User:WinnieLuna876

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Genie's father had an extremely low tolerance for noise, to the point of refusing to have a working television or radio in the house. He almost never allowed his wife or son to speak and viciously beat them if they did so without permission, particularly forbidding them to speak to or around Genie. Any conversation between them was therefore very quiet and out of Genie's earshot, preventing her from hearing any meaningful amount of language.[4][12][7] Her father kept Genie's room extremely dark, and the only available stimuli were the crib, the chair, curtains on each of the windows, three pieces of furniture, and two plastic rain jackets hanging on the wall.

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iPhone Cases About 7,500 referrals were made to the scheme in 2015 16 the equivalent of 20 a day, showed figures obtained from the National Police Chiefs' Council (NPCC) under a Freedom of Information request.Of the people referred to the scheme, set up in 2005 in the wake of the 7/7 London bombings, one in 10 were deemed to be vulnerable to terrorism and were referred to Prevent's Channel programme.'Cycle of aggravation'Mr Cole, who is the NPCC lead for Prevent, said the scheme was about "putting an arm around" people at risk of radicalisation."We try and divert, allow people the opportunity to help them make better decisions. It's absolutely fundamental," he said."It has enabled iPhone Cases us to try and help stabilise communities and stop people getting us into a cycle of aggravation."He cited a case in which people referred a young man from the Midlands who had been considering travelling to fight in Syria.Prevent groups worked with the man and he decided not to go, Mr Cole told BBC Radio's 5 live."The people he was travelling to meet, we believe, are dead. This is very real stuff," he said.In an interview with the Press Association, he cited another case of a young man from the north of England who was identified as expressing right wing views.He was referred to Prevent and a programme was put in place were he met people from other races and backgrounds through football.This changed some of his thinking about those groups and probably made him "a better citizen", Mr Cole said.Asked about the nine out of 10 found not to be at risk of extremism, Mr Cole told the BBC they were often found to be vulnerable in other ways.He said the process was "calm, mature and thoughtful", adding: "I think we'd all agree it was a good thing at a time when the terror threat level is at severe."But Raheel Mohammed, director of Maslaha, a charity that aims to tackle inequalities facing Muslims, said too many of the referrals were unsubstantiated.He said the public was not hearing about the impact of a wrong referral on those individuals, their families and the wider community.The government's independent reviewer of terrorism legislation, David Anderson, said troubled people had "undoubtedly" been helped by the strategy but it had suffered from bad PR.He called for iPhone Cases more openness from the government, better engagement with communities and an independent review of Prevent."I could see the logic in having an honest broker, trusted by Parliament, prepared to go to the media and explain what they were seeing, who could demystify what at the moment is seen as a secret and for that reason by some people, rather threatening strategy," he told BBC's World At One.Miqaad Versi, of the Muslim Council of Britain, said an independent review should take place, "at the very minimum".He cited a case in which a Koran in a young boy's bedroom was considered a sign of radicalisation, and asked why Muslim communities appeared to be being targeted.Liberal Democrat home affairs spokesman and former Metropolitan Police commander, Lord Brian Paddick, said Prevent needed to be scrapped and replaced with a new community led programme."The Muslim community rightly feels unfairly targeted by this policy and yet community confidence is crucial to its success," he said.Journeys to SyriaOf the 7,500 referrals made to the Prevent scheme in 2015 16, a quarter were found to be vulnerable but not at risk of involvement in terrorism iPhone Cases..
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