Saturday 28 November 2020

Biker dog Bogie thrills fans as he cruises Philippine highways

 By  

IMUS, Philippines (Reuters) - With his black sports jacket, reflective aviator sunglasses and bespoke orange helmet with holes so his ears can stick out, Bogie the dog sure is one suave-looking canine, with an Easy Rider look that would earn him a place in any motorcycle gang.

The 11-year-old crossbreed from the Philippines takes daily motorcycle rides with his owner Gilbert Delos Reyes, balanced perfectly with his hind legs on the edge of the seat and paws straddling the handlebars. Bogie has become a neighbourhood celebrity and is a magnet for attention on mountain and beach road trips.

“The first thing I taught him when he was around four months old was how to ride a motorcycle. I would carry him whenever I rode,” said Reyes, who owns a motorcycle shop in Cavite province outside the capital Manila.

“One day, he just started following me every time I left the house. As soon as I started the engine, he would get excited and jump on the bike.”

Bogie is also good for business, helping to lure customers eager to take pictures with him to Reyes’ shop, and doling out pawshakes as well.

He has even proven himself useful as a guard dog, once chasing after thieves who tried to steal his owner’s gold necklace at an intersection.

Reyes purchased Bogie when he was just a month old for 100 pesos ($2), but says the dog has been a lucky charm, and is priceless.

“I think of Bogie as a son. He’s been with me for 11 years and is a big part of my life,” said Reyes.

“We’ve had so many adventures and been to many places together, I don’t think I can ever replace him.”

 

Writing by Martin Petty; Editing by Karishma Singh

Friday 27 November 2020

The 1620 Project

 By Cameron Hilditch

November 26, 2020 6:30 AM

www.nationalreview.com 

 The Pilgrims Signing the Compact, on board the Mayflower, Nov. 11th, 1620, engraving by Gauthier (Library of Congress)  

A tale of, and a tribute to, those who planted the seeds of American liberty 

On November 11, 1620, the Mayflower arrived on the eastern coast of North America. She had weathered the slings and arrows of maritime misfortune for almost ten weeks at that point, but the passengers thought the discomfort of crossing a small price to pay for passage to the Promised Land. After all, these were radical Protestants, and to them a land undefiled by any previous association with the Catholic Church was more to be desired than Canaan itself, with all its rivers of milk and honey.

And so the settlers settled and gave thanks with the natives and worked and lived and died. Though centuries have passed since the last Mayflower pilgrim was entrusted to the earth in a makeshift Massachusetts cemetery, the symbolic freight of the ship and its voyage has only grown. It’s safe to say no other passage from the Old World to the New — with the possible exception of the Titanic — is likely to be commemorated in a column such as this one 400 years later.

There’s good reason for the Mayflower’s staying power in the American psyche, but it may not be immediately obvious. It wasn’t the first ship to alight in the New World (we have Columbus Day to remind us of that). Nor was it the first ship to carry English passengers to America: Virginia had been granted a royal charter and settled decades earlier. The Mayflower pilgrims have no claim to uncharted waters or undiscovered countries. Their pathbreaking endeavor wasn’t geographic at all. It was political and, more specifically, constitutional.

The ship had set out for Virginia but ended up landing on Cape Cod instead, which was beyond the legal domain of the Virginia Company. To head off lawlessness and anarchy, the passengers and crew of the ship quickly came together to draft and undersign the Mayflower Compact, which functioned as a governing document for the community. Its purpose was to establish “a civil body politic,” in order to make “just and equal laws, ordinances, acts, constitutions and offices” for the new colony.

This compact, more than anything else, is what cemented the place of the Mayflower pilgrims in the annals of American folklore. Other settlers had been governed by written charters before, but those had always been granted by a king or a queen across the water. The Mayflower Compact, by way of contrast, was a written constitution framed by the people and for the people. The temptation to view the document as an historical overture, sounding notes and themes that would be played again in the old courthouse in Philadelphia, was irresistible for latter-day Americans looking back on it from a post-Revolutionary perspective.

After the Constitution was ratified in 1787, the Mayflower Compact came to be understood as a kind of colonial prototype for our current governing document. Similar to the first Christians, who interpreted prophets like Moses and Jonah as prefigurements of Christ, Americans have traditionally read the Mayflower Compact as a document that presages the full flowering of American liberty.

 John Quincy Adams called it the “first example in modern times of a social compact or system of government instituted by voluntary agreement conformable to the laws of nature, by men of equal rights and about to establish their community in a new country.”

Later in the 19th century, historian George Bancroft claimed that in “the cabin of the Mayflower . . . humanity recovered its rights, and instituted government on the basis of ‘equal laws’ for ‘the general good.’”

But perhaps the most salient expression of Mayflower mythology came from Calvin Coolidge, who spoke at the 300th anniversary ceremony a century ago:

The compact which they signed was an event of the greatest importance. It was the foundation of liberty based on law and order, and that tradition has been steadily upheld. They drew up a form of government which has been designated as the first real constitution of modern times.

The Mayflower Compact has endured in our national memory for so long because it inaugurated a project on these shores that we’re still engaged in today: the project of free government under a written constitution.

Until the American Revolution, most free countries in the world preferred an unwritten constitution of customs and norms established over time. This model allowed almost all matters of public concern to be hammered out by the rough-and-tumble process of electoral politics. The British constitution still functions this way today. The Founding Fathers, however, established a government framed by a written constitution. A supreme law exists in this land, around 7,200 words long, that governs and restricts the actions of civil magistrates.

In his brilliant book on the subject, Greg Weiner called the American constitution “Madison’s metronome.” It was written and ratified to regulate the convulsive political passions of the early republic and channel them into sustainable and productive thoroughfares that would steady the more erratic political rhythms of the Union. In this respect, it served as a more refined and civilized successor to the Mayflower Compact of the previous century.

The Mayflower pilgrims confronted more elemental threats than the framers of the Constitution: Starvation, exposure, disease, and the animal enmity these things bring out in people were the chief obstacles to their continued survival. Still, faithfulness to their governing covenant saw the pilgrims through these threats and helped them to keep the political beat of ordered liberty throughout the riotous years of early colonial life. It provided a prototypical structure and rhythm for liberty in America, saving it from an early death in the Hobbesian wilderness of the New World. The traditions of self-government inaugurated in the Mayflower Compact serve to remind us that freedom and form make happy bedfellows and that we owe the fruit of their union in the shape of our Constitution to the brave men and women of ages past.

 

mayflower-2-14

 Mayflower II

 

 

Wednesday 25 November 2020

Barriers to police investigations into widespread financial crime unveiled

NOVEMBER 24, 2020, by University of Portsmouth
https://phys.org/news/2020-11-barriers-police-widespread-financial-crime.html

Credit: CC0 Public Domain

A majority of police detectives in England and Wales investigating financial crime do not have sufficient knowledge to build a successful case.

That's the finding of new research from the Institute of Criminal Justice Studies at the University of Portsmouth, looking into why results of such investigations vary so widely, especially when the crimes account for half of all criminal activity in the UK.

The report, published today in Policing: A Journal of Policy and Practice, finds that only 40 per cent of investigators understood the process by which fraud is reported. A third of those questioned said they had not received proper training in how to investigate financial crime. There was also a poor perception of fraud and the impact on victims amongst those questioned.

Researchers found that in many cases investigators had a negative view of their work, and did not have the time, training or determination. Financial crime is perceived to be notoriously challenging to investigate. Investigations into less prolific, but higher profile and headline grabbing crimes are known to get better results. Their report builds a picture of why investigations into financial crimes are largely unsuccessful, and it makes a series of recommendations to improve outcomes.

Lead author Paul Gilmour, Lecturer of Criminal Justice and Policing, Institute of Criminal Justice Studies, University of Portsmouth, said: "The police service in England and Wales has been subject of much criticism in the past two decades over the response to financial crime. Many studies have reported failures in how the police investigate and prosecute financial crime, which have led to many victims being dissatisfied with the service provided by police. Despite this, there has been little research into the barriers facing police investigators entrusted with tackling financial crime."

A recent study by Her Majesty's Inspectorate of Constabulary and Fire & Rescue Services (HMICFRS) concluded that the policing response to fraud is ineffective, with victims of fraud often left dissatisfied with the quality of the police's investigation into fraud. Less than three per cent of fraud reported to police between 2017 and 2018 led to any type of positive outcome, such as a charge, summons, caution, or community service. These statistics are especially disappointing considering that fraud and related computer crimes accounted for almost half of all crime in England and Wales in the year ending December 2019 (Office for National Statistics, 2020).

Paul Gilmour said: "Our article reports on a study into such barriers, through surveys and interviews with investigators that aimed to better understand the challenges faced by police forces within England and Wales. It demonstrates several overriding practical and cultural issues that inhibit the success of investigations. The article concludes that police need a better appreciation of financial crime, to help improve the service delivered to victims and to prioritize this often undervalued field of policing."

The report found that financial crimes need to be prioritized, with all sectors of the police service needing to understand that they have an important role to play in the success of an investigation. Researchers also recognized that resources dedicated to fighting financial crime have struggled to compete with other policing priorities. It suggests improved training will allow investigators to better judge and, therefore, prioritize those cases that warrant further investigation.

A summary of the findings and recommendations can be found below:

The findings showed a common theme:

The police's lack of knowledge around relevant legislation and investigative procedures emerged as a key theme in the research. Only 40 per cent of all respondents reported understanding the processes through which frauds are reported to the police, and half of all respondents did not understand the role of Action Fraud.

Many respondents reported a lack of training as a barrier. A total of 29 per cent of respondents reported having received no training related to investigating financial crime. Almost 40 per cent of all surveyed stated that the only training received relating to financial crime was during their initial police recruitment. In nearly 40 per cent of respondents, all investigative training delivered had been via online e-learning packages.

There was also a poor perception of fraud and also victims of fraud. Given the lack of training and knowledge around financial crimes, many respondents reported being fearful of conducting investigations into such crimes. The perception of fraud was overwhelmingly negative. Many respondents reported that fraud was not a priority. One respondent said: "Fraud has never interested me, but that said, it does not seem to interest many people; and as a result, it is definitely a poor relation when it comes to criminal investigation." The perceived lack of support from fraud victims was also reported as being a barrier. One said: "Many victims have a completely unrealistic attitude towards what we can achieve."
Many respondents also reported that inadequate available resources hinder their ability to respond to financial crimes.

Report recommendations:
Greater training is needed in this field to enhance investigators' ability to tackle financial crime. Further initial training and ongoing development will, not only, strengthen the police's competence in tackling financial crime, but also, improve the police workforce's resilience in meeting growing operational demands.
Better training will also improve how this area of policing is perceived. Victims of fraud and other financial crimes need the full support of the police, especially considering the increasing volume of frauds reported to police each year.


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Tuesday 24 November 2020

Mysterious monolith found in remote part of Utah fuels speculation on how it got there

 

Mysterious monolith found in remote part of Utah fuels speculation on how it got there

A mysterious monolith, which is believed to be some kind of metal, was discovered in the remote parts of Utah on Wednesday, fueling speculation on what the object was or how it got there, according to reports. 

https://www.foxnews.com/science/mysterious-monolith-discovered-in-utah-rocks

The structure, estimated at between 10 feet and 12 feet high, was found by state wildlife employees counting sheep from a helicopter. 

Utah’s highway patrol shared a picture of the finding on Instagram, along with the caption: "Counting big horn sheep with DWR this week. During the counts we came across this, in the middle of nowhere, buried deep in the rock. Inquiring minds want to know, what the heck is it? Anyone?"


Bret Hutchings, the helicopter pilot, said it was "about the strangest thing that I’ve come across out there in all my years of flying," according to Salt Lake City's KSL-TV.

Users on social media were quick to speculate what the object was.  

"It’s the on-off button for the planet," one user wrote. 

"I love this. I imagine it’s an art piece, but what if it isn’t..." another replied.


CHARLES DARWIN NOTEBOOKS 'STOLEN' FROM CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY

 

CHARLES DARWIN NOTEBOOKS 'STOLEN' FROM CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY

The University of Cambridge's vast library first listed the notebooks as missing in 2001 after they were moved out of the Special Collections Strong Rooms for photography to be carried out there.

FILE: Students walk through Cambridge University in Cambridge, east of England. Picture: AFP

LONDON - Two of Charles Darwin's notebooks containing his pioneering ideas on evolution and his famous Tree of Life sketch are missing, believed stolen, the Cambridge University Library said on Tuesday.

The British scientist filled the leather notebooks in 1837 after returning from his voyage on the HMS Beagle. The library said they were worth millions of pounds.

In one book, he drew a diagram showing several possibilities for the evolution of a species and later published a more developed illustration in his 1859 book On the Origin of Species.

The University of Cambridge's vast library first listed the notebooks as missing in 2001 after they were moved out of the Special Collections Strong Rooms for photography to be carried out there.

They were long believed to have been incorrectly filed within the building, which contains around 10 million books, maps, and manuscripts and has one of the world's most significant Darwin archives.

However, a major search this year - the largest in the library's history - failed to turn up the notebooks.

"Curators have concluded the notebooks... have likely been stolen," the library said in a statement.

It said it had informed the local police and the books had been listed on Interpol's database of stolen artworks, called Psyche.

The University Librarian, Jessica Gardner, released a video statement appealing to the public to help.

"It is deeply regretful to me that these notebooks remain missing despite numerous wide-scale searches over the last 20 years," she said, adding that the library has since massively improved its security systems.

The librarian suggested that former or current library staff, those working in the book trade, or researchers could have information.

"I would ask anyone who thinks they know of the notebooks' whereabouts to get in touch. Please help," she said.

The appeal was launched on 24 November, known as Evolution Day since it marks the date of the publication of On the Origin of Species.

https://ewn.co.za/2020/11/24/charles-darwin-notebooks-stolen-from-cambridge-university


South Africa: 13 Farm attacks and 4 farm murders in South Africa, 1-15 November 2020

 

South Africa: 13 Farm attacks and 4 farm murders in South Africa, 1-15 November 2020

The Rome Research Institute of South Africa


13 Farm attacks and 4 farm murders in South Africa, 1-15 November 2020
https://southafricatoday.net/south-africa-news/13-farm-attacks-and-4-farm-murders-in-south-africa-1-15-november-2020/

For the period 1 to 15 November 2020, there have been 13 farm attacks and 4 farm murders in South Africa, whilst only 1 farm attack was successfully averted. The onslaught against the white minority, especially farmers, continues unabated. During October 2020 there were 42 farm attacks and 7 farm murders in South Africa, whilst 5 farm attacks were successfully averted.

During September 2020 there were 48 farm attacks and 5 farm murders in the country and one attack was successfully averted.

Information supplied by The Rome Research Institute of South Africa



South Africa Today – South Africa News


South Africa: Farm attack, elderly man seriously injured by 4 attackers, Stoffberg

 

South Africa: Farm attack, elderly man seriously injured by 4 attackers, Stoffberg

Oorgrens veiligheid


Farm attack, elderly man seriously injured by 4 attackers, Stoffberg

A farm attack took place on 22 November 2020, between 00:00 and 01:00, on the farm Hoedspruit, in Stoffberg near Middelburg, in the Mpumalanga province of South Africa. An elderly man, Dirk Buys, who is approximately seventy years old, was viciously attacked four attackers.

The attackers gained entry to his home, tied him up and very seriously assaulted him.

The attackers then ransacked the property as well as the small farm shop and fled leaving the seriously injured man tied up. Only at 09:00 was the alarm made when a worker called the owner of the farm. Buys was rushed to Middelburg hospital.

Police are investigating the attack but there have been no arrests. There is no other information available at this stage.

Information supplied by Oorgrens veiligheid

South Africa Today – South Africa News

https://southafricatoday.net/south-africa-news/mpumalanga/farm-attack-elderly-man-seriously-injured-by-4-attackers-stoffberg/

South Africa: Farm attack, defenceless woman (78) seriously assaulted, robbed, Kwaggafontein

 

South Africa: Farm attack, defenceless woman (78) seriously assaulted, robbed, Kwaggafontein

Crime Correspondent



It was once more proven that farm attacks are about much more than robbery, these crimes are carried out with the utmost of hate – planted by black politicians with the help of liberal socialist media on a daily basis. How could an almost powerless 78 year old lady possibly have been a threat to the 2 black men who decided to attack her? They hurt her badly just because they could and they wanted to!

Once again liberal media will cover up this attack with the “it is ordinary crime” notion. But it is not. It was black-on-white terror. Call it what it is! Just remember that to stay silent about this is to be complicit in this. This is why liberal socialist media should be regarded as co-responsible for these heinous crimes.

They allow Malema to set the media agenda with non issues like that one in Brackenfell, but stay silent about black-on-white atrocities like this one. You can help by not using liberal socialist media. Use alternatives instead.

A 78 year old woman, Willa Greyling (78), was attacked and seriously injured on a smallholding outside Bloemfontein exactly 2 months after her husband died.

Mrs Greyling was alone at home in the Kwaggafontein area on Friday evening 20 November, 2020 and already in bed when two black men wearing balaclavas entered the house and came into the bedroom. It is unknown at this stage exactly how they broke in and what safety measures are in place at the home.

Mrs Greyling woke up when the 2 black men wrapped her in the blankets and also pushed the blankets into her mouth. Her hands were tied with the cord of the bed lamp.

The attackers also assaulted the harmless and already tied up woman. Mrs Greyling sustained a cracked chest bone and blue marks all over her body and head from the beating.

The attackers opened the safe and fled with only R500 and Mrs Greyling’s cell phone. Mrs Greyling lied on the floor injured the whole night.

There are 3 families living on the smallholding and 2 men heard Mrs Greyling screaming for help the next morning and came to help her.
Mrs Greyling was admitted to the ICU of the Life Rosepark hospital and later to the orthopedic section.

South Africa Today – South Africa News

https://southafricatoday.net/south-africa-news/free-state/farm-attack-defenceless-woman-78-seriously-assaulted-robbed-kwaggafontein/

South Africa: Farm attack, farmer shoots one attacker dead, Boschkop

 

South Africa: Farm attack, farmer shoots one attacker dead, Boschkop


Farm attack, farmer shoots one attacker dead, Boschkop

A farmer of the Boschkop area north of Pretoria, in the Gauteng Province of South Africa, shot one attacker dead after his house was attacked by three black men on Saturday evening 21 November 2020. It was the second attack on his farm house this year. The farmer fired shots in self defence and called his neighbours for help after his alarm was activated around 21:00.

The body of one attacker was found after help arrived. The farmer and his wife were also attacked in July 2020. At that time the attackers gained entry into the house and fired shots through the bedroom door.

The farmer and his wife barricaded themselves in the bathroom in July whilst the attackers stole items from the house.

A Police spokesperson told the media that they are investigating a case of house robbery and murder.

But why must the farmer be investigated for murder when he was forced to defend himself? Would the authorities rather prefer a dead or tortured farmer and his wife after such an attack?.

South Africa Today – South Africa News

https://southafricatoday.net/south-africa-news/gauteng/farm-attack-farmer-shoots-one-attacker-dead-boschkop/

Sunday 22 November 2020

Pompeii's ruins yield scalded bodies of rich man and slave

 By

Pompeii's Ruins Yield Scalded Bodies of Rich Man and Slave | World News |  US News

ROME (Reuters) - Archaeologists have discovered the exceptionally well-preserved remains of two men scalded to death by the volcanic eruption that destroyed the ancient Roman city of Pompeii in 79 AD, the Italian culture ministry said on Saturday.

One was probably a man of high status, aged between 30 and 40, who still bore traces of a woollen cloak under his neck.

The second, probably aged 18 to 23, was dressed in a tunic and had a number of crushed vertebrae, indicating that he had been a slave who did heavy labour.

The remains were found in Civita Giuliana, 700 metres northwest of the centre of ancient Pompeii, in an underground chamber in the area of a large villa being excavated.

The men’s teeth and bones were preserved, and the voids left by their soft tissues were filled with plaster that was left to harden and then excavated to show the outline of their bodies.

“These two victims were perhaps seeking refuge when they were swept away by the pyroclastic current at about 9 in the morning,” said Massimo Osanna, director of the archeological site. “It is a death by thermal shock, as also demonstrated by their clenched feet and hands.”

In a statement, Culture Minister Dario Franceschini said the find underlined Pompeii’s status as “an incredible place for research and study”.

Pompeii, 23 km (14 miles) southeast of Naples, was home to about 13,000 people when the eruption buried it under under ash, pumice pebbles and dust, freezing it in time.

The remains were not discovered until the 16th century and organised excavations began around 1750. However, more recently, attention has focused on arresting the decay or collapse of the exposed ruins.

Reporting by Angelo Amante; Editing by Kevin Liffey