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TopicGiant Oak Tree falls on DeSantis's Mansion
Everyonedies
08/30/23 3:48:05 PM
#1
https://twitter.com/CaseyDeSantis/status/1696926357404500285

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TopicKirklees police chief condemns jokes about 'baby-faced' recruits
Everyonedies
08/22/23 10:25:01 AM
#46
Don't let them out after curfew.

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TopicSaudi Arabia says it executed American citizen convicted of killing his father
Everyonedies
08/16/23 12:25:40 PM
#1
Saudi Arabia on Wednesday executed an American citizen who had been convicted of killing his father.
The Interior Ministry identified the executed man as Bishoy Sharif Naji Naseef and said he beat and then strangled his Egyptian father to death. It also said Naseef used narcotics, mutilated his father's body after his slaying and attempted to kill another person before his arrest.
The statement did not identify how Naseef was executed. However, Saudi Arabia typically beheads those sentenced to death.
A lawyer for Naseef could not be immediately identified. It wasn't known if Naseef had a home address in the United States.
The U.S. State Department did not immediately return a request for comment.
Saudi Arabia ranks among the world's top executioners behind China and Iran in 2022, according to statistics from Amnesty International. Though executions slowed during the height of the coronavirus pandemic, they've surged in recent years. In March 2022, the kingdom executed 81 people on the same day, the largest known mass execution carried out in the kingdom in its modern history.

https://abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory/saudi-arabia-executes-american-citizen-convicted-killing-father-102312730

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TopicNurse Questioned 13 yr old's Responsibility After She Got Pregnant from Rape
Everyonedies
08/14/23 2:09:46 PM
#1
A 13-year-old girl in Mississippi gave birth this month after she was raped last fall, and just weeks before she will start 7th grade. When the pregnancy was first discovered at an emergency room earlier this year, her mother told Time magazine that a nurse reportedly asked the child, What have you been doing?
Ashley (a pseudonym to protect her privacy), is Black, and her story illustrates the horrific effects of abortion bans in already disadvantaged areas. She was raped last fall while filming a TikTok video in the yard of her familys house in Clarksdale, while her relatives were inside. Her mother, who goes by the pseudonym Regina said, according to Time, that Ashley said a man came down the street and into the front yard, grabbed Ashley, and covered her mouth...He pulled her around to the side of the house and raped her and that the assailant was an adult, and that she didnt know him. Nobody else witnessed the assault.
At the next appointment, Regina broached the subject of abortion. But it was early 2023: The world of abortion access is the South was already at a humanitarian-level crisis. The closest abortion provider was in Chicago. I dont have the funds for all this, Regina told Time, referencing the need to take off work, pay for gas, food and lodgingas well as the abortion.
Ashley and Reginas position is horrifically not unique: There are nearly 2 million people of reproductive age who live in a county without abortion or maternity care access, according to a new analysis from ABC News and Bostons Childrens Hospital. If you zoom out a bit, to include counties that only have low access to maternal healthcare, these healthcare deserts now include 3.7 million women.
Obviously, Ashely didnt get the abortion; thats why youre reading this story. She joined the growing number of people who are simply unable to make true choices of bodily autonomy. Having a childeven as a teenshould be a choice. Instead, Ashley was raped and forced to become a mother at age 13.
Ashleys story is the inverse of a 10-year-old Ohio girl who was raped by Gerson Fuentes in summer 2022. That girl was able to travel across state lines to Indiana to receive a medication abortion before she reached seven weeks. (Of course, she was forced to travel because Roe v. Wade was overturned, and her home state of Ohio implemented a six-week abortion ban shortly thereafter.) After the girls pregnancy from the rape was discovered, child protective services got involved. A child abuse doctor reached out to Dr. Caitlin Bernard, the abortion provider in Indiana. They made travel plans, and the girl received her abortion. Ashley was not so lucky.
She also experienced the all-too-common adultification bias, which treats Black children as more grown up than they are and, in this case, presumes immense responsibility when the nurse asked, What have you been doing?
Even though Regina filed a police report, and the family gave the name of a possible suspect, little has been done for Ashleys case. Police only collected a DNA sample from the newborn child after Time made multiple inquiries. Time reported that the Clarksdale Police Chief Vincent Ramirez essentially shrugged when asked about the delay. Its a pretty high priority, as a juvenile, he told the magazine. Sometimes they slip a little bit because weve got a lot going on, but then they come back to it.

https://www.yahoo.com/news/mississippi-nurse-questioned-13-olds-164000267.html

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Topic"I shot that b**** dead" says 6-year old
Everyonedies
08/09/23 4:32:00 PM
#1
A 6-year-old who shot his teacher in January later boasted in a conversation with a school employee that I shot that b[ ] dead, according to unsealed redacted search warrants.
The documents obtained from CNN affiliate WTKR describe what happened after first grade teacher Abigail Zwerner was shot on January 6 at Richneck Elementary School in Newport News, Virginia.
I did it, the boy told school officials, according to police in an affidavit. I got my moms gun last night.
Unsealed records of Zwerners statement to police at the hospital said that when the boy drew the weapon from his pocket and pointed it at her, she asked, What are you doing with that?
Zwerner told authorities the boy paused, then fired one shot that struck Zwerner in her left hand and upper torso, the affidavit obtained by affiliate WTKR said. Zwerner fled the classroom to the school office, according to the affidavit.
The teacher suffered gunshot wounds to her hand and chest but survived.
A lawyer for the childs family told CNN Tuesday, The child had extreme emotional issues, and we are all working to see that he improves every day.
James Ellenson, the attorney, also said the child is in therapy and has shown improvement. Representatives for the family had previously said the student suffers from an acute disability.
The documents also included more information about a previous incident in kindergarten where the same child apparently choked a different teacher.
Authorities spoke to that teacher, who described that the student walked behind her while she was sitting in her chair and placed both of his arms around her neck pulling down, choking her to the point she could not breathe, according to the documents.
A teachers assistant forcibly removed the student from the classroom, according to the documents.
Police said they worked to obtain limited school records pertaining to the child from Child Protective Services, records on the choking incident, and other information, but those records were not readily provided by Newport News Public Schools.
Newport News Public Schools, in a statement Tuesday, said: Since the tragedy at Richneck Elementary School in January, Newport News Public Schools has worked cooperatively with the Newport News Police Department and other authorities in support of the investigation. While the school division cannot comment on legal actions, NNPS remains committed to ensuring the well-being and care of all students and staff.
The mother of the student pleaded guilty to federal gun charges in connection with the incident as part of a plea deal, and will be sentenced in October.
Deja Taylor will plead guilty to a state charge of child neglect on August 15, Ellenson told CNN.
A state charge for recklessly handling a firearm will be dropped at the time of the plea, according to Ellenson. The cap for sentencing on the child neglect charge is six months, the attorney said.
Sentencing on the federal charges will be October 18. A separate sentencing on the state charge will take place October 27.
CNNs Sara Smart contributed to this report.

https://news.yahoo.com/6-old-boy-shot-teacher-184022616.html?

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TopicSenator Dianne Feinstein Taken to Hospital After Tripping, Falling
Everyonedies
08/09/23 11:04:22 AM
#3
https://gamefaqs.gamespot.com/a/user_image/0/8/2/AAOW64AAEvPi.jpg

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TopicWoman fired from work from home job for not typing enough
Everyonedies
08/09/23 9:46:33 AM
#12
How did her activity compare to other people with the same job?

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TopicThis is slavery Propaganda in Florida Schools.
Everyonedies
08/08/23 2:28:25 PM
#57
No difference than guys who tell women that being raped is better than being murdered.

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TopicI love you guys, man. You know, you remind me of my kids.
Everyonedies
07/22/23 5:41:14 PM
#3
Nah. Not anymore.

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TopicAre Racing games "Sports" Games?
Everyonedies
07/10/23 9:28:37 AM
#1
What do you think?



Examples: Forza, Gran Turismo, Dirt, Mario Kart

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TopicDid Kelsey Grammer write this Simpsons line?
Everyonedies
05/16/23 10:52:41 AM
#10
https://gamefaqs.gamespot.com/a/user_image/8/1/4/AAOW64AAEe0e.jpg

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TopicDemocratic congressman's staff attacked by man with baseball bat
Everyonedies
05/15/23 3:37:30 PM
#4
Solar_Crimson posted...
I feel sorry for that intern.


Right. My first day on my first job I got lost on where to go when coming back from lunch. Her first day she ended up in the hospital due to an attack from a Nazi. Very bad first day.

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TopicBeing shot by a 6-year old should be an expected part of the job, says school
Everyonedies
04/28/23 3:27:29 PM
#1
Lawyers for the school board in Newport News, Virginia, have filed a motion to dismiss the $40 million lawsuit filed by first-grade teacher Abby Zwerner who was shot in her classroom by a 6-year-old student.
The attorneys for the board claim that her injuries are covered under the state's worker's compensation law for which she was approved to receive benefits, but they say she refused to accept them and filed suit instead.
In Zwerner's lawsuit, she alleged that school administrators were told the boy brought a gun to school prior to the shooting and "had a history of random violence," yet did nothing to stop him from harming her.
In response to her lawsuit, the motion filed on Wednesday by the attorneys for the Newport News School division claims the allegations made in the lawsuit fall under Virginia's Workers' Compensation Act.
They argue the act doesn't fall in the jurisdiction of the Newport News Circuit Court.
The lawyers for the board are representing former Newport News School Superintendent Dr. George Parker, III, and former Richneck Elementary Principal Briana Foster Newton. Ebony Parker, the former assistant principal at Richneck who was named in Zwerner's lawsuit, was not included in the school board's motion.
Lawyers for the school board wrote in the motion that Zwerner's complaints about the shooting in her lawsuit, "alleges in detail a long list of workplace conditions that were a direct and proximate cause of the attack on Zwerner."
The motion argues that under the Workers Compensation Act, Zwerner is barred "from maintaining a cause of action against the School Defendants for the injures she sustained in the course of her employment as a first-grade teacher with Newport News School." The court, thus, lacks subject matter jurisdiction over Zwerner's claims arising from the injuries she sustained during the shooting, the motion argues.
It further argues that Zwerner's assertion that the 6-year-old's attack was personal to her is in violation of the state's laws that children under the age of seven are unable to be guilty of negligence. The attorneys for the board add that Zwerner's lawsuit "attempts to circumvent the Act" by alleging that the child's actions on the day of the shooting were "personal" and pointing to the handgun as the problem.
Zwener "goes as far as to claim that she reasonably anticipated that 'she would be working with young [elementary school] children who posed no danger to her.' While in an ideal world, young children would not pose any danger to others, including their teachers, this is sadly not reality," the motion says.
Diane Toscano and Jeffrey Breit, attorneys for Zwerner, told ABC News on Thursday, "No one believes that a first grade teacher should expect that one of the risks of teaching first grade is that you might get shot by a six-year-old."
Zwerner's lawyers added, "The school board's position is contrary to how every citizen in Newport News thinks teachers should be treated, and the law does not support the board's position. Teachers across the district will be alarmed to learn their employer sees this as part of the job description."

https://abcnews.go.com/US/district-dismiss-lawsuit-teacher-shot-6-year-covered/story?id=98921573

These fucking guys are going to lose so hard.

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