Friday, July 25, 2008

No probation for woman who severely injured son

LOUISVILLE (WAVE) - A Louisville mom convicted of assaulting her infant son, leaving him brain damaged and blind, will not get shock probation, but she will get out of jail on bond after serving less than four months while she appeals her sentence. WAVE 3's Elizabeth Donatelli has more.

Article here

Nymphotropism

Nymphotropism is a relatively new English word that is used to refer to a collection of attitudes, thoughts, feelings, and biases found in human societies towards favoring the claims, needs, sympathies, and wants of women, even in the face of irrefutable evidence that such consideration is not warranted or just.

The word first appeared in an essay entitled Perils of nymphotropism by CJ Virag published June 25, 2008. Since that time its use in the place of such words as "chivalry" or "womanfirstism" has increased.

Wednesday, July 23, 2008

She can't Stop Raping

Former New York Teacher Arrested on Rape Charges for Continuing to Have Sex With Teen

GARDEN CITY, N.Y. — A former New York teacher who admitted having sex with a 16-year-old boy has been arrested on rape and other charges after prosecutors say she continued the liaisons in violation of a court order.

Heather Kennedy, a former Wantagh high school teacher, was arrested late Monday. She is charged with third-degree rape, committing a criminal sexual act , criminal contempt and endangering the welfare of a minor.

The 25-year-old was first arrested in March. She pleaded guilty to sexual misconduct and was awaiting an August sentencing.

Prosecutors got a tip Kennedy was still meeting with the boy and began watching her. The victim also admitted having sex with Kennedy five times since her guilty plea.

Kennedy's lawyer did not immediately return a call for comment.

Tuesday, July 22, 2008

The Welfare State (and wheres the men)

Excerpt from article


In a segment of All Things Considered (well, all things but common sense, anyway), NPR gives us Gloria Nunez whose family, we are told, was “built on cars.” NPR gives us all sorts of sobbing, rending of clothes, wearing of sackcloth and gnashing of teeth for the Nunez’, of course. But even NPR can’t hide some of the glaring problems that Gloria and her family have surely brought upon themselves.

In fact, her story sounds like the scene in the old Blues Brothers movie where John Belushi is on his knees pleading with Carrie Fischer to forgive him. There was a flood, he whined, locusts came, it was the end of the world, it REALLY wasn’t his fault, he swore to God. Similarly we get the tale that Gloria Nunez’ car broke down, she can’t find a job, she had a car accident that left her “depressed and disabled, incapable of getting a job.” She is now somehow forced to live on a “$637 Social Security check and $102 in food stamps.” Naturally, none of it is her fault. All the seeds for the common welfare tale are there.

‘I Just Can’t Get A Job’

Nunez, 40, has never worked and has no high school degree. She says a car accident 17 years ago left her depressed and disabled, incapable of getting a job. Instead, she and her daughter, Angelica Hernandez, survive on a $637 Social Security check and $102 in food stamps.

Hernandez received her high school diploma and has had several jobs in recent years. But now, because fewer restaurants and stores are hiring, she says she finds it hard to find a job. Even if she could, she says it’s particularly hard to imagine how she’ll keep it. She says she needs someone to give her a lift just to get to an interview. And with gas prices so high, she’s not sure she could afford to pay someone to drive her to work every day.

There are all sorts of extended family members mentioned in this little tale of woe. Grandmothers, sisters, daughters. But one glaring absence might dawn on the reader. No where in the story is a mention of a Mr. Nunez living with the family and trying to provide for them. No where do we see contemporaneously included in this tale a Father or husband.

There is one tiny little thing tucked into this story, though, that might escape notice. At least it is something that seems to have escaped the notice of too many Americans who sit about expecting some magical employment fairy to float down out of the sky and hand them a $50,000 dollar a year job and who, while they wait, sponge off the rest of us with state aid and Federal benefits.

The only employer within walking distance is a ThyssenKrupp factory that makes diesel engine parts. That facility, which employs 400 people, is shutting down and moving to Illinois next year.

The ThyssenKrupp factory is moving to greener pastures, to greater opportunity, to a better, more lucrative environment.

One must wonder why don’t the Nunez.’ In fact, why aren’t a large number of Americans moving to where the jobs are?

There have been many, many periods in American history when large numbers of Americans have uprooted themselves and moved to where there was a better opportunity to make their mark in life. “Go west young man” was once a rallying cry for an American diaspora. The wagon trains rolled by the thousands at a time when such travel often resulted in death. The dust bowl years saw many of those living in the near west moving to California, the land of milk and honey. After the turn of the century, hundreds of thousands moved from the south to the north when work became plentiful there — especially for America’s southern black population. Even recently, the south began to fill back up as work became more plentiful there. And there were many more eras of internal shifts in population that I didn’t mention here. They all moved when a certain section of the country became stagnant and another offered opportunity.

Today it is the west that once again needs great numbers of Americans to move there and fill jobs. Western states are finding themselves with jobs, but no one to fill them.

So, why aren’t large numbers of Americans moving west? Because they’ve been conditioned to imagine that if they can’t easily find a job where they are at, their government will hand them everything for “free.” They’ve become used to imagining that the state should take care of them instead of imagining that they are responsible for themselves.

These kinds of reports without context or any greater exploration of the situation is the sort of “journalism” that helps drive down morale for America for little real gain. Of course, for NPR the main point is to help achieve bad times, not merely report on them. NPR would rather see Americans lounge about their homes feeling desperate and turning to government for succor. NPR wants to breed dependency, not self-reliance.

And dependency is what we see in Gloria Nunez. She is filled with all sorts of excuses of why her life is so darn hard. The world is out to get her, it appears. But there are jobs a plenty out there. Only, they take some effort on the part of the seeker. The magical employment fairy is going to float down and wave her magic jobs wand neither on Gloria Nunez nor anyone like her.

Americans have many times taken their own lives in their own hands and set out to find a better life. Now days, however, the Gloria Nunez’ of the world seem to imagine that everyone else should come to their aid. America must become again that land of rugged individuals leaning forward into any ill wind that blows to forge ahead and succeed.

Government isn’t the solution. Someone should tell that to Gloria Nunez and NPR.

Tuesday, July 15, 2008

DV: Woman attacks man with toilet seat

FT. PIERCE. FL -- Police arrested an 18-year-old woman after they say she hit a man over the head with a toilet seat after finding him smoking crack cocaine in the bathroom.

Kimberlee Cole told police she found Joel Goldsmith smoking cocaine in their bathroom Sunday night. The two argued and Goldsmith, 24, refused to give up the drugs, according to a police affadavit.

According to the report, Cole said that when Goldsmith went to put another "rock" into his crack pipe, he dropped the cocaine and Cole turned on the water in the shower to wash away the drug. The two continued arguing, she said, and when Goldsmith refused to stop smoking the drugs, Cole hit him with the toilet seat.

Police arrived after a roommate heard the arguing and called 9-1-1. Police found a broken toilet seat in the master bedroom bathroom and blood on the walls, toilet and floor. A small amount of cocaine turned up in the shower.

Goldsmith was booked into the St. Lucie County jail on a cocaine possession charge. He was released after posting $5,000 bond. Cole, who was released without bond, faces a battery charge.

Father-of-three branded a 'pervert'

Father-of-three branded a 'pervert' - for photographing his own children in public park

Family man Gary Crutchley only wanted to take a picture of his children enjoying a day out.

But his innocent snaps of his sons on a slide ended with him being branded on the spot as a 'pervert'.

The woman running the inflatable slide attempted to stop Mr Crutchley from taking pictures of his two youngest children Cory, aged seven, and Miles, five.

And when he pleaded his innocence, other families waiting in the queue also demanded he stop taking pictures. See article here.

Comment:
How many womyn would have complained if a female was taking photos of her children.
Its madness.
But like I've always said "If a man does it its wrong - woman does it its right"
Man=Wrong
Woman=Right



Friday, July 11, 2008

Circus Worker Fatally Stabbed by Ex-Wife

DES MOINES, Iowa — Police have arrested a Florida woman who apparently followed her ex-husband across the country and then stabbed him repeatedly in a Davenport mall.

Debi Joy Droguett Olson, of Sarasota, Fla., was charged Thursday with first-degree murder and willful injury in the death of her 52-year-old ex-husband, Mauricio Droguett, said Jerry Feuerbach, assistant county attorney.

He said Mauricio Droguett was walking inside the NorthPark Mall about 7:30 a.m. Thursday when he was stabbed multiple times on the front and back sides of his body. One of his co-workers reportedly subdued Olson until police arrived a few minutes later. That man suffered minor injuries, Feuerbach said.

Thursday, July 10, 2008

Exposing the Madness and Hidden Agenda of Public Education

Thanks to reckless political leaders in California, the terms “mom and dad” are now completely banned in the public school system and teachers are being ordered to use euphemisms for those terms.

In addition, “husband and wife” are also banned under this new law signed by Gov. Schwarzenegger. The newly signed law also mandates public schools to allow boys to use girls restrooms and locker rooms, and vice versa, if they choose to do so.

In addition, Schwarzenegger worked together to establish Senate Bill 777 and Assembly Bill 394 as a law that institutionalizes the promotion of homosexuality, bisexuality, transgenderism and other alternative lifestyle choices within the public school system.

Wednesday, July 9, 2008

Baby cut from woman's womb

Excerpt from article

"KENNEWICK, Washington (AP) -- Kennewick, Washington, police report that a pregnant woman was fatally stabbed multiple times in the chest and her nearly full-term baby was cut from her womb. Police have arrested a 23-year-old woman.

The baby boy has been hospitalized at Deaconess Medical Center in Spokane, Washington, in critical condition.

Court documents say 27-year-old Araceli Camacho Gomez, of Pasco, Washington, had her hands and feet bound with yarn and suffered "massive trauma to her stomach area" late Friday night. An autopsy showed she died of the chest wounds, but had other wounds "consistent with the cutting of the body to remove an unborn child."

Her body was found early Saturday in Kennewick's Columbia Park."

Monday, July 7, 2008

Politically incorrect domestic violence

The words "domestic violence" typically invite images of bruised women and children - and male perpetrators. But the real picture of domestic violence isn't so clear-cut. And the solution to family violence is far more complex than our current criminal justice approach can handle.

For about 30 years now, we've been throwing money and punishment at domestic violence with not enough to show for it. Estimates are that more than 32 million Americans are affected by domestic violence each year, with many of those in need of help never reporting their abuse.

These are among the important findings of Linda Mills - attorney, social worker and survivor of a violent relationship as well as professor and senior vice provost at New York University - whose new book, Violent Partners, tackles the myths of domestic violence and suggests new ways of dealing with the problem.

One of the primary myths - and the one that meets with the most resistance - is that only men are violent. Women and children indeed suffer the worst injuries and more often die as a result of those injuries, but women initiate violence as often as men.

Ignoring or playing down that fact obscures the real problem of intimate violence and makes solutions less likely. Yet even people who know better are afraid of speaking up lest they be accused of undermining feminist efforts to help women and children in danger.

Feminism deserves credit for putting domestic violence on the radar back when what happened in a "man's castle" was considered no one else's business. But we now know a great deal more about what happens behind closed doors.

According to Ms. Mills, studies now confirm that women initiate violence in 24 percent of cases in which the husbands don't fight back, while men initiate violence in 27 percent of cases in which women don't fight back. In the other 49 percent of cases, both partners actively participate in the violence.

What this tells us is that violent partners frequently have a relationship problem that is never addressed under our system of arrest-and-punish. Moreover, says Ms. Mills, a majority of families with violence issues don't want to shatter the family, as our criminal system often encourages. They just want the violence to stop.

Yet many states have a "must-arrest" policy if a call to police is made. Many also take a "primary aggressor" approach in determining who should be arrested. Even if the man calls the police, says Ms. Mills, he's often the one hauled off and charged, based on the assumption that he, the physically stronger, is more dangerous. Consequently, the underlying problem of violence isn't addressed and people needing help won't call police for fear of the draconian measures likely to follow.

The solution to domestic violence, says Ms. Mills, begins with recognizing it as a cyclical, intergenerational family problem that usually begins in childhood. Research shows that children raised by violence are more likely to become violent or be the victim of violence in their own adult relationships - and so it goes from one generation to the next.

Allowing exceptions for the most violent abusers, Ms. Mills proposes a broad, systemic approach to domestic violence that includes counseling and at least the option of restorative, rather than punitive, justice. The current approach to "treatment" usually consists of sending men to classes on how to be less sexist.

Ms. Mills is testing an alternative program in Nogales, Ariz., that brings the whole family together to learn how the cycle of abuse works within families. Without blaming the victim, Ms. Mills insists that everyone has to take responsibility for his or her role in the dynamic that leads to violence.

It is brave of Ms. Mills to invite these challenges. But if we're really serious about reducing domestic violence, we have to recognize that demonizing men isn't the answer and that sexism isn't the only question.

Kathleen Parker's syndicated column appears regularly in The Sun. Her e-mail is kparker@ kparker.com.