Submitted by Minuteman on Wed, 2012-11-28 01:43
Link here. Excerpt:
'A Swedish woman who allegedly committed acts of necrophilia on a skeleton has been revealed as the same woman who sparked outrage in Australia in 2010 after publishing photos of a murdered Queensland teenager on her website.
The woman, whose identity has been supressed in Swedish media, is facing trial after human bones, body bags and disturbing images were allegedly found in her Gothenburg apartment.
Photos released to the media showed the 32-year-old caressing and licking the cranium of a yellowing skull.
In 2010 the woman made headlines after she posted three images of slain 12-year-old Goodna schoolgirl Leanne Holland on her now-defunct “gore” website ViralDeath.com.
Although it was later revealed the Holland images were lifted from a 2002 textbook, it drew widespread outrage from Australian authorities and led to an investigation by the Crime and Misconduct Commission.'
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Submitted by Mastodon on Tue, 2012-11-27 21:22
Submitted by Mastodon on Tue, 2012-11-27 21:19
Article here. Excerpt:
'As the wife of a Canberra construction worker, I have every hope that the ACT government inquiry into safety in the building industry will be successful in identifying causes and proposing implementable solutions. As someone who has worked in the health sector, however, I am not optimistic.
There is no simple or single underlying cause of the cavalier attitude towards occupational health and safety which is evident on many construction sites, and it will be the job of the inquiry to uncover as many of these causes as possible. While some attention has been given to issues such as the quality of training and workers being pushed to meet cost and time deadlines, the one aspect of the current culture which has remained unrecognised is gender.
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Submitted by Mastodon on Tue, 2012-11-27 21:14
Article here. Excerpt:
'This week on campus, a number of movements picketed and soapboxed to prevent sexual assault. And don’t get me wrong; that’s a very good thing. Rape and sexual assault are some of the more heinous and damaging crimes that human beings can enact upon one another. My problem is not with groups determined to prevent these crimes, but with the nature of these groups.
...
A glance at the White Ribbon Campaign’s website reveals some dynamic logos and the words: “What Does It Mean to Be A Man Today? It’s Time For A New Vision of the Perfect Man.” The White Ribbon Campaign further promises to educate men about how they can further prevent gender-based violence, a trait seemingly limited to their barbaric sex.
That’s my main problem here. Last I checked, our society was striving for an egalitarian approach, not a sexist one. The vision was that men and women are equal, and must be treated equally … so then why does no one care about men?'
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Submitted by Mastodon on Tue, 2012-11-27 20:18
Article here. Excerpt:
'A first lieutenant in the U.S. Marine Corps, a captain in the Marine Corps Reserves, a staff sergeant in the U.S. Army Reserves and a major in the U.S. Air National Guard filed suit Tuesday against the Department of Defense, challenging its rules restricting women in combat under the Fifth Amendment.
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Submitted by Minuteman on Tue, 2012-11-27 14:49
Link here. Excerpt:
'The 52-year-old woman, who cannot be named to protect the victim's identity, pleaded guilty in the Victorian County Court on Tuesday to repeatedly having sex with the teen over a four-year period.
...
After one sexual encounter the teenager vomited in the bathroom for half an hour.
"I'd never had sex before this and I felt sick to the bottom of my stomach," the boy said in a police statement that was read out in court.
The sexual relationship began in 2002 when the victim was aged 13 and the woman was 41.
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Submitted by Matt on Tue, 2012-11-27 02:57
Article here. Excerpt:
'Solicitors specialising in divorce and child contact say they have noted a marked rise in allegations of one parents exerting undue influence on children to try to turn them against the other.
New mobile phones, computer games, designer clothes and even exotic holidays have been deployed in attempts to win children’s loyalty.
In other cases parents have openly resorted to trying to blacken their former partner’s name in the children’s eyes.
Naomi McGloin, a solicitor at Pannone, said allegations of “brainwashing” had become an increasingly common feature of acrimonious separations in her experience.
Parents desperate to keep their children have attempted to exploit a requirement on the courts to take a child’s feelings into consideration in determining where they should live.'
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Submitted by Matt on Tue, 2012-11-27 02:44
Article here. Excerpt:
'So her entry into the debate about women’s place in society is likely to raise some eyebrows, whether plucked or au naturel.
The 44-year-old, who was France’s first lady for four years until May, has declared: “We don’t need to be feminist in my generation.” Instead she suggests a woman’s place is in the home with her children.
In an interview for the January issue of Vogue magazine, to be published on Dec 1, she develops her views on the women’s liberation movement, adding: “There are pioneers who opened the breach.
“I’m not at all an active feminist. On the contrary, I’m a bourgeois. I love family life, I love doing the same thing every day.’
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Submitted by Matt on Tue, 2012-11-27 02:39
Article here. Seriously... I mean, for real? They actually asked this? Pardon me, but what planet does one have to be living on to imagine this would happen? It's simply more out-and-out misandry, state-sponsored, too. [Fla. DOH contact info is in the first comment to this story.] Excerpt:
'FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. -- The state of Florida is asking thousands of young women some intimate questions their sex lives and is giving them a $10 gift card in return - but some who received the survey are offended.
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Submitted by Mastodon on Mon, 2012-11-26 20:59
Article here. Excerpt:
'The 18th Annual "A Woman's Journey" health symposium at the Baltimore Hilton highlighted lung disease and the health of women in the military.
Herrera was first deployed in 2004 to Fort McCoy in Wisconsin. Her son was 31/2 and her daughter 2. She was deployed again a year later to the William Beaumont Army Medical Center near El Paso, Texas.
Women in the military often suffer from back and joint problems from carrying heavy equipment and wearing ill-fitting uniforms that sometimes cut into a woman's breast area, Herrera said. Extreme weather conditions can lead to skin disorders. And hearing problems can arise from gunshots, bombings and loud military equipment.
"I was never able to get used to the hum of the generator," Herrera said. "It was noisy all the time."
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Submitted by Mastodon on Mon, 2012-11-26 20:27
Story here. Excerpt:
'Katherine Hasson’s son was born addicted to cocaine and other drugs. So when Riviera Beach police said Hasson told them she took drugs while pregnant in an attempt to kill her son, they thought they had probable cause to arrest her on child-abuse charges.
But the Palm Beach County State Attorney’s Office said Thursday it will not file such charges against Hasson — because it can’t.
“We need a statute that specifically punishes a mother when she harms a child in utero,” Assistant State Attorney Kirk Volker said.
...
Hasson gave birth to a boy Oct. 15 at St. Mary’s Medical Center in West Palm Beach. The boy was born blue in the face and motionless, and he was experiencing withdrawal symptoms. He was hooked up to a ventilator.'
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Submitted by Mastodon on Mon, 2012-11-26 20:21
Article here. Excerpt:
'We all should have someone in our corner like Sharain Spears, especially when experiencing the kind of month her cousin Brian Ingram is having.
Ingram was stabbed three times by his girlfriend, Diane M. Romano, on Nov. 4, after an argument at their home on Van Norwick Avenue in Batavia, according to police. Romano, who police say also knifed her 19-year-old son, was charged with three felony counts. Ingram was hospitalized with two punctured lungs.
Romano, 38, bonded out and went home. Ingram, released from Delnor Hospital in Geneva last Wednesday with no place to go, began living in a borrowed truck. Which is not a great place to bunk, especially after his wounds became infected.
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Submitted by Mastodon on Mon, 2012-11-26 20:12
Story here. Excerpt:
'November 25th, 2012 (InsideCostaRica.com) A group of over 60 people marched through Paseo Colon yesterday, with the message “we are functional parents, not ATM machines.”
The march was to demand men’s rights, and to demand the creation of an institute that could provide them with protection and support when assaulted by their partners or facing unfair legal treatment.
The protest began at about 10:00am yesterday in Paseo Colon, and proceeded towards the central Park in San Jose. There, the group spoke about various problems that men face in a family environment.
Eugenia Quesada, director of the foundation “Support to Men Institute” (FUNDIAPHO, in Spanish), said they are demanding the government to create an “Institute for Men.”
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Submitted by Mastodon on Mon, 2012-11-26 20:05
Article here. Excerpt:
'Masculinity is at the forefront of bullying in schools. Hypermasculinity and flamboyant heterosexuality are markers of masculinity that contribute to bullying. Boys should exhibit a tough, aggressive and violent masculinity that is based on heterosexuality. Boys who are considered nerdy, weak, or who do not live up to these standards of masculinity are often called gay or faggot and are assumed to be less masculine than those who exhibit traditional masculine behavior. The school climate is therefore built on a acceptance of hypermasculinity, and as Klein notes, school shooters often fail to live up to the standards of masculinity, choosing instead to respond to the bullying and failed masculinity in a violent last attempt to assert their power and questioned masculinity.
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Submitted by Mastodon on Mon, 2012-11-26 19:57
Article here. Excerpt:
'A coalition of women's groups has called for the issue of sexism in the media to be taken on by a new regulatory body in the runup to publication of Lord Justice Leveson's report on the press this Thursday.
Four women's organisations monitored the content of 11 national newspapers over a randomly chosen fortnight in early September, finding more than 1,300 articles and images that raised concerns over how women and violence against them are portrayed in the British press. They say their findings should inform proposals for a new era of newspaper regulation.
The analysis, published on Sunday – International Day for the Elimination of Violence against Women – warns that newspaper coverage is glamorising and, on occasion, eroticising violence against women and girls, and helps normalise rape while undermining the criminal justice system by creating jurors who hold prejudices against female victims.'
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