Society's ChildS


Che Guevara

Seattle protesters occupy city hall, demand Mayor Durkan's resignation


Comment: And Durkan is herself an extreme far-left politician!


Protesters Seattle
© ReutersGroup of protesters occupy Seattle City Hall
Hundreds of protesters swarmed city hall in Seattle Tuesday night to demand Mayor Jenny Durkan's resignation. The crowd chanted "Hey, hey! Ho, ho! Jenny Durkan's got to go!" during the roughly hour-long takeover, led by Councilwoman Kshama Sawant.

Some protesters carried "Black Lives Matter" and "Durkan must go" signs, according to the Seattle Times. "When you talk about black rights, you can't leave out the horrific gentrification in Seattle," Sawant told the newspaper.

She placed the blame on Amazon, which is headquartered in Seattle. "Taxing Amazon is absolutely a part of black rights ... It's about actually putting dollars on the table to address inequities affecting the black community," Sawant said.


Comment: Really? What business is this of Amazon? How is this 'black rights'?


Comment: See also:


Ice Cream Bar

NYPD alert: Concrete disguised as ice cream found near NYC protests

concrete ice cream
© newsfeed.mediaNYPD finds concrete disguised as ice cream at George Floyd protests
An internal NYPD alert warned officers of containers of hardened concrete resembling "chocolate chip ice cream" found near the scene of a recent George Floyd protest in Lower Manhattan.

Three containers of the alleged hard serve — poured into what appear to be to-go coffee and soup cups and flecked with darker-colored spots — were found sitting on a window ledge near the Worth Street entrance to Manhattan Supreme Court on June 3, according to the memo obtained by The Post. "The Cups were filled with cement and made to look like CHOCOLATE CHIP ICE CREAM," the alert read in part.

The cups, which have markings on the outside, also resemble concrete sample tests commonly used on construction sites. The department has also warned of concrete-filled tennis balls and water bottles.

Info

CrossFit CEO resigns after George Floyd tweet raised eyebrows and Zoom call full of conspiracy theories gets leaked

Greg Glassman
© Eduardo Contreras/San Diego Union-TribuneFormer CrossFit CEO and founder Greg Glassman, speaks at Fathom CrossFit in Southern California. He resigned June 9, 2020, after audio leaked of a call with CrossFit affiliate gyms in which he cast doubt on the legitimacy of George Floyd protests and advanced conspiracy theories about Floyd's death and COVID-19.
The CEO of CrossFit is stepping down after comments about George Floyd sparked a social media backlash and led to affiliated gyms and Reebok cutting ties with the exercise brand famous for its devoted followers.

Greg Glassman said in a statement posted on CrossFit's website late Tuesday that he decided to retire. Glassman had apologized earlier for tweets that sparked online outrage by connecting Floyd, a black man who died at the hands of Minneapolis police, and the coronavirus pandemic. He said he had made a mistake and should have been more sensitive, but denied being racist.

"On Saturday I created a rift in the CrossFit community and unintentionally hurt many of its members," he said. "I cannot let my behavior stand in the way of HQ's or affiliates' missions."

Glassman had angered many with his glib response to a tweet by the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation, a health research group, which said, "Racism is a public health issue."

"It's FLOYD-19," he replied on Saturday, and in a second tweet criticized the group's "failed" quarantine model and accused it of attempting to "model a solution to racism."

Comment:




Car Black

Car plows into pedestrians in Munich injuring 3, police hunt underway

German police, polizei
© REUTERS/Andreas GebertFile photo
Police have cordoned off part of the German city of Munich after a car drove into a group of people. The occupants then jumped out and attacked the group before fleeing the scene in their vehicle.

Three people were injured in the incident and have been taken to hospital, according to investigators.

In a series of tweets, Munich Police said that they have blocked off a large area around the scene in the Ungererstrasse and Domagkstrasse areas of the city. It's not believed there is any further risk to the public, they added.

"According to current investigations, a car drove into a smaller group of people, the occupants got out and hit the group. They then fled by car. We are now looking for the vehicle," the force said.

Arrow Down

Guardian writer Jones derided after promoting website seeking to topple Earl Grey statue, UK PM responsible for ending slavery

Owen Jones, Earl Grey Monument
© (L) Global look Press / Andres Pantoja (R) wikipedia(L) Guardian journalist Owen Jones (R) Grey's Monument, Newcastle
UK journalist Owen Jones has been mercilessly mocked after enthusiastically promoting a website that marks out statues around the UK that should be toppled...including that of a former PM who oversaw the abolition of slavery.

Jones - who writes for the Guardian and is also a prominent left-wing activist - took to Twitter on Tuesday to share a link to "Topple the Racists." It's a website run by the "Stop Trump Coalition" with support from the "Black Lives Matter" campaign, who say the objective is to "take down statues and monuments in the UK that celebrate slavery and racism."

Evil Rays

'Violence provokes violence', Mandela Foundation says in support of U.S. protests

Nelson Mandela
© REUTERS/Mike Hutchings/FILE PHOTO: Former South African President Nelson Mandela attends the Sixth Annual Nelson Mandela lecture in Kliptown, near Johannesburg, South Africa July 12, 2008.
South Africa's Nelson Mandela Foundation said on Thursday violence can be a rational response to racism and for some communities is the only way to elicit change, as protests raged across the United States over the death of George Floyd.

Floyd died after a police officer knelt on his neck for nearly nine minutes, video footage showed, sparking outrage across the United States and beyond. Protests in the country have turned violent.

The foundation, set up to guard the legacy of Nelson Mandela, South Africa's first democratically-elected president, said that violence is often too readily dismissed as the work of extremists or criminals, when it can be the result of careful calculation by communities who "see that only such action elicits the desired response from the state".

"When communities are confronted by both resilient structural violence and attacks on their bodies, violent responses will occur... The use of violence can be rational and carefully targeted," its statement continued.

Comment:






Dominoes

Stock market will hit new highs if Trump wins 2020 presidential election, chief strategist tells Boom Bust

trump
© Reuters / Kevin Lamarque
The National Bureau of Economic Research said this week that the US economy entered a recession in February as the coronavirus struck the nation, ending its longest expansion on record.

RT's Boom Bust is joined by Todd Horwitz of Bubba Trading to talk about the state of the US economy and what direction it might take.

"Nobody really knows the answer to that," he points out, adding that there's more action in the market and people are starting to go to work. "So, again, if the virus stays away and we can continue to open and get the country fully open, then the recession will be over... Overall, we are still very strong."

Arrow Down

Remember how public health COLLAPSED after Soviet Union fell? I fear West will see same due to post-lockdown economic CATASTROPHE

stay safe sign
© Getty Images/In PIctures/Mike Kemp
The self-inflicted damage we've done to our economies in the name of combating Covid-19 will kill far more people than the virus itself. The economic collapse that followed the communist bloc's break-up caused millions of deaths.

There has never been a situation to compare with what we have been living through these past weeks and months. Never in the history of the world have entire countries been locked down. Never have entire countries inflicted such enormous damage to their own economies and distorted their health systems away from all other activities, to deal with a virus.

I felt, right from the start, that the potential harms from lockdown could well exceed any - speculative - reduction in Covid deaths. I began by arguing against lockdown from an economic perspective, which many people hated. They felt it was impossible to put a value on a human life, even to attempt to balance money versus health.

Comment: Many are now anticipating the horrible fallout of the useless and economically detrimental lockdowns:


Bullseye

Best of the Web: 'Community policing' is a trick - new enforcers for the same oppressors, not a dismantling of tyranny

protesters
© AFP / Stephen Maturen
As the massive anti-police-brutality protests sweeping the US are diverted into calls to "defund the police" and to replace them with community-based enforcers, Americans would be wise to keep an eye on "who benefits."

There's no question US police departments have become too militarized, too much like occupying armies, when the cities they patrol truly need engagement and accountability. Police in some areas pose more of a threat to residents than criminals, seizing a bigger chunk of Americans' assets via civil asset forfeiture in 2014 than were stolen by burglars that same year. Certainly outfitting cops with military surplus equipment, sending them to Israel to learn chokeholds like the one that killed George Floyd, and then deploying them in American schools to keep the kids safe is not a workable model.

Most people concerned with the police brutality problem would support demilitarizing the cops, retraining them, even holding them accountable to the many laws already on the books. Derek Chauvin, the officer who killed George Floyd, had already racked up a number of brutality complaints and been involved in several shootings. In a functioning system, he would not have been on the street on Memorial Day.

Sheriff

NY police union head rails against legislators, media for 'vilifying' law enforcement

nypd
The New York Police Benevolent Association (PBA) railed Tuesday against state legislators and the press for "vilifying" law enforcement officers amid the nationwide demonstrations over the death of George Floyd, a black man who died in Minneapolis police custody on May 25.

The New York PBA's president, Mike O'Meara, said at a press conference that officers have 375 million interactions with individuals each year and that most of them are "overwhelmingly positive."

"But what we read in the papers all week is that in the black community, mothers are worried about their children getting home from school without being killed by a cop. What world are we living in? That doesn't happen," O'Meara said.

"Our legislators are failing us. Our press is vilifying us," he added. "Stop treating us like animals and thugs and start treating us with some respect. That's what we're here today to say. We've been vilified. It's disgusting."