Society's ChildS


Stock Up

Bitcoin ready for 'big bull run & best is yet to come,' director of business development tells RT's Keiser Report

bitcoin
© Reuters / Tyrone Siu
Bitcoin has undergone its latest 'halving' event, which occurs every four years and reduces the reward miners receive for mining new coins to help control inflation. It's the third halving in the cryptocurrency's 11-year history.

Keiser Report spoke to Dan Held of Kraken.com about the event, and what it means for this halvening to happen in an age of infinite fiat.

Bitcoin was purpose-built to be a new sound money, says Held, noting: "That message resonates really loudly with this sort of macro backdrop." According to him, there will be a lot of investor appetite in the near future.


Bizarro Earth

Ice cream shop closes one day after reopening due to patrons harassing workers

Polar Cave Ice Cream Parlour
© Fox News
The owner of a Massachusetts ice cream parlor closed its doors just one day after reopening amid the coronavirus pandemic in response to how angry customers mistreated a teenage employee.

Mark Lawrence, who for 19 years has operated Polar Cave Ice Cream Parlour in Mashpee, a small town on Cape Cod, waited to reopen his shop under the state's restaurant guidelines until Mother's Day weekend.

But Friday's grand reopening turned into a harsh lesson for the small business, according to Lawrence, who told FOX25 Boston that customers frustrated with having to wait longer for their ice cream after the shop grew busy took their anger out on his staff.

"One of my best workers quit yesterday at the end of her shift," he said. "But the words she was called and the language, you wouldn't even say in a men's locker room. And to say it to a 17-year-old kid, they should be ashamed of themselves."


Comment: The shutdown has created an environment of distrust and fear. This is clearly not something that is just 'turned off' as businesses begin to reopen. Your mask really is making you meaner.


Yellow Vest

Best of the Web: Militia mobilize to thwart arrest of 77-year-old Michigan barber who reopened his shop


Comment: Michiganders know how to do freedom!


Manke
© Sarabeth Maney/The Flint Journal via APKarl Manke, 77, waves to people gathered for a press conference, having defied the governor's order not to conduct business.
The Michigan Militia says the police will not be allowed to arrest 77-year-old Owosso, Mich., barber, Karl Manke, who has defied Governor Whitmer's orders that all non-essential businesses stay closed. Friday night, Michigan State Police delivered a health protection order from Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel's office ordering that Manke close his doors.

A local Fox affiliate spoke to Daniel Brewer, one of the militia members standing up for the barber's right to work.
"Yesterday six troopers came in to enforce the governor's order or to issue a cease or desist order so we are here to make sure he doesn't get arrested. We're willing to stand in front of that door and block the entrance so the police will have no entry there today."
As relationships heat up between overreaching government agents and protesters who want to open the economy, people like Manke are being completely let down by the system that claims to want to help them, leading to more anger and outrage than government officials are ready to handle. Manke obeyed the original orders and closed his shop, but when he was turned down for unemployment — twice — he said he had no choice but to go back to work to survive.


Comment: Here's more from Mr Manke himself:




Bad Guys

Judge says biological males in women's sports must be called 'transgender females,' while trying court case

transgender athletes beat girls
© AP Photo/Pat Eaton-RobbIn this Feb. 7, 2019 file photo, Bloomfield High School transgender athlete Terry Miller, second from left, wins the final of the 55-meter dash over transgender athlete Andraya Yearwood, far left, and other runners in the Connecticut girls Class S indoor track meet at Hillhouse High School in New Haven, Conn.
Three female high school track athletes are suing the Connecticut Interscholastic Athletic Conference (CIAC) over unfair rules that allow biological males who identify as female to compete in women's sports. Last month, a district court judge barred the girls' lawyers from referring to the biological males as "males," insisting that the lawyers call them "transgender females." He threatened to retaliate if they refuse to do so. This effective gag order may undermine their case, and it certainly shows bias against their underlying argument. Therefore, the lawyers moved for the judge to recuse himself.

"The Court has now reprimanded Plaintiffs' counsel and prohibited Plaintiffs from referring to those individuals as 'male athletes' because — in the Court's view — alluding to an individual of the male sex as male is contrary to science, 'bullying,' and violates 'human decency' if that individual claims a female gender identity," attorneys Roger Brooks, Kristen Waggoner, and Howard M. Wood III wrote in a motion filed Friday and provided to PJ Media. "A disinterested observer would reasonably believe that the Court's order and comments have destroyed the appearance of impartiality in this proceeding. That requires recusal."

Comment:


Red Flag

Interpol issues red notice for 'fugitive' Anne Sacoolas

Harry Dunn
© Family Handout/PAHarry Dunn was 19 when he was killed after his motorcycle was hit by a car.
An Interpol notice has been circulated worldwide making Anne Sacoolas in effect a fugitive from justice if she sets foot outside her native United States.

Sacoolas was charged in the UK with causing the death by dangerous driving of a 19-year-old motorcyclist, Harry Dunn, last August.

The US refused to accept an extradition warrant, saying she enjoyed diplomatic immunity at the time of the crash. Her husband worked at a CIA spying base, RAF Croughton in Northampton.

She and her family left the country with the knowledge of the Foreign Office a fortnight later. The Foreign Office agreed she had diplomatic immunity, a point disputed by lawyers working for Dunn's family.

Boris Johnson and the foreign secretary, Dominic Raab, have both asked for Sacoolas to be extradited, but the political pressure has led nowhere. Donald Trump instead suggested compensation and tried to engineer a meeting in the White House between Sacoolas and Dunn's parents.

Comment: For more background see: Craig Murray: The disgusting lies on Harry Dunn's death must stop


Jet5

F-35s are still a $428 billion bundle of flaws despite latest fixes

F-35B Lightning II
© SeongJoon Cho/BloombergA U.S. Marine Corps. F-35B Lightning II fighter jet performs a maneuver at the Singapore Airshow on Feb. 9.
The F-35 fighter jet is starting to outlive its reputation as a $428 billion bundle of flawed hardware and buggy software: Lockheed Martin Corp. and the military have eliminated all of the deficiencies believed to endanger pilots and about 90% of other serious flaws that could hamper missions.

That's down from 111 "Category 1" safety-of-flight and mission-impeding deficiencies in January 2018, according to Defense Department data compiled by the Government Accountability Office.

The improvements may be critical to reassuring lawmakers and U.S. allies buying the F-35 that the costliest U.S. weapons system is worth its price tag, especially as pressure builds to reduce government spending after the response to the Covid-19 pandemic escalates budget deficits. The aircraft is already being operated by forces in the U.S., U.K., Israel, Japan, South Korea and Australia.

The Defense Department's F-35 program office has "done a good job at working" with the Air Force, Navy and Marine Corps "to really prioritize what needs to get fixed versus what would be just a helpful thing to the pilot -- getting to the actual things they need to get at," Jon Ludwigson, the GAO's top F-35 analyst, said in an interview. He said "they have procedures in place to work around" the remaining flaws.

The last "Category 1A" deficiency that could endanger pilots was deemed corrected in mid-November. Now, Lockheed and the Pentagon are resolving eight remaining "Category 1B" deficiencies that pose a "critical impact on mission readiness." Five of those are expected to be completed and verified by December, the program office said.

Comment: Still a modern marvel of incompetently built machinery.


Info

Iran says ready for prisoner swap with U.S. without preconditions

Michael White, Joanne White
© ReutersMichael White poses with his mother, Joanne, in Washington in this undated photo.
Iran is ready for a full prisoner exchange with the United States, Iranian government spokesman Ali Rabiei says, adding that Washington has yet to respond to Iran's call for a prisoner swap.

"We have announced that we are ready without any preconditions to exchange all prisoners and we are prepared to discuss this issue but the Americans have not responded yet," Rabiei told the news site Khabaronline on May 10.

"We are worried about the safety and health of Iranians in jail.... We hold America responsible for Iranians' safety amid the new coronavirus outbreak," Rabiei added.

"Washington is aware of our readiness and we think there is no need for a third country to mediate between Tehran and Washington for the prisoner exchange," Rabiei was quoted as saying.

Attention

Twitter anoints itself arbiter of coronavirus truth with pledge to label even 'disputed' & 'unverified' claims as disinfo

twitter banner NYSE
© Reuters / Lucas Jackson
Twitter has expanded its war on Covid-19 wrongthink, announcing it will label "disputed" and "unverified" claims - categories that technically include even the scientific consensus, which has evolved with knowledge of the virus.

The social media platform will label not only "misleading" Covid-19 information - claims experts have determined to be false - but also "disputed" material whose accuracy is uncertain and "unverified" statements that simply haven't yet been confirmed, Twitter announced in a blog post on Monday.

Offending tweets will feature a label linking to either a curated "Moment"-style Twitter page or an "external trusted source" featuring additional information on the tweet's content. In the most extreme cases, the tweet will be hidden beneath a warning screen alerting the viewer that "some or all of the content shared in this tweet conflicts with guidance from public health experts" and the user will have to click through to view it.

Comment: See also:


Handcuffs

Poland arrests four suspected ISIS militants

polish police
© AP / Czarek SokolowskiPolice stand guard as counter-protesters stand guard during a far-right demonstration, in Warsaw, Poland, Monday, Nov. 11, 2019.
Warsaw said there was evidence suggesting the suspects were supporters of the Islamic State

Polish authorities on Monday said they arrested four suspects accused of attempting to recruit Muslims converts in order to carry out acts of terrorism in the country.

Warsaw said there was also evidence suggesting the suspects, purportedly ethnic Tajiks, were affiliated with the Islamic State terrorist organization.

Comment: See also:


Yellow Vest

Best of the Web: 'Arrest me': Elon Musk defies coronavirus lockdown restrictions and reopens Tesla plant in California

elon musk
Elon Musk confirmed Monday that Tesla has resumed production at its California plant in defiance of the state's coronavirus lockdown restrictions.
Elon Musk confirmed Monday that Tesla has resumed operations at its main California plant in defiance of the state's coronavirus lockdown restrictions - daring authorities to arrest him for the violation.

The plant in Fremont, south of San Francisco, had been closed since March 23 in an effort to prevent the spread of coronavirus.

But early Monday evening, Musk confirmed in a tweet that Tesla is restarting production at the facility 'against Alameda County rules.'

'I will be on the line with everyone else,' he continued. 'If anyone is arrested, I ask that it only be me.'

Comment: At least there is someone with some power fighting to do the right thing amid the insanity of the lockdown, serving his own interests or not.

See also: