Sunday, December 25, 2016

Saturday, December 17, 2016

[The nazis are atr it again!] Conservative Group Wants Trump To ‘Ferret Out’ Pro-LGBT State Department Workers

12/16/2016 04:57 pm ET |

A leading social conservative organization is calling on the Trump administration to “ferret out” employees at the State Department who worked to promote LGBT rights and replace them with conservatives.
The Family Research Council, in a little-noticed statement on Thursday, accused the Obama administration of having deployed the State Department to advance an LGBT agenda, and argued it was incumbent on the next secretary of state ― likely ExxonMobil CEO Rex Tillerson ― to stop it.
“I certainly don’t see Tillerson cut from the same cloth as [Hillary] Clinton or [John] Kerry, but he doesn’t have to be for these anti-life, liberal social policies to continue,” said a statement that appears to be written by the group’s president, Tony Perkins. “He must have the courage to stop the promotion of this anti-family, anti-life agenda, which is very much a question mark given that he capitulated to activists pushing to liberalize the Boy Scouts’ policy on homosexuality when he was at the helm of the organization.
“The incoming administration needs to make clear that these liberal policies will be reversed and the ‘activists’ within the State Department promoting them will be ferreted out and will be replaced by conservatives who will ensure the State Department focuses on true international human rights like religious liberty which is under unprecedented assault,” the statement concludes.
The Family Research Council is one of the last remaining major interest groups to wage these types of cultural wars. But there is a dark, McCarthyist undertone to the idea that an incoming administration should remove civil servants who have pushed for the advancement of LGBT rights; in part because it’s a slippery slope to removing people who are, themselves, LGBT.
Trump has been far more moderate on LGBT rights than many Republicans ― perhaps a reflection of his cosmopolitan, socially liberal upbringing. And it would be an abrupt about-face for him to take this advice after repeatedly criticizing Hillary Clinton for not standing up further to countries that didn’t have strong records on LGBT rights.
Indeed, after this article was published, Trump’s transition team released a statement expressing strong opposition to the Family Research Council’s appeal.
“President-elect Trump campaigned on a message of unity in order to bring all Americans together. To think that discrimination of any kind will be condoned or tolerated in a Trump Administration is simply absurd,” Trump spokesman Jason Miller said.
But Trump’s transition team has also tried a variation of fettering at another agency. His transition sought the names of Department of Energy employees that worked on climate change matters. The department this week denied that request.
This article has been updated to include comment from a Trump transition spokesman.

Friday, December 9, 2016

Cherokee Nation Will Now Recognize Same-Sex [= Equal] Marriage

Cherokee Nation Will Now Recognize Same-Sex Marriage

huffingtonpost.com - The Cherokee Nation will now recognize same-sex marriage, according to an opinion issued Friday by the tribe’s attorney general. Todd Hembree, the tribe’s attorney general, wrote in his opinion: Th...

This junior world champion came out as gay when it mattered the most

This junior world champion came out as gay when it mattered the most

Ivan Denis has competed openly around the world, including Russia.

Wilders convicted in hate speech trial

Wilders convicted in hate speech trial

Dutch anti-Islam political leader Geert Wilders convicted in hate speech trial but no penalty imposed
For more details, see the BBC News website

Thursday, December 8, 2016

Facebook Video of Animal Abuse Leads to Arrest. Man Charged with Three Felony Counts

Los Angeles, CA — Davion Shawntell Oatez (08-22-94) was taken into custody yesterday and charged with two felony counts of Penal Code § 597(a) animal cruelty and a weapons enhancement for the use of a dangerous weapon in the commission of a felony Penal Code § 12022 (b) (1). The arrest is the result of an investigation by the Animal Cruelty Investigations division of the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Los Angeles (spcaLA).
On October 11, 2016, a neighbor witnessed Oatez beating his 3 month old male Pit Bull, Fifty, with the handle of a mop and throwing him forcefully to the ground by his neck. A second incident began about 30 minutes later with Oatez beating and punching the dog while Fifty screamed and cried. The eye witness recorded these incidents with a cell phone and reported the acts of animal cruelty to spcaLA. The neighbor provided spcaLA Humane Officers with copies of the video as well as posting to a public Facebook page.
spcaLA Humane Officers went to Oatez’ residence at 1549 West 35th Street in Los Angeles on October 12, 2016. After questioning and with clear video evidence, Fifty was seized from Oatez. Upon examination by spcaLA’s Veterinarian Team, it was determined that Fifty “undoubtedly suffered from the violent mistreatment and beating inflicted by his owner.” spcaLA Humane Officers obtained an arrest warrant and Oatez was brought into custody by spcaLA Humane Officers with assistance from the Los Angeles Police Department Fugitive Task Force Detectives.
fifty
Fifty has since been adopted.
Oatez has posted bail and is scheduled to appear in the Los Angeles Superior Court Department 56 on December 30, 2016.
spcaLA is the only private animal welfare organization in Los Angeles that is also Law Enforcement. spcaLA Humane Officers hold the same powers of Peace Officers in the state of California when investigating animal cruelty. spcaLA is a non-profit agency that relies on donations for its programs and services, including animal cruelty investigations. To donate, please visit spcaLA.com or call 323-730-5300 x233.
For more information, please contact Ana Bustilloz at 323-730-5300 x252, cell 323-707-1271 or abustilloz@spcaLA.com.

Wednesday, December 7, 2016

Federal trial begins in gay pride nudity lawsuit

Is San Diego’s public nudity law enforced the same at the beach as at Comic-Con? What about the Mardi Gras block party or annual gay pride festival?
 
That is the question eight jurors will be considering over the next week, as they listen to testimony in the federal lawsuit that accuses San Diego police officers of selectively enforcing the nudity law against Will X. Walters at the annual 2011 gay pride event in Balboa Park.
“In this case, the evidence will show Mr. Walters was treated differently,” Walters’ attorney, Chris Morris, said in his opening statements Tuesday.
Not because Walters had done something wrong, Morris said, rather “because of who he was, where he was and what he represented.”
Deputy City Attorney Stacy Plotkin-Wolff told the jury that police weren’t acting with bias that afternoon, they were merely enforcing the law as they do at every other special event in the city.
She said officers had contacted a handful of other gay pride attendees that day — including a man wearing chaps and exposing his buttocks and a woman without a shirt wearing pasties — and they all agreed to cover up so they could continue to enjoy the festival. Walters was the only one who would not comply, she said.
“The same rules apply to everyone equally,” she said in her opening statements. “Mr. Walters doesn’t believe those rules apply to him though.”
Walters, 35, had worn the same skimpy gladiator outfit in question at the previous San Diego Pride Parade and Festival without incident. The outfit, which he had custom-made for $1,000, consists of two loose leather flaps — 12-by-12-inch front and back panels — connected by a waist strap. Depending on movement and angle, the flaps can expose parts of his buttocks, police said.
According to the city’s nudity ordinance, a person’s body parts, including genitals and buttocks, must be concealed by an opaque covering.
In prior years, a 1-inch strip rule allowed g-strings at the pride event. But in 2011, police Lt. Dave Nisleit was the new special events supervisor and changed the rule to a more restrictive definition of nudity for the event, Morris said.
Walters was in the beer garden when Nisleit walked by and stopped to ask him to cover up. Walters became irate and argued with him, Plotkin-Wolff told the jury, and Nisleit decided to drop it and move on to a meeting he was due to attend.
As Nisleit and other officers later patrolled the event space, Walters walked by and they asked for him to cover up again, Plotkin-Wolff said.
“Mr. Walters didn’t want to follow the rules,” she said.
The officers led him outside the venue and tried for several minutes to calm him down and get him to comply, but he wouldn’t, she said. A sergeant finally decided to write him a ticket.
Walters refused to sign the citation. His lawyer said it was because he wanted to read the citation first, and the officers wouldn’t let him, afraid of what he would do if he was given the officer’s citation book.
He was arrested and booked into jail.
In 2012, Walters filed his lawsuit.
It accuses the city and five officers — Nisleit, Gary Mondesir, Emilio Ramirez, Samuel Gardner and Debbie Becker — of violating Walters’ 14th Amendment right against discrimination.
At the heart of the case is whether police singled out Walters — or any gay pride attendees for that matter — with the nudity ordinance.
Morris noted that of the 104 citations for public nudity issued by the city from 2007 to 2012, Walters is the only one cited for wearing a thong.
Plotkin-Wolff said that is misleading, and that officers will testify that they have approached numerous people, including many women, with requests to cover up. Most comply, resulting in no citations. One example of that is a woman at Comic-Con who was told to change from her risqué outfit by some of the same officers, and she did.
In 2014, U.S. District Judge Cathy Ann Bencivengo ruled in the city’s favor in a motion for summary judgement, saying “There is nothing on the record that reasonably suggests sexual orientation had anything to do with the decision to insist upon compliance” with the law.
Walters appealed to the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, and in April that court reversed Bencivengo’s ruling, sending the case back for a possible trial.
The three-judge appeals court panel said a jury should decide how police enforced the nudity ordinance elsewhere, and if targeting someone at a gay pride event is the same thing as targeting the gay community as a whole.
The appellate panel also took issue with an officer allegedly referring to Walters as a “drama queen” during the arrest, noting that could be additional evidence of “discriminatory purpose.”
“Although Defendants (police and the city) may ultimately establish that another purpose motivated their nudity policy at the Pride Event, that question is seriously disputed,” the ruling stated.
The plaintiff’s first witness to be called, Nicole Murray-Ramirez, testified that the relationship between the Police Department and the LGBT community has improved greatly since he and two others tried to get a permit for the city’s first pride parade in 1974 and were turned down.
Murray-Ramirez said the cooperation has still been “on and off” over the years, and that as the city’s LGBT liaison with the Police Department he receives four to five reports each month from a community member who feels harassed by an officer.
Walters is asking for unspecified damages for emotional distress caused by public humiliation, wrongful arrest and PTSD. He has racked up about $1 million in legal fees thus far, according to his legal team.

Trump gives 'assurances' he will scrap laws protecting gay people

Trump gives 'assurances' he will scrap laws protecting gay people

independent.co.uk - Donald Trump has reportedly given “assurances” that he will take action to undermine laws that are seen as protecting the rights of gay people in the US. LGBT advocacy groups have been fielding cal...

Tuesday, December 6, 2016

Europe’s first openly-gay footballer hoping a Premier League player come out

Europe’s first openly-gay footballer hoping a Premier League player come out

mirror.co.uk - Europe’s first openly-gay ­footballer claims that if a Premier League player came out as ­homosexual, it would be huge for the game globally. But Anton Hysen says that such a brave move MUST be sup...

Iranian stabbed at Dutch migrant centre in 'homophobic attack'

Iranian stabbed at Dutch migrant centre in 'homophobic attack'

dailymail.co.uk - An Iranian was almost stabbed to death in a Dutch migrant centre after fellow asylum seekers reportedly found out he was gay.  Police initially thought the attack on the 25-year-old in the town of ...

Monday, December 5, 2016

Gambia's Jammeh, Who Once Threatened To Slit The Throats Of Gay Men, Defeated In Election

Gambia's Jammeh, Who Once Threatened To Slit The Throats Of Gay Men, Defeated In Election
  • By
  • Carlos Santoscoy
  • | December 03, 2016
Gambian President Yahya Jammeh, who ruled the West African country for 22 years, was defeated at the polls on December 1.
According to multiple sources, Gambia's Independent Electoral Commission named Adama Barrow the winner of the presidential election.
Barrow is an independent candidate who represents a coalition of opposition parties.
“Allah is telling me my time is up and I hand over graciously with gratitude toward the Gambian people and gratitude toward you,” the AP quoted Jammeh as telling Barrow in a telephone call.
Jammeh, who took power in a 1994 military coup, has a long history of homophobic remarks.
Last year, he threatened to slit the throats of gay men: “If you do it [in Gambia], I will slit your throat. If you are a man and want to marry another man in this country and we catch you, no one will ever set eyes on you again, and no white person can do anything about it.”
“Homosexuality is anti-God, anti-human, and anti-civilization,” he said in 2013. “Homosexuals are not welcome in the Gambia. If we catch you, you will regret why you are born. … Allowing homosexuality means allowing satanic rights.”
In 2008, he warned that he would “cut off the head” of gays found in his country.
Barrow's views on LGBT rights are not known.

Sunday, December 4, 2016

Harvard Study: Smoking Weed Improves Brain Functions

Harvard Study: Smoking Weed Improves Brain Functions

thekindland.com - People are forever wandering onto KINDLAND territory and wondering out loud: What makes you people so goddamn smart? Well, scientific findings recently published in Frontiers in Pharmacology may ha...

Friday, December 2, 2016

Donald Trump’s supporters filed legal challenges to presidential election recounts in Pennsylvania, Wisconsin and Michigan

Donald Trump’s supporters filed legal challenges to presidential election recounts in Pennsylvania, Wisconsin and Michigan

Friday, December 2, 2016 1:06 PM EST


The attorney general of Michigan said in a court filing that a pending recount — initiated by Jill Stein, the Green Party candidate — would put the state’s voters at risk of “paying millions and potentially losing their voice in the Electoral College in the process.”
In Wisconsin, a lawsuit argued that the recount could “unjustifiably cast doubt” on Mr. Trump’s victory there.
And in Pennsyvania, lawyers for Mr. Trump and his allies are seeking to halt legal proceedings to contest the statewide election results.
Read more »

Wednesday, November 30, 2016

Did Jesus Use Marijuana to Perform Miracles?

Did Jesus Use Marijuana to Perform Miracles?

jesus_almost_certainly_used_cannabis_wide
A closer look at the relationship between Christ and cannabis.
Recently, a crypt was unearthed in Jerusalem’s Old City that is believed to be the tomb of the historical Jesus of Nazareth. The Church of the Holy Sepulchre is considered to be Christianity’s holiest site. The historicity of Jesus is a murky territory that has been explored to the point of exhaustion. Whether you regard Jesus a deity, the son of a deity, a prophet, or a man, he almost certainly used cannabis oil throughout his ministry.
Jesus’ lifespan falls neatly within the timeline of the ritualistic use of the Judaic anointing oil described as containing cannabis. Jesus was known by his disciples as Christ, the Greek translation of the Hebrew word Messiah, or “the anointed one.”
Cannabis historian Chris Bennett is an expert on the topic of the shamanic use of cannabis. “Well, nothing is certain without a time machine, but we do have archaeological evidence from the third century in Bet Shemesh showing the plant’s use for medical purposes both topical and burnt,” Bennett says. Bennett has written several books and blogs on the topic. His new book, Liber 420: Cannabis Arcanum, is slated for release in 2017. It chronicles the magical and ritualistic use of cannabis. “This material is a revelation,” Bennett says. “People do not understand the impact it will have one day.”
According to the Old Testament, the recipe for the holy anointing oil calls for nine pounds (!!!) of cannabis tops, along with cinnamon, myrrh, and other spices. The cannabis was called kaneh-bosm (fragrant cane) in Aramaic. The root of the word “kan” means reed or hemp. “Bosm” means aromatic. The word kaneh-bosm appears in the New Testament five times. The cannabis was extracted using about six and a half liters of olive oil. “You shall speak to the sons of Israel, saying, ‘This shall be a holy anointing oil to me throughout your generations.’ It shall not be poured on anyone’s body, nor shall you make any like it in the same proportions; it is holy, and it shall be holy to you.” Exodus 30:31 reads. The spice frankincense interestingly contains a chemical similar to THC. “Frankincense contains trahydrocannabinole, which is similar in molecular structure to tetrahydrocannabinol, the psychoactive component of cannabis,” wrote Professor Carl Ruck. “And it has been suggested that even in modern church rituals, the mild mood-elevating effects of this may help to create a religious state of mind in parishioners close enough to inhale its effects.”
The recipe for Judaic cannabis oil was widely used at the time of Moses until the time of the prophet Samuel. The oil was usually applied topically. Nine pounds of cannabis would be enough to constitute an effective topical preparation of cannabis oil. During the age of kings, the anointing oil was used by each presiding messiah-king for guidance. After the fall of the early kingdoms, the anointing oil was associated with paganism and banned.
According to Bennett, Jesus was called the Christ because he violated the Old Testament’s taboo on the Holy anointing oil. Jesus’ use of cannabis oil is briefly mentioned in the New Testament, but explained in rich detail in the Gnostic texts. “There is no reason to consider these ancient Gnostic documents as less accurate portrayals of the life and teachings of Jesus than the New Testament accounts,” wrote Bennett. “In a sense, the rediscovery of the Nag Hamadi Library marks the resurrection of a more historical Jesus, an ecstatic rebel sage who preached enlightenment through rituals involving magical plants, and who is more analogous to the Indian Shiva, or the Greek Dionysus, than the pious ascetic that has come down to us through the Bible’s New Testament.”
In the Gnostic book the Gospel of Phillip, we get a glimpse at the effects of the anointing oil used by Jesus. “The anointing with oil was the introduction of the candidate into unfading bliss, thus becoming a Christ,” it reads. Again, since Christ means an “anointed one,” becoming a Christ is their way of saying the initiate has reached a spiritual level. Early Christians could not get enough.
The cannabis theory becomes plausible when you consider that Jesus healed the sick such as lepers with incurable skin disorders, and “demonic possessions” that could be interpreted as epileptic seizures. Instead of leprosy, some scholars have suggested that the disease mentioned in Leviticus, tsara’ath, is actually a severe form of pruritis, a skin disorder that causes discomforting itchiness, and would have been treatable with cannabis oil. Jesus may have used cannabis oil to heal a woman with chronic menstruation.
The process was described in detail when Moses anointed Aaron and his sons. “He sprinkled some of it on the altar seven times and anointed the altar and all its utensils, and the basin and its stand, to consecrate them. Then he poured some of the anointing oil on Aaron’s head and anointed him, to consecrate him,” reads Leviticus 8:11.
Archaeological evidence to support smoked cannabis use close to the time of Jesus has been uncovered in Bet Shemesh near Jerusalem. Archaeologists found a 3rd or 4th century AD girl with 6.97 grams of cannabis in her stomach. “We assume that the ashes found in the tomb were cannabis. burned in a vessel and administered to the young girl as an inhalant to facilitate the birth process. In antiquity, this procedure would usually have been carried out by a midwife as physicians were by law prohibited from attending women in labour,” wrote archaeologists.
Anointing oil is still blessed and used medicinally—take, for example, the anointing oil used in the Mormon faith. The practice involves blessing the oil and administering it on the person’s head.
Jesus’ words and ministry have been twisted and contorted to support just about any argument. But, there is little doubt that if Jesus was truly called the anointed one, he did indeed use cannabis oil, which was standard at the time. Carl Ruck, professor of classical mythology at Boston University sums it up: “There can be little doubt about a role for cannabis in Judaic religion.”

Study Concludes Alcohol is More Harmful to Mental Health Than Psychedelics

Study Concludes Alcohol is More Harmful to Mental Health Than Psychedelics

Tuesday, November 29, 2016

Indonesia Muslim Hardliners Break Up Alleged Gay Sex Party

Indonesia Muslim Hardliners Break Up Alleged Gay Sex Party

About 50 members of a hardline Muslim group barged into an apartment in the Indonesian capital to break up what they said was a gay sex party, angering rights groups, and police said on Monday no one in the flat had done anything wrong.
The lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community is largely accepted in urban areas of Indonesia, the world's largest Muslim-majority country, and being gay is not illegal, but there is growing concern among rights activists about intolerance.
South Jakarta police chief Iwan Setiawan said the 13 men in the apartment were questioned and released on Monday because there was no evidence they had broken any law at the weekend gathering.
Our Voice, a group supporting gay rights, said police should have detained the members of the Islamic Defenders Front (FPI) for breach of privacy.
"For a government agency to allow such thing to happen, it is terrifying. It is a warning for this nation," said Hartoyo, a director of Our Voice.
The FPI, which is also known for raiding bars and nightclubs, as well as helping prevent pop star Lady Gaga perform in the country, has vowed to continue such actions.
"The FPI since its birth has been and in the future will continue to fight to uphold what is good and to ban what is bad for society at all costs," Novel Bamukmin, the group's Jakarta secretary general, said.
The FPI backed a large rally on Nov. 4 against Jakarta's Christian governor, who is accused of insulting the Koran.
One person was killed and more than 100 were wounded when the protest, the biggest in the city in recent years, briefly turned violent.

Monday, November 28, 2016

'I'm not gay': Married Louisiana GOP lawmaker, 40, admits sexting a 17-year-old boy but insists they never had sex and he is not homosexual

'I'm not gay': Married Louisiana GOP lawmaker, 40, admits sexting a 17-year-old boy but insists they never had sex and he is not homosexual

  • Married lawmaker Mike Yenni admitted sexting the 17-year-old boy in 2015
  • He insists he is 'not gay' and said that he and the teen never had sex
  • But he admits sending the boy multiple messages of a sexual nature  
  • Refused to comment on allegations he'd also kissed the teen in a bathroom and bought him underwear 
  • His wife Michelle was disappointed but is standing by her husband  
  • Other Jefferson officials are demanding that he resign but he's carrying on 
  • A sexual relationship would have been legal under Louisiana law 
A married Louisiana politician who admitted sending sexual text messages to a 17-year-boy has insisted that he is 'not gay'.
Mike Yenni was investigated by the FBI last month over allegations he'd had an improper relationship with the teen in 2015 who claimed the GOP lawmaker kissed him, bought him underwear and sent sexts of threesome fantasies.
In an interview with Fox 8, Yenni, the former mayor of Kenner, Louisiana, admits he texted the boy but said that they never had any sexual contact.
He also insisted 'I'm not gay'.
Scroll down for video 
Scandal: Jefferson Parish President Mike Yenni (left, with wife Michelle Swanner and daughter Reagan) admitted to sending sexts to a 17-year-old high school boy in 2015
Scandal: Jefferson Parish President Mike Yenni (left, with wife Michelle Swanner and daughter Reagan) admitted to sending sexts to a 17-year-old high school boy in 2015
The Jefferson Parish President's wife Michelle is standing by her husband, Nola reports.
Although she said she was upset and disappointed by the news, after praying she decided that 'our family will be better together'.
'And this is something that we can pass and be stronger from, and we've been better since. And we work hard at our marriage. I think it's taught us not to take each other for granted as well.'
The scandal began after a Brown student wrote a story titled 'I was seduced by a politician' for The Tab.
His account claims a man, named as 'Kevin' for the purposes of the article, had frequently text him talking about how they might meet up for a sexual encounter.
On one occasion, he says the politician had bought him designer underwear and arranged to meet him in a mall bathroom where they shared an illicit kiss.
Yenni refused to comment on any details of the account during his interview, aside to admit that he did sext the teenager and insist that they never had sex.
'I sent inappropriate text messages,' he said. 'We had some off color texts. At no time did I ever think he was not a consenting adult.' 
In an interview with Fox 8, Yenni, the former mayor of Kenner, Louisiana, admits he texted the boy but said that they never had any sexual contact
In an interview with Fox 8, Yenni, the former mayor of Kenner, Louisiana, admits he texted the boy but said that they never had any sexual contact
He also insisted that; 'I'm not gay' in the interview to explain his sexting 
He also insisted that; 'I'm not gay' in the interview to explain his sexting 
Age of consent in Louisiana is 17, although Yenni could potentially face charges through a federal law banning texting with anyone under 18. 
Yenni called the sexting 'one of the stupidest decisions I have ever made'.
When asked whether the electorate should be concerned about his judgement, he argued that it was just one mistake made during 17 years in politics.
In fact, his sexting has landed him in trouble before when, while chief administrative officer in Kenner, he allegedly used his city-funded BlackBerry to sext multiple men and a woman. 
In this case, Yenni claims that The Tab article has overblown the interaction between himself and the teenager. 
'There are a lot of elements of that story I truly believe are certainly fictional,' he told Fox 8 without elaborating further.
'One thing that the author of that article and I can absolutely agree in is that there was no sex.'
Yenni claims that he first met the boy through a group text message. 
He also released an infomercial (pictured),where he apologizes for the messages - but doesn't broach other allegations, including claims he kissed the boy and bought him underwear
He also released an infomercial (pictured),where he apologizes for the messages - but doesn't broach other allegations, including claims he kissed the boy and bought him underwear
When asked about the alleged liaison in the mall, all Yenni would confirm was that they met once, briefly.
'He alleges a kiss,' the Fox 8 interviewer said of the young student.
Once again, Yenni dodged the question.
'There was no sex,' he replied.
Yenni said he had refused to confirm or deny any of the allegations made in the article 'line by line' as he did not want to further the story.
He believes the story has been twisted as a form of 'gay bashing' to try and 'define' him as a pedophile and homosexual - both of which he denies.
'I'm not gay,' he added.
The Republican who has a three-year-old daughter with wife Michelle, also addressed the story with an infomercial last month.
'Last summer I was old enough to know better, but I guess I was still young enough to do something stupid,' the 40-year-old Jefferson Parish President said in the video posted by NOLA.com. 
Denial: Yenni, a Republican politician, denies he misused his powers as a public official, but admits that the sexts were 'a bad decision'
Denial: Yenni, a Republican politician, denies he misused his powers as a public official, but admits that the sexts were 'a bad decision'
'I chose to send improper texts to a young man,' he explains. 'I won't go into details out of respect for the rights and privacy of all parties.' 
According to WWL TV, Yenni was introduced to the youth by a 19-year-old mutual friend at a function being held at the boy's Catholic high school and their relationship developed through phone and text messages 
The youth provided WWL with text messages sent by Yenni from a personal number. That number is not being billed to taxpayers.
In the texts, Yenni allegedly asks the boy if he's worn the underwear and says he wants to see him modeling them.
He also says he want

Saturday, November 26, 2016

Burqas, mosques, ‘gay propaganda’ all banned in Hungarian village

Burqas, mosques, ‘gay propaganda’ all banned in Hungarian village

© Ammar Awad
The far-right mayor of a southern Hungarian village has banned the open expression of Islam, including the building of mosques and wearing of veils and headscarves, as well as the promotion of same-sex marriages.
In a post on Facebook, Laszlo Toroczkai, mayor of Asotthalom, a village near the Serbian border, outlined the proposals adopted by his council after a session on Wednesday.
All board members voted for the new rules, with only two abstentions.
“Instead of looking for a scapegoat, I offer an immediate solution, a defense against the forced mass resettlement [of migrants] by Brussels,” Toroczkai wrote in his post.
“Today the Asotthalom village council adopted my proposal – which is an action package – to defend our community and traditions from any plan for the outside resettlement [of migrants]. All that needs to be done is for the rest of Hungary’s municipalities to adopt our preventative action package, and with that we will have defended our homeland.”
The mayor of the Hungarian border village of Asotthalom, Laszlo Toroczkai © Laszlo Balogh
The measures that Toroczkai put in place include a ban on the construction of mosques and any other place of worship which undermines the Catholic Church, a ban on the muezzin’s traditional call to prayer, and a ban on all face coverings such as the hijab, niqab and burqa, as well as the burkini.
Additionally, the ordinance also bans any kind of “public propaganda” which shows the institution of marriage being in any way other than “between a man and woman. This includes any public activity, performance, demonstrations, billboard, leaflet, or audio advertisement.”
These measures, Toroczkai says, will protect Hungary from the “two pagans”: migration from the south, and “extreme liberalism” from the West.
Toroczkai belongs to the far-right Jobbik party, whose stated aim is protecting “Hungarian values and interests.” But the party has also been accused of racism, anti-Semitism and homophobia.
"I want to be an example to other pioneering local authorities on how to protect themselves from external resettlement or any other subversive intentions," he said at the council meeting, as reported by delmagyar.hu.
Toroczkai is also the leader of the Sixty-Four Countries Youth Movement, a nationalist group seeking to reclaim lands that have historically belonged to Hungary. He is also known for his harsh anti-migrant rhetoric, including an action-movie like video showing big, burly men giving chase to illegal immigrants on motorcycles, helicopters and even on horseback.
Hungary is one of the European countries least welcoming to refugees and asylum seekers. In a referendum held in October, 98.3 percent of Hungarian voters rejected mandatory EU asylum seeker quotas in a referendum proposed by PM Viktor Orban. However, the referendum failed to reach the required 50 percent turnout, partly due to a boycott by the opposition. Orban himself has made a number of remarks on the subject, including suggesting that all refugees who came illegally be deported onto camps on an island or off the coast of Africa.

Friday, November 25, 2016

Football sex abuse claims: Police widen their inquiries

Football sex abuse claims: Police widen their inquiries

  • 18 minutes ago
  • From the section UK
Media captionSteve Walters: 'I was inconsolable'
Four police forces say they are now investigating allegations of historical child sex abuse within football.
Hampshire Police said it was looking into claims of "non-recent child abuse within the football community".
Cheshire Police said allegations had been made against more than one person while the Northumbria and Metropolitan forces have also opened investigations.
It comes as four ex-footballers spoke out about being abused as children by ex-Crewe Alexandra coach Barry Bennell.
Andy Woodward, who was the first to go public last week, wept as Steve Walters, Chris Unsworth and Jason Dunford spoke about their abuse by Bennell in an emotional interview on the BBC's Victoria Derbyshire programme.
Bennell, 62, has served three jail sentences for child sex offences.
Watch Victoria Derbyshire interview in full
Four ex-footballers speak of abuse
Abuse claims: What has happened so far?
Who is football coach Barry Bennell?
Former manager Warnock praises 'brave' Woodward
A dedicated NSPCC hotline - 0800 023 2642 - was set up after the abuse claims came to light and has received more than 100 calls.
Cheshire Police said it had received a "growing number of disclosures" which included referrals from the children's charity, and that allegations had been made "against more than one individual".
Image caption Victoria spoke to (L-R) Jason Dunford, Steve Walters, Chris Unsworth and Andy Woodward
The Premier League said it was concerned by the allegations and urged those with information to come forward.
MP Damian Collins, the chairman of the culture, media and sport committee, told the BBC he wants to hear from the Football Association.
He said: "The FA need to look back to see were mistakes made in the past. Were clues overlooked? Was not enough done to investigate a problem that they may have been perceived?"
Mr Unsworth and Mr Dunford waived their anonymity to speak out for the first time on Friday.
Mr Unsworth, 44, said he "thought he had to come forward... and help everybody", after his girlfriend showed him an interview on the Victoria Derbyshire programme with ex-Crewe player Mr Woodward, 43.
He had been a youth player at Manchester City with Bennell before moving to Crewe with him when he was about 12 in the mid-1980s.
Media captionChris Unsworth on how the abuse started.
Mr Unsworth said he had stayed at Bennell's house several times and the coach sometimes had two or three boys in the bed at once, where he would abuse them.
"We never spoke to each other about it," Mr Unsworth said. "I was raped between 50 and 100 times."
Mr Dunford said he had been staying at a Butlins holiday camp after winning a football competition, when Bennell attempted to touch him in bed.
He later moved to different boys' football teams and said at one point another coach also attempted to abuse him.
Mr Dunford has now given a report to the police.
Neither player turned professional, in part because they felt Bennell drove them away from the game.
Image caption Jason Dunford said another coach also tried to abuse him
Bennell, who also worked as a youth football scout, was jailed in 1998 for nine years and also served a four-year sentence in the United States.
In 2015, he was given a two-year term for sexually abusing a boy at a training camp in Macclesfield, but is now out of prison.
Cheshire Police said 11 people had come forward since Mr Woodward spoke out, including fellow ex-Crewe player Steve Walters, 44, who said he had been abused by Bennell, when he was 13 or 14, during a trip to Anglesey.
He told Victoria Derbyshire: "I want justice now. The whole of football just needs ripping apart and this can never, ever happen to any young footballer again."
Image caption Barry Bennell has served three jail sentences for child sex offences
In other developments:
  • Gordon Taylor, chief executive of the Professional Footballers' Association, which represents players, said the PFA and the FA had been aware of rumours of abuse but there had been "no cover-up"
  • Karen Bradley, secretary of state for culture, media and sport, said she had spoken to the FA and PFA to offer government support and ensure they were working with police and other agencies
  • The Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse said it was monitoring the allegations and its "terms of reference are broad enough to include failures by sports clubs"
  • PFA Scotland's chief executive Fraser Wishart said it would be "naive to think" the allegations were unique to one part of the UK and urged players of all levels to report any claims of abuse
  • Thames Valley Police said officers had attended a house in Milton Keynes on Thursday to recover a dog and other property in response to a safeguarding concern. The property is Bennell's. The force said it was not investigating any offences connected to the incident
In 2001, the FA put in place new rules to protect children, requiring adult and junior teams at all levels to have a trained safeguarding or welfare officer.
Some critics say the regulations rely too much on children being able to report abuse.
The Victoria Derbyshire programme is broadcast on weekdays between 09:00 and 11:00 on BBC Two and the BBC News channel.