Society's ChildS


Bad Guys

Ex-BBC presenter and pastor jailed for only 10 years for prolific sexual abuse

Benjamin Thomas BBC pastor paedophile
© North Wales police/PABenjamin Thomas was the pastor of Criccieth Family church in Gwynedd, north Wales, when he was arrested last year
A former pastor and BBC television presenter has been jailed for 10 years and four months after he admitted abusing boys and men over almost three decades.

Ben Thomas, 44, carried out many of his attacks while his victims were sleeping at Christian camps and conferences, Mold crown court in north Wales heard.

Sentencing Thomas for 40 sexual offences involving 33 boys and men, the judge, Timothy Petts, said: "For nearly 30 years, you hid a dark secret, namely that you were a prolific sex abuser."

Comment: Given the nature of the abuse and the fact that it spanned over 30 years and several counties, ten years in jail doesn't seem just.


Family

No mask, no child custody? Covid-19 a new factor for family law in Florida

Judge and gavel
© Orlando Sentinel
Melanie Joseph wants to see her son, but a judge won't let her — for no reason except that she won't wear a mask.

Joseph's 14-year-old son has asthma, a condition that could put him at risk of contracting COVID-19 during this pandemic, court filings show.

Broward Circuit Judge Dale Cohen called the mother an "anti-mask person" who had the "audacity" to brag about it on Facebook.

Conservatives take issue with the decision, but it illustrates how judges in family court now must consider the health risks of COVID-19 on top of juggling the interests of feuding ex-spouses, single parents and reluctant child-support payers.

Arrow Up

Trump sees approval rating increase as of two weeks before the debate, majority expect him to beat Biden

Trump
© Wall Street JournalTrump, just checking the polls...
A poll conducted in the lead-up to Tuesday's presidential debate showed Americans giving President Trump his highest approval rating in months while a majority predicted he would defeat former Vice President Joe Biden in November.

Gallup released its results on Thursday, claiming that Trump saw his highest approval rating (46%) since May with approvals on his handling of certain issues, other than the economy, below 50%.

The data, which was gathered in the two weeks before the debate, reflected an uptick from the 42% Trump received earlier in September. That increase, the polling company suggested, could be associated with his response to late Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg's death. A press release from Gallup reads:
"Although the increase of four percentage points in Trump's latest rating is not statistically significant, the poll's internals suggest a rise in his support the second half of the Sept. 14-28 field period coincident with Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg's death and lying in state, as well as Trump's announcing that he would quickly make a nomination to the Supreme Court. This suggests that some viewed his handling of the situation positively,"
For comparison, Gallup reported President Obama's approval rating at 47% and 50% around the same time in 2012.

Comment: Polling is a snapshot of the moment, hardly more than an indicator of a possible trend provided by a sampling of voters responding to (hopefully) non-leading questions. Good luck.


Cross

New York Roman Catholic diocese becomes the largest in US to declare bankruptcy amid clergy abuse lawsuits

Diocese of Rockville Centre
© NY TimesDiocese of Rockville Centre
A Roman Catholic diocese in New York City's suburbs has become the largest in the U.S. to declare bankruptcy to protect itself from a wave of lawsuits filed over past sexual abuse by clergy members.

The Diocese of Rockville Centre filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection on Thursday. It is the eighth largest diocese or archdiocese in the U.S., serving more than 1.4 million Catholics on Long Island.
video diocese of...

"The financial burden of the litigation has been severe and only compounded by the COVID-19 pandemic," Bishop John Barres, the spiritual leader of the diocese that serves 1.4 million Catholics on Long Island, said in a video posted on the diocese's website. "Our goal is to make sure that all clergy sexual abuse survivors and not just a few who were first to file lawsuits are afforded just and equitable compensation."


Comment: The relationship between New York's Catholic Governor Andrew Cuomo and the church is growing more tense; reaction from Father Jonathan Morris:




Clipboard

Levada Center: Only 11% of Russians fully believe opposition figure Navalny was poisoned, just 8% blame government

navalny poison hospital
© Instagram / @navalnyRussian opposition politician Alexei Navalny is pictured at Charite hospital in Berlin, Germany, in this undated image obtained from social media September 22, 2020.
A mere eight percent of Russians think the president or government bodies were behind the poisoning of opposition figure Alexey Navalny, according to a new study which revealed 22 percent of the country is unaware of the incident.

The poll, conducted by the Levada Center, also revealed that 29 percent of Russians don't believe Navalny was deliberately poisoned, with a further 26 percent having serious doubts. Only one in nine (11 percent) of those polled completely trust his story.

Comment: Navalny's illness has become a convenient political football for the West:


Cult

The covid 'epidemic' deception

trends journal cover covid
© Trends Journal
We have been deceived by public health authorities about Covid, partly from public authorities' ignorance of the virus, its spread and treatment, but mainly on purpose.

One reason we were intentionally deceived by public health authorities, and continue to be deceived by them, is to create a market for a Covid vaccination. There are billions of dollars of profits in this, and Big Pharma wants them. The financial connections between public health authorities and Big Pharma means that WHO, NIH, and CDC also desire mass vaccinations. If there are not enough people scared out of their wits to voluntarily seek vaccination, the chances are vaccinations will be made mandatory or your ability to travel, and so forth, will be made dependent on being vaccinated.

Another intentional reason for our deception is the Covid threat justifies voting by mail from the safety of one's home. Voting by mail means that no winner can be declared on election night. The mail-in votes will have to be counted as they come in. The delay in declaring an election winner allows time for more propaganda that Trump has (1) fraudently rigged his reelection or (2) has lost and won't step down. As the presstitutes speak with one orchestrated voice, whether Trump wins or not will be buried in reports that he lost and refuses to step down or that he won by fraud.

Attention

Harvey Weinstein faces six new sexual assault charges

harvey weinstein
© Getty Images
Six additional sexual assault counts have been added to a criminal complaint against Harvey Weinstein.

The ex-Hollywood mogul is currently serving a 23-year prison sentence after being convicted of sexual assault and rape in New York earlier this year.

On Friday, the Los Angeles County District Attorney's Office announced that another three felony counts each of forcible rape and forcible oral copulation would be added to charges Weinstein faces in California. The California case has been delayed due to the coronavirus pandemic.

Comment: See also:


Cheesecake

French chef leads noisy protest against COVID-19 restrictions

french chef protest bordeaux
This is Michelin-starred chef Philippe Etchebest leading a noisy protest in the French city Bordeaux against further coronavirus restrictions.

The closure of bars and restaurants in Marseille amid a surge of COVID-19 cases has prompted fears of similar measures elsewhere in France.

Etchebest, awarded two Michelin stars for Hostellerie de Plaisance near Bordeaux, said the protest was about not dying in silence.

Comment: Restaurants are some of the hardest hit businesses due to the lockdown restrictions and, given that most are barely keeping their heads above water at the best of times, restaurants may soon be a thing of the past.

See also:


Bizarro Earth

COVID didn't kill Rita at age 95, despair and loneliness did

Rita Thomas
© Nan ThomasRita Thomas, 95, rests on a hospital bed in her daughter’s Pasco County home, where she came to die. Thomas was so frightened and alone by the months of prolonged isolation brought on by the state’s coronavirus lockdown of her ALF, she told her daughters she had stopped eating.
Rita Thomas was a victim of COVID-19, but she never had the disease.

The vivacious and outgoing 95-year-old, who lived independently until last year and celebrated her most recent birthday in February with friends at a Pasco County diner, willed herself to die two weeks ago because she could no longer handle the pandemic-imposed isolation.

"She said to me: 'Linda. I've had a good life. I am ready to die. I don't want to live this way anymore. I stopped eating,' '' her daughter Linda Gardner said, recalling the conversation she had with her mother in August. Weeks later, her mother was hospitalized for complications from malnutrition.

For the last 18 months Thomas lived at Rosecastle of Zephyrhills Assisted Living & Memory Care, an 85-bed long-term care community near Tampa. She filled her days with routine: dining out at restaurants, playing bingo and cards, going for daily walks and visiting every weekend with her daughter, family and friends.

But on March 13, when Gov. Ron DeSantis and the Agency for Health Care Administration ordered that visits be banned from nursing homes and assisted living facilities in an attempt to prevent the spread of COVID-19, all that daily activity stopped. Although the order allowed homes to make exceptions for certain family members to visit their relatives, most homes, including Rosecastle, resisted.

Comment: See also:


Bad Guys

Best of the Web: Covid rules are destroying our humanity

woman tasered
There is not much special about Logan, Ohio. Sure, there's the Paul A Johnson Pencil Sharpener Museum in South Logan, and every year musicians strum a bunch of washboards at the Washboard Music Festival (cancelled this year because of the Covid apocalypse, of course). But Logan usually has a pretty relaxed, 'small-town America' vibe. That was until what can only be described as a violent confrontation over a face mask.

On the evening of 23 September, in the stands of an outdoor stadium at Logan High School, a school resource officer - effectively a cop for schools - spotted something. A 34-year-old woman called Alecia Kitts was not wearing a face mask. Kitts, who was there to watch her son play football, is said to have told the officer that she was exempt from wearing a mask due to her asthma. The officer was not satisfied with her answer, and instructed her to leave immediately. Kitts refused, so the officer proceeded to use a taser gun on Kitts before arresting her. It is worth pointing out that witnesses to the incident, including one of the school's glassy-eyed bureaucrats, simply looked on without intervening.

Kitts' story is indicative of a much greater social problem right now. In the name of protecting us from Covid, authority figures are being worshipped by us, and given absolute power over us. Every semblance of morality, proportionality and empathy is being tossed aside in our attempts to thwart a 100-nanometer-small virus. And so it comes to pass that a school cop zapping a woman with several thousand volts for not wearing a mask is applauded. The Milgram Shock Experiment, it would seem, has escaped the laboratory once more.