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Re: Scientists ‘Crack Code’ to Happiness : By Matt Barber
from Cezar on 06/15/2015 07:57 PMLike the happy pill on Brain Candy?
Re: Ultimate White House trolling: Obama to “diversify” wealthy neighborhoods
from Cezar on 06/14/2015 07:56 PMThis will lead to more gun sales, and probably more deaths around America.
Not a smart move.
This is multiculturalism, and it doesn't work.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=950ogfA7sos
Demoted and harassed for telling the truth.
from Cezar on 06/14/2015 07:42 PMGood Cop Demoted, Transferred & Worse for Exposing his Dept in the Killing of a College Student
On May 31 of last year, 20-year-old college student Brandon Ellingson was stopped for suspicion of driving a boat while intoxicated. Ellingson would not make it out of the water alive.
Trooper Anthony Piercy was the officer who stopped then young Iowa native that day. According to witnesses, Piercy handcuffed Ellingson's wrists behind his back and then pulled an already buckled life vest, with armholes, over his head and upper torso, completely against the recommended use of the vest.
As Piercy drove the dangerously restrained young man back to the office for a breathalyzer, he tumbled out of the boat and into the water. He would never come back up.
An investigation by the Star showed that Piercy only had 2 days of training prior to holding this young man's life in his hands. It also showed that the boat was travelling at over 40 mph which required patrol investigators to hold on or fall out; Ellingson was not given the option to hold on.
Only days after the death of this young man, special prosecutor Amanda Grellner announced that she would not file criminal charges against Piercy, and his death was ruled an accident.
This young college student, who was merely suspected of a misdemeanor, died at the hands of police and no one was held accountable.
Enter Trooper Randy Henry.
According to the Kansas City Star:
Days after Ellingson's death, Henry was interviewed by patrol investigators looking into the incident. At one point during the interview, a recording shows, Henry had questioned whether the highest degree of care was taken with Ellingson that day. When he mentioned a state law pertaining to that, his sentence was cut off and one investigator insisted the recorder be turned off.
Earlier this month, Henry was deposed in the civil suit the Ellingson family has filed against the patrol, Piercy and top commanders. In a letter to the patrol superintendent, Col. Bret Johnson, Pleban stated: "You might want to educate yourself by requesting a copy of the transcript of Sgt. Henry's deposition so that you can fully comprehend his status as a whistle blower."
Since Henry has begun to expose the lack of training, the resultant death of a young man, and the subsequent cover-up of that death by his department, he has since been retaliated against.
Sgt. Henry was demoted to corporal and transferred from his nearly three-decades long patrol at Lake of the Ozarks to Truman Lake.
"Randy Henry doesn't have a horse in the race," Henry's attorney, Chet Pleban told The Star. "He's not on one side or the other. He has testimony to give that's material. The truth is the truth. He went to his superiors to say, 'This is wrong. This is what happened.' And they blew him off. So now here we are."
Since he spoke out, Henry has been forced to undergo multiple mental health evaluations at the demand of his superiors. The exams found nothing
"Ultimately, the mental-health provider warned that because she found nothing wrong with Sgt. Henry, it would be unethical for her to see him a third time at the insistence of the patrol," Pleban wrote to Johnson. "When the mental health route failed, a Professional Standards investigation surfaced."
The departemnt has been silent on the reasons behind any of the investigations.
Craig Ellingson, Brandon's father, has insisted that Piercy should be held accountable for what happened to his son. He is also outspoken about the retaliation, noting that Henry's discipline is wrong.
"It's retaliation," he said. "They shouldn't be doing that."
Crossing the blue line to expose your own department is career suicide and can also be dangerous. The Free Thought Project has exposed countless cases of the proverbial good cop being ousted for merely seeking justice within their own ranks. If this cycle continues, eventually there won't be any good cops left.
Randy Henry deserves commendation for his perserverence in this matter. He's been demoted, transferred, investigated, attacked, mentally examined, and still, he seeks justice. That is what a "good cop" does.
Re: this is supposed to replace sodahead right? is this a site about opinions?
from Cezar on 06/14/2015 07:17 PMIt's here to connect everyone from Sodahead.
Then someday we will find or create a bigger site.

Re: MRC CyberAlert Thursday, June 11, 2015 at 9:25 AM EDT Tracking Liberal Media Bias Since 1996
from Cezar on 06/12/2015 07:41 PMPolitical correctness on college campuses, is hurting America.
The communists in the colleges have to be rooted out.
Re: Detroit Woman Fights Off 5 Home Invaders with Handgun ; "If you break into our home, we’re going to kill you." : Mark Tapson
from Cezar on 06/12/2015 07:35 PMStories like this should be on the news.
Re: It’s Starting: Chelsea Clinton for President ; BY PAUL BEDARD
from Cezar on 06/11/2015 08:04 PMNo way.

America needs to get away from reelecting people like this.
Clintons, Bushes, Reed, Pelosi and so forth. No more.
Demand term limits, and ID to make sure you live in America.
Re: Laws That Undermine Free Speech : Scott Greer -
from Cezar on 06/10/2015 06:54 AMAgreed, these unconstitutional laws need to be repealed.
FBI busted flying spy planes over U.S.
from Cezar on 06/10/2015 05:57 AMFBI busted flying spy planes over U.S.
The FBI has been busted by the media for flying spy planes over select U.S. sites, conducting secret surveillance absent specific court warrant.
The Associated Press reported the planes were being flown under the guise of fictitious companies and were outfitted with video and cellphone surveillance technology.
The FBI said the planes' surveillance capabilities were used for ongoing investigations, and that operating without court warrant was commonplace for the missions. In one recent 30-day span of time, the media learned the FBI flew the planes above more than 30 cities across 11 states, AP reported.
Civil liberties' advocates are in an uproar, despite the fact the FBI said its surveillance program has not been conducted on the sly.
"The FBI's aviation program is not secret," agency spokesman Christopher Allen said in a statement. "Specific aircraft and their capabilities are protected for operational security purposes. [The planes] are not equipped, designed or used for bulk collection activities or mass surveillance."
Yet the planes can indeed pick up video or activities on the ground that could be used for unrelated criminal cases, AP reported. On top of that, some of the crafts are fitted with technology that can identify thousands of individuals by the cellphones they're carrying, even if they're not placing a call, AP found.
"These are not your grandparents' surveillance aircraft," said Jay Stanley, a senior policy analyst with the American Civil Liberties Union, AP reported. He said the flights were important to know about in case "the federal government is maintaining a fleet of aircraft whose purpose is to circle over American cities, especially with the technology we know can be attached to those aircraft."
Among the FBI flights the AP tracked in recent weeks included ones over the District of Columbia, Houston, Phoenix, Seattle, Chicago, Boston, Minneapolis and Southern California. The FBI also helped local law enforcement monitor the recent Freddie Gray protests in Baltimore, AP said.
The fake companies that served as cover for the FBI flights operate under the names of FVX Research, KQM Aviation, NBR Aviation and PXW Services, AP found.
http://www.wnd.com/2015/06/fbi-busted-flying-spy-planes-over-u-s/



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