Dorner-newspaper-shootings.jpgLAist – by Matthew Bramlett

One year after the Christopher Dorner manhunt, the LAPD has determined that the officers who fired on two women, mistaking them for Dorner, were in the wrong.

Chief Charlie Beck and the Los Angeles Police Commission, a civilian panel, both agreed on the ruling that the eight officers involved violated the department’s rules on excessive force. The next step is to determine what kind of penalties are in store for them, according to ABC 7.   Continue reading “LAPD Chief: Cops Who Mistook Delivery Women For Christopher Dorner Were Wrong To Shoot Them”

tape_robotDisinformation – by JacobSloan

Scientists have created a network which various smart devices and artificial intelligences will use autonomously to share information and learn from each other – increasing their capabilities. Should we just surrender now? The BBC reports:

A world wide web for robots to learn from each other and share information is being shown off for the first time. The system has been developed by research scientists from Philips and five European universities including Eindhoven.   Continue reading “Skynet Has Arrived? European Union Unveils RoboEarth, An Internet Just For Robots”

matt mills.jpgNJ.com – by A.J. Perez

EAST RUTHERFORD — A 9/11 truther may have conned his way into MetLife Stadiumand then a Super Bowl postgame news conference, but a New Jersey State Police spokesman told NJ.com the agency did its job.

“He did go through the same screenings,” New Jersey State Police Capt. Stephen Jones said. “Those included pat downs, a magnetometer (metal detector) and K-9 screenings.”   Continue reading “State Police blame private security firm for Super Bowl lapse on 9/11 truther”

Main Entry ImageHuffington Post – by Matt Sledge

A bill meant to stem deaths from heroin overdoses advanced in the New York Senate Tuesday, just days after actor Philip Seymour Hoffman died of an apparent drug overdose.

Sponsored by State Sen. Kemp Hannon (R), the bill would increase access to naloxone, a special drug that can reverse overdoses from heroin and other opioids. Introduced before Hoffman’s death, it passed out of the state Senate’s Health Committee unanimously on Tuesday.    Continue reading “Heroin Overdose Prevention Bill Advances In New York After Philip Seymour Hoffman’s Death”

Video Rebels’s Blog

“America is great because America is good, and if America ever ceases to be good, America ceases to be great.”

Philosophers tell us that we can reason backwards from our behavior to our First Principles to determine what guides us.

In this memorandum I seek to prove that the behavior of the United States government in the modern era can best be described as being ruled by Pure Evil and that the governing class in America seeks wherever possible to do the greatest harm to the greatest number of people. And I further intend to prove that this harm is in this present generation focused as much on the American people as it is on foreign nationals. Though I do grant that people overseas have cause for complaint.    Continue reading “The De Tocqueville Memorandum”

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

Production of crude oil in western Canada emits more harmful carcinogens into the environment than official estimates let on, according to a new study. The Keystone XL pipeline would, if approved, move tar sands oil from Alberta through the US to Texas.

A new study by the University of Toronto-Scarborough published Monday in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences reported that Canadian officials may have underestimated emissions of harmful carcinogens known as polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) from Alberta tar sands.   Continue reading “Toxic carcinogens from tar sands oil production underestimated – report”

Image from knightscope.comRT News

The local neighborhood watch may be beefing up its robotic arsenal if a new technology startup gets its way anytime soon.

In a bid to make local communities safer and give local law enforcement agencies more tools to fight crime, California-based Knightscope recently unveiled a line of K5 robots that it believes will “predict and prevent crime with an innovative combination of hardware, software and social engagement.”   Continue reading “California company builds 5-foot android robocops to control crime-ridden areas”

John Hoeven, Gary Doer, Jack GerardMail.com

WASHINGTON (AP) — An unusual coalition of lawmakers from both parties, labor and business leaders, veterans groups and Canada’s ambassador to the United States joined forces Tuesday to push for quick approval of the Keystone XL oil pipeline.

Five Democrats joined Republicans at a Capitol news conference to urge President Barack Obama to approve the pipeline following a State Department report last week that raised no major environmental objections. The $7 billion pipeline would carry oil from tar sands in western Canada to refineries along the Texas Gulf Coast. The project has lingered for more than five years and has become a symbol of the political debate over climate change.   Continue reading “Broad coalition backs Keystone XL oil pipeline”

Barack ObamaMail.com

WASHINGTON (AP) — Several million American workers will cut back their hours on the job or leave the nation’s workforce entirely because of President Barack Obama’s health care overhaul, congressional analysts said Tuesday, adding fresh fuel to the political fight over “Obamacare.”

The workforce changes would mean nationwide losses equal to 2.3 million full-time jobs by 2021, in large part because people would opt to keep their income low to stay eligible for federal health care subsidies or Medicaid, the Congressional Budget Office said. It had estimated previously that the law would lead to 800,000 fewer jobs by that year.   Continue reading “Health care law will mean fewer people on the job”

Jonathan Greenert, John RichardsonMail.com

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Navy said Tuesday it is investigating about 30 senior sailors linked to alleged cheating on tests meant to qualify them to train others to operate naval nuclear power reactors. Representing roughly one-fifth of the reactor training contingent, sidelining 30 may put a pinch on the Navy’s training program, senior officials said.   Continue reading “Navy probing alleged cheating on nuke reactor work”

Mail.com

BEIRUT (AP) — Men pull a girl from the rubble and haul her onto a dirty sheet of plastic, while another child, coated in white dust save for a red streak of blood from his nose, lies with his crushed leg dangling off a gurney — the grisly aftermath from the dropping of a crude “barrel bomb” by Syrian forces on the city of Aleppo.

The bombing — one of at least seven such attacks in Aleppo on Tuesday — struck a mosque that was being used as a school, killing at least 11 people, activists said. A video supplied by activists contained scenes of the carnage.   Continue reading “Syrian forces hit mosque with crude bomb, kill 11”

Don PooleyMail.com

ARVADA, Colo. (AP) — Authorities say the man who was shot to death by suburban Denver police after holding a 13-year-old boy hostage for nearly 18 hours had a criminal record and was wanted for a parole violation.

Officers fatally shot 34-year-old Don Pooley on Tuesday when he went to the door of the house he was barricaded in to retrieve unspecified items left by negotiators, Arvada police said. Members of a SWAT team immediately rescued the boy. A Denver Post photo shows an officer carrying the teen away in a bear hug.   Continue reading “Police: Man killed in Colorado standoff had record”

Popular Science – by Rose Pastore

When a soldier is shot on the battlefield, the emergency treatment can seem as brutal as the injury itself. A medic must pack gauze directly into the wound cavity, sometimes as deep as 5 inches into the body, to stop bleeding from an artery. It’s an agonizing process that doesn’t always work–if bleeding hasn’t stopped after three minutes of applying direct pressure, the medic must pull out all the gauze and start over again. It’s so painful, “you take the guy’s gun away first,” says former U.S. Army Special Operations medic John Steinbaugh.   Continue reading “How A Simple New Invention Seals A Gunshot Wound In 15 Seconds”

obamacareThe Daily Sheeple – by Lily Dane

Obamacare advocates have resorted to all kinds of creative ploys in a desperate attempt to get young people enrolled in plans.

First they tried winning over the “young invincibles” with the Pajama Boy ad campaign. Those ads featured a bespectacled 20-something  “insufferable man child” who wanted young folks to wear pajamas, drink hot chocolate, and talk about getting health insurance.   Continue reading “This Cat Really Wants You to Have Health Insurance!”

iowa YouTubeThe Daily Sheeple

Sometimes on the news, you hear about a horrifying home invasion, during which a stunned family is terrorized at gunpoint by thugs who storm the home, shouting and waving around weapons.

That’s exactly what happened to a family in Des Moines, Iowa the other day, but the thugs who burst in just happened to be wearing police uniforms. They forced open the door with a battering ram, they had ballistic shields, and they were wielding weapons.   Continue reading “Thug Cops Rip Down Surveillance Cameras During SWAT-Style Raid…But They Didn’t Get All of the Footage”