Society's Child
New York-based Arcade Publishing announced on Monday they are the new home for Allen's memoir, titled 'Apropos of Nothing.' Arcade calls the book a "candid and comprehensive personal account" of Allen's life.
Editor Jeannette Seaver said in a statement that her company refuses to "bow to those determined to silence" Allen.

Bodies of coronavirus victims from Bergamo, Italy, are unloaded Saturday upon arrival at a cemetery in Ferrara, where they will be cremated.
"Western health care systems have been built around the concept of patient-centered care," physicians Mirco Nacoti, Luca Longhi, and their colleagues at Papa Giovanni XXIII Hospital in Bergamo urge in a paper published on Saturday in NEJM Catalyst, a new peer-reviewed journal from the New England Journal of Medicine. But a pandemic requires "community-centered care."
The experience of the Bergamo doctors is crucial for U.S. physicians to understand "because some of the mistakes that happened in Italy can happen here," said Maurizio Cereda, co-director of the surgical ICU at Penn Medicine and a co-author of the paper. The U.S. medical system is centralized, hospital-focused, and patient-centered, as in most western countries, "and the virus exploits this," he told STAT.
A jury of eight women and five men at the high court in Edinburgh on Monday found Salmond not guilty of 12 charges of attempted rape, sexual assault and indecent assault after about six hours of deliberations.
They came to the uniquely Scottish verdict of not proven on one charge of sexual assault with intent to rape, after hearing nearly nine days of evidence.
The outcome - greeted by Salmond with praise for the judicial system and a call for Scotland's attention to return to the threat posed by coronavirus - capped the most significant criminal trial in Scottish political history.
Comment: Previously:
- Brit MSM in predictable hysterics over former first minister Alex Salmond's new RT show
- Scots independence leader Alex Salmond: 'UK govt banning RT UK is what tin-pot dictatorships do'
- Scottish independence leader Alex Salmond under fire for positive remarks about Vladimir Putin
"Overnight, Senate Democrats block the nearly $2 trillion coronavirus aid package, saying it has a slush fund for big business. Republicans warning their rivals are playing with fire as the economy tanks," co-host Savannah Guthrie proclaimed at the top of the broadcast. Minutes later, she reiterated: "As mentioned, overnight, the new $2 trillion coronavirus aid package was blocked by Senate Democrats on Capitol Hill..."
Correspondent Tom Costello informed viewers: "On Capitol Hill this morning, Republicans and Democrats remain at odds over spending. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell blamed House Democrats after a procedural vote on the Senate measure failed Sunday evening." A soundbite followed of McConnell admonishing: "The Speaker of the House shows up and we're back to square one."
Comment: Job Creators Network also issued a statement on Sunday denouncing the Democrats for blocking the relief bill:
"The Democrats put partisan interests ahead of what's good for the nation by blocking the cloture vote this evening to proceed on the CARES Act," Alfredo Ortiz, president and CEO of the network said in a statement. "Millions of small businesses and employees around the country need the relief that this bill offered."
"Small businesses will know who is to blame for holding up the loans and grants they require to stay operational and pay their employees," Ortiz said. "April 1st is right around the corner and in the real world that is when rent, car, and mortgage payments are due."
"Ordinary Americans need the checks that the CARES Act would provide now, not a month or two from now," Ortiz said in the statement. "Millionaires like Pelosi and Schumer obviously don't need to worry about these concerns facing their constituents."
"It's time they stop playing chicken with the livelihoods of millions of Americans just so they can stick it to Trump," Ortiz said.
Rio Giardinieri, 52, told Los Angeles' Fox 11 that he struggled with horrendous back pain, headaches, cough and fatigue for five days after catching COVID-19, possibly at a conference in New York.
Doctors at the Joe DiMaggio Children's Hospital in South Florida diagnosed him with the coronavirus and pneumonia and put him on oxygen in the ICU, he told the outlet.
Peter Bright, 39, a tech reporter and editor for Ars Technica, was arrested in a public park during a sting operation in May 2019 after reaching out to an FBI agent posing as the mother of a 7-year-old girl and 9-year-old boy.
"Over the course of hundreds of chat communications, Bright discussed with the undercover agent Bright's plan to meet the minors to engage in sexual activity," according to the FBI. He asked for photos of the children and said he intended to rape the girl, the feds said.
"Hospitalization rates for school-aged children (5-17 years) are higher than any recent regular season but remain lower than rates experienced by this age group during the pandemic," the report said.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) released its U.S. Influenza Surveillance Report for the week ending March 14, with the total deaths this season at 23,000 and the highest number of children and people age 18-49 requiring hospitalization since the 2009 H1N1 pandemic.
Comment: Here we have yet another story that demonstrates how phony the current COVID-19 fear pandemic is. The masses living in relatively easy times and knowing little of the real hardships experienced by past generations have become easily manipulated to embrace hysteria and authoritarianism.
Hospital sees spike in severe child abuse cases; believed linked to stress from Coronavirus pandemic
Cook Children's says it typically sees that many such cases over the course of a month.
All of the children admitted this week were under 4 years old.
"We knew an increase in abuse was going to occur, but this happened faster than we ever imagined," said Christi Thornhill, director of the Trauma Program, the CARE team and Fostering Health at Cook Children's. "I mean this happened in a week and these are really bad abuse cases."
Comment: The social implications of worldwide quarantines have had very little discussion in the media. So many people who have been barely able to make ends meet are now without money, food, or social contact. Stress is poorly delt with in the West, and our current lockdown is magnifying it by untold numbers.

Protestors from the Green Anti-Capitalist Front (GAF) on February 28, 2020 in London.
Numerous commentators have extolled the positive effect that the global Covid-19 shutdown is having on the environment. Air quality has greatly improved in areas where there has been a 'lockdown', fish have returned to Venice's canals, and satellite observations from the European Space Agency have revealed a drastic drop in pollution over Europe. As Graham Dockery has noted elsewhere on RT, this is an impact that Greta Thunberg and other environmentalists could only dream about.
But don't cheer too loudly: in the longer term, the kind of societal shutdown that we have seen in China and across Europe and America triggers a global recession that will be a disaster for the environment. Economic activity has slumped. Stock market values have plummeted. Many businesses are simply running out of cash and a significant proportion of them will collapse. In the UK, for example, well-known stores like Carphone Warehouse and Laura Ashley have already succumbed, as has a regional airline, Flybe. Those businesses were already in trouble, but stronger companies will soon be in trouble, too.
Governments are offering enormous sums in grants and loan guarantees to protect businesses and workers. When the dust has settled, and those bills must be paid, will there really be such an appetite — let alone the money — to pursue climate-change policies?
Comment: The Earth is a carbon-based planet. Greenhouse gasses have little to no affect on climate change - they are part of a natural cycle. As the coronavirus 'pandemic' deprives our liberty and restricts daily life of its pace and rewards, climate-change fanatics can take 'a breather.'

Israeli border officers patrol the village of Azzun near the West Bank city of Qalqilya.
Despite the number of coronavirus patients being much lower in the Palestinian Authority (PA) than in Israel, where the number of those infected exceeds the one-thousand threshold, Ramallah still opted to introduce a series of strict measures that include the closure of banks, public offices, and governmental institutions as well as severe limitations on movement; with the public expected to stay indoors unless seeking essential services such as food and medication.
In addition, those coming from abroad have been asked to quarantine themselves for 14 days and the PA promised penalties including fines and imprisonment for those who breach the instructions.
Palestinians Staying Afloat But Seeking Help
According to Ibrahim Melhim, a Palestinian Authority spokesman:
"At this stage, we are focusing on precautionary measures to contain the spread of the virus. Although we have the medical teams, it will [definitely] not be enough [if the situation continues to deteriorate], especially given the fact that we have a shortage of medicine and medical equipment."But they will need financial assistance too. On Thursday, Israeli Finance Minister Moshe Kahlon signed a decree allowing the transfer of some $33 million of Palestinian taxpayers' money to the PA in a bid to keep their medical system afloat.
Comment: "At the same time, Israel continues to operate in the Palestinian Territories as if there is no coronavirus crisis." What does this tell us about what Israel thinks it knows?












Comment: Previously: