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Police: Man Fires AK-47 While Driving on Florida Highway

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Police say a man fired an AK-47 rifle while driving down a Florida highway, damaging at least two passing vehicles. Miami-Dade Police Detective Daniel Ferrin told The Miami Herald that the man began shooting from inside his Toyota Corolla around 1 a.m. Monday as he was…
Police say a man fired an AK-47 rifle while driving down a Florida highway, damaging at least two passing vehicles.
Miami-Dade Police Detective Daniel Ferrin told The Miami Herald that the man began shooting from inside his Toyota Corolla around 1 a.m. Monday as he was driving south on the Palmetto Expressway.
At least two vehicles were struck by bullets.
Ferrin said the man hit a median, drove into oncoming traffic and crashed into a wall before exchanging gunfire with law enforcement officers who were approaching him. The man eventually surrendered.
No injuries were reported.
It wasn’t clear how many officers were involved in the shooting. Ferrin said “many shots were fired.” Authorities didn’t know if the suspect had been involved in a dispute or if he fired randomly.

© Source: http://www.newsmax.com/US/US-Florida-Highway-Shooting/2017/05/29/id/792932/
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В СБУ прокомментировали обыски в Яндексе

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“Яндекс” незаконно собирал и передавал персональные данные украинских граждан спецслужбам РФ.
Служба безопасности Украины в понедельник проводит обыски в офисах компании “Яндекс. Украина” в Киеве и Одессе, которая подозревается в государственной измене.
“В рамках уголовного производства о государственной измене проводятся обыски в компаниях в Киеве и Одессе”, – сообщила спикер СБУ Елена Гитлянская агентству “Интерфакс-Украина”.
Как уточняется в сообщении на сайте СБУ, менеджмент компании незаконно собирал, накапливал и передавал в РФ персональные данные украинских граждан, в частности личные данные, род занятий, образ жизни, жилища, жительства, работы, досуга, источники и размеры доходов, номера телефонов, электронных адресов и аккаунтов в социальных сетях. Оперативники спецслужбы задокументировали, что среди граждан, информация о которых передавалась в РФ, есть сотрудники правоохранительных и специальных органов, военнослужащие Вооруженных Сил Украины, других подразделений, участвующих в антитеррористической операции на востоке Украины, работники органов государственной власти и управления.
“Информация передавалась специальным службам РФ для планирования, организации и проведения разведывательных, диверсионных, информационно-подрывных операций в нашей стране в ущерб суверенитету Украины, территориальной целостности и неприкосновенности”, – отмечается в сообщении на сайте.
Согласно ему, сотрудники СБУ обнаружили во время обысков серверное оборудование и документацию, которые будут направлены для проведения экспертизы, которая проверит факты сбора, накопления и передачи российской стороне персональных данных граждан Украины. Эксперты также проанализируют перенаправление трафика украинских пользователей на российские серверы, а также проверят координацию противоправной деятельности с территории Российской Федерации.
В пресс-службе компании “Яндекс” агентству подтвердили факт проведения обысков СБУ в одесском и киевском офисах “Яндекс. Украина”.
“Информацией о причинах сегодняшних действий СБУ мы пока не располагаем. К нашим офисам уже выехали адвокаты. В рамках правовых процедур мы готовы предоставить органам необходимую информацию”, – отметили в пресс-службе.
Как сообщалось, президент Украины Петр Порошенко указом от 15 мая ввел в действие решение СНБО от 28 апреля 2017 года “О применении персональных специальных экономических и других ограничительных мер (санкций) “.
Данным решением вводятся среди прочего санкции против социальных сетей “ВКонтакте” и “Одноклассники”, а также компаний “Мэйл.ру”, “Яндекс” и их сервисов. Доступ ко всем сервисам “Яндекса” и Mail.ru запрещен на три года.

© Source: http://telegraf.com.ua/ukraina/politika/3392722-v-sbu-prokommentirovali-obyiski-v-yandekse.html
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СБУ обнародовала видео обыска в офисах Яндекс. Украина

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“Во время обысков сотрудники СБУ обнаружили серверное оборудование и документацию, которые будут направлены для проведения экспертизы, которая пров…
Служба безопасности Украины опубликовала видео следственных действий в офисах Яндекс. Украина в Киеве и Одессе.
“Во время обысков сотрудники СБУ обнаружили серверное оборудование и документацию, которые будут направлены для проведения экспертизы, которая проверит факты сбора, накопления и передачи российской стороне персональных данных граждан Украины. Эксперты также проанализируют перенаправления трафика украинских пользователей на российские серверы, а также проверят координацию противоправной деятельности с территории Российской Федерации”, – сообщили в ведомстве.
Как отмечается, на данное время продолжается досудебное следствие в рамках уголовного производства, открытого по ст. 111 Уголовного кодекса Украины (государственная измена) .
Напомним, ранее пресс-служба российской IT-компании Яндекс сообщила об обысках СБУ в ее киевском и одесском офисах.
Позже эту информацию подтвердила и спикер Службы безопасности Украины Елена Гитлянская.
Согласно данным СБУ, Яндекс незаконно собирал и передавал персональные данные украинцев спецслужбам РФ.
НВ

© Source: http://nv.ua/ukraine/events/sbu-obnarodovala-video-obyska-v-ofisah-jandeks-v-kieve-i-odesse-1227821.html
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North Korea’s new missiles will make it even hard for the U. S. to intercept them

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Just as the U. S. prepares to test a multi-billion dollar missile defence system, North Korea is rolling out a new missile type that could evade even the Americans’ best current efforts
WASHINGTON — As the Pentagon prepares to conduct its first test in three years of the multibillion-dollar effort to intercept a North Korean warhead, it hopes to demonstrate that it has fixed a system that has worked in fewer than half of its previous nine tests.
But just as the Defense Department seeks to prove that it can strike a speeding target launched over the Pacific — in this case, an interceptor rocket is set to lift off from the California coast on Tuesday to try to smash a mock warhead — the North Koreans have delivered a new challenge.
The North has recently test-fired a series of missiles based on a technology that would give the United States little warning of an attack. The new generation of missiles uses solid fuels, enabling them to be rolled out from mountain hideaways and launched in minutes. That makes the job of intercepting them — already daunting — far harder, given that the U. S. anti-missile system works best with early alerts from satellites that a launch is imminent.
Even more worrisome is that these missiles actually seem to be functional, unlike older missiles that kept exploding or falling prematurely into the sea in past tests. Recent major tests were clearly successful, teaching the North Koreans a lot about how to fire missiles into space and drop warheads on distant targets. While the North has not yet flight-tested an intercontinental ballistic missile capable of crossing the Pacific, it has repeatedly claimed that it can strike the United States with a nuclear warhead.
Evidence suggests that U. S. intelligence missed signals last year that the North was moving quickly to adopt the solid-fuel technology, leaving Washington scrambling to catch up, according to current and former U. S. officials.
One former official who closely tracked the intelligence on North Korea said that while it should not be called an intelligence failure, the U. S. government had not appreciated the speed with which the North was changing its approach.
On Sunday, Defense Secretary Jim Mattis argued that the United States could not wait for North Korea to complete its testing program before responding forcefully.
“It is a direct threat to the United States, ” he said on CBS’s “Face the Nation.” “They have been very clear in their rhetoric — we don’ t have to wait until they have an intercontinental ballistic missile with a nuclear weapon on it to say that now it’s manifested completely.”
In its latest provocative move, North Korea early Monday test-fired a short-range ballistic missile, a launch that violated United Nations Security Council resolutions but was not of great concern to the United States.
The U. S. response so far to the North’s nuclear and missile programs has included a secret campaign of cyber- and electronic-warfare strikes that President Barack Obama accelerated three years ago, after concluding that traditional missile defenses were insufficient. The covert program is known as “left of launch, ” since the cyberattacks begin before missiles reach the launching pad, or as they blast off.
President Donald Trump has declined to publicly talk about the “left of launch” effort, though he has made comments that seemed to acknowledge its existence.
The test scheduled for Tuesday is of the more classic anti-missile defenses that the United States has struggled to make work since the Eisenhower administration. Yet it is the first since Trump took office vowing to “solve” the North Korea problem, and since he began talking about ratcheting up economic sanctions and raising military pressure on the North.
But Trump is discovering what Obama learned before him: Intercepting intercontinental missiles over the Pacific is exquisitely hard, even when the tests, like the one scheduled for this week, are designed to give the interceptor its best shot.
Incoming warheads move extraordinarily fast — more than 4 miles a second. In war, the interceptors in Alaska and California would race skyward and release speeding projectiles meant to obliterate incoming warheads by force of impact — what experts call hitting a bullet with a bullet.
Huge amounts of cash have been spent on this challenge: more than $330 billion by the estimate of Stephen I. Schwartz, a military analyst at the Middlebury Institute of International Studies in Monterey, California. Yet neither the high cost nor the poor performance has dampened enthusiasm in Congress or at the Pentagon — or among military contractors — for deploying missile defenses. The Defense Department hopes to spend billions more dollars on the interceptors, including perhaps on a new site on the East Coast.
Since the Bush administration began moving the system into operational mode in 2004, it has had a failure rate of 56 percent in tests against mock warheads. While the official tally is five misses in nine attempts, critics say that a test in 2006 was only a partial success, since the interceptor struck just a glancing blow.
“Close only counts in horseshoes, not in nuclear war, ” said Philip E. Coyle III, a former White House official and former head of weapons testing at the Pentagon who has long faulted the system as unreliable and misleading. If the glancing blow counts as a miss, the system’s failure rate is 67 percent.
Critics warn that the system would do worse in war, since the flight tests are highly scripted. They note that no mock weapon has moved nearly as fast as a true enemy warhead.
Portraying this week’s test as more realistic, Vice Adm. James D. Syring, the director of the Pentagon’s Missile Defense Agency, has called it “the first intercept of an ICBM-range target.” That means it is meant to approach the warhead speed of a true intercontinental ballistic missile.
While mock enemy missiles are always launched from Kwajalein, an atoll in the Pacific, North Korea uses large trucks to move around the intercontinental missiles it is developing, adding elements of surprise. Paul Bracken, a Yale military expert who is working on a book about mobile missiles, said foreign states saw movable arms as inherently safer from U. S. strikes.
In the past, the North’s reliance on liquid-fuelled missiles eased the targeting job for anti-missile interceptors. U. S. military surveillance planes and satellites could track missile transporters and convoys of fuel trucks. The process of fuelling a missile takes several hours, making it vulnerable to a pre-emptive strike, and giving the anti-missile systems on the West Coast time to lock in on expected trajectories.
With the new generation of weapons, the solid fuels are packed into the missile body in the factory, eliminating the need for fuelling in the field. So the preparation time for an attack can drop from hours to minutes.
It can give you less warning time
“It’s concerning, ” Coyle said. “It can give you less warning time.”
Missile experts say the North’s shift to solids came as a surprise. Jeffrey Lewis, an expert in North Korean rocketry at the Middlebury Institute, noted last year that Washington had given two kinds of submarine missiles — one fueled by liquids, and a newer one by solids — the same identifier code. The lack of a distinction, he said, suggested that the North had “caught the U. S. unaware.”
The CIA disputes that, saying it has been tracking solid-fuel developments closely. Nonetheless, when the new CIA director, Mike Pompeo, took office, his first organizational step was to create a unit to unify all analysis and covert operations against North Korea’s nuclear and missile systems, a recognition, officials say, that the efforts had been fractured.
In all, the North has now successfully tested solid-fueled missiles four times — twice last year and twice this year. After a test on May 21 — carried out in defiance of what Trump called an “armada” of warships and submarines off the Korean coast — the North Korean leader, Kim Jong Un, declared the new medium-range missile, known as the Pukguksong-2, ready to be mass produced and then deployed.
If left on his current trajectory (North Korea) will ultimately succeed in fielding a nuclear-armed missile capable of threatening the United States homeland
John Schilling, an aerospace engineer and an expert on North Korea’s missile program, predicted last year that the North might need five years or more to successfully deploy a solid-fueled missile. Recently, after the string of successes, he has updated his estimate, saying the North might start deployments this year.
In testimony to the Senate Armed Services Committee last week, the director of the Defense Intelligence Agency, Lt. Gen. Vincent R. Stewart, declined to offer a similar timing estimate. But he said that “if left on his current trajectory, ” Kim “will ultimately succeed in fielding a nuclear-armed missile capable of threatening the United States homeland.”
Young-Keun Chang, an aerospace engineer and the director of the Global Surveillance Research Center at the Korean Aerospace University, in Seoul, said the North’s recent solid-fuel advances had moved the impoverished state closer to the “technological breakthrough” it needed to build a mobile intercontinental ballistic missile.
“North Korea may, ” he said, “replace all its liquid-propellant ballistic missiles with solid-propellant missiles.” He called it a “fundamental paradigm shift” that could eventually pose “a serious potential threat to the United States.”

© Source: http://news.nationalpost.com/news/world/north-koreas-new-missiles-will-make-it-even-hard-for-the-u-s-to-intercept-them
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True meaning of Memorial Day remembered during Linden celebration

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“Everything seemed to happen at night, ” Aldrich said. “I landed in Korea at night. We got on a train and went way, I don’t know how far we went up in there. First thing I know we started hearing kaboom…
LINDEN, MI — Stanley Aldrich sat in a white limousine Monday morning outside the Linden VFW Post 4642 bearing seals of the different armed forces branches.
The 90-year-old U. S. Navy and Army veteran watched May 29 as parade-goers assembled outside the post for the 70 th annual Memorial Day parade, hoping people would remember the true reason for the day of remembrance.
Having helped build the Linden VFW block-by-block, Aldrich talked his father into letting him join the Navy at 17 in 1945, the year World War II came to an end.
“I had two brothers that were in the Navy and I wanted to be in with them, ” said Aldrich, dressed in full uniform.
He spent time “here, there, and everywhere” in Korea, helping bandage up wounded soldiers being dropped in the country.
“Everything seemed to happen at night, ” Aldrich said. “I landed in Korea at night. We got on a train and went way, I don’t know how far we went up in there. First thing I know, we started hearing kaboom, kaboom. We were getting close, but I was lucky. I got to come home.”
Linden resident Dafne Ward offered her thanks in a message scribbled on the Patriot Wall outside the VFW hall.
Ward’s husband, Dave Ward, served in the U. S. Army, having headed to Panama during the December 1989 invasion of Panama.
“It’s a way of remembering. It’s a sad day because we are talking about all the people that have passed away, died (in combat) , or have not come back in our wars, ” she said. “It’s sad. I can’t even imagine, a mom that lost her kids.”
Ward also reminded people to remember those who’ve returned and have their scars on the inside, not visible to those around them.
“We have to remember, to give help for them, ” she said. “When they come back you don’t know the horrific conditions they have to live.”
Ward and Aldrich both asked people to think about the true meaning behind the day.
“One thing I don’t like, they’re using Memorial Day to sell stuff, cars, mattresses. I hate that, ” Aldrich said, “Memorial Day is not for that. Remember the guys that left a long time ago and the ones that are in right now.”

© Source: http://www.mlive.com/news/flint/index.ssf/2017/05/veterans_ask_people_to_remembe.html
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Proud of My Graduate, but Missing My Mother

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When you lose the people you love, you mark the loss over and over in the celebrations they don’ t get to celebrate.
Naturally, I’ m in a sentimental mood. My youngest child just graduated from college, and my family tends toward mush on these occasions, just as yours probably does. The conventions were duly observed; he looked and seemed ridiculously grown up and also trailed along all the echoes of his childhood self.
We observed the formalities; we laughed, we cried, we got soaking wet (it was a rainy commencement) . His older sister offered, as a fond benediction, “This may seem like a backhanded compliment, but you’ ve gotten so much more out of college than I ever thought you would.”
And I carried with me, through the commencement, a very strong sense of missing my mother, who died in 2014. Every so often, when I couldn’ t resist, I would invoke her, usually by saying, she would have been so proud.
It’s not that I would have wanted her standing there in the rain with us. If she were still alive, my mother would now be pushing 90, and I assume that she would have had the good sense to enjoy the occasion from the warmth and dryness of her own home. But when you lose the people you love, you mark the loss over and over in the celebrations they don’ t get to celebrate, in the moments they don’ t get to reflect back.
So my son was graduating, and I wanted my mother. I wanted to be not only the proud parent, but also the loving — and loved — daughter.
Sixteen years ago, after my father died very suddenly, I started learning about the way that every happy milestone can also constitute a chance to miss and mourn. Like so many other life lessons, this one turned out to be something I hadn’ t learned, and couldn’ t learn, based only on the accumulated experience of all the billions of people who had gone before, not to mention the poetry and pontifications they had left behind to guide me.
That doesn’ t seem to be how we learn the real lessons. Just as you don’ t know what it will feel like to love a child until you’ ve been the person with the child, so you don’ t know what it’s like to lose a parent until you’ ve been the person without the mother or the father — even though there are vast archives of the literature of love and loss to draw on.
There is also the literature of graduations. I was imprinted, early on, by the description of a New England high school graduation in “Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm, ” the 1903 novel by Kate Douglas Wiggin that tells the story of Rebecca Rowena Randall, an imaginative child sent away from her poverty-stricken family (on poor old Sunnybrook Farm) to be educated and given advantages by her two somewhat severe maiden aunts in small-town Maine.
I read and reread the book when I was quite young (battered paperback, white cover, lavender trim, picture of a dark-haired girl in white pinafore) . Like many girls, I was a real glutton for stories of young women turned out into a somewhat unwelcoming world. And I was apparently imprinted with Rebecca’s seminary graduation scene, as she rode to the ceremony on a haywagon with the girls in her class, resplendent in her white cheesecloth dress, on a sunny day in a small New England town. I say imprinted because the lines describing the scene come to my mind at any commencement, however inappropriate (6-foot-tall male graduates from urban college in 21st century, on a rainy day, say) .
Wiggin wrote that the student essays and recitations at the commencement were “precisely like all others that have been since the world began.” She went on to say, “We yawn desperately at the essays, but our hearts go out to the essayists, all the same, for ‘the vision splendid’ is shining in their eyes, and there is no fear of ‘th’ inevitable yoke’ that the years are so surely bringing them.”
(Writing in an era when memorization played a bigger role in education, Wiggin probably assumed that her readers would recognize those quotes from Wordsworth’s “Ode: Intimations of Immortality From Recollections of Early Childhood.” My mother, born in 1927 and educated in the Brooklyn public schools, was big on learning poetry by heart, but her tastes ran more to Whittier and Poe.)
Commencement, and I wanted my mother. I wanted my father as well, but we lost him before my children’s graduations began, so I am more accustomed to his absence. I picture him at my own medical school graduation, another singularly wet commencement, with a sodden tent that sagged ever closer to the seated parents in their graduation finery.
My parents were exactly as old that year as I am right now, watching my own child graduate. Commencement ceremonies put you in your generational place. If your child is graduating, why then, you must be one of the parents. Is this how my parents felt, when I was graduating? Yes, probably, they were absorbed in their own work and their own lives, proud of their children, and perhaps occasionally struck with wonder to find themselves as old as they had already become.
And were they thinking of their own parents, and did their parents feel as close and yet as far away as mine do, right now? My parents had both traveled far from the patterns of their immigrant parents; they were the first generation of their families to go to college, and their graduations were momentous for that reason. They both went on to become college professors, living lives their own parents could not have imagined.
For my mother, college graduation also represented a victory over her parents, who had wanted her to take a commercial course in high school and then get a secretarial job; against their wishes, she moved out, took a job as a live-in babysitter, and attended Brooklyn College. Into her 80s, she was still capable of working up some anger about their belief that education was unnecessary for a woman.
If she were around, she would probably have told my son that story, one more time, in honor of his graduation. And then she would have remembered her own father at that Brooklyn College graduation; he hadn’ t wanted her to go, but he was very, very proud.

© Source: https://www.nytimes.com/2017/05/29/well/family/proud-of-my-graduate-but-missing-my-mother.html?_r=0
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Shark in Australia leaps into boat, lands on fisherman

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An Australian fisherman got a rare — and unusual — catch on Saturday when a great white shark leapt into his boat and knocked him off his feet.
An Australian fisherman got a rare — and unusual — catch on Saturday when a great white shark leapt into his boat and knocked him off his feet.
Terry Selwood, 73, said he was on his 15-foot boat off Evans Head, north of Sydney, when the shark came charging toward him. It struck him with its pectoral fin before landing on him, he told the Associated Press on Monday.
Selwood said he got up and went to the gunnel at the bow of the boat while the 9-foot shark viciously flopped in the vessel.
DRUG-SMUGGLING PIGEON CARRYING 178 PARTY PILLS CAUGHT BY KUWAITI OFFICIALS
“I didn’ t give it a chance to look me in the eyes. I wanted to get up and get on top of the gunnel because it was thrashing around madly, ” Selwood told Australian Broadcasting Corp.
Selwood steadied himself by clinging to the tubular metal frame of the sun shelter, known as a bimini.
He suffered from bruises and bleeding on his right arm.
Selwood radioed the Evans Head coast guard and stayed on the gunnel until a rescue boat arrived.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.

© Source: http://www.foxnews.com/world/2017/05/29/shark-leaps-into-boat-and-lands-on-australian-fisherman.html
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Chinese lesbian dating site closed down as users fear government crackdown

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A Chinese lesbian dating app with more than five million users has been shut down.
A Chinese lesbian dating app with more than five million users has been shut down.
Rela’s website and main social media account were also taken offline at some point last week, according to Reuters.
The move quashes some of the optimism felt in the Chinese LGBT community after the highest court in Taiwan ordered its parliament to legalise same-sex marriage.
China’s state-run news agency Xinhua said the ruling had “caused controversy”.
It also shows the current limits of progress in the country, after a Chinese tech company completed its buy-out of dating app Grindr last week.
Beijing Kunlun Tech finalised the acquisition after initially investing in the app, popular with gay and bisexual men around in the world, back in January 2016.
As well as its app and website, Rela has also had its page taken down from Weibo, a social media site with characteristics of Facebook and Twitter which around one-third of Chinese people use.
The page had around 200,000 fans, according to a cached version of the website.
Rela, first released in 2012, was temporarily suspended because of an “important adjustment in service, ” the company told users on its WeChat app.
“Rela has always been with you and please await its return!” it added, without giving any details about why the service had been suspended.
Many users were convinced that the service had been shut down by the government, with one writing on Weibo: “This is discrimination against us lesbians.”
Another fan said: “Not being able to open it feels like being jilted.”
One Twitter user suggested that the app had been targeted because of its support on Weibo for the group of mothers of LGBT people who were kicked out of Shanghai’s famous “marriage market” after trying to find partners for their single children.
Rela posted a video in support of the group on its Weibo page last week.
Reuters has reported that Rela did not respond to an email seeking comment.
The country’s internet regulator, the Cyberspace Administration of China, also did not immediately respond to a faxed request for comment today, though it is a national holiday.
In April, gay Chinese dating app Zank was shut down after around four years.
In a message on its Weibo account, which is still online, Zank said it had been accused by the internet regulator of broadcasting pornographic content and consequently closed down.
The Chinese government has in the past blocked sites like Facebook and Google for allegedly challenging the Community Party’s rule over the country or threatening stability.
Being gay in China was decriminalised in 1997, and declassified as a mental disorder by the Chinese Society of Psychiatry in 2001.
Last month, it was revealed that Chinese Communists won’ t call each other ‘comrade’ anymore because of the word’s associations with gay people.

© Source: http://www.pinknews.co.uk/2017/05/29/chinese-lesbian-dating-site-closed-down-as-users-fear-government-crackdown/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+Pinknews+%28Pink+News%29
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安倍首相「国際連携に必要」=一般人、ほう助で捜査も-「共謀罪」参院審議入り

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「共謀罪」 の 構成要件を改めた「テロ等準備罪」 を新設する組織犯罪処罰法改正案は29日の 参院本会議で審議入りした。 安倍晋三首相は同法案を成立させて国際組織犯罪防止条約を締結する意義について、 「テロを含む国際的組織犯罪に対して国際社会と一致結束して対処するためにも
「共謀罪」の構成要件を改めた「テロ等準備罪」を新設する組織犯罪処罰法改正案は29日の参院本会議で審議入りした。 安 倍 晋 三 首相は同法案を成立させて国際組織犯罪防止条約を締結する意義について、「テロを含む国際的組織犯罪に対して国際社会と一致結束して対処するためにも、この条約の締結が必要だ」と強調。6月18日の会期末を控え成立を急ぐ考えを強調した。自民党の 古 川 俊 治 氏への答弁。
【ニュースを探るQ&A】キノコの違法採取は「共謀罪」?=処罰対象の妥当性争点
首相は、テロ等準備罪で処罰されるのは、あくまでも「実行準備行為」に着手した段階だと説明。「内心の自由が侵害される、といった不安や懸念を払拭(ふっしょく)する内容だ」と訴え、理解を求めた。公明党の 浜 田 昌 良 氏への答弁。 焦点の一般人への捜査について、民進党の 真 山 勇 一 氏は、ほう助犯とみなされれば捜査対象になり得るとの懸念を示した。 金 田 勝 年 法相は「計画を話し合う場所を提供した場合に、ほう助犯が成立することはあり得る」と語り、捜査が及ぶ可能性を否定しなかった。 ただ、「重大犯罪計画を認識していない限り、ほう助犯は成立しない。一般の方々が、このような認識をして場所を提供することは想定されない」と述べ、懸念は当たらないとの立場を示した。(2017/05/29-17: 22) 関連ニュース
【政治記事一覧へ】 【アクセスランキング】

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Leftist Media Outlet Attacks Marines on Memorial Day over ‘Toxic Masculinity’

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Left-wing news outlet Vox attacked Marines on Memorial Day, claiming in an article that the Marine Corps has a “toxic masculinity problem.”
The article, which was simply titled “The Marine Corps has a ‘toxic masculinity’ problem, ” continued to claim that the Marine Corps often “marginalizes or mistreats female troops.”
Citing the Marines United nude photo sharing scandal, Vox staff writer and defense correspondent Alex Ward attempted to link the Marines with systemic sexism and listed ways how the Corps could get rid of their “toxic masculinity.”
“And to be fair, it’s not just the Marines. Sexual assault has increased in other services, and even in military academies, ” concluded Ward in the article. “According to one Pentagon review, there were 6,172 reports of sexual assault last year.”
“So as the service tries to win battles around the world, the most important fight may be the one closest to home, ” he continued. “The battle for the soul of the Marine Corps.”
The article was criticized by numerous other journalists on Twitter:
“I’ m an ex-Army woman. This article is hysterical bullshit, ” commented one user, while another added: “Yeah, you know that toxic masculinity saving lives. Just terrible.”
Charlie Nash is a reporter for Breitbart Tech. You can follow him on Twitter @MrNashington or like his page at Facebook.

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