Society's ChildS


NPC

Double standards: Cambridge University backs academic who tweeted 'White Lives Don't Matter'

white lives don't matter professor
© Rex/ Shutterstock
The University of Cambridge has spoken out in support of one of its lecturers who was hit by a wave of abusive messages and death threats for tweeting 'White Lives Don't Matter'.

Dr Priyamvada Gopal, 51, who teaches in the Faculty of English at Churchill College, took to the social media platform on Tuesday evening to write: 'I'll say it again. White Lives Don't Matter. As white lives.'

However the controversial message, which has since been deleted by Twitter, was met with a barrage of outrage, with many people responding both publicly and privately with death threats and racist abuse.

Comment: See also:


Red Flag

NYT celebrates 'radical feminist' whose legacy was 'overshadowed' by '1 violent act'... shooting Andy Warhol

andy warhol
© USA Network; AP / AFP(L) Valerie Solanas; Andy Warhol in 1975
The New York Times has left many scratching their heads over an article about feminist Valerie Solanas' activism being "overshadowed" by the small fact that she attempted to murder film director Andy Warhol.

"She made daring arguments in 'SCUM Manifesto,' her case for a world without men. But her legacy as a writer and thinker was overshadowed by one violent act," Bonnie Wertheim writes as part of the "overlooked no more" series for the paper, which looks to highlight "remarkable people" whose deaths went unreported by the Times.

While she was a feminist author, Solanas was most famous for shooting and attempting to kill Warhol at his studio on June 3, 1968, a year after she self-published her 'Manifesto' on the extermination of men. Solanas also shot art critic Mario Amaya and tried to fire on Warhol's manager before her gun jammed. She later turned herself into police and served a three-year prison sentence. She was later diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia.

Bizarro Earth

Police say Glasgow stabbing attack 'not terrorism' as 6 hospitalized including 'critically injured' police officer

Glasgow stabbings
© JATV_SCOTLAND/via REUTERS 339Emergency responders are seen near a scene of reported stabbings, in Glasgow.
Six people have been hospitalized following a stabbing attack at a hotel in Glasgow city center. Authorities have confirmed that the male suspect was shot dead during the attack, which is not being treated as a terrorist incident.

The attack took place in the Park Inn hotel on West George Street, which is known to house asylum seekers. The police said that all of the victims are men and one of them is a 42-year-old police officer. The other victims are aged 17, 18, 20, 38 and 53.

Reports in British news outlets earlier indicated that three people died in the attack but authorities have yet to confirm that any of the victims were killed.


Comment: Update 6/27:

Glasgow stabbing suspect was Sudanese asylum seeker 'fed up' with 'hellish' shelter conditions, reports claim
Multiple media reports say the man who went on a stabbing rampage in Glasgow and who injured six before being shot dead by police, was a Sudanese refugee who had mental health issues and was put over the edge by hostel conditions.

The knifeman, identified by the Daily Mail as a Sudanese national named Badradeen, repeatedly complained about his living conditions in the Scottish city's Park Inn hotel, which had been turned into a shelter for asylum seekers, several British media outlets report.

His "erratic" behavior allegedly prompted fellow hotel residents to report the man to a British liaison officer. The attacker, who'd arrived in the UK about six months ago, complained about food in the shelter and appeared to take particular issue with noise, threatening to attack fellow refugees.

"He said that he was going to attack two guys in the room next to his because they're were making noise to deliberately annoy him," an asylum seeker, identified only as Siraj, told the Daily Mail.

Siraj claimed that the Sudanese had also told him he was "fed up" and "very angry," and complained that there was "no daylight in his room."

Several of Badradeen's acquaintances interviewed by the tabloid believed that he was gradually becoming insane and some had alerted the shelter staff - allegedly to no avail.

"I think he was getting more mentally ill over the three months... He had gastric problems and had to isolate for around 20 days and his room had no light from a window," Nigerian-born Beatrice Onwuka said. She added the man had few friends and "didn't speak much English," and ultimately changed his mind about seeking asylum in the UK.

The sorry state Badradeen allegedly found himself in might have been due to the measures the British authorities have taken to combat the Covid-19 pandemic. Asylum seekers who had previously been living in apartments had been moved to hotels during the pandemic, Ako Zada, an activist from Kurdish Community Scotland, told the Telegraph.

The money they had formerly received to buy food had also been swapped for thrice-daily provided meals, but many had complained about getting the same food all the time. Badradeen had said he was "very hungry" while living at the hotel.

Shortly before the Friday attack, he phoned an immigration solicitor and a liaison officer, Sky news reports. The lawyer promised to pass the man's concerns to the "safeguarding" team at the Home Office, which deals with protecting vulnerable people.

British officials haven't yet confirmed the identity of the attacker. They also have not released the names of his victims, except for 42-year-old police constable David Whyte, who is said to be in a critical but stable condition. Those injured in the rampage are believed to be residents and staff members of the shelter.

The attacker was shot dead by police responding to the incident. The British authorities have said they were not treating the case as terrorism.



Red Flag

Ignoring MSM's Covid-19 warnings made Americans more likely to die, studies say. Unless they went to a BLM protest, says another

covid and hannity
© Reuters / Social Media / Leah MillisBFFs, according to WaPo
Several US studies have blamed conservative media for high Covid-19 mortality, claiming pundits like Sean Hannity misled their viewers about the virus. But another study says liberals who also ignored official advice saved lives.

Seemingly determined to root out all "wrongthink" regarding the pandemic that has killed over 124,000 Americans so far, the Washington Post looked over a handful of recent academic papers analyzing media coverage of the outbreak and found - surprise! - that listening to Fox News' Sean Hannity shortens American lifespans.

"The end result, according to one of the studies, is that infection and mortality rates are higher in places where one pundit who initially downplayed the severity of the pandemic - Fox News's Sean Hannity - reaches the largest audiences," the outlet revealed in its pearl-clutching writeup on Thursday, specifically referring to a University of Chicago study published earlier this month.

Comment: This story is just more proof of the lengths the PTB are going to shame anyone who doesn't follow the mainstream thought on how to act and behave during the coronavirus hysteria. Also see: Does Not Complying With Social Distancing Rules Mean You're a Psychopath? The Answer is Obvious


NPC

Virtue signaling at its worst: L'Oreal to drop words such as 'whitening' from skin products

l'oreal
L'Oreal, the world's biggest cosmetics company, will remove words referencing "white", "fair" and "light" from its skin-evening products, a spokeswoman said on Friday, a day after Unilever made a similar announcement in the face of growing social media criticism.

Unilever and L'Oreal are two big players in the global market for skin whitening creams used in many Asian, African and Caribbean countries where fair skin is often considered desirable.

Attention

Best of the Web: Covid-19 was in Spanish sewage as early as MARCH 2019, study finds

test tube
© Global Look Press / Zhang Chenlin
Spanish virologists have found traces of the novel coronavirus in a sample of Barcelona waste water collected in March 2019, nine months before the COVID-19 disease was identified in China, the University of Barcelona said on Friday.

The discovery of virus genome presence so early in Spain, if confirmed, would imply the disease may have appeared much earlier than the scientific community thought.

The University of Barcelona team, who had been testing waste water since mid-April this year to identify potential new outbreaks, decided to also run tests on older samples.

They first found the virus was present in Barcelona on Jan. 15, 2020, 41 days before the first case was officially reported there.

Pistol

'Guns are flying off the shelf:' Permit applications in Chicago up more than 500% amid coronavirus pandemic and George Floyd fallout

rifle
© Stacey Wescott/Chicago Tribune
Take your pick. The pandemic, the police killing of George Floyd, the presidential election. Protests, looting, calls to "defund the police."

Any one of such similar events historically has been enough to push some people off the fence, prompting them to finally buy a gun or add to their collection.

But with a wave of crises crashing across the country, more than 40,000 Illinoisans applied for a gun permit in a little more than two weeks this month, more than 500% over this time last year, according to Illinois State Police.

Gun sales are soaring at Mark Glavin's gun shop in Elgin, from an average of 10 a day last year to as many as 200 a day this year. With so many gun purchases, he said, ammunition also can be hard to find.

Bizarro Earth

Up to 140 police officers injured during illegal street parties and protests

Police officers
© REUTERS / Stefan WermuthPolice officers in riot gear in London.
"Up to 140-odd" police officers have been injured while responding to protests and illegal parties in the past three weeks, according to the Metropolitan Police Commissioner.

Speaking after officers faced attacks in London for the second night in a row, Dame Cressida Dick condemned aggression towards police at illegal parties as "utterly unacceptable".

The Scotland Yard chief said the force has a "duty" to stop unlawful music events during the coronavirus pandemic and vowed: "We will be prepared this weekend."

At least 22 officers were reportedly injured while responding to a street party in Brixton on Wednesday night, with footage showing a police car being destroyed and officers being chased down streets.


Comment: Human beings need to be able to connect with eachother another as a fundamental means of regulation. Remove this basic need and you naturally get dysfunction on the mass level. This is incredibly dangerous and destructive.


Bad Guys

Gunmen injure Mexico City police chief, 3 dead in attack allegedly carried out by Jalisco New Generation cartel

mexico police
© REUTERS/Henry Romero
A high-sided construction truck and a white SUV pulled into the path of Mexico City's police chief just as dawn was breaking Friday on the capital's most iconic boulevard and assailants opened fire with .50-caliber sniper rifles and grenades on his armored vehicle.

The cinematic ambush involving two-dozen gunmen left chief Omar García Harfuch wounded with three bullet impacts and shrapnel. Two members of his security detail were killed, as was a woman who happened to be driving by.

The high-powered armament and brazenness of the attack suggested the Jalisco New Generation Cartel and hours after the attack, García blamed them via Twitter from the hospital.

"This morning we were attacked in a cowardly way by the CJNG," García tweeted, using the Spanish-language acronym for Mexico's most violent criminal group.

Megaphone

Social media alternative Parler doesn't censor, fact-check posts, CEO says

Parler app
There's a new social media app trying to give Facebook and Twitter a run for their money -- without the censorship.

Instead of using fact-checkers or a "third party editorial board," Parler moderates posts based on FCC guidelines and Supreme Court rulings, Parler CEO John Matze told Fox News' Neil Cavuto on Friday.

"It'll feel very similar to Twitter, which I'm sure many people are accustomed to," Matze said. "However ... we take a really firm stance that we want to be unbiased."

If someone does post something inaccurate on Parler, Matze said the app would not fact-check it. Instead, other users would be able to comment.

"They can make any claim they'd like, but they're going to be met with a lot of commenters, a lot of people who are going to disagree with them," Matze said. "That's how society works, right? If you make a claim, people are going to come and fact check you organically."


Comment: See also: MSM scrambles to smear 'free speech' platform Parler as Twitter censorship wave pushes conservatives out