Collapse in the Rule of Law – Average Americans Do not Trust Courts

Justice-FatThe National Post has reported the sad state of the American legal system – there is nothing left. As they said – the right to a fair trial just does not exist. We have reached that point in the evolution of government where the rule of law fades into the night. It is all about corruption any more and the courts support the system who pay their pension. This is the symbol of injustice, the fat judge being carried on the back of the people.

The United States has an election next week, but nowhere to be found is any discussion of the genuine national crisis in the criminal justice system. To put it dramatically, but not inaccurately, the right to a fair trial no longer exists in America, except by accident. The land of the free simply isn’t that for those who catch the eye of the police. And nobody seems to care. MORE

 

CULTURAL CLEANSING OF CHRISTIAN MALES

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Last week came word Saint Louis University will remove a heroic-sized statue of Father Pierre-Jean De Smet S.J. from the front of Fusz Hall, where it has stood for 60 years.

The statue depicts De Smet holding aloft a crucifix as he ministers to two American Indians, one of whom is kneeling.

Historically, the statue is accurate. Father De Smet, “Blackrobe,” as he was known, was a 19th-century missionary to Indian tribes who converted thousands. A friend of Sitting Bull, he spent his last years in St. Louis. MORE

Manspreading arrests: the long arm of the law just invaded our personal space

Manspreading_3As two men are arrested for ‘manspreading’ on the New York metro, Joel Snape argues that we should all take a bit of responsibility rather than making anti-social behaviour illegal.

Bad news, tall men with a poor sense of boundaries: the NYPD have had enough of your nonsense. Yes, after opeds in the New York Times (£), a popular crowdshaming Tumblr campaign and a series of public service ads from the Metropolitan Transport Authority, ‘manspreading’, or ‘sitting with your legs slightly too far apart’, as it used to be known, has apparently become a criminal offence. MORE

World’s first witchcraft cafe sells love-spells and black magic alongside coffee and cake

WITCHCA Thai cafe is offering the standard fare of lattes and cake alongside some less conventional services- like love-spells and exorcisms.

Situated in the central Bangkok, Ace and Cups is the world’s premiere Witchcraft Café, and it’s proving a hit with young occult enthusiasts.

The lower floor of the sells food and drinks along with witchcraft tools like crystals and wands -but the real spectacle is upstairs, where the supernatural services take place, reports VICE. MORE

Iraq lost 2,300 Humvee armoured vehicles in Mosul

PMI think we need to bill Iraq for the Expenses it’s costing us to protect them.

Iraqi security forces lost 2,300 Humvee armoured vehicles when the Islamic State jihadist group overran the northern city of Mosul, Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi said on Sunday.

“In the collapse of Mosul, we lost a lot of weapons,” Abadi said in an interview with Iraqiya state TV. “We lost 2,300 Humvees in Mosul alone.” MORE

 

You’ll Never Guess Who’s Building an Aircraft Carrier Now (Seriously… Try)

liaoning-goAll of a sudden, aircraft carriers are back in fashion.

Over in Russia, they’re drawing up plans to build the world’s biggest aircraft carrier, a 100,000-ton beast that can carry 100 combat aircraft. China’s building one, two, or maybeeven four aircraft carriers. And here in the United States, we’re busy building our second ­Ford-class supercarrier.

Around the world and across the seas, aircraft carriers are popping up in the unlikeliest of places — in Korea, in Thailand, in India, Japan, and maybe soon in Singapore, as well. But you’ll never guess the latest country to announce plans to acquire one. MORE

Washington farmers, wildlife managers prepare for drought

Washington DroughtWith Washington state experiencing the worst mountain snowpack in decades and a drought emergency declared two weeks ago, farmers, growers and wildlife managers are preparing for a tough summer as conditions are expected to worsen.

Some farmers and irrigators are forgoing watering crops and pastures for all or part of the season in exchange for lease payments from the state. Others are seeking permission to tap emergency wells or drill new ones. A large irrigation district in the Yakima River basin shut off the water for a few weeks this month to save supply for later. MORE