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Heart - Black

Israel to demolish 200 Palestinian buildings in East Jerusalem

Israel destroys Palestinian structure
Israeli occupation authorities yesterday delivered an order to demolish 200 decades-old Palestinian-owned industrial structures located in occupied East Jerusalem, reported Wafa news agency.

As with many neighborhoods in the area surrounding Jerusalem, Wadi Al-Joz is experiencing severe challenges with the aggressive expansion of the Jewish presence in the area.

The chairman of East Jerusalem's Arab Chamber of Commerce and Industry, Kamal Obeidat, told Wafa that the order was made by recommendation of the Israeli Planning and Zoning Committee and will demolish up to 200 structures including car repair shops, restaurants and other facilities.

Obeidat called the move a "racist order" to destroy the only Palestinian industrial area that serves the city's 300,000 residents in East Jerusalem in order to build Israeli structures.

Stock Up

Sweden's economy grows well ahead of the rest after opting against full lockdown

Sweden lockdown covid
© Jonathan NACKSTRAND | AFPA woman walks through the Kungstradgarden in Stockholm on May 8, 2020, amid the new coronavirus COVID-19 pandemic.
The Swedish economy expanded at a far superior rate than many of its European counterparts over the first three months of the year, data published Friday showed, following the government's decision not to impose a full lockdown to contain the spread of the coronavirus.

The Nordic country's statistics office reported gross domestic product (GDP), the broadest measure of economic health, grew at an annual rate of 0.4% in the first quarter.

Sweden's GDP increased by 0.1% in the first quarter, when seasonally adjusted and compared to the final three months of 2019. The median forecasters in a Reuters poll of economists had expected to see a 0.6% contraction on a quarterly basis.

Comment: Also see: If Sweden Succeeds, Lockdowns Will All Have Been For Nothing


Light Saber

'Is this even about George Floyd?' Enraged UFC champ slams riots, protects community from vandals

Jon Jones George Floyd
© Instagram @jonnybones / Getty ImagesUFC champion Jon Jones confronts George Floyd protesters.
UFC light heavyweight champion Jon Jones took the law into his own hands as he tackled vandals in downtown Albuquerque, New Mexico, amid continued unrest across the US following the death of George Floyd.

In a video shared with his 5 million Instagram followers, Jones confronted a pair of masked youths who were carrying spray cans during protests on Sunday night.

"Give me the spray can," the fighter can be heard yelling as he follows one youth into the road.

Arrow Down

Univ. of Alabama Birmingham professor instructs rioters on how to tear down monuments

confederate statue Silent Sam toppled
© AP Photo/Gerry Broome, FileIn this Aug. 20, 2018, file photo, police stand guard after the confederate statue known as Silent Sam was toppled by protesters on campus at the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill, N.C.
A professor at the University of Alabama Birmingham used Twitter to tell protesters how to successfully pull down monuments, as rioters vandalized the Lincoln Memorial, the World War II Memorial and other iconic sites in the nation's capital over the weekend.

Sarah Parcak, an Egyptologist who specializes in ancient architecture, says she is an expert on obelisks, the shape of the Washington Monument. She noted obelisks "might be masquerading as a racist monument."

The District of Columbia was set ablaze, and stores were looted and destroyed, after a series of protests turned destructive following the death of George Floyd, a black man who was killed last week by a white Minneapolis police officer. The officer, who knelt on Mr. Floyd's neck for 9 minutes, has been charged with murder, but protesters are demanding more in response for the killing.

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Brick Wall

YouTube censors interview with lockdown skeptic Peter Hitchens

peter hitchens interview censored
YouTube continues to suppress any content that goes against their chosen narrative.

In case you were wondering, yes, YouTube is still enforcing its almost unprecedented censorship around what's allowed to be said regarding the coronavirus pandemic.

But this censorship seems to be elastic in how and to whom it is applied. While many videos got summarily removed, even those giving voice to respectable scientists and doctors, others, like an interview with British journalist Peter Hitchens, have "merely" been hidden.

Comment: See also:


Microscope 2

Coronavirus 'no longer clinically exists in Italy', top doctor says

Galleria Vittorio Emanuele Milan
People walk through the Galleria Vittorio Emanuele in Milan, Italy
A study conducted at a hospital in Milan found that the number of viruses present in people who tested positive has decreased.

COVID-19 is losing its potency and no longer clinically exists in Italy, a senior Italian doctor has claimed.

Dr Alberto Zangrillo, the head of Milan's San Raffaele Hospital in the hard-hit Lombardy region, said the new coronavirus has become much less lethal, with newly infected patients having weaker symptoms than a couple of months ago.

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Chart Bar

Poll: More than half of Americans support sending military to aid police in dealing with George Floyd protests

Pennsylvania National Guard
© Reuters / Joshua RobertsMembers of the Pennsylvania National Guard maintain control of the area near City Hall after violent protests in response to the death of George Floyd in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, US, on June 2, 2020.
Over 50 percent of Americans would like to see the army deployed to the streets of US cities to help police tackle the riots raging across the country following the death of George Floyd at the hands of Minneapolis police.

The US has been gripped by a massive wave of protests for over a week, as hundreds of thousands of people took to the streets to call for justice for the African American man, who was choked to death by a police officer during a detention process.

While it might seem that the nation, or the larger part of it at least, has rallied behind the cause, a large number of Americans admitted they would not object to the military being deployed to aid the police in dealing with the protest actions that have spiraled into riots and violent clashes with law enforcement in many cities.

A poll conducted between May 31 and June 1 by Morning Consult data intelligence company showed that as many as 58 percent of Americans approve of the idea. One third of the respondents "strongly support" it while only a total of 30 percent oppose, to some extent, deploying the troops. The survey relies on a "national sample of 1,624 registered voters" interviewed online.

Megaphone

Clashes at Paris protest against racism and police violence

paris anti-racism protest
© Anadolu Agency/Getty ImagesA demonstrator holds a banner in front of a burning barricade in a protest against police brutality at the Tribunal de Paris courthouse in Paris on 2 June.
Inspired by the US demonstrations, 20,000 people defied a ban to rally in the streets of the French capital

Clashes broke out between police and protesters in Paris on Tuesday after around 20,000 people defied a ban to rally over the 2016 death of a black man in police custody, galvanised by US demonstrations against racism and deadly police violence.

The protesters used slogans from the American protest movement to call for justice for Adama Traore, whose death four years ago has been a rallying cause against police brutality in France.

The demonstration, which came after the release of two differing medical reports into the cause of Traore's death, had been prohibited by police citing a coronavirus ban on gatherings of more than 10 people.

Comment: More on the death of Adama Traore from 2016, and the resulting riots:


Airplane Paper

And just like that the fashionably liberal decided killer virus was no longer a thing

Remember that thing you spent 3 months screeching about and clamoring for a police state over?

protesters
"Social distancing" much?
People not able to breathe in Colorado during a respiratory "pandemic":


How many screeching COVID Karens are in this crowd?

It gets more hypocritical:

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Eye 1

Facebook employees rebel against Zuckerberg, unhappy with his response to Trump

zuckerberg
© REUTERS/Erin Scott/File Photo
Employees at Facebook are annoyed at CEO Mark Zuckerberg's refusal to act against President Donald Trump, sharing their dissatisfaction with his decision online for all to see.

Grumblings amongst the employees were heard at all levels of the company, with the main criticism being aimed at Facebook's decision to leave Trump's post allegedly "glorifying violence" untouched, even as Twitter hid the same text behind a warning.

In his May 29 Twitter thread, Trump first decried what he called "a total lack of leadership" in Minneapolis, before proceeding to unload on "THUGS" that were "dishonoring the memory of George Floyd." The part that Twitter took issue with read "when the looting starts, the shooting starts" and was interpreted as a threat to looters and rioters.

The tweet remains accessible "in the public's interest," but only after a user clicks on a warning message covering it.

trump tweet looters

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