Society's ChildS


Sherlock

An in-depth look behind the scenes of SouthFront censorship

msm, Nato, propganda, misinformation
The situation surrounding the censorship of SouthFront on Facebook has turned into a display of the stereotypical Big-tech super villain. Facebook has published a report justifying its actions, which is an egregious, textbook example of fake news. The report contains only disjointed accusations under the cover of meaningless words, and without a single example being presented. Special attention should be paid to the fact that in the full 29-page report, there are no mentions of SouthFront itself, besides the baseless accusations at its outset.

Furthermore, in order to label SouthFront as allegedly official Russian propaganda, Facebook first identifies another media site with a similar name, and then proceeds to emphasize the similarity of the brands. The name of this organization is "News Front", which indeed shares the word "Front" in its name, yet the similarities end there. News Front is an official Russian organization that is located in Crimea and publicly pursues an acute pro-Russian patriotic informational agenda for a Russian speaking audience.
In the case of News Front, to assert that the site is engaged in pushing fake news or disinformation is also nonsense. There are no hidden "trolls" infecting the weak minds of the citizens of Russia or other countries of the post-Soviet space through devious attempts to manipulate and mold their innermost perception. This is a regular Russian patriotic media site with a declared pro-Russian bias. Having a declared and obvious bias is not a crime in a democratic world.
As for the wider, global, non-Russian-speaking audience, News Front has a minimal presence. So why it was necessary to censor this Russian organization? The answer is now obvious, as described above.

The comparison of the audience of southfront.org and news-front.info by Alexa:

Bug

"Contact Tracer" and "Disease Investigator" jobs spring up across the country

covid spying
For those who may have lost their jobs during the lockdown, it appears a whole new sector of jobs is opening up across the country. Cities and states are seeking "contact tracers" and "disease investigators" to track down anyone who may have COVID-19 or anyone who may have come in contact with people diagnosed with COVID-19.

There are multiple job postings on Indeed.com, an employment-related search engine for job listings. Job titles include contact tracer, contact tracing supervisor, COVID-19 case investigator, and communicable disease investigator.

While some people find these positions to be necessary to public health, others find them invasive and meddlesome. One of the most worrisome things about this is what kind of power is held by the tracers and investigators. If they feel someone isn't quarantining properly, and they report that person, what happens next? Ventura County, California officials claimed they would remove people suffering from COVID from their homes if there was only one bathroom, a claim they've since walked back after public outrage ensued.
Ventura County officials were forced Wednesday to apologize and clarify that those who could not isolate or quarantine themselves would never be forcibly removed from their homes as part of an effort to further contain the spread of the coronavirus.

Video circulated on social media showed Dr. Robert Levin, the director of Ventura County Public Health, speaking before the board of supervisors Tuesday about a plan to hire up to 50 new "contact tracing investigators" to "find people who have COVID-19 and immediately isolate them, find every one of their contacts, make sure they stay quarantined and check in with them every day." (source)

Comment: See also:


Георгиевская ленточка

75-Year Victory Day celebration over a Russia in quarantine

Saint Basil's Cathedral
One cannot resist thinking that this Victory Day scene is a bit post-apocalyptic. The sight of the yearly military air parade over Moscow was a welcome sight as I watched several formations of fighter planes and a single Tupolev bomber fly over my home in southeastern Moscow. Tuning in to RT's "Ruptly" service online yielded a video presented here in full:


Comment: Comment: More coverage from RFE/RL:
President Vladimir Putin marked Victory Day calling for unity and a dignified honoring of those killed during World War II, even as the coronavirus pandemic curtailed the pomp the Kremlin had planned for Russia's most important secular holiday.

With this year marking 75 years since the Nazi defeat, the Kremlin had hoped to turn already elaborate May 9 celebrations into a platform for Putin to host world leaders and promote what he sees as Russia's rightful place on the world stage.

But the coronavirus has upended political life, and society in general, with millions under lockdown orders, the economy contracting, and Putin forced to limit his appearances to teleconferences with cabinet members and governors.

At a speech that marked his first public appearance in nearly a month, Putin did not mention the virus or its spread in Russia, focusing solely on the memory of the millions of Soviet citizens who died in what is known as the Great Patriotic War.

"We will, as usual, widely and solemnly mark the anniversary date, do it with dignity, as our duty to those who have suffered, achieved, and accomplished the victory tells us," he said. "There will be our main parade on Red Square, and the national march of the Immortal Regiment -- the march of our grateful memory and inextricable, vital, living communication between generations."

He also vowed that Russia would always remember the victims of the conflict, which killed an estimated 25 million Soviet citizens -- most of them civilians.

"We know and firmly believe that we are invincible when we stand together," he said.

Some people defied the restrictions to take to the streets displaying photos of grandparents who died in the war.

Irina Popova, 60, who owns a cosmetics business, told RFE/RL near Red Square that her grandmother always used to take her for walks through Moscow on Victory Day.

"You can't not celebrate this day. It's sacred," she said. "It's good to self-isolate, this thing is dangerous. But I got an [electronic] pass, so I'm allowed to go on the street."
Putin's address taken from Fort Russ News:
Vladimir Putin addressed the Russians, congratulating fellow citizens on the holiday.
"Dear citizens of Russia! Dear veterans! Dear friends!

With all my heart I congratulate you on Victory Day!

For all of us, this is the most important, most costly holiday. We always celebrate it solemnly and popularly, all together.

The spiritual, moral significance of Victory Day remains invariably great, and our attitude towards it remains sacred.

This is our memory and pride, the history of our country, the history of each family, part of our souls that were passed on to us by fathers and mothers, our grandparents.

Today we keenly feel the greatness of their destinies, remember those who are no longer with us, look at their faces with love in photographs of different years, wish our veterans long life, bow before the great generation of winners.

They have done so much for the Motherland that it can't be measured, paid for in any way. They saved the Fatherland, the life of future generations, liberated Europe, defended the world, restored cities and villages, achieved grandiose accomplishments.

We pay tribute to the endless recognition of the great, sacrificial feat of the Soviet people, people of different nationalities, standing shoulder to shoulder at the front and in the rear. Time has no power over their courage, unity, dignity and truly steel spirit.

Dear friends!

Here, at the Kremlin wall, is a sacred place for all of us.

Eternal fire burns day and night in memory of those who died in the Great Patriotic War.

Here lies the Unknown Soldier. We come here to bow to him and all the defenders of the Motherland, heroes who forever remained in mass, unknown graves near Moscow and Smolensk, Stalingrad and Kursk, near Sevastopol and Minsk, Kiev and Riga, near Berlin and Vienna, on the Pulkovo Heights, on the banks of the Neva , Dnieper, Danube, Vistula and Oder.

Millions of the fallen did not see, did not wait for the Victory - the Victory that they so dreamed about, they believed that they would defeat the enemy and return to their native home. And they fought for it, fought to the last breath, gave their lives so that we, our children and grandchildren, those who have not yet been born, who have to come to this world, which have defended, have saved the Soviet soldier.

We bow our heads to the blessed memory of everyone who has not returned from the war, to the memory of sons, daughters, fathers, mothers, grandfathers, great-grandfathers, husbands, wives, brothers, sisters, fellow soldiers, relatives, friends.

A minute of silence is announced.

(A moment of silence.)

Dear friends!

75 years have passed since the Great Patriotic War ended. We will, as usual, widely and solemnly mark the anniversary date, we will do it with dignity, as our duty to those who have suffered, achieved and achieved the Victory tells us.

There will be our main parade on Red Square, and the national march of the Immortal Regiment - the march of our grateful memory and inextricable, vital, lively communication between generations.

Our veterans fought for life against death. And we will always be equal to their unity and stamina.

We are united by a common memory and common hopes, our common aspirations, our responsibility for the present and future.

We know and firmly believe that we are invincible when we are together.

Happy holiday to you! Happy Victory Day! Hooray!"



No Entry

Seoul shuts down more than 2,100 nightclubs

doctor nasal swab
© AP Photo/Ashwini BhatiaA doctor takes a nasal swab to be tested for the coronavirus in Dharmsala, India, Saturday, May 9, 2020. India relaxed some coronavirus lockdown restrictions on Monday even as the pace of infection picked up and reopenings drew crowds of people.
South Korea's capital has shut down more than 2,100 nightclubs, hostess bars and discos after dozens of coronavirus infections were linked to club goers who went out last weekend as the country relaxed social distancing guidelines.

The measures imposed Saturday by Seoul Mayor Park Won-soon came after the national government urged entertainment venues around the nation to close or otherwise enforce anti-virus measures, including distancing, temperature checks, keeping customer lists and requiring employees to wear masks.

Park said the entry bans on the facilities will be maintained until the city concludes that risks of infection have been meaningfully lowered.

South Korea's Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, or KCDC, said earlier in the day that 18 new cases were reported in the 24 hours to midnight Friday, all but one of them linked to a 29-year-old man who visited three clubs in Seoul's Itaewon district last Saturday before testing positive days later.

But Park said 16 more cases were confirmed in Seoul alone in the following hours. He said this brought the total number of infections linked to club goers to 40 — 27 in Seoul, 12 in neighboring Incheon and Gyeonggi and one in the southern port city of Busan.

Comment: The hysterical over-reactions continue.


Brick Wall

Moronic medical advice: Two-thirds of patients recently hospitalized in NY had been staying home

empty school
"They're not working; they're not traveling," Cuomo said. "... They were predominantly at home."

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said Wednesday that a survey showed that a "shocking" two-thirds of patients recently hospitalized for coronavirus became infected despite largely staying at home.

Hospitals were asked to document where their most recent COVID-19 patients had been staying before admission, Cuomo said, and 66 percent came from their own homes.

About 18 percent came from nursing homes, 4 percent from assisted-living facilities, 2 percent were homeless, 2 percent had been at other "congregate" settings, fewer than 1 percent were prison or jail inmates, and 8 percent were classified as "other."

Comment: What an absolute crock! The patently obvious answer is that the spread of a virus can't be curtailed by trying to hide from it. But our feckless leaders will never admit that they've made a horrible mistake. Never waste an opportunity to heap blame on the people for something that they're absolutely blameless for. It keeps them in line.

See also:


Display

YouTube deletes video 'Plandemic' with Dr. Mikovits accusing Dr. Fauci of corruption and suppression

judy a mikovitz
Dr. Mikovitz
In late April we reported on the little known story is how Dr. Fauci ruined the career of a brilliant young doctor who blew the whistle on the harmful consequences attributed to vaccines.

Dr. Judy Mikovits was a brilliant young doctor with a promising career, until she discovered what she considered to be harmful consequences with vaccines. After she came out with her warnings, she was jailed for identifying the link between vaccines and chronic diseases.

In the first part of the video below, Dr. Mikovits explains how she was jailed for speaking out about her concerns.

Comment: See the Mikovits interview here: Plandemic Documentary, Part 1: Interview With Judy Mikovits

See also:


Bizarro Earth

Lockdown consequences: Africa falls further into poverty, 1 in 5 US children face food insecurity, UK faces worst economic crisis since 1706

africa coronavirus
Almost 70% of Africans said food and water would be a problem during a 14-day lockdown, while more than half would run out of money, a new report found on Tuesday. African countries have quickly imposed the lockdown policies, but they need to find a balance between reducing transmission while preventing social and economic disruption, according to a report conducted by global market research firm IPSOS.

The research was conducted in collaboration with the Africa Centers for Disease Control (CDC), the World Health Organization (WHO) and other partners, DPA reported.

"COVID-19 is not just a health crisis; it's a political and social crisis as well," said Africa CDC Director John Nkengasong.

Comment: RT reports on the unprecedented food insecurity in the US:
A new study has found that children in the United States are suffering the highest rate of food insecurity ever recorded in the country, as tens of millions of Americans are barred from working under coronavirus-induced lockdowns.

Food insecurity for American children was significantly worse in April than during any year since 2001, before which point no comparable data is available, according to research published on Wednesday by the Brookings Institution.

"Looking over time, particularly to the relatively small increase in child food insecurity during the Great Recession, it is clear that young children are experiencing food insecurity to an extent unprecedented in modern times." wrote Brookings researcher Lauren Bauer, who called the findings "alarming."
lockdown us food
© Reuters / Andrew HayFILE PHOTO: Volunteers hand out free groceries at a drive-by aid station, providing food to families and children in New Mexico during the Covid-19 crisis.
Citing two nationally representative surveys, Bauer found that by the end of April, one in five US households - and two in five households with children 12 and under - could not afford enough food "often," or "sometimes," figures she said were "higher than they have ever been on record." Compared to 2018, food insecurity for households with children under 18 had seen a 130 percent spike.

While the research did not investigate the causes of the surge in food shortages for households with children, the soaring figures come as more than 30 million Americans file for unemployment benefits, thrown out of work by Covid-19 containment measures that have shuttered wide swathes of the US economy. The true number of workers out of a job is likely higher, however, given that some are not eligible for benefits, while others simply never apply to receive them. And though Congress has passed a number of relief packages worth trillions of dollars, many have found the aid insufficient to keep their families afloat for weeks, or even months, under lockdown.

Thousands of residents have taken to the streets to protest the containment policies across a handful of states, demanding they be allowed to return to work. The demonstrations have been spurred on by US President Donald Trump, who has urged some governors to "liberate" their citizens, arguing that "we can't let the cure be worse than the problem itself."

Despite the pressure from the commander in chief and their own citizens, the governors have approached reopening cautiously, fearing a resurgence of the virus, which has infected more than 1.2 million people in the US and killed in excess of 73,000. According to federal guidelines, states should not lift their containment policies before observing a steady fall in new infections for two weeks straight, and are expected to carry out widespread testing for the virus.

Short of ending the lockdowns keeping millions from earning a livelihood, Bauer recommended ways the government could mitigate the country's fast-growing food insecurity problem - including increasing food benefits under the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), as well as broadening eligibility for the Electronic Benefit Transfer (EBT) card, which provides low-income residents with funds for food and other essentials.
The world's economic situation was precarious before the lockdown now the UK and a great many other countries, particularly those that implemented the draconian measures, will likely suffer a worse fate:
The coronavirus pandemic is set to plunge the British economy into one of the deepest recessions ever, shaving 14 percent off the country's gross domestic product, according to a Bank of England forecast.

The central bank said that the coronavirus outbreak has led to an "unprecedented" situation for the global economy. Evaluating the toll the crisis is set to take on the UK, the bank said that apart from a sharp fall in GDP over the first half of the year, it will also result in a "substantial" hike in unemployment.

Bank of England
© Reuters / Toby MelvilleFILE PHOTO: The Bank of England, London, Britain
In real terms, that would mean the nation's GDP may fall close to 30 percent in the second quarter of 2020 compared to the end of last year, the bank's latest Monetary Policy Report says. After shrinking around three percent in the first three months of this year, the UK economy is set to face a 25 percent decline in the three months to June. The two successive quarters of contraction would mean that the UK will enter a technical recession, defined as two consecutive quarters of economic decline.

For the year as a whole, the nation's economy is expected to contract by 14 percent. It would be the sharpest drop since 1706, according to historical Bank of England data.

On the bright side, the bank predicts that economic growth to rapidly pick up, with the recovery expected to be much faster than after the 2008 economic crisis. The UK's GDP is set to hit pre-Covid levels in the second half of next year and could further rise three percent in 2022. However, the scenario is built on the assumption that the worst days of the pandemic would be over. The report stressed that the outlook for the economy is "unusually uncertain."

"Economic prospects are highly dependent on the evolution of the pandemic and how governments, households and businesses continue to respond to it," the bank's governor, Andrew Bailey, said in a statement.

As the central bank decided to leave interest rates intact - at the historic low of 0.1 percent - Bailey said that it could take "further action as necessary" to support the economy amid the coronavirus crisis. While the members of the nine-member monetary policy committee (MPC) voted unanimously to keep interest rates unchanged for now, they were divided on whether to inject more stimulus into the economy. On Thursday, two members of the MPC voted to increase the quantitative easing program by another £100 billion ($123 billion). In March, the committee agreed to increase the stock of asset purchases by £200 billion ($246 billion) to a total of £645 billion ($795 billion).



Cardboard Box

We are witnessing economic slaughter like we have never seen before

COVID economic collapse
© theeconomiccollapseblog.com
Now we are up to 33.5 million jobs lost. In just 7 weeks, the U.S. economy has been completely turned upside down, and the numbers are unlike anything that we have ever seen before.

On Thursday, the Labor Department announced that 3.17 million Americans filed initial claims for unemployment benefits last week. That brings the grand total for this crisis up to 33.5 million, and that figure absolutely dwarfs what we witnessed during the last recession. And as I discussed yesterday, even the mainstream media is now admitting that millions of those jobs are never coming back.

Yes, some Americans will be going back to work now that the lockdowns are being ended, but for now it is being projected that the job losses will continue to surpass any gains that are made by workers that are returning to their old jobs.

In fact, one prominent economist told CNBC that it will likely take until mid-June before the number of Americans filing new claims for unemployment benefits each week falls below a million:
At the current pace, the week claims numbers should fall below 1 million by mid-June, according to Ian Shepherdson, chief economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics. "We're very hopeful that June will see the beginnings of a rebound as states begin to reopen," Shepherdson said.

Snakes in Suits

'Adam Schiff is a sociopath': Tucker Carlson calls for House Intelligence chairman to resign

Schiff
© Boston HeraldHouse Intelligence Committee Chair Adam Schiff
Fox News host Tucker Carlson thinks it's past time for Democratic California Rep. Adam Schiff to step down.

Carlson refused to mince words on the Friday edition of his show, blasting Schiff for his role in advancing conspiracy theories about a hidden back channel between Russia and the Trump administration.

"Adam Schiff is a sociopath," Carlson said. "He will do or say anything to achieve power. He is unfit to hold office. He should resign."

Comment: See also:


Brick Wall

Was lockdown a waste of time? Study finds stay-at-home order was 'ineffective'

lockdown collage
© EPA/GettyScientists locked at how effective measures across Europe were – and backed school closures and banning mass gatherings.
Blanket lockdown orders had limited effect on fighting coronavirus in Europe, a bombshell experimental study has suggested.

But closing schools and banning mass gathering did slow the pandemic's spread across the continent, researchers from the University of East Anglia (UEA) found.

They said that relaxing stay-at-home orders and allowing some types of non-essential businesses such as shops to reopen could be the starting point towards moving the UK out of lockdown. The success of these measures, along with other social distancing policies across 30 European countries, were studied by the UAE scientists, who wanted to see which were the most effective at controlling the disease.