ARTICLES - HOT OFF THE FAGGOT

Female Police Chief Murdered in Mexico

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Female Police Chief Murdered in Mexico

Mexican federal police officers man a roadblock in the town of Meoqui, state of Chihuahua, northern Mexico, Monday Nov. 29, 2010 after the police chief of the town was gunned down.

Hermila Garcia, 38, was shot on her way to work Monday by a convoy of gunmen. Garcia, a trained lawyer, took the job as police chief on Oct. 9 in the town of Meoqui, in drug violence-ridden Chihuahua state.

The assailants intercepted her in the town of Los Garcia, some 10 kilometers from Meoqui around 7:20 a.m. Monday. Garcia was in charge of up to 90 police agents in a mostly agricultural region of the Chihuahua state, some 70 kilometers south of Chihuahua City, the capital of the state.

"La Jefa," as she was known to her police agents, didn't carry weapons or have bodyguards.

"If you don't owe anything, you don't fear anything," she was fond of saying when asked why she didn't have security.

Mexican media reported that Garcia was single and lived with her parents, whom she supported financially.

Mexico's drug violence has claimed almost 30,000 lives since President Felipe Calderon took office in late 2006 and sent about 45,000 soldiers to fight the powerful drug cartels. In recent months, Meoqui had started to see some of this violence. A once peaceful town, the drug violence-related death tally has shot up to 40 deaths so far this year. Normally that death count would account for homicides over seven years.

Policing has become a job so dangerous that men are now shying away from such posts. Just last month, 20-year old mother and student Marisol Valles was appointed chief of police in Praxedis, in the Juarez valley, a key drug smuggling route just across the border from Texas also in Chihuahua state. Why did a 20-year-old mother accept the position? No one else would. Her predecessor was kidnapped more than a year ago. His head was deposited outside the police station a few days after he disappeared. After that, no one came forward to fill the police chief vacancy for more than a year -- until Valles was appointed top cop by the town's mayor.

Other women who have taken top policing jobs because no men would include two housewives: Ver?nica R?os Ontiveros and Olga Herrera Castillo, who took over policing jobs in El Vergel and Villa de Luz, both in Juarez, now known as the "murder capital" of the world due to its high murder rate. The Juarez valley has had more than 2,700 drug violence-related deaths this year.

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Mystery Air Force Spacecraft to Return to Earth

Air Force Space Command Says Vandenberg Air Force Base Has Begun Landing Preparations for the Unmanned X-37B's Return

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Mystery Air Force Spacecraft to Return to Earth

Air Force Space Command Says Vandenberg Air Force Base Has Begun Landing Preparations for the Unmanned X-37B's Return

(AP)  An unmanned Air Force space plane that spent seven months in orbit is set to return to Earth.



The X-37B Orbital Test Vehicle is scheduled to land at Vandenberg Air Force Base northwest of Los Angeles sometime between Friday and Monday, depending on the weather and other factors.



The Air Force Space Command said in a statement Tuesday the base has begun preparations for the landing.



The X-37B resembles a small space shuttle. Since it launched in April, space enthusiasts have speculated about its ultimate purpose. The Air Force has said the space plane was to serve as a test platform for unspecified experiments.



Hundreds of millions of dollars have been spent on the X-37 program, but the current total hasn't been released.

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Internet Inaccessible Behind China's Firewall, Including Sites Such as Facebook, Twitter and YouTube

WikiLeaks Site Blocked Behind Chinese Firewall

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WikiLeaks Site Blocked Behind Chinese Firewall

Vast Swath of Internet Inaccessible Behind China's Firewall, Including Sites Such as Facebook, Twitter and YouTube

  • Links to the WikiLeaks website were blocked within China on Wednesday local time amid potentially embarrassing claims made in leaked U.S. diplomatic cables posted to the site.

    Links to the WikiLeaks website were blocked within China on Wednesday local time amid potentially embarrassing claims made in leaked U.S. diplomatic cables posted to the site.  (CNET)

  • Play CBS Video Video WikiLeaks Impacts Washington

    James Hohmann, Reporter for POLITICO, talks with Up to the Minute anchor Betty Nguyen about how the recent documents dump by WikiLeaks is affecting Washington and The White House.

(AP)  Updated at 11:30 p.m. ET



Links to the WikiLeaks website were blocked within China on Wednesday amid potentially embarrassing claims made in leaked U.S. diplomatic cables posted to the site.



Attempts to access wikileaks.org and cablegate.wikileaks.org were met with a notice saying the connection had been reset. That's the standard response when a website is being blocked by Chinese authorities who exert rigid controls over Internet content.



It wasn't clear when the blocks were imposed, although a vast swath of the Internet is inaccessible behind China's firewall, including social networking sites such as Facebook, Twitter and YouTube.



Human rights and political dissent-themed sites are also routinely banned, although technologically savvy users can easily jump the so-called "Great Firewall" with proxy servers or other alternatives.



WikiLeaks may have been singled out because of some of the assertions made in the leaked cables, including some sent from the U.S. Embassies in Seoul and Beijing focusing on China's ally North Korea.



Those included suggestions that North Korea's communist regime would likely collapse within three years of the death of ruler Kim Jong Il, and that Chinese leaders were prepared to accept South Korea's eventual rule over the entire Korean peninsula.



In one, a Chinese diplomat is quoted describing North Korea as a "spoiled child" for attempting to win U.S. attention with a provocative missile test.



The leaks also claimed that China's Politburo directed a cyber intrusion into Google's computer systems, and expressed concern over attempts by Iranian front companies to obtain Chinese nuclear technology.



China's government has taken a low-key approach to the leaks, with the Foreign Ministry saying it would not comment on specific assertions in the cables.



"China takes note of relevant reports. We hope the U.S. side will properly handle the relevant issue. As for the content of the documents, we do not comment on that," ministry spokesman Hong Lei said Tuesday.



The Global Times, a provocative tabloid published by the ruling Communist Party mouthpiece Peoples Daily, labeled the disclosure a "nefarious slander against China" on Wednesday.



It also questioned the U.S. government's perceived inability to block the posting of the leaks, saying it raised questions as to whether it had reached some form of tacit understanding with WikiLeaks.



Shi Yinhong, a professor of international relations at Beijing's Renmin University, said Beijing shared Washington's concern about the release of sensitive diplomatic communications. But he said the WikiLeaks' blocking was motivated more by the need to stifle further rumor mongering, rather than suppressing specific revelations.



"The website is blocked because the information is both unprovable and sensitive," Shi said.



U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton has said that WikiLeaks acted illegally in posting the documents. Officials around the world have said the disclosure jeopardizes national security, diplomats, intelligence assets and relationships between foreign governments.



The massive leaks were "embarrassing" and "awkward," but the consequences for American foreign policy should be limited, U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates said Tuesday.



More on the Wikileaks Diplomatic Cables:



Wikileaks Sends U.S. Scrambling Over Security

Leaked Cables Reveal Locations of European Nukes

Hoekstra on WikiLeaks: "A Number of Time Bombs"

Outrage Over Wikileaks

The WikiLeaks Impact

WikiLeaks Releases State Dept. Documents

Key GOP Pol: WikiLeaks a Terrorist Group

Ahmadinejad Dismisses WikiLeaks Cable "Mischief"

U.S. Cables: Iran Armed Hezbollah Via Ambulances

Hoekstra: World's Trust in U.S. Now at Risk

U.S. Encouraged Diplomats to Spy, Leaks Show

Leaked Cables Shine Light on Iran Nuclear Threat

Worldwatch: Embarrassing Revelations Abound

Worldwatch: Diplomatic Shockers

White House Condemns WikiLeaks' Document Release

WikiLeaks Defies U.S., Releases Embassy Cables



Links to Leaked Cables:



Cables Shine Light Into Secret Diplomatic Channels (NYT)

The US Embassy Cable (Guardian)

A Superpower's View of the World (Spiegel, in English)

Los papeles del Departamento de Estado (El Pais)

Wikileaks: Dans les coulisses de la diplomatie americaine (Le Monde)
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Indonesia's Islamic laws are 'abusive', report says: poor women, bear the brunt of Sharia law

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Indonesia's Islamic laws are 'abusive', report says

Murni Amris being caned for opening a food stall during the Ramadan fasting month, 1 Oct 2010, Aceh
Women, especially poor women, bear the brunt of Sharia law in Aceh, says Human Rights Watch

Two Islamic laws applied in the Indonesian province of Aceh violate people's rights and are implemented abusively, a new report has concluded.

Human Rights Watch (HRW) says two of five local laws based on the Sharia legal code discriminate against women.

It says the laws against "seclusion" - association by unmarried individuals of the opposite sex - and dress codes are also not applied to wealthy people.

Islamic law applies only in Aceh in the secular state of Indonesia.

The report by New York-based HRW, Policing Morality: Abuses in the Application of Sharia in Aceh, Indonesia, notes that the rights group takes no position on Sharia law as a whole - a system its supporters say provides a comprehensive guide to behaviour.

However, it says the "seclusion" law, which makes association by unmarried individuals of the opposite sex a criminal offence in some circumstances, and laws on dress requirements, are discriminatory.

"These two laws deny people's right to make their own decisions about who they meet and what they wear," said Elaine Pearson, deputy Asia director at Human Rights Watch.

"The laws, and their selective enforcement, are an invitation to abuse," she said.

Abuse

The word "seclusion" has been used to bar people simply meeting and talking in a quiet place, the report says.

Abuses include aggressive interrogations and attempts to force people to marry.

At least one case of rape of a woman in detention by Sharia police officers has occurred, the report says.

HRW says Sharia police officers have told investigators that they sometimes force women and girls to submit to virginity exams as part of the investigation.

The laws also allow for members of the public to identify, report and punish alleged misbehaviour which has also led to further violence and abuses which usually go unpunished, HRW says, citing several first-person accounts.

Other Islamic laws applied in Aceh relate to charitable giving, gambling, Islamic ritual and proper Muslim behaviour.

They were applied as part of the central government's attempts to appease the Islamic lobby in Aceh, where separatists have for years criticised unfairness in the distribution of wealth from Aceh's considerable oil and gas resources.

Surveys in the province have regularly highlighted local residents' unhappiness with the laws.

There has been no central or local government response to the HRW report.


Related stories



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Spanish nursing home orderly admits 11 killings

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Spanish nursing home orderly admits 11 killings

An orderly at a Spanish retirement home has admitted killing 11 residents, reports say.

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Joan Vila, 45, said he poisoned them with bleach, an overdose of insulin or drugs at the home in the north-eastern town of Olot, Spanish media reported.


He had confessed to killing three residents "to end their suffering" when he was arrested in October.


He then told a judge on Tuesday that he had killed another eight, the Spanish news agency Efe reported.


The confession came 10 days after a judge ordered the eight bodies exhumed as part of an investigation into suspicious deaths at the La Caritat home.


Doctors first alerted police after they found burns to the mouth and throat of an 85-year-old woman who died last month.


Mr Vila then confessed he had killed the woman and two others by forcing them to drink bleach.


In his latest confession Mr Vila told a judge he killed another six with a mix of drugs and two from an overdose of insulin, Efe reported.


The newspaper El Periodico quoted Mr Vila's lawyer, Carles Monguilod, as saying that the first killing was carried out in August 2009, another later that year and the other nine this year.


Mr Vila, who worked weekends at the home, is currently being held in the psychiatric ward of a prison.


Mr Monguilod said his client acted out of "compassion... because they were suffering and he wanted to give them some peace".


Most of the patients were said to have been suffering terminal illnesses, including Alzheimer's, and had fevers or were disorientated.

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Obama's anti-child obesity initiative receives faith, community support

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Obama's anti-child obesity initiative receives faith, community support

At White House, Wilson pledges support for 'Let's Move' goals
Ansel Oliver/NAD staff

The Seventh-day Adventist Church joined some 50 other faith and community organizations yesterday in supporting a national initiative of United States first lady Michelle Obama to fight the epidemic of childhood obesity.



The initiative, "Let's Move: Faith and Communities," seeks pledges from organizations to promote exercise, the planting of community gardens to provide fresh food, and other activities contributing to healthful living.



About one-third of children in the U.S. are overweight or obese, Obama told faith and community leaders gathered at the White House.



"It's clear that when it comes to ensuring our children's health and well-being, when it comes to tackling childhood obesity, our faith-based and community organizations have a very critical role to play," Obama said.



She said this new phase of the previously established Let's Move initiative would work to support existing programs. "Many of you have been leading the way on this issue for so long..." Obama said, referring to faith-based health ministries, exercise clubs and education in "Saturday and Sunday schools."



The new initiative is comprised of four goals for next year:



-Community and faith-based members walking a total of three million miles.

-Complete 500,000 Presidential Active Lifestyle Awards or establish exercise programs.

-Host 10,000 community gardens or farmer's markets nationally.

-1,000 new summer feeding sites nationally.



Several leaders of prominent faith groups expressed support for the goals, including Ted N. C. Wilson, president of the Adventist world church, who said he "resonate[d] with the issue personally." He holds a master's degree in public health from the church's Loma Linda University.



"The 'Let's Move' initiative is consistent with our church's approach to ministering to people physically, mentally, socially, and spiritually," Wilson said. "It has been shown that Seventh-day Adventists live longer because of their healthy lifestyle.



"Seventh-day Adventists have extensive educational and health systems in which we promote better health through practical, healthy lifestyles such as balanced nutrition, exercise, drinking enough water, adequate sunlight, abstaining from alcohol, tobacco, and illicit drugs, fresh air, appropriate rest and trust in divine power.



"We will promote balanced and healthful vegetarian meals for children and young people in our schools and summer Vacation Bible Schools, walking programs for young people, and possible use of periodic local produce markets on church properties.



"The Seventh-day Adventist Church will do its part to fulfill God's wish found in 3 John [chapter] 2 which indicates that God wants us to be in physical and spiritual health," Wilson said.



Katia Reinert, Health Ministries director for the church in North America, said members will be encouraged to:



-Walk 1 million miles through InStep for Life and other exercise initiatives. Health Ministries will aim to motivate 100 churches walking 10,000 miles a year and at least 10 people per church walking 2.5 miles a day.

-Engaging youth at churches and schools to establish vegetable gardens in the community, with the goal of one garden in each local conference.

-Encourage youth to receive the Presidential Active Lifestyle Awards; at least one award per Adventist school in North America.

-Establish summer feeding programs through Vacation Bible School, summer camps, and community service outreach initiatives.



"I think more than ever the time has come for God's message of healing and restoration to be heard," Reinert later said in a statement. "This is a wonderful opportunity to engage our churches and schools to make a positive impact for Christ in our communities on a national level."



For more information, resources and an initiative tool kit, visit www.letsmove.gov.

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Tea Party Leader: Restricting Voting to Property Owners 'Makes a Lot of Sense'

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Tea Party Leader: Restricting Voting to Property Owners 'Makes a Lot of Sense'Tea Party Leader: Restricting Voting to Property Owners 'Makes a Lot of Sense'Judson Phillips, president of prominent Tea Party group Tea Party Nation, has a terrific idea: "The Founding Fathers... put certain restrictions on... the right to vote... you had to be a property owner. And that makes a lot of sense."

Like a lot of people, I was pretty worried that after The Tea Party won the November elections and executed President Obama for treason, they'd stop peddling their bizarre, antiquated views of government in public. But I was wrong! Because Judson Phillips is out there, fighting the good fight for the landed gentry, on the Tea Party Nation radio station:


The Founding Fathers originally said, they put certain restrictions on who gets the right to vote. It wasn't you were just a citizen and you got to vote. Some of the restrictions, you know, you obviously would not think about today. But one of those was you had to be a property owner. And that makes a lot of sense, because if you're a property owner you actually have a vested stake in the community. If you're not a property owner, you know, I'm sorry but property owners have a little bit more of a vested interest in the community than non-property owners.


That whole property owners-only deal worked out pretty well back in the nineteenth century, didn't it? I mean, if you were a property owner! If you weren't (or if you were female, or black) well, no, it probably did not make so much sense, to you. But who cares what you think! How on earth could you have a vested interest in your community if you are renting, or, say, homeless?

So why not just add this proposal to the bizarre movement to repeal the 17th amendment, which would end the direct election of Senators? Hell, why not repeal all the amendments? And let's get a king in here, too! He'd look after the property-owners.


Send an email to Max Read, the author of this post, at max@gawker.com.

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Wikileaks chief said he has 5GB of secret docs on Bank of America

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Flashback: Wikileaks chief said he has 5GB of secret docs on Bank of America (exclusive)

julian assange  Flashback: Wikileaks chief said he has 5GB of secret docs on Bank of America (exclusive)

In an interview published Monday, Wikileaks founder Julian Assange revealed that his whistleblower website intends to publish a trove of secret documents exposing the corruption of a major American bank.


He declined to say which bank, but he offered what may be a telling hint last year as to who the megaleak will target.


"At the moment, for example, we are sitting on 5GB from Bank of America, one of the executive's hard drives," Assange told the technology site Computer World in an article published on October 9, 2009.


The Wikileaks chief continued: "Now how do we present that? It's a difficult problem. We could just dump it all into one giant Zip file, but we know for a fact that has limited impact. To have impact, it needs to be easy for people to dive in and search it and get something out of it."


The Internet has been abuzz with speculations as to which bank the famous -- or notorious -- website will expose. Although Assange's hint is far from a dead giveaway, his strategic approach to publishing secrets suggests that his next target may well be Bank of America, the nation's largest bank in terms of assets.

Speaking to Andy Greenberg of Forbes, Assange said the leak -- to be unveiled early in 2011 -- "will give a true and representative insight into how banks behave at the executive level in a way that will stimulate investigations and reforms."


It would blow the lid off an "ecosystem of corruption," he added.


The Australian-born Wikileaks chief predicted it would be as damaging as the Enron emails, which brought the powerful Houston-based energy company to its knees and led to its bankruptcy.


Assange has long maintained that he is sitting on far more secret documents than he can handle at any given moment, and is generally astute in terms of winning the maximum amount of media coverage for his leaks.


Having exposed explosive US secrets pertaining to the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, Wikileaks this week has put the US in damage control mode after revealing 250,000 classified diplomatic cables obtained from the Department of State without permission, exposing the modus operandi of American foreign relations and countless diplomatic secrets of world leaders.


Stephen C. Webster contributed to this story.

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