Meet the enemy. This celebrated woman from the New York Times is not a crank, she is a revered writer- on the leading edge of culture. Where goes the New York Times, goes the future. Watch your penis, and stay masculine- you are going to need it.
This behavior is main stream. Allege violence, and use the court as a weapon against your husband. Imagine what would happen if a man alleged violence by his wife (Typically HE IS arrested)
Brig, Soren and Reidar- ….And you were told Mothers are wonderful people. Beware of Mummy. She is dangerous too, deranged and delusional.
Mum paid $2500 to oust ‘demon’ from daughter before alleged beheading
A Sydney court has heard a woman decapitated by her daughter paid a medium to rid her daughter of a “demon”. Warning: Graphic content
Police attend the scene in St Clair in 2019, after Rita Camilleri’s dismembered body was found on the footpath and inside her western Sydney home. Picture: David Swift.Source:News Corp Australia
WARNING: EXTREMELY GRAPHIC
Before she was allegedly beheaded by her daughter, Rita Camilleri had been so desperate she had paid a medium $2500 to “get the demon out” of Jessica Camilleri.
The trial of Jessica, who has pleaded not guilty to murdering her mother by way of mental illness, heard that her mother Rita had taken her to a female “spirit communicator”.
The medium, a “she wolf” on Queen Street, a major thoroughfare in the western Sydney suburb of St Mary’s, had quoted Rita Camilleri a sum of nearly $5000 to get rid of Jessica’s demon, the court heard.
“She paid $2500 but never got any service, I believe she was desperate for anything to help,” a friend of Rita and her other daughter, Kristy Torrisi, told the court.
Ms Camilleri’s trial heard earlier that the accused enjoyed horror movies including the Jeepers Creepers film franchise based on a flesh-eating demonic creature, known as the ‘creeper’, who devours people to replace its own body parts.
Gruesome scenes of the brutal beheading by a young woman of her mother have been heard in court on the first day of the trial of Jessica Camilleri for alleged murder.
The decapitated head of Rita Camilleri, 57, was found on the footpath near her home. Other body parts were found on the kitchen floor, including the tip of her nose, Crown Prosecutor Tony McCarthy told the court.
The trial by jury, before Justice Helen Wilson, heard that then 25-year-old Jessica Camilleri stabbed her mother more than 100 times, later saying, “I kept stabbing and stabbing and stabbing her, I took off her head”.
Ms Camilleri, now aged 27, has pleaded not guilty to murdering her mother at their western Sydney home in St Clair on July 21 last year.
It is not contested that Ms Camilleri did physically carry out the acts upon her mother, but it is the defence case that psychiatric illness caused a substantial impairment upon her mind at the time.
Mr McCarthy said that Jessica Camilleri “had a lengthy history of assaulting people” and her mother Rita had become “overly protective and defensive” in her role as carer of her daughter.
Jessica had harassed or threatened family members, as well as random people over the phone including threats to cut off people’s heads with a knife, he said.
The accused was also a fan of horror movies, with her favourite film being The Texas Chainsaw Massacre, the court heard .
“A feature of these movies was killing people violently and dismembering their bodies,” Mr McCarthy said.
Jessica Camilleri, 26, who police allege used several knives to decapitate her mother Rita Camilleri, 57, in St Clair in 2019. Picture: Facebook.Source:Supplied
Rita Camilleri’s body was found at her home in St Clair in western Sydney in July 2019.Source:Supplied
After the attack on her mother, he said that Jessica had called triple-0 and claimed she was acting “in self-defence”.
Jessica claimed her mother had grabbed her by the hair inside the house and tried to stab her first.
“You’ll hear the accused say, ‘I just kept stabbing and stabbing and stabbing her, I took off her head’,” Mr McCarthy told the jury.
The court heard multiple knives were used in the attack and some had broken off before Rita Camilleri’s head was found out the front of a neighbour’s house.
Ms Camilleri was found on the street outside her home covered in blood and holding a bottle of water when police arrived.
“She immediately told them she had killed her mother and pointed out the head that was on the footpath,” Mr McCarthy said.
Rita Camilleri, 57, was protective of her troubled daughter.Source:Supplied
Jessica Camilleri had a history of threatening people.Source:Supplied
In a subsequent police interview, the court heard, Ms Camilleri alleged there had been an argument and then she had stabbed her mother an estimated 85 times.
“The accused said she wanted to give the deceased a taste of her own medicine,” he said.
Defence counsel Nathan Steel asked the jury to put emotion and sympathy to one side and decide the case based on the evidence.
“Due to the effects of her mental conditions, she had an impaired capacity at the time of the events,” he said.
The court heard evidence from Jessica’s sister who agreed that the accused had been diagnosed with disorders including dyslexia and attention deficit disorder and had been bullied by other students at school.
When the girls’ father was no longer living with the family, Jessica’s behaviour worsened because “Dad had control over her and discipline” and that was no longer there.
This little bit of wisdom can teach you a lot about when others are angry with you. Rarely does the anger have to do with what you said, or how you acted. Most people are angry with you if they feel jealous or resentful of your success.
Therefore people will HATE you if you are more beautiful.
Therefore people will HATE you if you are stronger.
Therefore people will HATE you if you are smarter.
Therefore people will HATE you if you are more courageous.
Psychological research confirms this. It is not greed, money or bad behavior. And anger management problem is a emotional problem with resentment.
France bans discrimination against regional accents
Assemblée Nationale makes glottophobiean offence along with racism, sexism and other outlawed bigotry
Jean Castex, the French prime minister, is often accused of sounding ‘a bit rugby’. Photograph: ReutersKim Willsher in ParisFri 27 Nov 2020 17.55 GMT
In France, it’s not what you say, it’s the way that you say it. When the prime minister, Jean Castex, opens his mouth, he is often accused of being “a bit rugby” – he comes from the south-west, where the sport is popular. Others with regional accents sound like “they should be reading the weather”.
Now the French have not only come up with a word for this kind of prejudice – glottophobie – but a new law banning it. The Assemblée Nationale has adopted legislation making linguistic discrimination an offence along with racism, sexism and other outlawed bigotry.
The legislation, approved by 98 votes to three, was the subject of acute debate in the house. Among those who voted against was Jean Lassalle, a former presidential candidate, the head of the Libertés et Territoires (Freedom and Land) party and a well-known orator.
“I’m not asking for charity. I’m not asking to be protected. I am who I am,” he said in a south-west accent with knife-blunting properties.
The justice minister, Éric Dupond-Moretti, whose booming voice is familiar to courtrooms across the land, said he was “super-convinced” of the necessity of the law.
Christophe Euzet, who proposed the law, said accents were a grave matter. “At a time when visible minorities benefit from the legitimate concern of public powers, the audible minorities are the poor cousins of the social contract based on equality,” he said.
Several MPs, including one from French Polynesia and another the daughter of parents repatriated to France around Algerian independence in the 1960s, aired their accents. Other parliamentarians complained that many broadcasters with strong regional accents were pigeonholed into reporting on rugby matches or delivering the weather.
It is not recorded whether the Moroccan-born, Paris-adopted, hard-left firebrand Jean-Luc Mélenchon contributed to the debate, but he can count himself lucky having narrowly escaped potentially facing a €45,000 fine and three years in jail for blatant glottophobie. When a journalist with a strong southern accent addressed him recently, he replied: “Can someone ask me a question in French? And make it a bit more understandable.”