Society's Child
In an initial incident, the attacker wounded three people in front of a cinema in the 19th arrondissement late on Sunday evening. A group of men playing petanque tried to stop him by throwing a heavy iron ball used in the popular French game, according to Le Parisien.
"He had an iron bar in his hand which he threw at the men chasing him, then he took out a knife," a security guard at the cinema recalled after the initial attack.

Young members and supporters of the far-right Sweden Democrats react to the results of the exit polls at their party election centre
Nearly a fifth of Swedish voters have backed the far-right Sweden Democrats in the country's general election but the anti-immigration group lags behind the ruling party, an exit poll suggests.
The poll had the nationalist Sweden Democrats on 19.2 per cent support but found the ruling Social Democrats gained the backing of more than a quarter - 26.2 per cent - of the public.
If the exit poll results carry over to the official count, the Sweden Democrats would be the second-largest party in parliament.
We're expected to believe some pretty absurd things at the moment, aren't we?
Patrick Hamilton's 1938 play Gas Light, in which a wicked, manipulative husband gets his wife to doubt her memory and her sanity was meant to be thrilling entertainment, ideal fare for a foggy autumnal evening.
Instead, it's become a 21st-century instruction manual for the elites.
All kinds of psychological pressure is being exerted on us to accept things we know simply can't be true.

The first half of 2017 witnessed the export of 24 condensates shipments and 24 gas liquids shipments
Speaking to BasNews, Idris Refaat, of the security troops in Kirkuk, said "Islamic State blew up a pipeline used for transferring crude oil in west of Kirkuk, late on Saturday, using two bombs."
The fire, according to Idris, "has not be put out yet."
DNA evidence confirmed the accusations against Wouts, including samples taken from inmates underwear.
Wouts was found guilty of five counts of second-degree sexual assault by correctional staff. He was sentenced to 35 years in prison. In addition to his sentencing, Wouts is also ordered to register as a sex offender upon release.
Dodge County Assistant District Attorney James Sempf called Wouts a "serial rapist" during sentencing.
"The corrosive nature of the disparity in the power dynamic is a factor in what makes this offense so serious. The defendant can fairly be classified as a serial rapist," Sempf said.
The village of 'Urif, which is located near Nablus, lies in close proximity to the notorious settlement of Yitzhar, established in 1983. All Israeli settlements are illegal under international law, and described by international human rights groups as part of an inherently discriminatory regime.
According to B'Tselem, the Palestinian residents of 'Urif "have been suffering for years from repeated attacks by settlers", with most attacks taking place "in farmland close to the village water tower, which is situated some 500 metres from its easternmost homes". In recent months, moreover, the Israeli human rights group "has documented three attacks by settlers in the area, some of which included the active participation of soldiers".
In March, "settlers assaulted residents of the village", while the Israeli occupation forces "who accompanied them shot and killed one resident and injured a boy aged 14". In April, settlers cut down 57 trees on 'Urif's land and vandalised vehicles.
In June, "settlers injured a shepherd and assaulted other residents, while soldiers joined in the attack, injuring another resident," B'Tselem added.
Comment: Israel's routine prescription of terror, torture and destruction.

Flowers and candles left in remembrance in the playground in Köthen, Saxony-Anhalt
The circumstances surrounding the incident that occurred on Saturday evening remain unclear. The killing may have followed a dispute between the two Afghans and two Germans, Die Welt reports. It is thought that the German victim died as the result of a brain hemorrhage.
Some witnesses saying that the two suspects had previously been involved in an argument with another compatriot and a German woman. The row apparently related to who got the woman pregnant, according to Bild. The two Germans than intervened in a dispute and one of them was beaten to death.
This sobering data point comes courtesy of the latest Bureau of Labor Statistics study on fatal occupational injuries. What's behind all this shooting (the leading m.o. of workplace murderers, according to the study) and "stabbing, cutting, slashing, piercing" (the runner-up category)? News reports point to doomed love triangles and disgruntled co-workers. Another cause, however, has been largely overlooked: fraud. Imagine a boss who kills his assistant to keep a Ponzi scheme afloat, or a crooked accountant who poisons an especially thorough auditor. In the world of CFEs (certified fraud examiners), these offenses have their own, pulpy label: red-collar crime.
Frank S. Perri, a CFE and defense attorney who teaches forensic accounting at DePaul University, coined the term after working on a murder case in 2005, an embezzlement scam that ended with a salesman - Perri's client - convicted of smashing his partner's skull with a claw hammer. Perri says his client was well-spoken and had no known history of violence or arrests. That's part of why he was so dangerous. "Research shows the more that people reflect our own image, the more we are inclined to give them what is called an 'implied credibility,' " he told me. "But these people can be very predatory."
The ships also carried out attacks on mock targets and underwater surveillance.
"These exercises are necessary to understand to what extent we are prepared to use new equipment installed on our ships," said Captain Andrei Soloshin, chief of staff of the vessels involved in training.
A NATO vessel observed maneuvers from 12 miles away.
Large-scale military exercises lasting a week began on September 1 with the participation of more than 25 ships from the North, Baltic, Black Sea and Caspian Flotilla fleets, as well as 30 naval aircraft.
What is happening at American universities? Jonathan Haidt, moral psychologist and critically acclaimed author, provides answers in his latest book co-authored with Greg Lukianoff, The Coddling of the American Mind: How Good Intentions and Bad Ideas Are Setting Up a Generation For Failure, which is now on sale. Yesterday Haidt discussed what's been going wrong in childrearing in the past few decades. Today he'll discuss what's been happening when today's youth show up at college.
Madeleine Kearns: In your new book you and Greg Lukianoff argue that overprotection is badly affecting the development of young people today. Previously, we discussed where the "bad ideas" referred to in your book's title originated and the damage they do before young people go to college. Here, we'll discuss what's been happening since "iGen" started arriving on college campuses around 2013.
Today's young people are arriving at university expecting safety, you observe, so why can't we simply make colleges safe spaces to meet those expectations?
Jonathan Haidt: We certainly could. If someone has a plan for raising kids in a safe space that would extend all the way to the age of 85, and they could be confident that the child will stay in the safe zone as an adult, then you could do it. But if you want kids who will go out and get a job and do something in the wider world, then you have to let them fly on their own at some point. I think it is a national tragedy that Americans - on the whole, not everyone - overprotect their children all the way through high school. If we extend that overprotection through college, it would make things worse.












Comment: Background from RT: