Tag Archives: said-the-second

Epitome Of A Bad Mother: Woman Pimps Out Her Three Teenage Daughters For $20

She pimped her daughters for $20? Dayum, times are hard. Woman Pimped Daughters Out For $20 A mother is supposed to protect her children not pimp them out to tricks. She needs her azz whooped. According to Local 6: A local mother was arrested after she was accused of selling her teenage daughters in prostitution. Deputies say those daughters are just 16, 17 and 18 years old. According to a report, 50-year-old Paula Howard sold her daughters for sex, for as little as $20. An anonymous tip led Osceola County deputies to Howard, suspected of operating a family-run prostitution business. Deputies arrested Howard after an undercover sting. Deputies said they found Howard and her three daughters at a bus stop in Kissimmee. Howard waved over the undercover deputy as one of the girls walked up and offered sex for cash, and then deputies said the second daughter did the same. Local 6 has also learned that Samantha Howard, 18, was also arrested and charged with prostitution because she’s an adult, but her two younger sisters are being cared for in protective custody because they are underage. Deputies fear how those girls started selling their bodies in the first place. “They were willing to do this. It’s probably because maybe the mother had forced them to do this for some extended period of time,” said Twis Lizasuain of the Osceola County Sheriff’s Office. For now, deputies said Paula Howard will remain in jail while her children will get the help they need. Deputies called the whole ordeal extremely rare. The report also suggests the family prostitution ring has been going on for about a month. SMH. Continue reading

Marcus Canty Sings a Song for X Factor Viewers

Did Marcus Canty do enough last night to avoid another placement in the bottom two on this evening’s X Factor results show? The singer/dancer gave viewers twice the Marcus during an episode that featured a dance hit and a choice by each of the contestants. First up, Canty covered “Ain’t Nobody.” From there, it was on to “A Song For You” and mixed reaction from the panel. Paula Abdul referred to Canty as a “storyteller,” while Nicole Scherzinger said the second rendition reminded her of why she fell in love with him. Simon Cowell, however? “It was good, I’m not jumping out of my chair. It was a bit boring,” he said. Marcus Canty – Ain’t Nobody Marcus Canty – A Song For You

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Marcus Canty Sings a Song for X Factor Viewers

The End of the Tuna Fish?

From the NY Times Magazine (June 21, 2010) http://www.nytimes.com/2010/06/27/magazine/27Tuna-t.html Tuna's End In the international waters south of Malta, the Greenpeace vessels Rainbow Warrior and Arctic Sunrise deployed eight inflatable Zodiacs and skiffs into the azure surface of the Mediterranean. Protesters aboard donned helmets and took up DayGlo flags and plywood shields. With the organization’s observation helicopter hovering above, the pilots of the tiny boats hit their throttles, hurtling the fleet forward to stop what they viewed as an egregious environmental crime. It was a high-octane updating of a familiar tableau, one that anyone who has followed Greenpeace’s Save the Whales adventures of the last 35 years would have recognized. But in the waters off Malta there was not a whale to be seen. What was in the water that day was a congregation of Atlantic bluefin tuna, a fish that when prepared as sushi is one of the most valuable forms of seafood in the world. It’s also a fish that regularly journeys between America and Europe and whose two populations, or “stocks,” have both been catastrophically overexploited. The BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, one of only two known Atlantic bluefin spawning grounds, has only intensified the crisis. By some estimates, there may be only 9,000 of the most ecologically vital megabreeders left in the fish’s North American stock, enough for the entire population of New York to have a final bite (or two) of high-grade otoro sushi. The Mediterranean stock of bluefin, historically a larger population than the North American one, has declined drastically as well. Indeed, most Mediterranean bluefin fishing consists of netting or “seining” young wild fish for “outgrowing” on tuna “ranches.” Which was why the Greenpeace craft had just deployed off Malta: a French fishing boat was about to legally catch an entire school of tuna, many of them undoubtedly juveniles. Oliver Knowles, a 34-year-old Briton who was coordinating the intervention, had told me a few days earlier via telephone what the strategy was going to be. “These fishing operations consist of a huge purse-seining vessel and a small skiff that’s quite fast,” Knowles said. A “purse seine” is a type of net used by industrial fishing fleets, called this because of the way it draws closed around a school of fish in the manner of an old-fashioned purse cinching up around a pile of coins. “The skiff takes one end of the net around the tuna and sort of closes the circle on them,” Knowles explained. “That’s the key intervention point. That’s where we have the strong moral mandate.” But as the Zodiacs approached the French tuna-fishing boat Jean-Marie Christian VI, confusion engulfed the scene. As anticipated, the French seiner launched its skiffs and started to draw a net closed around the tuna school. Upon seeing the Greenpeace Zodiacs zooming in, the captain of the Jean-Marie Christian VI issued a call. “Mayday!” he shouted over the radio. “Pirate attack!” Other tuna boats responded to the alert and arrived to help. The Greenpeace activists identified themselves over the VHF, announcing they were staging a “peaceful action.” Aboard one Zodiac, Frank Hewetson, a 20-year Greenpeace veteran who in his salad days as a protester scaled the first BP deepwater oil rigs off Scotland, tried to direct his pilot toward the net so that he could throw a daisy chain of sandbags over its floating edge and allow the bluefin to escape. But before Hewetson could deploy his gear, a French fishing skiff rammed his Zodiac. A moment later Hewetson was dragged by the leg toward the bow. “At first I thought I’d been lassoed,” Hewetson later told me from his hospital bed in London. “But then I looked down. ” A fisherman trying to puncture the Zodiac had swung a three-pronged grappling hook attached to a rope into the boat and snagged Hewetson clean through his leg between the bone and the calf muscle. (Using the old language of whale protests, Greenpeace would later report to Agence France-Presse that Hewetson had been “harpooned.”) “Ma jambe! Ma jambe!” Hewetson cried out in French, trying to signal to the fisherman to slack off on the rope. The fisherman, according to Hewetson, first loosened it and then reconsidered and pulled it tight again. Eventually Hewetson was able to get enough give in the rope to yank the hook free. Elsewhere, fishermen armed with gaffs and sticks sank another Zodiac and, according to Greenpeace’s Knowles, fired a flare at the observation helicopter. At a certain point, the protesters made the decision to break off the engagement. “We have currently pulled back from the seining fleet,” Knowles e-mailed me shortly afterward, “to regroup and develop next steps.” Bertrand Wendling, the executive director of the tuna-fishing cooperative of which the Jean-Marie Christian VI was a part, called the Greenpeace protest “without doubt an act of provocation” in which “valuable work tools” were damaged. (This story is much, much longer and continues at the link!) added by: captainplanet71

Black Bloc Tactics- To Clear the Way

Vandalism a central part of anarchists’ tactics Black Bloc tactics seen as a method to clear way for other protest groups to state their cases The black-clad vandals who fanned out across Toronto’s downtown are relatively foreign to the city’s streets, but their Black Bloc methods and motivations have been deployed around the world for decades. But the shattered storefronts and graffiti slogans left in their wake do not answer the most fundamental of questions: Who are the ruffians and what do they want? The individuals who carry on the anarchist Black Bloc tradition today congregate through online forums, newsletters and small conventions. They are yoga teachers, soup-kitchen volunteers, community organizers and university students from Southern Ontario, Quebec and points further afield. They bristle at the anarchist label – they bristle at most things, for that matter – and reject their common portrayal as an ignorant pack of angry young men. “We don’t just crawl up from the sewers from protests,” says Chris Bowen, part of the anarchist hip-hop duo Test Their Logik and one of the movement’s most visible proponents of property damage. “We are not violent people. I’m filled with love – love for this planet, not for pacifism and the status quo.” It was difficult to see the love in images of smashed Starbucks windows and burning squad cars. Many, including Toronto Police Chief Bill Blair and Mayor David Miller, lamented the violence and promised retribution. But when your goal is to “smash capitalism,” violence takes on a very narrow definition. Mr. Bowen, a yoga teacher by day, insists property damage is necessary to draw the world’s eyes. “When buildings are destroyed and no one is hurt – who cares?” said Mr. Bowen during a protest earlier this week. “It’s a broken window, not a life. The violence comes from the companies that are targeted. They are wrecking the environment; they are wrecking lives.” Mr. Bowen was scooped up during mass arrests of demonstrators on Sunday morning, joining the ranks of more than 600 detained by police. The number of protesters participating in Black Bloc tactics this week were not expected to exceed the roughly 400 who turned out for the 2001 Summit of the Americas held in Quebec City. “If you look at our movement before and after 9/11, it dwindled,” Mr. Bowen said. “People got scared and left.” One of those alleged organizers, Alex Hundert, arrested on charges of conspiracy to commit mischief during an early-morning police raid Saturday, recently wrote a treatise at rabble.ca defending destructive Black Bloc tactics used during the 2010 Winter Olympics. He claimed that Black Bloc acts as “a wrecking ball” that clears the way for other protest groups to state their various cases. Smashing windows at Hudson’s Bay Co., for instance, “actually opened up space for Canadians to stop and think about the colonial history of HBC,” Mr. Hundert wrote. Mr. Hundert is part of a large contingent of demonstrators affiliated with the Kitchener-Waterloo Community Centre for Social Justice. Other protesters in police custody hail from Montreal, Guelph, Ont., Vancouver and the United States. “They are your co-workers and neighbours, your teachers or students, your relatives,” said one anarchist organizer who asked not to be identified. “If it seems they only appear when an event like the G20 takes place, it’s because the rest of the time they are not wearing masks.” Toronto Police have been investigating Black Bloc strategies for months. On Saturday night, Chief Blair vowed to root them out. “There is no sanctuary from responsibility and accountability for their criminal acts,” he said. In a press release Sunday he urged the public to submit any images they have of “the small group of criminals, whose only motivations are violence and destruction, who have appalled those who came to express their views in a peaceful manner.” Many Black Bloc demonstrators arrived in Toronto as part of tight-knit affinity groups – clusters of friends who spread ideas and tactics in small meetings to avoid police detection – to answer a general callout by the Southern Ontario Anarchist Resistance and the Toronto Community Mobilization Network. They’ve been staying on numerous couches and carpets throughout the city. “We have friends willing to open their doors here and all across the land,” Mr. Bowen said. “They have my back, and I have theirs.” During the destruction on Saturday, affinity groups employed tactics they say were popularized during historical uprisings such as the Boston Tea Party. Dressed in black, affinity groups would dart from within masses of peaceful protesters to smash windows and paint anarchist slogans. Minutes later, they would change into light-coloured garb and rejoin the crowds, relying on the anonymity of the throng for camouflage. Online explanations of Black Bloc encourage this shape-shifting approach while discouraging violent confrontations with police so that participants can avoid arrest. These tactics are hardly secret, easily accessed through popular anarchist websites such as crimethinc.com and theanarchistlibrary.org. Even with hundreds of detained demonstrators, the anarchists insist their movement is snowballing. “Look here, look at the reaction to austerity measures in Greece, look at the anger surrounding BP in the Gulf,” Mr. Bowen said. “The whole global economy is coming down. We are going to kick it until it breaks.” added by: animalia_libero

Supreme Court limits local gun bans

WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court ruled Monday that the Constitution's “right to keep and bear arms” applies nationwide as a restraint on the ability of the federal, state and local governments to substantially limit its reach. By a 5-4 vote split along familiar ideological lines, the nation's highest court extended its landmark 2008 ruling that individual Americans have a constitutional right to own guns to all the cities and states for the first time. In doing so, the justices signaled that less severe restrictions could survive legal challenges. The ruling involved a 28-year-old handgun ban in the Chicago area. The ruling was a victory for four Chicago-area residents, two gun rights groups and the politically powerful National Rifle Association. It was a defeat for Chicago, which defended its ban as a reasonable exercise of local power to protect public safety. The law and a similar handgun ban in suburban Oak Park, Ill., were the nation's most restrictive gun control measures. Monday's decision did not explicitly strike down the Chicago area laws, ordering a federal appeals court to reconsider its ruling. It left little doubt, however, that they would fall eventually. Justice Samuel Alito, writing for the court, said the Second Amendment right “applies equally to the federal government and the states.” The Second Amendment and gun ownership rights are finally protected. Now people will be able to have their own equal protection from criminals, who have been the only people who owned guns in some areas. added by: 2helenahandbasket

Sarah Jessica Parker Is Glad Aidan Is Back For ‘Sex And The City 2’

‘John Corbett is gold,’ Parker says of her co-star’s return. By Jocelyn Vena, with reporting by Josh Horowitz Photo: MTV News In the trailer for “Sex and the City 2,” the only thing more surprising than the girls taking the sex to a different city, Abu Dhabi, is that fact that Carrie Bradshaw runs into former flame Aidan Shaw. It’s definitely a moment that had fans talking — and will certainly have them flocking to the theaters May 27 to see what happens between the two. Parker said the second flick was the right time to revisit their relationship, even if fans had hoped it would happen sooner. “That has been an outcry from the public: ‘How could you not have Aidan in the first movie?’ ” she told MTV News, joking, “And therefore [‘SATC’ writer/director] Michael [Patrick King] went back into his tiny little room in the desert in California and wrote in Aidan. “And I think the truth is that Michael really lets a story tell itself,” she continued. “That he doesn’t think so much about ‘Will this or won’t this please an audience.’ I think he told a story that really is great for Carrie Bradshaw — or Carrie Preston, depending on who she is at the moment. But I sure love the way he brought John Corbett back, because John Corbett is gold.” Are you excited to see Aidan’s big return? Do you think Aidan and Carrie should get back together? Tell us in the comments! Check out everything we’ve got on “Sex and the City 2.” For young Hollywood news, fashion and “Twilight” updates around the clock, visit HollywoodCrush.MTV.com . Related Videos MTV Rough Cut: ‘Sex And The City 2’

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Sarah Jessica Parker Is Glad Aidan Is Back For ‘Sex And The City 2’