Society's ChildS


Fire

One killed and two injured by explosions in Utsunomiya, Japan

car explosion in Utsunomiya, Japan
© TwitterA car on fire after twin explosions in Utsunomiya in Japan
One person was killed and at least two injured by two near-simultaneous blasts in a Japanese park today, the local fire department said.

The explosions occurred at a park in Utsunomiya, some 100 kilometres north of Tokyo, shortly after 11:30 am (1.30pm AEDT), a fire department spokesman said.

It was not immediately clear what caused the blasts.

"One person was found dead," the fire department spokesman said, without elaborating further.

Public broadcaster NHK said a body badly damaged in the blast was found at a bicycle parking space for the park.

"The sex and ages of the three are not known yet," another local fire department official said, adding one blast hit a car parking lot for the park.

NHK footage showed a car completely charred, as fire fighters poured water on it.

A man told NHK that he "smelled gunpowder in the area" after the explosions.

Network

Massive web outage blamed on 'Internet of Things'

CCTV camera
© Joshua Lott / Reuters
Dyn DNS, the internet traffic management company hit by DDoS attacks Friday which affected more than 80 popular websites, says it believes that smart devices such as webcams and thermostats were infiltrated to carry out the attacks.

Scores of websites including PayPal, Reddit, Amazon, Spotify and Twitter were unavailable Friday as three separate distributed denial of service (DDoS) attacks disrupted the New Hampshire based server's operations.

A DDoS attack occurs when a server is overwhelmed with traffic in a targeted attack. In this case, it's believed that Internet of Things devices, which covers any object with an internet connection, were hit.

Dyn DNS believes tens of millions of these connected devices, including surveillance cameras, webcams and smart thermostats were infected with malware.

"It is a very smart attack. As we start to mitigate they react and start to throw something that's over the top," Dyn chief strategy officer Kyle York said, as reported by Sky News.

The Department of Homeland Security is reportedly investigating the attack. A shadowy group which calls itself "New World Hackers" has claimed responsibility.


Comment: The dark side of the Internet of Things


Briefcase

Defendant's belief in the "Illuminati" makes him unfit for trial in another case of FBI coaxed "terror" plot

Adel Daoud
Adel Daoud
A suspect who was awaiting judgment in a terrorism case has been deemed unfit to stand trial because he believes that the court is controlled by the "Illuminati."

Adel Daoud was accused of attempting to plant a bomb in downtown Chicago in 2012 when he was 17 years old. However, the plot was not conceived by him, he was allegedly coaxed by FBI agents, who encouraged him to take a fake bomb and plant it in the city. This case was among dozens of cases when the FBI encouraged individuals to plan false terrorist attacks.

According to Court House News, U.S. District Judge Sharon Coleman found Daoud unfit to stand trial for the third time based on his belief in reptilians and the Illuminati.

Comment: Read Trevor Aaronson's full article here: The Sting: How the FBI Created a Terrorist


Stock Down

Saudi Arabia: Civil servants work one hour-per-day as country anticipates bankruptcy in 3-4 years

Saudi, column money
© Khaled Desouki / AFP / Getty
Top Saudi officials have hit out at shockingly low productivity in the country's bloated public sector, as the kingdom - reeling from low oil prices - tries to cut a budget deficit that ran to nearly $100 billion last year. "The amount worked [among state employees] doesn't even exceed an hour - and that's based on studies," civil service minister Khaled Alaraj said during an official discussion of Saudi Arabia's economy broadcast at prime time on Wednesday night.

More than two-thirds of all Saudis in employment work for the government - compared to fewer than 20 percent for the US - and last year the kingdom spent about 45 percent of its budget, or $128 billion, to pay their wages. Prior to recent reforms, even a conscientious Saudi national civil servant had generous perks - a 35-hour working week, almost no prospect of being made redundant, and frequent bonuses, such as two monthly salaries paid to every bureaucrat, when King Salman ascended to the throne in early 2015. "In my ministry we have more than a million job applicants. Of them, 200,000 are already working in the private sector and are prepared to take a pay cut," said Alaraj.

With the economy expected to expand by only 1.2 percent this year, and oil prices hovering at around $50 per barrel, Saudi Arabia vast oil reserves, which still stand at over $500 billion, have been depleting at an alarming rate. "If we didn't take any reform measures, and if the global economy stays the same, then we're doomed for bankruptcy in three to four years," said Mohamed Al Tuwaijri, the deputy economy minister, at the same meeting.

Comment: Saudi Arabia needs crude oil to be priced at $103/barrel in order to balance their budget. Perhaps facing bankruptcy will curb Saudi Arabia's military spending, putting an end to the war in Yemen and the funding of Islamic groups in Syria.


Attention

Anti-Russian Hysteria: Latvia Detains, Deports Russian News Agency Producer

riga latvia airport
© Ints Kalnins / ReutersPassengers walk to their gates at Riga International airport, Latvia
Latvian border guards have detained Ella Taranova, a chief producer for Russia's Rossiya Segodnya international information agency, who arrived for the Baltic Forum in Riga. According to RIA Novosti, she was deported late Friday.

After being held by border agents, Taranova was sent on a flight back home with Aeroflot on Friday evening, RIA Novosti reported.

It appears she had been blacklisted by the country's authorities in August 2014 but was never informed about it.

Taranova, who has a valid Schengen visa, arrived in the country by plane on Friday morning, alongside other Russian journalists, and "had no problems when passing border control," she said.

Comment: Latvian authorities have a few screws loose, that's for sure. Perhaps Latvians should check out this: Russia is not your enemy: An open letter to the people of Europe. Anti-Russian sentiment and actions are heating up:


Black Cat

Homeland security officers caught on video kicking subdued handcuffed man in the face

cops kick handcuffed man face pomona ca
© CBS LAScreenshot of cellphone video showing a Federal Protective Service officer apparently kicking a handcuffed man in the head during an arrest.
Disturbing Video Shows a Cop Kneel on Handcuffed Man, As Another Cop Kicks Him in the Face

An abusive officer was publicly exposed this week after a vigilant citizen recorded him kicking a handcuffed man in the face. The man was no threat, on his stomach, and completely subdued when this federal officer decided to waylay his foot across the man's face.

The man who filmed this deprivation of rights, Alex Garcia, gave the video to CBS2 in Los Angeles. The video shows a cut and dry case of police brutality.

"One of the officers started handcuffing him. The other one was on top of him and socked him on the back," Garcia said.

According to CBS 2, these officers were not local Pomona cops. They were actually federal officers who report to the Department of Homeland Security. Federal officers protect buildings like Social Security offices, which happens to be the place in front of which this arrest took place.

No Entry

Syrian refugee wants to leave Britain for war-torn homeland: 'I would rather be in Aleppo'

 bomb damaged Old City area of Aleppo, Syria
© ReutersA general view of the bomb damaged Old City area of Aleppo, Syria
A 28-year-old Syrian migrant who has been in Britain just 11 days says he is "miserable" and wants to go back to his life in his war-torn country saying it "is better than it is here."

Abdul Kader al-Zuebi, who was once a military doctor in the Syrian army, says he fled the war in his homeland because he did not want to have to kill.

He now says he has grown frustrated with being unable to rent a home or seek work as a doctor in the UK, complaining that officials do not know where his passport is and are refusing to let him leave.

Kader al-Zuebi has a British fiancee and three relatives living in the UK.

Comment: Damned if he does, damned if he doesn't. What a humanitarian nightmare Syria has become thanks to the United States and western powers. You know it's bad when a war refugee think it's better to go back to the war zone.


Quenelle

French police protest country's 11-month 'state of emergency', stretched to the limit

police protest
© RT
Several hundred policemen took to the streets of France, from Paris to Bordeaux, for the fifth night in a row to complain about the unbearable working conditions and fatigue caused by an 11-month state of emergency, saying they're stretched to the limit.

Policemen got together in front of the Notre-Dame cathedral in Paris singing La Marseillaise, the country's national anthem, while applauding every police siren passing nearby. The officers complain that they are not even well enough equipped to defend themselves and are calling for Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve's resignation, Le Parisien reported.

"We're asked to do things that have nothing to do with police work, like guarding theaters and synagogues and churches. It's becoming unbearable; we can't do it all," Nathalie, a 12-year veteran of the police force who asked that her last name not be disclosed, told CBC.

"If somebody dials 17 [France's 911], there aren't any cars around to respond. Misdemeanors, felonies... we don't have time for that anymore," another anonymous policeman said.


Comment: Will somebody please tell pathocrat Hollande that his own kowtowing to US imperial dictates and his implementation of egregious economic reforms meets the very definition of "erosion of authority" in his country - or, at least, some semblance of responsible authority!?


Camcorder

British university will pay £400 to couples willing to be filmed having sex

xxx rated
A British university is offering to pay young couples £400 to be filmed having sex in a bid to promote the notion that using a condom does not "kill the mood."

Coventry University is looking for three couples aged between 18 and 25 to have sex on camera. They will be filmed in "natural settings" such as student accommodation and a car.

It will be "tastefully shot" and use "real couples in loving, consensual relationships," according to the academics behind the project.

Project lead Dr. Katie Newby said the videos aim to show that sex can still be fun and sexy even when stopping to put on a condom.

Stock Down

Killary standing up for women's rights?: Clinton Foundation paid women less than men according to WikiLeaks

hillary clinton
The Clinton Foundation in 2011 employed more women than men but paid them less, on average, according to a salary schedule included in an email released Friday by WikiLeaks.

A foundation employee emailed the payroll schedule to board Chairman Bruce Lindsey and John Podesta, who currently chairs Hillary Clinton's presidential campaign. It included then-Chief Operating Office and Chief of Staff Laura Graham's salary recommendations for 2012 for rank-and-file employees.