles of our governing constitution.
  3. To demand limited government.
  4. To promote the free market that made our country the leader of the world.
  5. To give support for individual rights, and property rights.
  6. To provide a platform for giving like-minded people a voice.

And the voters who say they support these principles have chosen, as their preferred 2012 nominee, Rick Santorum, the social conservative who says he voted contrary to his beliefs in order to be a “team player” during the big-spending, federal-government-expanding George W. Bush administration. Their least favorite is Ron Paul, the most consistent champion of all the issues they say that they care about most. It’s almost a joke. If they prefer an interventionist foreign policy or don’t think there’s any chance for Paul to beat President Obama, fine: No one is obligated to vote for a principled advocate of small government. But if they wind up supporting Santorum, what’s the point of having a tea party at all?

To read more, visit:  http://www.nationaljournal.com/2012-presidential-campaign/michigan-s-most-fervent-tea-partiers-backed-santorum-20120229?mrefid=election2012

RE Tea Party » 2012 Elections

Orwellian Big Brother Tax Collection Commercial Airs in Pennsylvania

Keith Farrell
Infowars.com
May 2, 2010

We’re not living in an Orwellian Police state; it’s all just a conspiracy theory. However, that’s not what Pennsylvania’s government is telling their citizens. In what can only be described as a mafia-style intimidation tactic, the Pennsylvanian government is telling citizens there that they “know who you are”. The video shows a satellite image
rhawk301 blog

Santorum campaign suggests Mitt Romney may have done deal to make Ron Paul his running mate

By: Toby Harnden, Daily Mail

After tonight’s debate, in which Ron Paul and Mitt Romney repeatedly attacked Rick Santorum over his 16-year record in Congress, the former US Senator for Pennsylvania hinted that something nefarious was going on.

“You have to ask Congressman Paul and Governor Romney what they’ve got going together,” Santorum told reporters in the spin room in Mesa, Arizona. “Their commercials look a lot alike and so do their attacks.”

Santorum’s top strategist John Brabender went even further, charging that the two men had “joined forces” and were coordinating attacks against his man

“Clearly there’s a tag team strategy between Ron Paul and Mitt Romney. For all I know, Mitt Romney might be considering Ron Paul as his running mate. Clearly there is now an alliance between those two and you saw that certainly in the debate.”

The was also coordination in their attack ads, he charged. “Ron Paul for all practical purposes has pulled out of Michigan. Correct? Where’s he running negative ads against Rick Santorum? Michigan.

“It was interesting to me that if you watch Ron Paul when he came into the debate, he wrote negative things about Rick Santorum down because when he started to get questions he would immediately pick up his paper and start mentioning Santorum stuff.”

To read more, visit:  http://harndenblog.dailymail.co.uk/2012/02/santorum-campaign-suggests-romney-may-have-done-deal-to-make-ron-paul-his-running-mate.html

RE Tea Party » 2012 Elections

Santorum Victories Disprove Tea Party Myth

By Rich Thomas, YahooNews.com

Rick Santorum’s sweeping victories in Colorado, Minnesota and Missouri do more than buoy the former Pennsylvania senator’s chances of winning the Republican presidential nomination or hand front-runner Mitt Romney a severe setback. Santorum’s triple win also disproves the popular myth that the tea party is somehow a new phenomenon in conservative politics rather than the same old gang of extremists made up mostly of the Christian Right.

That the tea party was somehow separate from the Christian Right was always rather obvious, even though the mainstream media embraced the myth, making distinctions that never existed in practice. Many prominent tea party figures such as former GOP presidential candidate Michele Bachmann and former Senate candidate Christine O’Donnell, sprang from an enjoy large support from conservative evangelical circles, and opinion studies have shown the tea party looks a lot like the old conservative movement.

Polling shows little enthusiasm for supposed Romney and that many in Florida voted for him only because they thought he was the candidate with the best chance to beat Barrack Obama in November. Romney failed to carry a majority in Florida, won Nevada by a smaller margin than in 2008 and movement conservatives continue to lurch around looking for an alternative to Romney, the Republican Party’s anointed.

Yet who did the supposed new model, anti-socialist, economic libertarians of the tea party choose in large numbers in Colorado, Minnesota and Missouri? Not the ardent libertarian Ron Paul or more secular Newt Gingrich, but Catholic conservative Santorum, who is more renowned for his anti-gay and anti-abortion stances than his economic views.

Unlike Iowa, Tuesday’s results cannot be dismissed as a mere aberration in a Christian Right-friendly state. Colorado, Minnesota and Missouri represent a very broad geographical cross-section of America, as well as a diverse sampling of the Republican rank and file. If the tea party was ever distinct from the old conservative movement, it certainly is not today.

To read more, visit:  http://news.yahoo.com/santorum-victories-disprove-tea-party-myth-192300268.html

RE Tea Party » 2012 Elections

Pennsylvania Welder Fights Eminent Domain, Agenda 21

(FOXNEWS)   Bob Valerio’s thoughts were on his country as he waited for a court hearing on whether he would get to keep his business.

“This is not the United States of America that I know,” Valerio lamented. “Does the Constitution mean anything? Obviously, there are no personal property rights.”

For nearly 60 years, Valerio’s family business, Wally and Joe’s Welding, has stood in a squat brick building on a busy highway in McKeesport, Pa. But the government has taken title to his land by eminent domain, forcing Valerio to consider the prospect of closing his doors forever.

“I’m not ready to retire,” says the 64 year-old welder.

Bob has lost his building because the City of McKeesport Sewage Authority used eminent domain to take the property. They say they need the land to expand a sewage pumping station next door. The battle landed in court, pitting Valerio against the government.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mIy-eSlITwY

“My family has worked at this thing their whole lives, and I’m carrying on the legacy.”

The city of McKeesport originally paid Valerio $ 57,000 for the building and offered a check for $ 47,000 for his equipment, some of it specialized and custom-made for the welding process. But Valerio says the amount was not enough to cover his move and keep him in business, and he did not accept the second check.

“I just want it replaced. I’m not looking to make a windfall and retire at Myrtle Beach on a golf course. I just want you to move me to an adequate facility where I can continue.”

They got the deed, they did eminent domain, and if you’re ordered out, you don’t have enough to continue the business,” says Valerio’s business partner, Bob Livingston.

“We had it appraised at a certain value, and he wanted far more than what the appraisal was,” countered Joe Rost, executive sirector of the Muncipal Authority of the City of McKeesport. “When you can’t come to an agreement, then you have to resort to the court, and hope that the courts will determine what is fair and reasonable.”

Rost says the small pumping station expansion is part of a federally mandated $ 54 million expansion of the sewage system needed to clean rain run-off, and that Valerio’s building is the only place where the new facility can be built. He insists that Valerio has been treated fairly in the process.

“We only used eminent domain as a very last resort. None of us would like that to happen to us. We realize that. We put ourselves in their place.”

He says the city has tried to find an alternative location for the business.

“We didn’t want to do it under any stretch of the imagination…but in this case we had no choice. We were running out of time and this project had to be done.”

At a court hearing, a partial settlement was reached that will force Valerio out in 30 days but allow him to try and relocate his business elsewhere. Both sides agreed on a payment of $ 140,000 to help Valerio purchase a new building, and the final amount to be paid by the city will be decided under arbitration.

“It’s going to get me enough to relocate and remain in business, and that was my main objective,” Valerio told Fox News after the hearing, adding, “I will have to fight for the rest.”

The lawyer for the McKeesport Authority, Cliff Johns, said, “a fair and equitable understanding has been reached for possession of the property,” but the final settlement will still have to be reached.

Pittsburgh Republican Rep. Tim Murphy, who represents the district where Valerio lives, said in a written statement that it would have been “a travesty for McKeesport to lose a 60-year-old institution like Wally and Joe’s.” He said government “should be doing everything to help them survive in tough economic times.”

Construction on the sewage pumping station expansion will soon impact the site, and Valerio will lose the building where he has welded since he was 15 years old. But while he endured what he calls “the heartbreaking” experience of eminent domain, he has hope that the agreement means he will remain in business.

“I expected maybe to turn my keys in today,” he said.

Federal Jack

Pennsylvania school decides to cancel play because of 9/11 sensitivity

(AOI)   Richland School District  was set to perform the Tony award-winning play Kismet when complaints started coming in from the community. You see, the play has the unfortunate distinction of being about a beggar and poet from Baghdad (gasp, an Arab/Muslim). Strike number two is the fact that the school district is a mere 30+ miles from Shanksville, sight of where Flight 93 crashed. So, you can honestly see why no one in their right mind would want obvious Muslim propaganda in the same year and near the crash site of the tragedy of 9/11. And now that I got that sarcasm out of my system, let me explain why the hell people need to stop overreacting to every little fucking thing (especially when concerning anything that mention anything coming from the middle east that isn’t from Israel). If anyone would have done their research, the would notice something really odd to begin with.

Kismet was a play written in 1911 by Edward Knoblauch. That doesn’t sound like a “Terrorist” name, does it? Considering that Knoblauch was born in (GASP) New York City in 1874, graduated from Harvard in 1896, and lived out the rest of his life in the United Kingdom. In fact, if you would look up Mr. Knoblauch (later Knoblock when he anglicized the spelling of his name), he was a captain in the British Army and worked for the Secret Service Bureau in the Mediterranean. He also wrote the screenplays for Robin Hood (1922) and The Three Musketeers (1921). Sounds like a guy who was hell-bent on spreading an agenda, doesn’t it. I can’t wait until the re-release of Disney’s Aladdin gets boycotted. There is no hidden agenda behind Kismet…despite the moral outrage of speaking the name of Allah and Mohammed, it’s a play…nothing more, nothing less.

What happened on September 11th, 2001 was a horrific event. But we should not and cannot hold an entire group of people responsible for the misdeeds of a few. If anyone should know this the best, it should be Christians. How long were Christians persecuted by the Romans? For how long did Christians persecute those outside their own religion (Spanish Inquisitions). Are there going to be extremist who claim to represent the Islam faith? Yes, there will always be some that are willing to take it to the point of no return. But forgive me for saying that almost every religious sect has extremist in their mist.  But you will always have those people who no matter what are going to remain prejudice against others.

*sigh*

And with this shit, we honestly thought we defeated the extremist….no, they got what they wanted…are you happy now?

http://theagentsofinformationpodcast.wordpress.com/2011/09/21/sore-spot-pennsylvania-school-decides-to-cancel-play-because-of-911-sensitivity/

Federal Jack

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