Society's ChildS

Mr. Potato

LA Public Health Department faces backlash after offering COVID-19 test to animals, including seals

dog mask
© Chris Delmas/AFP via Getty ImagesZiggie the dog wearing a mask put on her face by her owner in Los Angeles, on April 5, 2020.
The Los Angeles Public Health Department is facing growing criticism over its decision to offer free COVID-19 testing for animals, despite there being no positive cases reported among animals in the area.

LA Public Health announced the initiative on Aug. 20 and said it has received funding from the Council of State and Territorial Epidemiologists and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) to monitor COVID-19 in animals in Los Angeles County.

"This project will help us to learn more about COVID-19 from a One Health perspective, meaning that we can learn more about the significance of COVID-19 in human, animal, and environmental relationships," the public health body said.

Comment: That they're being mocked on social media seems appropriate. They're basically spending taxpayer money to see if people's pets have the flu.

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Cross

Black Christian denied student government role after quoting Bible

Mya Little
© Mya Little/LinkedIn
Speaker of the senate criticized 'preaching about religion' in the post-Roe era.

A black Christian female will not serve on the University of Houston student government's judicial branch this year after she quoted the Bible while interviewing for a position.

Mya Little (pictured) opened a speech at an interview session over the summer with a Bible quote, according to The Cougar, the campus newspaper. Little had applied to be an associate justice on the SGA Supreme Court.

Comment: It would seem anti-Christian sentiments are now acceptable form of discrimination at all levels of society. It's to the point where officials don't even try to hide their blatant bigotry.

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Mr. Potato

Bulgaria says it's 'inevitable' that talks with Gazprom will resume

gazprom bulgaria
A protester holds a poster reading "Freedom Or Gazprom" during a protest rally in downtown Sofia on August 10.
Bulgaria must hold talks with Russia's state-controlled energy giant Gazprom on the resumption of gas deliveries that were halted in April, interim Energy Minister Rossen Hristov said on August 22.

Hristov did not say when talks would take place. He said Sofia would hold talks with Azerbaijan this week to boost Azerbaijani gas supplies and would discuss such deliveries with Turkish gas traders.

Family

NYC could spend $300M annually to house migrants in hotels: analysis

nyc migrant hotel
© Matthew McDermottCity officials are planning to rent about 600 rooms for migrants.
The Big Apple could be on the hook for more than $300 million per year to provide shelter space in hotels for newly arrived migrants, a Post analysis shows.

City officials have either rented or announced plans to secure roughly 5,800 hotel rooms over the last month in response to the influx from the southern border, which quickly overwhelmed the already-strained homeless shelter system.

One of the largest operations is planned for the ROW NYC hotel on 8th Avenue in Midtown, where officials are looking to rent as many as 600 rooms and provide intake and other services for the recent arrivals.

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Attention

3 Arkansas officers suspended after video of violent arrest emerges

arkansas police suspended
© FacebookThree officers on the Arkansas police force have been suspended after brutally beating a suspect they were detaining.
Three cops in Arkansas were suspended after a video emerged that showed them brutally beating a detainee.

In the TikTok video posted on Twitter, one officer holds the man down to the ground as another repeatedly and relentlessly punches the man's head and a third forcibly nails him with his knee multiple times in a row.

At one point, the officer punching the man in the head lifts the man's head up from the ground and slams it back down into the cement sidewalk as the man tries to protect his head with his hands, the video shows.

Comment: Federal officials are now investigating. From NBC News:
State police and federal officials launched investigations into the use of force against a man by Arkansas law enforcement officers that was captured on viral video, officials said Monday.
...

The deputies and the officer involved were identified as Crawford County Sheriff's Deputies Zack King and Levi White and Mulberry Police Officer Thell Riddle, the sheriff's office revealed Monday.

At a news conference Monday, Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson said the officers' conduct was "reprehensible."

"First of all, that is reprehensible conduct in which a suspect is beat in that fashion," he said. "We don't have all of the details, and certainly that suspect had a history of concern that was legitimate for the officers, but that response was not consistent with the training that they receive as certified officers with the Arkansas Law Enforcement Training Academy."

Hutchinson said that, in addition to a probe by Arkansas State Police, the U.S. Justice Department is also investigating.
...

The sheriff's department said that the suspect was cooperative at first but that the men ultimately ended up in a physical confrontation.

Damante said at a news conference Monday that the suspect, who wasn't known to police, as he was from another state, became violent when officers were about to take him into custody. He said his officers' account of the incident matched what the viral video showed.

Damante said his officers "admitted that they had to use force to subdue him."

He said there is dashcam video of the interaction from the Mulberry officer's vehicle, which was handed to state police.

"The dashcam does bring to light other things that happened there, that initiated, that wasn't caught on the citizen's camera," Damante said about the video.

The sheriff's deputies didn't have body cameras. Damante said he is trying to get body and dash cameras for the department.
...

He said that the FBI is expected to speak with state police Monday and that an internal investigation within the sheriff's office is underway.

The state investigators are focusing solely on the use of force at the store, and they will forward their conclusion, including possible recommended charges, to local prosecutors.

A detailed list of charges for which the suspect was booked, according to state police, includes: second-degree battery, resisting arrest, refusal to submit, possessing an instrument of crime, criminal trespass, criminal mischief, terroristic threatening and second-degree assault.



Bad Guys

ISIS suicide bomber en route to India intercepted - Russia

Screenshot from a video showing the suspect.
© FSBScreenshot from a video showing the suspect.
The terrorist recruit was tasked with killing a senior figure in the Indian leadership, law enforcement reported.

A person who allegedly plotted to blow himself up to kill a senior Indian politician was intercepted during transit through Russia, the Federal Security Service (FSB) reported on Monday.

The would-be suicide bomber was recruited in Turkey by the terrorist group Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS), the statement said. The man was radicalized on social media and met a representative of IS in Istanbul to record a pledge of allegiance before going on a mission to India, the FSB said. Russia served as a transit nation for the trip, the agency said.

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Family

Boston Children's Hospital gender clinic sees children 'ages two and three'

boston children's hospital
A psychologist at the Boston Children's Hospital claimed that children know they are transgender "seemingly from the womb," explaining that the gender clinic sees children as young as ages two and three.

A shocking video produced by the Boston Children's Hospital Gender Multispeciality Service features psychologist Kerry McGregor claiming that children may identify as transgender from the womb.


In the video on transgenderism, McGregor remarks "A good portion of children know ... seemingly from the womb." Some children identify as transgender "as soon as they can talk," she continues. "Kids know very very early," McGregor claims.


Comment: No, they don't. These people are insane.


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Eye 1

'I am the state, the state is me': Tucker Carlson mocks Fauci's alleged lies about covid-19

fauci tucker carlson
Fox News host and Daily Caller co-founder Tucker Carlson mocked White House senior medical adviser Dr. Anthony Fauci's alleged false claims and inconsistencies about COVID-19.

Carlson noted that Fauci has made several incorrect conclusions about both the virus and the vaccine in an attempt to "give more power" to the Biden administration. "Tony Fauci has been consistent on one point, one point really only," Carlson said. "And that is that you need to give more power to the Biden administration. His patrons."

Fauci announced Monday that he will step down from his position at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) and from advising the White House this upcoming December.

He played a segment of Fauci in July arguing there should have been "more stringent restrictions" imposed in order to prevent asymptomatic individuals from spreading the virus.

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Take 2

In China, latest Minions movie gets a new ending that promotes rule of law

Minions: The Rise of Gru
What's small, yellow, loves bananas and promotes the rule of law? A Minion, at least according to an edited version of the latest animated film featuring supervillain Gru and his army of tiny sidekicks being screened in China.

The fifth instalment of the lucrative "Despicable Me" franchise, "Minions: The Rise of Gru", premiered in China this month, several weeks after the film opened in United States cinemas.

But while the international version of the kung fu-filled family-friendly romp set in 1970s San Francisco tells the story of how the dastardly Gru cut his teeth as a tween criminal, filmgoers in China are treated to an alternative ending in which the good guys win.

A series of subtitled still images inserted into the credits sequence on mainland Chinese screens reassures audiences that police catch Gru's law-breaking mentor Wild Knuckles and lock him up for 20 years after a failed heist.

International viewers simply see Knuckles give police the slip by faking his death earlier in the film's concluding scenes, but in the Chinese version he puts his con artist skills to positive use in prison, where he follows his "love of acting" and sets up a theatrical troupe.

As for Gru, he "eventually became one of the good guys", devoted to raising his family, the Chinese ending says.


Comment: Plato approves.


Eye 1

France to hire 3,000 'green police' to improve investigation of environmental issues, medicine tracking, and bioterrorism

A firefighting truck works to contain a fire in Saint-Magne, as wildfires continue to spread in the Gironde region of southwestern France, August 11, 2022.
© REUTERS/Stephane MaheA firefighting truck works to contain a fire in Saint-Magne, as wildfires continue to spread in the Gironde region of southwestern France, August 11, 2022.
French Interior Minister Gรฉrald Darmanin has announced plans to launch 3,000 "green gendarme positions" to improve the investigation proceedings in environmental issues - particularly in cases of arson.


Comment: Apparently the government has room in the budget for these new hires, despite the fact they won't address actual, critical issues like the looming food shortages, the energy crisis, and the country's tanking economy.


"The aim is to have gendarmes (police officers) trained in attacks on ecology in each gendarmerie brigade... It will be a revolution", the minister said on Sunday. This summer, "there were between 80 and 120 fires per day in France; to date we have carried out 26 arrests of suspected arsonists."


Comment: With so many fires, and just 26 arrests, it seems highly unlikely that these officers, who will likely be spread across the country, will make much difference.


Darmanin hopes that the move will "massively strengthen local and central authorities in the fight against damage to the environment."

In 2004, the Central Office to Tackle Environmental Crime (OCLAESP) was founded. In July, it led investigations into the great fire of Landiras in Gironde.

Comment: What are the chances that these 'green gendarmes' will instead be deployed against the average citizen breaking minor, and likely arbitrary, rules, meanwhile the biggest polluters, such as the national and international corporations, will continue getting away with the most egregious criminality?

It's notable that over in Russia they seem to have the right idea, with new legislation that will block profits of corporations who destroy the environment, and they've already followed through with a $2 billion fine against a corporation over a massive oil spill.