Washington Monthly – by Martin Longman, November 27, 2017

Three days before the presidential election, Jared Kushner and Ivanka Trump visited the Queens gravesite of Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson and, according to The Times of Israel, they prayed for Donald Trump’s victory.

Schneerson, who died in 1994, is an interesting character. Although he never claimed it himself, some of his followers consider him the Messiah, and others believe he is still aliveContinue reading “The Odd Chabad Connection Between Putin and Trump”

The Atlanta Journal-Constitution – by Campbell Lutz

Two men disguised as Walmart employees attempted to steal several thousand dollars worth of merchandise from a metro Atlanta store, according to Peachtree City police.

About 2:46 p.m. June 29, the men entered the back of the retailer’s location in the 2700 block of Ga. 54 and began loading pallet carts, police spokeswoman Lt. Odilia Bergh said Friday.   Continue reading “Men dressed as Walmart employees try to steal from metro Atlanta store”

ATT.net

WARSAW, Poland (AP) — A joint statement by the prime ministers of Poland and Israel was meant to lay to rest a months-long dispute over how to remember Polish behavior during the Holocaust. Instead, the document has re-opened wounds that go back decades.

Prime ministers Benjamin Netanyahu and Mateusz Morawiecki signed and recited the statement in their respective capitals last week after Poland scrapped potential prison terms for anyone claiming the country bore some responsibility for the Holocaust.   Continue reading “Joint Statement On Holocaust Fuels Anger It Was Meant To End”

PoliZette News – by Matt O’Brien

President Donald Trump recently suggested that illegal aliens should be sent back to their countries of origin without hearings and the years of litigation that often follow.

He branded the current process, which permits illegal aliens to repeatedly contest orders of removal, as “a mockery to good immigration policy and law and order.” Continue reading “Supreme Court Says Foreign Nationals Have No Due Process Rights Here”

LifeSiteNews – by Lisa Bourne

MILWAUKEE, Wisconsin, July 6, 2018 (LifeSiteNews) – The professor forced out by a Jesuit-run Catholic university for blogging about an undergrad student being assailed by his teacher for his having voiced defense of marriage has won in court.

In a landmark decision Friday the Wisconsin Supreme Court said Marquette University violated John McAdams’ right to free speech when it suspended him for writing the blog post, and it ordered the University to restore McAdams immediately with his full rank, tenure, compensation and benefits.   Continue reading “Prof fired by Catholic university for defending marriage has huge court win”

Daily Kos – by Walter Einenkel

“I need somebody to come through here please, ASAP. Now. There’s about eight people in a van, and they’ve been in the store for about an hour. They keep going back and forth to the bathrooms by my back door.” That’s the 911 call—obtained by WSB-TV Channel 2 Action News—from a Subway employee on a family of 6, Felicia and Othniel Dobson and their four children, ages 8, 12, 13, and 19. The family had stopped at the Subway in Coweta County, Georgia, on their trip back from South Georgia to their home state of North Carolina. They had been attending a grandparent’s birthday party for the weekend.  Continue reading “Subway employee calls police on two parents and their four kids eating dinner”

AOL

Hundreds of thousands of Americans with unpaid tax debts will not be able to apply for or renew passports until their debts are settled, as federal officials step up enforcement of a law passed by Congress in 2015.

The law requires the Internal Revenue Service and the State Department to deny or revoke passports for people who have an overdue tax debt of $51,000 or more, according to the IRS.   Continue reading “Hundreds of thousands at risk for passport denial because of tax debt”

Washington Post – by Abha Bhattarai

Just after she turned 70, Leslie Botts became a lifeguard.

Botts, a longtime swimmer from Austin, was looking for a way to stay active while supplementing her income. After retiring in 2007 from her 30-year career as a special-education teacher, she taught yoga at a Caribbean resort for a year, then worked as a substitute high school teacher, making just over $10 an hour. But she was frustrated by the unpredictable hours and low pay.   Continue reading “Why your pool’s lifeguard is more likely to be a senior citizen”

Zero Hedge – by Tyler Durden

While the headline prints in today’s jobs report were solid with the exception of hourly earnings, which disappointed consensus expectations on both a monthly and annual basis, however not too dramatically earning the report a “goldilocks” name, a look below the surface reveals at least one ugly side to today’s jobs report: all the job gains were for part-time workers, while full-time employment dipped modestly.

In June, the number of part-time workers rose by 145K to 27.028MM, while the full-time workers declined by a modest 89K to 128.658MM.   Continue reading “June Jobs Increase: All Part-Time Workers As Full-Time Jobs Drop”

The Organic Prepper

In a move straight out of the Soviet Union handbook, PG&E has warned they may cut electrical power to some California residents during “extreme weather” to help prevent wildfires.

This comes after some poorly maintained Pacific Gas and Electric power lines have been determined to have started last year’s deadly wildfires in the Napa Valley wine country area.   Continue reading “PG&E Plans to Cut Electricity to Some California Residents to Prevent Wildfires”

LMT Online – by Andrew Van Dam, The Washington Post

Seventy may be the new sixty, eighty may be the new seventy, but 85 is still pretty old to work in America. Yet, in some ways, it is the era of the very-old-worker in America.

Overall, 255,000 Americans, 85-years-old and over, were working over the past 12 months. That’s 4.4 percent of Americans that age, up from 2.6 percent in 2006, before the recession. It’s the highest number on record.   Continue reading “A record number of folks age 85 and older are working. Here’s what they’re doing.”

NewsWars

Over 16,000 complaints have been logged with the City of San Francisco regarding ‘feces’ in the last seven days.

website and related app that allows local residents to request maintenance or non-emergency services from the city has received 16,015 complaints with the keyword ‘feces’ in the last week at the time of this writing, and many pertain to human waste in public places.   Continue reading “San Francisco Logs Over 16,000 Feces Complaints in One Week”

The Smoking Gun

A Florida man who tussled with a cop trying to arrest him for disorderly conduct later said that he “really enjoyed resisting” because it was like being on “Live PD,” a cable program that chronicles the mayhem police officers encounter on the night shift.

A patrolman was dispatched yesterday to a home in Sebastian, a city near Vero Beach, after a 911 caller reported that a man wielding a golf club was chasing a woman.  Continue reading “Man Tells Cop He “Really Enjoyed” Resisting Arrest Because It Was Like Being On A TV Show”

RT – by John Wight

The US has long sought to deny its hegemonic character while emphasizing its democratic character. It now seems all such pretense has been abandoned.

“False face must hide what the false heart doth know,” Shakespeare writes, in words that for time immemorial should have sat pride of place under the Great Seal of the United States on front of the podium whenever any president, cabinet member, congressman, or indeed any US official proclaimed their country a champion of democracy.  Continue reading “The Pentagon’s new mission statement: Neo-colonialism & hegemony unmasked”

AOL

When Crystal Reynolds Fisher’s 18-year-old son ended up on life support for a 104-degree fever, she did what any working mom would do: she called out of work so she could be with him. But when she contacted her manager to let her know, she was not prepared for such a cruel, heartless reaction, Buzzfeed reports.

Crystal, who lives in Michigan, works at a PS Food Mart, a convenience store run by the company Folk Oil. On the day she had to miss work, she texted her manager, Dawn, to explain her son’s situation, and offered to keep her updated so she “can return to work with no problems.”   Continue reading “Mom gets shamed by manager for calling out of work to care for son on life support”

Fox News

A Connecticut man who was assaulted by three juveniles while at work has been sentenced to prison for stabbing one of the attackers.

The Connecticut Post reports 21-year-old Jeffrey Sumpter of Bridgeport received 18 months in jail Monday at a Stamford courthouse.  Continue reading “Connecticut assault victim gets 18 months in jail for stabbing attacker”

BBC News

Investigators are continuing to search for the item contaminated with the nerve agent which poisoned a couple near Salisbury.

Police believe Charlie Rowley, 45, and Dawn Sturgess, 44, from Amesbury, were exposed to Novichok after handling the unknown object.

The pair remain in a critical condition in hospital.  Continue reading “Amesbury Novichok contaminated item search continues”

AP News – by Julian Hattem

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — Utah police seized about $2.2 million in cash last year under a law allowing authorities to take someone’s property even if they aren’t charged or convicted of a crime, a state report showed.

The 2017 report on state asset forfeiture showed virtually all of the money and other assets seized by police came in drug investigations.

In 13 percent of the cases no criminal charges were filed.  Continue reading “Utah Police Seized $2.2M in Cash Under Civil Forfeiture Law”