Society's Child
Polite allegedly wrote "Die Jew Rats" and "Hitler" at the Union Temple of Brooklyn in November 2018. Security footage allegedly showed him setting setting fires at "seven shuls and yeshivas in Williamsburg."
The incidents led to the cancellation of a Democratic event at the synagogue, with a candidate saying it highlighted the need to vote out "hate."
Polite is a self-identified queer black man who was taken in by a Jewish couple after his mother left him in "unsanitary" conditions. At a Barack Obama rally, he met then-New York city council speaker Christine Quinn, who hired him as an intern working on anti-hate crime issues and also called him the "adopted child of the Quinn administration," according to a 2017 New York Times profile that said he "could defy the statistics."
Polite went on to immerse himself in African American studies at Brandeis University.
On Facebook, he shared a paper hosted on Brandeis' website from the Journal of Black Studies about "witchcraft, race and resistance in colonial New England," highlighting how "Whites accused blacks of the crime of witchcraft in New England."
Balochistan Province's Home Minister Ziaullah Langove said 19 people were also wounded in the January 10 explosion, which took place during evening prayers at a mosque in a satellite town of Quetta, the provincial capital. Some of the injured were said to be in a critical condition.
Langove said a suicide bomber detonated explosives attached to his body among the worshipers.
The Islamic State (IS) extremist group claimed responsibility for the bombing, saying it was a suicide attack.
A deputy superintendent of police was among those killed.
A cleric leading the prayers, as well as associates and relatives of a prominent Taliban leader also died in the explosion, reports said.
The mosque was said to be part of an Islamic seminary run by the Afghan Taliban.
While it's unclear when the image scans started, Apple's chief privacy officer Jane Horvath confirmed at an event in Las Vegas this week that the company is now "utilizing some technologies to help screen for child sexual abuse material."
Apple initially suggested it might inspect images for abuse material last year - and only this week added a disclaimer to its website acknowledging the practice - but Horvath's remarks come as the first confirmation the company has gone ahead with the scans.
A number of tech giants, including Facebook, Twitter and Google, already employ an image-scanning tool known as PhotoDNA, which cross-checks photos with a database of known abuse images. It is unknown whether Apple's scanning tool uses similar technology.

Workers were given generic passwords and had no cybersecurity help to protect sensitive recordings, the former contractor said.
The recordings, both deliberate and accidentally invoked activations of the voice assistant, as well as some Skype phone calls, were simply accessed by Microsoft workers through a web app running in Google's Chrome browser, on their personal laptops, over the Chinese internet, according to the contractor.
Workers had no cybersecurity help to protect the data from criminal or state interference, and were even instructed to do the work using new Microsoft accounts all with the same password, for ease of management, the former contractor said. Employee vetting was practically nonexistent, he added.
"There were no security measures, I don't even remember them doing proper KYC [know your customer] on me. I think they just took my Chinese bank account details," he told the Guardian.
Comment: See also:
- What privacy? Amazon is listening to what you tell Alexa, even if you 'opt out'
- Google's voice assistant records and keeps conversations you're having around your phone
- Whisteblower says Siri records drug deals, medical records, sexual relations - workers hear all of it
- Amazon employees reviewing Cloud Cam home security footage have seen owners having sex
When I was nine years old, my family and I, all wearing gas masks, would huddle in our bomb shelter, which doubles as my parents' closet. It was the Gulf War, and Saddam Hussein was lobbing Scud missiles at Israel in retaliation to the US and its allies invading Iraq.
In 2003, in the ramp-up to the second Iraq war, tensions were high again: I took my gas mask to the bar in which I worked. People sat with their brown boxes to their sides, sipping beer and waiting to hear whether the air siren would sound.
It's been this way ever since I can remember. Besides the direct daily conflict with Palestinians and tensions with our neighbors, every time the White House gave out a "special statement" about the region, we Israelis began to brace ourselves for the unknown.
Comment: We know it's a tall order for most Israelis, but the alternative is allowing their leaders to lead their country to its utter destruction. Israel must either become a normal country in the region, or it's doomed. It has lived off the largesse of American taxpayers and stolen tech for far too long. It's time for the U.S. to cut the cord and let Israel work out its future for good or ill, on its own.
A military statement read on state media channels came as the first confirmation from Iranian officials that a missile, and not an engine fire, caused the crash last Wednesday. The statement noted that the shootdown was "unintentional" and maintained that those responsible would face consequences.
"A sad day," wrote Foreign Minister Javad Zarif on Twitter, adding "Preliminary conclusions of internal investigation by Armed Forces:"
Human error at time of crisis caused by US adventurism led to disaster. Our profound regrets, apologies and condolences to our people, to the families of all victims, and to other affected nations.
Comment: Moon of Alabama posted the complete statement:
The Iranian Armed Forces General Staff just admitted (in Farsi) that its air defenses inadvertently shot down the Ukrainian flight PS 752 shortly after it took off on January 8 in Tehran (machine translation, slightly edited for readability):The Daily Mail reports:The Pentagon had claimed that Iran shot down the airliner but the evidence it presented was flimsy and not sufficient as the U.S. tends to spread disinformation about Iran.In the hours after the missile strikes, US terrorist forces' warplanes around the country increased, and some reports of air strikes targeting strategic centers in the country were reported to numerous defense units and targets on some radar plates. It has caused more sensitivity in air defense units.
In such critical conditions, the Ukrainian Airlines departs from Imam Khomeini Airport and, while in rotation, was in close proximity to a sensitive military center of the IRGC and in a height and shape of a hostile aircraft. In these circumstances, the plane was accidentally hit by a human error, which unfortunately results in the martyrdom of dear compatriots and the death of a number of foreign nationals.
The Armed Forces General Staff sends condolences to the families of missing persons of other countries and apologizes for the human error, ensures that this will not happen again by carrying out major reforms in operational processes at armed forces level to make such errors impossible and immediately report it to the Armed Forces Judicial Organization to deal with the errors committed legally.
It is welcome that the Iranian forces come clean about the incident.
The FAA confirmed to DailyMail.com on Friday that it published a 'notice to airmen' (NOTAM) warning of potential hazards along the flight routes in the area just three hours before the plane was shot down.And from the BBC:
'Our NOTAMs were published roughly three hours before the accident,' a spokesperson for the FAA told Washington Free Beacon.
The notice specified 'flight restrictions that prohibit US civil aviation operators from operating in the airspace over Iraq, Iran, and the waters of the Persian Gulf and the Gulf of Oman.
'The FAA will continue closely monitoring events in the Middle East,' the NOTAM said.
'We continue coordinating with our national security partners and sharing information with US air carriers and foreign civil aviation authorities.'
The statement said it had done so due to "human error" after the plane flew close to a sensitive site belonging to Iran's Revolutionary Guards. Those responsible would be held accountable, the statement said.PressTV on the airliner's black box (from an earlier report):
Iran had previously rejected suggestions that one of its missiles brought down the plane near the capital, Tehran, on Wednesday.
But pressure mounted after the US and Canada, citing intelligence, said they believed Iran had brought the plane down with a missile, possibly accidently.
US media have speculated that the airliner may have been mistaken for a warplane as Iran prepared for possible US retaliation.
Iran has promised a full investigation. However, TV images from the crash site on Thursday showed a mechanical digger helping to clear debris away, raising concerns that important evidence could have been removed.
At the same press conference, Hassan Rezaeifar, the head of the Aviation Organization's commission for plane crash probes, said Ukraine, France, Canada, and Russia have all expressed their readiness to assist Iran with the data extraction.Rouhani has made a further statement on the downing of the plane:
Tehran, he said, will send the black box to one of these countries if it fails to retrieve the data.
Iran has already urged all parties involved, including Boeing, to contribute to the probe into the crash.
"According to international regulations, representatives from the civil aviation agency of the country where the crash has taken place, the civil aviation agency of the country which has issued the airworthiness certificate (Ukraine), the owner of the airliner (Ukraine International Airlines), the aircraft manufacturer (Boeing Co.), and the jet engine manufacturer (CFM International) can participate in the investigation process," Iran's Government spokesman Ali Rabiei said Friday.
"A delegate from Ukraine is already in Iran. We call upon Boeing Co. to dispatch its own representative to participate in the process of reading the black box data," he said.
Rabiei said Iran also welcomes the participation of all the countries which have lost their nationals in the mishap.
Iranian President Hassan Rouhani has pledged to find and punish all involved in an unintentional shoot down of a Ukrainian aircraft over Tehran, calling it a "disastrous mistake."
The OSCE's media freedom chief, Harlem Desir, "is closely following the situation of Sputnik Estonia," the organization's secretary-general, Thomas Greminger, confirmed to RT in a statement.
Greminger said that "concerns" about media freedom have been conveyed to Estonia, and Desir had asked local authorities to provide more information about the case.
Comment: Ouf, this is a bad look!
Newly released internal emails from Boeing Co. paint a disturbing picture of its 737 Max program, with employees bragging about fooling FAA regulators and ridiculing its safety.
The emails were part of more than 100 pages of documents sent Thursday by Boeing to House and Senate committees that have been investigating the aircraft maker in the wake of two crashes in 2018 and 2019 that killed a combined 346 people. The 737 Max family has been grounded for nearly a year, with no return date yet.
The emails were also made public, in three batches: here, here and here.
"This airplane is designed by clowns who in turn are supervised by monkeys," read one email.
Comment: This comes on the heels of two of only the most recent revelations of the alarming safety issues plaguing Boeing's planes:
- MORE glitches found on Boeing's planes
- "Potentially catastrophic" wiring issue on Boeing 737MAX confirmed by FAA
The bill, introduced on the first day of Vermont's 2020 legislative session, would punish anyone under 21 years old who is caught with a cell phone with one year in prison, a $1,000 fine, or both, NBC5 reported.
The legislation claims the reasons for the ban are that cell phones are an important factor in teen driving deaths, bullying, and radicalizing teens into "terrorists, fascists, and other extremists."
Comment: Although it's meant as a hyperbolic illustration, the Senator makes a good point. How much better would the lives of youth be without cell phones? While banning them, punishable by prison time, might be a few steps too far (and only suggested to make a point), the negative effects of cell phones on young adults is well documented.
See also:
- Say what? Mother arrested and thrown in jail for taking daughter's cell phone away in act of discipline
- Italian study links cell phone radiation to brain and heart tumors
- Keep that thing away from your head! California public health department issues new guidelines for cell phone use
- Consensus science on cell phone use?
- Conspiracy theory' confirmed: Documents show government covered up cell phone cancer risks for years
- Radiating corruption? The frightening politics & science of cell phone safety

Wikileaks founder Julian Assange speaks on the balcony of the Embassy of Ecuador in London.
The Catalan Dignity Commission has honoured him with its 2019 Dignity Prize for raising awareness around the world about the plight of the Catalans in the lead up to the 2017 independence vote.
Announced on Friday, the prize recognises his efforts to correct misreporting of events and to provide live video updates to the world of the peaceful Catalan protesters and the brutal crackdown on them by Spanish police.
Comment: See also:
- Mexico president calls for Julian Assange to be released from UK prison
- UN envoy says Assange showing signs of "torture", British govt should release him immediately
- "I'm slowly dying here": 'Sedated' Assange tells friend during Christmas Eve call from UK prison as health concerns mount
- Assange testifies in Spanish case against security contractor
- Reporters Without Borders calls for the release of Julian Assange
- So who spied on Julian Assange? Many possible suspects
- Guardian issues halfhearted correction of article about 'plot' to transfer Assange to Russia - 1 year later
- Historian and Assange activist says judge's acceptance of 'complexity' of Assange's case is 'an important win'
- 'Absolutely unaware': Assange testifies in trial of Spanish company that spied on WikiLeaks founder inside embassy
- Assange lawyer says UK-US treaty prohibits extradition of WikiLeaks publisher












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