Society's Child
The only Christian registered with the Lahore Press Club, Gonila Gill has been working as a journalist for nearly twenty years. Covering health, education and minority rights, her job at Dunya News became a nightmare after she married a Muslim co-worker in 2014. Their marriage led to Gill being criticized at her workplace for not adopting her husband's religion. The discrimination only grew worse after she gave birth to her first son - who was baptized and named Abraham. Ironically, she recounted, her co-workers had told her that she would never get pregnant until she converted to Islam.

Men pave a road with bricks as part of an EU-funded job scheme in Agadez, Niger.
The EU and its member states remain the biggest development donor group in the world - investing €71.9bn ($61bn) in 2018, more than half of global aid - but its contribution was 5.8% lower than in 2017, the European NGO network, Concord, found in its AidWatch report.
Progress on meeting the UN target of spending 0.7% of gross national income on aid, laid down in 1970, has gone into reverse, said the group. Their research showed that aid decreased to 0.47% of the EU's combined GNI last year, compared with 0.49% in 2017 and 0.51% in 2016.
Roundup is a weedkiller that contains glyphosate, a herbicide chemical often used by homeowners to treat their lawns.
There have been many lawsuits filed across North America alleging that glyphosate can cause health problems including non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, a rare type of cancer that affects the lymphatic system.
In the United States alone, there have been about 18,000 lawsuits filed against the makers of Roundup.
Diamond & Diamond is calling this Canada's largest class-action lawsuit against Roundup makers. There are currently more than 60 individuals named as plaintiffs, but the firm said they believe thousands may have been affected.
In an interview on the Triggernometry podcast, Parker restated her apparently controversial view that men who transition to female are still men.
The video was online for 24 hours and was watched by around 35,000 people until YouTube took it down. The tech giant also gave the Triggernometry channel a warning. After three further warnings, a channel can be permanently deleted.
Waters told RT that the statement from Swedish prosecutors claiming that the evidence against Assange had "weakened" since 2010 was a "mealy-mouthed bunch of bullsh*t" and that there was "no evidence to support the idea that [Assange] injured anybody."
It's partly because of this whole "set-up" that Assange is still suffering in London's Belmarsh Prison with no real process of law being followed, Waters said. "Assange is being slowly murdered by the state because he told uncomfortable truths about US war crimes," he added.
Comment: See also:
- UN torture envoy demands 'full accountability & compensation' after Sweden drops rape probe against Assange
- Assange rape case dropped! Sweden forsakes probe that led him to seek asylum in UK's Ecuadorian embassy
- 'Evo, I hope your exile is short': Roger Waters sends message of support to Bolivia's Morales
- Orwell & Huxley were BOTH right, Roger Waters tells RT
- Punishing Assange sends 'we will get you' warning to other journalists, Roger Waters tells RT
- 'Nothing!' Media refuse to cover Roger Waters concert in support of Julian Assange
- Roger Waters performs Wish You Were Here in honor of Julian Assange
Mr Justice Knowles made the remark on the first day of a landmark legal challenge against guidelines issued to police forces across the country on how to record "non-crime hate incidents".
The College of Policing, the professional body which delivers training for all officers in England and Wales, issued their Hate Crime Operational Guidance (HCOG) in 2014, which states that a comment reported as hateful by a victim must be recorded "irrespective of whether there is any evidence to identify the hate element".
Comment: Nice to see that the judge still has a head on his shoulders.
See also:
- Precrime 'Minority Report'? Police in UK want to use AI to stop violent crime before it happens
- Minority Report 'precrime' is here: NH teen arrested after parking in 'predictive hot spot' for crime
- Things are getting scary: Global police, precrime and the war on domestic 'extremists'
- Shades of Minority Report: Pennsylvania to become the first state to use precrime assessments in sentencing
- Precrime in America
A "clubbable conservative," as one reviewer accurately describes him, Murray hit his intellectual stride early, publishing his first book at 18, which attracted the attention and mentorship of polemical giants Christopher Hitchens and Roger Scruton. Quite different in personality from Jordan Peterson (less intensity, more suavity), he's equally erudite and similarly crowd-pleasing (they've done joint appearances in the U.K., attracting massive audiences).
Murray shot to international celebrity with his powerful, if depressing 2017 book, The Strange Death of Europe, which opens with the words, "Europe is committing suicide. Or at least its leaders have decided to commit suicide." Joining frontline reports from unpleasant way stations in the 2015 migrant crisis to insightful analysis of the West's present malaise, Murray painted a gloomy picture of continental passivity in the face of momentous cultural change.
In The Madness of Crowds, also inspired by the West's loss of a "grand narrative," Murray applies his formidable exegetical skills to the proliferation of identity politics "tripwires" that corrode civic life and wreak havoc with individual lives.
Murray writes: "The interpretation of the world through the lens of 'social justice,' 'identity group politics' and 'intersectionalism' is probably the most audacious and comprehensive effort since the Cold War at creating a new ideology." Christianity has been spurned, but the religious impulse is inherent and abhors a vacuum. The "religion" of social justice, Murray observes, poured itself into the handy campus vessel of Marxism with remarkable speed.
Comment: See also,
- Douglas Murray in conversation with Jordan Peterson
- Stoicism vs. Identity Politics: What is Properly 'I' And 'Mine'?
- Social Justice Syndrome: 'Rising tide of personality disorders among millennials'
- The difference between justice and social justice, and why the search for social justice continues to erode our freedoms
- The Solution to the Hatred of Identity Politics Is Psychological Knowledge
- Too Far Left: How Liberals Transformed Into Illiberal Social Justice Warriors
- Zionism is the Right's 'identity politics'
Mulcair told a conference in Montreal today that he's been using homeopathic remedies for about 30 years and feels the Quebec government should do more to recognize and regulate the field.
His presence was discouraging to Jonathan Jarry of the McGill Office for Science and Society, who says there's no scientific evidence to show homeopathic remedies work for any health condition.
Comment: The fact that an ex-politician would actually stick his neck out to proclaim he supports homeopathy is quite significant given the amount of trash thrown at the healing modality in the public sphere. It's akin to declaring yourself an 'informed vaccination' advocate. For a look at how divisive the topic is, head over to the original article and take a look at the comments - all 152 of them (at the time of posting) - and see some of the divisive name calling from the skeptics. But the arguments always boil down to "homeopathy cannot possibly work because it betrays the laws of my materialistic worldview, therefore it doesn't work". Rock solid logic.
See also:
- Slaying Americans' freedom of health choices and homeopathy
- FDA's regulatory overreach reflects a poor understanding of Homeopathy
- Canadian college forced to scrap homeopathy program due to '3yrs of pseudoscience nonsense'
- NHS 'blacklists' homeopathy on prescription because of mistaken belief that it doesn't work
- Homeopathy can reverse the effects of lead poisoning and other environmental toxins
- Russian Academy of Sciences claims homeopathy is 'pseudoscience'
- The Federal Trade Commission's war on homeopathy

Dozens of new photos and video give the most revealing insight yet into Jeffrey Epstein's notorious 'baby making Zorro Ranch' in the New Mexico desert.
The dead financier used the 10,000-acre Zorro Ranch as a playground for his VIP guests, who he brought to the secluded estate a few times a year, entertaining his entourage of 30 with four-wheelers and rumored illicit activities.
New photos show a staircase leading downstairs, as a former contractor claims the convicted pedophile built a 1,000 sq ft underground 'strip-club' for entertaining his VIP guests with teenage girls.
Comment: If Maxwell has blackmail videos from the New Mexico compound, it might explain why she has been able to, more or less, disappear in the wake of the Epstein scandal.
See also:
- Former Israeli Intel Official Claims Jeffrey Epstein, Ghislaine Maxwell Worked for Israel
- Thousands implicated in secret Jeffrey Epstein files, Ghislaine Maxwell fighting to keep them sealed
- Epstein madam Ghislaine Maxwell's host of family skeletons
- Galloway: How I exposed Ghislaine Maxwell's arch-Zionist daddy
- Daily Mail: Ghislaine Maxwell staged LA photo with close friend and attorney
- Epstein's alleged co-conspirator Ghislaine Maxwell spotted eating lunch at burger joint in Los Angeles
- Jeffrey Epstein accuser sues Ghislaine Maxwell, 3 others; says Epstein 'forcefully raped' her at 15
- 'They're nothing, these girls': Unraveling the mystery of Ghislaine Maxwell, Epstein's partner in crime
- Ghislaine Maxwell suddenly torpedoes her oceanic non-profit in wake of scandal surrounding close associate Jeffrey Epstein
The total number of suicides in Japan (National Police Agency annual totals) peaked at 34,427 in 2003 and then began to fall. From 2010, this figure has fallen for nine years straight. In contrast, despite decreased student numbers due to the shrinking birthrate, child suicides are on the rise. In 2006, the suicide ratio was 1.2 per 100,000 children, whereas by 2018 this had more than doubled to 2.5.














Comment: The video has since been re-instated by YouTube, but you'd probably be better off watching it on BitChute here.
See also: