Society's Child
According to a report from WSB-TV Atlanta, the massive change was confirmed on Tuesday. The department confirmed with WSB-TV reporter, Mark Winne, noting that all the officers in the drug unit will be assigned to other areas.

Protesters at the Thursday march shouted anti-government slogans, waved red flares and held banners saying "on strike until withdrawal."
By morning rush hour, there were more than 124 miles (200km) of traffic jams in the greater Paris area as public transport was badly disrupted, leaving millions of commuters struggling to get to work.
More than a third of teachers stopped work across the country and dozens of schools closed in the capital. Rail services across France were severely hit and there were warnings of potential delays and disruption to flights. Energy workers were also striking, with refinery stoppages. Thousands of police officers were poised for a protest march in the centre of Paris.
Comment: RT provides coverage of some of the massive protests:
In Paris, a six-hour rally kicked off at 1:30pm causing major disruption for commuters. Only two out of 14 Paris metro lines were running normally, with reduced services on other lines as well on buses and trams.Graphic footage from France's Rouen shows scenes of police brutality that became commonplace during the Yellow Vest protest's, and those protess, which seem to be merging with the strikes, have now entered their second year:
Protesters at the Thursday march shouted anti-government slogans, waved red flares and held banners saying "on strike until withdrawal."
Some videos on social media appeared to show riot police forcibly removing some protesters from a city bus depot.
Demonstrations are also happening in Marseille, Lyon, Strasbourg, and other cities.
Paris was chaotic last weekend as pension protesters and anti-Macron Yellow Vest protesters filled the streets. A new round of negotiations over pension reform is set to take place between trade unions and the government this week.
Eyewitness footage from the scene shows riot police engaging with demonstrators in ever-increasingly aggressive encounters, ranging from pushing and shoving, to tear gassing, before eventually the police begin swinging batons at the unarmed protesters.See also: "I am France": No one is calling this a revolution, but it is
The altercation took place at the corner of rue Jeanne d'Arc and rue du Gros-Horloge in the city center at around noon local time.
One man was filmed with blood streaming down his face after the encounter. The bloodied 61-year-old was treated at the scene by paramedics and firefighters, before being transferred to Rouen University Hospital.
There was at least one arrest as a result of the scuffles, and several people were reportedly injured.
Pension reform marches turned violent across the country, with brutal flare ups in the capital Paris, as well as in smaller cities nationwide.
And check out SOTT radio's:
- NewsReal #26: Globalization vs Nationalism - The Hidden Causes of The Yellow Vest Protests in France
- NewsReal: Will Globalists' War on Nationalism Lead to Bloody Revolution?

The fire came within metres of the main house on Leanne King and Phil Sheppard's property in the Hunter Valley.
The 66-year-old had poured his heart and soul into Ngurrumpaa - an isolated 160-acre bushland property with a main house and several huts, offering cultural camps for tourists and Indigenous youth.
Three weeks ago, he and other owners were forced to evacuate, helplessly watching online as the Gospers Mountain fire converged with the Little L Complex fire and appeared to engulf the property.
Comment: That the native aboriginals developed a technique for saving their lands from bushfires (aside from being truly remarkable) is clearly a knowledge that should be passed on. However, it wouldn't surprise us if Mr. Barber was accused of 'cultural appropriation', given the modern political environment.
See also:
- Australian fires: Why do people start fires during fires?
- Paul Joseph Watson: The Truth About the Australian Bushfires
- Australia: Greens leader declares he supports hazard-reduction burning as Facebook critics accuse him of being responsible for bushfires
- Ice Age Farmer Report: AUSTRALIA: Burned on the altar of global warming
- Australia's raging bushfires intensify: Sydney engulfed in 'extremely' hazardous smoke
- Smoke and deception blanket Australia
A lot has happened in the last decade — including a lot of things being called racist, sexist, offensive, or insensitive.
Here, in no particular order, are 24 of the most absurdly politically correct moments of the decade:
1. A college diversity-training course taught that it was culturally insensitive to expect people to be on time.
A Clemson University training course taught its attendees that it is offensive to expect people to be on time, because "time may be considered fluid" in other cultures.
Comment: The mental gymnastics necessary to justify some of these complaints is astounding. Giving in to these demands is literally catering to crazy people. Note that the majority come from Universities, where coddled students who have no real understanding of how the world works are primed to foist their sheltered worldview onto society at large.
See also:
- Dear young progressives: The white-supremacist anti-immigration anti-political-correctness free-speech fascists are your friends
- Political correctness gone wild: School spirit symbols and mascots on the chopping block nationwide
- Tulsi Gabbard lists political correctness among threats to American values
- Political correctness strikes again: Many social workers are in denial about child psychopaths
- Political Correctness: Much more harmful than people realize

U.S. financier Jeffrey Epstein appears in a photograph taken for the New York State Division of Criminal Justice Services’ sex offender registry March 28, 2017 and obtained by Reuters July 10, 2019.
Comment: Inadvertently? Give. Us. A. Break.
Prosecutors, in a filing in U.S. District Court in Manhattan, said the video was deleted as the result of a jailhouse computer error about the location of Epstein's cellmate at the time Epstein tried to kill himself.
A lawyer for Epstein's former cellmate said that it was "deeply troubling" to learn that the footage no longer exists. That lawyer, Bruce Barket, has been trying since July to obtain the video.
Comment: So they'd like us to believe that a 'computer error' lead to the loss or erasure of the tape and its backup? How stupid do they think we are? Either Epstein committed suicide and a series of next-to-impossible coincidences have stood in the way of confirming this, or there is some kind of foul play. Only the most ardent coincidence theorist could possibly buy the former.
See also:
- Big surprise: Surveillance footage from Epstein's first 'suicide attempt' goes missing
- ABC takes advantage of Iran conflict to FINALLY screen Epstein story... 3 years late
- FBI investigating Ghislaine Maxwell and others who 'facilitated' Epstein
- Epstein 'admitted to me' he was a Mossad SPY: Ex-business partner claims Prince Andrew is protecting Ghislaine Maxwell because of blackmail
- Alleged ex-Mossad handler claims Maxwell and Epstein were Israeli spies who used underage sex to blackmail politicians
The Report, a new film from Vice Studios starring Adam Driver, feels somehow both timely and late. It tells the story of American Senate staffer Daniel Jones (Driver), who was tasked with investigating the U.S. government's "enhanced interrogation" program in the late 2000s. The program, which many denounced as torture, was used to extract intelligence from suspected terrorist detainees at CIA black sites after Al Qaeda's attack on September 11, 2001. It ended years ago and is no longer even legal — the McCain-Feinstein Amendment restricts prisoner interrogation techniques to those listed in the United States Army's field manual, and it passed the Senate with a 78-21 vote in 2015, backed by majorities in both parties.
Among the general public, however, the topic remains controversial, with almost half of Americans saying they think torture could be used to obtain "important military information" from "a captured enemy combatant" and only a little more than half saying they think torture is "wrong." During and after his 2016 campaign, President Donald J. Trump, ever-sensitive to divergences between "elite" and "popular" opinion, promised to revive and even expand enhanced interrogation, claiming that waterboarding is a "minor form" of torture and that "we should go much stronger than waterboarding."
Jones worked for Senator Dianne Feinstein (played in the film by Annette Bening) and was deputized by a bipartisan Senate committee to lead a team of six — three Democrats and three Republicans — to find out exactly what the CIA program had entailed. In the flash-forward that opens the film, we learn that his obsessive dedication to the report cost him his romantic relationship, but as we return to the report's inception and watch events unfold chronologically, we also see that this kind of personality was required to pursue the investigation to completion and release. "Do you ever sleep?" a security guard asks Jones at one point. "I used to," he replies, "but it got in the way of the work."
Comment: See also:
- Newly released CIA 'torture program' documents reveal post-9/11 'Project Medication'
- 'Enhanced interrogation': It was only torture when the Commies did it
- Kiriakou: I went to prison for disclosing the CIA's torture - Haspel helped cover it up
- A brief historical review of torture in America to the present day
The fire at the diesel processing unit of the plant in the city of Ukhta, population circa 100,000, was preceded by "two bangs of a technological character," a source in the Emergencies Ministry said.
The blaze spread quickly, covering around 1,000 square meters at its peak. It was assigned the highest category of difficulty, with around 80 emergency workers and 15 firetrucks involved in extinguishing it. A fire train was later sent to help put the blaze out.
Comment: Major Explosions and fires at chemical facilities have become alarmingly common:
- ANOTHER major fire breaks out at chemical plant, this time at a refinery in California
- Massive explosion at chemical plant in Port Neches, Texas - UPDATE: Explosions ongoing 24 hours later - 60,000 ordered to evacuate
- Massive blaze breaks out at oil refinery outside Mumbai, India
- Fire 'like a nuclear bomb' rips through Philadelphia refinery
- ANOTHER major fire at a chemical plant in Europe, this time at a waste disposal facility in Linz, Austria
- China chemical plant blast kills 4, injures 6
- Again? Another massive industrial blaze breaks out in France, 100 firefighters deployed near Lyons, France
- Fire breaks out at Moscow refinery with 10 meter high flames and black plumes of smoke

Dennis Arp stands for a portrait near a colony of honeybees outside Rye, Arizona.
Thanks to a record wet spring, his hundreds of hives, scattered across the central Arizona desert, produced a bounty of honey. Arp would have plenty to sell in stores, but more importantly, the bumper harvest would strengthen his bees for their biggest task of the coming year.
Like most commercial beekeepers in the US, at least half of Arp's revenue now comes from pollinating almonds. Selling honey is far less lucrative than renting out his colonies to mega-farms in California's fertile Central Valley, home to 80% of the world's almond supply.
But as winter approached, with Arp just months away from taking his hives to California, his bees started getting sick. By October, 150 of Arp's hives had been wiped out by mites, 12% of his inventory in just a few months. "My yard is currently filled with stacks of empty bee boxes that used to contain healthy hives," he says.
The Gulf Stream is part of a larger ocean conveyor belt known as the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation (Amoc), which moves warm water northwards in the upper layers of the Atlantic Ocean, and colder waters southwards at lower depths. Previous research has shown that a slowdown of Amoc appeared to trigger a global cold snap 13,000 years ago. In 2018 scientists revealed that the Gulf Stream was at its weakest in 1,600 years.
By investigating the impact of Greenland meltwater and rainfall on Amoc, researchers found that thankfully there is very little chance of a complete shutdown in the next 1,000 years, but instead they show there is a 15% chance of a temporary shutdown in the next 100 years, which would likely trigger cooler conditions in north-west Europe. But acting fast to limit global warming will reduce the chances of being thrown into a chill.
Comment: While The Guardian tries to spin this as an unlikely event their bias blinds them to the plentiful research that shows global cooling has already begun:
- Stratospheric polar vortex reaches coldest temperature in 40 years
- Global cooling to replace warming trend that started 4,000 years ago - Chinese scientists
- Gulf Stream is 15% weaker, region south of Greenland coldest in 1,000 years
- Adapt 2030 Ice Age Report: Interview with Laura Knight-Jadczyk and Pierre Lescaudron
- Behind the Headlines: Earth changes in an electric universe: Is climate change really man-made?

The First Temptation of Christ depicts Jesus returning home on his 30th birthday and implies he is gay.
The ruling by a Rio de Janeiro judge, Benedicto Abicair, responded to a petition by a Brazilian Catholic organisation that argued the "honour of millions of Catholics" was hurt by the airing of The First Temptation of Christ. The special was produced by the Rio-based film company Porta dos Fundos, whose headquarters was targeted in the Christmas Eve attack.
Netflix told the Associated Press it would not comment on the ruling. Porta dos Fundos also declined to comment on the judge's decision, which contradicted an earlier decision rejecting censorship of the program. The ruling is valid until another court orders otherwise.










Comment: See also: