An intriguing video on the evidence for much older civilisations that may have been wiped out in a global cataclysm some 12,900 years ago.
Showing posts with label USA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label USA. Show all posts
Wednesday, 12 March 2025
Saturday, 8 May 2021
Debelbots: new DA reveals Department illegally suppressed evidence, apologises for unfair trial
https://reason.com/2021/05/06/debelbots-child-murder-shaken-baby-syndrome-free/
Initially, the government planned to retry the Debelbots. But just a few weeks ago, District Attorney Mark Jones, who inherited the case, decided not to do that. He told the Supreme Court that there was "mounting medical evidence that says the child was born this way"—that is, with a fatal brain defect. Then he went a step further and apologized to the Debelbots, on behalf of his office, for "not getting a fair trial."
This seemed to shock Ashley Debelbot almost more than being freed from a life sentence. Asked in a press conference how she felt about the DA's apology, she replied, "I thought I would never hear that word being said to me, ever. Once you've been incarcerated, the word 'sorry' never comes to you at all."
She added, "I do not hold any bitterness toward anybody."
Her husband, Albert Debelbot, seemed a little less mellow. "I joined the Army protecting the same freedom that was taken from me. I lost a buddy in Iraq and [another] buddy lost his leg protecting the freedom we so believe in. We came home and the same system that we went to war to protect would never protect us."
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UPDATE: See also Daily Mail (UK) coverage 21 May 2021:
Wednesday, 14 April 2021
Debelbots freed, finally
UPDATE (April 2021): All charges against Albert and Ashley Debelbot have been dropped, no retrial.
At last, at long, long last:
At last, at long, long last:
- what a travesty.
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See earlier Polynesian Times article from August 2, 2020:
Thursday, 13 August 2020
AUSTRALIA: Ancient aboriginal land management
Civilised people (i.e. from the culture of towns and cities) came to Australia, America etc and saw wilderness. They didn't see a managed environment; but it was there.
One aspect of aboriginal land management was and is 'cool burning' - the periodic deliberate starting of grass fires to clear away flammable debris and so prevent the kind of mega-blazes we saw recently in Australia, which killed perhaps 3 billion animals.
This has also been an ancient practice among Native Americans:
Similarly, in both countries there are sacred areas, some of which would seem to the ignorant eye to be simply wild places, missing the point that they are carefully kept that way:
https://theculturetrip.com/pacific/australia/articles/the-11-most-sacred-places-in-indigenous-australian-folklore/
https://www.indian-affairs.org/sacred-sites.html
There is the archaeology of relics, but there is also the archaeology of the human mind and its cultures. How old, for example, are the stories of the Dream Time?
As Yeats said:
'I have spread my dreams under your feet;
Tread softly because you tread on my dreams.'
Having said that, an archaeological dig in the Torres Strait has recently found concrete evidence of cultivation of bananas 2,000 years ago:
'Lead researcher Robert Williams said... the Torres Strait had been historically viewed as a "separating line" between Indigenous groups in New Guinea - now part of Indonesia and Papua New Guinea - who practiced agriculture, and those in Australia who were labelled "hunter gatherers".
'But the findings show that the strait was "more of a bridge or a filter" for horticultural practices across both regions.'
One aspect of aboriginal land management was and is 'cool burning' - the periodic deliberate starting of grass fires to clear away flammable debris and so prevent the kind of mega-blazes we saw recently in Australia, which killed perhaps 3 billion animals.
This has also been an ancient practice among Native Americans:
Similarly, in both countries there are sacred areas, some of which would seem to the ignorant eye to be simply wild places, missing the point that they are carefully kept that way:
https://theculturetrip.com/pacific/australia/articles/the-11-most-sacred-places-in-indigenous-australian-folklore/
https://www.indian-affairs.org/sacred-sites.html
There is the archaeology of relics, but there is also the archaeology of the human mind and its cultures. How old, for example, are the stories of the Dream Time?
As Yeats said:
'I have spread my dreams under your feet;
Tread softly because you tread on my dreams.'
Having said that, an archaeological dig in the Torres Strait has recently found concrete evidence of cultivation of bananas 2,000 years ago:
'Lead researcher Robert Williams said... the Torres Strait had been historically viewed as a "separating line" between Indigenous groups in New Guinea - now part of Indonesia and Papua New Guinea - who practiced agriculture, and those in Australia who were labelled "hunter gatherers".
'But the findings show that the strait was "more of a bridge or a filter" for horticultural practices across both regions.'
Thursday, 6 August 2020
JAPAN: Remembering Hiroshima
A version of the post below is also published today on The Conservative Woman:
https://conservativewoman.co.uk/8-14am-august-16-1945-the-bomb-that-changed-the-world/
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https://conservativewoman.co.uk/8-14am-august-16-1945-the-bomb-that-changed-the-world/
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Father John A. Simes was starting
his day at Hiroshima when it happened, at about quarter past eight on 6 August
1945 http://www.atomicarchive.com/Docs/Hiroshima/Hiroshima_Siemes.shtml
. He was up in the hills with the Jesuit Mission that had relocated there after
the gigantic fire-bombing of Tokyo in March by hundreds of American planes https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bombing_of_Tokyo#Operation_Meetinghouse
. This time, incredibly, to inflict similar damage only needed a single bomb, a
weapon so different that it took Father Simes some time to piece together what
had happened. Conventional air raids in World War Two – yet how is napalming
civilians conventional? – claimed perhaps twice as many lives in Japan as
Hiroshima’s and Nagasaki’s victims combined; but ever since that day 75 years
ago, warfare’s potential has been on a new, even ghastlier level.
The British people’s reaction to
the radio news, first relayed on the Home Service at 6 p.m., was not unmixed
rejoicing, according to sources quoted by David Kynaston in his ‘Austerity
Britain’ (pp. 82-86). https://www.amazon.co.uk/Austerity-Britain-1945-1951-Tales-Jerusalem/dp/0747599238
The nine o’clock edition gave more details of the Bomb and its effects – still
hard to discern through the ‘pall of smoke and dust’ - on what had been a
Japanese ‘army base’ at six but three hours later was ‘a city of once over
300,000 inhabitants.’ There was ‘elation’ at the prospect of peace, but
‘terror’ at the scale of destruction; the novelist Ursula Bloom and her husband
were speechless with horror; the Dean of Oriel College abandoned any belief in
a Just War; J R R Tolkien wrote to his son deploring ‘the utter folly of these
lunatic physicists to consent to do such work for war-purposes; calmly plotting
the destruction of the world’, especially while mankind’s ‘moral and
intellectual status is declining.’ A London schoolteacher noted the hypocrisy
of cheering the ‘Atomic bomb’ yet hating the Germans for their air raids on us;
a housewife in Cumbria worried whether Japan had the Bomb, too, and was merely
biding its time; a Scots engineer wrote in his diary, ‘There is no hope in man…
The end is near – perhaps some years only.’
Out East, the morale of the ‘Forgotten
Army’ had been low: they had learned of Victory in Europe, but had been
expecting perhaps another ten years of fighting the Japanese to the last ditch.
Instead, to their great relief, the conflict was to end in a few days. What,
however, did they make of the Bomb?
There are three books that taken
together serve as a trilogy describing the war in Burma at first hand and at
every level. The first, ‘Defeat Into Victory’ (1956) https://www.amazon.co.uk/Defeat-into-Victory-William-Slim/dp/0330509977
, is by the Fourteenth Army’s commander, Lieutenant General (later Field
Marshal and Viscount) William ‘Bill’ Slim. In the final chapter ‘Afterthoughts’
he saw that future armies, facing enemies in possession of battlefield nuclear
weapons that could wipe out whole units at a stroke, would have to fight in a
dispersed, semi-autonomous fashion in order to complete their campaigns.
The second, John Masters’ ‘The
Road Past Mandalay’ (1961) https://www.abebooks.co.uk/book-search/title/the-road-past-mandalay/author/masters-john/
, is by one of Slim’s military planners who for a time took command of a Gurkha
Brigade dropped behind the Japanese lines, initiating a ferocious battle https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Masters#Life
and ultimately forced to retreat. When he returned to HQ he resumed the heavy
burden of intricate planning and towards the conclusion of the Burmese campaign
became so exhausted that he was in danger of making fatal errors. Granted
leave, he set off to walk the Himalayas with his new wife. Near the end, they
came to the Rest House in Joshimath where the resident priest remarked that he
was glad the fighting was over. This made no sense until His Holiness showed
him a newspaper over two weeks old, with the splash headline ‘ATOMIC BOMB
DROPPED ON JAPAN.’ The couple had started on their mountain journey, cut off
from communication with the outside world, on the morning of 6 August.
‘I believed with instant conviction that there could
be no more war. No more tactics, no more strategy, only total destruction – or
peace. The training and experience of a lifetime had vanished into the thin
Himalayan air, and I was happy.
‘I took my wife in my arms and kissed her. His
Holiness said, in Hindi, ‘May God bless you, in peace.’
1992 saw the appearance of
‘Quartered Safe Out Here’ https://www.amazon.co.uk/Quartered-Safe-George-MacDonald-Fraser/dp/0007105932
, George MacDonald Fraser’s celebrated vivid account of his part in the Burma
Campaign, serving as a private in Cumbria’s Border Regiment. Many years after
the war, he argued with a man who was denouncing the nuclear bombings of
Hiroshima and Nagasaki as obscene, monstrous and barbarous. Fraser reflected on
what other and how many more lives would have been lost had the war continued;
possibly his own, in which case his three children and six grandchildren would
never have been born:
‘And that, I’m afraid, is where all discussion of
pros and cons evaporates and becomes meaningless, because for those nine lives
I would pull the plug on the whole Japanese nation and never even blink. And
so, I dare suggest, would you. And if you wouldn’t, you may be nearer to the
divine than I am but you sure as hell aren’t fit to be parents or
grandparents.’
Here we are now, with these
horrors sitting in their silos and launch tubes, plus chemical weapons and vile
diseases carefully crafted by laboratory white-coats. Which of the above
witnesses are right? Among the military, the tactician, the idealist, the
balance-of-terror-ist? For the civilians, the elated, the horrified, the
triumphant, the bleak pessimist?
How can we get rid of such dark
toys? For surely, we’re not fit to play with them.
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Suggested further reading:
John Pilger on the risks of another nuclear war:
http://johnpilger.com/articles/another-hiroshima-is-coming-unless-we-stop-it-now
Professor Francis Boyle argues that atomic weapons are illegal:
https://consortiumnews.com/2020/08/04/atomic-bombings-at-75-the-illegality-of-nuclear-weapons/
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Suggested further reading:
John Pilger on the risks of another nuclear war:
http://johnpilger.com/articles/another-hiroshima-is-coming-unless-we-stop-it-now
Professor Francis Boyle argues that atomic weapons are illegal:
https://consortiumnews.com/2020/08/04/atomic-bombings-at-75-the-illegality-of-nuclear-weapons/
Sunday, 2 August 2020
PALAU: US justice on trial
UPDATE (April 2021): All charges dropped, no retrial. At last, at long, long last:
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https://www.gofundme.com/f/Ashley-Debelbot
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A Palauan man and his wife are to be re-tried more than 10 years after being found guilty of the murder of their newborn child, McKenzy. Their original trial and their first unsuccessful appeal raise questions about the quality of the justice system and its preparedness to address its own possible errors.
Born in hospital on 29 May 2008, the baby was taken home May 31 and died early the morning after. The couple, Albert and Ashley Debelbot, were convicted of malice murder in 2009, but eventually had their appeal heard in 2017, in which they claimed that their respective attorneys had not defended them effectively.
There are concerns about the conduct not only of the original trial but also of the appeal, which was denied. A further appeal to Georgia's Supreme Court succeeded and the convictions were 'vacated' on 28 February 2020 and a new trial ordered.
https://www.ledger-enquirer.com/news/local/crime/article240737036.html
'Their conviction was based on a testimony of the State assistant medical examiner whose opinion is based on an autopsy report. The State gave no evidence tying the couple to their daughter’s death and the couple’s lawyer did not offer any alternative explanation or evidence or witnesses on how the baby died,' reports the Island Times. The defence attorneys at the original trial had offered no alternative explanation of the child's injuries, even though the hospital had recorded the birth as a 'rough, atypical delivery.'
https://islandtimes.org/palauan-man-imprisoned-unjustly-for-12-years-in-us/
At the 2017 appeal four medical experts giving evidence for the defence 'opined that the trauma of the birthing process caused the additional and more acute fracturing to the left side of McKenzy’s skull, and denied that post-birth trauma caused McKenzy’s injuries' but 'the court concluded in one sentence that all the Debelbots’witnesses, expert and otherwise, were not credible' and went on further to rule out their evidence as not legally admissible.
https://law.justia.com/cases/georgia/supreme-court/2019/she defence18a1073.html
Perhaps the most astonishing aspect of the 2009 trial was the way that the Assistant District Attorney chose to define the 'reasonable doubt' in the presumption of innocence that a jury should extend to defendants:
In explaining the concept of “reasonable doubt,” which in a juror’s mind would justify a vote to acquit, Assistant District Attorney Sadhana Dailey said it “does not mean beyond all doubt,” and added:
“It does not mean to a mathematical certainty. Which means we don’t have to prove that 90 percent. You don’t have to be 90 percent sure. You don’t have to be 80 percent sure. You don’t have to be 51 percent sure.”
https://www.ledger-enquirer.com/news/local/crime/article240737036.html
It seems reasonable to interpret that last sentence as implying that if it's down to tossing a coin, it's okay to find the defendant guilty. As the Supreme Court said, 'We cannot conceive of any good reason that a competent criminal defense attorney could have to fail to object to such an egregious misstatement of the law.'
The Island Times article cited above says '.. the DA for Muscogee County has announced that she will retry the case despite Georgia Supreme Court saying the government evidence is very thin. Debelbot will be represented in the new trial pro bono by the top rated Civil Defense and Criminal Defense New York Attorney Earl Ward.'
If that Ward is the 'Earl S. Ward' described here, the prosecution will have a fight on its hands; and if Ward succeeds, his pro bono work may be followed by a big compensation fight - he 'secured a $6.7 million settlement for the widow of Israel Vasquez, who was wrongfully convicted and incarcerated for more than 12 years for a 1995 homicide he did not commit.' Twelve years: the same period Debelbot has spent in jail, so far; twelve of his wife's child-bearing years, of their potential family life together.
https://ecbawm.com/our-people/earl-s-ward/
Let's turn our eyes away from money and consider a legal system that negligently sics a jury onto the defendants with a wildly wrong definition of reasonable doubt, lets them be found guilty of murder on the basis of an autopsy and accompanying assertions of a single expert (that did not directly connect the alleged offence with the defendants), and brushes away expert witnesses for the defence at appeal.
Not everyone would expect to receive such sub-standard service from the justice system. Is money, or the lack of it, a factor? Any other factors?
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