Odd

How consistently male-dominated extremist religions turn to abusing women as a public good:

GENEVA – Militants have ordered all girls and women in and around Iraq’s northern city of Mosul to undergo female genital mutilation, the United Nations said on Thursday. The “fatwa” issued by the Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham (ISIS) would potentially affect 4 million women and girls, U.N. resident and humanitarian coordinator in Iraq Jacqueline Badcock told reporters by videolink from Erbil, Iraq.

I don’t even know what to say. These aren’t women who grew up in a culture where this is considered “normal.” This is nothing but torture and mutilation for the sake of exercising power. Sometimes I forget how primal misogyny is.

The logical outcome of austerity is unenforced regulation

Big_Mac_and_Coke_-_Google_Search

One of the reasons I’m always so pissed at Obama for going along with austerity cuts is the loss of vital services, and his apparent inability to effectively advocate for them.

I kept waiting to hear him make this speech: “Let me be clear. What these Republican cuts mean are increasing numbers of illness and death from uninspected meat and medication, dirtier water and air, more dangerous roads, and a whole host of necessary parts of invisible government. Things you don’t think about, but that you’ll feel the effects when they’re no longer there, things that make us a civilized society and not a Third World nation. I am deeply opposed to these cuts, and instead of thinking of these elected representatives as doing an important job of deficit reduction, you should know the reality: Government is being stripped of its most vital services. I have to sign this bill, because these partisan political vandals are holding our debt ceiling hostage. But the American people should have no illusions about the effects.”

But he never did, and instead we see stories like this:

The American meat supplier at the center of a major food safety scandal in Asia engages in widespread food safety and labor violations at its massive processing plant in West Chicago, Illinois, former employees alleged Wednesday in exclusive conversations with International Business Times.

OSI Group LLC, which posted more than $6 billion in sales last year, has been under fire since Sunday, when Chinese regulators shuttered OSI’s Shanghai Husi Food Co. Ltd. meat processing facility. Chinese authorities later detained five individuals connected to the company. The moves came in the wake of an investigation by a local TV station that revealed that OSI sold expired meat and meat that had fallen on the floor to several fast-food chains throughout China and Japan.

OSI said Monday that it had launched its own investigation into the practices at the Shanghai Husi plant, and issued a statement saying that “[o]ur company management believes this to be an isolated event.”

The Aurora, Illinois, company’s West Chicago plant reportedly produces more than five million beef patties per day, making it one of OSI’s largest facilities. Sheldon Lavin, CEO and chairman of OSI, has said that the company is the world’s largest protein supplier for McDonald’s (NYSE:MCD). The West Chicago plant is mostly dedicated to providing meat products for the fast food giant, which the supplier has done without major scandal for four decades.

But OSI’s food safety problems may extend beyond Asia. Aurora resident Rosa Maria Ramirez, 47, described practices she allegedly witnessed at the West Chicago plant where she worked for six years.

“The meat would fall on the floor and they would put it back in and pack it,” Ramirez told IBTimes through a translator Wednesday evening. “They would spit in the meat, and have sweat dripping off their faces into the meat, and there were times when people’s gum would drop out of their mouths into the meat and they would just let it go if they couldn’t find it. It’s a requirement for every person to wash their hands when they go into the production area but pretty much nobody did it.”

A new record

Two hours to execute a prisoner, and of course it’s Arizona:

The controversy engulfing the death penalty in the United States escalated on Wednesday when the state of Arizona took almost two hours to kill a prisoner using an experimental concoction of drugs whose provenance it had insisted on keeping secret.

Joseph Wood took an hour and 58 minutes to die after he was injected with a relatively untested combination of the sedative midazolam and painkiller hydromorphone. The procedure took so long that his lawyers had time to file an emergency court motion in an attempt to have it stopped. For more than an hour, he was seen to be “gasping and snorting”, according to the court filing.

The attempt to execute Wood had begun at 1.52pm, with sedation of the prisoner confirmed five minutes later. The office of the Arizona attorney general, Tom Horne, announced at 3.49pm local time that Wood was dead.

According to the emergency motion, Wood was seen to be still breathing at 2.02pm, and the next minute his mouth moved. “He has been gasping and snorting for more than an hour,” his lawyers said. When the officials in charge of the execution checked the prisoner at 3.02pm – an hour and 10 minutes after the procedure began – he was confirmed still to be alive.

Sodastream fires Palestinian workers

SodaStream, at Target 7/2014 Pics by Mike Mozart of TheToyChannel and JeepersMedia on YouTube #SodaStream #Target

I argue with people about boycotting this company all this time. They do love their Sodastreams, but the company is in an illegal settlement that was stolen from the Palestinians. They employed Palestinians, true — but not anymore:

Sodastream, which makes soda machines for home use, fired 60 Palestinian workers this month from its plant in the West Bank settlement of Mishor Adumim over a dispute about the food they received during their shifts to break the day-long fast during the month of Ramadan.

WAC-MAAN, the trade union representing the plant’s Palestinian workers, said that in early July workers on the evening shift complained that the food they received was insufficient.

“Sixty workers, who are prohibited from bringing food from home because of Jewish dietary laws, found themselves without enough food after the 16-hour fast,” Maan’s Jerusalem coordinator, Erez Wagner, said.

Wagner said the workers approached management and explained that it would be difficult for them to work through the night without sufficient food, noting that it was dangerous for them to work the big machines when they were both hungry and tired.

According to Wagner, one executive accused the workers of deliberately provoking confrontation, an accusation the workers denied.

The good news

Is that Tariq Abu Khdeir, Tampa teenager beaten by Israeli cops, left Israel without incident on the morning of the 17th.

The bad news is, that night, Israeli police then raided his relatives’ house where he was staying and ransacked it. Remember, these are the parents of the Palestinian teenager who was just kidnapped, tortured and killed by Jewish extremists:

At 1 AM, however, a squadron of Israeli police burst into the Abu Khdeir family home in Shufat and ransacked the place, smashing furniture and emptying cabinets with reckless abandon.

The police left with Tariq Abu Khdeir’s 59-year-old uncle, Iesa, in handcuffs, along with his cousins Musaa and Anen.

Musaa Abu Khdeir’s mother told Shibly she was informed by a magistrate judge that her son and Iesa Abu Khdeir would be released but they remain in custody.

According to Shibly, the family is “terrified.”

israeliraid

When you absolutely need your illegal drugs overnight

Electric FedEx delivery van downtown San Jose

This is interesting. I’m not fond of FedEx, they’re big union busters. So it wouldn’t break my heart to see them get slammed, but they do have a point:

SAN FRANCISCO — FedEX has been indicted by a federal grand jury on charges of shipping powerful prescription drugs for illegal online pharmacies, the latest major company targeted by federal law enforcement for playing a part in the proliferation of such drugs on the black market.

The indictment charges the world’s largest cargo company with conspiracy to distribute controlled substances and distribution of misbranded drugs, and it moves to force the company to forfeit at least $820 million linked to the proceeds from such illicit shipments.

Federal prosecutors accused FedEx of ignoring warnings for nearly a decade from Congress, the DEA and other federal agencies that underground online pharmacies were using its shipping services to illegally distribute prescription drugs such as oxycodone and hydrocodone.
Continue reading “When you absolutely need your illegal drugs overnight”

Judge rules against CA death penalty

Another state done with it:

California’s system for imposing and carrying out the death penalty is so long and drawn-out that it amounts to cruel and unusual punishment and is unconstitutional, a federal judge ruled on Wednesday.

Ruling in the case of Ernest Dewayne Jones, who was condemned to death in 1995 and has yet to be executed, Judge Cormac J. Carney of the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California said that to take “nearly a generation” to decide on Jones’ appeals is unconstitutional.

Meh

Citibank Shadow Letters

They get to deduct a lot of it from their taxes. A mere slap on the wrist, as usual:

WASHINGTON (AP) — Citigroup will pay $7 billion to settle an investigation into risky subprime mortgages, the type that helped fuel the financial crisis.

The agreement announced Monday comes weeks after talks between the sides broke down, prompting the government to warn that it would sue the New York investment bank. The bank had offered to pay less than $4 billion, a sum substantially less than what the Justice Department was asking for.

The settlement stems from the sale of securities made up of subprime mortgages, which fueled both the housing boom and bust that triggered the Great Recession at the end of 2007.

Citigroup and other banks downplayed the risks of subprime mortgages when packaging and selling them to mutual funds, investment trusts, pensions, as well as other banks and investors. The securities, which contained so-called residential mortgage-backed securities and collateralized debt obligations, plunged in value when the housing market collapsed in 2006 and 2007. Those losses triggered a financial crisis that pushed the economy into the worst recession since the 1930s.