Ethan Crumbley's parents sentenced for his actions | HAKE NEWS Wed 4-10-24
VIDEO YouTube | Rumble | X | BitChute | Odysee | Podcast jlptalk.com
Hake News for The Jesse Lee Peterson Show, Wednesday, April 10, 2024 AD
The Hake Report | Anchor Baby | Joel Friday | JLP Network
End of Hour 1: Aborsh drama in AZ // Ethan Crumbley parents sentence //
End of Hour 2: Severe weather! // Prez debate, media wants it! // Gaza drama // NOT READ: Boeing mess // EPA / Forever chemicals //
JLP Show Notes | Wed 4-10-24
Hake notes from JLP…
Wed 4-10-24 Hr 1 Experts on the Ethan Crumbley case…
Wed 4-10-24 Hr 2 Joel and Hake continue on Ethan Crumbley case… Calls (Cotton from WA, great call), Super Chats…
Wed 4-10-24 Hr 3 Manhood Hour: Anger, young man killed his mother because she annoyed him… // Danielle in WA … // Erica in CO (1st-timer) had a violent nightmare… likes she doesn’t have to call herself a sinner, asks about prayer and post-forgiveness anger…
HAKE NEWS, Hr 1 | Wed 4-10-24
Aborsh drama in AZ // Ethan Crumbley parents sentence //
Aborsh drama in AZ
(CNN & theSkimm Wed 4-10-24) Arizona is taking its law books back to the 1800s. (160-year-old law banning all abortions except in cases when “it is necessary to save” a pregnant person’s (sic) life. — Old laws are good laws!)
Yesterday, the Arizona Supreme Court upheld an 1864 ban on nearly all abortions in the state. (The law can be traced to as early as 1864 — before Arizona became a state (1912, it was Mexico in 1821, then we got it in 1848 after the Mexican-American War) — this law was was codified in 1901.) The law allows the procedure only if a pregnant person’s (sic) life is at risk and makes no exceptions for ape-ray or incest. Providers can face up to five years in prison if prosecuted. After the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, the dormant Civil War-era law was called into question. The state’s highest court decided that without the federal right to abortion, Arizona’s near-total ban could be enforced. If it goes into effect, the measure would change the state’s current law, which bans abortion after 15 weeks of pregnancy.
The justices put a 14-day hold on the ruling to allow a lower court to hear expected challenges to the law. For now, Planned Parenthood — the state’s largest abortion provider (mill) — said it will continue performing the procedure (baby-killing) as long as it’s allowed. Democratic lawmakers in the state and some Republicans called on the GOP-led legislature to take steps to repeal the law (FOR WHAT!). Abortion supporters hailed the ruling as a victory. Meanwhile, reproductive rights advocates say they have enough signatures to put a constitutional amendment on abortion on Arizona’s ballot this fall.
… Since SCOTUS’ 2022 decision (US Supreme Court struck down Roe v. Wade in June 2022), more than a dozen states have banned or limited abortion. Now, a law from before Arizona was even a state is coming into play to dictate access to modern reproductive health (what a euphemism!).
ETHAN CRUMBLEY
(CNN or theSkimm Wed 4-10-24) Who’s heading to prison… The parents of the Oxford High School shooter. Yesterday, a judge sentenced the Crumbleys to at least 10 years in prison. This marks the first time that parents are being held legally responsible for their child carrying out a mass school shooting. In 2021, the Crumbleys’ then 15-year-old son killed four students and injured seven others at a Michigan school. James and Jennifer Crumbley were each convicted on four counts of involuntary manslaughter earlier this year. Prosecutors argued the Crumbleys ignored signs their son was struggling with his mental health and gifted him the gun he used in the shooting.
HAKE NEWS, Hr 2 | Wed 4-10-24
Severe weather! // Prez debate, media wants it! // Gaza drama // NOT READ: Boeing mess // EPA / Forever chemicals //
Severe weather
(CNN or theSkimm Wed 4-10-24) A potent storm is unloading torrential rains and fierce winds on parts of the Southeast US. Over 30 million people across the region are under a severe storm threat today, while flood watches are in effect for more than 13 million people from Texas to Georgia amid heavy downpours, according to the Storm Prediction Center. Baseball-sized hail has been reported in Texas and at least one tornado overnight ripped through Raymond, Mississippi, about 20 miles west of Jackson. Along with the severe storm threat, meteorologists anticipate potential flash floods in parts of eastern Texas, northern Louisiana and western Mississippi, where isolated rainfall totals could exceed 6 inches.
Ratings-grubbers want a debate
(CNN or theSkimm Wed 4-10-24) Five of the major US television networks have banded together to draft a letter urging President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump to commit to participating in televised debates ahead of the 2024 election. According to a draft of the letter, NBC, CBS, ABC, Fox News and CNN urged the presumptive nominees “to publicly commit to participating in general election debates” to share “their visions for the future of our nation.” Biden has not publicly committed to debating Trump, although he has not ruled it out. “It depends on his behavior,” Biden said in March. Trump has said that he will debate “anytime, anywhere anyplace.” However, the presumptive Republican Party presidential nominee has a proven track record of flagrantly violating debate rules, hurling insults at his opponents, and making false claims.
Gaza drama
(CNN or theSkimm Wed 4-10-24) President Biden offered one of his sharpest rebukes of Israel’s handling of the war in Gaza, describing Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s approach to the conflict as a “mistake” and calling for a halt to the fighting. “I think what he’s doing is a mistake. I don’t agree with his approach,” Biden told Univision in an interview. The president’s comments add to mounting US criticism of Israel’s war in Gaza. Still, Netanyahu on Tuesday emphasized that “no force in the world” would stop Israeli troops from entering Rafah, where about 1.5 million Gazans are sheltering. Netanyahu said a date was set for Israel’s planned offensive but the Biden administration has dismissed it as bluster fueled by Netanyahu’s tenuous political standing at home, officials told CNN.
NOT READ:
Boeing mess
(CNN or theSkimm Wed 4-10-24) Where someone is blowing the whistle… Boeing. Yesterday, media outlets reported that federal authorities are investigating the aircraft maker after a whistleblower raised safety concerns about the manufacturing process. The whistleblower is an engineer, who has apparently worked at Boeing for more than a decade. He alleges that sections of the 787 Dreamliner fleet were assembled improperly and that it could cause the planes to break mid-flight over time. Boeing, which is already involved in another probe, denied the allegations and said it’s “fully confident in the 787 Dreamliner.” Congress is set to hear from the Boeing engineer next week.
Evil EPA
(CNN or theSkimm Wed 4-10-24) What the EPA wants to cut down on… Toxic air pollution. Yesterday, the Environmental Protection Agency issued a new rule ordering more than 200 chemical plants to cut back on toxic pollutants linked to cancer. This is the first time in nearly 20 years that the federal government is telling chemical plants to rein it in. The rule primarily targets two chemicals: Ethylene oxide, which helps sterilize medical devices, and chloroprene, which is used to make rubber in shoes. The EPA’s move will impact industrial plants in Texas, Louisiana, and West Virginia, where Black and Latino residents have faced higher rates of cancer and respiratory issues.
Forever chemicals
(CNN or theSkimm Wed 4-10-24) The Biden administration finalized the first national standard to limit dangerous “forever chemicals” found in nearly half of the drinking water in the US. Some environmentalists called the new rule a “huge breakthrough” and a “historic” change that can help protect human health. Water utilities will now have to filter out five of more than 12,000 types of individual forever chemicals. These synthetic chemicals are used to help products repel water and oil, but they linger in the environment and the human body. They are linked to a variety of health problems including cancer, thyroid disease, reproductive problems and heart damage among other issues. The chemicals are found in the blood of nearly 97% of all Americans, according to the CDC.
--
*Of mild Hake interest
**Of great Hake interest