ARTICLES - HOT OFF THE FAGGOT

Woman run over by own car - twice

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Woman run over by own car - twice

Ambulance /Rex


Paramedics in Australia described a woman as "incredibly lucky" after she was run over by her own car - twice.


The 37-year-old had pulled into the driveway of her Melbourne home and, in her haste, failed to put on the handbrake.


The runaway car knocked the woman to the ground and ran over her abdomen and legs, reports the Melbourne Age.


As she lay injured on the driveway, the car continued rolling down the incline, hit a fence and rolled back towards her, running her over again.


Paramedic Craig Brooks said the woman was "incredibly lucky" despite the unfortunate chain of events.


"The woman said she couldn't move after being crushed the first time," he said.


"She definitely was fortunate that her injuries, whilst possibly being serious, they could have been much worse."


Intensive care paramedics took the woman to hospital where her condition was described as serious but stable.


 

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Mystery boom still confounding officials

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Mystery boom still confounding officials


The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

A tremendous boom that shattered the quiet of a Friday night in rural west Georgia continues to defy explanation.

Residents of Carroll, Douglas and Haralson counties heard it, and officials in all three counties tried to find what caused it.

They're still trying.

Douglas County Communication Director Wes Tallon said "911 calls lit up" the switchboard after the 9:45 p.m. noise rattled windows across a large area of west Georgia.

"There was no catastrophe, we know that," Tallon told the AJC Saturday morning.

Tallon, who lives in East Douglas, did not hear the blast. But plenty of people in the western area of the county, and in Carroll and Haralson counties farther to the west, did hear it.

Villa Rica authorities dispatched several police and fire units to the Mirror Lake subdivision when the sound was first reported, but they found no damage or even smoke.

"People all over the city heard the boom, but we couldn't find anything," a police department receptionist said late Friday.

The National Weather Service in Peachtree City had no natural explanation for it. And there were no obvious signs of damage on the ground.

An amateur astronomer who has published several books about sky-watching said one could probably rule out a natural phenomenon such as a meteorite.

"A really big meteor can make a sonic boom, but if it did it would make a big flash of light," said the author, Michael Covington, who helps run a computer research program at the University of Georgia when he's not star-gazing.

So far, no one has reported seeing a flash in the sky, and the National Weather Service says that the clouds that were moving over Villa Rica Friday evening were mostly gone by the time of the unexplained sound.

Tallon said no one who called 911 reported fires or explosions. And he said no utility companies reported trouble either.

"We’ve called everyone under the sun trying to figure this one out," said Tallon. "We used the process of elimination and the only thing we can think of is that it was a sonic boom of some kind. To be able to be heard and felt 30 miles away in Haralson County it had to be something like that."

But there is a problem with that theory, too.

A sonic boom is a large shock wave created by an aircraft that exceeds the speed of sound, about 761 mph. Since the retirement of the supersonic Concord, no civilian aircraft has been capable of reaching that speed, said Kathleen Bergen, a spokeswoman for the Federal Aviation Administration.

"Only military planes make sonic booms," she told the AJC Saturday afternoon.

Bergen checked with radar installations in the area at the request of the AJC and confirmed that there were no logs of military flights around the time of the boom Friday night. And there shouldn't have been, anyway.

Military planes are only supposed to fly fast in designated zones, Bergen said, and there are none in that part of Georgia.

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Huffington: Public Anger Is Beyond Left or Right

Calls Anger Felt by Middle Class Legitimate but Also Un-American, and Potentially Dangerous to Political Stability

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Huffington: Public Anger Is Beyond Left or Right

Calls Anger Felt by Middle Class Legitimate but Also Un-American, and Potentially Dangerous to Political Stability

By Jimmy So
  • Play CBS Video Video Huffington Defends American Perception

    Bob Schieffer spoke with authors Edmund Morris, Ron Chernow, Bob Woodward, and Arianna Huffington on what areas in the current state of the country differs and at sometimes echoes the early days of America's formation.

Author Arian Huffington on Face the Nation, Nov. 28, 2010.

Author Arian Huffington on Face the Nation, Nov. 28, 2010.  (CBS)

(CBS)  Author and Huffington Post co-founder Ariana Huffington said that the tremendous anger in the United States today is not a product of just the right or the left, and that neither political party stands to benefit from it.


Huffington, speaking in a panel of authors and journalists on CBS' "Face the Nation" Sunday, said people are sensing doom, and that this frustration can threaten American stability.



"It's beyond left and right anger. No party can claim that it really is going to ultimately benefit them because it's very unpredictable and potentially very dangerous for our political stability," Huffington said.


Her new book has the provocative title "Third World America," in which she describes the disillusionment faced by the nation.



"I wanted to sound the alarm because as an immigrant to this country, as somebody who has lived the American dream, I see dying all around me," she said.



"When we have two-thirds of Americans right now who expect their children to be worse off than they are, when we have America ranked number ten in upward mobility - behind France and Scandinavia countries and Spain - when we have 25 percent of young people out of work and 27 million people unemployed or underemployed, we know there is something fundamentally wrong.


"People are sensing that. That's why we have that sense of collective anxiety and fear about the future that in many profound ways is very un-American, because we are such a deeply optimistic country at heart."



Huffington also said that, despite the anger or disenfranchisement felt by many, she has seen an "incredible outpouring of compassion and creativity all around the country, that's using social media to do an enormous amount of good. What has been missing is the kind of magnifying glass that we in the media can put on all the creative stuff happening out in the country."



Pulitzer-prize winning biographer Edmund Morris, whose new book "Colonel Roosevelt" completes his trilogy on President Theodore Roosevelt, said "one can see the present in the past," when looking at the progressive middle class movement which erupted, "volcanically," in 1910:


"The passion that drew them together was rather similar to the passion that links the Tea Party people now," Morris said. "That is this feeling of exclusion - exclusion from the privileged interplay of a conservative Congress, financial institutions, the corporate elite. The middle class feels disenfranchised, angry, overtaxed and perplexed.


"This anger is something quite formidable. I would not be surprised if it doesn't crest over the next two years and give us real trouble in 2012."



Morris, who was born in Kenya and lived for many years in England before immigrating to the U.S. in 1968, said Americans have also become insular.


"I'm particularly sensitive to this, as I suppose Ariana is as an immigrant," Morris said. "I come from another culture. I can call myself legitimately an African-American. I'm aware of the fact that people elsewhere in the world think differently from us. I can sort of see 'us' Americans with their eyes.



"Not all that I see is attractive," Morris said. "I see an insular people who are insensitive to foreign sensibilities, who are lazy, obese, complacent, and increasingly perplexed as to why we are losing our place in the world, to people who are more dynamic than us and more disciplined."



Huffington, unlike Morris, defended the American people, and instead put the blame on institutions that are failing the middle class.


"There is a lot of legitimate anger out there. The sense that somehow the game is rigged, that if you are powerful enough, if you are running institutions that are too big to fail, you can get away with anything," she said.



"That lack of accountability, that lack of identifying what needs to fundamentally change and how we're going to go about turning our lives and our communities around is, I think, what is perpetuating that anger and putting us in that state that Edmund described, which is a very un-American state in very profound ways."



But journalist Bob Woodward, whose new book is "Obama's Wars," said American politics always had an element of anger in it.



"If you look at the Declaration of Independence, two-thirds of it is a list of angry grievances against King George III," Woodward said. "I think it's a matter of political leaders finding a way to use this in a constructive way. I think that's quite possible. I think the leaders are out there. I wouldn't give up on them just because there are divisions.



"I think now we have a lot of conflict, a lot of disagreement. I don't see hate in our politics," he said.



Ron Chernow, the author of "Washington: A Life," a new 904-page biography of George Washington, agreed. He said the founding of America was divisive and turbulent.



"It was every bit as nasty and partisan as things are today. George Washington, for instance, was accused of everything as president from plotting to restore the monarchy to having been a British double agent during the Revolutionary War," Chernow said.
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BBC News Video - Colorado coal train wreck was 'like a bomb going off'

A freight train carrying hundreds of tonnes of coal has derailed in Colorado.



No-one was hurt, although 31 wagons were wrecked in the crash, each carrying 200 tonnes of coal.



The BBC's Juliet Dunlop reports.


BBC News Video - Global Warming? Wales' coldest night in 89 years as more snow is forecast

Drivers across the UK are being warned to take extra care as the working week begins amid further heavy snow and ice.



Parts of eastern England and Scotland already under thick snow could get up to 25cm (10in) more by Monday morning.



Plummeting temperatures overnight will lead to icy roads in many places, while strengthening winds will cause snow to drift and make it feel even colder.



On Saturday night temperatures in Wales and Northern Ireland fell to the lowest on record for November, reaching -18C (0F) and -9.5C (15F) respectively.



The BBC's Alexandra Mckenzie reports.


Swiss voters back expulsion of foreign criminals

Swiss voters have backed a referendum proposal for the automatic expulsion of non-Swiss citizens for certain crimes.

Amplify’d from www.bbc.co.uk

Swiss voters back expulsion of foreign criminals

Swiss voters have backed a referendum proposal for the automatic expulsion of non-Swiss citizens for certain crimes.

Detail of poster put out by Swiss People's Party. It reads: Ivan S, rapist and soon to be Swiss?
Opponents say the SVP's posters are racist

Around 53% agreed that those convicted of crimes ranging from murder to benefit fraud should be deported.

Fabrice Moscheni, of the right-wing Swiss People's Party (SVP), which drew up the measure, said "people we welcome in Switzerland should respect the rules of this country".

But opponents said it was another example of increasing xenophobia.

The SVP was behind last year's referendum that imposed a ban on the building of Islamic minarets. That decision was condemned by human rights groups and foreign governments.

The SVP says immigrants to Switzerland are disproportionately responsible for crime. It points to the fact that more than 60% of prison inmates do not have Swiss nationality.

But opponents say the measures go too far. The children of immigrants do not automatically get Swiss citizenship, so the rule would mean sending some people who were born and brought up in Switzerland to countries they know nothing of.

Convicts would serve their sentence in Switzerland first and then be deported without appeal.

The Swiss government believes mandatory deportation could violate Switzerland's obligations under international law not to send people to countries that practise torture or execution.

It advised voters to reject the proposal, and it put forward an alternative system which would allow deportation for certain crimes, but which would assess cases individually. That was defeated.

'Statement against foreigners'

The SVP has been accused of using racist posters that depict certain ethnic groups as criminal.

The Swiss political analyst Georg Lutz says the SVP's wider strategy is to capitalise on Swiss worries that the foreign population is too big.

"This vote is not about some complex legal issues about how to deal with certain types of criminal foreigners," he says.

"What most people will want to do in this vote is make a statement against foreigners, and that is the central motivation."

A second referendum, which asked the Swiss to approve a minimum tax rate of 22% for people earning more than 250,000 francs (£160,000; 190,000 euros), was rejected.

The Socialist Party said it would be more just, but the government and centre-right parties said it would harm the economy by making the country less appealing to foreign businessmen.

Related stories


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Police: Pa. Couple Hid 5 Children From Society - ABC News

From my hometown!


Ore. Fire Raises Muslims' Fears of Attack Backlash - ABC News


Palestinian official: Western Wall not Jewish

Amplify’d from www.usatoday.com



Palestinian official: Western Wall not Jewish
Backdropped by the Dome of the Rock, Israelis and tourists pray at the Western Wall in Jerusalem's old city on November 21, 2010. Israel's cabinet backed plans to invest millions of shekels in a five-year project to develop the Western Wall plaza, in a project branded by the Palestinians as
By Gali Tibbon, AFP/Getty Images
Backdropped by the Dome of the Rock, Israelis and tourists pray at the Western Wall in Jerusalem's old city on November 21, 2010. Israel's cabinet backed plans to invest millions of shekels in a five-year project to develop the Western Wall plaza, in a project branded by the Palestinians as "illegal."
By Diaa Hadid, Associated Press
JERUSALEM — An official Palestinian report claiming that a key Jewish holy site —Jerusalem's Western Wall — has no religious significance to Jews has evoked an angry response from Israelis, threatening to further inflame tensions over the disputed city.

2nd Ld-Writethru

Decades of archaeology have shown that the Western Wall, the holiest place where Jews can pray, was a retaining wall of the compound where the two biblical Jewish Temples stood 20 centuries ago. The Al-Aqsa Mosque compound, Islam's third-holiest site, is built atop the ruins.

The latest claim about the Temples, echoing positions taken in the past by Palestinian leaders including the late Yasser Arafat, underlined the deeply held, conflicting beliefs that must be untangled if a peace accord is to be reached between Israel and the Palestinians.

Al-Mutawakil Taha, deputy minister of information in the Western-backed Palestinian Authority that rules the West Bank, told The Associated Press on Wednesday that his five-page study published on a Palestinian government website reflected the official Palestinian position.

Part of the report disputes that the Western Wall was a retaining wall of the Temple compound, discarding centuries of documentation and archaeology.

"This wall has never been a part of what is called the Jewish Temple," the report claimed. "However, it was Islamic tolerance which allowed the Jews to stand before it and cry over its loss."

The report concludes that since Jews have no claim to the area, it is holy Muslim territory and must be part of Palestinian Jerusalem.

Both sides say the clashing narratives are political. Israel captured Jordanian' occupied east Jerusalem in the 1967 Mideast war after Jordan joined in the Arab states attack on Israel, and annexed it. Palestinians claim east Jerusalem, including the Old City, as the capital of their future state.

"Of course it's a political position," Taha said.

Taha said he wrote the report after Israeli officials on Sunday approved a five-year renovation plan for the Western Wall area.

Israeli government spokesman Mark Regev described the report as "incitement" by denying the historic Jewish connection to Jerusalem.

Einat Wilf, a legislator from the moderate Israeli Labor Party, a part of the governing coalition, said Palestinians "are stupidly trying again and again to somehow create an alternative reality in which the Jewish people are a strangers in this land."

After Israel seized control of east Jerusalem, it cleared away shacks built next to the Western Wall and built a wide, open plaza there.

In contrast, Israel turned over administration of the hilltop itself, with the Al-Aqsa Mosque and Dome of the Rock shrine, to the Muslim Supreme Council, or Waqf, while Israel maintained overall security control.

Plans that won preliminary approval in earlier, failed peace negotiations envisioned dividing Jerusalem along ethnic lines — leaving Israel in control of Jewish neighborhoods while Arab sections would be part of the Palestinian state — but no formula emerged for the disputed hilltop.

Copyright 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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Where's Molly? Younger Sister Who Disappeared 47 Years Earlier

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Where's Molly?

It Wasn't Until His Parents Died That Jeff Daly Learned What Happened to His Younger Sister Who Disappeared 47 Years Earlier

Jeff Daly and his sister Molly in the 1950s, before she disappeared from his family.

Jeff Daly and his sister Molly in the 1950s, before she disappeared from his family.  (CBS)

(CBS)  "Where's Molly?" is the poignant question a little boy used to ask many years ago. The answer to that question was a long time coming. Our Cover Story is reported by John Blackstone:
If a picture is worth a thousand words, then the pictures of the Daly Family in the 1950s tell the story of a typical American family: The handsome husband, the perfect wife, and the happy kids.



But then, the pictures change . . . and a family secret was born.


"I would often look at a photo, and I'd say, 'Tell me again who's this,'" said Jeff Daly. "'Well, that was Molly.' 'Where Molly now?' 'She's not here anymore.'"



When older brother Jeff was 6, Molly disappeared. For a while Jeff asked constantly: "Where's Molly?"



He stopped asking after being told repeatedly by his mother he had to forget his baby sister.



"I was fairly, you know, fairly well brainwashed," Daly said. "I think I can say that Molly never crossed my mind for 20 years, maybe 30 years. I mean, she effectively had been shoved away. I'm told I can't do anything more. So, when I hit my teenage [years], my 20s, my 30s, I never really thought about Molly."



That is, until someone else from his past came back into his life.


Cindy Thompson grew up with Jeff in Astoria, ore. The two even dated in middle school. They met again, in 1994, after their 25th high school reunion.


"I had not seen him in probably 25 or 30 years," said Cindy. "And just naturally thought that he had contact with his sister."



"And one of the first things she said to me was, 'How's your mom? How's your dad? And what's Molly doing?' And I almost fell off the chair," Jeff said. "'How, how do you remember Molly?'"



"I said, 'Everybody knew about Molly,'" Cindy said. When Jeff asked her what she knew about his sister, Cindy replied, "Well, she was sent away. I don't know where she went. And I never heard what happened to her. Is she still alive?"



Jeff didn’t know. He said it almost ended his relationship with Cindy right there: "Cindy was so upset saying, 'How could you not know where your sister is? How do you not know how she's doing?'"



Jeff and Cindy's relationship grew, and they got married. But it would take another ten years before the mystery of Molly's disappearance began to unravel.


And it was only after Jeff's parents, Sue and Jack, passed away . . .


"When my father died, Cindy said, 'Time's up. I'm gonna find Molly,'" Jeff recalled. "And we actually found in his wallet a little card that was sort of a cheat sheet. It had his parents' birthdays and Social Security numbers. It had mine. It had Molly's name, Molly's Social Security number and her birth date."


Turns out, Jack Daly also kept a file hidden away about his only daughter. And within 24 hours of Jack's death, the mystery of "Where's Molly" was solved.


Cindy Daly started making phone calls, and on her third call she found the group home in Hillsboro, just outside of Portland, where Molly was actually living.


(CBS)
Three days later, Jeff Daly reunited with the sister he last saw when she was just shy of her third birthday.


Molly was now a 49-year-old woman.


(Left: Jeff Daly and his sister Molly today.)



"I wasn't sure what to expect," Jeff said. "But the first time I saw her, it was pain. I felt pained that I hadn't seen her. I knew that I was wrong."



"Knew that you were wrong not trying to find her sooner?" asked Blackstone.


"Yeah, that here, indeed, is this individual that has personality, and she's my sister. And I let her go for 47 years without ever being part of our life."


Because Molly couldn't tell Jeff and Cindy about those missing 47 years, they set about filling in the details, which brought them to the institution where Molly was sent back in 1957: the Oregon Fairview Home.



Fairview has now been closed for almost a decade. The buildings where Molly and thousands of other children lived are in decay. But a film that shows what life was like here in the 1950s gave Cindy and Jeff a disturbing look at how Molly spent her childhood here.



(CBS)
And the last thing Jeff and Cindy expected to see in the beginning of "Fairview 1959" was Molly herself, at age 5.


"When we saw that, we crumbled," Jeff said.


At the time, the film was meant to be a testament to the state-of-the-art care given to patients with intellectual disabilities.



Fairview, founded in 1907, was originally named the "Oregon State Institution for the Feeble-Minded." And it was hardly alone. By 1962, there were 123 state institutions around the country.


James Trent, a professor at Gordon College and the author of a history of America's treatment of those once called "mentally retarded," says Molly's parents undoubtedly acted on what was common advice in the 1950s.



"After World War II in the early '50s, you increasingly had physicians who would tell parents to put their children almost immediately in institutions after they were born if they had an apparent disability," Trent said.


"Most physicians would tell them for the good of the other children in the family, for the good of the stability of the family, it was best to put the disabled child in a state institution," said Trent.


Jeff Daly says that was the way it was done with his sister: "The doctors told my parents, 'It's okay. Let Molly go to Salem. She'll be in an institution. She'll be better off there.'"



But as the Fairview film painfully illustrates, Molly was not better off.



Jeff says that while Molly had some minor disabilities, he believes that when she went into the institution she became "institutionally retarded."


"The environment created her, forced her into being what everybody else in an institution was, which were people surviving," he said.


In combing through Molly's records, the Dalys discovered that, despite the family mandate to forget her, through the years, Molly did have some family visitors.



"My mom went there once from what we understood," Jeff said. "We just found a little note in her records that mother had visited. But, other than that, she didn't visit."



"Was it shame that kept your mother from doing this?" Blackstone asked. "Was it just that she didn't want to acknowledge even Molly's existence?"



"I just have a hard time understanding," Jeff said. "To send her away and say, 'No more conversation. She is not part of our lives. We're not gonna talk to her about it.' So, whether that's shame? It's a horrible dilemma I think that my mother had to go through."



And at first, Molly's father visited often, until Fairview's staff advised him to stop, because Molly would become inconsolable after he left.


But Jack Daly found an ingenious way to continue seeing his daughter . . .


(CBS)
"He did go back," said Jeff. "It was only a way that I suppose my dad could have figured out. He went back as a clown."



Jeff's father - an executive at the Bumblbee Seafood Company - founded a troupe called the Astoria Clowns in 1957, the very year Molly was sent away. The troupe traveled around Oregon, marching in parades and entertaining children wherever they went.


And they visited Fairview.


"He was able to have this relationship with Molly in disguise: Painted face, an orange wig, wearing the clown outfit," said Jeff. "But he was able to still get back there and see his daughter."



By profession, Jeff was a freelance cameraman who sometimes worked for CBS News. Now, he's made a film called "Where's Molly" about the search for his sister. He hopes his story encourages others to reunite with siblings lost because of the wisdom of earlier times.



He's failed, however, to convince his own younger brother, Tim, to spend time with Molly.


"I've not only lost my brother now, but, he's missing - he's missing out on a great opportunity to have a sister," Jeff said.


For Jeff, finding his sister has done much more than solve a mystery . . . according to his wife Cindy, he's changed immensely. "He has, as one person said it, 'filled a hole in his soul.' And it really did."



"I have family," Jeff said. "I've lost some family. But I've got family. And I think that the family that I have now needs me, and I'm glad to be there for her. That's the beauty of it. It's a lovely reward to be able to give back and to take care of your little sister."





For more info:

wheresmolly.net
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