Cops Pull Mother with Four Children Over at Gun Point, Caught on Camera, No Apologies

Child from car pulled over in Texas, hands upPolice in Forney, Texas, were
looking for a tan-colored Toyota from which someone was reported to
be waving a gun around when they pulled over Kametra Barbour, who
was driving with her four young children, in a red Nissan. They
pulled Barbour over at gunpoint, forcing her and her children to
put their hands up. Police admit they made a mistake but aren’t
going to apologize, because officer safety.


WFAA reports
:

Was Barbour treated properly by the police?

“For the nature of the call – that a weapon was involved – yes,”
Detective [Michael] Clay said.

Barbour understands officers were making quick decisions that
night. Nonetheless, she is still deeply troubled.

“I need you to make sure you have all the facts, because you
can’t just say, ‘Okay, I’m sorry,’ and then I’m over it. I can’t.
Every time I listen to and hear or think about it, it bothers you.
I can’t just say, ‘I’m fine. It’s okay. It’s not a big deal.’ It
is,” Barbour said.

“Quick decisions” shouldn’t be an excuse for reckless behavior.
I don’t know any amount of training that can get a cop who mistakes
a tan Toyota for a red Nissan, even at night, not to do so. We hear
a lot about “officer safety” (Conservative commentator Andrew
Malcolm
seems to defend
any amount of militarization in the name of
officer safety, despite statistics showing officers
facing record low fatalities
). What about the safety of people
exposed to police officers? Each of those encounters involve a
weapon.  Last week we brought you the story of an
alleged sex predator
returning to the streets of Philadelphia
as a cop even though the police commissioner doesn’t think
he belongs in a uniform. (Thanks
unions!
)

And here we have a department defending an officer who mistook a
tan Toyota for a red Nissan and terrorized four children in the
process. The mother remains deferential, as many Americans do,
inculcated as they are with that attitude by a pervasive “safety
first” culture that continues to ignore the threats cops pose in
favor of the wrong-headed notion that those given the authority to
use violence against us are all that stands between society and
chaos.

Watch dashcam of cops pulling Barbour over below:

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Latest Excuse for Overwrought College Campus Lockdowns: Umbrellas!

Can you imagine the kind of objects that prompt panicked lockdowns in Gotham City?Students at California State
University – San Marcos are safe from a guy carrying a rifle across
campus, thanks to a SWAT team and a 30-minute lockdown. Wait, no.
They are safe from an umbrella. The man wasn’t carrying a gun. He
was carrying an umbrella. ABC10 in San Diego told the story and

interviewed the non-mass-murderer
:

[Bill] Craig was the person – reported as being suspicious –
they had been looking for. The person was described as a white
male, wearing a black shirt and jeans and walking across campus
carrying a rifle.

He says he knew it was him the second the alert went out.

“I was certain,” said Craig. “It could have certainly been
someone else. I mean, I’m not the only tall, bald guy here, but it
fit me to a tee.”

At that same time, classrooms began sheltering in place.

“They immediately … the doors locked and then they took all the
chairs and all the tables and barricaded the doors,” said junior
James Collins. “People were kind of freaked out and you could tell
that there was a nervous tension.”

He was confronted and held at gunpoint by sheriff’s deputies
while they determined that he was not, in fact, the Penguin, there
with some sort of deadly scheme to finally kill off Batman.

You have to admit, though, there’s something a little suspicious
about carrying an umbrella around in California. We’re having our
worst drought ever!

Elsewhere in our constantly panic-stricken country, a college
student is getting a slap on the on the wrist from the courts for
terrorizing Central Connecticut State University. His crime:

wearing a ninja costume
with a sword on campus a couple of days
after Halloween, causing another campus lockdown and a SWAT
response. He actually had no intent of terrorizing anybody and will
have his charges dismissed if he completes his probation without
launching any further ninja team assaults at other colleges.

And while I was writing this, an “active
shooter” incident
was reported at Fort Lee in Virginia, and the
installation is on lockdown.

(Hat tip to Ken)

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How Adolf Hitler screwed me

August 25, 2014
Shanghai, China

I was sitting on the plane waiting for take off when the captain came on and uttered words you never want to hear in aviation:

“Ladies and Gentlemen, I have some bad news.”

It turned out that a German construction crew had dug up some WWII-era unexploded ordinance, and since it was so close to the Frankfurt airport, they were going to have to shut down all air operations until a EOD crew could take care of it.

With such a tight layover, there was no chance I would make my connecting flight to Ethiopia. And that was a major bummer, because I had a lot of meetings to catch in the morning as soon as I landed.

But it got me thinking– World War II ended nearly 70 years ago. Yet the ramifications of this event… and the consequences of a single person’s decisions from decades past… still affect people’s lives to this day.

Sure, the macro picture is clear. Because of World War II, the US became the world’s largest superpower. The dollar became the world’s reserve currency. US banks came to dominate the global financial system.

But even little, simple things were affected.

There we were– a plane full of people trying to get from point A to point B. And we couldn’t. All because, decades ago, Hitler decided to invade his neighbors and dare the world to stop him.

Of course, this wouldn’t have happened if Germany hadn’t been bankrupted after World War I… an obscene, terrible war waged by fatcat politicians who thought it would be a quick, glorious war.

Sitting there for the 90 minute delay, I had all the time in the world to think about this.

These people in charge– the central bankers and politicians– make decisions that have long-lasting implications, both big picture and small.

Even where you’d least expect it… something as simple and innocuous as a routine passenger flight decades later… gets disrupted because of idiotic decisions made today.

And that’s just the small stuff.

The big picture is far worse. Like World War II, the decisions made today have the power to change our way of life forever. It’s already happening.

Because of so many poor decisions made today by US politicians and central bankers, the rest of the world is rapidly starting to drop the dollar as the preferred reserve currency and adopt alternatives.

This is no longer theory or conjecture. It’s happening. And the implications will last through the next century.

Moreover, the decisions that political leaders are making today are turning ‘rich’ western nations into highly extractive economies… exactly the sort of system I see on the ground in Africa.

These are places where a tiny elite takes most of the wealth and privilege for themselves at the expense of everyone else.

In Africa it’s often done at the point of a gun. In the West, the corruption is far more sophisticated. But the theft is there, plain as day for anyone paying attention.

I invite you to explore this with me more in today’s podcast; in addition, I’ll give you my boots on the ground take from Ethiopia and explain how that country is a stark proxy for what’s happening in the West.

Today’s Podcast: http://ift.tt/1mIblxV

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Services PMI Drops Most In 6 Months, “Recovery Has Lost Some Momentum”, Markit Says

US Services PMI dropped from multi-year highs to a still expanding 58.5, 3 month lows and the biggest MoM drop in 6 months. This is the 10th month of expansion in a row but employment growth continues to slow… as opposed to the priced-in escape velocity to the moon alice levels the market expects…

 

 

As Markit notes,

Adjusted for seasonal influences, the Markit Flash U.S. Composite PMI Output Index dipped from 60.6 in July to 58.8 in August, its lowest reading for three months.

 

The composite index is based on original survey data from the Markit U.S. Services PMI and the Markit U.S. Manufacturing PMI. Slower overall output growth largely reflected a moderation in the service sector, as manufacturing production expanded at a similarly sharp pace tothat seen in July.

 

Meanwhile, latest data pointed to a solid increase in private sector payroll numbers, but the rate of employment growth remained weaker than June’s post-crisis peak.




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Fort Lee Army Base On Lockdown – Active Shooter

According to Facebook:

“An active shooter incident has been reported on Fort Lee at CASCOM HQ, Bldg. 5020.

 

All personnel should enact active shooter protocols immediately. The installation is being locked down until further notice. More info to follow.”

 

CASCOM stands for Combined Arms Support Command.

 

“We’ve had an active shooter incident,” said Stephen Baker, a post spokesman. “The installation is locked down… it is still active,” he said at 9:34 a.m.

*  *  *




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Chart Of The Day: One Of Every Two Cyprus Loans Is In Default

Far be it for us to comment that anything like “fundamentals” matters anymore, or that, blasphemy, bad news is anything but good news, however what the Central Bank of Cyprus revealed today is a little troubling to say the least: as of the most recent, June, data, the total percentage of non-performing loans in the Cypriot banking system just rose to a mind-blowing 45%, up from 44.3% in May, and nearly double the 23.6% which was reported at March 2013 when the local banking system cratered, leading to the first European forced “bail-in” of (mostly Russian) depositors.

In other words, nearly one of every two loans in Cyprus is now in default or near-default.

One wonders if, when peeling all the rhetoric and obfuscation, Europe’s very own NPLs, which several years ago were estimated to be in the trillions of euros, is higher, lower, or just about the same as Cyprus.

Source: Central Bank of Cyprus




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“Current Ebola Outbreak Is Different,” WHO Warns “Unprecedented” Number Of Medical Staff Infected

The outbreak of Ebola virus disease in west Africa is unprecedented in many ways, including the high proportion of doctors, nurses, and other health care workers who have been infected, warns the World Health Organization. Despite all precautions possible, more than 240 health care workers have developed the disease in Guinea, Liberia, Nigeria, and Sierra Leone, and more than 120 have died. Simply put, they conclude, the current outbreak is different. The loss of so many doctors and nurses has made it difficult for WHO to secure support from sufficient numbers of foreign medical staff. Even WHO admits, if doctors and nurses are getting infected, what chance does the general public have?

 

Full WHO Statement:

The outbreak of Ebola virus disease in west Africa is unprecedented in many ways, including the high proportion of doctors, nurses, and other health care workers who have been infected.

To date, more than 240 health care workers have developed the disease in Guinea, Liberia, Nigeria, and Sierra Leone, and more than 120 have died.

Ebola has taken the lives of prominent doctors in Sierra Leone and Liberia, depriving these countries not only of experienced and dedicated medical care but also of inspiring national heroes.

Several factors help explain the high proportion of infected medical staff. These factors include shortages of personal protective equipment or its improper use, far too few medical staff for such a large outbreak, and the compassion that causes medical staff to work in isolation wards far beyond the number of hours recommended as safe.

In the past, some Ebola outbreaks became visible only after transmission was amplified in a health care setting and doctors and nurses fell ill. However, once the Ebola virus was identified and proper protective measures were put in place, cases among medical staff dropped dramatically.

Moreover, many of the most recent Ebola outbreaks have occurred in remote areas, in a part of Africa that is more familiar with this disease, and with chains of transmission that were easier to track and break.

The current outbreak is different. Capital cities as well as remote rural areas are affected, vastly increasing opportunities for undiagnosed cases to have contact with hospital staff. Neither doctors nor the public are familiar with the disease. Intense fear rules entire villages and cities.

Several infectious diseases endemic in the region, like malaria, typhoid fever, and Lassa fever, mimic the initial symptoms of Ebola virus disease. Patients infected with these diseases will often need emergency care. Their doctors and nurses may see no reason to suspect Ebola and see no need to take protective measures.

Some documented infections have occurred when unprotected doctors rushed to aid a waiting patient who was visibly very ill. This is the first instinct of most doctors and nurses: aid the ailing.

In many cases, medical staff are at risk because no protective equipment is available – not even gloves and face masks. Even in dedicated Ebola wards, personal protective equipment is often scarce or not being properly used.

Training in proper use in absolutely essential, as are strict procedures for infection prevention and control.

In addition, personal protective equipment is hot and cumbersome, especially in a tropical climate, and this severely limits the time that doctors and nurses can work in an isolation ward. Some doctors work beyond their physical limits, trying to save lives in 12-hour shifts, every day of the week. Staff who are exhausted are more prone to make mistakes.

All personal protective equipment despatched or approved by WHO meets the appropriate international safety standards.

The heavy toll on health care workers in this outbreak has a number of consequences that further impede control efforts.

It depletes one of the most vital assets during the control of any outbreak. WHO estimates that, in the three hardest-hit countries, only one to two doctors are available to treat 100,000 people, and these doctors are heavily concentrated in urban areas.

It can lead to the closing of health facilities, especially when staff refuse to come to work, fearing for their lives. When hospitals close, other common and urgent medical needs, such as safe childbirth and treatment for malaria, are neglected.

The fact that so many medical staff have developed the disease increases the level of anxiety: if doctors and nurses are getting infected, what chance does the general public have? In some areas, hospitals are regarded as incubators of infection and are shunned by patients with any kind of ailment, again reducing access to general health care.

The loss of so many doctors and nurses has made it difficult for WHO to secure support from sufficient numbers of foreign medical staff.

The African Union has launched an urgent initiative to recruit more health care workers from among its members.

*  *  *

Have no fear though… Ebola infection is low-risk…




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Rand Paul on Meet The Press: Hillary Clinton a “War Hawk,” “you have to change the whole war on drugs,” and more

Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) was on
Meet the Press yesterday, including the above segment
about his recent charity trip to Guatemala, where he’s been doing
free eye operations since 1996. The clip above spends too much of
its time debating whether or not the trip is simply a
pre-advertisement for a presidential run (the short answer is yes,
but so what).

But the topics covered also included the Michael Brown shooting
in Ferguson, the drug war, militarization of police, and foreign
policy and this is pretty meaty stuff (in bold)

Let’s say none of this has to do with race. It might not, but
the belief—if you’re African American and you live in Ferguson, the
belief is, you see people in prison and they’re mostly black and
brown, that somehow it is racial, even if the thoughts that were
going on at that time had nothing to do with race.

So it’s a very good chance that had this had nothing to do with
race, but because of all of the arrest and…the way people were
arrested, that everybody perceives it as, “My goodness, the police
are out to get us,” you know? And so that’s why you have to
change the whole war on drugs
. It’s not just this one
instance.

On police militarization:

Homeland Security gave $8 million to Fargo to fight terrorism in
Fargo, North Dakota. And I say if the terrorists get to
Fargo, we might as well give up.
I say that as a joke,
but, I mean, it’s like, “What are we doing spending $8 million in
Fargo? What are we doing sending a tank?” There’s an armored
personnel carrier in Keene, New Hampshire.

On Democrats and Hillary Clinton:

…were I to run [for president], there’s gonna be a lot of
independents and even some Democrats who say, “You know what, we
are tired of war. We’re worried that Hillary Clinton will get us
involved in another Middle Eastern war, because she’s so
gung-ho.”

If you wanna see a transformational election in our
country, let the Democrats put forward a war hawk like
Hillary Clinton, and you’ll see a transformation like you’ve never
seen
.


Full transcript here.

That last bit is a bit hyperbolic (like
you’ve never seen?
) but also on-target. Hillary is a hawk’s
hawk, which is one of the reasons Jeffrey Goldberg at The
Atlantic
was so keen on talking to her and why she was so
quick to slag President Obama as a prevaricator (rather than as
simply another version of an ineffective
interventionist).

On August 21, blogger and longtime Hit & Run reader

Alan Vanneman
flagged this bit, which has been described as the
“money quote” from Clinton’s Q&A with Goldberg. Read it closely
and you start to understand why American foreign policy is so
FUBAR:

I think we’ve learned about the limits of our power to spread
freedom and democracy. That’s one of the big lessons out of Iraq.
But we’ve also learned about the importance of our power, our
influence, and our values appropriately deployed and explained. If
you’re looking at what we could have done that would have been more
effective, would have been more accepted by the Egyptians on the
political front, what could we have done that would have been more
effective in Libya, where they did their elections really well
under incredibly difficult circumstances but they looked around and
they had no levers to pull because they had these militias out
there. My passion is, let’s do some after-action reviews, let’s
learn these lessons, let’s figure out how we’re going to have
different and better responses going forward.

As Vanneman notes:

Well, if that’s a money quote, I want my money back.
Hillary isn’t saying that we shouldn’t have gone into Iraq, or that
we shouldn’t have invaded Libya. No, our problem was that we didn’t
do it 
effectively!
Yeah, 
that’s the
problem!


Read more here.

The Democratic National Committee responded to Paul’s
comments thus
:

“Senator Paul’s foreign policy vision is to retreat from our
responsibilities abroad by ending all foreign aid to our
allies—including Israel. That’s the vision he’s laid out and
defended time and time again and that even conservatives have said
would bring ‘terrible misery’ to millions of people across the
globe.”

The DNC is correct in noting that Paul has in the past proposed
ending all foreign aid, including that to Israel. He has also
denied that he proposed that, earning him
a “pants of fire” rating
from Politifact, the fact-checking
operation. After releasing a budget proposal in 2011 that cut all
foreign aid (and taking a ton of shit for it, especially the
portion that would go to Israel), Paul released an amended
budget:

Paul’s new bottom line for foreign aid wasn’t to cut it to zero.
Rather, the proposal said, “Freeze foreign aid funding at $5
billion.” Though the report doesn’t say so explicitly, that would
have been enough to cover the outlays for Israel.


Read whole thing here.

That’s an important reminder that Rand Paul is a politician and
that politicians are given not just to changing their minds but
denying that they have ever changed their minds.

And yet, he’s still basically right that he and Hillary Clinton
(who in this case is standing in for just about every possible
Republican presidential wannabe and most other Democrats too)
disagree about foreign policy in really important ways.
I’ve written elsewhere
that I don’t consider Paul an
isolationist (a tag that is pretty accurate regarding Ron Paul).
But far more important, Rand Paul at this stage of the game is the
ONLY national politician who seems actually to be interested in
acknowledging the failure of the past dozen-plus years of U.S.
foreign policy as a failure of vision, not simply of tactics.
Obama, Hillary Clinton, Mitt Romney, all the Bush admin flunkies,
you name it: They’re complaining that we didn’t prosecute wars
properly or do the right sort of occupation after various missions
were accomplished. They’re not really talking about larger
questions of America’s role in the world or thinking about jihadism
as anything other than an excuse to keep growing the size and scope
of Pentagon budgets, surveillance operations, and the like.

If Rand Paul remains the only major representative of either
party who is willing to directly address those questions and offer
up a less war-happy position, he’s absolutely right that he’s going
to be incredibly attractive to independents and Democrats. Not
simply because they’re tired of “war,” but they’re tired of a
generally failed policy being pursued with at best minor
modifications.

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U.S. Writer Freed From Syria, 11 Percent Identify Libertarian, Cell Phone Spying Goes Global: A.M. Links

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