Monthly Archives: November 2009

Sarah Palin’s Business Model

I always find good stuff over at Mudflats.

Convicted Murderer Serving Life Sentence Wants Taxpayer-Funded Sex-Change Operation

A convicted murderer serving a life sentence goes before a judge to ask for electrolysis treatments as she seeks a taxpayer-funded sex-change operation.
   
Michelle Kosilek was born as Robert and has been living as a woman in an all-male prison in Norfolk, for murdering of his wife, Cheryl, in 1990.
   
Prison officials oppose Kosilek’s request for surgery, saying the sex change would pose security problems.
   
U.S. District Judge Mark Wolf ruled in 2002 that Kosilek was entitled to treatment for gender identity disorder, but stopped short of ordering surgery. Kosilek sued again in 2005.
   
Kosilek had seven electrolysis treatments, but they were discontinued. Kosilek is due in court Monday to renew the request.

WTF?  It’s bad enough that we have to pay for this scumbag to even be alive much less pander to the whims of hair removal and a sex change operation?

Excuse me, but WHAT THE FUCK???  This guy should be dead by now.  Who gives a fuck what he wants?  I don’t.  I say he should FRY.  He is a MURDERER and as such, IMHO, should have NO RIGHTS.

15 year old Alyssa killed a 9 year old neighbor because “she wanted to know what it felt like to kill someone”

Why do people, especially stupid or degenerate people, insist on reproducing???

Here’s another example of really bad parenting:

A police officer testified Wednesday that a 15-year-old girl told investigators she killed a 9-year-old neighbor because she wanted to know what it felt like to kill someone, and a judge ruled the teen should stand trial as an adult.

Authorities have not publicly identified the suspect, but her attorney referred to her in court Wednesday as Alyssa.

Police testified that Elizabeth Olten did nothing to provoke the attack against her, and that the teenage suspect led authorities to the girl’s body after they questioned her.

Asked by juvenile justice attorney Samantha Green whether Alyssa gave a reason for killing the girl, highway patrol Sgt. David Rice replied “ultimately, she stated she wanted to know what it felt like.”

Cole County Circuit Judge Jon Beetem ruled that the slaying was vicious and that the state had no adequate facilities or services to treat the suspect if she stayed in the juvenile court system.

The teen, who sat silently through the proceedings in an orange prison jumpsuit and handcuffs, was arrested on an adult charge of first-degree murder. She was scheduled to be arraigned later Wednesday.

Hundreds of people searched for Elizabeth when she did not return home on Oct. 21 from a neighbor’s house in St. Martin’s, west of Jefferson City. Authorities have not released details about how Elizabeth was killed or why she was chosen, and those details did not come out during the hearing.

Juvenile officers testified Wednesday that Alyssa previously considered committing suicide and had been receiving treatment for depression for a few years before Elizabeth’s death.

A Missouri State Highway Patrol officer testified that Alyssa admitted to digging two holes on Oct. 16 with the intention of burying Elizabeth — a sign that juvenile officers said showed the girl’s killing was premeditated.

Throughout the hearing, it was assumed that Alyssa committed the killing, which is a legal requirement under state law for conducting adult certification hearings. However, Alyssa’s attorney objected repeatedly when attorneys tried to introduce into evidence specific details about the killing.

Juvenile defense attorney Kurt Valentine argued that Alyssa would either kill herself or be assaulted and killed by others if she were placed with adults in a jail cell while awaiting trial or in a prison if convicted.

“We are throwing away the child and we are signing a death sentence for Alyssa,” Valentine said. “She is not going to survive her time in the Cole County jail.”

Alyssa appeared in court with straight, shoulder-length brown hair, with bangs frequently covering her eyes. Her mother and grandmother sat on one side of the courtroom. The grandmother has been Alyssa’s legal guardian for about half of her life.

On the other side of the courtroom sat Elizabeth’s mother, other family members and friends, some of whom wore pink shirts, which was Elizabeth’s favorite color.

State juvenile officials said Missouri has no secure facilities to house female juvenile offenders and would have had to renovate a facility and create a specific supervision plan had Alyssa been kept in juvenile custody.

If convicted of first-degree murder, the teen could be sentenced to up to life in prison.

Source: AP News

Personally, I think it’s okay if she gets killed in prison.  She deserves it.  Just like the maniac at Fort Hood.  He wanted to kill himself, but we are trying like crazy to save his life…  so we can put him on trial for senselessly murdering a bunch of innocent people.

We already know that both of these people are guilty.  The girl admitted it and Hasan was caught in the act.  They don’t need a trial.  They need to be put to death.

Otherwise they’ll just end up like convicted child killer Curtis Martin of Oakland — back on the streets and murdering again.

Our judicial system is ridiculous.

Curtis Martin, Child Murderer

 

Belle de Jour comes out of the closet

A London PhD, comes clean about her years as a prostitute to pay for her education.

Good stuff.

Belle_De_Jour_bookj_645471a

 

Sarah Palin’s Lies Don’t Get Any Truer Over Time… Even If She Does Publish Them

The San Francisco Chronicle reports:

Sarah Palin’s new book reprises familiar claims from the 2008 presidential campaign that haven’t become any truer over time.
Ignoring substantial parts of her record if not the facts, she depicts herself as a frugal traveler on the taxpayer’s dime, a reformer without ties to powerful interests and a politician roguishly indifferent to high ambition.

word du jour: EFFIGY

Main Entry: ef·fi·gy
Pronunciation: \ˈe-fə-jē\
Function: noun
Inflected Form(s): plural ef·fi·gies
Etymology: Middle French effigie, from Latin effigies, from effingere to form, from ex- + fingere to shape — more at dough
Date: 1539

: an image or representation especially of a person; especially : a crude figure representing a hated person

Normally I like to use the word in a sentence, but since this definition clearly states that the it is an image or representation and because a picture paints a thousand words, I would like to direct you here.

Enjoy!

photo du jour: Infant Neutron Star in the Cassiopeia A Supernova

Wow!

Infant-neutron_1517226i

For the first time an infant neutron star has been been observed (blue dot in the centre of the image). The neutron star which is located in the “Cassiopeia A” supernova was photographed by the The Chandra X-ray Observatory. It is the latest stunning image to come from this telescope which has lasted twice as long as its original mission run of five years.

Picture: NASA/PA

Palin’s Universe: Alaska Left Behind, Fabricating A Higher Calling

palinsuniverse

h/t AKMuckraker

 

Lakisha Hogue is another example of fine parenting:

COATSVILLE, Pa.—A Pennsylvania mother’s 6-year-old daughter was reportedly driving the family car when police say mom was too impaired.

Police spotted the 6-year-old driving a Dodge Durango while her mother rode in the passenger seat. 

When police stopped the vehicle, the mother, Lakisha Hogue, allegedly told them she was teaching her daughter to drive. 

The officers believed Hogue was intoxicated or high and didn’t quite know what was going on. 

The 6-year-old girl told police her mother was just tired, but while calling her aunt from the scene, admitted mom had been “smoking smelly stuff” again.

Police said a DUI or toxicology test was not conducted on Hogue because she was not behind the wheel. 

She was arrested, though, and was being held on a $15,000 bond. 

Hogue’s four children are staying with family.

 

Yeah, just keep pumpin’ ‘em out.  You’re obviously doing a fine job as a parent and we want to make sure that you keep on breeding.

Margarita Vargas could be the only person in the City of Richmond with any sense at all

(KPIX/CBS5)

Photo: Margarita Vargas.

RICHMOND, Calif. (CBS/KPIX) On Oct. 24, police say dozens of teens gawked, laughed and took photographs while a 15-year-old girl was brutally gang-raped and beaten outside a Richmond High School homecoming dance.
But one brave girl, who was not even there, wouldn’t stand for it.

“I was watching a movie, and my brother-in-law came in and he told me ‘I don’t know what to do, because there is a girl back there and she has been raped. I’m scared,’” 18-year-old Margarita Vargas said.

“I’m like ‘We should call the cops because that’s the right thing to do.’ I didn’t think about it twice.”

Vargas said she called police because she would want someone to do the same if she ever was in that situation.

After making the call, Vargas went to the scene to check on the girl.

“I could tell that she had been beat up because her face was swollen,” Vargas said. “She was naked, didn’t have shoes. They just covered her up and stuff.”

The girl who was attacked is just a few years younger than the woman police now call the “Good Samaritan.” Vargas said she would like to reach out to the victim again.

“I would like to talk to her. I would just, not to be nosey or stuff, but I would like to ask how she’s feeling. I would want her to know that she can get through it. It will take awhile but she can get through it,” she said.

Vargas said she would pick up that phone again and call for help. But she also understands why others won’t.

“I think people are scared, especially in a community like this where ‘snitching’ is a big thing to people,” she said.

Vargas said she does not believe there is such a thing as “snitching,” especially in a case such as this. Calling for help, she said is just the right thing to do.

You can see her on video here.