organization:supreme court

  • Stop comparing Trump to foreign leaders. He’s a distinctly American phenomenon
    http://www.latimes.com/opinion/op-ed/la-oe-johnson-trump-is-like-x-20170210-story.html

    Often, they prioritize adherence to norms and governing style over ideological goals, precisely because this approach allows them to, at the same time, praise George W. Bush while treating Trump as beyond the pale, despite the fact that the two men share many of the same political objectives, including a bloated military, economic policies that favor Wall Street and the installation of anti-choice judges on the Supreme Court.

    #Etats-Unis

  • Islamist Groups Demand Removal of Sculpture in Front of Supreme Court in Bangladesh · Global Voices
    https://globalvoices.org/2017/02/18/islamist-groups-demand-removal-of-sculpture-in-front-of-supreme-court-

    In Bangladesh, right wing religious groups are demanding the removal of a sari-clad sculpture of the Lady Justice in front of the Supreme court. They have threatened a countrywide movement from February 24 if their demands are not met by authorities.

    The sculpture was created from stainless steel by renowned artist Mrinal Hoque and is scheduled to be officially opened in April this year. The statue is currently in position outside the court but is still being decorated.

    #régression #bangladesh

  • Norma McCorvey, ‘Roe’ in Roe v. Wade, Is Dead at 69 - The New York Times
    https://www.nytimes.com/2017/02/18/obituaries/norma-mccorvey-dead-roe-v-wade.html

    Norma McCorvey, the anonymous plaintiff in Roe v. Wade, the landmark 1973 Supreme Court ruling that legalized abortion in the United States, reshaping the nation’s social and political landscapes and inflaming one of the most divisive controversies of the past half-century, died on Saturday in Katy, Tex. She was 69.

    At the heart of it all, Ms. McCorvey — known as Jane Roe in the court papers — became an almost mythological figure to millions of Americans, more a symbol of what they believed in than who she was: a young Dallas woman lifted by chance into a national spotlight she never sought and tried for years to avoid, then pulled by the forces of politics to one side of the abortion conflict, then by religion to the other.

    Les gens changent au cours de leur vie. Mais les acquis collectifs restent, car ils dépassent les cas individuels. C’est un des problèmes de la Common Law par rapport à la logique républicaine de la Loi en priorité. Le rapport à la loi n’est pas plus simple que celui aux individus qui apportent de grands changements malgré eux.

    #féminisme #avortement #USA

  • 2月6日のツイート
    http://twilog.org/ChikuwaQ/date-170206

    Top story: Donald J. Trump on Twitter: "Just cannot believe a judge would put … twitter.com/realDonaldTrum…, see more tweetedtimes.com/ChikuwaQ?s=tnp posted at 07:46:22

    Top story: Will the Supreme Court Stand Up to Trump? www.nytimes.com/2017/02/04/opi…, see more tweetedtimes.com/ChikuwaQ?s=tnp posted at 05:53:45

    Top story: Bret Stephens on Twitter: "Trump puts US on moral par with Putin’s R… twitter.com/StephensWSJ/st…, see more tweetedtimes.com/ChikuwaQ?s=tnp posted at 03:49:46

    Top story: Sean Spicer Press Conference - SNL www.youtube.com/watch?v=UWuc18…, see more tweetedtimes.com/ChikuwaQ?s=tnp

    posted at (...)

  • 1月31日のツイート
    http://twilog.org/ChikuwaQ/date-170131

    Top story: Senate Dems will filibuster Trump’s Supreme Court nominee - POLITICO www.politico.com/story/2017/01/…, see more tweetedtimes.com/ChikuwaQ?s=tnp posted at 06:03:54

    Top story: BREAKING NEWS: Full Text of Draft Dissent Channel Memo on Trump Refu… lawfareblog.com/breaking-news-…, see more tweetedtimes.com/ChikuwaQ?s=tnp posted at 04:07:08

    Top story: Trial Balloon for a Coup? – Yonatan Zunger – Medium medium.com/@yonatanzunger…, see more tweetedtimes.com/ChikuwaQ?s=tnp posted at 02:08:26

    Top story: Donald J. Trump on Twitter: "Only 109 people out of 325,000 were det… twitter.com/realdonaldtrum…, see more tweetedtimes.com/ChikuwaQ?s=tnp posted at (...)

  • Abortion Rate In U.S. Falls To Lowest Level Since Roe v. Wade : The Two-Way : NPR
    http://www.npr.org/sections/thetwo-way/2017/01/17/509734620/u-s-abortion-rate-falls-to-lowest-level-since-roe-v-wade

    The abortion rate in the United States fell to its lowest level since the historic Roe v. Wade Supreme Court decision legalized abortion nationwide, a new report finds.
    […]
    Perhaps not surprisingly, given the longstanding controversy around abortion policy, the meaning of the report is somewhat in dispute.

    Planned Parenthood President Cecile Richards said efforts to help women get better access to contraception are paying off. She points in particular to recent improvements in the rate of unintended pregnancies, and a historically low teen pregnancy rate.
    […]
    Some anti-abortion groups, meanwhile, argue the Guttmacher report shows new state restrictions on abortion are working. Kristi Hamrick, a spokeswoman for Americans United for Life, said she has her doubts about the Guttmacher report — since the data come from surveys of abortion providers — but accepts the overall conclusion. She emphasized the impact of new regulations on clinics and laws requiring women seeking abortions to get an ultrasound, which she said are having a “real, measurable impact on abortion.”

    These have been game-changers, and we see the abortion rate dropping in response,” Hamrick said.

    Hamrick said she believes abortion numbers are also falling in part because public sentiment is turning against abortion — although surveys by the Pew Research Center show opinions on abortion have been largely stable over the past two decades. The Gallup polling firm has found Americans largely divided on abortion in recent decades, with a majority labeling themselves “pro-choice” in a 2015 survey.

  • Apple v. Samsung Case is Reopened, Returning to Court of Appeals | Androidheadlines.com
    http://www.androidheadlines.com/2017/01/apple-v-samsung-case-reopened-returning-court-appeals.html

    With the Supreme Court ruling in favor of Samsung, this means that the case is sent back to the Court of Appeals, and it also means that the case is now re-opened. Additionally, the Court of Appeals are unable to hit Samsung with a fine that covers the sales of all devices sold with infringing patents, thanks to the Supreme Court’s decision. Now since Samsung has already paid Apple the $399 million, it likely means that once the court comes to a new judgement, Samsung will be getting a partial refund from Apple. Since Samsung cannot be liable to pay back all the profits from products that infringed, the amount should be lower, in fact it should be considerably lower, than what they have already paid.

    The case between Apple and Samsung was one of the biggest cases in recent history, and it’s still not over. Apple was actually originally awarded just over a billion, but Samsung continued to appeal the decision and got it all the way down to $399 million. That is when the Supreme Court got involved and agreed to hear the case. Where they ultimately ruled in favor of Samsung, which sent the case back over to the Court of Appeals. So the Apple v. Samsung case is far from being over. But this case is setting precedent for future patent cases, which there are sure to be plenty in the near future.

  • Les Français du Royaume-Uni s’inquiètent pour leurs retraites...
    https://www.crashdebug.fr/international/12901-les-francais-du-royaume-uni-s-inquietent-pour-leurs-retraites

    Merci à Le monde étudiant de m’avoir passé l’info sur facebook ; ), et à spartou de me l’avoir croisé par Email, gage que ceci risque de s’envenimer, perso, ça me fait bien marrer...

    NB. j’ai des gros soucis avec Orange qui continue a nous faire suer, (le support au 39.00 à refusé de me passer un ingénieur) pas impossible que je bouge de provider, si ça se reproduit je vous fait une vidéo live, pour que vous compreniez mon calvaire.... Enfin je vous rassure ça me prends exactement 5 sec pour me connecter en dehors d’Orange... DGSE = Loser

    Protestors in costume demonstrate outside the Supreme Court in London, Monday, Dec. 5, 2016. May’s

    government will ask Supreme Court justices to overturn a ruling that Parliament must hold a vote before

    Britain’s exit (...)

    #En_vedette #Actualités_internationales #International

  • Israel issues 20 demolition orders in East Jerusalem – Middle East Monitor
    https://www.middleeastmonitor.com/20161215-israel-issues-20-demolition-orders-in-east-jerusalem

    December 15, 2016 at 9:33 pm

    Jerusalem municipality crews today distributed 20 demolition orders for residential buildings in the Issawiya neighbourhood of occupied East Jerusalem.

    Activist and political analyst Hani Al-Issawi said the Israeli municipality filed a request about two weeks ago, at the Israeli court to issue the demolition orders against a large number of buildings which were 20-30 years old giving their owners 30 days to object.

    Al-Issawi said the Israeli municipality wants to demolish 20 buildings which include 80 apartments, where scores of Jerusalemites, including children, live, pointing out that the motive is “purely political rather than because of illegal construction”, because the residential building are located near the illegal Israeli settlement of Ma’aleh Adumim in East Jerusalem.

    The move is part of Jerusalem Mayor Nir Barkat’s threate to issue more demolition orders against Palestinians if settlers were evacuated from the illegal Amona outpost, Al-Issawi said.

    Israel’s Supreme Court has ordered the Amona outpost to be evacuated by 25 December due to the outpost being built on privately owned Palestinian land.

    #colonisation_de_peuplement

  • Supreme Court rules against exposing Israel’s role in Bosnian genocide
    By John Brown* (Translated by Tal Haran) | Published December 5, 2016
    http://972mag.com/israels-involvement-in-bosnian-genocide-to-remain-under-wraps/123503

    Citing potential damage to Israel’s foreign relations, the Supreme Court rejects a petition calling to reveal details of the government’s arms exports to the Serbian army during the Bosnian genocide.

    Israel’s Supreme Court last month rejected a petition to reveal details of Israeli defense exports to the former Yugoslavia during the genocide in Bosnia in the 1990s. The court ruled that exposing Israeli involvement in genocide would damage the country’s foreign relations to such an extent that it would outweigh the public interest in knowing that information, and the possible prosecution of those involved.(...)

  • Supreme Court to consider indefinite detention for immigrants

    The Supreme Court will hear arguments Wednesday over whether immigrants facing deportation can be detained indefinitely for months or even years without a hearing, a case that could have broad implications for President-elect Donald Trump’s proposals to crack down on those entering the country illegally and to ramp up deportations.

    http://www.aol.com/article/news/2016/11/29/supreme-court-to-consider-indefinite-detention-for-immigrants/21616499
    #USA #Etats-Unis #détention_administrative #rétention #asile #migrations #réfugiés

  • Zionism at its best
    http://www.haaretz.com/opinion/.premium-1.756077
    The land that Israel has designated for the joyous settlers is called Atir/Umm al-Hiran, and for 60 years it has been home to members of the Bedouin Al-Qi’an tribe.
    By Amira Hass | Nov. 30, 2016 | 4:48 AM | 1

    The videos produced by the Hiran settlers’ group show a lot of joyful Jews who like to sing and play music, tell jokes and have fun. They will be even happier very soon, when they move to the site of their permanent community in the northeastern Negev.

    The land the state has designated for them is called Atir/Umm al-Hiran, and for 60 years it has been home to members of the Bedouin Al-Qi’an tribe. In other words, the homes and playgrounds for Jewish children that will be built there, and the gardens to be planted, will all be established on the ruins of the homes and lives of some 1,000 other people, who are also Israeli citizens (some of whom served in the army, for those who care).

    Any day now, the bulldozers of the Israel Land Administration and/or its subcontractors are going to demolish the homes of these Bedouin citizens to make way for a flourishing community of joyful Jewish citizens. Zionism in a nutshell.

    This is not an act of war or even an act of vindictive passion; everything has been calmly and carefully planned. The government of Ariel Sharon decided, the National Planning and Building Council approved, and the appeals committees rejected all the objections filed.

    The plan to destroy the lives of Bedouin for whom the Negev has been home for hundreds of years to advance and elevate a group of Jews who have gathered from all over the country – this also has the approval and sanction of six judges from three different courts: Israel Pablo Akselrad of the Kiryat Gat Magistrate’s Court; Judges Sarah Dovrat, Rachel Barkai and Ariel Vago of the Be’er Sheva District Court and Justices Elyakim Rubinstein and Neal Hendel of the Supreme Court. (Justice Daphne Barak-Erez objected to the demolition.)

    These judges knew that the Al-Qi’an tribe has lived in Umm al-Hiran since 1956, after being sent there at the order of the military governor. After 1948, those few Bedouin whom Israel did not expel to Gaza or the West Bank and Jordan were ordered to stay in a designated area of the Negev, which has gradually been reduced. The Al-Qi’an tribe was forced to leave the lands it had lived on for several generations, and on which Kibbutz Shoval was built. After years of wandering and evacuations, they were allowed to settle in the area of Wadi Yatir. Nevertheless, the state never officially recognized their village. That’s 60 years without electricity, water service or government expenditure on education, welfare or health. Moreover, all its structures are defined as “illegal.”

    The Startup Nation wants them to move to the Bedouin township of Hura. So here’s another mini-lesson in Zionism: Jewish Israelis are allowed to decide for themselves where and how to live. Arabs? They should be thankful we aren’t expelling them; they’ll live where and how we decide.

    Wrote Judge Akselrad: “We can say that the personal interest of the plaintiffs that the roofs over their heads not be demolished are not weighty under these circumstances, and in any case do not prevail over the public interest of preventing construction on state lands.”

    And the judges in Be’er Sheva put it, “Once it was determined that the permission given the appellants to use the land was revocable, the respondent has the right to demand their eviction from the land. … The claim that the respondent has some covert or even overt motive for evacuating them from the land in favor of establishing a Jewish community at the site … [must be discussed] by a different tribunal.”

    And what did the two justices from the different tribunal, the Supreme Court, say? They hid behind the procedural explanation that the residents had been late in filing their complaints against the destruction of their homes and lives.

    The majority decision by Rubinstein and Hendel permitting the village’s demolition was handed down in May 2015. Now the children and adults in Umm al-Hiran know that any minute the bulldozers and Jewish officials bearing official orders will be coming to kick them out.

  • Gazan boy paralyzed by Israeli army fire fights for compensation
    Atiya Nabahin was shot in the neck by soldiers as he returned home from school. Now he awaits a ruling for compensation.
    By Amira Hass | Nov. 26, 2016 | 11:58 AM
    http://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/.premium-1.755216

    A 17-year-old Palestinian who became a quadriplegic after being wounded by IDF fire is posing the first challenge to the Law to Bypass the High Court that was passed by the Knesset four years ago. If the Be’er Sheva District Court accepts the state’s position that his suit for damages should be rejected, his lawyer will appeal the ruling to the Supreme Court. Then the justices will have to address for the first time the legality of the amendment to the Civil Damages Law that the Knesset passed in 2012, seven years after they nullified a similar amendment to the same law.

    Atiya Nabahin’s family lived east of the Al-Bureij refugee camp on farmland it has owned and worked for decades, close to the Green Line. On November 16, 2014, his birthday, Nabahin was shot in the neck by soldiers as he returned home from school. No armed clash was occurring at that time and place between Palestinians and the IDF.

    For six months, Nabahin received medical treatment in Israel (paid for by the Palestinian Authority), after it was determined that he had been permanently paralyzed from the neck down. His father Fathi, 59, stayed with him throughout that time, and was taught at ALYN Hospital about how to care for his son, who is now completely dependent on his family members. The family cannot afford to hire outside help. It must shoulder the emotional, physical and financial burden of Atiya’s care alone.

    When Atiya Nabahin and his father were in Soroka Hospital in early 2015, the Gazan human rights organization Mizan put them in touch with lawyer Mohammed Jabarin, who later filed the civil suit against the state. Ofer Shoval, deputy Tel Aviv district attorney, sought to have the claim rejected because Nabahin “is a resident of an area outside of Israel that the government has officially declared to be enemy territory,” and because “the law explicitly states that the state is not responsible for damages in these circumstances.”

    A month ago, Jabarin and attorney Nadeem Shehadeh from Adalah – The Legal Center for Arab Minority Rights in Israel co-wrote a response to Shoval, saying that the law upon which the state is seeking to have the suit dismissed amounts to a direct challenge to the Supreme Court’s authority.

    Since the late 1990s, and more so after the outbreak of the second intifada, successive Israeli governments have tried to limit Palestinians’ ability to sue the state when they are hurt by IDF actions. In 2002, an amendment to the Civil Damages Law was enacted, which introduced many hurdles in the process for Palestinians wishing to sue for damages. In 2005, another amendment (7) was passed, which denied residents of the occupied territories, “subjects of enemy states and active members of terrorist organizations” the right to sue for damages caused them outside the framework of combat operations (with minor exceptions). The amendment also stipulated that “the state is not response for damages caused in the conflict zone due to actions by the security forces” and authorized the defense minister to determine, even retroactively, what qualifies as a “conflict zone.”

    Challenges from human rights NGOs

    Nine Israeli and Palestinian human rights organizations petitioned against the amendment and in December 2006 a nine-justice panel of the High Court, headed by then-court President Aharon Barak, ruled that the clause in question granted sweeping immunity to the state, “with the improper aim of exempting the state from all responsibility for damages in conflict zones … in relation to wide categories of actions that are not combat actions even in the broadest definition of that term. What this means is that many injured persons who were not involved in any hostile activity, and who were not hurt incidentally during actions by security forces meant to address any sort of hostile activity, are left without remedy for the harm to their life and their property.”

    The judges ruled that the key clause of the amendment (No. 7, Section 5c), which included the definition of conflict zones, shall be nullified because it violated the Basic Law: Human Dignity and Freedom. However, the court did not strike down Section 5b, regarding the identity of the casualties, but it did say that this section could be discussed in specific cases.

    Immediately after the ruling was handed down, the government began working to have the amendment restored, indirectly. Amendment 8 was passed in 2012, and this time there was no High Court petition, even though it was even more sweeping than Amendment 7. In the new amendment, the definition of military activity as “being done in circumstances of mortal or physical danger” was expanded to “actions of a combat nature, considering the entirety of the circumstances, including the objective of the operation, its geographical location and the threat to the force carrying it out.” In other words, the state needn’t make the claim that soldiers were in any danger in order to justify its request to reject a suit for damages.

    Additionally, to evade the definition of a “conflict zone” that was nullified by the High Court’s order, Amendment 8 added the following words to the part concerning the identity of the injured party who is not authorized to sue (the subject of an enemy country, etc.): “or one who is not an Israeli citizen, who is resident of an area outside of Israel that the government has declared, by order, as enemy territory.” In other words: Instead of a “conflict zone,” the new amendment refers to “enemy territory.”

    In October 2014, the government issued an order declaring Gaza enemy territory. The order was applied retroactively, beginning July 7, 2014 (just before the start of Operation Protective Edge in Gaza).

    Nabahin’s lawyers believe his severe injury falls exactly in that place where the High Court justices, in their 2006 ruling, sought to prevent the state from being able to evade responsibility: the seemingly unjustified injuring by soldiers, the state’s emissaries, of a person who was not involved in any hostilities and at a time and place where no hostile activity was occurring. In their letter, Jabarin and Shehadeh wrote:

    “The state is effectively being given total immunity, meaning it is exempt from responsibility for damages in relation to many areas of activity that do not qualify as combat activity, even in the broad and inherently problematic definition, given to this concept in the law. Thus many victims find themselves without recourse. … In this way [the state] is not trying to adapt the laws on damages to a war situation, but rather to deny the applicability of these laws to many actions that are not combat-related…”

    The attorneys – and their permanently paralyzed client – are now waiting for the state’s response to their objection.

    #Amira_Hass

  • Brexit: Fresh blow for Theresa May as Supreme Court rules Scotland and Wales can intervene in Article 50 triggering | The Independent
    http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/brexit-fresh-blow-for-theresa-may-as-supreme-court-rules-scotland-and

    Brexit: Fresh blow for Theresa May as Supreme Court rules Scotland and Wales can intervene in Article 50 triggering

    Edinburgh and Cardiff will be allowed to argue for the right to have a say over the triggering of the Article 50 notice period

    Rob Merrick Deputy Political Editor

    The Supreme Court today threw a further hurdle in the way of Theresa May’s hopes of a smooth Brexit, when it ruled the Scottish and Welsh governments can intervene.

    #brexit #écosse #pays_de_galle

  • Turkey’s ruling AKP proposes rapists be released from prison if they marry victims

    Turkey’s ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) has brought a motion to Parliament that proposes rapists in Turkish jails be released if they marry their victims, a way out of prison for more than 4,000 inmates convicted of rape.

    https://www.turkishminute.com/2016/11/18/turkeys-ruling-akp-proposes-rapists-released-prison-marry-victims
    #Turquie #viol #violeurs #mariage
    (mais où va-t-on?)

  • What `Watergate’ meant, before it meant scandal
    http://www.watergatenotes.net/pages/wbeforescandal.html


    http://www.openstreetmap.org/way/234731579#map=15/38.8988/-77.0669

    I had joined the Army the year before — Regular Army, thank you — and was strolling along the tow path of the old Chesapeake and Ohio Canal one Saturday afternoon. It’s a lovely old canal almost lost to the ages half a century ago when local road planners wanted to pave it over and make it a freeway.

    Had they done so, they would have wiped out nearly two centuries worth of American history. In 1754, George Washington had envisioned the C&O Canal as a way to link the Chesapeake Bay to the Midwest. The plan was to build a canal from Georgetown on the Potomac River to Pittsburgh on the Ohio River, and on to the heartland via the Mississippi.

    The canal would begin just about where Rock Creek empties into the Potomac River, with a canal and locks system paralleling the Potomac River valley. President John Quincy Adams broke ground for the canal in 1828. Builders got as far as Cumberland, Md., 184.5 miles upstream.

    It was profitable for a time, but the Baltimore and Ohio railroad, roughly paralleling the canal, ultimately doomed it. Floods took their toll as well, though the railroad continued operating parts of the C&O canal until 1924. The government bought it in 1938, and by the early 1950s had hatched the parkway plan.

    Then Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas, an outdoorsman and historian, went to work. He recruited a party of editorial writers from The Washington Post, which had backed the plan to pave over the canal, and led them on a hike along the entire length of the C&O canal. By the end of the trip the writers had changed their minds, and eventually Congress preserved it as a National Historical Park.

    Without that designation, the canal would have disappeared, and so might the little-known area around the canal’s Milepost 0. When we first saw it that afternoon in 1969, it was little more than an old jumble of stones and timbers. But it was, we later learned, the water gate — the last lock, where water coming downstream along the C&O canal could empty into the Potomac. It was the place where canal boats could move on and off the Potomac River. With the water gate closed and the channel filling with water, they could begin the long process of locking up through the C&O.

    When a new complex with a hotel, condominiums, offices, restaurants and shops was built just across Rock Creek Parkway, it took its name from that old water gate — and became the Watergate.

    #histoire #USA #politique #ouvrage_hydraulique

  • Barrel of deaths | The Economist
    http://www.economist.com/news/books-and-arts/21709516-why-americans-love-guns-barrel-deaths?fsrc=scn%2Ftw%2Fte%2Fbl%2F

    ONE of the peculiar things about America is the extraordinary frequency with which people who live there are shot to death. There are well over 30,000 gun deaths in America each year, roughly two-thirds of them suicides and one-third murders. This firearm homicide rate, 3.4 per 100,000 inhabitants in 2014, is more than five times that of any other developed country. Yet America’s political system steadfastly rejects every attempt to do anything about it. Massacres in schools have become regular occurrences, yet Congress has consistently voted down even weak gun-control measures. The Supreme Court decided in 2008 that the constitution’s Second Amendment, which begins with a clause about militias, gives individuals the right to own guns. Many Americans have come to embrace a novel political ideology, concocted by pro-gun lobbying groups, which holds that firearms are the cornerstone of political liberty and that restricting them would cause more crime.

    #armement #armes #états-unis

  • 10月29日のツイート
    http://twilog.org/ChikuwaQ/date-161029

    RT @ISUTA_JP: 宮崎駿がシシ神に!?映画監督とその代表作をミックスしたフィギュアがシュールすぎる isuta.jp/104061/ @ISUTA_JPさんから pic.twitter.com/ocPDsKA5Tf posted at 11:07:55

    RT @tokyoshashinbu: 夕刊と東京新聞ホームページ掲載の「写真広場」。「青と茶 2つの世界」。26日の富士山初冠雪を伝える写真から。東京都江戸川区上空約500mで撮影すると上空はくっきり、下は「煙霧」と呼ばれる現象で茶色に。 #富士山 #煙霧 #スカイツリー pic.twitter.com/gt7Nzbe0Ec posted at 11:06:25

    ちょっと寒そう。 twitter.com/chiyodacitypr/… posted at 10:56:42

    RT @LeoAuteur: Je vous souhaite une très belle nuit et vous donne rendez-vous demain si vous le voulez bien ! pic.twitter.com/WTcBWo8gfx posted at 10:42:57

    The latest Papier! paper.li/ChikuwaQ/13277… Thanks to @FadiAbouRihan @samvega_pasada @MondeDeScience #photography #blackandwhite posted at 09:14:28

    Top story: Supreme Court to Rule in Transgender Access Case www.nytimes.com/2016/10/29/us/…, see more tweetedtimes.com/ChikuwaQ?s=tnp posted at 08:23:32

    Top story: F.B.I. Reviewing New Emails in Hillary (...)

  • Latvijas Gāze pays the fine applied by Competition Council | Baltic News Network - News from Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia
    http://bnn-news.com/latvijas-gaze-pays-the-fine-applied-by-competition-council-152929

    In accordance with the ruling of the Supreme Court, which approved the decision made by the Competition Council in relation to the breach of regulations and damage caused to its clients, Latvijas Gāze has transferred the payment of the fine worth EUR 2.2 million applied to the company.

    In 2013, CC made the decision to fine Latvijas Gāze for its abuse of monopoly status in its refusal to sign new gas supply contracts with new clients who did not pay back debts owed to LG by previous clients. Over the course of the investigation CC received complaints about such cases from 500 clients.

    #Latvia #Latvijas_gāze #Competition_council

  • Case Accusing Bush Officials of 9/11 Abuses Heads to Supreme Court
    http://www.nytimes.com/2016/10/12/us/politics/supreme-court-9-11-muslim-bush-administration.html

    The Supreme Court agreed on Tuesday to decide whether high-ranking George W. Bush administration officials — including John Ashcroft, the former attorney general, and Robert S. Mueller III, the former F.B.I. director — may be held liable for policies adopted after the Sept. 11 attacks.

    The case began as a class action in 2002 filed by immigrants, most of them Muslim, over policies and practices that swept hundreds of people into the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn on immigration violations in the weeks after the attacks. The plaintiffs said they had been subjected to beatings, humiliating searches and other abuses.

    The roundups drew criticism from the inspector general of the Justice Department, who in 2003 issued reports saying that the government had made little or no effort to distinguish between genuine suspects and Muslim immigrants with minor visa violations.

  • L’Islande confirme la condamnation de ses banksters à de la prison ferme. Pour l’instant, aucune reprise dans nos médias. (Et où, au passage, on parle du Qatar.)

    Supreme Court Affirms Kaupþing Convictions | Iceland Review
    http://icelandreview.com/news/2016/10/07/supreme-court-affirms-kaupthing-convictions

    Yesterday afternoon The Supreme Court of Iceland affirmed the guilty verdicts handed down by the Reykjavík District Court in June of last year over seven out of nine former Kaupþing bank directors, convicted for major market manipulation and breach of trust, Fréttatíminn reports. The court, furthermore, extended the sentence of Hreiðar Már Sigurðsson by six months. In addition, the court handed down a guilty verdict for two defendants who were acquitted in district court.

    Iceland to sentence ninth banker found guilty of market manipulation that helped caused 2008 crash | The Independent
    http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/europe/iceland-to-sentence-ninth-banker-found-guilty-of-market-manipulation-

    Their sentences range from one year to more than four years for crimes relating to misleadingly financing share purchases - the bank lent money for the purchase of the shares and used its own shares as collateral for the loans. They are also found guilty of creating a misleading demand for Kaupthing shares. 

    No jail time has yet been handed out to Ms Þórarinsdóttir or Mr Guðmundsson. 

    Another former director of the bank, Hreiðar Már Sigurðsson, who received a prison sentence of five and half years last year, was given a six-month extension to his sentence on Thursday.

    He was one of group of former bankers accused of hiding the fact that a Qatari investor bought a stake in the firm with money lent illegally by the bank itself. Weeks before the bank collapsed Kaupthing announced that Sheikh Mohammed Bin Khalifa Bin Hamad al-Thani had bought a 5.1 per cent stake during the financial crisis in 2008 - a move supposed to be seen as a confidence boost for the bank.

  • Transnational #Eugenics
    http://africasacountry.com/2016/10/transnational-eugenics

    In mid-September, writer Adam Cohen’s Imbeciles: The Supreme Court, American Eugenics, and the Sterilization of Carrie Buck (published by Penguin this year) made the long list for this year’s National Book Award. (The awards will be announced today.) The book explores a deplorable moment in early 20th-century American history when much of the American establishment […]

    #CULTURE #antisemitism #Books #South_Africa

  • The Transnational Character of the #Eugenics Movement
    http://africasacountry.com/2016/10/the-transnational-character-of-the-eugenics-movement

    In mid-September, writer Adam Cohen’s Imbeciles: The Supreme Court, American Eugenics, and the Sterilization of Carrie Buck (published by Penguin this year) made the long list for this year’s National Book Award. (The awards will be announced today.) The book explores a deplorable moment in early 20th-century American history when much of the American establishment […]

    #CULTURE #antisemitism #Books #South_Africa

  • Black men have legitimate reason to run from police, Supreme Court rules
    http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/black-men-have-legitimate-reason-to-run-from-police-us-court-ruling-c

    La fuite d’un Afro-americain à la vue de la police (étasunienne) n’est pas une preuve de sa culpabilité puisqu’il a des raisons légitimes de craindre ladite police,

    “Rather, the finding that black males in Boston are disproportionately and repeatedly targeted for FIO [Field Interrogation and Observation] encounters suggests a reason for flight totally unrelated to consciousness of guilt.

    “Given this reality for black males in the city of #Boston, a judge should, in appropriate cases, consider the report’s findings in weighing flight as a factor in the reasonable suspicion calculus.”

    #Etats-Unis #harcèlement #violences_policières