Society's ChildS


Propaganda

No class: NYT reporter Kenneth Vogel tries to cancel pardoned black Christian for supporting Trump

john ponder wife trump pardon
© Committee on Arrangements for the 2020 Republican National Committee via Getty ImagesJon Ponder (L) and his wife Jamie Ponder (R) look on as President Donald Trump signs a document granting clemency to Ponder during the virtual RNC on Aug. 25, 2020.
A New York Times money and politics reporter, Kenneth Vogel, is trying to cancel a pardoned black Christian, Jon Ponder, whose inspirational story of redemption was prominently featured on night two of the Republican National Convention Tuesday, for endorsing the president's re-election.

"JON PONDER's story is inspirational," Vogel wrote on Twitter. "But should he be endorsing a candidate for president while being identified as the founder & CEO of Hope for Prisoners, which — as a 501(c)(3) non-partisan non-profit group — is barred from participating in partisan politics?"

Bad Guys

Kenosha officials: Jacob Blake admitted to having a knife in his possession during Kenosha shooting

jacob blake kenosha riot knife
Officials in Wisconsin announced that Jacob Blake, the man shot by police in Kenosha, admitted to being in possession of a knife.

The Wisconsin Department of Justice's Division of Criminal Investigation provided further details about the Sunday shooting in a Wednesday news release and identified the officer allegedly involved in the shooting as Rusten Sheskey, a seven-year veteran of the police force.

"During the investigation following the initial incident, Mr. Blake admitted that he had a knife in his possession. DCI agents recovered a knife from the driver's side floorboard of Mr. Blake's vehicle. A search of the vehicle located no additional weapons," the Wisconsin Department of Justice said.

Comment: Police in Wisconsin shoot Black man in back multiple times, sparking protests - Updates


Black Cat

Best of the Web: Gaslighting: CNN claims Kenosha protests are 'fiery but mostly peaceful' as city burns behind reporter

kenosha riots
© Joshua Lott for The Washington Post via Getty ImagesA building burns during the Kenosha, WI riots
CNN ran a segment on the unrest in Kenosha, Wisconsin, on Tuesday night that featured a chyron claiming that the protests were "fiery but mostly peaceful" as a reporter who was on the ground stood in front of a city that was on fire.

"What you're seeing behind me is one of multiple locations that have been burning in Kenosha, Wisconsin, over the course of the night," the CNN reporter said. "A second night since Jacob Blake was seen shot in the back seven times by a police officer."

"And what you are seeing now, these images came and come in stark contrast to what we saw over the course of the daytime hours in Kenosha and into the early evening, which were largely peaceful demonstrations in the face of law enforcement," the reporter continued. "It wasn't until night fell that things began to get a little bit more contentious, things were thrown back and forth. Police started using some of those crowd disbursal tactics like teargas, even playing really loud sounds to push them out."

Comment: The Twitterati had a field day mocking CNN:








Footprints

Coronavirus' two-meter social distancing rule is based on 'outdated science,' medical experts say

social distance
© EPAResearchers suggest "one-size-fits-all" replaced by "graded recommendations".
Some of the research used to justify 2m distancing based on findings from 1800s. Two-metre social distancing deployed across the world to limit the spread of coronavirus is based on "outdated science", experts have said.

A group of British scientists said distance should not be the focal point of measures designed to limit the spread of the virus and that the one-size-fits-all system should be replaced by "graded recommendations" for different settings.


Comment: Shucks. It was almost hopeful...and then they ruined it. Read on, it gets worse.


The UK government, as in many other nations, recommends people should remain two metres or one metre if mitigating factors such as face masks and screens are in use. But researchers writing in the British Medical Journal (BMJ) said more flexible guidance would enable "a return towards normality in some aspects of social and economic life".

"Current rules on safe physical distancing are based on outdated science," Nicholas Jones, from Oxford University's Nuffield Department of Primary Care, and his colleagues wrote. They added: "Distribution of viral particles is affected by numerous factors, including air flow. Evidence suggests Sars-CoV-2 may travel more than two metres through activities such as coughing and shouting.

Comment: Two words of advice: Diss Stancing! The 'complications' are not a 'medical' issue.

See also:


Footprints

If Biden is elected, residents fleeing chaotic cities like Seattle and Portland are in for a rude awakening

Riot  Portland
© AP/Marcio Jose SanchezRiot at Mark O. Hatfield U.S. Courthouse, Portland Oregon
If you listen to the mayors of cities in chaos like Seattle and Portland, the Mostly Peaceful Protestors™ were singing kumbayah until federal officers arrived. Anyone paying attention knows this is a ridiculous narrative. Apparently, local residents have been paying attention because they are fleeing in large numbers.

If you recall, Seattle Mayor Jenny Durkan allowed a group of insurrectionists to take over a portion of downtown Seattle, which included unwilling participants who lived, worked, or owned businesses in the area. Huddled in their homes, they listened to chaos and gunfire every evening. During the day, a motley selection of partygoers descended on the six-block radius to engage in some kind of riot tourism.

The autonomous zone, also known as CHAZ/CHOP, was eventually broken up. But the Mostly Peaceful Protests™ didn't end. Just this weekend, a construction site was set ablaze along with a Starbucks adjacent to an apartment complex. Residents have taken note and are leaving. One way you can tell is that it costs a lot more to rent a U-Haul to leave a city than to travel to the same town — basic supply and demand [...] It costs almost eight times as much to leave Seattle as it does to leave Boise.

Comment: After instigated riots, after planned attacks, after horrific '9/11s' there comes change...and it will not be in our favor, nor will it honor our rights. We simply won't have them and there will be nowhere to run.

See also:


Family

South Dakota governor wants schools open without mask mandates: 'The risks of COVID are too minimal'

Noem
© AP/James NordSouth Dakota Governor Kristi Noem
South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem on Tuesday said she will push for schools to stay open this fall, but disparaged any requirements for children to wear masks in classrooms.

As parents and school boards cautiously weigh the risks and benefits of schools reopening, the Republican governor emphasized the educational and social upside of a return to in-person learning, citing research that COVID-19 poses less of a threat to children. But Noem appears selective in the research she is using for her decisions: She has pointed to studies and recommendations that indicate the health risks from the virus are less than feared, while also downplaying scientific findings that show masks could help prevent the spread of the disease.

"We cannot sacrifice the educational, physical, emotional and social well-being of our kids. The risks of COVID are too minimal for us to make sure that they're all going to stay home," Noem said at a press conference held in a classroom at John Harris Elementary in Sioux Falls.

Comment: See also:


Pistol

Man in protest walk, from Milwaukee to DC, injured in Pennsylvania shooting

news picture
© 12 ABC/WISN
Two people were being questioned by investigators after a man participating in a cross-country protest from Milwaukee to Washington, D.C., was injured in a shooting in Pennsylvania, state police said Tuesday morning.

The incident was captured on live streamed by the protest group's leader Frank Nitty. The video shows what appears to be two people standing in a driveway on a street which was not easily identifiable in the video. One of the people appears to have a long gun.

In a news release, Pennsylvania State Police identified the street as Lincoln Highway in Bedford County, which has just under 50,000 residents, according to the most recent Census Bureau data.

"This dude is shooting at us," Nitty can be heard saying before a vehicle pulls slightly forward blocking the camera's view of the person with the gun. At least two shots can then be heard.


Comment: Police provide an update as investigation continued:

Update 25/8/2020: Warning shots fired:
One of the BLM militants was shot and seen bleeding in a video.



The wounded man admits shooting at the homeowner:



Stop

Poll: Russians overwhelmingly oppose microchipping of humans, fear becoming cyborgs without even knowing it

Chip
© Getty Images/KTSDESIGN/SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARYImplantable chip
The majority of Russians are opposed to implanting microchips into the human body - a popular idea in sci-fi movies, yet rare in reality - a recent survey has discovered.

While a whopping 77 percent of those surveyed by the Russian Public Opinion Research Center VCIOM (a state-linked outfit) said they are against the idea in principle, 45 percent elaborated that they were afraid of being implanted without even knowing it.

Other hyper-anxious citizens stressed that their fears were based on the presumption that microchips could be hazardous for their health or be used for 24-hour surveillance.

Only 11 percent of respondents said that they either were not as concerned or had other things to worry about. Nevertheless, they didn't expect technology that could render people cyborgs to appear any time soon - at least not during their lifetime. Twenty-three percent had never heard about such technology before the sociologists enlightened them.

Some people, also a tiny minority, believe chipping would benefit them, making it easier to replace paper IDs and bank cards or help in the search for missing persons.

Question

Russia launches preliminary inquiry into Navalny's hospitalization

Charite/Omsk hospitals
© UnknownCharité Hospital in Germany • Omsk hospital facility
The Russian Interior Ministry has launched a preliminary inquiry into the hospitalization of Russian opposition figure Alexei Navalny, the press service of the Russian Interior Ministry's Transport Directorate for the Siberian Federal District informed TASS.
"Currently, investigators of the Investigative Department of the Russian Interior Ministry's Transport Directorate for the Siberian Federal District are carrying out a preliminary inquiry initiated by the Western Siberian Transport Prosecutor's Office in accordance with the established procedure over the hospitalization of Alexei Navalny on August 20 in Omsk."
Russia's transport police have not found any potent substances or drugs during the search of Alexei Navalny's hotel room as well as along the route of his trip, the press service informed TASS.
"A search of the hotel room where A. Navalny stayed was conducted, along with the search of his travel route. Over 100 objects that could be used as evidence were seized. Surveillance videos were analyzed. Over 20 forensic (medical and legal, biological, and physical and chemical) tests are currently being carried out. So far, no potent substances or drugs have been found."

Comment: See also:


Stop

Berlin bans anti-lockdown protest, condemning 'corona deniers and right-wing extremists'

Berlin Protest
© Reuters/Fabrizio BenschAnti-lockdown march near the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin, Germany, August 1, 2020.
Berlin authorities have banned the upcoming protest against Covid-19 lockdown measures, saying the marches were being misused as a stage for right-wing extremists and "deniers" of the pandemic.

Organizers of the August 29 "Assembly for Freedom" in central Berlin had registered 17,000 demonstrators. The local government says police will be out in force to prevent the gathering, because participants in the previous march "deliberately broke the rules" for wearing masks and social distancing.

"We are still in the middle of a pandemic with rising infection figures," Berlin's interior minister Andreas Geisel told reporters on Wednesday.

"This is not a decision against freedom of assembly, but a decision in favour of infection protection," the minister said, adding that Berlin should not be "misused as a stage for corona deniers... and right-wing extremists."

About 20,000 people marched against the lockdown measures on August 1, including civil libertarians, constitutionalists, anti-vaccination activists and supporters of the Reichsburger movement, which some German state governments consider far-right. Some of the marchers, Geisel said, refused to wear face coverings or keep a distance of 1.5 meters, as required by police.