Society's ChildS


Newspaper

NY Times' front page mass-listing of Covid-19 victims

Publicity stunt
© Reuters/Tom BrennerProtesters stage a 'mock funeral' to protest handling of coronavirus pandemic May 20, 2020.
The New York Times' editors are busy congratulating themselves for publishing the names of a thousand Covid-19 deaths and calling it journalism. Why has the nation's paper of record abandoned reporting for misery-mongering?

New Yorkers woke up on Sunday to find the sun shining, and fewer people dying of the coronavirus than at any point since mid-March. However, they remain locked at home under Governor Andrew Cuomo's orders, and as the total death count in the US inched near 100,000, their morning newspaper reminded them they have nothing to feel good about.

The New York Times chose to mark the 100,000 death milestone by replacing its front page (and the following 11 pages too) with a list of 1,000 of these deaths, along with a one-line description of the deceased.

Comment: "...the New York Times is selling you misery for misery's sake." It is also selling newspapers for a profit that misery, fear, and pulling heartstrings from first-hand tragedy encourage.


X

More than half a million people sign petition refusing mandatory coronavirus vaccine

Vaccination
© Shutterstock/KJN
More than half a million people have already signed a petition created by LifeSiteNews rejecting the notion of a mandatory coronavirus vaccine.

As of Saturday, the petition has created more than 532,000 online signatures. It was created in early May. The lion's share of petition signers are from the United States, with tens of thousands in the United Kingdom, Canada and Australia. Gualberto Garcia Jones, LifeSite's director of advocacy, said:
"The enormous response against a mandatory vaccination program for the coronavirus is truly global in nature. This is something people around the world are very concerned about, and which many reject."
The petition breaks down the fundamental violation of essential liberties that a prospective mandatory vaccine effort would entail.
"Fear of a disease - which we know very little about, relative to other similar diseases - must not lead to knee-jerk reactions regarding public health, nor can it justify supporting the hidden agenda of governmental as well as non-governmental bodies that have apparent conflicts of interest in plans to restrict personal freedoms."
The petition cites concern with the credibility of globalist billionaire Bill Gates, who has poured an immense amount of resources into the development of an entirely hypothetical coronavirus vaccine.
"And, while some people, like Bill Gates, may have a lot of money, his opinion and that of his NGO (the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation) - namely, that life will not return to normal till people are widely vaccinated - should not be permitted to influence policy decisions on a coronavirus vaccination program."

Comment: The petition is available here.


No Entry

Coronavirus update: UK hospital closes A&E, no longer accepts new patients

Hospital UK
© Google
'We have taken the proactive step to temporarily stop accepting new patients to maintain patient and staff safety,' says hospital medical director.

An NHS hospital has been forced to close its accident and emergency department to new admissions as a result of high numbers of patients with the coronavirus. Weston General Hospital, in Weston-super-Mare, Somerset, stopped accepting A&E patients at 8am on Monday morning.

The University Hospitals Bristol and Weston Foundation Trust, which runs the hospital, said patients who needed care would be treated elsewhere in the local area. The trust has not said how many new patients with the virus have been admitted or whether the closure has followed a sudden surge in cases.

A statement on the trust website said:
"Weston General Hospital will temporarily stop accepting new patients, including into its A&E department, as of 8am today.

"This is a precautionary measure in order to maintain the safety of staff and patients in response to the high number of patients with coronavirus in the hospital."
The trust said the decision had been clinically led and supported by its local NHS commissioners.

Play

How hit Turkish show 'Ertugrul' fed the hearts of Muslims hungry for representation

Engin Altan Düzyatan in and as Ertugrul Gazi
© YouTubeEngin Altan Düzyatan in and as Ertugrul Gazi
Diliris Ertugrul, Ertugrul Gazi, Resurrection: Ertugrul

If you haven't been violating lockdown laws and are privileged enough to have a home, chances are that you come across these words a few times everyday - depending on just how many hours you spend on social media. Personally, I'm nearing a whole twenty-four - but that's a story for another day.

The Turkish show Ertugrul is based in 13th century Anatolia and tells the story prior to the establishment of the Ottoman Empire. It illustrates the struggle of Ertugrul Gazi, father of the empire's founder, Osman. It is often called the Turkish Game of Thrones, and for good reason - you'll find everything except dragons and sex: the castles, the sceneries, the clothes, the sword-clashing, the thrill, hell, even a starting score just as exhilarating. I often see my fifty-something parents bobbing their heads to the title theme just as I would for GOT - and it is cute as hell.

The show has taken Pakistan by a storm, breaking multiple YouTube records since its Urdu translation was released, and is now becoming the go-to Muslim household show to watch in India as well. It took me a hot minute to bring my snobby Game Of Thrones nose to the ground and watch the show, but I caved, and man, oh man.


The Resurrection of the Show

Ertugrul was released in Turkey in 2014, and became the most sought-after entertainment, spreading to Azerbaijan, for its shared history. Recently, Pakistan's Prime Minister visited Turkey and heard about the mad fandom around the show, and decided to work to bring the show to Pakistan by getting it dubbed in Urdu, and releasing it on the first of Ramadan, after which it spread like wildfire in the South Asian Muslim community. Turkey, Pakistan and Malaysia have decided to come together to fight the rampant Islamophobia in the rest of the world, particularly the West, and wanted to bring forth content that attempts to nullify the damage done through almost every film and Netflix series one can watch today.

Comment: Ertugrul is a bit too popular for Egypt, where it is banned by religious decree - they're worried it might help Erdogan reestablish the Ottoman Empire, it seems. More likely, they've watched the show and seen that it actually promotes real values. Children might grow up being able to recognize tyranny when they see it. Can't have that.


You can watch the first two seasons in English on TRT's YouTube channel, starting here:





Quenelle

Protesters railing against lockdown hang effigy of Kentucky governor

protesters hang effigy of Kentucky governor
© ABC News
A group of protesters in Kentucky on Sunday hung an effigy of Gov. Andy Beshear (D) outside the state capitol during a rally celebrating the Second Amendment and opposing coronavirus restrictions.

The demonstration was organized by the group Take Back Kentucky and billed on Facebook as an opportunity for individuals to "celebrate freedom and to fight back against the unconstitutional shutdown over the Coronavirus." The event attracted approximately 100 people to the Kentucky State Capitol, The Louisville Courier Journal reported.

As the rally entered its final stages, organizers reportedly led a crowd to the governor's mansion as part of an attempt to deliver a message asking Beshear to resign. During their walk to the residence, individuals could reportedly be seen carrying signs saying, "Abort Beshear from office" and "My rights don't end where your fear begins."

Comment: Below is a clip of the Hanging of Governor Beshear in effigy:




Alarm Clock

GOP groups sue California Gov. Newsom over vote-by-mail, claim order is 'brazen power grab'

Gavin Newsom
California Lieutenant Governor Gavin Newsom
The Republican National Committee, National Republican Congressional Committee and California Republican Party sued Gov. Gavin Newsom and the state's Secretary of State Alex Padilla on Sunday, claiming an executive order sending mail-in ballots to all registered voters in the state is an "illegal power grab" that invites potential fraud.

Newsom's order, aimed at allowing voters to avoid exposure to coronavirus, will send ballots to all registered voters including inactive voters. This has led to concerns that ballots sent to people who have moved or died will end up being filled out and submitted anyway unless voter rolls are inspected and cleaned out before ballots are mailed. Many Republicans have expressed concern that Democrats could try using these ballots improperly, to swing races in their favor.

Comment:


V

Belgian citizens sue government for 'unacceptable Communist quarantine', restricting rights and freedoms

world closed coronavirus lockdown
A group of 40 Belgian citizens filed the first lawsuit in the kingdom against the state, the Ministry of Internal Affairs and personally the head of the department, Peter De Crema, for restricting personal freedoms and rights during quarantine justified by the Coronavirus pandemic, the RTBF television channel reported on May 24th.

According to activists, the country's authorities "copied the measures taken by China without taking into account European human rights standards." The lockdown provisions have provoked the ire of whole layers of society.

According to the plaintiff's lawyer, "Communist quarantine is unacceptable in Belgium, it was necessary to analyze these measures from a human rights perspective."

At the same time, the channel does not explain why De Crem is the main defendant, although restrictive measures were introduced by the decision of the Belgian National Security Council.

The Belgian Ministry of Internal Affairs said it did not know anything about this lawsuit, but recognized the right of citizens to defend their rights in court.

Handcuffs

Best of the Web: The Authoritarian State's dream has come true thanks to the repulsive word 'lockdown'

Police are pictured speaking to demonstrators
Police are pictured speaking to demonstrators in Hyde Park, London last week. We are learning, during this induction period, to do what we are told and to become obedient, servile citizens of a new authoritarian State
We will never get out of this now. It will go on for ever. We will not be free people again.

Even when we seem to be free we will be like prisoners on parole, who can be snatched back to their cells at a moment's notice.

I think I now understand why this period has come to be known by the repulsive word 'lockdown', an American term which describes the punishment of rioting convicts in a penitentiary, by confining them in their cells for long periods.

I hate this word, because it does not seem to me to be fitting to describe free people in a free country.

But we are no longer such people, or such a country. We have become muzzled, mouthless, voiceless, humiliated, regimented prisoners, shuffling about at the command of others, stopping when told to stop, moving when told to move, shouted at by jacks-in-office against whom we have no appeal.

Comment: Yup, the Corona World Order is here to stay.

It won't last long, thank God. A decade at most.

Full-blown pathocracy has nowhere to but down.


Light Saber

Nobel prize-winning scientist: The Covid-19 epidemic was never exponential

Michael Levitt, Freddie Sayers
As he is careful to point out, Professor Michael Levitt is not an epidemiologist. He's Professor of Structural Biology at the Stanford School of Medicine, and winner of the 2013 Nobel Prize for Chemistry for "the development of multiscale models for complex chemical systems." He's a numbers guy — as he told us in our interview, his wife says he loves numbers more than her — but then, much of modern science is really about statistics (as his detractors never tire of pointing out, Professor Neil Ferguson is a theoretical physicist by training).

With a purely statistical perspective, he has been playing close attention to the Covid-19 pandemic since January, when most of us were not even aware of it. He first spoke out in early February, when through analysing the numbers of cases and deaths in Hubei province he predicted with remarkable accuracy that the epidemic in that province would top out at around 3,250 deaths.

His observation is a simple one: that in outbreak after outbreak of this disease, a similar mathematical pattern is observable regardless of government interventions. After around a two week exponential growth of cases (and, subsequently, deaths) some kind of break kicks in, and growth starts slowing down. The curve quickly becomes "sub-exponential".


Handcuffs

Deputy gets prison for stealing from charity that helped kids of fallen military and cops

Robert Simeone, a former Palm Beach County Sheriff’s deputy
Robert Simeone, a former Palm Beach County Sheriff's deputy and U.S. military veteran, originally faced up to 175 years in prison for the 30 felony charges he pleaded guilty to this month. However, despite the long list of crimes, including stealing from a children's charity, Simeone will spend just five years behind bars thanks to a likely blue privilege-inspired plea deal given to him this month.

Simeone, 49, pleaded guilty to 30 felony charges for stealing $50,000 from a children's charity and paying kickbacks to lure patients into a drug treatment center he ran in West Palm Beach.

On Wednesday, this prior 'pillar of the community' stood before a judge and admitted to stealing tens of thousands of dollars from children in a charity he set up to get rich in the name of dead cops and veterans.

According to the Sun-Sentinel, in 2017, Simeone became one of the first individuals ensnared by State Attorney Dave Aronberg's Sober Homes Task Force. It's a law enforcement push against abuses in the area's drug-recovery industry. There have been more than 100 arrests in three years.