Thứ Năm, 5 tháng 10, 2017

News on Youtube Oct 6 2017

Public schools now pharmaceutical PRISONS as 8-year-old boy strapped to gurney and forcibly

injected with powerful drugs

The first day of school can be a nerve-wracking time for many kids and their parents, but

normally the day goes off without a hitch.

Some unlucky kids might be seated next to a classmate they don�t like or get lost

going to the bathroom, but most kids find that all those jitters were ultimately unwarranted.

That was not the case for a Toronto-area boy, however, as his first day of school this year

ended with him being carted off in a police car to a hospital and being forcibly injected

with drugs.

Debbie Kiroff told CBC Toronto that her eight-year-old son is a normal boy in many ways; he enjoys

playing with Legos, cooking and swimming.

However, he also has some behavioral issues and a serious learning disability.

She wasn�t terribly surprised when the principal of Holland Landing Public School called her

on the first day of school on September 5 to report that his behavior was �escalating.�

He likes to run to release energy, she says, and he�s fond of escaping to a frog pond

on the school grounds.

However, she was shocked by what happened next.

Following an argument with another student over who could use a computer, the principal

said he ran around and began climbing unspecified structures while holding a ruler.

The principal asked her to come pick her son up, but Kiroff couldn�t leave work immediately

and sent her adult daughter to pick him up instead.

By the time her daughter arrived, the boy was in the back of a police car.

He was brought to Southlake Regional Health Centre, where Kiroff was forced to wait for

15 to 20 minutes before she could even go inside and see her son.

Before being allowed to enter, she says that a woman working at the hospital came to tell

her that her son was out of control and that they had to restrain him and inject him with

a sedative.

Kiroff said that she tried to remain calm despite seething inside and asked if they

needed her consent for that.

She was told that parental consent was not needed if the hospital felt there was an extreme

safety concern.

She asked what he was doing that prompted them to take such an extreme measure and was

told that he was �kicking, screaming and yelling.� While these behaviors certainly

have all the markings of a temper tantrum and are not pleasant to witness, it�s hardly

an emergency situation worthy of needles and pharmaceuticals.

Her son later told her that hospital workers said they�d take his restraints off of him

one at a time if he calmed down, but they ended up injecting him instead.

He was kept for around an hour and a half in restraints before being released, and he

stumbled back to the car.

He was not allowed to go back to school until after his mother could meet with the principal

on September 15.

Kiroff said the incident has left her son emotionally scarred.

Could this happen to your child?

It�s hard to believe that a school or a hospital would allow such a young boy to be

forcibly injected with a powerful sedative, particularly when his behavior does not seem

much worse than an extreme temper tantrum.

The fact that it was done without parental consent only makes the situation even more

infuriating.

A statement by the hospital said: �No one wants to use restraints; it is a last measure

and is done only in dire situations deemed an �emergency.� In an �emergency�

situation, our concern for our patient determines how long a restraint is used.�

It�s too bad their concern for the patient didn�t extend to his long-term emotional

well-being.

For an eight-year-old-boy, being removed from school by police, brought to the hospital,

strapped to a gurney and injected with drugs is pretty much the worst possible first day

imaginable and something he is unlikely to ever forget.

The experience could well affect him for the rest of his life and cause him to act out

even more in the future.

It�s hard to imagine how any of the adults involved believed this was the best way to

handle the situation, and all parents who send their children to public schools need

to be aware that this could happen to their child without their consent.

For more infomation >> Public schools now pharmaceutical PRISONS as 8 year old boy strapped to gurney and forcibly injected - Duration: 4:34.

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10 Disturbing Government Cover-Ups Hidden From The Public - Duration: 11:48.

For more infomation >> 10 Disturbing Government Cover-Ups Hidden From The Public - Duration: 11:48.

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Complaints of Sexual Harassment in Public Housing Go Ignored - Duration: 5:35.

Taya Graham: This is Taya Graham reporting for The Real News Network in Baltimore City,

Maryland.

I'm standing in Perkins Homes, what might be the next battleground for low income people

to be able to live in Baltimore's upscale housing.

But our investigation here has revealed other uncomfortable facts, which shed light on just

how difficult life already is for the people who live here.

Speaker 2: The projects is bed bug infested, roach infested.

I mean, I just think the government need to put some money in these projects.

Taya Graham: When housing officials first announced they had selected a luxury developer

to rebuild Perkins Homes, a low-income housing project near Baltimore's gleaming inner harbor,

there was anxiety among the residents.

Speaker 3: And I am worried because they had said several things and didn't keep their

word.

Taya Graham: But as we explored the lives of the people who live here, other troubling

facts emerged.

Speaker 4: But then I started experiencing, in the bathroom and the kitchen, these big,

black spots, like in the corner of the bathtub, which was, they say, mold.

Taya Graham: We toured poorly maintained apartments, and heard stories of repairs unfinished.

And even more disturbing, allegations of sexual harassment of residents.

Speaker 5: Either they're trying to get your phone number, they're trying to have sex with

you, they want to charge you for all of these things.

It makes you really not even want to call them.

Taya Graham: In fact, The Real News obtained this, a notarized statement from a resident

who said she was asked to pay for repairs with sex.

She submitted this notarized complaint in 2015, but heard nothing back.

So, we asked the Housing Department what happened, and they told us they never received it.

We dug deeper, and we found that since 2016, that 18 sexual harassment complaints have

been filed by residents.

Complaints the Housing Department would not tell us how they resolved.

The notarized statement we obtained is disturbing.

The Housing Authority installed a generator because there was no power in half of her

house, but it was so loud she and her child couldn't sleep.

The maintenance worker asked for money to remove it, and when she couldn't pay, he asked

for sex.

Quote, "At about four years ago I had a problem with my electricity cutting off in different

rooms.

I called the maintenance office to see if someone could check it out.

The next day he came out with a big generator and stated he was leaving this here overnight

to help my lights work better.

I could not sleep because it was so loud and noisy.

The next day he came back out to my house to pick the machine up, and he said it would

cost me $150.

I did not have it because it was the end of the month, and I had no more money to pay

him.

He stated to me, 'Well, we can have sex to clear this bill up.'"

End quote.

This echoes a similar scandal at the city's Gilmore Homes project, which emerged last

year.

There, the city settled a lawsuit for six million dollars after at least a dozen residents

said they had been asked for sex in exchange for repairs.

Speaker 6: He asked me to send him some pictures.

And I asked him ... Pictures of my feet.

He wanted pictures of my pedicured feet.

I felt invaded.

I felt disrespected.

I let him know I felt disrespected, because I wanted to know what made him think, just

because he asked for pictures of my feet, that he should get them.

Taya Graham: This controversy comes amid the news that the city is considering giving the

developer of Perkins a massive tax break to rebuild it.

According to the Baltimore Sun, the Housing Department is contemplating offering BD Development

a TIF, or tax-increment finance deal.

It's a subsidy that allows developers to pump their property taxes back into building and

infrastructure, a possibility that didn't sit well with residents.

Speaker 7: I just hope it be better than how the living conditions is now, because if they

gonna get all this money to do, you know, fix up the buildings, fix up the community,

and it still looks the way it looks now, then that's a big concern, because they getting

money to fix it so we can live better, so kids can live better.

Taya Graham: BD has benefited from this type of largess before.

In 2013, the city gave his firm a 104 million dollar TIF to build the luxury development

Harbor East, a property that sits just a half mile from Perkins Homes.

Speaker 8: Do you think a big tax break to a luxury developer is gonna actually help

the residents who live here?

Speaker 7: I would really hope so, because that's what the big move, for real, the big

plan.

So, I would really hope so that it's for the community and for the people.

Taya Graham: We asked the city housing authority for comment, and they declined.

But despite the talk of big plans and tax breaks for the wealthy, residents here continue

to suffer and wonder if a community that showers money on the already rich will continue to

ignore their pleas for help.

Speaker 7: I need to be concerned because I don't really know what's going on, and what's

gonna happen for me and my kids.

Taya Graham: We will continue to follow this story as it unfolds.

This is Taya Graham and Steven Jannis reporting for The Real News Network in Baltimore City,

Maryland.

For more infomation >> Complaints of Sexual Harassment in Public Housing Go Ignored - Duration: 5:35.

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Trump Pushes Coal and Wants Public to Pay For It - Duration: 13:48.

DIMITRI LASCARI: This is Dimitri Lascaris for The Real News.

The Trump Administration's Department of Energy is run by former Texas Governor, Rick Perry,

who vowed to abolish the department when he was a presidential candidate.

Known as the Darling of the Fossil Fuel Industry, Perry just announced a request to the Federal

Energy Regulatory Commission to enact changes that would boost pricing for coal and nuclear

power.

This rule would require regional power markets to factor in certain characteristics of coal

fire and nuclear power generation when they set prices for electricity.

Some experts say this change could create the biggest change to electricity markets

in the United States in decades.

Rick Perry's proposed rule came on the heels of an environmental success story.

Washington State, nixed plans for a major coal export terminal last week, dealing a

possible lethal blow to the project.

Here to discuss all of this with us is Mary Anne Hitt, director of the Sierra Club's Beyond

Coal Campaign.

Mary Anne joins us today from Los Angeles.

Welcome back, Mary Anne.

MARY ANNE HITT: Thank you.

It's a pleasure to be with you.

DIMITRI LASCARI: First of all, Mary Anne, I'd like to talk about the Washington State

Department of Ecology's denial of the permit for the Millennium Bulk Terminal project.

How would that export facility, if built, impact the public, the environment and now,

in light of this denial what are the prospects for the terminal to actually be built?

MARY ANNE HITT: Well, this was a big victory, not only because we stopped this particular

project, and by we, I mean, a very big coalition of environmental groups, tribal partners,

community leaders.

It's also an even bigger deal because it was the final coal export proposal in the Northwest

that was still standing.

About a decade ago, big companies like Peabody Coal were looking for new markets for coal

coming out of Montana and Wyoming, which is our biggest remaining coal reserves because

we're using a lot less coal in the United States.

Their plan was to build the six big coal export terminals in the Northwest to ship the coal

to Asia.

This marks the last of those six that was defeated by a grassroots network that's really

one of the most remarkable things I've seen in my 20 years in the environmental movement.

DIMITRI LASCARI: That's quite a contrast to the attitude of the Trump administration to

the coal industry.

Let's talk about this proposal that's coming from Rick Perry and the Department of Energy

to boost pricing for coal and nuclear power.

Perry's reported rationale for this rule is that wind and solar energy are intermittent

sources of energy.

In other words, that source of energy is only available when the sun shines and the wind

blows, whereas coal and nuclear power make the electrical grid, according to Rick Perry,

more reliable and resilient.

Is there any truth to this, especially in light of advances we've seen and will continue

to see in terms of electricity storage?

MARY ANNE HITT: The idea that you have to have these big old fossil fuel plants around

to keep the grid stable or reliable is really a pretty outdated notion.

What we actually have found in recent years is it has been renewables that are keeping

our grid stable because having more diverse sources of energy on the grid like wind and

solar that can keep going, no matter what happens elsewhere on the grid has proven to

be a real boon.

Basically, the grid is this vast interconnected network of wires and other ways we transmit

electricity that are managed by smart people.

You could think of the air traffic control where there are folks who are really managing

to make sure that if one power source goes down somewhere, we're bringing up another

power source somewhere else.

Coal is actually not a great source for reliability because it takes a long time to fire up a

coal plant.

It takes a long time to power it back down, whereas wind and solar are a lot more nimble,

but the point being, the real motive here by Secretary Perry is not about the reliability

of the grid.

It's to prop up the fossil fuel industry, which is having trouble competing on the free

market with renewables.

That's the real motivation here.

We can have a safe, reliable grid powered with 100% renewable energy, but that is a

threat to the bottom line of the fossil fuel companies, which are really what Rick Perry

is trying to protect here.

DIMITRI LASCARI: How would this rule do that?

How does it boost the viability of coal and nuclear power?

Do you think it's ultimately going to affect the attractive... in economic perspective

to the power markets?

MARY ANNE HITT: Well, what they are proposing to do here is to claim that coal and nuclear

are these special categories of power because they have this big fuel supply on-site, which

means that they get, essentially, subsidized for continuing to exist.

The Department of Energy has sent this over to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission,

which is an impartial entity that is actually supposed to be not picking winners and losers

but just making the best resource decisions for the country.

Again, the real motivation here is that coal and nuclear are having a very hard time competing

with all the other sources of electricity out there, especially as we now have 10% or

more of our nation's electricity coming from renewables.

In some parts of the country, they're getting 30, 40 even 50% of their power from renewables

on some days.

Coal plants, they're finding that when they try to sell their coal out into the marketplace,

especially the open market, that no one wants to buy it because it's too expensive, and

there's a lot more competition out there.

Not every state is in one of these open markets, but then, these deregulated open markets,

they basically want to force the customers to buy the electricity anyway.

This notice from the Department of Energy has gone over to the Federal Energy Regulatory

Commission or FERC, and it's a big deal.

It's definitely a big deal.

I'm glad you're following it and paying attention to it.

It is definitely designed to prop up old polluting sources of energy that can no longer compete

increasingly with renewables.

We're going to be working at the Sierra Club to stop this from ever getting over the finish

line.

It's going to be a big focus of ours for sure.

We definitely, all as Americans, need to be paying attention to it because we're really

at a tipping point when it comes to the economics and energy.

Renewables are cheaper than coal in many, if not, all parts of the country.

We shouldn't be forcing people on their electric bills to pay to keep these old dirty polluting

plants open which is essentially what this proposal would do.

DIMITRI LASCARI: Let's shift focus a little bit.

We've been talking about the price to the consumer of electricity of coal and so forth,

and how this might affect that.

Let's talk about other costs of coal usage, in particular, the health effects.

We know, for example, that working in the health industry, Trump is always, or at least

most of the time trying to justify his defense of the coal industry and this advancement

of the coal industry's agenda by reference to jobs for coal miners.

We know that working in the coal mining industry has had historically quite significant adverse

health effects.

For example, black lung disease.

When you compare the health profile for workers in the solar energy industry and the wind

industry and the wind energy industry, other renewable, clean, renewable energy industries

to what we see in the coal industry.

I mean it Trump really cares about workers, shouldn't he be taking into account the health

effects?

Aren't working in those industries a much more attractive proposition for workers from

a health perspective?

MARY ANNE HITT: Well, I live in West Virginia.

I'm in Los Angeles today, traveling for work, but I live in West Virginia and so I know

all too well both the health and safety, dangers that come from coal mining but also how reliant

those communities are on those jobs.

Unfortunately, still in this country, we don't have a lot of other economic opportunities

for folks in coal mining areas.

We haven't invested in diversifying the economy in coal mining regions like we should, in

my opinion.

You know, when folks really only have, as you'll hear that folks in the coal field say,

the only options are mining coal or maybe flipping burgers.

There's not a lot of other economic options.

They aren't yet seeing those clean energy jobs in their area and that's, I think, a

very important work that we need to be doing as a country.

I mean, we all have benefited from the sacrifices folks have made in the coal mines.

We've had cheap electricity.

We've had built a prosperous nation on the backs of those folks.

Now, I think the best way to honor the sacrifice people have made in coal communities is to

help diversify the economy as we transition away from coal.

Definitely, there are more solar jobs.

The solar jobs are not as big as a threat to the health of the workers.

At the same time, if those jobs aren't in the same places, that is cold comfort to folks

in those mining communities.

That's where, I think, we really need to invest as a nation and helping to diversify the economy

in coal communities.

I think that's the best way to honor that sacrifice that those folks have made on behalf

of us all.

DIMITRI LASCARI: Do we have reliable, are you aware of a reliable statistic study showing

how many jobs are created per-dollar investment in renewable energy versus per-dollar investment

in the coal industry?

MARY ANNE HITT: Well, those numbers are out there.

I can't cite them off the top of my head, but I can say the number of jobs per unit

of electricity produced, say kilowatt of electricity produced from coal versus renewable energy,

renewable energy is creating many times over the jobs that coal and fossil fuels are.

I mean, that's in part because it takes a lot of folks to put solar panels up on all

of those roofs and to get all those wind turbines built.

Those are good-paying jobs.

They are growing fast.

We have about 50,000 coal miners in this country, and by contrast, there's upwards of 300,000

renewable energy jobs in this country.

It's actually been one of the biggest sources of new job creation and economic growth in

this country over the past decade.

It's just continuing to skyrocket.

It's creating a lot of economic opportunity in places that haven't embraced wind and solar

like Iowa, like California.

The places that are hospitable to clean energy are really seeing a lot of job creation and

economic opportunity as a result.

DIMITRI LASCARI: Lastly, I want to talk to you a little bit about mountaintop removals.

My understanding is the Trump administration has been trying to roll back regulations on

mountaintop removal.

Could you bring us up-to-date on his efforts in that regard and the possible implications?

MARY ANNE HITT: Well, one of the first actions that Trump took when he became president was

to repeal something called the Stream Protection Rule, which had been long opposed by coal

mining companies, particularly in Appalachia because the stream protection rule prevented,

it was intended to protect streams around coal mining sites.

It never really went into effect.

That was one of his first actions, which he did, with a lot of fanfare with a lot of coal

folks and coal country politicians standing next to him.

Most recently, they have instructed the halting of a study by the National Academy of Sciences

that was really looking at the health of mountaintop removal.

Mountaintop removal is still going on.

It is still harming folks in Appalachia.

There have been a handful, about a dozen peer-reviewed studies connecting the dots between local

health problems like cancer, adverse effects and premature death, linking those to the

mountaintop removal mines.

The National Academy of Sciences was doing this survey of all that research to figure

out what it all added up to and what were the gaps, and what could we definitively say

about how to address this health crisis that we have in these coal communities around mountaintop

removal sites.

The study was halfway complete.

They pulled the plug on the funding.

It's very frustrating and angering to folks living near these sites who are looking for

answers and looking for solutions.

I think it's a very cynical move by the Trump administration and really shows that they're

not that worried about people in coal communities.

They are just wanting to score political points by promising that coal is going to come back

when it is not.

If you go back to the news last week that the very last coal export terminal in the

Northwest has had the plug pulled on it, you know, the economics aren't adding up.

In this country, we keep retiring coal plants.

Foreign markets are not hungry for our coal.

They are moving away from coal as well.

What we need are solutions for the people living around these mountaintop removal sites,

for public health, for economic development, for diversifying the economy.

We're not going backwards on no matter what Trump says when it comes to moving away from

coal.

I think it's time, as a nation, to step up and be honest about that and start solving

some of these problems instead of making empty promises to folks to score cheap political

points, frankly.

DIMITRI LASCARI: This has been Dimitri Lascaris, speaking to Mary Anne Hitt of the Sierra Club

about Donald Trump's latest attempts to prop up the dying coal industry.

Thank you very much for joining us today, Mary Anne.

MARY ANNE HITT: It's a pleasure to be with you.

Thank you for having me.

DIMITRI LASCARI: This is Dimitri Lascaris for The Real News.

For more infomation >> Trump Pushes Coal and Wants Public to Pay For It - Duration: 13:48.

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Public Bathrooms : 8 Steps to Public Pooping - Duration: 5:18.

hi guys and in today's video I thought I would do something slightly different

from my usual reaction and commentary style video and bring you eight steps to

public pooping

that's right a highbrow topic in need of an in-depth analysis

also note that even analysis contains the word anal and that's a pretty smart

word so yeah this is totally not childish humor masquerading as a useful

guide anyway let's begin step 1 assess the shituation how bad is this

yearning in your digestive system are you crippled by waves of sudden bowel

movements or is the feeling much more nuanced to merely a slight inconvenience

if it is the latter then you have options the obvious one is to wait until

you get home and poop in the privacy of your own bathroom free from judgment and

the other pitfalls that may await you during the journey of public pooping if

you feel like you're about to break one off bigger than an Arctic ice sheet then

proceed to step 2 selecting a location public pooping is a real minefield that

is fraught with a variety of lavatories that can range from almost as good as

home to post-apocalyptic porcelain death chamber from my experience there is a

scale from safe to syphilis and it is as follows hotel bathrooms restaurant

toilets Airport bathrooms fast food restaurant bathroom supermarket toilets

train station bathrooms shopping center bathrooms trains coaches those public

toilets where you have to pay like 20 P to get into portaloos and the wild card

office bathrooms which will greatly depend on where you work now your

selection will greatly depend on your response to step 1 and your proximity to

the location if you feel like you're about to birth a u-bend hero or turd

inator at any moment then you might have no other choice than to use a lower

class a public toilet this guide will help you in that situation step 3 the

cubicle this is one of the most crucial decisions you're going to have to make

and there are several factors to consider before locking that bathroom

door behind you first off if someone has just come out of there avoid this stall

no questions asked nothing is worse than the feel of a seat warm by the pulsating

tush of another person next up heed this warning if the lid is down it's

probably Brown so get out of town make sure you inspect the seat to ensure that

there is no piss spray from some depraved soul who doesn't know how to

clean up after themselves Daniel okay if all of the factors seem

satisfactory check that there is sufficient toilet paper on the roll or

in the dispenser if there isn't there move to the next cubicle if you're good

to go then lock the door and proceed to step four

preparing your throne you're going to want to begin with a Jim Carrey special

for all of those that have seen the prison scene in the mask you'll know

exactly what I speak of arrange a tissue barrier between the seats and your

cheeks by strategically placing toilet roll over the exposed area of the seat

next take a long strip and fold it in half and then half again and place this

in the toilet this is what we pros call the landing pad which help prevent

splash back and the loud plopping sound which is sure to embarrass you heavily

in the unfortunate case of meeting a fellow public bathroom user the downside

of this technique is that the poop may build up on top of the tissue paper

causing a terrible stench but nobody minds the smell of their own brew so I

wouldn't worry about it too much step 5 initiate the poop if you have

ultimate control over your digestive system you may want to time your pushes

with the sound of the hand dryers this takes a lot of concentration and good

core strength ensuring that your strains and grunts are drowned out by the hum of

the dryer alternatively you'll want to wait until everyone else has left the

bathroom before attempting a single evacuation pushing with all of your

might whilst performing the boy band air grab for extra power

step 6 wipe that booty in this instance you have two options you either scrunch

or you fold the toilet paper no failing to wipe is not an option Ryan I myself

prefer the scrunch but folding is a perfectly reasonable option and will

ensure the tush is clean and dingleberry free knowing how much toilet paper is

tricky and can depend on the location as discussed in step 2 the better the

establishment the higher quality you can expect the toilet paper to be if the

toilet paper is thinner than keira knightley you might want to use extra

but try avoid clogging the toilet step 7 survey the scene now you may want to do

this after you have flushed the toilet unless you want to observe your beeriod

in all its pebbled dashed glory but you need to ensure the toilet is poop and

skid mark free before evacuating the stall this is basic etiquette to ensure

the next desperate pooper is not met with a streaky shituation or worse yet a

floater flush all toilet paper a lift tactically out of the cubicle when you

are sure that the coast is clear step 8 wash your hands that includes you Matt

not only is this a given it's extra important considering how filthy public

restrooms tend to be now you control the dryer it's your duty as a brother of the

shites watch to dry your hands for a prolonged period of time to ensure that

others who may be waiting to poop as per step 5 have ample opportunity to

evacuate their bowels it's like giving back to the community or the circle of

shite if you will now leave the public restroom and remember next time go

before you leave the house they have it guys I hope that you liked this video

please feel free to share this with friends and get the word out there to

ensure that proper public bathroom etiquette is being followed be sure to

subscribe for great life tips from someone said and I will see you next

time

For more infomation >> Public Bathrooms : 8 Steps to Public Pooping - Duration: 5:18.

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World Cerebral Palsy Day Awards 2017 - Public Awareness - Duration: 1:36.

World Cerebral Palsy Day Awards 2017

The major award for Public Awareness goes to

Cerebral Palsy Awareness Film Drama for Kenya

a project by Purple Field Productions and partners

Superstition about cerebral palsy is widespread in Africa

Purple Field Production's goal was to create a film

to combat this fear and improve awareness in rural communities

PFP used a solar-powered backpack cinema

with a trained facilitator leading a follow-up discussion

Initially, PFP aimed to reach an audience of 10,000 people in rural areas

They reached over 20,000 in 140 villages across Kenya

plus a Christmas Day TV broadcast to an estimated 300,000 people

The film cleared up many misconceptions about CP

and prepared audiences to openly discuss and begin to embrace disability

To read about ALL the award winners

go to worldcpday.org

Thank you again to everyone who entered

You are ALL stars for CP!

For more infomation >> World Cerebral Palsy Day Awards 2017 - Public Awareness - Duration: 1:36.

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Jan on the European Public Prosecutor's Office, plenary 4 October 2017 - Duration: 2:51.

Our next speaker on behalf of the Greens: Jan Philipp Albrecht.

Thank you president,

commissioner, ladies and gentlemen, colleagues. Today we are living through a

historic moment. About eight years ago the Lisbon Treaty came into effect.

Creating a European Public Prosecutor now is what we're debating and that's

historic and I think we shouldn't fail to value it.

But the Council isn't here and I'm not sure the member states are

really happy with this step and that they'll breathe life into it. I hope that

changes, I hope that the 20 Member States which have embarked on setting up the EPPO

will convince the remaining Member States to become part of the instrument.

This is important to the citizens of the EU and to the EU budget. Every year we

are losing several hundred million Euro in these areas of crime, when these

crimes are directed against the EU budget. Some estimates go well beyond

that. For example the special committee on organized crime and money-laundering

looked at it and said it might be more than that - several billions. And that's

why it's important we use this instrument, that we breathe life into it,

that the member states are part of it and that they take this as a model for

ordered cooperation in police and justice matters in the criminal domain.

And I think that's what we need to do, if we want effective prosecution of crime

promoted in the EU. There's not much point in having new investigative

measures or new databases if the personnel and infrastructure isn't in

place for normal cooperation between the police and justice authorities in the EU.

This is a job that we can only do together and that's why the European

Public Prosecutor is a big step forward, an important step forward. We Greens

therefore are a hundred percent behind this proposal. We're in favor of setting up

the EPPO and we'll vote accordingly. And we believe that the most recent

proposals, that the powers should be expanded to encompass terrorism in the

future, absolutely need debate. That's a proper proposal and on the European

Parliament's side we should keep plugging away and ensure that there are high

procedural standards in place in the future too. Thank you.

For more infomation >> Jan on the European Public Prosecutor's Office, plenary 4 October 2017 - Duration: 2:51.

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DOTD to host I-49 Lafayette Connector open house public meeting - Duration: 0:30.

For more infomation >> DOTD to host I-49 Lafayette Connector open house public meeting - Duration: 0:30.

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Springdale shows public new design for Shaw family park - Duration: 1:51.

For more infomation >> Springdale shows public new design for Shaw family park - Duration: 1:51.

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Un projet de loi inquiétant pour la protection du public - Duration: 1:29.

For more infomation >> Un projet de loi inquiétant pour la protection du public - Duration: 1:29.

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Public invited to weigh in as commissioners review police chief finalists - Duration: 3:06.

For more infomation >> Public invited to weigh in as commissioners review police chief finalists - Duration: 3:06.

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Milwaukee Public Library to open newest, largest neighborhood library - Duration: 2:09.

For more infomation >> Milwaukee Public Library to open newest, largest neighborhood library - Duration: 2:09.

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Greenfield making changes to public Wi-Fi services - Duration: 1:03.

For more infomation >> Greenfield making changes to public Wi-Fi services - Duration: 1:03.

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Idaho fish and Game asks for the public's help in poaching case - Duration: 0:30.

For more infomation >> Idaho fish and Game asks for the public's help in poaching case - Duration: 0:30.

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Public Improvement Commission Hearings 10-5-17 - Duration: 2:22:08.

For more infomation >> Public Improvement Commission Hearings 10-5-17 - Duration: 2:22:08.

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We Are Michigan Public Health - Duration: 1:24.

It didn't begin yesterday and it won't be done tomorrow or next month or even

next year. In our classrooms and in the communities we're privileged to serve,

across Ann Arbor and across the globe, this is our journey. We build strong

partnerships beyond these walls because our complex world demands diverse

perspectives. We give the best of ourselves for those we may never meet

because we want a healthier world, a more equitable future. We create knowledge

through discoveries large and small. We innovate, blaze new trails, pursue big

ideas. It's who we are. Because at the end of the day, our belief

in this work is why we're here. And it's why tomorrow, we'll begin again. We are

Michigan Public Health, and this is our pursuit.

For more infomation >> We Are Michigan Public Health - Duration: 1:24.

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Public forum on High Trestle Trail lights tonight - Duration: 0:16.

For more infomation >> Public forum on High Trestle Trail lights tonight - Duration: 0:16.

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On VAT fraud and the European Public Prosecutor's Office - Molly Scott Cato MEP - Duration: 1:09.

For many, VAT is that loathed tax that adds to the cost of our weekly shop.

The reality is that consumption tax is meant to fund our schools and hospitals and the

other vital public services.

However, it is being avoided on a massive scale and the procedes of VAT fraud are diverted

to fund global terrorist organisations.

A staggering 50 billion Euros is being lost each year in VAT fraud.

A nice round figure to publicise on the side of a bus.

Indeed, it is extremely disappointing that the UK is one of a number of EU countries

that have fought the tax cooperation we so desperately need.

By opting not to take part in the establishment of the European Public Prosecutor's Office,

the UK is contradicting and undermining its own insistence on maintaining defence and

security cooperation with the EU after Brexit.

I call on the UK government to stop its anti-terrorism posturing and go to the heart of the problem

by joining the EU in its battle to fight VAT fraud and starve the terrorist of the funds

they need to function.

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