Society's ChildS


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Gender discontent is just a phase for most kids, a new study shows. Will transition pushers leave those kids alone?

LGBT
© Getty Images/Vladimir Vladimirov
Thousands of children will likely regret going under the knife to change their sex as the majority of gender-confused kids have been found to shed the confusion by the time they are fully grown adults.

Search anywhere on social media these days and you'll find endless chatter on the subject of young people ruminating over a sex change. Coming at a critical time in a child's development, the messaging can sow tremendous confusion. And what has been missing from the conversation is how many of these young people eventually grow out of their feelings over time.

One such adolescent, 'Rebecca,' was 11 years old when she began to identify as transgender. At the age of 13, at the emotionally sensitive time when puberty sets in, she broke the unsettling news to her friends and family. That same year, the doctors prescribed her puberty blockers and testosterone. At the tender age of 16, she went under the knife for a double mastectomy. Less than a year later, however, she understood that she'd made a terrible mistake.

Family

New York grand jury releases scathing report against Child Protection Services Agency

Adam Montgomery Harmony Montgomery
© Courtesy of Manchester Police DepartmentThis combination of photos show Adam Montgomery (L) and Harmony Montgomery.
The investigation followed the 2019 murder of 8-year-old Tommy Valva and comes after a similar finding against CPS agencies in the murder of Harmony Montgomery.

The result of a six-month special grand jury investigation into the murder of 8-year-old Tommy Valva by his father has revealed another disturbing instance of abuse of power by child protection agencies and the family court system.

The New York boy died in 2019 from hypothermia after his father, an NYPD cop, inflicted a series of cruel punishments on him. He made the child strip naked, lay on a cold cement garage floor, and hosed him down with cold water. Michael Valva was convicted of his son's murder in 2022.

Comment: See also


Shoe

College athletics body NAIA bans trans athletes from women's sports

naia basketball court
© APFreed-Hardeman guard Quan Lax wearing the championship banner after winning the NAIA men's national championship basketball game, 2024The NAIA is banning transgender athletes.
The National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics announced Monday that it has barred transgender athletes from competing in women's sports.

"Only NAIA student-athletes whose biological sex is female may participate in NAIA-sponsored
female sports," the body said in its announcement of the decision.

The announcement later clarified that "biological sex is defined by distinguishing characteristics and can be supported by birth certificate or signed affidavit."

Comment: The tide seems to be turning as more and more athletic associations are showing some common sense. To pit female athletes against biological males is, quite simply, unfair.

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Black Magic

Switzerland climate policy violated human rights, Strasbourg court rules

Strasbourg, KlimaSeniorinnen, Senior Women for Climate Protection
© REUTERS/Christian HartmannMembers of Senior Women for Climate Protection react after the court verdict in Strasbourg, April 9, 2024.
The European Court of Human Rights has ruled that the Swiss Government had violated the human rights of its citizens by failing to do enough to combat climate change. Reuters has more.
The European Court of Human Rights's (ECtHR) decision on the case brought by more than 2,000 elderly Swiss women set a precedent that will resonate across Europe and beyond for how courts deal with a growing trend of climate litigation.

But in a sign of the complexities of climate litigation, the court rejected two similar climate-related cases, one brought by a group of six Portuguese young people against 32 European governments and another by a former mayor of a low-lying French coastal town.

The Swiss women, known as KlimaSeniorinnen, argued their Government's climate inaction put them at risk of dying during heatwaves.

In her ruling, Court President Siofra O'Leary said the Swiss Government had failed to meet targets for cutting greenhouse gas emissions and that there had been gaps in its domestic regulatory framework.

"It is clear that future generations are likely to bear an increasingly severe burden of the consequences of present failures and omissions to combat climate change," O'Leary said. ...

The cases before the 17-judge panel in Strasbourg, France, are among the increasing number of climate lawsuits brought by communities against governments that hinge on human rights law. ...

Global civic movement Avaaz said the court's Swiss ruling had opened a new chapter in climate litigation.

"(It) sets a crucial legally binding precedent serving as a blueprint for how to successfully sue your own government over climate failures," Ruth Delbaere, legal campaigns director at Avaaz, said.

The verdicts, which cannot be appealed, could compel the Swiss federal Government to take greater action on reducing emissions, including revising its 2030 emissions reductions targets to get in line with the Paris Agreement goal of limiting warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 Fahrenheit).

Comment: The age of skepticism is over. The time of the orc climate alarmist has come.


Bad Guys

Washington's support for Israel threatens Palestinian Christians, priest tells US journalist Tucker Carlson

Christian Palestinians
Members of Gaza's small Christian community were among the thousands of civilians killed in the Palestinian enclave as a result of Washington's support for Israel in its war with Hamas, a pastor from Bethlehem has told journalist Tucker Carlson.

In an interview posted on X (formerly Twitter) by the former Fox News host on Tuesday, Reverend Munther Isaac of the Evangelical Lutheran Christian Church also criticized Christian leaders in the United States for failing to oppose the destruction in Gaza.
"One of the biggest problems we are facing right now is the deterioration of our [Christian community] numbers," Isaac told Carlson. "People keep leaving because of the political reality. Life under a very harsh Israeli military occupation is difficult to bear," he explained.
Palestinian Christians "are probably disproportionately affected by all of this because of our small numbers as a religious community. Anything that happens impacts us severely," the pastor said.

Comment: For the full Tucker Carlson interview:


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No Entry

US to ban Russian anti-virus software - CNN

Kaspersky bldg.
© Sputnik/Kirill Kallinikov
Washington is planning to bar US businesses and individuals from using software created by the Russian cybersecurity company Kaspersky Lab, CNN reported on Tuesday, citing unnamed government officials familiar with the matter. The move is seen as "unprecedented," as measures of the kind have never targeted private companies and citizens.

The comprehensive ban is currently being finalized and could be imposed as soon as this month, the sources told the news network. The new regulation would use "relatively new Commerce Department authorities built on executive orders" by Presidents Joe Biden and Donald Trump to prohibit Kaspersky Lab from providing certain products and services in the country, they added.

According to the sources, the order is aimed at mitigating risks allegedly posed by Kaspersky's software to critical US infrastructure.

As part of preparatory works for the move, the US Department of Commerce has made an "initial determination" to ban certain transactions between the Russian cybersecurity company and US citizens, the sources added.

Comment: No one has ever shown or proven any actual connection between Kaspersky products and Russian spying operations. It's all a bogus fear campaign.


Putin

Putin twice as popular as Biden in Mideast and African states - poll

US President Joe Biden, Russian President Vladimir Putin
© Sputnik / Mikhail MetzelFILE PHOTO
Moscow and Beijing are already playing more important roles in the Middle East and North Africa than ten years ago, and in another decade could rival Washington's influence in the region, according to a recent opinion poll.

The poll was conducted by Al-Monitor in partnership with data analytics firm Premise across Egypt, Türkiye, Iraq and Tunisia between March 4 and March 22, 2024, and questioned 2,670 respondents in the four states about their views on power dynamics in the region.

When asked which of the three world leaders they viewed "most favorably," some 44.4% chose Russian President Vladimir Putin, followed by Chinese President Xi Jinping with some 33.8%, while only 21.7% said they preferred US President Joe Biden.

Putin was seen more favorably across all four states, most of all in Egypt (51.6%). Biden was slightly more popular in Iraq (29.2%) of all states, but still polled third after Putin (35.5%) and Xi (35.3%).

Al-Monitor suggested that Washington's popularity suffered due to its support of Israel's war in Gaza, but noted that a multitude of other factors could be influencing opinions. The respondents were almost split on whether Washington (30%) or Moscow (28%) could "most successfully mediate political disagreements in the Middle East." However, over 40% agreed that the US was still "best equipped to help resolve the Israel-Hamas war," compared to Russia's 27.9% and China's 13.4%.

Biohazard

Ground-up chicken waste and excreta fed to cattle may be behind bird flu outbreak in US cows

cow dairy
© ADAM DAVIS/EPA-EFE/ShutterstockDairy cows across six US states have become infected with the highly pathogenic virus. Experts warn that lax regulations could also see the virus spread to US pig farms, with serious consequences for human health.
Fears are growing that the H5N1 outbreak among cattle in the United States could have been caused by contaminated animal feed.

In contrast to Britain and Europe, American farmers are still allowed to feed cattle and other farm animals ground-up waste from other animals including birds.

Dairy cows across six US states - and at least one farm worker - have become infected with the highly pathogenic virus, which has already killed millions of animals across the globe since 2021.


Comment: Tens of millions have been culled preemptively; how many bird flu itself has actually killed is harder to discern. And it seems the relentless vaccine campaign isn't working: France detects bird flu outbreak on fully vaccinated duck farm

MIT reports: 'Immunization doesn't prevent infection, but it does reduce symptoms.'


Hourglass

Saudi cuts back widely ridiculed NEOM desert city plans by 98%

NEOM saudi arabia
© NEOMThe $500 billion desert project sparked human rights concerns over the need to expel Bedouin tribes from the development area
Saudi Arabia will downsize plans for its $500 billion NEOM linear city, The Line, as part of Mohammad bin Salman's (MbS) 2030 vision to diversify the oil-dependent economy.

By 2030, development was planned in stages to ultimately cover a stretch of 170 kilometers of coastal desert and house 1.5 million people.

However, an unnamed official told Bloomberg on 5 April that the project would be scaled back to 2.4 kilometers, with a reduced capacity of less than 300,000 residents.


Comment: So it'll essentially be another skysraper-esque building in the desert?


"The pullback on The Line comes as the kingdom's sovereign wealth fund has yet to approve Neom's budget for 2024," Bloomberg writes, citing unnamed sources familiar with the matter. "It shows that the financial realities of the trillions of dollars of investment are starting to cause concern at the highest levels of the Saudi government as it tries to fulfill its ambitious Vision 2030 program, the overarching initiative tasked with diversifying the kingdom's economy."

Comment: One wonders whether this scaling back has something to do with the, overall, rapidly deteriorating global economic situation: US at risk of 'delayed recession', says analyst who predicted 2008 crash

For an idea as to why it was so widely ridiculed, see:




Headphones

I've been at NPR for 25 years. Here's how we lost America's trust

uri berliner
© Photo by Pete Kiehart for The Free PressUri Berliner near his home in Washington, D.C., on April 5, 2024.
Uri Berliner, a veteran at the public radio institution, says the network lost its way when it started telling listeners how to think.

You know the stereotype of the NPR listener: an EV-driving, Wordle-playing, tote bag-carrying coastal elite. It doesn't precisely describe me, but it's not far off. I'm Sarah Lawrence-educated, was raised by a lesbian peace activist mother, I drive a Subaru, and Spotify says my listening habits are most similar to people in Berkeley.

I fit the NPR mold. I'll cop to that.

Comment: While the focus here is on NPR, a similar story could be told about a number of center-left news organizations, as mainstream journalism slowly circles the drain of irrelevancy. When the mandate switches from production of thought-provoking to thought-dictating, the audience simply won't stick around.

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