Society's ChildS


Passport

Homan: ICE to leave airports when enough TSA officers return to work

Tom Homan
© Andrew Harnik / Getty Images fileWhite House border czar Tom Homan said TSA officers would "hopefully" be paid by Monday or Tuesday.Andrew
Tom Homan said ICE agents would remain at their posts until airports could resume regular operations.

Border czar Tom Homan said Sunday that Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents would remain at airports until TSA officers are able to resume normal operations.

"We're going to continue an ICE presence there, and until the airports feel like they're in 100%, you know, in a posture where they can do normal operations," Homan said in an interview on CBS News' "Face the Nation." "So if less TSA agents come back, that means we'll keep more ICE agents there."

His comments come days after President Donald Trump directed the Department of Homeland Security to pay Transportation Security Administration officers as the partial shutdown continues. Homan said in a separate Sunday interview on CNN's "State of the Union" that TSA officers will "hopefully" get paid by Monday or Tuesday.

Star of David

Israeli police block Catholic cardinal from Palm Sunday Mass at Jerusalem's Holy Sepulchre

Latin patriarch of Jerusalem, Pierbattista Pizzaballa
© Mussa Qawasma / Pool / AFP via Getty Images fileThe acting Latin patriarch of Jerusalem, Pierbattista Pizzaballa, leads a Christmas midnight Mass at the Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem in December.
The incident marks "the first time in centuries" Palm Sunday Mass couldn't be celebrated where many believe Jesus was crucified, according to the Latin Patriarchate of Jerusalem.

World leaders have voiced concern after Israeli police prevented Cardinal Pierbattista Pizzaballa, the Latin patriarch of Jerusalem, from entering the Church of the Holy Sepulchre on Sunday.

Pizzaballa had attempted to travel to the church within Jerusalem's Old City with the Rev. Francesco Ielpo, the church's official guardian, to celebrate Palm Sunday Mass, according to the Latin Patriarchate of Jerusalem.

It said the two were stopped en route and compelled to turn back, marking "the first time in centuries" that Palm Sunday Mass could not be celebrated at the church, which is the holiest site in Christianity, built where many believe Jesus was crucified.

Comment: Par for the course for the zionist ghouls. They've been quietly cleansing Christians from Palestine from the get-go. They're just less blatant about it As Craig Murry says, "Where are the CHRISTIAN zionists?"

And in other news:




Stop

QatarEnergy declares 'force majeure' for LNG shipments through May, representing as many as 90 cargoes

Qatar Energy
© Unknown
The already dismal LNG supply situation just got worse.

With up to 20% of global LNG flows shuttered due to the ongoing blockade of the Hormuz Strait and the extensive damage of Qatar LNG infrastructure, QatarEnergy has declared force majeure on some of ⁠its long-term liquefied natural gas (LNG) supply contracts, including for customers ⁠in Italy, Belgium, South Korea ⁠and China, effectively canceling contractual obligations. That would represent as many as 90 cargoes according to Bloomberg.

The move on Tuesday comes amid ongoing production and supply disruptions caused by the United States-Israeli war on Iran.

Cell Phone

"Don't Be Evil": Google's motto becomes a jury verdict in California

META Google decision
© openaiMeta • Justice • Google
Below is my column in the New York Post on the California verdict against Google and Meta. Google's "Don't Be Evil" went from a motto to a jury verdict. The jury clearly believed that these companies were malicious and manipulative toward minors, but there remain considerable questions over the basis for the liability of social media companies.

Here is the column:

Google once had a motto: "Don't be evil."

In its reorganization in 2015, the motto was changed to "Do the right thing."

According to a California jury this week, neither motto stuck.

In a historic verdict against both Google and Meta, a jury found that the companies maliciously designed their social media products to addict children, including the plaintiff, who was known only as Kaley or KGM.

The jury heard testimony of efforts to "target" young users and feed an addiction to social media and YouTube. The jury awarded Kaley $3 million in compensatory damages divided between Meta (70%) and Google (30%). It then awarded another $3 million in punitive damages.

Those damages are nothing to companies worth billions. However, the verdict was like a dinner gong for plaintiffs lawyers. There are already thousands of cases filed against social media companies. That wave is about to become a tsunami. That is particularly the case after companies like TikTok and Snap settled before trial.

In addition to this civil verdict, the New Mexico Attorney General secured a $375 million verdict the same week against Meta under the state's consumer protection laws.

But it will be a very long time before these companies cut a check. The California case is rife with compelling appellate issues that will take years to work out.

Megaphone

Conservative EU MEPs warn of 'no-go zones' tied to mass immigration and Islamization

French politician Marion Maréchal
Conservative French MEP Marion Maréchal
A new report argues that areas of state retreat and parallel societies are spreading across Western Europe and are being fueled by uncontrolled immigration and Islamist entrenchment

A new report backed by European conservative lawmakers is sounding the alarm over what it describes as the spread of "no-go zones" across the European Union, linking the phenomenon directly to mass immigration, Islamization, and the breakdown of state authority in major urban areas.

The report was presented at a press conference on Wednesday by Sweden Democrats MEP Charlie Weimers, French nationalist MEP Marion Maréchal, and Brothers of Italy MEP Nicola Procaccini. Published by New Direction, the foundation tied to the ECR parliamentary group, the study argues that large parts of Europe are witnessing the rise of "parallel societies where the laws of the State are increasingly replaced by the codes of radicalisation and the rule of violence."

Truck

Maritime shipping giant Maersk slaps emergency fuel surcharge as war upends marine supply chains

The Maersk Gibraltar
The Maersk Gibraltar
The war in the Middle East has upended shipping fuel markets with prices of marine fuels skyrocketing and regions running low on supply, pushing some traders to forgo cargo and ship additional fuel volumes to key bunkering ports outside the Middle East.

The price of fuel oil has surged this month as the stalled tanker traffic at the Strait of Hormuz is tightening supplies of the fuel in Asia, the key bunkering hub for fuel oil used in ships.

The Middle East is a major global supplier of fuel oil, especially of high-sulfur fuel oil (HSFO). But the Iran war has all but halted traffic via the Strait of Hormuz, stranding supplies for Asia and its key bunkering hub of Singapore.

Yet, stocks in Singapore have increased this month as shipping owners and operators have refrained from buying the too expensive fuel. These, however, could soon start to deplete, fast, because vessels are becoming desperate to refuel, according to a Financial Times analysis.

Comment: Whistling past the graveyard? It remains to be seen how long Maersk can (literallly) keep things moving.


Star of David

Gaza toddler released from Israeli custody with 'cigarette burn' wounds

palestinian child torture IDF
© Palestinian ChroniclesA one-year-old child was tortured in Al-Maghazi to pressure the detained father during interrogation in March 2026
A doctor told the child's family that his injuries were consistent with 'signs of torture and cigarette burns', reports say

A Palestinian toddler was returned from a 10-hour detention by Israeli forces in the Gaza Strip with apparent cigarette burns on his thighs, according to medical reports.

Jawad Abu Nassar, aged 21 months, was detained alongside his father, Osama Abu Nassar, 25, in central Gaza on 19 March.

According to the family, Osama had taken his son out at around 10am to buy sweets ahead of the Muslim holiday of Eid al-Fitr.

Osama - who had been grappling with severe trauma after losing his home, his unborn child, and his livelihood during the war - never returned.

Comment: From the Independent:
The Israeli Defence Forces (IDF)rejected the claims, describing them as "unfounded", and said the child was brought "by a Hamas operative into a dangerous area to be used as a human shield". They claimed that his injuries were inflicted by shrapnel from bullets being fired by Israeli soldiers.

[...]

The child was examined by Dr Bisan Ahmed, an emergency room physician, a day after his release. She produced a medical report that identified signs of possible torture.

"I observed multiple deep, uniform lesions on his lower body, which are clinically consistent with deliberate cigarette burns used as a form of physical torture," she told Sky News. The Independent could not verify the report.

Jawad's father is still missing, and his family has not been told whether he has been arrested by the Israeli army, or what his condition is after being wounded. The IDF has not produced evidence to support the claim that Osama is a member of Hamas.
Demons . . . .


Star of David

Israeli soldiers parrot illegal settler ideology

IDF soldier west bank gun detain cnn
© Cyril Theophilos/CNNAn Israeli soldier's gun is seen as soldiers detain CNN crew members March 27, 2026
Talk of revenge after targeting Palestinians and detaining CNN crew in the West Bank

Amid the war with Iran, Israeli settler violence in the occupied West Bank is surging again. In one village, a Palestinian family says settlers beat a 75-year-old man inside his home. When reporting from the same village, a CNN crew is detained by Israeli soldiers who echo settler ideology and talk of revenge.

Twelve hours after Israeli settlers brutally attacked several Palestinians and established a new illegal outpost in their village, the Israeli military stepped in.

But instead of detaining settlers or dismantling the illegal outpost, the soldiers targeted the Palestinian residents of Tayasir and a CNN team covering the incursion.

Comment: Will CNN be altering their editorial slant now? In 2014, a CNN reporter was reassigned after she dared to insult the Israeli ghouls watching the bombing of Gaza while sipping lattes.

The NY Post reported on CNN's humiliating row-back:
CNN correspondent Diana Magnay was pulled from covering the Israeli-Hamas conflict Friday after she reported on a rocket attack and referred to Israelis who were allegedly harassing her as "scum."

Magnay fired off an angry tweet Thursday, shortly after she appeared on the air with Wolf Blitzer and reported on the rocket strike from a hill overlooking Israel's border with Gaza.

"Israelis on hill above Sderot cheer as bombs land #gaza; threaten to 'destroy our car if I say a word wrong.' Scum," she wrote.

Her tweet was later removed — but the damage was done once it was recirculated.

A CNN spokeswoman said Magnay was reassigned to Moscow.

"After being threatened and harassed before and during a live shot, Diana reacted angrily on Twitter," a CNN spokeswoman said in a statement to The Huffington Post.

"She deeply regrets the language used, which was aimed directly at those who had been targeting our crew. She certainly meant no offense to anyone beyond the group, and she and CNN apologize for any offense that may have been taken."

On the air, Magnay called the rocket fire "an astonishing, macabre and awful thing."

New York political watchers said Magnay dug her own hole by using such an inflammatory word on Twitter for others to see.

"It ain't good politics in the US to be calling a group of Israelis scum," said Baruch College Professor Doug Muzzio. "The use of the word is unfortunate. It's definitely something a professional journalist wouldn't say on the air."

While CNN had the right to reassign her, Muzzio said the Magnay controversy represents a new quandary for journalists about what's private and what's public.

"Can a journalist make a private comment on Twitter without running afoul of corporate bosses? It's an awful gray area," he said.
No tolerance for truth: CNN boots reporter from Israel-Gaza conflict after 'scum' tweet, reassigns her to Moscow


Syringe

Leonid Radvinsky, owner of OnlyFans, dies of cancer aged 43

Leonid Radvinsky
© Facebook
Leonid Radvinsky, the owner of OnlyFans, has died of cancer at the age of 43, the company announced on Monday.


Comment: Could this be another case of a turbo-cancer caused by the covid vax?

Turbo-Cancer: A doctor speaks out about aggressive tumors associated with Covid vaccination


"We are deeply saddened ​to announce the death of Leo ​Radvinsky. Leo passed away peacefully after a ⁠long battle with cancer," said a spokesperson for the company, best known for subscriptions to pornographic content creators. "His family have requested privacy at ​this difficult time."

Radvinsky, a Ukrainian-American billionaire with a net worth of about $3.8bn as of May 2025, acquired Fenix International Limited, OnlyFans' parent company, in 2018. He served as the company's director and majority shareholder. Born in Odesa, he grew up in Chicago and studied economics at Northwestern University. According to the Wall Street Journal, he began running pornography sites as a teenager.

Handcuffs

US quadruple amputee cornhole champion arrested on suspicion of murder

Dayton Webber
© Kevin Sullivan/Orange County Register via Getty Images
A Maryland man who made history as the first quadruple amputee to compete in the professional, televised American Cornhole League has been arrested on suspicion of shooting and killing a passenger in his car during an argument.

Dayton Webber - who became a champion cornhole player after losing his limbs and nearly dying from a bacterial infection in his infancy - faces murder charges in connection with the death of Bradrick Wells, authorities said on Monday.

According to a statement from investigators with the sheriff's office of Charles county in suburban Washington DC, Webber was driving his car with Wells as his front-seat passenger at about 10.25pm on Sunday when the pair began arguing in view of others who were in the vehicle.