End of Issue #95


Any Questions?

Editorial and Rants

Maybe these Pakistanis are on to something?  LOL!

If this little girl would have drawn of picture of "my two daddies," she and her "parents" would have been paraded around like heros in the Jew media.  Draw a gun, and well...  Jail time!  Better hope your kid doesn't draw a picture of the Sun or you might get raided for running an illegal nuclear weapons program!

Man Shocked by Arrest After Daughter Draws Picture of Gun at School

February 24, 2012 - From: therecord.com

by Dianne Wood

KITCHENER [Canada] -- A Kitchener father is upset that police arrested him at his children's' school Wednesday, hauled him down to the station and strip-searched him, all because his four-year-old daughter drew a picture of a gun at school.

"I'm picking up my kids and then, next thing you know, I'm locked up," Jessie Sansone, 26, said Thursday.

"I was in shock.  This is completely insane.  My daughter drew a gun on a piece of paper at school."

The school principal, police and child welfare officials, however, all stand by their actions.  They said they had to investigate to determine whether there was a gun in Sansone's house that children had access to.

"From a public safety point of view, any child drawing a picture of guns and saying there's guns in a home would warrant some further conversation with the parents and child," said Alison Scott, executive director of Family and Children's Services.

Waterloo Regional Police Insp. Kevin Thaler said there was a complaint from Forest Hills public school that "a firearm was in a residence and children had access to it.  We had every concern, based on this information, that children were in danger."

Their concern wasn't based on the drawing alone, he said.

Neaveh, the child who made the drawing, also made comments about it that raised more flags.

Sansone thinks police overreacted.  He didn't find out until hours after his arrest what had actually sparked the incident.

He said he went to the school Wednesday afternoon to pick up his three children.  He was summoned to the principal's office where three police officers were waiting.  They said he was being charged with possession of a firearm.

He was escorted from the school, handcuffed and put in the back of a cruiser.

At the same time, other police officers went to his home, where his wife and 15-month-old child were waiting for his return.

They made his wife come to the police station while the other three children were taken to Family and Children's Services to be interviewed.


"Nobody was given any explanation," said his wife, Stephanie Squires.  "I didn't know why he was being arrested."

"He had absolutely no idea what this was even about.  I just kept telling them, 'You're making a mistake.'"

At the police station, Sansone talked to a lawyer who said only that he was being charged with possession of a firearm, Sansone said.

He kept asking questions.  He was given a blanket and told he would appear before a judge in the morning to post bail.

"I was getting pretty scared at that point," Sansone said.  "It seemed like I was actually being charged at this point."

He was forced to remove his clothes for a full strip search.

Several hours later, a detective apologized and said he was being released with no charges, Sansone said.

The detective told him that his four-year-old daughter had drawn a picture of a man holding a gun.  When a teacher asked her who the man was, the girl replied, "That's my daddy's.  He uses it to shoot bad guys and monsters."

"To be honest with you, I broke down," Sansone said.  "My character got put down so much.  I was actually really hurt, like it could happen that easy."

"How do you recognize a criminal from a father?'"

He said he thought he had good relations with the principal who offered him a job last year counselling students at the school.

"We're educated," he said.  "I'm a certified PSW (personal support worker) and a life issues counsellor.  I go into schools to try to make a difference."

After he was released, Sansone was asked to sign a paper authorizing a search of his home.  He signed, even though he didn't have to, he said.

"I just think they blew it out of proportion," Squires said.  "It was for absolutely nothing.  They searched our house upside down and found nothing.  They had the assumption he owned a firearm."

"The way everything happened was completely unnecessary, especially since we know the school very well.  I don't understand how they came to that conclusion from a four-year-old's drawing."

Scott, of Family and Children's Services, said the agency was obligated to investigate after getting a report from the school.

"Our community would have an expectation if comments are made about a gun in a house, we'd be obligated to investigate that to ensure everything is safe."

If there's a potential crime that's been committed, the agency must call in police, she said.

"In the end, it may not be substantiated.  There may be a reasonable explanation for why the child drew that gun.  But we have to go on what gets presented to us."

"I'm sure this was a very stressful thing for the family," she acknowledged.

The school principal, Steve Zack, said a staff member called child welfare officials because the law requires them to report anything involving the safety or neglect of a child.

The agency chose to involve police, he said.

"Police chose to arrest Jessie here.  Nobody wants something like this to happen at any time, especially not at school.  But that's out of my hands."

Sansone says he got into some trouble with the law five years ago, and was convicted of assault and attempted burglary.  But he's put all that behind him.  He never had any firearms-related charges.

As for the strip search, Thaler said it was done "for officer safety, because it's a firearms-related incident.

"At the point in the investigation when it was determined it was not a real firearm, the individual was released unconditionally," he said.


Let's play a game of Guess the Race.  Note the words "Saudi Arabia" in the article's title...

Teen from Saudi Arabia to Face Federal Charges in E-Cigarette Incident

February 22, 2012 - From: oregonlive.com

by Helen Jung

A man who was arrested Tuesday after defying a flight attendant's orders to turn off an "e-cigarette" is to make his first court appearance this afternoon on a federal charge of interfering with flight crew members and attendants.

Yazeed Mohammed Abunayyan, 19, of Saudi Arabia is also accused of of "yelling profanities and swinging his fist at the flight attendant, hitting or attempting to hit several passengers, and speaking or singing about Usama bin Laden and his hatred of women," according to the indictment.

He was taken into custody after Continental Flight 1118, which was headed to Houston, turned around and landed back at Portland International Airport. Abunayyan had allegedly refused to turn off an electronic cigarette -- in which a lithium battery heats a liquid nicotine solution to create a vapor for inhaling -- and "was not cooperative," according to authorities.

A passenger on the flight shot a cellphone video as Abunayyan was handcuffed on the airplane.

This is Abunayyan's second brush with the law in a two-day period. Abunayyan was arrested on Feb. 19 by Ashland police after leading them on a low-speed car chase west of the Southern Oregon University campus.

During the 20-minute encounter, he nearly hit a pedestrian and rammed two police cars, according to a Feb. 21 Ashland Daily Tidings story. The story quotes a witness who compared the chase to the "Grand Theft Auto" video game. After he high-centered the car, Abunayyan was arrested on accusations of driving under the influence of intoxicants, assault on a public safety officer, three counts of first-degree criminal misconduct, reckless driving and five counts of recklessly endangering another person.

He was released from the Jackson County Jail on Feb. 20 after posting $6,500 of his $65,000 bail. The Jackson County District Attorney's office is still reviewing the case and has not formally charged him, said District Attorney Mark Huddleston.


Yazeed Mohammed Abunayyan's Mugshot & Booking Info

Note his race is listed as "White" when he is clearly an Arab!

Change!

No money for White kids who want to study and learn - plenty of money to bribe niggers to attend school.  Note that this has NOTHING to do with actual learning and more about teacher's unions maintaining their access to "free" government handouts.  Remember, we didn't have these problems in schools 70 years ago and there were plenty of poor White kids...  This money would be better spent bribing them not to reproduce...

Cincinnati High School Paying Students to Come to School

February 13, 2012 - From: cleveland.cbslocal.com

CINCINNATI, Ohio (CBS Cleveland) -- A Cincinnati high school is paying its students to come to school.

The Dohn Community High School has launched a $40,000 incentive program to get students to come to class.

The school's CEO Ken Furrier told CBS Cleveland that students will get Visa gift cards for showing up everyday for school, being on time for class and not getting into trouble.  Seniors would get $25 while underclassmen would get $10.

The school would also put $5 into a savings account for the student that earns a gift card.

"Our student population is 90 percent poverty," Furrier told CBS Cleveland.  "Money is important to them.  We can't teach them if they're not here."

Despite taking criticism for the program, Furrier brushes it aside.

"I think the thing that many parents have to realize is that these kids are very poor," Furrier said.  "They don't have all the benefits suburban kids have."

Dohn students have come around to the idea, excited about being rewarded for coming to school.

"I'm very excited to get the money," 16-year-old student Arneqka Lester told the paper.  "It makes me want to come to school on time, not that I don't.  But some students don't have the money and this will help them.  It's a good idea".

The school is trying out this new idea after the Ohio Department of Education designated the school an "academic emergency" on its report card.  About 14 percent of students graduated from Dohn during the 2010-2011 school year.

Furrier said the program -- which began Monday -- has already seen benefits. Class attendance yesterday was up by 15 percent compared to Friday.


"Sheet dawg...  Ahs don't be needin' no whitey 'riffmattick!"

Photos from the Library of Congress of Anacostia High School (District of Columbia) in 1939.

These students did not need to be paid to attend school.

Note the boys wearing their ROTC uniforms.

And it starts...

There is only ONE reason for Democrats not wanting people to show an ID to vote.  It's so illegal aliens can vote too!  Funny, liberals have no problems with the government running our healthcare, but when the same government asks them show a valid (free) ID so our elections can be fair - they stomp their feet and pout!

Owning a firearm is also right, but they still make you shown an ID to purchase (and carry) a weapon.  Don't count on liberals protesting that...

Voter ID laws discriminate against Blacks and Hispanics - in the same way burglar alarms do!

Judge Who Ordered Halt to Voter ID Law Signed Walker Recall Petition

March 6, 2012 - From: greenbaypressgazette.com

MADISON - A Wisconsin judge who filed a temporary injunction against the states new voter identification law also signed a petition seeking the recall of GOP Gov. Scott Walker, who was a staunch supporter of the law.

The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reported Tuesday that Dane County Circuit Judge David Flanagans signature appears in a recall petition dated Nov. 15.  It also lists his wife, who circulated the petition.

The newspaper reports that Maureen McGlynn Flanagan confirmed she circulated the petition and that her husband signed it.

Flanagans temporary injunction on Tuesday prevents the law from being in effect for the April 3 presidential primary.

The NAACP's Milwaukee branch and immigration rights group Voces de la Frontera filed their lawsuit last year.  A five-day trial on whether there should be a permanent injunction is scheduled for April 16.

Flanagan had first denied an injunction request in February, saying NAACP plaintiffs did not sufficiently demonstrate irreparable harm for an injunction.  The NAACP's lawsuit included 40 affidavits describing plaintiffs difficulties with complying with the law.  But Flanagan at the time said the affidavits did not sufficiently demonstrate irreparable harm to justify the injunction.  A hearing scheduled for April was supposed to focus on new plaintiff testimony.

Flanagans motion orders the Government Accountability Board and Gov. Scott Walker to immediately cease any effort to enforce or implement the law pending the April 16 trial.

NAACP Attorney Richard Saks said he feels good about the decision, but he wouldn't comment further.

Government Accountability Board spokesman Reid Magney had no immediate comment on the judges order.  A spokeswoman for the state Department of Justice, which represented GAB in the case, did not immediately return messages seeking comment.

There are four lawsuits against the states new voter ID law, which went into effect in February.  All of them are pending.