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I actually went and googled this. The department of Justics actually declined to prosecute the alleged rapist.

"abcnews.go.com"

The alleged rapist admitted to making sexual advances towards Mrs. Barker, which is completely unprofessional, but why wouldn't she sue the DoS? After all, this guy was one of theirs. I don't know that KBR could have done anything other than physically extricate her from the situation. They certainly don't have any authority or control of DoS employees.

"When she complained to them, they then had a responsibility to resolve the situation."

But so did she. In my line of work, if I feel that my job will put me in an unsafe situation, I call kings X. Not going to do it. She could have been on the next flight out of Baghdad. for whatever reason, she was not. maybe KBR should sue her for costing them $2.93 in legal fees...

"Whoever came up with that is a scumbag."

Uh, it was me who came up with it, and given my experience with rape in these kinds of situations, this woman had ample opportunity to squash any sort of serious problem. Since I'm already a dirtbag, I'm going to play the devil's advocate and offer another, not unsubstantiated possiblity.

This lady signs on to go to Baghdad as a contractor. While there, she suddenly finds herself the object of the advances of one or more men, something she may not be used to, and something she finds quite flattering. One night she is hanging out with a new friend, and things get a little heated. They end up having sex. Being a married woman, she instantly regrets the move, confessing to her husband while claiming that it was forced.

If she was raped, why not file a criminal complaint? if it were me, my wife, or one of my two daughters, I would rather see the guy put in jail than have to pay me a currently undisclosed sum of money. Many State Dept guys are Ivy League grads with no shortage of cash. They can afford to rape if the only cost is monetary. It's unliekly that profit was ever a motivating factor for this woman, more likely she just wanted to convince her husband that the sex hadn't been consensual, and that she had reamined faithful.

This is a story you hear on college campuses all the time. Freshmen girls go to their first frat party, get drunk, hook up, and then realize they've cheated on the highschool boyfriend that they'd sworn they were in love with. Unable to confess that it had been consensual, they claim that the fratboy used undue coersion in the hope that said boyfriend would be more forgiving. Until they do the exact same thing again.

Protecting air safety is essential, but professional screening at airports already provides for it. Giving the TSA as an official agency the additional authority to decide who gets to go where reaches beyond safety into overextended governmental power. This newly minted "Secure Flight" rule fundamentally imbalances long-standing citizens' rights both to travel and to be left alone. If your name appears among hundreds of thousands on "watchlists," you assert that the government should not require ID to fly, you don't want to reveal your date of birth for concern about identity theft, or you don't choose to declare your gender, you can stay home.

By combining the requirement for government photo IDs in order to fly with checking government watchlists including potentially every passenger, "Secure Flight" puts the federal government into the business of licensing travel. All travelers will need government OK in order to board a flight, or take a cruise. What the government can allow one day, it can forbid the next. All things considered, isn't this a higher-tech and later-day version of South African domestic passports or eastern European checkpoints? In fact, because of the high technological capacity of the U.S. version, aren't its implications for travel control of plane, train, bus and subway travel much more far reaching? It's incredible that something like this is happening relatively unrecognized in America.

While some people consider the requirement to show ID or reveal a birth date a small trade-off for security, what is at stake here is the right to travel. That fundamental freedom of movement appears in the Articles of Confederation in the right to freely enter and leave all the states of the then small union. It was so fundamentally a part of American citizenship that the privileges and immunities clauses of the Constitution included it without explicitly mentioning it again for the more perfect union. With a large and expansive nation now ranging from Hawaii and Alaska to Washington DC, that right to travel nationally, and petition the distant government, is even more fundamental. Yet some courts maintain that if you can walk, you don't need the right to fly. People have the right to walk around freely without carrying a national ID; why do they have to show one to travel? The Supreme Court has yet to rule on the scope of the right to travel but lower courts have tended to restrict it more narrowly than the Founding Fathers would approve.

Clearly, the air ID and "Secure Flight" rules mean you cannot travel any distance reachable only by air without official permission. Moreover, the system can easily be extended to Amtrak as a government railroad, which already requires government ID in order to purchase a ticket. It can further be extended to urban rapid-transit networks tied to travel cards, and private inter-city buses requiring IDs to buy tickets or board coaches. These are the bases for an internal passport system in the U.S.

There are a lot of practical issues here too. The assumption that any "no-fly" list includes all potential wrong doers is implausible, and first time criminals would by definition not appear until it's too late. Many people on these lists are there because their names are similar to those who are suspect for other reasons. There are perhaps a few hundred people whose past activities merit keeping them off the streets, let alone flights; the small group is better caught through search warrants and good police work before they come to the airport. To demand that 750 million annual passengers have to get government permissions to fly creates a needle in-a-haystack approach to locating a few potential wrongdoers

Secure Flight, Insecure Travel Rights

So what? .... WTF does that have to do with anything?

#76 | Posted by RingMaster

From another article. Maybe this will clear things up for you a bit:

Manipulation of evidence:

I've just completed Mike's Nature trick of adding in the real temps to each series for the last 20 years (ie from 1981 onwards) amd from 1961 for Keith's to hide the decline.

Private doubts about whether the world really is heating up:

The fact is that we can't account for the lack of warming at the moment and it is a travesty that we can't. The CERES data published in the August BAMS 09 supplement on 2008 shows there should be even more warming: but the data are surely wrong. Our observing system is inadequate.

Suppression of evidence:

Can you delete any emails you may have had with Keith re AR4?

Keith will do likewise. He's not in at the moment minor family crisis.

Can you also email Gene and get him to do the same? I don't have his new email address.

We will be getting Caspar to do likewise.

Fantasies of violence against prominent Climate Sceptic scientists:

Next
time I see Pat Michaels at a scientific meeting, I'll be tempted to beat
the crap out of him. Very tempted.

Attempts to disguise the inconvenient truth of the Medieval Warm Period (MWP):

Phil and I have recently submitted a paper using about a dozen NH records that fit this category, and many of which are available nearly 2K backI think that trying to adopt a timeframe of 2K, rather than the usual 1K, addresses a good earlier point that Peck made w/ regard to the memo, that it would be nice to try to "contain" the putative "MWP", even if we don't yet have a hemispheric mean reconstruction available that far back.

And, perhaps most reprehensibly, a long series of communications discussing how best to squeeze dissenting scientists out of the peer review process. How, in other words, to create a scientific climate in which anyone who disagrees with AGW can be written off as a crank, whose views do not have a scrap of authority.

"This was the danger of always criticising the skeptics for not publishing in the "peer-reviewed literature". Obviously, they found a solution to thattake over a journal! So what do we do about this? I think we have to stop considering "Climate Research" as a legitimate peer-reviewed journal. Perhaps we should encourage our colleagues in the climate research community to no longer submit to, or cite papers in, this journal. We would also need to consider what we tell or request of our more reasonable colleagues who currently sit on the editorial boardWhat do others think?"

"I will be emailing the journal to tell them I'm having nothing more to do with it until they rid themselves of this troublesome editor.""It results from this journal having a number of editors. The responsible one for this is a well-known skeptic in NZ. He has let a few papers through by Michaels and Gray in the past. I've had words with Hans von Storch about this, but got nowhere. Another thing to discuss in Nice !"

"Did McDonald's arrange housing in a dorm filled with men?"

Yes. They should have hired a buch of local Iraqi women to play the role as KBR employees to even out the man/woman ratio. Or maybe they should have built her a separate, women only dorm. In either case, this it was a situation she was aware of, and had she been uncomfortable with it, she should have left.

"This would be correct. KBR had an obligation to provide her safety."

She was in a war zone. Does KBR have an obligation to provde for the safety of all employees? If so, it would seem to me that the families of all KBR employees killed in Iraq would have much stronger lawsuits than this woman did.

Under the UCMJ rape during a time of war is punishable by death, and if they stuck the State Dept in front of a firing squad, so be it. But the begs an even better question. Where is the rapist? More importantly, and it's not defined here, was he found guilty of rape? According to the headline, she only claimed she was raped. Based on the information provided here, there never was any criminal suit filed against the attacker, only a civil suit. the details of which have been withheld. Curious.

A few years ago there was a case where a female cadet at the Air Force Academy was being brought up on charges that she had violated the institutions's code of ethics. During the hearings, she made the claim that, as a freshman (she was an upper classman at this point, she had been raped by a senior. That senior had gone on to graduate and was in pilot training in Missisppi. he was pulled out of class and placed on an administrative hold while the Air Force investigated. Meanwhile, the charges against the female cadet were substaniated, and she was kicked out of the Air Force. It was later determined that she was using the rape claim as a means of deflecting attention away from her own actions, and on to someone else. Four years later, the accused rapist, was finally cleared. Of course by this point he was four years behind the rest of his peers. His career, not to mention his reputation, had been severly damaged by a woman who under oath had admitted that she could see how he could have contrued it to be consensual sex...becuase she had provided consent.

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