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A black man went undercover online as a whitesupremacist

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The Washington Post
A black man went undercover online as a white supremacist. This is what he learned.
By Peter Holley  •  Read more »
Trump slams another Republican senator, warning Bob Corker that ‘Tennessee not happy!’
Trump taunted the Senate Foreign Relations Committee chairman on Twitter after Corker last week publicly questioned the president's stability and competence.
By Philip Rucker  •   Read more »
 
Yellen rejects Trump approach to Wall Street regulation, says post-crisis banking rules make economy safer
The Federal Reserve chair rejected assertions from President Trump and top aides that regulators have gone too far and that the rules should be rolled back.
By Damian Paletta  •   Read more »
 
French President Macron has spent $30,000 on makeup services in just 3 months
France's political fresh face has some expensive help.
By James McAuley  •   Read more »
 
Wonkblog • Analysis
With the debt ceiling, President Trump is playing with fire
It wouldn't just crater the U.S. economy. It would take the rest of the world's financial system with it.
By Heather Long  •   Read more »
 

Texas in direct path of suddenly intensifying, ‘astounding’ Hurricane Harvey
It would be the first major hurricane to strike the U.S. since 2005; historic deluge looks likely
By Joel Achenbach  •   Read more »
 
Hurricane Harvey grows stronger as Texas braces for historic storm to make landfall Friday evening
Harvey expected to reach Category 3 intensity as it bears down on Corpus Christi
By Tim Craig  •   Read more »
 
At CIA, a watchful eye on Mike Pompeo, the president’s ardent ally
The director’s tendency to play down Russian interference in the 2016 election is seen as a nod to Trump.
By Greg Miller  •   Read more »
 
Mnuchin viewed eclipse from lawn of Fort Knox, Treasury says (updated)
Treasury officials rejected the notion that the secretary traveled there for the eclipse, noting that the trip had been planned for earlier in the month but was postponed when the Senate delayed its recess.
By Drew Harwell  •   Read more »
 
The Fix • Analysis
Alec Baldwin can’t quit Trump. Neither can the news media.
The media can't resist Trump either — not that ignoring the president is an option, but he attracts an inordinate amount of coverage.
By Callum Borchers  •   Read more »
 
 
Also Popular in Politics
 
Politics • Analysis
What Trump has undone
A look at where Trump has reversed the nation's course.
By Philip Bump  •  Read more »
 
 
Also Popular in Opinions
 
Trump’s rhetorical schizophrenia is easy to see through
The authentic president was on full display in Phoenix
By Michael Gerson  •  Read more »
 
 
Also Popular in Local
 
Falsely accused of satanic horrors, a couple spent 21 years in prison. Now they’re owed millions.
Children accused the Kellers of wearing white robes, serving blood-laced Kool Aid, cutting the heart out of a baby and using Satan's arm as a paintbrush, among other things.
By Avi Selk  •  Read more »
 

Also Popular in Sports
 
Disturbing video shows high school cheerleaders screaming as they’re forced to do splits
The coach, Ozell Williams, is a Guinness World Record holder and former contestant on "America's Got Talent."
By Andrew deGrandpre  •  Read more »
 
 
Also Popular in National
 
‘My pipe dream finally came true’: This woman won the second-largest Powerball jackpot ever
Mavis Wanczyk, the lone winner of the $758.7 million jackpot, called into work “and told them I will not be coming back.”
By Travis M. Andrews  •  Read more »
 
 
Also Popular in World

Raising the Minimum Wage Would Reduce Child Neglect Cases

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  • Lindsey Rose Bullinger
Newswise — BLOOMINGTON, Ind. -- Raising the minimum wage by $1 per hour would result in a substantial decrease in the number of reported cases of child neglect, according to a new study co-authored by an Indiana University researcher.
Congress is considering increases to the federal minimum wage of $7.25 per hour, and several state and city governments have enacted or are considering minimum wages higher than the federal rate. A $1 increase would result in 9,700 (9.6 percent) fewer reported cases of child neglect annually as well as a likely decrease in cases of physical abuse, said Lindsey Rose Bullinger of IU's School of Public and Environmental Affairs.
"Money matters," Bullinger said. "When caregivers have more disposable income, they're better able to provide a child's basic needs such as clothing, food, medical care and a safe home. Policies that increase the income of the working poor can improve children's welfare, especially younger children, quite substantially."
Bullinger and co-researcher Kerri Raissian of the University of Connecticut reached their conclusions by analyzing nine years of child maltreatment reports from the National Child Abuse and Neglect Data System. More than 30 states had minimum wages exceeding the federal requirement by an average of $1 during the study period, allowing the researchers to track changes in the number of reports to child protective service agencies with increases in the minimum wage.
The substantial decrease in child neglect cases is concentrated among toddlers and school-age children, but changes in the minimum wage had little impact on reports of neglect of teenagers. The researchers found no variation based on a child's race.
One measure before Congress would increase the wage from $7.25 to $10.10, and several cities are looking at wages as high as $15.
"We can't say for sure that there would be even fewer cases of child maltreatment if hourly pay were that high, but our findings point in that direction," Bullinger said.
Most research on the minimum wage has focused on its effects on the economy and poverty. Too often, policymakers have overlooked the impact on human health and well-being, Bullinger said. She directed a previous research project that found that increases in the minimum wage resulted in a drop-off in teen births.
Bullinger and Raissian's complete findings were published in the peer-reviewed article "Money matters: Does the minimum wage affect child maltreatment rates?" in the journal Children and Youth Services Review.

Supreme Court of India declares right to privacy as Fundamental right

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In a landmark decision that will affect the lives of all Indians, the Supreme Court unanimously declared that right to privacy was a Fundamental right under the Constitution.
A nine-judge Constitution bench headed by Chief Justice J S Khehar ruled that “right to privacy is an intrinsic part of Right to Life and Personal Liberty under Article 21 and entire Part III of the Constitution”.
The ruling on the highly contentious issue was to deal with a batch of petitions challenging the Centre’s move to make Aadhaar mandatory for availing the benefits of various social welfare schemes.
While the Centre had argued that right to privacy is not a Fundamental right, the petitioners had contended that when a citizen gives his biometrics and personal details to the government and when in turn it is used by commercial organisations, it is a breach of privacy.
The judgement was limited to the issue of right to privacy and the question whether Aadhaar violates right to privacy will be dealt with the five-judge bench which has been hearing the petitions since 2015.
In today’s judgement, other members of the bench comprising Justices J Chelameswar, S A Bobde, R K Agrawal, R F Nariman, A M Sapre, D Y Chandrachud, S K Kaul and S Abdul Nazeer also shared the same view.
The nine judges unanimously overruled the two earlier judgements of the apex court that right to privacy is not protected under the Constitution.
The bench overruled the M P Sharma verdict of 1950 and that of Kharak Singh of 1960.
The judgement in the Kharak Singh case was pronounced by eight judges and in M P Sharma it was delivered by six judges.
Justice Khehar, who read the operative portion of the judgement, said the subsequent verdicts pronounced after M P Sharma and Kharak Singh have laid down the correct position of the law.
Before pronouncing the judgement, the CJI said that among the nine judges some of them have authored different orders.
The verdict was reserved after hearing marathon arguments for six days over a period of three weeks, during which submissions were advanced in favour and against the inclusion of the right to privacy as a fundamental right.
The high-voltage hearing saw a battery of senior lawyers, including Attorney General K K Venugopal, Additional Solicitor General Tushar Mehta, Arvind Datar, Kapil Sibal, Gopal Subaramaniam, Shyam Divan, Anand Grover, C A Sundaram and Rakesh Dwivedi, advancing arguments either in favour or against the inclusion of right to privacy as a fundamental right.
Petitioners include former Karnataka High Court judge Justice K S Puttaswamy, first Chairperson of the National Commission for Protection of Child Rights and Magsaysay award recipient Shanta Sinha, feminist researcher Kalyani Sen Menon and others who have challenged the validity of the Aadhaar scheme on grounds of it being violative of the right to privacy.
Initially, on July 7, a three-judge bench had said that all issues arising out of Aadhaar should finally be decided by a larger bench and the CJI would take a call on the need for setting up a constitution bench.
The matter was then mentioned before CJI Khehar who set up a five-judge constitution bench to hear the matter.
However, the five-judge constitution bench on July 18 decided to set up a nine-judge bench to decide whether the right to privacy can be declared a fundamental right under the Constitution.
The decision to set up the nine-judge bench was taken to examine the correctness of two apex court judgements delivered in the cases of Kharak Singh and M P Sharma in which it was held that this right was not a fundamental right.
While reserving the verdict, the bench had voiced concern over the possible misuse of personal information in the public domain and said that protection of the concept of privacy in the all-pervading technological era was a “losing battle”.
During the arguments earlier, the bench had observed that the right to privacy cannot be an absolute right and the state may have some power to put reasonable restrictions.
The Attorney General had also contended that right to privacy cannot fall in the bracket of fundamental rights as there were binding decisions of larger benches that it was only a common law right evolved through judicial decisions.
The Centre had termed privacy as a “vague and amorphous” right which cannot be granted primacy to deprive poor people of their rights to life, food and shelter.
The high-profile arguments also saw the apex court asking searching questions about the contours of right to privacy in the digital age when personal information was randomly shared with all types of government and private entities.
The bench had wanted to know about the tests which could be used to regulate and enforce privacy right when there could be “legitimate or illegitimate” use of data.
Meanwhile, the petitioners had contended that the right to privacy was “inalienable” and “inherent” to the most important fundamental right which is the right to liberty.
They had said that right to liberty, which also included right to privacy, was a pre-existing “natural right” which the Constitution acknowledged and guaranteed to the citizens in case of infringement by the state.
The apex court had favoured overarching guidelines to protect private information in public domain and said there was a need to “maintain the core of privacy” as the notion of privacy was fast becoming irrelevant in an all-pervading technological era.
( Source – PTI )

Mitra-mandal Privacy Policy

This privacy policy has been compiled to better serve those who are concerned with how their  'Personally Identifiable Inform...