Showing posts with label forced. Show all posts
Showing posts with label forced. Show all posts

Monday, April 7, 2014

Student Was Forced to Perform Sexual Acts in Her Dorm, Harvard Turned a Blind Eye



How America"s top universities fail rape survivors.








You"ve heard this story before: A young woman is sexually assaulted on her college campus. She reports it to campus authorities. They take the accusations as a “he said, she said”. They do nothing. She goes to therapy, maybe goes on medication, maybe drops out of school. He goes on with his life. The university stays silent in the face of criticism, or perhaps pledges to take “a new look” at its sexual assault policies.


The latest depressing chapter arrived this week at Harvard, where a student penned an anonymous letter in the school newspaper detailing what she says was an assault on her and inaction by her university. The woman was in a friend"s dorm room – intoxicated, she writes – when “a friend” pressured her into sexual activity. There wasn"t physical force, she says, but there were demands and there was pain inflicted, and she was scared and drunk and trapped between him and a wall.


The woman reported the assault, but Harvard"s 20-year-old sexual assault policy is so outdated – less comprehensive than that of all the other Ivies, less inclusive even than the guidelines of the Justice Department – that the administration told her there was little they could do. Under Harvard policy, “Indecent assault and battery involves any unwanted touching or fondling of a sexual nature that is accompanied by physical force or threat of bodily injury.” The policy doesn"t address consent or intoxication in the context of indecent assault and battery, although it touches on those issues in cases of penetrative rape. Many other schools require “affirmative consent” – that is, you need to get a “yes” before you have sex with someone … rather than just the absence of a “no”.


Harvard joins too long a line of elite universities accused of inadequately meeting the needs of sexual assault survivors: YalePrincetonBrown,DartmouthUNCOccidental and many more. But what might have been easily swept under the rug 10 years ago is now, largely thanks to the internet, a major story.


Why aren"t schools like Harvard, with their vast financial and intellectual resources, with their leadership position at the very top of higher education, doing a better job? Why have the best universities in America turned from in loco parentis to incommunicado?


The usual sad suspects are all out again: Ivy League entitlement, institutional self-protection, impulsive identification with the accused rather than the accuser.


Jaclyn Friedman, a sexual assault educator from Boston who has worked with Harvard students, told me that they say young women are bussed in from Boston University and Wellesley to attend parties and social events at Final Clubs – the Harvard equivalent of fraternities.


“The attitude is, "these girls are lucky to be at this party,"” Friedman says. “That inherent power dynamic feeds right into rape culture.”


Sexual assaults like the one detailed by the brave anonymous Harvard student happen when men feel entitled to women"s bodies and when men feel as though they can commit bad acts with impunity. And that"s what is extra troubling about these Ivy League assaults: they happen at institutions where student identities are entirely grounded in a narrative of exceptionalism.


Does the “I"m special” ethos turn students into rapists? Of course not – sexual assault happens in nearly every corner of the world, and on college campuses of all types. But the Ivy League identity may help to cultivate the assumption that such extraordinariness somehow means there are fewer consequences for the chosen ones.


Studies show that men are more likely to commit acts of sexual violence in communities where sexual violence goes unpunished – a truth reflected in the way we understand assault in institutions like the military and in far-away countries like the Congo, Bosnia and India, where we use the word “impunity” to describe how weak governance and a culture of higher-ups looking the other way allows abuse to thrive.


It can be more difficult to see our own institutions of higher learning in that same context of power and abdication of responsibility – and surely there are innumerable, substantial differences, particularly between rape as a war crime and acquaintance assault. But as different in nearly every way as Harvard may be from Kosovo, the Ivy League implies a similar freedom from consequences, and inadequate sexual assault policies affirm it.


“These are "Harvard men,"” Friedman tells me. “We assume these aren"t the type of guys who would do this sort of thing.”


They do, of course, and administrators have to deal with it, uncomfortably. Colleges are not courts of law, and students are disciplined and expelled for a range of activities, including those that don"t actually break any criminal codes. Universities often prefer to deal with sexual assault charges themselves for two reasons, one well-intentioned and one significantly less so: to save students the trauma of bringing a difficult-to-win criminal case, and to save the university the embarrassment and attendant dip in enrollment that comes from a public criminal complaint. Given that so many students prefer not to report the kind of assaults that all too commonly occur on college campuses – those involving “a friend” or someone they know – a university"s willingness to handle such matters itself is, at least in theory, quite laudable.


But university administrators have to actually deal with it. Colleges are not required to uphold the standard of “innocent until proven guilty”; being on campus is a privilege, not a right, and the university doesn"t have the power to deprive students of their personal liberties. But the overwhelming majority of on-campus rapes are committed by a small number of repeat offenders. Most campus assailants commit multiple assaults. This should put administrators in risk-assessment mode. They should take every singly accusation more seriously: keeping an assailant on campus, even if he seems like a nice guy, often means more sexual assault.


Of course there has to be significant care given to ensure a student accused of any offense gets a fair defense. No serious person suggests that an accusation should immediately lead to expulsion from Harvard. There"s no perfect way to balance the competing interests here, and universities will never, sadly, be able to ensure that campuses are 100% safe for female students.


Yet there"s a lot of space between perfection and the status quo. A school spokesperson told me via email that Harvard is moving to address its sexual assault policy, and there is a new task force, which are good first steps. But the most famously elite university in America should also be instituting transparent processes for dealing with sexual assault accusations, training administrators and judicial boards on how to handle sexual assault cases, and making sure students have a clear understanding of affirmative consent to sex. “No means no” isn"t good enough anymore. Harvard should be leading the way.


“These universities, especially Harvard and the elite universities, are supposed to be creating our next generation of thinkers and ideas,” Friedman said. “We don’t need perfect answers in order to do something better. They"re Harvard. They could consider themselves on the forefront of how to use their creative energies to address this issue.”


 

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Student Was Forced to Perform Sexual Acts in Her Dorm, Harvard Turned a Blind Eye

Wednesday, March 12, 2014

Denver Cops Forced to Wear Cameras, Unable to Delete Footage


Who will watch the watchers? Apparently the watchers..


Adan Salazar
Infowars.com
March 12, 2014


Police in Denver are testing a solution they hope will give a much-needed boost to their public persona.


Denver PD is acquiring new guns and armor, and for the next six months will engage in a body camera
pilot program in attempts to ingratiate themselves to a police-corruption weary public.


The cameras will be smaller than Go-Pro devices and are part of a public relations effort aimed “to restore the relationship between Denver police and the public, especially in Lower Downtown,” according to CBS Denver.


Police are reportedly “hoping the tiny cameras will bring a big dose of credibility to the department.”


“Individuals make allegations … ‘The officer did this or the officer did that.’ Or the officers make allegations, ‘I did this, or I did that’ based on the incident,” Police Chief Robert White told KCNC. “It’s right there on the camera.”


The cameras will not, however, automatically begin recording an incident. They must be initiated by the officers themselves, basically still allowing them to selectively choose what they want filmed.


“Essentially I’m the producer and director of my own video involving my police action and interaction with the public,” Detective Tony Weathersby said.


Officer shows off $ 800 body camera members of Denver PD

Officer shows off $ 800 body camera members of Denver PD’s District 6 will be testing out for the next six months. / Photo via KCNC



But, once filming has started, it cannot be deleted. The camera synchs to the web via an officer’s smartphone and gets uploaded to a police server, preventing an officer from deleting his footage.


As numerous citizen journalists can attest, police officers through either sheer ignorance or defiance will often stop citizens from filming incidents, confiscate their cell phones or cameras, then delete the footage.


Last month, one man claimed he was beaten by an NYPD officer and arrested for filming an incident. The officer who arrested the man neglected to mention in his police report that the man had been filming and that the officer had deleted the footage, which the man was fortunately able to recover.


In September 2012, Dallas police shot a man 41 times, then confiscated another man’s camera, which was used to film the bloody event, and also allegedly proceeded to delete the incriminating footage.


And recently it also happened in Fall River, Mass., when a man recorded a police officer who was shouting profanities across the street from his home. The man was arrested for “surreptitiously” filming the officer and his footage was mysteriously deleted while in custody.


“From my perspective it’s a safety issue and will clearly identify the truth,” Police Chief White claims, but this will only hold true if officers choose to press the “record” button.


This article was posted: Wednesday, March 12, 2014 at 2:47 pm










Infowars



Denver Cops Forced to Wear Cameras, Unable to Delete Footage

Denver Cops Forced to Wear Cameras, Unable to Delete Footage


Who will watch the watchers? Apparently the watchers..


Adan Salazar
Infowars.com
March 12, 2014


Police in Denver are testing a solution they hope will give a much-needed boost to their public persona.


Denver PD is acquiring new guns and armor, and for the next six months will engage in a body camera
pilot program in attempts to ingratiate themselves to a police-corruption weary public.


The cameras will be smaller than Go-Pro devices and are part of a public relations effort aimed “to restore the relationship between Denver police and the public, especially in Lower Downtown,” according to CBS Denver.


Police are reportedly “hoping the tiny cameras will bring a big dose of credibility to the department.”


“Individuals make allegations … ‘The officer did this or the officer did that.’ Or the officers make allegations, ‘I did this, or I did that’ based on the incident,” Police Chief Robert White told KCNC. “It’s right there on the camera.”


The cameras will not, however, automatically begin recording an incident. They must be initiated by the officers themselves, basically still allowing them to selectively choose what they want filmed.


“Essentially I’m the producer and director of my own video involving my police action and interaction with the public,” Detective Tony Weathersby said.


Officer shows off $ 800 body camera members of Denver PD

Officer shows off $ 800 body camera members of Denver PD’s District 6 will be testing out for the next six months. / Photo via KCNC



But, once filming has started, it cannot be deleted. The camera synchs to the web via an officer’s smartphone and gets uploaded to a police server, preventing an officer from deleting his footage.


As numerous citizen journalists can attest, police officers through either sheer ignorance or defiance will often stop citizens from filming incidents, confiscate their cell phones or cameras, then delete the footage.


Last month, one man claimed he was beaten by an NYPD officer and arrested for filming an incident. The officer who arrested the man neglected to mention in his police report that the man had been filming and that the officer had deleted the footage, which the man was fortunately able to recover.


In September 2012, Dallas police shot a man 41 times, then confiscated another man’s camera, which was used to film the bloody event, and also allegedly proceeded to delete the incriminating footage.


And recently it also happened in Fall River, Mass., when a man recorded a police officer who was shouting profanities across the street from his home. The man was arrested for “surreptitiously” filming the officer and his footage was mysteriously deleted while in custody.


“From my perspective it’s a safety issue and will clearly identify the truth,” Police Chief White claims, but this will only hold true if officers choose to press the “record” button.


This article was posted: Wednesday, March 12, 2014 at 2:47 pm










Infowars



Denver Cops Forced to Wear Cameras, Unable to Delete Footage

Thursday, February 27, 2014

China backs suit over Japan"s forced labor



By Christopher Bodeen, AP
February 27, 2014, 12:03 am TWN





BEIJING — China’s government accused Japan of failing to conclusively address allegations of forced labor during World War II and voiced support Wednesday for Chinese plaintiffs seeking to sue to Japanese companies in a Beijing court.

The lawsuit brought by 37 former workers and their descendants, 69 years after the end of the war, comes as China-Japan tensions rise over territorial claims and their troubled history. While aggressively pursuing claims over disputed islands, Beijing has also sought to play up Japan’s wartime guilt for which it says Tokyo has never shown proper contrition.


Tokyo insists that postwar agreements settled cases of forced wartime labor, and the Japanese government spokesman said Wednesday that the plaintiffs had “no case.” But Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying said the issue remained unresolved.


“Forced labor is a grave crime which Japanese militarists committed during their World War II aggression. It is an issue which has yet to be properly solved,” Hua said.


The lawsuit names Mitsubishi Materials Corporation and Mitsui Mining and Smelting as defendants and asks for compensation of 1 million yuan (US$ 163,000) for each defendant as well as apologies in the Chinese and Japanese languages to be placed with the country’s major media outlets.


Beijing lawyer Kang Jian, who is representing the 37 plaintiffs, said they filed their paperwork with the Beijing No. 1 Intermediate Court, but did not yet know whether they would get a hearing.


Japan’s wartime government systematically abducted nearly 40,000 Chinese citizens and forced them to work for Japanese companies for little or no pay to make up for a labor shortage at home. They were sent to mines, construction sites and factories operated by 135 Japanese companies, many of them among Japan’s corporate giants today.


About 7,000 people died of malnutrition and mistreatment by their employers.


Dozens of similar lawsuits brought in Japan were dismissed, although some were settled outside court. The lawsuit filed Wednesday is believed to be the first such action brought before a Chinese court.


Japanese government spokesman Yoshihide Suga, speaking to reporters at his routine morning briefing, reiterated Tokyo’s position that all such claims were settled by agreements between the two governments.


“This is a matter between China and companies with China-related business, so it is a civil issue, Suga said.


“However, I can say that since such problems were included in the Japan-China communique, there is no case,” he said. “The individual rights for seeking (compensation) were included in the communique.”


Renewed frictions between Beijing and Tokyo arose in 2012 after Japan nationalized a group of tiny uninhabited islands controlled by Japan but claimed by China.





China Post Online – China News



China backs suit over Japan"s forced labor

Tuesday, February 11, 2014

Exxon oil spill town "deserted land", residents still getting sick, forced to abandon homes

Exxon oil spill town "deserted land", residents still getting sick, forced to abandon homes
http://rt.com/files/news/22/47/a0/00/3.jpg



Published time: February 11, 2014 02:53



Emergency crews work to clean up an oil spill near Interstate 40 in Mayflower, Arkansas March 31, 2013.(Reuters / Jacob Slaton)



Download video (19.76 MB)



Almost one year after ExxonMobil’s pipeline burst and caused a major oil spill near Mayflower, Arkansas, officials say the area is safe to live in. But locals are still suffering from dizziness, headaches, and nausea – prompting many to move away.


On March 29, 2013, Exxon’s Pegasus pipeline spilled thousands of barrels of Canadian crude oil in a suburban area near the town of Mayflower, sparking strong opposition to oil sands exploitation and the Keystone XL project. If approved, the Keystone pipeline would carry tar sand oil from Alberta, Canada through the US to Texas refineries.


More than 10 months after the Pegasus rupture – which resulted in the evacuation of over 20 homes – residents are complaining about health problems. Many are keen to leave the town entirely.


Before the spill, the small town was a peaceful place for families. Many didn’t even know there was a pipeline running underneath their houses. Following the spill, many residents have moved to other locations. ‘For Sale’ signs can currently be seen throughout the area, RT’s Gayane Chichakyan reported from Mayflower.


Spilt oil from Exxon pipeline runs between homes in North Woods Subdivision in Mayflower, Arkansas in this March 31, 2013 photo released to Reuters on April 11, 2013.(Reuters /Handout)


Former Mayflower resident Ann Jarrell said she “tried to stay here for as much as I could,” but every time it rained, oil vapor would return. Like many other locals, she started having constant headaches and coughing after the spill, she said.


I have friends who still live here. They don’t have a place to go. They have small children… and they’re all sick,” she told RT.


Exxon told RT that a Unified Command – comprised of Exxon representatives and officials from state and federal environmental services – has deemed that all areas affected by the spill are now safe to live in.


We are continuing to monitor the cove area adjacent to Lake Conway. All other cleanup and response efforts were approved and deemed complete by the Unified Command in late 2013,” Exxon wrote in an e-mail to RT. “The Unified Command was comprised of US EPA, ADEQ, Faulkner County, and ExxonMobil representatives. All areas in Mayflower Northwoods subdivision have been cleared for re-entry or deemed with no restrictions for re-occupancy by the Unified Command.”


However, many of the residents don’t buy it. And their homes aren’t selling.


I would say the number of homes sold in Mayflower has dropped by at least 50 to 60 percent,” real estate agent Richard Henley said.


Demonstrators protest against the proposed Keystone XL oil pipeline in San Francisco, California February 3, 2014.(Reuters / Stephen Lam)


Meanwhile, the 2013 Mayflower oil spill is only a fraction of annual pipeline leaks. It is estimated that between 2008 and 2012, US pipelines spilled an average of more than 3.1 million gallons of hazardous liquids per year, according the Pipeline & Hazardous Materials Safety Administration.


Plans for the Keystone XL pipeline have caused many to worry that they – like the residents of Mayflower – may become collateral damage of the big oil companies.


There are a lot of us who have been forgotten. We’re just collateral damage,” Ann Jarrell said.


Last week, an alliance of Native American communities promised to block construction of the northern leg of the Keystone pipeline, which has yet to be approved by President Obama.


The project has seen strong opposition in the US, with many believing the carbon-intensive impact that results from the extraction of tar sands will worsen the effects of climate change. They also fear the pipeline will put nearby communities at risk of oil spills and their subsequent fallout.


Adding up concerns over the planned pipeline, a new study said that production of crude oil in western Canada emits more harmful carcinogens into the environment than official estimates let on. The report by the University of Toronto-Scarborough published earlier in February said that Canadian officials may have underestimated emissions of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) from Alberta tar sands, and they may pose a serious danger to humans and the ecosystem.


The Syncrude tar sands mine north of Fort McMurray, Alberta.(Reuters / Todd Korol)




RT – USA




Read more about Exxon oil spill town "deserted land", residents still getting sick, forced to abandon homes and other interesting subjects concerning U.S. News Report at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Monday, January 13, 2014

children forced into cell-like school seclusion rooms


children forced into cell-like school seclusion rooms

from cnn: A few weeks before 13-year-old Jonathan King killed himself, he told his parents that his teachers had put him in “time-out.” … But time-out in t…
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children forced into cell-like school seclusion rooms

Tuesday, January 7, 2014

TYT Network Reports - Bill O"Reilly Forced To Apologize For MLK Commemoration Lie

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TYT Network Reports - Bill O"Reilly Forced To Apologize For MLK Commemoration Lie

Wednesday, November 27, 2013

Boeing icing problems may lead to forced landings: FAA

Boeing icing problems may lead to forced landings: FAA
http://currenteconomictrendsandnews.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/11/f4080__p-89EKCgBk8MZdE.gif



A staff of Japan Airlines’ (JAL) walks past one of the company’s Boeing Co’s 787 Dreamliner plane at Narita international airport in Narita, east of Tokyo, November 11, 2013.


Credit: Reuters/Toru Hanai




Reuters: Business News




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Wednesday, November 13, 2013

Chaplains Mocked, Forced out of VA Program for Their Christian Beliefs


Two military chaplains are suing the federal Veterans Affairs department after they said they were mocked for their Christian beliefs and forced out of a Veterans Affairs chaplain training program.


In 2012, Lieutenant Commander Dan Klender, a Navy chaplain, and Major Steven Firtko, a retired Army chaplain, enrolled in the VA’s Clinical Pastoral Education Center program in San Diego. The class is a requirement for chaplains wishing to serve at VA hospitals. The two chaplains are members of the Conservative Baptist Association of America, a denomination that places a high priority on Scripture and faith in Christ.


The two chaplains charge that they were ridiculed and taunted by the program’s director, Nancy Dietsch, a VA employee with a reputation for antagonism toward evangelical Christians, charged John Wells, the attorney representing the two chaplains in the suit. “She’s been very, very critical of Christians,” Wells told Fox News. “Instead of teaching anything dealing with faith issues, she’s dealing with a holistic, humanistic approach. It’s the idea that the spirit comes from within.”


The lawsuit, filed against Secretary of Veterans Affairs Eric Shinseki, charges, among other things, that Dietsch said VA policy forbade chaplains from praying in Jesus’ name, and that chaplains could not quote Scripture in her class.


Specifically, during one class discussion on faith, Major Firtko cited the Scripture saying that “faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen.” According to Fox News, “Dietsch told the chaplain he was not allowed to quote from the Bible in her classroom.”


During one class session, Dietsch said that she believed God could be either man or woman. But when Firtko referred to “The Lord’s Prayer,” which refers to “our Father which art in heaven,” Dietsch “angrily pounded her fist on the table and shouted, ‘Do not quote Scripture in this class,’” the lawsuit contends.


On another occasion, according to the lawsuit, “Dietsch insisted that evolution was fact and that she believed mankind evolved. Chaplain Firtko stated he believed in the Genesis statement that ‘in the beginning, God created the Heavens and Earth.’ In response, Ms. Dietsch pounded her fist on the table and ordered Chaplain Firtko to not quote Scripture in the classroom.”


The lawsuit charges that in January of this year Dietsch declared to the chaplains enrolled in the class that there are many ways to heaven and that one religion cannot be right while all others are wrong. When Firtko pointed out that Jesus said that “no one comes to the Father but through me,” Diestch again demanded that he stop quoting Scripture and said to him, as quoted in the lawsuit: “If you believe your beliefs are right, and everyone else’s are wrong, you do not belong in this program.”


By February of this year Dietsch’s harassment of the two chaplains had become so severe, the lawsuit claims, that Klender withdrew from the program. Meanwhile, Firtko had been placed on a six-week probation period after being threatened with dismissal. A week after Klender withdrew Firtko received a letter, signed by Dietsch, booting him from the program, with Dietsch insisting that the “probation period is not yielding” the results she had desired.


In July, Klender and Firtko, along with their denomination, filed a formal complaint against Dietsch for religious discrimination and for violating the standards of the Association of Pastoral Continuing Education. The lawsuit seeks the return of the two chaplains into the program, along with an injunction that will prevent the VA from discriminating against Christian chaplains.


“No American choosing to serve in the armed forces should be openly ridiculed for his Christian faith, and that is most obviously true for chaplains participating in a chaplain training program,” said Wells, a retired Navy officer and executive director of the group Military-Veterans Advocacy. “Not only was the treatment these men received inappropriate, it was also a violation of federal law and the religious freedom guarantees of the First Amendment.”




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Chaplains Mocked, Forced out of VA Program for Their Christian Beliefs

Friday, November 1, 2013

California: Mentally ill prisoners forced from cells with pepper spray


Paige St. John
L.A. Times
November 1, 2013


Videotapes released Thursday by a federal court show mentally ill prisoners in California being forced from their cells by guards who douse them repeatedly with pepper spray.


Some of the inmates are being forced to comply with medication orders; others are to be moved to new cells.


The six tapes, created by guards abiding by a state policy to record all cell extractions, were shown in court in October as part of a lawsuit by inmates’ lawyers seeking a ban on the use of pepper spray against the mentally ill. The tapes were ordered released by U.S. District Judge Lawrence Karlton, who is holding hearings on the issue in Sacramento.


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This article was posted: Friday, November 1, 2013 at 10:37 am


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California: Mentally ill prisoners forced from cells with pepper spray

Monday, October 21, 2013

Women Forced to Strip at Police Station While Being Filmed -- Officials Say Filming Is "Common Industry Standard"



"They were snickering at these women," says a lawyer for one of the women who was filmed without her knowledge.








 


Nearly two dozen women have reported that they were forced to strip in a Washington police station while being recorded and watched by their male jailers.


“We’ve got dozens of other people calling who had similar experiences in Puyallup [city jail]. We’re sorting through them right now,” Seattle Attorney James Egan told King 5 News.


“I was told I needed to take off all my garments and change into the uniform,” said one woman who requested anonymity.


She refused the order, noting the presence of four male guards and one male inmate.


“Basically I was harassed for not doing it and put back in the holding cell and made to stay there for about 12 hours.”


City officials in Puyallup have defended the practice, arguing that filming in jails is a “common industry standard.”


But law enforcement experts say filming inmates while changing and using the bathroom is “highly unusual and improper,” according to King 5 News.


“They had originally told me to change behind a curtain in a designated area. But when I questioned them, it’s like they took it as insubordination instead of me simply asking a question,” said another woman. “And they sent me into this holding cell to change instead.”


 


“They asked me, ‘Is that everything? I told them, well, I still had my undergarments on. And they said I needed to take off everything. … And then I was shown the videos, and it was absolutely horrifying and embarrassing,” the woman said. “Honestly, it’s embarrassing, I feel violated.”


Others allege officers sexually harassed them while they changed, according to Egan.


“They were snickering at these women,” Egan said. “Called one woman a squatter, asked [a woman with red hair] if she’s red downstairs too.”


h/t Gawker


 

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Women Forced to Strip at Police Station While Being Filmed -- Officials Say Filming Is "Common Industry Standard"

Thursday, October 3, 2013

Forced Evictions, Anti-Gay Laws, and Dead Workers: Welcome to World Cup Prep

Last week, the Guardian published a report into the slavelike conditions of Qatar’s World Cup construction projects. Detailing the tragic deaths of 44 Nepalese migrant workers and the squalid conditions of thousands more prepping for the event in 2022, the Guardian‘s reporting has rightfully drawn the attention of the international community. But labor relations aren’t the only issue in Qatar—and the Middle Eastern state is far from an exception among World Cup hosts. In fact, all three of the next Cup locations have been widely criticized for human rights and inequality issues.


Here are some of the more egregious examples:


BRAZIL (2014)


Last week, a Brazilian government investigation into the Sao Paulo Guarulhos International airport expansion project—set for completion before next year’s World Cup—revealed more than 100 workers living in “conditions analogue to slaves.” According to the BBC, while workers were promised $ 625 a month in wages, some had paid more than $ 220 just to secure a job. Many more were forced into makeshift camps near the airport while waiting for their employment to begin.


In addition to labor concerns, there’s also the question of what to do with all the new infrastructure after the event is over, when operational costs and low returns could leave Brazil’s stadiums like South Africa’s unviable “White Elephants.” (There, the government only recovered a tenth of its World Cup investment.) According to one report, a local official preemptively suggested the $ 240 million 44,500 seat Arena da Amazonia be repurposed as a prison. Of course, that’s assuming a soccer stadium can be maintained at all in a rainforest climate, where humidity and sun can buckle steel and melt the color off seats.


All this poor planning and waste only serves to underscore Brazil’s staggering economic disparity. While Brazil has quickly become the sixth-largest economy in the world, its distribution of wealth is one of the worst in the world, meaning most of that money is going to people at the top. This past June, the “Services Not Soccer” protests questioned spending some $ 13.3 billion on the 2014 World Cup and $ 18 billion on the Rio 2016 Olympic Games—especially with Brazil struggling to deal with big issues like health care, education, and political corruption. Now, the stadium development is forcibly evicting people from slums and raising ticket prices, driving out the poor and working-class fans whose money previously kept struggling soccer clubs alive.


RUSSIA (2018)


In many ways, the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi, Russia, will act as a litmus test for how international LGBT athletes and advocates are treated under the country’s harsh anti-gay law. If Mother Jones‘ previous reporting is any indication, the results could be alarming.


Russian soccer has also been criticized for its inability to fix hooliganism and racism. In 2011, Brazilian soccer player Roberto Carlos had a banana thrown at him within months of joining Russian FC Anzhi Makhachkala. In 2012, his Congolese teammate Christopher Samba received similar treatment. Two years earlier, Alexey Sorokin, then-director of the Russian Football Union, defended several fans who put a banana on a banner to taunt Peter Odemwingie, claiming the banana as Soviet slang with “nothing racial in it.” A leader in Russia’s World Cup bid, Sorokin is now the appointed CEO of the 2018 World Cup Local Organizing Committee. According to the BBC, right before FIFA chose Russia to host the Cup, the Russian Football Union released a memo and announced a website to combat racism. Notably, the site is still offline. And in 2012, Zenit St. Petersburg fans wrote an open letter claiming that using “dark-skinned players” only “brings out a negative reaction” and that gay players were “unworthy of our great city.”


As with the Sochi Olympics, unexpected costs have plagued the 2018 World Cup. The cost of updating transportation, building and renovating stadiums, and ensuring infrastructure and events run smoothly for the entirety of the Cup is now over $ 20 billion, twice as much as previously projected. Part of the problem? Hosting games in remote cities like Saransk, where the only flight from Moscow is on an overnight propeller plane and the city’s primary achievement is as a onetime center of the Gulag prison system. These costs, combined with the $ 50 billion price tag of the Olympic games, could make a heavy dent in Russia’s near-zero-growth economy.
 


QATAR (2022)


Qatar’s treatment of migrant workers has long been a problem. Prior to the Guardian investigation, Human Rights Watch called out Qatar’s exit visa system and employment sponsorship system. Both require a resident to vouch for a worker’s ability and can effectively prevent a migrant from starting work, finding housing, or even leaving the country. Within World Cup construction sites, thousands of workers have spoken out about confiscated passports and visas, cramped living situations (up to 20 people in a single room), and forced labor in desert heat without food or water. (Don’t worry, fans and players: Organizers are mulling a massive air-conditioning system for you.) These conditions led to the death of 44 Nepalese workers from June 4 to August 8 alone.


Altogether, current estimates for Qatar’s World Cup facilities, transportation, air conditioning, and construction of an entirely new city come in at a whopping $ 220 billion, approximately 1.3 times the country’s total annual GDP. While Qatar’s GDP is undeniably large for its size, that’s 60 times what South Africa spent on the 2010 World Cup. Note: The richest Qataris make as much as 13 times more than the poorest.


Homosexuality is also illegal in Qatar, and foreigners have previously been whipped, imprisoned, and deported as punishment. Since Shariah law is effect, Qatari Muslims could theoretically be executed for homosexuality. Three years ago, when asked what gay fans should do in Qatar, FIFA president Sepp Blatter said, “They should refrain from any sexual activities.” Now, FIFA is reported to be pressuring Russia and Qatar to relax anti-gay laws during the World Cup, but with the games still several years away, a decision may not come anytime soon.


In the meantime, there have been some rumblings about moving the event, maybe even to the United States. Unfortunately for US soccer supporters (and perhaps migrant workers and gay fans), the relocation dream remains just that.



Politics | Mother Jones



Forced Evictions, Anti-Gay Laws, and Dead Workers: Welcome to World Cup Prep

Saturday, August 24, 2013

Residents Of Georgia City Won"t Be Forced To Own Guns After All


It was a close call, but the small northern Georgia city of Nelson won’t be forcing its residents to own guns after all.


The Brady Center to Prevent Gun Violence announced Thursday that it had settled its lawsuit against the city’s mandatory gun ownership ordinance. As part of the settlement, which Nelson’s City Council approved with a 5-0 vote on Tuesday, the city will amend the ordinance to say that the U.S. constitution “protects the rights of Americans to choose not to own or maintain a gun in their homes.” The amended ordinance will also state that the gun ordinance is not enforceable and there will be no penalties for violations.


The ordinance, known as the Family Protection Ordinance, passed on April 1. It required all heads of household residing within the city limits to own a firearm and ammunition — the only exceptions being those who “suffer from a physical or mental disability,” “paupers,” felons, or those who “conscientiously oppose maintaining firearms as a result of beliefs or religious doctrine.”


Named after John Nelson, a landowner, farmer, and rifle maker, the city is home to 1,317 residents.


“I am glad an acceptable solution has been reached and feel that those Nelson residents that wish to keep home protection a private matter will be pleased with this outcome,” Lamar Kellett, a Nelson resident and Brady Center member, said in a statement issued by the center.


Brady Center to Prevent Gun Violence, Gun Control


Eric Lach

Eric Lach is a reporter for TPM. From 2010 to 2011, he was a news writer in charge of the website’s front page. He has previously written for The Daily, NewYorker.com, GlobalPost and other publications. He can be reached at ericl(at)talkingpointsmemo.com





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Residents Of Georgia City Won"t Be Forced To Own Guns After All

Wednesday, June 5, 2013

Watford Residents Forced to Show Papers


Infowars.com
June 5, 2013



A day ahead of Bilderberg’s official start, security theater is in full swing as police appear to be asking residents of Watford, England to identify themselves just to travel on one of the byways located near the Grove Hotel.


This article was posted: Wednesday, June 5, 2013 at 12:27 pm


Tags: bilderberg, police state









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Watford Residents Forced to Show Papers

Monday, May 27, 2013

Dutch Defined Benefit Pension Plans, Second Largest in Europe, Face Forced Cuts

Things are getting rather interesting in the Netherlands as low interest rates have increased pension deficit liabilities. Unlike the US and other parts of Europe where deficits are ignored, Dutch law requires 105% funding and the plans fell from 152% funded in 2007 to 102% funded today.


This has forced pension plans to cut benefits by as much as 7% for some trades. As might be expected, this has given rise to a 50 Plus Party, which won election to the Dutch parliament for the first time last year on promises to defend the interests of pensioners.


Please consider Yawning deficits force Dutch pension funds to cut payouts.

A combination of record low rates, sluggish economic growth and lives that last far longer than anyone imagined even a decade ago have resulted in yawning deficits. At the end of 2012, the funds were €30bn short of what is needed to cover promised benefits.

For the Dutch, the cutbacks are the first ever in a nation which has the second largest “defined benefit” system in Europe. But defined benefit provision, under which pensioners are guaranteed a portion of their salary for as long as they live, is unraveling under the pressure of the financial crisis and ensuing recession.


In April, under orders from the Dutch central bank, 66 of the country’s 415 pension funds started cutting their payouts. The average cut is around 2 per cent of the monthly benefit, but that figure conceals a wide range.


Last September the parliament, under pressure from older voters, approved new rules that allow pension schemes to use a higher rate to gauge the pace at which inflation will erode liabilities.


This has lowered liabilities, and funding targets. The sector as a whole now has a coverage ratio of 105 per cent under the new rules, but just 101 per cent under the old rules, according to an analysis by Aon Hewitt.


As at 2007, a quarter of Dutch retirees were below the age of 60. Early retirement has proved extremely expensive for defined benefit schemes, especially as longevity has risen sharply. On average, Dutch men aged 65 can expect to live for another 18 years as of 2011, up from just 15.5 years a decade earlier.


Head in the Sand Solution


Burying your head in the sand is not a solution to the problem but that is exactly what the Dutch parliament did by assuming higher rates of inflation (and interest on bonds) in a low-yield world. 


This is yet another consequence of central bank policy to drive down interest rates. When the US stock market heads south again (and it will), US pension plans, already trillions of dollars underfunded, will become even more underfunded.


Mike “Mish” Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com 


Mish’s Global Economic Trend Analysis



Dutch Defined Benefit Pension Plans, Second Largest in Europe, Face Forced Cuts

Saturday, March 2, 2013

SpaceX company fixes Dragon capsule problem

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) — A commercial craft carrying a ton of supplies for the International Space Station ran into thruster trouble shortly after liftoff Friday. Flight controllers managed to gain control, but were forced to delay its arrival at the orbiting lab.
Science Headlines



SpaceX company fixes Dragon capsule problem