May 1, 2014 at 2:11 P.M. I will be writing soon about the horrible incident in Oklahoma as well as the global reaction to the event. It appears that Mr. Rabner will not be reappointed to the New Jersey Supreme Court and that he has ordered items pertaining to me -- whether accurate or not -- to be posted on-line, possibly in an effort to discredit these posts. It all helps now. I cannot say, at this time, whether Mr. McGill has been (or will be) disbarred and/or indicted. It certainly looks that way. Good luck, Mr. McGill. ("New Jersey's 'Ethical' Legal System" and "What did you know, Mr. Rabner, and when did you know it?" then "Solomon Dwek Gets 7 Year Sentence" and "John McGill, Esq., the OAE, and New Jersey Corruption.")
Keep the attacks coming, OAE and New Jersey Supreme Court. ("New Jersey's Office of Attorney Ethics.")
Eduardo Porter, "In the U.S., Punishment Comes Before the Crime," The New York Times, April 30, 2014, p. B1. ("The U.S. spent about $80 BILLION on its system of jails and prisons in 2010 -- about $260 for every resident of the nation." Nearly 2.2 million persons are incarcerated in America, as many as 50% may not be guilty of the crimes for which they are punished. Many -- especially female inmates -- will be raped during their incarceration. Most of the victims of the criminal justice system in America are African-Americans: "Foucault, Rose, Davis, and the Meanings of Prison.")
John Branch, "Clippers Owner Barred For Life Over Racist Talk," The New York Times, April 30, 2014, p. A1. (Mr. Sterling's comments are more reflective of the reality among persons in his economic strata and cultural group than the hypocrisy we claim to accept publicly.)
Erick Eckholm, "One Execution Botched, the State Delays the Next," The New York Times, April 30, 2014, p. A1. (A man's torture and death has become symbolic of America's treatment of African-American inmates that has generated protests from all over the world as well as expressions of revulsion for the American legal system's "structural injustices." "Nihilists in Disneyworld.")
Michael D. Shear, [G.O.P.] "The Rise of the Drone Master: Pop Culture Recasts Obama," The New York Times, April 30, 2014, p. A1. (3,000 to 6,000 innocent victims of drones motivated the UN report condemning U.S. drone policies as barbaric and violative of international law. The U.S. Senate will not require disclosures of precise numbers by the administration killing thousands of persons by way of drones. "The F.B.I. Wants Assata Shakur.")
Jennifer Shuessler, [Rachel Maddow?] "White House Sets A College Agenda On Sex Assaults," The New York Times, April 29, 2014, p. A1. ("Trenton's Nasty Lesbian Love-Fest.")
Thomas Zambito, "Communication Focus of Rutgers Sex Case," The Star Ledger, April 25, 2014, p. 1.
"A state judge yesterday cast doubt on the centerpiece of Rutgers-Newark professor Anna Stubblefield's defense of allegations she repeatedly assaulted a 33-year-old man doctors say has the mental capacity of an 18-month-old." ("Menendez Consorts With Underage Prostitutes.")
D.J. is a mentally-impaired man who lacks the capacity to consent to sexual conduct. Comparable lack of capacity can be produced in persons (anyone) through the injection of the so-called "date rape drug" or other tranquilizers as well as hypnosis, all of these methods are popular in campus rape cases afflicting 3-out-of-5 young women attending American colleges and universities, but also quite a few young men in similar situations. ("Trenton's Nasty Lesbian Love Fest!" and "Diana's Friend Goes to Prison" then "Judges Protect Child Molesters in Bayonne, New Jersey.")
There are an increasing number of cases in which women have used such methods to have sex with men (or other women) who are incapacitated, either because of illness or, temporarily, from drugging or alcohol abuse, or through more nefarious methods of domination. ("Marilyn Straus Was Right!" and "Deborah T. Poritz and Conduct Unbecoming to the Judiciary in New Jersey.")
Rape is always a crime of domination in which the most powerful sexual gratification is derived from "controlling or dominating the victim," usually, someone who is -- artificially or otherwise, and temporarily or otherwise -- severely impaired. ("Diana's Friend Goes to Prison!" and "Edward M. De Sear, Esq. and New Jersey's Filth.")
With regard to the welfare and/or rights of the mentally-impaired or unconscious victim of such an assault -- this is true regardless of whether the victim is permanently or temporarily impaired -- courts should be most vigilant to protect the incapacitated person's rights as opposed to protecting the rapist who may be politically-connected or, say, a fellow lesbian. ("Jennifer Velez is a Dyke Magnet!" and "New Jersey is the Home of Child Molesters" and "New Jersey's 'Ethical' Legal System.")
Judge Siobhan Teare of N.J.'s Superior Court concluded: " ... 'Even if you found D.J. has the ability to communicate, you can't overturn 20 years of his being determined to be incompetent,' Teare said during the hearing to gauge D.J.'s ability to communicate."
I find it difficult to believe that Ms. Stubblefield found a "relationship" with this severely mentally-disabled man, whose inability to communicate and intellectual level may be below the capacities of a one year-old, genuinely "consensual" on the part of D.J., the victim of her "seduction" efforts.
The essence of this "romance" involved the distinguished professor performing fellatio on a severely impaired man who could not fathom what was happening to him. I wonder whether Professor Stubblefield chatted about David Hume and Ludwig Wittgenstein during this event? I doubt it. ("An Open Letter to My Torturers in New Jersey, Terry Tuchin and Diana Lisa Riccioli.")
Professor Stubblefield's romantic techniques are worthy of Estela De La Cruz and Diana Lisa Riccioli, Lourdes Santiago and Nydia Hernandez, or Lilian Munoz and Mary Anne Kriko to say nothing, perhaps, of Deborah T. Poritz and Jaynee La Vecchia. ("Jaynee La Vecchia and Conduct Unbecoming to the Judiciary in New Jersey" and "New Jersey Welcomes Child Molesters.")
Women must be in the forefront of efforts to enforce consent laws that criminalize sexual violations of persons incapable of consenting to sex, under any circumstances, even when assailants claim to be lesbians. ("Why Jane Can't Read.")
"Stubblefield, a philosophy professor, has championed the cause of the disabled [irony?] through a controversial technique known as 'facilitated communication.' [Is that what they call sex at Rutgers?] She says the technique enables the disabled to communicate with the assistance of a 'facilitator,' who helps guide the individual's hand as it moves over a keyboard or steadies the body so he or she can strike the keys." (Again: "John McGill, Esq., the OAE, and New Jersey Corruption" and "Terry Tuchin, Diana Lisa Riccioli, and New Jersey's Agency of Torture.")
For unexplained reasons Jennifer Shuessler and The New York Times -- which ran a front page story concerning politically incorrect emails by Colin McGinn -- seems uninterested in allegations against a tenured professor at Rutgers University victimizing a severely mentally handicapped man.
Professor Stubblefield found no difficulty in "guiding" D.J.'s hand to parts of her anatomy. Is this episode an example of successful "facilitated communication"? Is Professor Stubblefield "ethical"? ("Have you no shame, Mr. Rabner?" and "Sybil R. Moses and Conduct Unbecoming to the Judiciary in New Jersey.")
Allegations that Ms. Stubblefield is a lesbian cannot be confirmed and seem somewhat irrelevant at the moment:
"Rutgers placed Stubblefield on administrative leave without pay and stripped her [as it were] of the title of chairwoman [sic.] of the philosophy department after the sexual assault allegations surfaced."
Ms. Stubblefield is said to be an "ethical relativist" and quite fond of behaviorism, also she is a devout atheist. Allegations that Ms. Stubblefield was among the participants in debates against me at The Philosophy Cafe cannot be confirmed at this time. Malbus? ("Why I am not an ethical realtivist" and "John Finnis and Ethical Cognitivism" then "New Jersey's Feces-Covered Supreme Court" and "New Jersey's Legal System is a Whore House" and, again, "Nihilists in Disneyworld.")
Ms. Stubblefield has been linked, romantically, to former Attorney General Anne Milgram and, no doubt, Diana Lisa Riccioli. Ms. Riccioli seems to have been linked romantically to most women in the Garden State. ("Another Mafia Sweep in New Jersey and Anne Milgram is Clueless" and "Dehumanization.")
Along with several items this week, this story makes it clear that violence, power, sex and all of the popular methods of dehumanization are still important aspects of America's paradoxical actual practices as opposed to our absurd public rhetoric concerning sex, status, gender-roles and power. ("Protecting Sex Workers" and "America's Love of Violence" then "Abuse and Exploitation of Women in New Jersey" and "Not One More Victim" and "'The Stepford Wives': A Movie Review.")
"Stubblefield, 44, is accused of repeatedly sexually assaulting D.J. in her Newark office in 2011. Essex County prosecutors say D.J. is so profoundly mentally disabled that he's incapable of giving his consent." ("'The Reader': A Movie Review.")
The solution for Professor Stubblefield is to have her friends continue "testing" D.J. until they can find some way to make the ludicrous claim that he is capable of consent, possibly while unconscious. The trial judge pointed out that D.J. is the victim who should not be raped, again, by way of these invalid tests. I know what that judge feels.
Do you speak to me of "ethics," Mr. Rabner? More censorship, New Jersey? How about posting more insults of me in order to change the subject? ("Stuart Rabner and Conduct Unbecoming to the Judiciary in New Jersey" and "N.J. Rabbi Charged With Child Molesting" then "David Samson Resigns!" and "Psychological Torture in the American Legal System.")
To continue torturing this helpless man is to make the state (all of us) accomplices to this horrible crime. It is time to acknowledge the truth about the monstrous evil that has taken place in this matter so that justice may be done. ("No More Cover-Ups and Lies, Chief Justice Rabner!")