Society's ChildS

Black Cat

Hunkering down in Mordor: America's wealthy flee Covid-19 epicentre for their New Zealand bunkers

custom bunker wealthy apocolypse
© Rising SA floor plan of the most expensive bunker Rising S offers.
Apocalypse-fearing wealthy Americans, and Kiwis, are reportedly shipping survival bunkers to New Zealand where they believe they will be safe.

Rich Americans are reportedly fleeing to their bunkers deep beneath New Zealand to avoid the coronavirus outbreak.

New Zealand has been lauded internationally, and especially by media in the United States for Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern's handling of the coronavirus pandemic by introducing a stringent lockdown early.

Meanwhile New York has become the epicentre of the virus, which has killed more than 30,000 Americans.

Comment: So much for "We're all in this together."

On the ground, ordinary New Zealanders are not so thrilled with their prime minister.


Gold Bar

Peter Schiff: 'Gold mines right now are literally GOLD MINES

refining gold
© Reuters/Rick WilkingSenior refinery technician pours liquid gold to form gold dore bars.
Jobless claims continued stockpiling in the US, having topped 26 million over the past five weeks. The government is working to improve stimulus measures as the pandemic continues to ravage the global economy.

Boom Bust is joined by the CEO of Euro Pacific Capital, Peter Schiff, who says the US Federal Reserve is just doubling down on its failed monetary policy: "In order to prop up the market, the Fed hastened to destroy the purchasing power of the dollar."

According to Schiff:
"Investors "should be buying gold stocks because gold and gold stocks would be the biggest beneficiaries of monetary policy. Precious metals are a monetary alternative to fiat currencies that are being debased the world over, particularly in the United States."

Russian Flag

Russia passes dual citizenship law, hoping to add 10 million citizens

russian passport
© Andrei Lyubimov / Moskva News Agency
Russian lawmakers from both houses of parliament have passed legislation Friday allowing dual Russian citizenship for foreigners, sending it to President Vladimir Putin's desk less than two weeks after introducing it.

Lawmakers have described the amendments to Russia's citizenship law, which among other steps strike down a requirement to renounce one's existing citizenship, as "revolutionary." Their authors expect up to 10 million people, primarily from Russian-speaking populations in the former Soviet republics, to obtain Russian passports as the country tries to fix its demographic crisis.

The bill relaxing current citizenship rules passed the lower-house State Duma unanimously in a 302-0 vote in a rare session Friday. The Duma usually convenes between Tuesday and Thursday.

Russia's upper-house Federation Council, which traditionally gathers once a week on a Wednesday, passed the bill shortly after.

Both votes took place within 10 days since the Russian government submitted the legislation for consideration.

Russia's dual citizenship bill will become law 90 days after Putin signs it and Russia's official gazette publishes it.

The bill also exempts spouses and children of Russian nationals from the five-year continuous residence requirement in order to become a naturalized Russian.

Comment: Putin signed the bill today.


Corona

Corona-madness: Indian police mistakenly book 6-month-old baby, 3-year-old for not following quarantine measures

india corona
© AP
A six-month-old baby and a three-year-old child were among more than 40 people booked in a village in Uttarakhand's Uttarkashi district for 'not following home quarantine and endangering the life of others.'


Comment: Nonsense.



As soon as the incident came to light, villagers raised objection following which the official, on whose report they were booked, was suspended by the district magistrate and a probe was ordered, said officials.

The suspended official identified as Girish Singh Rana, an assistant engineer in irrigation department, was deployed as Covid-19 magistrate by district magistrate (DM) Ashish Chauhan in Chinyalisaur area to ensure home quarantine of the people who return to the district, said officials.

Chauhan said the incident happened on April 10 when a family comprising the two children returned to their village from Haryana along with 47 others and were asked to remain in home quarantine as a precautionary measure.

"However, it was found that they didn't follow the home quarantine following which action was directed against them. Covid-19 magistrate concerned Rana was asked to prepare a report of the violators for necessary action," Chauhan said.

Yellow Vest

'Political repression': Woman detained by police in France for displaying 'Macronavirus' banner on garden wall

macronavrius
© AFP / Lionel Bonaventure
A French woman was reprimanded by police for displaying a banner with the words "Macronavirus, when is the end?" outside of her home as social tensions grow amid a strict Covid-19 lockdown.

The woman complied with a police order to remove the banner on April 21, but officers returned a day later with a summons for a hearing on April 23. When she showed up, she was taken into custody for "contempt." She was released after four hours, local media reports said.

The banner that was critical of President Emmanuel Macron had been hung on the woman's garden wall in Toulouse - and the word "Macronavirus" was a reference to a cover of the satirical Charlie Hebdo magazine from January.

The incident follows several others since early April in which residents in Paris, Marseille and other cities who have displayed banners with "political overtones" have been visited by the police, according to Mediapart.

Megaphone

Handing out free cash to citizens as part of coronavirus relief will lead to hyperinflation in Russia - Central Bank

disinfecting roads moscow
© Global Look Press
Distributing money to people as part of coronavirus relief measures could be catastrophic in terms of inflation, according to the Bank of Russia Governor Elvira Nabiullina.

"If the Central Bank prints money and gives it out at a zero rate, what could that lead to? I can recall the 1990s. This will lead to an 'explosion' of inflation, and for those who received those banknotes it will be hard to buy anything," she said.

Nabiullina added that, according to the bank's estimates, an easing of monetary policy is needed to maintain annual inflation close to four percent over the forecast horizon.

"The slump in domestic and external demand this year will significantly contain inflation, which reduces the risk of its substantial deviation downwards from the target in 2021 and over a medium-term horizon if no additional monetary policy measures are introduced," she said.

The bank governor also said that the economic situation will be "returning to normal step-by-step," assuming that governments will be gradually lifting or considerably easing the majority of current restrictions in the second quarter of the year. "In this case, we can expect that in the third and fourth quarters, economic activity will be recovering quarter-on-quarter," she said.

Dollars

Amazon will be fined โ‚ฌ100,000 for EVERY 'non-essential' delivery in France after court rejects appeal in worker safety dispute

amazon warehouse
© Thomas Samson / AFP
A French court upheld a ruling Friday restricting Amazon deliveries to essential products only until a risk assessment is carried out, but reduced fines for breaches and extended the list of products that can be delivered.

"The court of appeal confirms [the April 14 ruling] that requires Amazon France Logistique to carry out, in association with representatives of workers, an evaluation of professional risks linked to the COVID-19 epidemic in all its warehouses," the Versailles court of appeal said in a statement.

Amazon has temporarily closed its warehouses in France in response to the original ruling, arguing the order was too ambiguous.

Bullseye

Tucker Carlson: Here's why Gov. Whitmer wants Michigan residents quiet and subservient during coronavirus crisis

Whitmer
© APMichigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer
All last week, we told you about Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer and what she was doing in the name of science to respond to this coronavirus pandemic.

She banned the sale of forbidden objects -- paint, carpet, gardening supplies. She took control of the state's highways. She forbade residents from traveling to their own homes. She claimed this was rational and legal, though she never cited, of course, any scientific justification for all of this.

She says she must continue to do it, however, because keeping residents indoors is comparable in importance to beating Nazi Germany.
Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer: President Trump called this a war and it is exactly that. So, let's act like it.

In World War II, there weren't people lining up at the capitol to protest the fact that they had to drop everything they were doing and build planes or tanks or to ration food. They rolled up their sleeves and they got to work.

Dominoes

Federal judge blocks California law requiring background check to buy ammunition

bullets
© Rich Pedroncelli / AP file
A federal judge Thursday blocked background checks for ammunition buyers in California, calling the state's law on the matter "onerous and convoluted."

San Diego-based U.S. District Judge Roger Benitez granted a preliminary injunction against the rule after plaintiffs, including the California Rifle and Pistol Association and six-time Olympic medalist skeet shooter Kim Rhode, sued the state.

In 2016, Golden State voters approved Proposition 63, which included the background checks as well as a ban on high-capacity magazines for firearms. The same judge halted sales of the magazines as the state appeals another court challenge.

Eye 1

Duper's delight! Bill Gates giggling through Ellen interview evidences lying

Bill Gates smiling
Noun. duping delight (uncountable) The pleasure of being able to manipulate someone, often made visible to others by flashing a smile at an inappropriate moment.

Getting Away With Lies

By: Dr. Paul Ekman
December, 2009

The Navy warrant officer John Anthony Walker, Jr. was convicted as a spy for the Soviet Union in 1987, and is serving a life sentence. The New York Times said he had been the most damaging spy in history, having helped the Soviets decipher over 200,000 encrypted naval messages. It wasn't the polygraph that caught him, nor surveillance by U.S. counter-espionage officers. His wife Barbara turned him into the FBI. He was bragging about all the money he was making, but Barbara was his ex-wife and Walker was behind in alimony payments.

What motivated this smart, devious fellow to be so foolish? Probably what I call duping delight, the near irresistible thrill some people feel in taking a risk and getting away with it. Sometimes it includes contempt for the target who is being so ruthlessly and successfully exploited. It is hard to contain duping delight; those who feel it want to share their accomplishments with others, seeking admiration for their exploits.