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Current Topic: Society

Tasered and shot with a beanbag gun for videotaping warrantless police search - Boing Boing
Topic: Society 10:28 am EDT, Oct 17, 2007

Tasered and shot with a beanbag gun for videotaping warrantless police search

Tasered and shot with a beanbag gun for videotaping warrantless police search - Boing Boing


History of Religion
Topic: Society 11:16 am EDT, Oct 16, 2007

How has the geography of religion evolved over the centuries, and where has it sparked wars? Our map gives us a brief history of the world's most well-known religions: Christianity, Islam, Hinduism, Buddhism, and Judaism. Selected periods of inter-religious bloodshed are also highlighted. Want to see 5,000 years of religion in 90 seconds? Ready, Set, Go!

Pretty neat.

History of Religion


RE: Halloween decoration or hate crime?
Topic: Society 4:31 pm EDT, Oct 15, 2007

I can imagine someone quite innocently putting an Indian in a chair wrapped in a blanket as a Thanksgiving decoration. While I don't believe such a decoration should be banned, I do understand how such a thing may be interpreted as ignorant and possibly spiteful. I think it would be the burden of the affected group to inform people of any insensitivities, however I don't think either a hanging witch or an Indian in a blanket should result in legal censorship or the bucket of black paint groups like the anti-defamation league employ.

RE: Halloween decoration or hate crime?


Gay Rights Backers Split on Bias Bill
Topic: Society 2:28 pm EDT, Oct 12, 2007

By ANDREW MIGA
Associated Press Writer
AP - Friday, October 12

WASHINGTON - Rep. Barney Frank, a leading gay rights champion in Congress, on Thursday urged fellow gay rights advocates not to let their dispute over protecting transgender workers doom a job discrimination ban that could mark a major civil rights advance for gays in the workplace.

The debate over including transgender people has sharply divided gay rights activists, many of whom are trying to kill a stripped-down bill without protections for transgender workers that Frank and Democratic leaders hope will win House passage this year.

"We're not going to be split off this way," said Matt Foreman, executive director of the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force. "We're driven by principle. No civil rights movement has ever left a part of its community behind - and we're not about to be the first."

Frank, D-Mass., one of two openly gay members of Congress, supports transgender protections, but said they don't have the votes.

"Politically, the notion that you don't do anything until you can do everything is self-defeating," he said.

Frank said the public has more awareness because gay activists began educating people about the unfairness of prejudice based on sexual orientation a long time ago.

"These things take awhile," Frank said. "The transgender issue is of relatively recent vintage."

Legislation banning workplace discrimination against gays, lesbians and bisexuals _ but not those who have had sex-change surgery or cross-dressers _ has stalled after an outcry from the transgender community and its allies, including many gay rights organizations.

"Transgender" is an umbrella term that covers transsexuals, cross-dressers and others whose outward appearance doesn't match their gender at birth.

The Employment Non-Discrimination Act would make it illegal for employers to make decisions about hiring, firing, promoting or paying an employee based on sexual orientation or gender identity. Churches and the military would be exempt.

But when Democrats took vote counts and realized the measure would fail, they substituted a new scaled-back version dropping transgender people from the bill. A second bill to ban workplace discrimination against transgenders was also drafted.

Gay rights groups that oppose a ban that leaves out transgender people have waged an aggressive lobbying campaign.

"Fighting your friends can sometimes be difficult," said Frank.

Foreman agreed.

"I never thought in a million years we would be on the opposite side of Barney Frank and it is painful," he said.

Federal law bans job discrimination based on factors such as race, gender and religion. Nineteen states and the District of Columbia have laws against sexual orientation discrimination.

However, only nine states specifically protect transgender people from discrimination: New Jersey, Minnesota, Rhod... [ Read More (0.4k in body) ]

Gay Rights Backers Split on Bias Bill


Wired News - AP News - New Scanner May Replace Metal Detectors
Topic: Society 12:27 pm EDT, Oct 12, 2007

"I continue to believe that these are virtual strip searches," Steinhardt said. "If Playboy published them, there would be politicians out there saying they're pornographic."

I wonder how long before naked pics of airport travelers end up on the internet.

Wired News - AP News - New Scanner May Replace Metal Detectors


Dragonfly or Insect Spy? Scientists at Work on Robobugs. - washingtonpost.com
Topic: Society 10:32 am EDT, Oct 10, 2007

Vanessa Alarcon saw them while working at an antiwar rally in Lafayette Square last month.

"I heard someone say, 'Oh my god, look at those,' " the college senior from New York recalled. "I look up and I'm like, 'What the hell is that?' They looked kind of like dragonflies or little helicopters. But I mean, those are not insects."

I wonder if they had a warrant to Bug.

Dragonfly or Insect Spy? Scientists at Work on Robobugs. - washingtonpost.com


Next-gen killbots boast enhanced friendly fire avoidance - Engadget
Topic: Society 12:49 pm EDT, Oct  9, 2007

While it's always bittersweet to report on the latest advancements in autonomous military killbots, the one upside to Foster-Miller's most recent heavily-armed robotic platform is that it possesses enhanced safeguards to minimize incidences of friendly fire or civilian casualties. That being said, QinetiQ's SWORDS-smith is still touting the improved "lethality" of its new MAARS chassis (Modular Advanced Armed Robotic System), a 350-pound PackBot-type unit that, unlike its predecessor, was built from the ground up with murder in its heart. Its M240B Medium Machine Gun is more powerful than SWORDS' M249, although redesigned software and a mechanical range fan are said to bolster safety by delineating live fire zones and keeping barrels pointed away from allied positions, respectively. A final precaution precludes the bots from firing directly at their control units -- a feature that will provide little solace to the MAARS controller whose charge has just pulled a 180 after being hacked by enemy forces. For a short video of the new bot still under friendly control, keep reading after the break...

Next-gen killbots boast enhanced friendly fire avoidance - Engadget


Schools chief pushes Big Brother out of dinner line | The Register
Topic: Society 10:22 am EDT, Oct  5, 2007

The government has told head teachers to lighten up after one British school told children in the dinner queue that if they didn't give their fingerprints they wouldn't get any food.

The Department for Education and Skills said this week in a statement to the BBC Radio 4 Programme You and Yours that schools who refused school dinners to kids who won't scan their fingerprints might be in breach of the law, contrasting with the long-overdue guidance note it issued on school fingerprinting in the summer.

If they don't give their finger prints they should send the little bastards right to Guantanamo.

Schools chief pushes Big Brother out of dinner line | The Register


Danger Room - Wired Blogs
Topic: Society 1:27 pm EDT, Oct  1, 2007

The MySpace generation is a "somewhat alien life force," a Navy recruiting presentation contends -- with a language and lifestyle that's almost unrecognizable to adults. And because the kids are such "coddled," "narcissistic praise junkies," they'll be beyond tough to bring into the military. Propensity to join the armed forces among these so-called "millennials" has dropped to as little as 3%; that's down from 26% in 2001.

Danger Room - Wired Blogs


Black Ops Jungle: The Academy of Military-Industrial-Complex Studies
Topic: Society 11:46 am EDT, Sep 27, 2007

Dedicated to everything from architecture to sports medicine, "career academies" claim to offer high school kids focus, relevancy, and solid job prospects. Now add a new kind of program to the list: homeland security high. In late August, Maryland's Joppatowne High School became the first school in the country dedicated to churning out would-be Jack Bauers. The 75 students in the Homeland Security and Emergency Preparedness magnet program will study cybersecurity and geospatial intelligence, respond to mock terror attacks, and receive limited security clearances at the nearby Army chemical warfare lab.

They have SPY TECH!!! They KNOW!!!

Black Ops Jungle: The Academy of Military-Industrial-Complex Studies


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