Menu



error This forum is not active, and new posts may not be made in it.
PromoteFacebookTwitter!
Luis Miguel Goitizolo

1162
61587 Posts
61587
Invite Me as a Friend
Top 25 Poster
Person Of The Week
RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
3/25/2018 5:52:56 PM

Awful New Details About The Ohio Dad Who Broke His 3-Month-Old Daughter's Ribs Multiple Times Because He Wanted A Son

Emily Blackwood



An Ohio man is behind bars after police said he broke his infant daughter's ribs multiple times.

According to WLWT, the 3-month-old's mother took her to the hospital this past month for a traumatic brain injury along with multiple rib fractures. Officials say they were in multiple stages of healing.

“The child had over 28 rib fractures of varying ages, meaning they had happened at different times,” prosecutor David Fornshell said.

The infant girl's father, 33-year-old Jason Bittner, allegedly told the doctors that the child's injuries were caused by an accident. But they believed her to be a victim of abuse and called the police.



Fornshell revealed that Bittner, who's a chiropractor, was disappointed that his daughter was "fussy." He was also upset that she wasn't a boy.

Fornshell revealed that Bittner, who's a chiropractor, was disappointed that his daughter was "fussy." He was also upset that she wasn't a boy.

His company's website indicates that he and his wife have two daughters.

Bittner is reportedly seen as a pillar of his community, and Fornshell said that people who know him "will be shocked at what comes out at trial."

“Mr. Bittner is a medical professional,” the prosecutor said. “By all accounts he’s a member of good standing in the community he’s active in his church and I think people think that people like that are incapable of committing acts of child abuse or even domestic violence and those kind of situations but unfortunately those types of acts are committed by all manner of people.”

Though she was in the intensive care unit, the 3-month-old has been released from the hospital.

Bittner is facing one charge of assault and two counts of endangering children. The second county is reportedly for failing to get his infant daughter medical attention.

He posted bond Mar. 21.


read more


(Yahoo)


"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

+1
Luis Miguel Goitizolo

1162
61587 Posts
61587
Invite Me as a Friend
Top 25 Poster
Person Of The Week
RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
3/26/2018 10:25:27 AM

Fitbit Recalls Due to Rashes. Reports of Dizziness, Erratic Pulse, Nausea, Pain, Headaches. Fitbits Operate Using WiFi. Whoomp! There It Is.

"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

+1
Luis Miguel Goitizolo

1162
61587 Posts
61587
Invite Me as a Friend
Top 25 Poster
Person Of The Week
RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
3/26/2018 10:46:46 AM

Trump issues order supporting ban on many transgender troops, defers to Pentagon on new restrictions



The Pentagon had been grappling for months with how to change its policy after President Trump unexpectedly tweeted last summer that he was banning all transgender people from serving in the military. (Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP/Getty Images)



President Trump issued an order late Friday that supports a ban on many transgender troops, deferring to a new Pentagon plan that essentially cancels a policy adopted by the Obama administration.

The decision revokes a full ban that Trump issued last summer but disqualifies U.S. troops who have had gender reassignment surgery, as recommended by Defense Secretary Jim Mattis.

“By its very nature, military service requires sacrifice,” Mattis wrote in a memo to the president that was released Friday. “The men and women who serve voluntarily accept limitations on their personal liberties — freedom of speech, political activity, freedom of movement — in order to provide the military lethality and readiness necessary to ensure American citizens enjoy their personal freedoms to the fullest extent.”

Current transgender service members who have not undergone reassignment surgery should be allowed to stay, as long as they have been medically stable for 36 consecutive months in their biological sex before joining the military and are able to deploy across the world, Mattis recommended.

Mattis recommended that anyone diagnosed with gender dysphoria, the condition of wanting to transition gender, since the Obama administration ended the Pentagon’s longtime ban on transgender service in 2016 may continue to serve. The decision amounts to a “grandfathering” of those affected by the new policy.

The new plan will be challenged in court, just as the full ban that Trump issued last summer was, in at least four separate cases that are still ongoing. Federal judges allowed transgender service members to continue serving under the old ban and permitted transgender recruits to join the military as well.

The Justice Department filed a copy of Mattis’s recommendations in at least one of those legal battles Friday.

“In service to the ideological goals of the Trump-Pence base, the Pentagon has distorted the science on transgender health to prop up irrational and legally untenable discrimination that will erode military readiness,” said Aaron Belkin, who has studied transgender issues for the Palm Center, a think tank that had worked with the Obama administration in repealing the previous ban. “There is no evidence to support a policy that bars from military service patriotic Americans who are medically fit and able to deploy. Our troops and our nation deserve better.”

In his memo to the president, Mattis specifically challenged the thinking of the Obama administration when it repealed the ban in 2016. Mattis said that he found a Rand Corp. study — commissioned by the Pentagon under Obama that became a backbone of the repeal process — to be flawed.

“It referred to limited and heavily caveated data to support its conclusions, glossed over the impacts of health care costs, readiness and unit cohesion, and erroneously relied on the selective experiences of foreign militaries with different operational requirements than our own,” Mattis wrote. “In short, this policy issue has proven more complex than the prior administration or RAND assumed.”

The new direction comes after months of the Pentagon’s grappling with how to change its policy after Trump unexpectedly tweeted July 26 that he was banning all transgender people from serving in the military. The president, without any plan in place, cited the “tremendous medical costs and disruption” that he believed transgender military service would cause, and said that he had consulted with “my Generals and military experts.”

A day later, Marine Gen. Joseph F. Dunford Jr., the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, released a memo effectively stopping the military from making any changes until a new policy was adopted, and Mattis backed the move.

In August, Trump issued a presidential memorandum providing more detail. He accused the Obama administration of allowing transgender military service without identifying a “sufficient basis” that doing so would not “hinder military effectiveness and lethality, disrupt unit cohesion, or tax military resources,” and he directed Mattis to have the Pentagon adopt a new ban similar to the military’s former policy by Friday.

The Obama administration began allowing transgender people to serve openly in the military in June 2016, following a review that dragged out months longer than expected amid internal conflict in the Pentagon over how the change would be made. Until then, the Pentagon considered gender dysphoria a disqualifying mental illness.

In removing the ban, then-Defense Secretary Ashton B. Carter stopped the military from involuntarily separating anyone in the service, and gave the service branches a year to iron out how they would begin processing transgender recruits. A year later, Mattis delayed allowing transgender recruits for an additional six months as the deadline neared, saying the issue needed more study.

Trump’s tweets came a few weeks later.

Federal judges required the military to allow transgender recruits beginning Jan. 1, and the Pentagon signaled in December that it would not stand in the way of the courts’ rulings. Instead, it issued new policy guidance to recruits to explain how to enlist transgender men and women, and stated in a policy paper that the guidance “shall remain in effect until expressly revoked.”


(The Washington Post)

"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

+1
Luis Miguel Goitizolo

1162
61587 Posts
61587
Invite Me as a Friend
Top 25 Poster
Person Of The Week
RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
3/26/2018 5:00:27 PM
‘Never again!’ Students demand action against gun violence in nation’s capital


March for Our Lives brought hundreds of thousands of people from across the nation to Washington on March 24. Here's some of what you missed at the event.

"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

+1
Luis Miguel Goitizolo

1162
61587 Posts
61587
Invite Me as a Friend
Top 25 Poster
Person Of The Week
RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
3/26/2018 5:41:05 PM

Marchers Across the US United in Plan for Pro-gun Politicians: ‘Vote Them Out’

By

Marchers across the US united in plan for pro-gun politicians: ‘Vote them out’

Thousands of people rallied in Washington DC and other US cities on Saturday, expressing clear outlines for action on gun reform

For four minutes and 25 seconds, 18-year-old Emma Gonzalez held a crowd of hundreds of thousands in the nation’s capital in near total silence. With tears rolling down her cheeks, intermittently closing her eyes, the teenager’s stillness told its own story.

In the moments before, she had called out the name of each of her fellow students and teachers gunned down five weeks ago. By the time she broke her silence Gonzalez had been on stage for six minutes and 20 seconds, the same time it took a gunman to claim 17 lives at her school, Marjory Stoneman Douglas High, in Parkland, Florida.

“No one could comprehend the devastating aftermath or how far this would reach or where this would go,” she said. “For those who still can’t comprehend because they refuse to, I’ll tell you where it went: right into the ground, six feet deep.”

That a teenager unknown to the country until a little over a month ago could command such quiet respect and deep introspection among a rally of this size illustrates just how powerful the student-led movement to rise from the Parkland massacre has become.

Hundreds of thousands of people attend the March for Our Lives rally in Washington DC Saturday.
Pinterest
Hundreds of thousands of people attend the March for Our Lives rally in Washington DC Saturday. Photograph: Evelyn Hockstein for the Guardian


4:04
March for Our Lives: five of the most powerful speeches – video


But organizers in Washington were keen to make this centrepiece rally an inclusive event, with many of the most impassioned speeches made by young gun violence victims from other areas of the US.

Seventeen-year-old Edna Chavez, from Manual Arts High in south Los Angeles, walked onto to stage with her right hand clenched in a first held above her head. With poise and indignation, she told the story of how her older brother was shot dead when she was a young child.

“I have lived in south Los Angeles my entire life and have lost many loved ones to gun violence. This is normal. It’s normal to the point that I learned to duck from bullets before I learned how to read,” she said, asking the crowd to chant her brother’s name: Ricardo.

“It was a day like any other day. The sunset was going down on south central. You hear pops thinking they were fireworks. They weren’t pops. You see the melanin on your brother’s skin turn grey.”

Alexandria, Virginia student Naomi Wadler, speaks during the March For Our Lives rally in Washington DC.
Pinterest
Alexandria, Virginia student Naomi Wadler, speaks during the March For Our Lives rally in Washington DC. Photograph: Nicholas Kamm/AFP/Getty Images


Naomi Wadler, from Alexandria, Virginia, spoke with a fluency and eloquence that seemed beyond her 11 years of age. Wadler told the marchers she was present to “acknowledge the African-American girls whose stories don’t make the front page of every national newspaper, whose stories don’t lead on the evening news. The African-American women who are simply statistics instead of vibrant, beautiful girls full of potential.”

Teenagers from Chicago, New York as well as victims of school shooting massacres in Sandy Hook also addressed the rally.

“I’m here to speak for those Chicago youth who feel their voices have been silenced for far too long,” said Trevon Bosley, 19. “And I’m here to speak on behalf of everyone who believes a child getting shot and killed in Chicago or any other city is still a not-acceptable norm.”

It was not just Emma Gonzalez who observed silence on the day that hundreds of thousands descended on Washington. Donald Trump, spending the weekend at his members’ club in South Florida, offered no comment or tweet on the marchers.

Demonstrators participate in the March for Our Lives rally on Saturday in Los Angeles, California.
Pinterest
Demonstrators participate in the March for Our Lives rally on Saturday in Los Angeles, California. Photograph: Sarah Morris/Getty Images


Instead, the White House issued a short statement before the rally began applauding the “courageous young Americans exercising their first amendment rights”, the right to free speech.

Trump, who had once seemed amenable to some of the demands for gun control echoing from the Parkland tragedy, has since reneged under pressure from the NRA. The president has instead pushed arming teachers with firearms to fend off attackers.


That proposal was repeatedly booed by those assembled in Washington.

“Arming teachers will not work,” 17 year-old Chavez. “More security in our schools does not work. Zero tolerance police do not work. They make us feel like criminals. We should feel supported & empowered in our schools.”

As the rally closed, marchers melted onto the streets of downtown DC, still chanting what had become one of the major themes of the rally, one that seems likely to rattle nerves a short distance away on Capitol Hill: “Vote them out.”


(goldenageofgaia.com)

"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

+1


facebook
Like us on Facebook!