Society's ChildS


NPC

Election night sees BLM protests erupt across US, Oregon calls in National Guard

Election BLM
© REUTERS/Brendan McDermidA protester holds a placard during a march on Election Day in New York City, New York, U.S. November 3, 2020
Troublemakers have been arrested across the US, from Washington DC to Seattle, as anti-racism demonstrators pushed the limits of largely peaceful protest on election night.

Thousands of people took to the streets of cities including Washington DC, Seattle, Portland, and New York after America voted on Tuesday. The demonstrations centered on the racial equality movement, but they have varied in scope and focus.

More than 1,000 people gathered in front of the White House, protesting against Donald Trump's presidency and campaigning for racial equality, while smaller protests took place elsewhere in the country.

Comment: As we've seen from near enough the beginning of the partly manufactured and coopted BLM protests, there's no room for reason and a worrying number are intent on violence, ultimately destroying the very communities they claim to be representing. And we can expect for those involved to resort to ever more extreme actions in the coming days and weeks following the inevitable Trump win:


Info

Censorship's slope is always slippery & the Internet Archive's embrace of biased 'fact-checking' proves it

graffiti censorship
© Pixabay / dimitrisvetsikas1969
The Internet Archive has begun slapping "fact-checks" on archived pages, supposedly to provide "context" they're missing. But readers don't need their thoughts babysat, and it's a small step to deleting the page altogether.

The nonprofit, which operates the Wayback Machine - an archive of old web pages spanning decades - announced last week that it would begin adding "fact-checks" and "convenient links to contextual information" to certain archived pages, unsettling internet freedom activists and researchers who rely upon the 40-petabyte mega-archive to do their work.

Comment: See also:


Megaphone

Poland delays implementing abortion ruling amid nationwide protests

abortion poland
© AP Photo/Czarek SokolowskiWomen’s rights and man activists with posters of the Women’s Strike action protest against recent tightening of Poland’s restrictive abortion law in front of the parliament building as inside, guards had to be used to shield right-wing ruling party leader Jaroslaw Kaczynski from angry opposition lawmakers, in Warsaw, Poland, on Tuesday, Oct. 27, 2020. Massive nationwide protests have been held ever since a top court ruled Thursday that abortions due to fetal congenital defects are unconstitutional. Slogan reads ‘Women’s Strike’.
Poland's right-wing government is delaying the publication and implementation of a high court ruling that tightens the abortion law, which has triggered almost two weeks of nationwide protests.

A government official said leaders are taking time to debate the contested ruling and find a solution.

"There is a discussion going on, and it would be good to take some time for dialogue and for finding a new position in this situation that is difficult and stirs high emotions," said Michal Dworczyk, the head of prime minister Mateusz Morawiecki's office.

Comment: See also: Pro-choice abortion supporters hold biggest-ever protest against Polish government


Magic Wand

Kanye West concedes presidential race — but already has sights on 2024

kanye west
© AP Photo/Michael Wyke
Kanye West threw in the towel on his presidential run in the 2020 election and hinted at another long-shot bid four years from now — though he didn't get many votes this time.

West made the concession in a tweet after appearing on the ballot in 12 states in the presidential election between Democratic nominee Joe Biden and President Donald Trump.

"WELP," West said in the tweet. "KANYE 2024."

Comment: See also:


Red Flag

Philadelphia stops counting mail-in ballots for the night

philadelphia
Philadelphia has stopped counting mail-in ballots for the night — a move that could skew Tuesday night's preliminary results in Pennsylvania toward President Trump.

Only about 76,000 of the city's mail-in ballots have been tallied so far out of some 350,000 received, noted Holly Otterbein, who is covering the race in Pennsylvania for Politico.

"And remember, Biden supporters are disproportionately voting by mail," she tweeted.

Comment: See also:


Attention

Scotland: Warning hate crime bill will make it an offence to 'insult'

Justice Secretary Humza Yousaf
Justice Secretary Humza Yousaf
Legal experts have warned they still have concerns over controversial hate crime proposals - amid warnings over insulting someone being a criminal offence.

Justice Secretary Humza Yousaf last month outlined amendments to the Scottish Government proposals amid concerns over the potential impact on freedom of expression.

Following the change of heart, the contentious stirring up hatred offences will now "require an intention on the part of the accused" for an offence to have been committed.

Comment: See also: Fascist Scotland justice minister wants to punish citizens over 'insulting' conversations AT HOME


Pocket Knife

Pro-Trump activist Bevelyn Beatty stabbed in the back... Multiple Proud Boys stabbed in DC

Bevelyn Beatty stabbed
Pro-Trump activist Bevelyn Beatty and multiple Proud Boys were stabbed in DC while attempting to help another person who was being assaulted.

Proud Boys founder Enrique Tarrio tells Gateway Pundit that he was slashed in the stomach, Beatty was stabbed in the back, and multiple other members of the men's social group were stabbed and are now hospitalized with serious wounds.

A law enforcement confirmed to TGP that the group was walking down the street, away from the protests, when they saw an older man being stabbed and intervened.

Comment: This is the same Bevelyn Beatty, Christian activist, who was arrested for painting over the Black Live Matter mural on New York's Fifth Avenue back in July. See: NY Mayor's 'Black Lives Matter' mural attacked for third time in a week, this time by Christian activist


Arrow Down

Hospital intensive care no busier than normal for most trusts, leaked documents show

hospital beds
Hospital intensive care is no busier than normal for the majority of trusts, leaked documents have shown, raising more questions about whether a second national lockdown is justifiable.

An update from the NHS Secondary Uses Services (SUS), seen by The Telegraph, shows that capacity is tracking as normal in October with the usual numbers of beds available that would be expected at this time of year, even without extra surge capacity.

An NHS source said: "As you can see, our current position in October is exactly where we have been over the last five years."

The new data shows that, even in the peak of the Covid outbreak in April, critical care beds were never more than 80 per cent full.

Although there has been a reduction in surge capacity since the first wave, with the closure of the emergency Nightingale Hospitals, there is still 15 per cent spare capacity across the country - fairly normal for this time of year.

Comment: See also:


X

PA poll watchers denied access, illegal campaigning observed at polling stations: 'The steal is on'

lines voters pennsylvania election 2020
© NBC NewsVoters lined up outside St. Paul's Lutheran Church in New Hanover Township, Pennsylvania.
Election Day kicked off with a bout of chaos in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, with poll watchers reportedly denied access and witnesses alleging "illegal campaigning" at various polling locations.

According to Trump 2020 EDO director Mike Roman, Democrat election officials are banning Trump poll watchers all across the city, as one video shows. Another photo on social media shows a physical barrier, which Roman says Democrat officials are using to keep poll watchers far from the counting tables:

Comment: In New York and Florida, the deceased apparently feel their civic duty keenly:
Ballots have been posted in to the New York City Board of Elections in the name of dead voters, according to The New York Post. The elections board received an absentee ballot from a Frances Reckhow of Staten Island, but as it turned out Frances Reckhow had died in 2012, according to an obituary filed with The Staten Advance.

Moreover, another absentee ballot was mailed from a certain Gertrude Nizzere, born in 1919, who also turned out to have a passed away a long time ago, according to the Board of Elections. After the incident, all data has been transferred to the police and Staten Island District Attorney Michael McMahon's office for investigation.

Earlier, a number of media outlets have cited the Broward County Election Commission on reporting that Florida election officials and law enforcement officials have disclosed an attempt to register about 50 deceased voters to vote in the 2020 US presidential election. More than 96 million early votes have been cast, which represents almost 70% of the 2016 total, according to the US Elections Project.
Just the sort of situation Tom Fitton and Judicial Watch have been litigating against:


USA

SOTT Focus: Breaking a Lance in Support of Trump

Trump buy American
Fair warning: I'll squarely defend Trump in this article. I'll hone in on the good things he has done. Lo' and behold: there are many. With Trump's press coverage being 95% negative, I think that approach is needed, necessary and long-overdue.

I tried to make each section readable in and by itself. So skim over the headlines, pick a topic, read a bit, get upset (because "I defend the orange monster") and think: what if?