Submitted by Matt on Sat, 2013-01-26 23:37
Story here. Excerpt:
'DAVOS, Switzerland – Three women angry over sexism and male domination of the world economy ripped off their shirts and tried to force their way into a gathering of corporate elites in a Swiss resort.
Predictably, they failed. The ubiquitous and huge security force policing the World Economic Forum in Davos carried the women away, kicking and screaming.
The women, from Ukrainian feminist activist group Femen, scaled a fence and set off pink flares in the protest Saturday. Their chests were painted with "SOS Davos," as they sought to call attention to poverty of women around the world.'
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Submitted by Matt on Sat, 2013-01-26 16:50
Story here. Excerpt:
'SEVARE, Mali (AP) — The boy sits with his knees tucked under his chest on the concrete floor of the police station here, his adolescent face a tableau of fear. He's still garbed in the knee-length tunic he was ordered to wear by the Islamic extremist who recruited him.
It's these same clothes, styled after those worn by the Prophet Muhammad in the 7th century, which gave him away when he tried to flee earlier this week. They have now become his prison garb.
Adama Drabo is 16, and his recruitment into the ranks of a group designated as a terrorist organization, followed by his violent interrogation at the hands of the Malian army, underscores the obstacles faced by France as it tries to wash its former West African colony clean of the al-Qaida-linked fighters occupying it.'
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Submitted by Mastodon on Sat, 2013-01-26 06:40
Article here. Excerpt:
'We have apparently arrived at the Golden Age, free from strife and the threat of foreign enemies. Little else can explain so gratuitous a decision as to place women in combat units. The downsides to such a policy are legion and obvious; the only reason to pursue it is to placate feminism’s insatiable and narcissistic drive for absolute official equality between the sexes.
Any claim that our fighting forces are not reaching their maximum potential because females are not included is absurd. The number of women who are the equal to reasonably well-developed men in upper-body strength and who have the same stamina and endurance is vanishingly small. Because the number of women who will meet the military’s already debased physical-fitness standard will not satisfy the feminists’ demand for representation, the fitness standard will inevitably be lowered across the board or for women alone, as we have seen in civilian uniformed forces.
...
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Submitted by Mastodon on Sat, 2013-01-26 06:37
Article here. Excerpt:
'And as a MOB - Mother of Boys - she has come to the conclusion that bringing up boys "is like dealing with dogs".
While males, or FOB (Fathers of Boys), may initially take offence at the analogy, her reasoning does, perhaps, make more than a little sense.
Evans, a mother of three boys aged seven, nine and 10, explains that 'boy pups' need feeding at least three times a day, a tree or a toilet to mark his territory, clear commands of no more than one syllable such as 'Stop!' or 'No!', love which may be shown in manic displays of tummy tickling, and most importantly, to go out to let off steam, twice a day, every day.
...
But Evans, like most MOBs, weathers the violent boy storms, and concludes she wouldn't have it any other way.
She points out that one of the many reasons why being a MOB is great is that boys' needs are simple: "Exercise, discipline, lunacy and love.
"Oh, and a never-ending supply of Scooby snacks."'
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Submitted by Mastodon on Sat, 2013-01-26 06:26
Story here. Excerpt:
'Prosecutors have rested their case in the high-profile trial of an Arizona woman accused of killing her boyfriend in 2008.
They called their last witness to the stand Thursday, a female friend of defendant Jodi Arias.
The woman testified that she had dinner with Arias 24 hours after Arias allegedly killed 30-year-old Travis Alexander in his suburban Phoenix home.
The 32-year-old Arias could become the fourth woman on Arizona's death row if she's convicted.'
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Submitted by Mastodon on Sat, 2013-01-26 06:20
Article here. Excerpt:
'Is Jodi Arias the next Casey Anthony? Two beautiful women, two terrible deaths and a lot of lies. We all thought the evidence was sky high to convict Casey but she went free. Could this happen again in the Jodi Arias trial?
Jane Velez-Mitchell analyzes the prosecution’s case with a panel of legal experts.'
---
Ed.: In case you're unfamiliar with this case, read about it here and here.
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Submitted by Matt on Sat, 2013-01-26 04:27
Story here. Excerpt:
'Two teenage girls have been arrested in a violent subway assault on a 55-year-old man, punching him in the head in an attack that sent the victim to the hospital, police said.
According to police, the two teens were on a northbound 4 train departing Utica Avenue in Brooklyn at about 1 p.m. when they encountered a man and became aggressive with him, police said. The nature of the dispute wasn't immediately clear.
Police say the teenagers became violent and attacked the 55-year-old man, punching him in the face and head. Video of the incident showed the man eventually punching back in an attempt to defend himself.'
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Submitted by Mastodon on Sat, 2013-01-26 00:48
Article here. Excerpt:
'The more I read, the more bizarre it got.
The Supreme Court of Canada ruled this week on a case where an allegation of spousal abuse – never substantiated – is the heart of a troubling story that has concluded in law, but has certainly not brought any sense of moral closure to those who track gender bias in the courts. Quite the opposite, in fact.
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Submitted by Mastodon on Sat, 2013-01-26 00:45
Story here. Excerpt:
'Debra Lafave, the former Tampa, Fla., middle school teacher and pin-up model who pleaded guilty in 2005 to having sex with a 14-year-old student, has been ordered back on probation.
A trial judge released Lafave from the remainder of her probation obligation before she served her full sentence of three years house arrest and seven years probation. However, an appellate court called the decision to release her early an “abuse of judicial power,” according to The Associated Press.
Today, responding to the appellate court ruling, Circuit Judge Lisa Campbell in Hillsborough County, Fla., reinstated LaFave’s probation, ordering the mother of twins to serve another four years and two months probation effective Dec. 19, 2012, to observe a curfew from 10 p.m. to 6 a.m., and to stay away from schools, according to AP and ABC News affiliate WFTS in Tampa, Fla.'
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Submitted by Mastodon on Sat, 2013-01-26 00:42
Story here. Excerpt:
'New Delhi: In a shocking incident, a girl withdrew her complaint against four accused that they had allegedly gang-raped her on gunpoint. The girl on Friday accepted that she had filed a false case against the accused.
The girl said, “I am taking my case back as I was not gang-raped. I tried to implicate them in false case because one of the accused duped me on the pretext of marrying me.”
The girl said that she developed a strong feeling for the boy and wanted to marry him. But when he refused to marry the girl she decided to take revenge by falsely implicating him in rape case.'
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Submitted by Mastodon on Sat, 2013-01-26 00:40
Article here. Excerpt:
'(Bartlett, TN) Rachel Courtney is in jail charged with attempted murder. Police say she ran out of her house with a gun and machete.
According to police documents, her lover, Robbi Fitch claimed a man raped her. He later showed up at their home and parked outside.
The documents say Courtney got in the car, pulled a gun and she and the man fought over it.
He won, and pistol-whipped her, before she choked him.
The 57-year old man told police he took Fitch to buy drugs and have sex. Fitch said he raped her, but police said text message showed otherwise. They had been sleeping together regularly for years.
...
The girl caught in the middle finally admitted she wasn’t raped.
Rachel Courtney is charged with attempted first degree murder. Robbi Fitch is charged with making a false report.'
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Submitted by Mastodon on Fri, 2013-01-25 20:10
Article here.
'Again and again, the assumption is made that women - far more so than men or teenage boys - are not cut out for negotiating the often dark, offensive internet. And so they need protecting from it; websites that offend them must be closed, and trolls who troll them must be silenced. Perhaps misogyny-filtering software should be invented to make the web a safer place for women, like that software parents use to protect their children from seeing porn.
The truth is that the internet always has been, and will remain, a place with strange, perverted corners that are best avoided. Men, believe it or not, also know that every time we venture on to the web we're just a few clicks away from violent-minded porn, hateful racism, Holocaust denialism or, in some of our cases, long discussion threads calling us every name under the sun - but we don't freak out and go back to bed; we carry on surfing and chatting, knowing that the virtues of the internet outweigh its ills.'
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Submitted by Mastodon on Fri, 2013-01-25 19:53
Article here. Excerpt:
'This week the Pentagon altered its policy prohibiting women from serving in combat roles in the US military. This has generally been seen as a win for feminism by feminists themselves. It's also been seen as a feminist victory by conservative folks like Heather Mac Donald at National Review, who declares with hyperbolic outrage that "the only reason to pursue [the policy of women in combat] is to placate feminism's insatiable and narcissistic drive for absolute official equality between the sexes."
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Submitted by Mastodon on Fri, 2013-01-25 19:45
Submitted by Mastodon on Fri, 2013-01-25 19:44
Story here. Excerpt:
'A Florida appellate court on Friday set aside two of the four convictions Casey Anthony faced for lying to detectives during the investigation into her missing 2-year-old daughter.
Judges on the 5th District Court of Appeals agreed with Anthony's attorneys that two of the charges constituted double jeopardy, or being convicted more than once for the same crime.
"We cannot conclude that the Legislature intended to authorize separate punishment for each false statement made during a single interview," the judges said in their ruling.
...
The appeals judges ruled that the trial court was correct to allow Anthony's statements to detectives to be used during her murder trial. Anthony's attorneys had argued that she was in police custody at the time and hadn't been read her Miranda rights. They also had argued that Anthony should have been convicted of only a single count of lying because of the double jeopardy concern.'
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