Tag: USA

  • Guru Tarik Rambut Pelajar Berkeperluan Khas, Seretnya Di Lantai

    Guru Tarik Rambut Pelajar Berkeperluan Khas, Seretnya Di Lantai

    Seorang guru dilihat menghimpit pelajarnya yang berkeperluan khas ke lantai, menarik rambutnya dan mengheretnya, dalam sebuah video yang dimuat naik ke Facebook.

    Sebuah lagi video yang turut dirakamkan oleh telefon bimbit itu juga menunjukkan guru terbabit, Linda Winters-Johnson, 53 tahun, memukul kepala pelajar perempuan itu dengan termos, lapor Huffington Post.

    Menurut WAPT Channel 16, insiden itu berlaku di Sekolah Tinggi Greenville di Mississippi pada 21 September lalu.

    THIS SHIT JUST PISSED ME OFF THE CHILDREN T GREENVILLE HIGH CAUGHT ONE OF THE SPECIAL NEED STUDENTS GETTING TREATED LIKE THIS YALL SHARE SHE NEED TO BE FIRED licensing@viralhog. com

    Posted by Kesha Williams on Thursday, 6 October 2016

    DIPECAT, DIARAH KE MAHKAMAH

    Winters-Johnson dilaporkan sudah dipecat dari jawatannya sebagai guru pelajar berkeperluan khas pada 17 Oktober.

    Menurut Peguam Negara Daerah Washington DeWayne Richardson, Winters-Johnson sudah dikenakan dakwaan mendera seorang yang lemah dan diarahkan menghadap mahkamah untuk dibicarakan.

    SUPERINTENDAN “TIDAK BERTERUS TERANG TENTANG INSIDEN”

    Sementara itu, lembaga sekolah itu dikatakan mengambil tindakan disiplin terhadap seorang lagi kakitangan, sementara Superintendan Sekolah-Sekolah Awam Greenville, Leeson Taylor II ,diarahkan mengambil cuti berbayar.

    Menurut Associated Press, para pegawai lembaga sekolah itu berkata Taylor tidak berterus terang tentang betapa dahsyatnya insiden tersebut.

    “Kami mendapat notis, namun lembaga tidak diberitahu tentang betapa teruknya insiden itu. Ini sehinggalah video itu tersebar di Facebook,” kata Presiden Lembaga, Loretta Shannon kepada AP.

    Jabatan Pendidikan Mississippi kini dalam proses untuk melucutkan lesen guru Winters-Johnson, menurut Huffington Post.

    Winters-Johnson belum ditangkap dan dijadualkan dihadapkan ke mahkamah pada 13 Disember.

    Jika didapati bersalah mendera individu yang lemah, dia boleh dipenjara sehingga setahun dan didenda sehingga AS$1,000 (S$1,430).

    Source: Berita MediaCorp

  • Trump’s Breezy Calls To World Leaders Leave Diplomats Aghast

    Trump’s Breezy Calls To World Leaders Leave Diplomats Aghast

    On Thursday, the White House weighed in with an offer of professional help. The press secretary, Josh Earnest, urged the president-elect to make use of the State Department’s policy makers and diplomats in planning and conducting his encounters with foreign leaders.

    “President Obama benefited enormously from the advice and expertise that’s been shared by those who serve at the State Department,” Mr. Earnest said. “I’m confident that as President-elect Trump takes office, those same State Department employees will stand ready to offer him advice as he conducts the business of the United States overseas.”

    “Hopefully he’ll take it,” he added.

    A spokesman for the State Department, John Kirby, said the department was “helping facilitate and support calls as requested.” But he declined to give details, and it was not clear to what extent Mr. Trump was availing himself of the nation’s diplomats.

    Mr. Trump’s conversation with Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif of Pakistan has generated the most angst, because, as Mr. Earnest put it, the relationship between Mr. Sharif’s country and the United States is “quite complicated,” with disputes over issues ranging from counterterrorism to nuclear proliferation.

    In a remarkably candid readout of the phone call, the Pakistani government said Mr. Trump had told Mr. Sharif that he was “a terrific guy” who made him feel as though “I’m talking to a person I have known for long.” He described Pakistanis as “one of the most intelligent people.” When Mr. Sharif invited him to visit Pakistan, the president-elect replied that he would “love to come to a fantastic country, fantastic place of fantastic people.”

    The Trump transition office, in its more circumspect readout, said only that Mr. Trump and Mr. Sharif “had a productive conversation about how the United States and Pakistan will have a strong working relationship in the future.” It did not confirm or deny the Pakistani account of Mr. Trump’s remarks.

    The breezy tone of the readout left diplomats in Washington slack-jawed, with some initially assuming it was a parody. In particular, they zeroed in on Mr. Trump’s offer to Mr. Sharif “to play any role you want me to play to address and find solutions to the country’s problems.”

    That was interpreted by some in India as an offer by the United States to mediate Pakistan’s border dispute with India in Kashmir, something that the Pakistanis have long sought and that India has long resisted.

    “By taking such a cavalier attitude to these calls, he’s encouraging people not to take him seriously,” said Daniel F. Feldman, a former special representative to Afghanistan and Pakistan. “He’s made himself not only a bull in a china shop, but a bull in a nuclear china shop.”

    Husain Haqqani, a former Pakistani ambassador to Washington, said his government’s decision to release a rough transcript of Mr. Trump’s remarks was a breach of protocol that demonstrated how easily Pakistani leaders misread signals from their American counterparts.

    “Pakistan is one country where knowing history and details matters most,” Mr. Haqqani said, “and where the U.S. cannot afford to give wrong signals, given the history of misunderstandings.”

    At one level, Mr. Trump’s warm sentiments were surprising, given that during the campaign, he called for temporarily barring Muslims from entering the United States to avoid importing would-be terrorists.

    His conversation with Mr. Sharif also came a day after an attack at Ohio State University in which a Somali-born student, Abdul Razak Ali Artan, rammed a car into a group of pedestrians and slashed several people with a knife before being shot and killed by the police. Law enforcement officials said Mr. Artan, whom the Islamic State has claimed as a “soldier,” had lived in Pakistan for seven years before coming to the United States in 2014.

    Mr. Obama never visited Pakistan as president, even though he had a circle of Pakistani friends in college and spoke fondly of the country. The White House weighed a visit at various times but always decided against it, according to officials, because of security concerns or because it would be perceived as rewarding Pakistani leaders for what many American officials said was their lack of help in fighting terrorism.

    “It sends a powerful message to the people of a country when the president of the United States goes to visit,” Mr. Earnest said. “That’s true whether it’s some of our closest allies, or that’s also true if it’s a country like Pakistan, with whom our relationship is somewhat more complicated.”

    Mr. Trump’s call with President Nursultan A. Nazarbayev of Kazakhstan raised similar questions.

    Mr. Nazarbayev has ruled his country with an iron hand since 1989, first as head of the Communist Party and later as president after Kazakhstan won its independence from the Soviet Union. In April 2015, he won a fifth term, winning 97.7 percent of the vote and raising suspicions of fraud.

    The Kazakh government, in its account of Mr. Trump’s conversation, said he had lavished praise on the president for his leadership of the country over the last 25 years. “D. Trump stressed that under the leadership of Nursultan Nazarbayev, our country over the years of independence had achieved fantastic success that can be called a ‘miracle,’” it said.

    The statement went on to say that Mr. Trump had shown solidarity with the Kazakh government over its decision to voluntarily surrender the nuclear arsenal it inherited from the Soviets. “There is no more important issue than the nuclear disarmament and nonproliferation, which must be addressed in a global context,” it quoted Mr. Trump as saying.

    Mr. Trump’s statement said that Mr. Nazarbayev had congratulated him on his victory, and that Mr. Trump had reciprocated by congratulating him on the 25th anniversary of his country. Beyond that, it said only that the two leaders had “addressed the importance of strengthening regional partnerships.”

    Source: The New York Times

  • Muslim New Yorker: Trump’s Victory Shows  We’ll Never Be Accepted As Part Of American Community

    Muslim New Yorker: Trump’s Victory Shows We’ll Never Be Accepted As Part Of American Community

    I covered a lot of Trump rallies as a journalist. I didn’t feel any hatred. People were more curious than anything. I was never assaulted. I felt like most people were just supporting him because he wasn’t part of the establishment. Or because they were tired of politics.

    But it was confusing. Because even though I didn’t feel like they hated me, these people were supporting someone who said I should be banned from the country. Even the father of one of my best friends supports Trump. This man had me over to his house. I went to Thanksgiving with him. My friend asked him: ‘Dad, how can you support that man? Our friend Zahra is a Muslim.’ He told her: ‘Don’t worry. He won’t do everything that he says.’

    Today has been difficult. These last few weeks, it was mostly speculation. There was suspicion that most Americans supported him but I could hope that it was wrong. But now that hope is gone. And I have to feel differently.

    I have to feel like maybe most Americans don’t want me here. And I feel like no matter how hard I try, I’ll never be part of the community. And even if they’re friendly to me, or if they invite me to Thanksgiving, deep down they believe that America is a country that belongs to white people.

     

    Source: Humans of New York

  • Omar Suleiman: Donald Trump Won, America Lost

    Omar Suleiman: Donald Trump Won, America Lost

    America lost.

    Not because Hillary did, but because bigotry won. This country just elected an openly racist, sexist, obnoxious xenophobe to lead it. Gone are the days in which we could lecture any other nation on extremism or immorality. This leaves the nation bare for the world to see it for what it is.

    Donald Trump doesn’t just represent the fringe of America, he represents a chunk of it.

    Have I lost hope? No. I’m not going anywhere. I, and millions of others who envisioned a better nation, will continue to fight to redeem it. We thought we ditched our ugly past only to realize that our present is just as horrid.

    Now that it’s undeniable, our response needs to be unparalleled. We’ve got work to do people. But God willing, we’ll get there. #electionnight

     

    Source: Omar Suleiman

  • Countries Like Singapore Stealing US Jobs: Trump

    Countries Like Singapore Stealing US Jobs: Trump

    Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump claims that countries such as Singapore, China, India and Mexico are stealing jobs from Americans, and vowed to stop the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP).

    “America has lost 70,000 factories since China entered the World Trade Organisation, another Bill and Hillary-backed disaster,” he told supporters in Florida, reported the Press Trust of India. “We are living through the greatest jobs theft in the history of the world. There’s never been a country that’s lost jobs like we do, so stupidly, so easy to solve.”

    Mr Trump said Goodrich Lighting Systems laid off 255 workers and moved jobs to India, while Baxter Health Care Corporation laid off 199 workers and moved its jobs to Singapore. “It’s getting worse and worse and worse,” he said.

    A Trump administration, he said, would impose a 35 per cent tax on any US company that wants to fire its workers and move to another country, and then shift its product back into the United States.

    He also said he would immediately stop the “job-killing” TPP, calling it another disaster in the making.

     

    Source: The Straits Times