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Interesting News Article Thread (Read 737766 times)
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Re: Interesting News Article Thread
Reply #600 - Apr 5th, 2007 at 11:35am
 
Quote:
London's 'white slaves'

By Caroline Davies
Last Updated: 2:05am BST 05/04/2007

As Britain commemorates the 200th anniversary of the abolition of the slave trade, new research traces the stories of the first batch of slaves sent to the colonies in America - not black Africans but white children from London.

A new book, White Cargo, tells how children as young as 10 were swept off the city's streets and sent with convicts to work in America several months before the first shipment of African captives arrived in 1619. Authors Don Jordan and Michael Walsh say hundreds of homeless children were rounded up and held in the Bridewell, a workhouse and prison near Blackfriars Bridge.

But, to disguise the fact these children were to be enslaved, officials sold it as giving the underprivileged a new life. In truth, the City of London wanted to get rid of their street children while the merchants behind the company colonising Virginia wanted slave labour.


Calling Al Sharpton!  Calling Al Sharpton!

-b0b
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Re: Interesting News Article Thread
Reply #601 - Apr 5th, 2007 at 1:35pm
 
Where's my apology and repreations!?  Also I don't want to see the Union Jack anymore...it's an old symbol of my *sniffle* time of oppression.

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Re: Interesting News Article Thread
Reply #602 - Apr 5th, 2007 at 2:38pm
 
Quote:
SEATTLE - She met him at the mall, the older teen orphaned by the terrible deaths of his parents. They talked on the phone and went on a date, and soon her family let him move in.

Now a year later, the family has received stunning news from police: Mark, the 14-year-old's boyfriend, isn't an orphan, or even a boy at all. He is a 30-year-old woman.

And that 30-year-old woman beat and sexually molested the young, trusting girl, according to court papers filed this week. Other acquaintances claim the woman scammed them out of money while posing as Mark.

"They were all surprised that this individual was not who she said she was, both in name and sex," Everett Police Sgt. Robert Goetz said Wednesday.

Lorelei Corpuz was charged Wednesday with rape of a child in the third degree. Corpuz is being held on $150,000 bail, and is expected to make her first court appearance on Thursday afternoon. Corpuz was arrested Sunday after an officer ran a check on her Honda, then parked at an Everett gas station, to see if it was stolen.

The check pulled up an outstanding traffic warrant naming Mark Villanueva, also known as Lorelei Corpuz. The officer had arrested Corpuz in January on another warrant and recognized her. Corpuz was arrested on the warrant, and the officer asked the girl in the passenger seat how she knew the suspect.

"She indicated it was her boyfriend," Goetz said. "When the 14-year-old victim said that, that obviously piqued the concern of the officer."

Police are not identifying the girl except by her initials, T.N.

Officer Don de Nevens wrote in a probable cause statement that while Corpuz lived with the girl, the two had kissed on the lips, and Corpuz performed oral sex on the girl. About three months ago, Corpuz had intercourse with the girl; the girl told police she did not see what Corpuz had placed inside her.

"Over the year that suspect lived with victim, the suspect never let victim see her/his private parts and victim always thought that suspect was male until officer informed her otherwise," de Nevens wrote.

The relationship was also abusive, de Nevens wrote. At one point, the girl's father went to Alaska for work, and Corpuz began striking her once a week. Twice, Corpuz bit her on the back, leaving a scar, the probable cause statement said.

"Every time I questioned her she would get really mad," said the alleged victim. "So I just stopped caring."

The two met at the Alderwood Mall in September 2005, police said, and "Mark" told the girl that his mother had died of cancer and that his father committed suicide. The girl's parents believed his story and let Corpuz move into their home.

Family members told police they never suspected Corpuz was a woman in the year she lived in the home. The alleged victim says she no longer has feeling for Corpus now that she knows the truth, but admits she used to.

"Well he was really nice and I didn't really have anybody to talk to because my mom and dad are always at work," she said. "He talked to me."

Meanwhile, two young boys claaim Corpuz scammed out of money. The two boys, who are cousins, say they befriended who they thought was Mark out of sympathy.

"Sometimes he was crying, telling me people were after him, that his girlfriend hit him, that his parents are dead," said one of the boys, "Devante".

They boys sad Corpuz suckered them into handing over their ATM cards, then withdrew more than $1,000 from their savings accounts.

"He took all the money out. He was just making stuff up pretty much- she," Devante said.

"Gabe", the other boy, said he believed Corpuz was a boy.

"It could be convincing she was a boy because she cut her hair short and she could act like a boy," he said.

The boys' grandmother, Cindy Woods, says she's still in shock.

"He scammed my grandchildren, he scammed juveniles. And in the process, he scammed me," she said.

Corpuz has not been charged in connection with the alleged theft.

Booking records list Corpuz as 5-foot-3 and 140 pounds. Her arrest was first reported Wednesday in The Herald newspaper of Everett.

www.komotv.com/news/6879882.html


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Chlorine needs to be spread in a pretty wide swath over that whole family.  Letting your 14-year old daughter's boyfriend move in?  What the heck are they smoking up there?

-b0b
("...Lesbian transvestite pedophilic convict in love tryst with underage teen, next on Jerry Springer.")
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Re: Interesting News Article Thread
Reply #603 - Apr 17th, 2007 at 2:34pm
 
Quote:
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/04/17/business/17construct.html?ei=5090&en=1da5de5a8...

April 17, 2007
Housing Slump Takes a Toll on Illegal Immigrants
By EDUARDO PORTER

HURON, Calif. — Some of the casualties of America’s housing bust are easy to spot up and down California’s Central Valley.

From Fresno to Sacramento, big tangles of wire and PVC pipes clutter vacant lots in silent subdivisions, waiting for houses to be built — some day. Dozens of “For Sale” signs already dot the lawns across new residential communities. And right next to the ubiquitous billboards from builders are fresh signs offering homeowners help to avoid foreclosure.

But another set of losers is less visible: the immigrant workers, mostly illegal, who rode the construction boom while it lasted and now find jobs on building sites few and far between.

Offering more than $10 an hour as well as new skills and a shot at upward mobility, construction provided many illegal immigrants the best job they ever had, a step up from the backbreaking work reserved for those toiling without legal authorization, which in the Central Valley mostly meant pruning and picking in fruit and vegetable fields.

The growing presence of illegal immigrants in home building, mostly working for small labor contractors, might help explain why government statistics have recorded only a small decline in construction employment, despite the collapse in residential investment.

“Technically they don’t fire them,” said Myrna Martínez, coordinator for the Fresno office of the American Friends Service Committee, a nonprofit organization working on social assistance projects for immigrant workers. “They just tell them that there is no more work.”

As building jobs have grown scarce, many of the workers who left farm labor a few years ago are returning to where they came from. They can be seen once again hunched in clusters under the unremitting sun, cutting heads of lettuce or slicing off spears of asparagus for minimum wage, clinging to the hope that home building will resume again.

“If another construction job comes up, I’ll go there,” said Cresencio B., a former Mexico City policeman who arrived illegally in the United States in 1991.

Cresencio B. toiled on farms up and down the West Coast until he got a job cutting wood segments on a construction crew two years ago, making about $11 an hour. But building jobs dried up in October. In early April, he was in a tomato field nearby, brandishing his hoe for $7.50 an hour, clearing out the weeds and the leftover garlic sprouts from last year’s crop.

(The Times is using only the first name and last initial of the workers.)

“There are quite a few in this situation,” Ms. Martínez said. “This construction boom that started five or six years ago just suddenly started to fall apart.”

Illegal immigrants played a big if quiet part on the supply side of America’s housing boom. According to the Pew Hispanic Center, a research organization in Washington, immigrants from Mexico and other Latin American countries account for about one in five construction workers. Those who arrived since 2000 — who are likely to be unlawfully in the United States because they had virtually no way of immigrating legally — account for an estimated 7 percent of the construction work force.

They were mostly pulled in by the building frenzy of the first half of the decade. According to the analysis by the Pew Hispanic Center, based on census data, Hispanic immigrants took 60 percent of the million new construction jobs created from 2004 to 2006. Those recently arrived took nearly half.

While there are no equivalent statistics at the state or local level, a glance at a construction crew anywhere in the valley confirms the overwhelming immigrant share. “There are only Mexicans,” said Adrián L., an illegal immigrant from Oaxaca who does interior work on homes here. “Now not even the supervisors are American.”

Like no other job, construction allowed many immigrants a shot at the American dream. After more than five years in construction, Adrián L. was making $25 to $35 an hour leading a 15-strong team for a company building new tract homes in the Central Valley.

Farther north, construction work also allowed José Manuel J. to aspire to a better life. An illegal immigrant from Guanajuato State in Mexico, he left the fields to sweep construction sites eight years ago. By last year he was making $25 an hour running a small crew laying roofs. He got a mortgage and bought a home in the United States. He bought land and built a house in Mexico.

For Cresencio B. a construction job meant his wife, Marta M., could afford to stay home and care for their 2-year-old son, Ángel.

But when home builders stopped building, they stopped calling. Hoe in hand, Marta M. is back at work these days, hacking alongside her husband at the weeds in a tomato field from 5 a.m. to 5 p.m. Ángel is left in the care of his 18-year-old sister.

Adrián L. and José Manuel J. have resisted going back into the fields, making do with piecemeal work: putting up a roof here, re-tiling a bathroom there. But they are near the end of the line. “If work doesn’t pick up,” José Manuel J. said, “in May I am going to have to go to pick in the cherry crop.”

The nation’s great housing bust has not shown up so far in official employment data. According to the Labor Department, employment in residential construction has declined by only 28,000 jobs — or some 3 percent — since its peak last fall.

“It is sort of surprising that construction employment numbers haven’t gone down more already,” said David F. Seiders, chief economist at the National Association of Home Builders. “I’m not sure about the quality of the data.”

The statistics seem to belie the debacle that has overwhelmed home building. In February, there were 15 percent fewer homes under construction and 27 percent fewer homes started than in the corresponding month of 2006. In California, 42 percent fewer building permits for new residential units were issued in February than a year earlier.

“Because we have fewer homes sold, we have slowed down the building of various phases in some communities,” said Joel H. Rassman, chief financial officer for the home builder Toll Brothers, which expects to deliver 6,000 to 7,000 homes in 2007, down from 8,600 in 2006. “We have delayed the start of some communities, and we are letting less work out to our contractors.”

Mr. Seiders suggested that reported employment might not be falling as starkly as other statistics because builders do not employ construction workers directly. Instead, they use subcontractors to build different parts of a development. These often use labor contractors, who may also turn to subcontractors to fill their crews.

José Carlos J., José Manuel’s nephew, has not formally lost his job as a roofer. But the contractor he works for has hardly called him in recent months. “Since November I’ve laid only four roofs,” he said.

Most of the workers disgorged back into the fields are in a similar situation. Milling about in a park near downtown Stockton after work on a recent afternoon, José Manuel’s brother, Raymundo J., who is the foreman of a crew picking asparagus near Stockton, pointed to several former construction workers from his hometown in Mexico who are now in the field.

There was his other nephew, Roberto, who used to tear roofs down for $15 an hour, and Manuel S., who used to spray stucco on houses in the San Francisco Bay Area. Antonio R. lost a $14-an-hour job cutting wood last October. Chuy R., who got a job wiring homes immediately after arriving in the United States in May 2006, lost it at the end of the year.

They all hang on to the hope that construction will rebound. Most fear, however, that times will never again be as good. Said José Manuel J., “I don’t think building houses will pick up for several years.”

The growing season is barely starting in the Central Valley. Demand for farm workers will peak in the summer, at around 450,000. But many growers are concerned that tight border controls will continue to cut deeply into their labor force and that, as happened last year, crops will be left to rot in the fields.

Still, as farm workers once lured into construction are returned to the fields, there are signs that the labor supply on some California farms is increasing.

Luawanna Hallstrom, chairwoman of the California Farm Bureau’s labor committee and general manager of Harry Singh & Sons, a large tomato grower north of San Diego, noted that more workers were showing up at greenhouse nurseries than last year.

She pointed out that the lull in construction, combined with the frosts this year that devastated the state’s citrus crop and part of the nut crop, are freeing workers for other farms.

“There’s an opportunity for some areas in agriculture to attract labor who would have been doing other agricultural jobs or tied up in construction,” Ms. Hallstrom said.

The immigrants agree. “There are too many people for too little field work,” José Manuel J. complained. “People are scattering up to Oregon and further north because there is little work here.”


Cry me a freakin' river.

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Re: Interesting News Article Thread
Reply #604 - Apr 17th, 2007 at 2:39pm
 
Comon man, where is the love?
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Re: Interesting News Article Thread
Reply #605 - Apr 17th, 2007 at 3:14pm
 
It seems like all my love is crossing a line illegally so I have none to give here.
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Re: Interesting News Article Thread
Reply #606 - Apr 17th, 2007 at 4:17pm
 
MediaMaster wrote on Apr 17th, 2007 at 2:39pm:
Comon man, where is the love?


In Mexico, where it belongs.

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Re: Interesting News Article Thread
Reply #607 - Apr 18th, 2007 at 9:25am
 
Quote:
BEIJING —  Red hair and the big earrings are out for women Beijing cab drivers in the run-up to next summer's Olympic Games, a state-run newspaper reported Wednesday.

The bans were part of a 12-item self-improvement list given to cab drivers by the city's transport management bureau, the Beijing News said.

The list includes the usual pleas to be polite and not to smoke, spit or overcharge, plus the hair and jewelry tips for women. Men were told not to have long hair.

"Some drivers don't care about their appearance and this has a negative impact on the whole industry," the bureau's vice director Yao Kuo was quoted as saying by the newspaper.

"A person's hairstyle and accessories are their personal business, but cab drivers must remember they are a window for China's capital," Yao said.

Drivers who do not use their meters or refuse to pick up passengers will lose their licenses, the paper said.

It did not say if there would be any penalties for cab drivers who dyed their hair red or broke the other guidelines.



Proof the gingers don't have souls.

-b0b
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Re: Interesting News Article Thread
Reply #608 - Apr 20th, 2007 at 1:34pm
 
Quote:
http://www.yaledailynews.com/articles/view/20843

Weapons to go offstage
Trachtenberg cites Virginia Tech attack

Courtney Long
Staff Reporter and Copy Editor

In the wake of Monday’s massacre at Virginia Tech in which a student killed 32 people, Dean of Student Affairs Betty Trachtenberg has limited the use of stage weapons in theatrical productions.

Students involved in this weekend’s production of “Red Noses” said they first learned of the new rules on Thursday morning, the same day the show was slated to open. They were subsequently forced to alter many of the scenes by swapping more realistic-looking stage swords for wooden ones, a change that many students said was neither a necessary nor a useful response to the tragedy at Virginia Tech.

According to students involved in the production, Trachtenberg has banned the use of some stage weapons in all of the University’s theatrical productions. While shows will be permitted to use obviously fake plastic weapons, students said, those that hoped to stage more realistic scenes of stage violence have had to make changes to their props.

Trachtenberg could not be reached for comment Thursday night.

“Red Noses” director Sarah Holdren ’08 said she first heard about the changes in a phone call from a friend as she arrived at the Off-Broadway Theater on Thursday morning. At the theater, technical director Jim Brewczynski told her about the new regulations. The pair then met with Trachtenberg, who initially wanted no stage weapons to be used in the show, Holdren said, though she later agreed to permit the use of obviously fake weapons.

In a speech made before last night’s opening show of “Red Noses,” Holdren said that Trachtenberg’s decision to force the production to use wooden swords instead of metal swords will do little to stem violence in the world.

“Calling for an end to violence onstage does not solve the world’s suffering: It merely sweeps it under the rug, turning theater — in the words of this very play — into ‘creamy bon-bons’ instead of ‘solid fare’ for a thinking, feeling audience,” she said. “Here at Yale, sensitivity and political correctness have become censorship in this time of vital need for serious artistic expression.”

Holdren said she is primarily worried about the University’s decision to place limitations on art, rather than the specific inconvenience to her production.

“I completely understand that the University needs to respond to the tragedy, but I think it is wrong to conflate sensitivity and censorship,” she said in an interview. “It is wrong to assume that any theater that deals with tragic matter is sort of on the side of those things or out to get people; they’re not — they’re out to help people through things like this. I want my show and all shows to be uplifting to people. That’s why I’m upset about this — it’s not because my props were taken — it’s about imposing petty restrictions on art as the right way to solve the problems in the world.”

Brandon Berger ’10, who plays a swordsman in the show, said the switch to an obviously fake wooden sword has changed the nature of his part from an “evil, errant knight to a petulant child.”

“They’re trying to make an appropriate gesture, but they did it in an inappropriate way — they’ve neutered the play,” he said. “The violence is important to what it actually means. What these types of actions do is very central — it is not gratuitous.”

Susie Kemple ’08, an actress in the show, said Trachtenberg’s way of dealing with the Virginia Tech massacre was not beneficial to the students’ own mourning process.

“It is problematic because all of us were incredibly shocked by the events at Virginia Tech,” Kemple said. “We turn to extracurriculars in our grief [and] the Yale administration makes the healing more difficult. None of the shows are about massive gun violence — this show is about showing and explaining the human experience.”

Berger also said he finds the ruling inconsistent because forms of stage violence that do not involve weapons — such as hangings — are still permitted.

“Red Noses” will end its run Saturday night.


Here's another heaping helping of feel-good liberalism for you.

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Re: Interesting News Article Thread
Reply #609 - Apr 20th, 2007 at 1:37pm
 
Isn't this kinda like putting your hand across your eyes and saying, "If I don't see it it's not really there?!"

I think we need to ban squirt guns, super soakers, and Nintendo guns, as well as the SNES cannon, oh and all Nerf guns...and paintball guns, and pictures of guns!

Then I'll feel safer!

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Re: Interesting News Article Thread
Reply #610 - Apr 20th, 2007 at 1:43pm
 
Smiley

Oh Noes!

EDIT: Actually that kind of offended me. Wow. Gonna leave it tho
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Re: Interesting News Article Thread
Reply #611 - Apr 20th, 2007 at 2:29pm
 
X wrote on Apr 20th, 2007 at 1:37pm:
...as well as the SNES cannon...


It's called the Super Scope Six, you insensitive jerk!  Get it right or pay the price!

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Re: Interesting News Article Thread
Reply #612 - Apr 20th, 2007 at 2:31pm
 
MediaMaster wrote on Apr 20th, 2007 at 1:43pm:
EDIT: Actually that kind of offended me. Wow. Gonna leave it tho


What offended you?

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Re: Interesting News Article Thread
Reply #613 - Apr 24th, 2007 at 10:38pm
 
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And that, knowing the time, that now it is high time to awake out of sleep: for now is our salvation nearer than when we believed.
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Re: Interesting News Article Thread
Reply #614 - Apr 24th, 2007 at 11:17pm
 
403!!!
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