Society's Child
After Friday's court proceedings, Robinson joined a crowd of supporters and journalists outside of London's Old Bailey courthouse to comment on the decision.
"The British government continually slams Russia, continually slams China about free speech and their treatment of journalists," Robinson told a reporter with Ruptly.
"I'm going to be sent to prison next week because I asked, as a journalist, 'how do you feel about your sentence?'" he added, describing the actions for which he was first arrested last year.
Dr. Karen Siegemund, president of the Los Angeles-based American Freedom Alliance, gave a speech in May at the group's "Long March Through the Institutions" conference, which "explored the Left's ongoing multi-decade takeover attempt of numerous public and private institutions to effect a radical transformation of America."
During her speech, she said "each of us here believes in the unparalleled force for good that is Western Civilization, that is our heritage, whether we were born here or not."
The 42-year-old nurse, now in a hospital in Reims, suffered an accident in 2008 which left him quadriplegic and with extensive brain damage. He is described by some as "semi-conscious," and by others as being "in a vegetative state." Vincent can sleep and wake up, respond to some voices, can swallow, and breathe on his own. He is not dependent on machines to live, but he is dependent on nutrition and hydration being delivered in a special manner, like many people.
The Court of Cassation's final ruling means that Lambert, who is not otherwise ill or at the end of his life, would be removed from food and water and left to die slowly, which can take 14 days or more. The decision cannot be appealed in France, but his parents are fighting the order and have threatened to press charges for murder if his food is removed. However, Vincent's wife and six of his eight siblings believe he should be forced to die.
Comment: From late-term and forced abortions, CRISPR genetic meddling, to Euthanasia, the question of the right to, and value of, life, is in the headlines frequently these days:
- Horrifying New York late-term abortion law at forefront of big Democrat push in US
- Suicide pod makes its debut at Amsterdam funeral show
- Dutch teen raped as a child chose to be legally euthanized due to 'unbearable' pain - Update: Teen was not actually euthanized
- Insane! UK court orders disabled woman to have an abortion despite her and her family's objections
- The Health & Wellness Show: Suicide and Euthanasia: A valid choice or the easy way out?
- Objective: Health - Law or Flaw? Let's Talk About Abortion

South Korean merchants stomp on boxes bearing the logos of Japanese manufacturers at a demonstration, July 5, 2019.
By Friday, over 28,000 South Koreans had signed a petition on a government website calling for a boycott of Japanese products and tourism, and asking the government to "respond with force" to Tokyo's new trade restrictions on exports of materials used to make smartphones and other electronics.
Relations between the two countries have long been marred by memories of Imperial Japan's decades-long occupation of the Korean peninsula that ended in 1945 - in particular the use of forced labor and "comfort women" for military brothels.
Chris Cline, a coal tycoon who once dated Tiger Woods' ex-wife, Elin Nordegren, was killed Thursday, a day before his 61st birthday, when the chopper crashed around 2 a.m. shortly after taking off from Grand Cay in the Bahamas, the Register-Herald reported.
The mining entrepreneur's daughter Kameron was among the seven victims on the submerged aircraft, which was discovered overturned two miles off his private island, news station KFSN reported.
Staff recognized the location in the video where the "malicious act of food tampering took place," according to a statement on Blue Bell's website.
Blue Bell inspected the freezer where the licking incident took place and said it believes it located the half gallon of Tin Roof that was "tampered with," the statement said.
On Friday morning, police said they've identified the girl. She's a juvenile from San Antonio. Because she's a minor, her identity is protected under the Texas Family Code.
The case will be turned over to the Texas Juvenile Justice Department.
Lufkin police said Friday that they don't intend to charge the teen with tampering with a consumer product.
Greek authorities have announced the seizure of what they called the biggest-ever haul of Captagon, the amphetamine-type drug associated with Middle Eastern terrorists.
The Greek Finance Ministry's Financial Crimes unit (SDOE) said the haul, which was worth $660 million, was found during a joint operation with police and coast guards.
Comment: See also:
- Made in America: Extremely powerful 'Captagon' drug turned 'Islamic' terrorists in Syria into 'superhuman soldiers'
- Two tons of IS drugs, including Captagon, seized in Western Syria, NATO connection
- 'Captagon' party drug is flooding Middle East thanks to retooling of Syria's pharmaceutical industry by CIA-trained terrorists
- 'Jihadist drug': 137kg of Captagon seized at French airport, partly bound for Saudi Arabia
When the latest recall is done, Honda says it will have recalled or accounted for 22.6 million inflators in about 12.9 million vehicles.
Takata inflators can explode with too much force and blow apart a metal canister, spewing shrapnel. Twenty-four people have been killed and hundreds injured by the inflators worldwide. Honda was Takata's largest customer.
The Japanese company, which was forced into bankruptcy by the troubles, used the volatile chemical ammonium nitrate to create a small explosion and inflate the air bags. But the chemical deteriorates when exposed to high temperatures and humidity and can burn to fast, blowing apart the canister designed to contain the explosion.
Comment: Please note the Traffic Safety Admin. announcement: Besides Honda, 19 automakers are set to recall 70M inflators.

Tattoo shop owner Edward Everett shows LAPD Senior Lead Officers Denise Vasquez, center, and Oscar Bocanegra where cars have been burglarized on Sherman Way in Reseda. The officers patrol where a computer program predicts property crimes will occur.
But the widely hailed tool the LAPD helped create has come under fire in the last 18 months, with numerous departments dumping the software because it did not help them reduce crime and essentially provided information already being gathered by officers patrolling the streets.
After three years, "we didn't find it effective," Palo Alto police spokeswoman Janine De la Vega said. "We didn't get any value out of it. It didn't help us solve crime."
The Mountain View, Calif., Police Department spent more than $60,000 on the program between 2013 and 2018. "We tested the software and eventually subscribed to the service for a few years, but ultimately the results were mixed and we discontinued the service in June 2018," spokeswoman Katie Nelson said in a statement.
The program was designed to predict where and when crimes were likely to occur over the next 12 hours. The software's algorithm examines 10 years of data, including the types of crimes and the dates, times and locations where they occurred. Beyond concerns from law enforcement, the data-driven programs are also under increasing scrutiny by privacy and civil liberties groups, which say the tactics result in heavier policing of black and Latino communities.
"I call on these countries that are supporting wars and providing arms to stop doing that, we want to live in peace," Kurdi said. He also expressed his hope that his native Syria "will become a better place and these wars will stop in all the countries so that people will stop leaving like I did."
Kurdi's wife and two sons drowned when the rubber boat, in which they sought to reach Greece with 13 other refugees, capsized off the Turkish coast. The image of his 3-year-old son Alan, whose body washed up on the Turkish shore in September 2015, has provoked an international outcry and became a symbol of the refugees' plight, prompting the EU to open its borders to people fleeing the Syrian conflict.
Comment: See also:
- More than 300 child-refugees of NATO's wars have drowned in the Aegean since Aylan's death
- Regime change refugees: On the shores of Europe
- West 'did nothing' to resolve the Syrian crisis, says aunt of drowned Syrian boy
- Disgusting: Charlie Hebdo mocks death of drowned Syrian child Aylan Kurdi
- Heartbreaking Missy Higgins ode to dead Syrian boy Aylan Kurdi takes off online
- Rep. Tulsi Gabbard: To help refugees, stop arming terrorists













Comment: More background on Robinson: