http://youtu.be/LIkjuw410EI
I’ve also often thought the layout of his run made no sense!
http://youtu.be/LIkjuw410EI
I’ve also often thought the layout of his run made no sense!
Police believe they have pinned down a shooter who has been firing at people in the Washington Navy Yard Monday morning, wounding at least 10 people.
Police said that they believe the shooter is somewhere between the third and fourth floors of one of the buildings on the installation in Southeast Washington, but they declined to identify it further.
As hundreds of police officers from various agencies converged on the scene, officials at Reagan National Airport ordered all outgoing flights held.
Police on the scene said eight civilians were shot, along with the two police officers. One is a D.C. Metro Police officer who was shot two times in the leg, police said. The other officer worked at the base.
I try to explain this to people. Tax cuts are only high-cost loans against deferred maintenance.
That the city’s two top high schools have closed their libraries.
Very meager gains in last month’s employment numbers.
From the Bureau of Labor Statistics…
Both the number of unemployed persons, at 11.3 million, and the
unemployment rate, at (U3) 7.3 percent, changed little in August. The
jobless rate is down from 8.1 percent a year ago….
In August, the number of long-term unemployed (those jobless for 27
weeks or more) was about unchanged at 4.3 million. These individuals
accounted for 37.9 percent of the unemployed. Over the past 12 months,
the number of long-term unemployed has declined by 733,000…
In August, 2.3 million persons were marginally attached to the labor
force, down by 219,000 from a year earlier. (The data are not
seasonally adjusted.) These individuals were not in the labor force,
wanted and were available for work, and had looked for a job sometime
in the prior 12 months. They were not counted as unemployed because
they had not searched for work in the 4 weeks preceding the survey.
Among the marginally attached, there were 866,000 discouraged workers
in August, essentially unchanged from a year earlier. (The data are
not seasonally adjusted.) Discouraged workers are persons not
currently looking for work because they believe no jobs are available
for them. The remaining 1.5 million persons marginally attached to the
labor force in August had not searched for work for reasons such as
school attendance or family responsibilities.
The U6 numbers, that factor in people who work part-time even though they want full-time jobs and discouraged workers who want jobs but have given up looking within the past year in the calculation is at 13.7%.
Georgia is at 8.8%, U3. Ugh.
NSFW….
http://youtu.be/mjkX4oqG4CA
From Tuesday’s Philadelphia Daily News:
Cops in Center City are trying an unusual approach to thwarting bike thieves: They’re letting them steal bikes. Undercover cops… set up stings – like the one Aug. 15 observed by the Daily News – leaving an unlocked “bait bike” out somewhere and then waiting for someone to take it.
They’ve logged more than a dozen arrests this way this year for a pesky quality-of-life crime that historically has had low arrest rates.
It’s great that a local paper devoted time and space to bicycle theft in Philly, where riders have been making slow but steady progress in forcing drivers to share the roads with them. Too bad the reporter didn’t mention some of the reasons why bike theft is so rampant.
Start with the fact that city government and private businesses have done a lousy job of creating parking space for the growing number of riders in Center City and other popular biking areas. Some racks and corrals have been installed, and some poles fitted with metal rings, but finding a safe outdoor spot to lock up can still be a challenge. It’s not uncommon to see a bunch of bikes mashed together and somehow locked to the same pole.
Also, cops rarely put much effort into trying to catch bike thieves, despite the crude entrapment strategy described in the Daily News story. I had more than a half-dozen good bikes stolen in Philly over the past ten years and reported each theft. The cops who responded to my complaints shrugged then off, and in some cases laughed in my face.
The Daily News reporter called bike theft “a pesky quality-of-life crime,” an expression that both hints at police indifference and points to a big contradiction in the story. Is pesky the right word, given that “11,000 bicycles were reported stolen from 2007 through 2012 in Philly”? Bikes are as important to cyclists as cars are to drivers, but would the Daily News describe the theft of a gas-guzzling Hummer as pesky? And what if the bike owner catches up with the thief and someone gets his head bashed in? Still a pesky crime?
Give the Daily News credit for calling attention to the Bicycle Coalition of Greater Philadelphia and StolenBicycleRegistry.com and the Facebook page called Philadelphia Stolen Bikes. Otherwise, the story was mostly a puff piece for the Philly police.
Footnote: Philly might have more bike commuters per capita than any other major city in America, so it’s nice to know city officials are at least working with the Bicycle Coalition to install more racks.
My plan was to hitchhike from Tinicum swamp past the junkyards and into Philly through the backdoor. My swamp rabbit friend tried to discourage me, but I had no choice, a temp agency was insisting on proof that I really existed, so I had to order a copy of my birth certificate, in person, at the Division of Vital Records, in Center City.
This, of course, is easier said than done. When you get to the Vital Records building, you have to take a number and wait for hours to speak to a clerk through a tiny hole in a bulletproof window. And that’s only if you get past two armed, gray-uniformed guards and their scanning devices, which are to make sure no one brings in bombs or other weapons. Why anyone would want to blow up a bunch of applications for birth and death certificates is a mystery to me, but I guess Big Brother knows.
I was commanded to empty the contents of my pockets into a plastic tray and put the tray and my backpack on the conveyor belt of the x-ray scanner. Then I had to walk between the two poles of another scanner, which (I think) was merely a metal detector. I made it inside but my bag set off an alarm, beep beep. The conveyor belt stopped moving.
The heavier guard took a long look at a monitor I couldn’t see. Then she eyed me suspiciously and said, “You got something shaped like a bagel in that bag?”
“Yes,” I replied, “A bagel.”
The guard ordered me to walk back through the metal detector, zip open the bag and remove the offending article. I pulled back the tin foil in which I’d wrapped a pumpernickel bagel, my favorite kind.
“You can’t bring no bagel into Vital Records,” she said.
I explained that the bagel was my lunch and promised not to eat it until my business inside was finished, but she wasn’t having any of that.
“You got to eat it outside, or throw it away,” she said, eyeing me even more suspiciously.
You’ve heard of the shoe bomber? I guess she thought I was the bagel bomber, armed with an explosive too subtle for x-rays to detect. It was a losing battle, so I threw the bagel into a nearby trashcan. The guard tensed up, as if fearing the bagel might still go off.
I’d learned my lesson — don’t try to sneak a bagel into a municipal building. But too late! My picture was probably being taken from a dozen angles and sent by Big Brother to cops all over the country, with this message: Be on the lookout for this man. May be carrying explosive bagels.
Footnote: Here’s a good piece about x-ray scanners and police states.
Normally I’m a too-tolerant human being, but right now, I hope the cops catch these people and beat the shit out of them.
And hey, WaWa? Why should you put out a tip jar to cover her medical bills? Do the right thing, you can afford it.
A documentary about parkour, a form of extreme outdoor acrobatic workouts done in cities. The Times writes about how it’s being tamed for gyms.
The job of an insurance company is to avoid paying out whenever possible. I can’t help but remember, though, that when I pointed out to an insurance carrier that a local township lied on their application, they weren’t interested. I guess that’s what makes politics so interesting:
The insurance company for the contractor being sued by people injured in the Market Street building collapse contends that the contractor’s insurance policy is invalid because he lied on key application documents.
Berkley Assurance Co. of Iowa filed a suit Monday afternoon in Philadelphia Common Pleas Court arguing that Griffin Campbell misrepresented his history and the details of the demolition. Six people were killed when a wall of the building being demolished collapsed onto the Salvation Army thrift store next door June 5. The suit also says that because Campbell did not pay a policy premium in April, the insurance policy was canceled and not in effect on the day of the collapse. Also named as defendants are Richard Basciano, who owned the building that fell onto the shop, and the 11 injured victims who have sued Basciano, Campbell, and their firms.
The grounds for including the victims among the defendants were not included in the complaint. Berkley is asking the court to confirm that the policy is either canceled or void and that the company is not obliged to provide any payouts demanded in response to the collapse.