Society's ChildS


Eye 2

Defense contractor Northrop Grumman accused of fueling false 'revenge porn' allegations against CIA whistleblower John Kiriakou

northrup grummon defence contractor building
Northrup Grummon headquarters
Northrop Grumman, the third largest military contractor in the world, was allegedly involved in falsely accusing CIA whistleblower John Kiriakou of "revenge porn."

The false accusation allegedly resulted in his arrest, improper charges, and a police raid that violated his privacy rights.

A civil lawsuit further claims the false accusation contributed to the "loss of contact" with his three children, who are eight, 13, and 15 years old.

He seeks damages from Northrop, John Bamford, an Arlington County police detective, and his ex-wife Heather Kiriakou.

Comment:


Cult

Cancel these! 12 offensive things our new CULTURAL COMMISSARS should address ASAP

columbus statue vandalized head removed
© Getty Images/Tim BradburyA statue depicting Christopher Columbus is seen with its head removed at Christopher Columbus Waterfront Park on June 10, 2020 in Boston, Massachusetts.
Colston and Columbus have already fallen, and Rhodes doesn't look to be far behind, but why stop there? For the revolution to succeed, we must erase all problematic history - that way we can be certain never to repeat it again.

A cultural revolution appears to be gathering pace across the West. Government mandated lockdowns, mass hysteria and now race riots seem to be par for the course in daily life, as civilisation collectively takes leave of its senses. Masked mobs are now marauding unmolested, vandalising and looting towns as police officers, terrified of being accused of being racist, stand idly by allowing cities across America and Europe to descend into anarchy. Collectively we appear to have sided with Bane rather than Batman in The Dark Knight Rises.

To paraphrase Tom Hardy's masked villain we must "free (Britain/America) from the corrupt! The rich! The oppressors of generations who have kept you down with myths of opportunity, and we give it back to you... the people. (The West) is yours. None shall interfere. Do as you please."

So, with a view to helping this exciting new wave of iconoclasm continue on its way, here's a handy list of things we aren't allowed to enjoy anymore. Be warned: dissenters will be cancelled.

Comment: While obviously satire to the normal-minded, one can't help but worry that Birchall's tongue-in-cheek list is not going to give some lunatics ideas about the next opportunity to virtue-signal.


Pistol

The mysterious case of Raz from CHAZ - BLM warlord owns multiple guns, luxury cars, millions in properties, and is supported by Dubai government

raz simon from CHAZ
Solomon Samuel Simone (aka RAZ from CHAZ or CHOP) is the proclaimed warlord of CHAZ, the multi-block area located in Seattle. Raz hates America but owns multiple guns, luxury automobiles, millions in real estate.

More importantly, Raz is supported by the Islamic government in Dubai.

The leader of CHAZ, Warlord Raz Simone was previously identified running guns in the newly formed country in the center of Seattle. Today we have more on RAZ thanks to the work of Yaacov Apelbaum.

Comment: One wonders if the occupants of CHAZ are aware of who this self-styled warlord really is.

See also:


Dollar

"The Black Lives Matter Foundation" raised millions. It's not affiliated with the Black Lives Matter movement

blm donations
© BuzzFeed News; Getty Images
Employees of Apple, Google, and Microsoft have raised millions of dollars for the Black Lives Matter Foundation thinking it's the international racial justice movement seeking to end police brutality. That couldn't be further from the truth.

When Elena Iliadis searched for "Black Lives Matter" on GoFundMe, the popular online fundraising platform, she didn't do much research on the first verified foundation that popped up.

Inspired to help the cause, the 19-year-old Georgetown University sophomore and her a capella group, the Phantoms, raised nearly $1,100 for what they thought was the global movement to bring racial justice and defund the police. It wasn't until she was contacted by BuzzFeed News that the student learned her group had been collecting money for a completely unaffiliated cause.

Comment: See also:


Wolf

Trump's executive order misses the point: Police reform (or any other measure) will not appease the 'revolution' mob

black live matter BLM protest
© Joshua S. Kelly-USA TODAY SportsBlack Lives Matter protest in Clemson, South Carolina, June 13, 2020
President Donald Trump's executive order about police moves a lot of things in the right direction. It also won't matter in the least, because police (mis)conduct is only a pretext for the current crisis, rather than its cause.

On Tuesday, Trump put forth improved federal guidelines that would drastically limit the use of chokeholds, give police more nonlethal weapons to cut down on shootings, fund more social workers, and condition federal aid on certifications in de-escalation and proper use of force policies.

In ordinary circumstances, all of those would be welcome steps towards reducing police brutality and improving both officer safety and that of the general public. These aren't ordinary circumstances, however.

NPC

Seattle Mayor Durkan refers to CHAZ as a 'block party', plans to let anarchists enjoy their 'summer of love'

surveillance border CHAZ
© JASON REDMOND/AFP via Getty ImagesA protester uses a scope on top of a barricade to look for police approaching the newly created Capitol Hill Autonomous Zone (CHAZ) in Seattle, Washington on June 11, 2020.
The bluest skies you've ever seen in Seattle
And the hills the greenest green in Seattle
Like a beautiful child growing up free and wild
Full of hopes and full of fears
Full of laughter full of tears
Full of dreams to last the years in Seattle
In Seattle


So Perry Como sang in the late '60s. Now it seems the days of beautiful children growing up free and wild are returning to Seattle. Like other American cities over the last three weeks, Seattle saw protests rapidly become violent clashes with police. This ugliness waxed and waned for a fortnight until police withdrew from their East Precinct Building, effectively ceding the surrounding area to the protestors. Barriers were erected around it by activists who initially christened the new territory the Capitol Hill Autonomous Zone (CHAZ), and later renamed it the Capitol Hill Occupied Protest (CHOP). As their quasi-manifesto of June 9th put it, they had "liberated Free Capitol Hill in the name of the people of Seattle."

Now a tense and potentially dangerous stand-off has developed. What does the city administration intend to do? On June 11th, the Democratic mayor of the city, Jennifer Durkan, was interviewed on CNN by a sympathetic Chris Cuomo. Cuomo began by asking if Durkan had lost control of her own city's streets.

Durkan: We've got four blocks in Seattle that you just saw pictures of that is more like a block party atmosphere. It's not an armed takeover, it's not a military junta. We will make sure that we can restore this. But we have block parties and the like in this part of Seattle all the time... There is no threat right now to the public and we're looking, we're taking that very seriously, we're meeting with businesses and residents...


Cuomo: The counter will be block parties don't take over a municipal building, let alone a police station and destroy it, basically thumbing their nose at any sense of civic control. Do you believe that you have control of your city, and that you would be able to clear those streets? Because you haven't.

Comment:


Red Flag

Police officers all over America are quitting their jobs because of the George Floyd protests

Protester and police
© Getty Images
Even during the best of times, being a police officer in one of America's major cities is extremely stressful, and these are definitely not the best of times. In 2020, the entire profession has become the target for a vast nationwide outpouring of anger and hatred. It doesn't matter if you are a good officer or a bad officer, because everyone is being lumped together. Every single person that puts on a police uniform understands that they are putting their lives on the line every single day, but now that is even more true than ever.

All over the U.S., police officers are being attacked, abused and targeted for violence, and I can't even imagine what it is like to never be able to let your guard down because someone could assault you at any moment. And even if you never get physically attacked, most officers must still endure the mental torment of knowing that vast numbers of people want them dead simply because they have chosen to serve in the police. For Winchester, Tennessee police officer Dustin Elliott, that was one of the main factors that caused him to quit his job:
"I thought long and hard about whether or not I should even make a video, but I feel like that today we all kinda need to understand where law enforcement is and the crusade against us that is weighing on every officer's heart in America right now," he said.

It's devastating to be a police officer right now, and to know what's going on and how people feel about you and the things that you do in this job, the sacrifices that you make," Elliott added. "There's a lot that would rather see you dead just because of the uniform that you wear.
I have never seen as much hatred for the police as we are seeing right now, and that is incredibly sad.

Yes, there have been abuses, but most police officers have never had any problems and serve their communities with distinction.

Snakes in Suits

BLM: California Assembly passes reparations bill task force

Shirley Weber
© Justin Sullivan/Getty ImagesCalifornia State Assemblymember Shirley Weber (D-San Diego)
A bill creating a task force to study how reparations could be implemented statewide passed the California Assembly this week as Black Lives Matter protests across the U.S. force leaders to reckon with the country's history of racism.

KEY FACTS

The bill would establish an eight-member task force to study how reparations could be awarded and who would be eligible for them in an effort to address the wrongs of slavery in the U.S.

The measure was passed 60-14 with bipartisan support. The bill still has to pass the State Senate and be signed into law by Governor Gavin Newsom.

If the bill becomes law, California would be the first state to create an official task force studying the issue.
Assemblywoman Shirley Weber, the author of the bill, said:
"The discriminatory practices of the past echo into the everyday lives of today's Californians... We seem to recognize that justice requires that those who have been treated unjustly need the means to make themselves whole again."

Comment: The 'means' to make themselves whole again...with money? The message - if you protest too much we will pay you to stop.


Arrow Up

Supreme Court upholds pipeline permit for gas line tunnel under Appalachian Trail, but problems remain

Appalachian Trail
© UnknownAppalachian Trail near Asheville, North Carolina
The Supreme Court on Monday upheld a permit for a controversial $8 billion gas pipeline that would tunnel below the famed Appalachian Trail.

The 7-2 opinion handed a defeat to environmental groups who challenged the Atlantic Coast Pipeline (ACP), which would carry natural gas some 600 miles from West Virginia to North Carolina.

The decision to uphold the permit resolves a complex bureaucratic dispute involving multiple U.S. environmental agencies and overlapping legal authorities. The justices held that the U.S. Forest Service (USFS) had been duly authorized to greenlight the project, rejecting the challengers' claim that power over the affected land lay elsewhere.

The dispute stemmed from the Department of the Interior's decision to make the National Park Service (NPS) responsible for the Appalachian Trail. Prior to the court's Monday decision, the question of whether this move also transferred authority of lands underneath the trail had been an open one.

But Justice Clarence Thomas, writing for the majority, said the administrative arrangement did not remove the USFS's power to permit construction under the trail.

Clipboard

'Information Heros'? Reporters Without Borders acknowledges WH press corps for pandemic coverage

WH press Trump
© Reuters/Kevin LamarqueWhite House press corps journalists bravely overcoming adversity
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) has praised journalists who distinguished themselves with courageous work on the Covid-19 pandemic - whistleblowers and reporters who were jailed and persecuted - and the White House press corps.

The press organization published a list of 30 "information heroes" whose "courage, perseverance or capacity to innovate has helped to circulate reliable and vital information" during the coronavirus outbreak which has infected close to eight million people worldwide as of Monday.

Among the jailed and persecuted whistleblowers, suppressed media outlets, and courageous truth-tellers who endured real adversity in their efforts to cover the pandemic, the decision to include the entire White House Correspondents' Association raised a few eyebrows.