Students are impossible and senior staff undermine us, say 70 teachers at Darwen Vale high school Teachers at a Lancashire comprehensive will go on strike on Thursday in protest at the unruly behaviour of their pupils. The teachers of Darwen Vale high school say pupil behaviour has become impossible to deal with and that students are pushing them, challenging them to fights, and threatening to film their lessons and post them online. Some 70 of the 80 staff at the school will not turn up to take lessons on Thursday. They argue that senior teachers at the school are not giving them enough support to deal with poor discipline, and say that when they confiscate pupils’ mobiles, senior managers undermine them by giving the phones back to their owners. It is highly unusual for teachers to go on strike over the misbehaviour of their pupils – most industrial action is taken in protest at pay and conditions. On Monday, Michael Gove, the education secretary, issued new guidance to schools on discipline . It reminded teachers that, in extreme circumstances, headteachers could press criminal charges against pupils. Inspectors who visited Darwen Vale last June said the behaviour of its 1,150 pupils was good. Chris Keates, general secretary of the Nasuwt teaching union, says its members were left “with no other option but to take strike action”. “Teachers can’t teach and pupils can’t learn where there is pupil indiscipline. Teachers feel unsupported and vulnerable in the workplace. Governors have a duty of care to staff and pupils, and it’s in no-one’s interest that these matters are left unaddressed. All the teachers want is to secure a safe environment for pupils and staff.” But Simon Huggill, one of the school’s governors, denies there is a behaviour problem. “Look at the outcomes from the school – it is fantastic,” he says. “I think there are one or two specific issues around a very small minority of school pupils. The majority are good, hardworking pupils.” The strike is expected to last one day and is supported by three teaching unions. Teachers say that for two terms they’ve been trying to hold talks with senior managers to avoid a strike. The headteacher, Hilary Torpey, began in November 2009. No one was available for comment from Blackburn with Darwen borough council. Pupil behaviour Schools Teaching Secondary schools Jessica Shepherd guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Bashar al-Assad also orders closure of Syria’s only casino in bid to appease Muslims ahead of proposed anti-regime protests Syria has closed the country’s only casino and reversed a ban on teachers wearing the Islamic veil – moves seen as an attempt to reach out to conservative Muslims ahead of calls for pro-democracy demonstrations. Syrian activists have urged protesters to take to the streets on Wednesday and the following two days to honour more than 80 people who were killed in a crackdown on demonstrations that erupted nearly three weeks ago. President Bashar al-Assad’s decisions on Wednesday were unusual concessions to religious concern in Syria, which promotes a strictly secular identity. The recent protests, however, have brought sectarian tensions into the open with thousands of people taking to the streets calling for democracy in a country where Alawites – followers of a branch of Shia Islam who represent just 11% of the population – have been in power for nearly 40 years. The country is overwhelmingly Sunni Muslim. Assad banned the niqab, the full Islamic face veil that reveals only a the wearer’s eyes, in July . Hundreds of primary school teachers who were wearing the niqab at government-run schools were transferred in June to administrative jobs in a move that angered many conservative Muslims. On Wednesday, Ali Saad, the education minister in Syria’s temporary government, said the teachers were now allowed to return to their jobs, according to the state-run news agency, Sana. He added that the ministry would discuss any new application by teachers willing to go back to work. Wearing the niqab – a billowing black robe – is not widespread in Syria, although it has become more common recently – a trend that has not gone unnoticed by the secular regime. The Syrian state-run Tishrin newspaper reported that the Casino Damascus had been closed because the practices of the club’s owners “violate laws and regulations”. It did not elaborate further. Many Muslims consider casino betting, lottery participation and sports betting to be particularly unIslamic. On Wednesday, Human Rights Watch called on Assad to order Syrian security forces to stop using “unjustified lethal force against anti-government protesters”. “For three weeks, Syria’s security forces have been firing on largely peaceful protesters in various parts of Syria,” said Sarah Leah Whitson, its Middle East director. “Instead of investigating those responsible for the shootings, Syria’s officials try to deflect responsibility by accusing unknown ‘armed groups’.” Syria Bashar Al-Assad Middle East Protest Islam Arab and Middle East unrest guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Ed Schultz talked to Tax.com’s David Cay Johnston and The United Steelworkers Leo Gerard about just how devastating Paul Ryan and the Republicans new budget proposal would be to the disabled, the elderly and children. Remember when everyone on the right and much of our beltway media was criticizing Alan Grayson for saying the Republicans’ health care plan was not to get sick, and if you do get sick, “die quickly?” I think Paul Ryan just proved him right this week. As David Cay Johnston pointed out during this segment, that’s exactly what Ryan’s budget proposals will do; assure that more people die because they can’t afford to get the treatment they need as his vouchers become increasingly worthless as the cost of care continues to go up and gets pushed back onto the consumer. And as Leo Gerard made clear, Ryan’s claims that giving huge tax cuts to the rich will create jobs is a farce. As he noted, if that were true, we’d have been at full employment while Bush was in office. Johnston also expressed his frustration with a lack of a plan to get our budget under control that doesn’t balance it on the backs of the working class from the Democrats and I couldn’t agree with him more. Since any talk of raising taxes seems to be taboo among our political class, I don’t know what it’s going to take to finally see that happen.
Continue reading …As the use of pro-anorexia websites increases, some vulnerable women are finding themselves the targets of grooming by the porn industry. Nicola Hobbs reports ‘As you know, beauty has one name: being thin. Our models are underweight, skinny, thin, bony – just like you. We want you. Regardless of the costs, we want you to join our agency. Let’s face facts, on anorexic porn websites, men are masturbating watching your pictures. You are a superstar of starvation and if you were selling and marketing your frame you would be more wealthy than most of us because men would pay any price for watching those pictures.” This was the email Sasha McDonald was sent last year from a pornography agency specialising in anorexic images. McDonald was 15 when she was first diagnosed with anorexia nervosa. “I was very lonely and felt worthless,” she says. “I retreated into an online pro-anorexic [pro-ana] community and shared everything. I didn’t realise the danger I was putting myself under.” Despite receiving professional support, McDonald found herself becoming more entrenched in the online anorexic world. She wrote a blog of her battle with anorexia, recording the small amounts she ate and publishing photographs of herself in her underwear as evidence of her emaciated body. “I was dangerously underweight and so ill that I felt proud of the comments from other website users saying how beautiful and skinny my body was. I relied on the judgments of the friends I had made on pro-anorexia websites because I assumed they were people like me – scared, depressed, exhausted and battling an illness that torments you continuously,” says McDonald. But McDonald was horrified when a fellow member of one pro-anorexia website emailed her requesting that she join a pornography agency. “My anorexic friend was actually a 46-year-old male with a fetish for skinny women,” she says. “He had pretended to be a young girl and persuaded me to share sexually explicit pictures and tried to convince me to join his modelling agency for the super-skinny.” McDonald also found that emaciated photographs she had published of herself on her blog had been posted on anorexia porn forums for users with fetishes about super-skinny women to admire. “Beautiful girl – much prettier than all those meat mountains. Bones and ribs must be very visible. If their BMI [body mass index] is above 15, they are not attractive,” says one forum user commenting on a skeletal photograph of McDonald. McDonald, now 19 and training to be a doctor, had recovered sufficiently to avoid being drawn into the world of anorexia porn, but others with eating disorders have not been so fortunate. Anorexia porn is growing in popularity and the prevalence of pro-anorexia websites is making those with eating disorders easy targets for grooming. Vulnerable users of pro-anorexia websites are increasingly being courted for their emaciated frames by pornography agencies specialising in images of extremely thin women. Optenet, an international IT security company, reported that between 2006 and 2008 the number of pro-ana websites globally increased 470% to more than 1,500 and social networking and blogging has seen a surge in online pro-anorexia content. One anorexia pornography agency admits to paying owners of pro-anorexia websites for each person who joins it after being contacted via the sites. “I pay the owner of this pro-ana community a donation for every model I found here,” confesses a “skinny scout” in the email to McDonald. The porn agencies’ websites have two roles. They sign up new clients and advertise images, films and escort-type services, such as body worshipping, fantasy role play and private photography sessions, for those “hooked on skinnies”. Some of this porn is free to access while other “professional” agencies charge a monthly membership fee for regularly updated sexually explicit images and videos of emaciated women. Agencies also host anorexia porn on YouTube and advertise on anorexia pornography forums. These forums often offer advice on how to groom users of pro-anorexia websites into taking and sharing explicit photographs of themselves. Ronny Bi, originally from China, now living in Canada, says she was held captive and forced into anorexia pornography after being tricked by someone she had been in contact with online. “He forced me to pose for photos both in revealing clothing and nude, it was sickening. I was too weak to fight back because of how thin I was. I was completely powerless.” Bi, who was held captive with another person with an eating disorder, was starved by her captor in order to make her as emaciated and marketable as possible. “Sadly, I was not the only woman he did this to,” she says. “Eventually, both of us managed to escape but my friend died shortly afterwards from heart failure due to her anorexia. It was shortly after this that I found out he had posted all of the photos he took of us online and they spread to all the pro-ana and anorexia pornography websites like wildfire.” Against her will All the explicit photographs of Bi were taken against her will, she says, and she has fought to get them removed from the internet in order to protect other vulnerable women. She believes that the pornography has put her life at risk and, after having a number of heart attacks, multiple organ failure and other medical conditions, is terminally ill because of her eating disorder. “The thinner the person is, the more likely they are to be contacted by a fetishist. I never wanted any of this attention and those photos have done a good part in destroying my life and keeping me severely anorexic,” says Bi. “I wish I could force these men to live in my head for a week so they could experience the hell I have to live in every single day, and then ask them if they still find anorexia beautiful.” Anorexia nervosa has the highest mortality rate of all psychiatric illnesses, but in the UK, those with the mental illness have no protection from online exploitation. The legality of anorexia porn means that indecent images of vulnerable adults can be freely published. “It is government policy that controls a balance between freedom of expression and protection of the public on published material which should be proportionate to the potential harm that might be caused,” says Justin Millar, a member of the Home Office’s computer crime team. “The general test of obscenity is flexible, reflecting society’s attitude towards pornographic material. But even if material is not illegal, it is open to anyone concerned about the content of pornography websites to ask the relevant internet service provider to remove them.” Bi is still contacted to pose for sexually explicit pictures despite being bedridden and requiring 24-hour care. “Because of how well known I am [online], I get contacted quite often by anorexic fetishists,” she says. “I am constantly dealing with perverted stalkers and harassment. Some send me sexually explicit emails, telling me all the things they want to do to me and others offer to pay me in exchange for nude photos.” Before she became too ill, Bi ran Eating Disorder Refuge, an online support community. She has developed a “shame list” of nearly 50 people and websites to look out for to try to prevent vulnerable people with eating disorders from enduring what she went through. She believes that the only way to protect others is to make it illegal to publish online revealing or sexually explicit photographs of people with a BMI of below 17.5, the diagnostic criteria for anorexia. “There should be a worldwide law in place to protect those with anorexia from those horrible, disgusting perverts,” says Bi. “Those with anorexia fetishes will target women who are so far into their illness that they are easily manipulated and extremely vulnerable. It may be that the anorexics targeted are incapable of making a proper decision on being photographed and therefore their permission to be photographed in this manner should be void.” Experts agree that much more could be done. “Criminals and predators target vulnerable people online; they simply have no conscience about what they do. Vulnerable people are often not able to make good decisions for themselves and they need others to help protect them,” says Jennifer Perry, an e-crime consultant. “If the UK set the precedent of removing a set of offensive material it would encourage different countries to also take action. Currently, the most effective way to address this problem is education and discussing how people are being approached and exploited.” Many feel that much of the onus should fall on internet service providers. “Responsible internet service providers would remove the most hardcore and toxic material,” says Susan Ringwood, chief executive of beat, a UK eating disorder charity . “Pro-ana sites don’t hold out any hope at all, they can trap people in a negative cycle of despair.” Lucky escape Samira Jay feels she had a lucky escape. Although she believes that pro-anorexia websites helped her to realise that she had a problem, Jay admits that she would never have published explicit photographs of herself if she had known that they were being used for sexual gratification. Now 19, and studying in Newcastle, she developed anorexia at 11. “It sickens me to the stomach knowing that my photographs could have been used for porn,” she says. “At the time, I was lonely and the pro-anorexia community gave me a purpose in life. Most users posted photographs of their naked bodies because when you have anorexia, the eating disorder is the only thing you feel you are good at, so it gives you a sense of achievement.” Jay acknowledges that she is not fully recovered, but she now speaks out about her historic use of pro-anorexia websites to make vulnerable people aware of the dangers of using them. “I knew my photographs might be used as ‘thinspiration’ by other eating disorder sufferers but the thought that they were being used for sexual enjoyment never even crossed my mind,” she says. Some names have been changed. Anorexia Mental health Health guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Maxwell Cook found not guilty after two and a half day trial A kitchen porter at a top public school has been acquitted of attempting to poison the pupils’ soup. Maxwell Cook was accused of pouring a bleach-like cleaning product into the carrot and coriander soup at Stowe School, Buckinghamshire. But after 2½ hours deliberation, the jury of 11 women and one man found him not guilty of attempting to administer poison with intent to injure, aggrieve or annoy. Cook, 58, slumped back in his seat with a look of relief as the verdict was read out. A cry of “yes” was heard from the public gallery. During the 2½-day trial at Aylesbury crown court in Buckinghamshire, trainee chef Louise Samples, 21, told the jury she had seen Cook in the kitchen lacing the soup with a sanitising destainer on 11 March last year. The soup was destined for about 100 pupils and staff at the £27,000-a-year school. But the cleaning product was detected during a routine tasting and no one was injured. Robert Spencer-Bernard, prosecuting, said the soup would have had “detrimental effects”. The toxic liquid was used to unblock drains and could cause irritation, vomiting and swelling of the throat. A spokeswoman for the school said: “We are completely satisfied with all kitchen procedures and there was never a risk of the contaminated soup reaching the dining hall. Pupils’ safety at Stowe remains paramount.” Cook, from Brackley, Northamptonshire, was dismissed after the incident. Stowe alumni include business tycoon Sir Richard Branson, Prince Harry’s on-off girlfriend Chelsy Davy and jazz musician George Melly. Crime Private schools Schools guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …WikiLeaks founder says being forced to go to Sweden to face sexual assault allegations would breach his human rights Julian Assange has been given a date for his appeal against extradition to Sweden, where he faces allegations of sexual assault. A two-day hearing has been listed at the high court in London beginning on 12 July, it was announced on Wednesday. The WikiLeaks founder is appealing against a ruling by Judge Howard Riddle at Belmarsh magistrates’ court in south London that extradition would not breach his human rights. The 39-year-old Assange, described the ruling as “rubber stamping” and the result of a “European arrest warrant system run amok”. He denies the allegations against him and believes they were politically motivated, particularly after WikiLeaks’ publication of leaked American diplomatic cables that rocked the US government. The Australian national faces three allegations of sexual assault and one of rape in Stockholm in August last year, made by two female WikiLeaks volunteers. His lawyers accused the Swedish prime minister, Fredrik Reinfeldt, of creating a “toxic atmosphere” in Sweden and damaging his chances of a fair trial by portraying him as “public enemy No 1″. At a hearing in February, Riddle dismissed all of Assange’s arguments that he could not get a fair trial and rejected his claim that extradition to Sweden would violate his human rights. Assange has said he fears extradition to Sweden could be a stepping stone to him being sent to the US to stand trial on fresh charges relating to WikiLeaks, and that he could even face the death penalty. About a dozen supporters demonstrated outside the Belmarsh courthouse wearing masks, costumes and Guantánamo Bay-style orange boiler suits. If his appeal is unsuccessful, Assange could take his case to the supreme court, the UK’s highest court. Julian Assange WikiLeaks Crime Sweden Europe Extradition UK criminal justice guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Family’s QC accuses officer of talking ‘rubbish’ over claim that newspaper vendor was walking into a police line The officer who pushed and struck Ian Tomlinson shortly before his death has been branded “absurd” after telling an inquest that the newspaper vendor was “almost inviting physical confrontation” during the G20 protests in London in April 2009. Giving evidence for a third day, PC Simon Harwood was adamant that he had not pushed Tomlinson from behind – despite video footage that appeared to contradict his claims. When the officer repeated his claim that Tomlinson had been walking into a police line before the encounter, the family’s lawyer, Matthew Ryder QC, replied: “I suggest to you the answer you are trying to give is absurd.” However, Harwood insisted that “from his angle”, the 47-year-old had not been moving away. “That is rubbish, I suggest to you, PC Harwood, and you know it,” said Ryder. “I was there and I saw what I saw,” said Harwood. In an earlier statement, the officer had maintained that Tomlinson was “almost defiant in that his hands remained in his pockets and he looked at police officers approaching him as if he was simply intent on remaining where he was”. He stood by that claim in his evidence today, despite being reminded by the acting deputy coroner, Judge Peter Thornton QC, that he need not answer any question that tended to incriminate him. Harwood again responded by saying that he was “here to help” – a claim that reduced family members, including Tomlinson’s widow, to tears. Harwood also accepted that he had not given Tomlinson any warning before pushing him and told the court that he believed that he was entitled, as a police officer, to strike someone even if he had judged them not to pose a threat. Ryder asked: “Does your training tell you if someone is not a threat to you or any other person it is acceptable to baton them? Is that your training? “Yes,” replied Harwood. He also said that he did not consider his push to be any harder than that of a fellow officer who had pushed Tomlinson seconds earlier. Another officer, however, had described Harwood’s push as being “in a different league of force”. Harwood said he had not expected Tomlinson to fall to the ground as a result of the push. “Someone who has his back to you, you push him with that force, from behind and you didn’t expect he might fall to the ground?” asked the barrister. “No,” said Harwood. “I suggest that is a lie.” “No it is not,” replied Harwood. Ryder then asked if he had been trying “to make an example of” Tomlinson. “Because that would be a pretty horrible thing to do, do you agree? Just to make an example of them. Do you agree with that?” “Yes,” said the officer. The inquest continues. Ian Tomlinson G20 Sam Jones Paul Lewis guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …David Cameron, Nick Clegg and Andrew Lansley launch two-month ‘listening exercise’ on plans to reform the health service, but warn ‘no change is not an option’ David Cameron and Nick Clegg have cast the government’s listening exercise on the NHS as an opportunity to “pause, listen, reflect and improve” the NHS modernisation plans but warned: “No change is not an option.” Amid mounting criticism of the coalition’s controversial NHS reforms, the prime minister stressed that modernisation was “essential” but conceded that NHS workers needed to be “really on board” in order to make the plans work. Clegg, who is under pressure from his own party over the details of the reform, stressed that he cared “more about getting this right than just getting it done” and insisted that the plans would not lead to creeping privatisation of the health service as some feared. Speaking at the launch of the government’s two-month listening exercise, which was also attended by the health secretary, Andrew Lansley, the prime minister led the launch at Frimley Park hospital in Surrey, telling NHS staff: “We want to work with you, not against you.” He added: “We will listen, and we will make any necessary changes.” The trinity of ministers took turns to spell out the need for reform amid fears that Lansley’s failure to explain the reforms has provoked a damaging backlash among voters and NHS staff. Describing himself as “passionate” about the NHS, Cameron said it was Britain’s “most precious national asset” and that he as prime minister had no intention of putting it at risk. But he stressed that “no change” was not an option in light of the two-pronged pressures to make it a more effective health service and to prepare for the demographic changes. He said hundreds more lives could be saved every week if the NHS was performing at world class level, claiming that about 5,000 more lives could be saved from cancer every year, as well as an extra 2,000 from respiratory diseases, as a result of the reforms. The other reason for modernisation was that the number of people aged over 85 was set to double in the next 20 years while the cost of advances in treatments and medicines was adding £600m of extra funding pressure every year. “Pumping in a bit more money and sticking with the status quo is not going to work,” Cameron said. Lansley was forced to take the rare step on Monday of making a statement to MPs, during the middle of a passage of a bill through parliament, to announce that the government would “pause” proceedings to listen to people’s concerns. Cameron told NHS workers that this offered a “natural break” before the legislation reaches its final stages in parliament. “We are taking this time to pause, to listen, to reflect and to improve our NHS modernisation plans. “Let me be clear: this is a genuine chance to make a difference. Where there are good suggestions to improve the legislation, to improve the changes, those changes will be made. “But let me equally be clear: the status quo is not an option. Modernisation is not just a good idea to save money and build a better health service. It is in my view essential for a better NHS for our future.” Many critics, including unions and patient groups, are opposed to major parts of the bill, particularly the increased role for the private sector. Other concerns relate to the accountability of GP-led consortiums. Clegg echoed Cameron on the need to modernise, while admitting that the “unusual” step of reflecting again on the plans showed that government had not got every detail right. He said that while the NHS could not “stand still”, the coalition would not “mess around with the basic principle” underpinning the service. Addressing some of the concerns, Clegg said on the issue of accountability: “It’s right that family doctors are in the driving seat; they know their patients best. But there have to be safeguards. And there will be. “Proper transparency, proper scrutiny and proper involvement of patients, other health professionals and local leaders. And that’s something we take very seriously.” On privatisation, Clegg went on to say that charities, social enterprises and the private sector had been used in providing care in the NHS ever since it was founded. “While we say yes to strengthen that role, we say no to allowing private companies to cherry-pick services, so undermining hospitals. “We say yes to a family doctor choosing a nurse’s co-op to visit you in your home, we say no to a US-style healthcare system where they check your credit card before they check your pulse. “Yes to patient choice, no to selling the NHS off to the highest bidder.” NHS Health Health policy David Cameron Nick Clegg Andrew Lansley Hélène Mulholland guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …New York state security and educational authorities are on high alert after an email sent to officials and the media threatened attacks on school buses. Bus drivers have been warned to be especially watchful for suspicious behavior or packages. The email, which is being taken very seriously by authorities, also…
Continue reading …Lonnie David Franklin and his victims Behind The Scenes with John Walsh: Serial Killers Lizard Fight!! LA Photo: Grim Sleeper Update @ LAPD L.A.P.D. detectives and Chief Charlie Beck hold a press conference to update the media on the “ Grim Sleeper ” serial murder case. Police officials ID’d 8 women who are still missing, three of them were directly connected to evidence … Accused ' Grim Sleeper ' suspected in more deaths (Reuters) | Yoctomy LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – A retired sanitation worker accused of murdering 10 women and girls who has been dubbed the “ Grim Sleeper ” may have killed eight additional victims, police said on Tuesday. Police officials said there may be even … Accused ' Grim Sleeper ' suspected in more deaths (Reuters) | Today … Lonnie David Franklin Jr. stands in court during his arraignment on 10 counts of murder Reuters – A retired sanitation worker accused οf murdering 10 women аnd girls whο hаѕ bееn dubbed thе “ Grim Sleeper ” mау hаνе kіllеd eight … Accused ' Grim Sleeper ' suspected in more deaths (Reuters) | Latest … Reuters – A retired sanitation worker accused of murdering 10 women and girls who has been dubbed the Grim Sleeper may have killed eight additional victims, police said on Tuesday. Grim Sleeper serial killer may have 8 more victims | RGVNEWS.NET By CHRISTINA HOAG The Associated Press LOS ANGELES — Los Angeles detectives said Tuesday they believe the suspect in the “ Grim Sleeper ” serial killings could be responsible for up to eight additional murders, but say the likelihood is … beloaida says: ' Grim Sleeper ' Suspect Lonnie Franklin Jr. May Be Linked to 8 More Victims – ABC News http://t.co/DhDUC81 via @AddThis
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