Society's Child
Have you heard about China's social credit system? It's a technology-enabled, surveillance-based nationwide program designed to nudge citizens toward better behavior. The ultimate goal is to "allow the trustworthy to roam everywhere under heaven while making it hard for the discredited to take a single step," according to the Chinese government.
In place since 2014, the social credit system is a work in progress that could evolve by next year into a single, nationwide point system for all Chinese citizens, akin to a financial credit score. It aims to punish for transgressions that can include membership in or support for the Falun Gong or Tibetan Buddhism, failure to pay debts, excessive video gaming, criticizing the government, late payments, failing to sweep the sidewalk in front of your store or house, smoking or playing loud music on trains, jaywalking, and other actions deemed illegal or unacceptable by the Chinese government.
It can also award points for charitable donations or even taking one's own parents to the doctor.
Punishments can be harsh, including bans on leaving the country, using public transportation, checking into hotels, hiring for high-visibility jobs, or acceptance of children to private schools. It can also result in slower internet connections and social stigmatization in the form of registration on a public blacklist.
The New York Post, citing divorce filings obtained by the newspaper, reports Dr. Beth Jordan Mynett said her husband Tim Mynett admitted to having an affair with Omar in April. Dr. Mynett also alleges her spouse dropped a "shocking declaration of love" for the far-left lawmaker and dumped her soon after, state filings submitted to the Superior Court of the District of Columbia on Tuesday.
"The parties physically separated on or about April 7, 2019, when Defendant told Plaintiff that he was romantically involved with and in love with another woman, Ilhan Omar," the documents read.
Despite her husband's alleged actions, Dr. Mynett says she told him she was "willing to fight for the marriage," but she claims the political consultant told her their relationship was done. The couple married in 2012 and have a 13-year-old son together.
Omar has dished out roughly $230,000 in campaign funds in consulting fees and travel expenses to Mynett's E Street Group since 2018.
Leon Haughton said he bought three bottles of honey from a roadside stand while visiting relatives in Jamaica last Christmas. When he tried to bring the honey into the U.S., things got a little sticky.
Haughton said K-9 officers began sniffing him at a security checkpoint in Baltimore's international airport. Then, Customs and Border Protection agents detained him and seized his three bottles of honey.
CBP said police arrested Haughton on felony drug charges after the honey tested positive in a field test for methamphetamine.
Comment: How in the hell does it take police almost two and a half months to determine the facts about the honey!? Mr. Haughton would do well to find himself a good lawyer!
Brought by states, cities and counties, the lawsuits — some of which have been combined into one massive case — allege the company and the Sackler family are responsible for starting and sustaining the opioid crisis.
At least 10 state attorneys general and the plaintiffs' attorneys gathered in Cleveland, where David Sackler represented the Sackler family, according to two people familiar with the meeting. David Sackler, who was a board member of the company, has recently been the de facto family spokesperson.
The lawsuits that Purdue and the Sacklers are seeking to settle allege that their company's sales practices were deceptive and at least partly responsible for the opioid crisis, which claimed more than 400,000 lives from 19 c99 to 2017, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Some of the lawsuits also allege that after 2007 the Sackler family drained the company of money to enrich themselves.
"The Sackler family built a multibillion-dollar drug empire based on addiction," New Jersey Attorney General Gurbir Grewal said in May when his state joined others in suing the Sackler family and their company. Massachusetts Attorney General Maura Healey was the first to name family members in her suit in January.
Comment: More on the Sacklers and Purdue Pharma's role in creating an epidemic that has killed hundreds of thousands:
- How the American opiate epidemic was started by the Purdue Pharma company
- Former Purdue Pharma CEO called opioid addicts 'victimizers' while company counted on addiction for profits
- Landmark lawsuit targets billionaire OxyContin family personally for fueling opioid epidemic
- New book 'Dopesick' documents how doctors and Purdue Pharma are responsible for getting millions of Americans addicted to drugs
- Billionaire OxyContin dealer Richard Sackler set to rake in more money with patent on addiction treatment drug
O'Rourke described a country founded on white supremacy, and said that the country was projecting its racism onto would-be migrants being detained on the border.
The Democratic presidential hopeful, who is trailing badly in the polls, recited a litany of claims — many of them debunked, such as the Charleston "very fine people" hoax — accusing President Donald Trump of fomenting racism in the country.
He also accused Trump, whom he likened to a fascist dictator, of "stochastic terrorism," alleging that Trump was making provocative statements to encourage individuals, indirectly, to launch white supremacist attacks like the recent mass shooting in El Paso, Texas.
O'Rourke also called for a complete ban on so-called "assault weapons," and a national buyback of AR-15 rifles and other legal weapons currently owned by Americans.
Relations between Washington and Moscow have been declining for the last five years due to a number of disagreements on international issues, with the latest US moves being aimed at sanctioning the Russian gas export project Nord Stream 2. Despite this, however, trade between the US and Russia has been reasonably stable since 2015.
Carl Fey, a professor of international trade at the School of Business at Aalto University, said:
"For the first half of 2019 the US imported $10.5 billion and exported $3.3 billion [worth of goods] according to the US census data. Despite current challenges, many in the US and Russia also realise that there is a difference between what a government does and the views of individual people."In light of the negative pressure from anti-Russian sanctions imposed by many Western governments, the role of export-supporting projects like "Made in Russia" by the Russian Export Centre (REC) has significantly increased. While REC is helping Russian companies that work in the non-resource export sector enter foreign markets, the program "Made in Russia" is working towards promoting an image of reliability and quality when it comes to products made in Russia. The latter is achieved via the voluntary certification of goods being exported by companies in accordance with global standards.
The Israeli Finance Ministry has announced a tender for the construction of a massive cloud-based data centre for government ministries, agencies, and "additional governmental units" with the aim of giving them unified access to databases, information, and services. The data centre project suggests the construction of two "domains" located in different places in Israel, functioning autonomously from other services run by the provider that wins the tender.
There has been no information so far on how much Tel Aviv is ready to spend on the mega-project, but participation in the tender is limited to companies with $2 billion and higher in annual revenues from cloud services, meaning that only giants like Microsoft, Google, or Amazon will be eligible to participate.
"In Australia we have proper democracy but in Hong Kong, democracy is being slowly eroded away and I'll try to do whatever I can to try and help the cause," the anonymous guy told ABC.
This sort of enthusiastic empty non-story cheerleading is typical for western media coverage of the Hong Kong protests so far, while these same media outlets consistently ignore or downplay protests against the government of France, Israel, Honduras, India, Indonesia and any other region that happens to fall within the US-centralized power alliance. It's an amazingly reliable pattern: the entire western political/media class finds protests and uprisings endlessly fascinating when they are in opposition to governments which haven't yet been absorbed into the imperial blob like China, Russia, Iran, Venezuela, Syria, pre-collapse Libya, or then-Moscow-aligned Ukraine, but any protests or uprisings within that empire are ignored at best or demonized at worst.

The All-Russian Fisheries and Oceanography Institute has released 10 killer whales since June.
But 75 beluga whales still languished in pens in the so-called "whale jail" in the Russian Far East, and the question remains whether Russia's controversial practise of catching wild marine mammals for the aquarium industry will be banned.
The All-Russian Fisheries and Oceanography Institute, or VNIRO, has released a total of 10 killer whales, or orcas, and 12 of 87 beluga whales since June, sending them on an arduous 1,800-kilometre (1,120 mile) route by truck and boat.
On Tuesday, VNIRO said in a statement that the last two killer whales and six of the belugas had been released into the wild.
"All 10 orcas from the Srednyaya Bay (facility) have been set free," it said.
The fisheries institute earlier said it has prioritised releasing the killer whales over the summer, as belugas are a more resilient Arctic species that can be taken to the ocean in the colder months.
Environmentalists and marine mammal researchers had criticised the way the initial releases were handled.
Greenpeace said the fourth release on Tuesday was more transparent to the public, while demanding that Russia "publish plans for the release of the remaining belugas".
The details
- What Oklahoma said: State Attorney General Mike Hunter argued that Janssen, J&J's pharmaceutical subsidiary, created a "public nuisance" by misinforming both doctors and the public about the addictive risks of painkillers as early as the 1990s. The state called J&J the "kingpin" of the crisis.
- What J&J said: It lawfully marketed and sold prescription opioid painkillers, and its products account for under 1% of the Oklahoma opioid market (a stat the state disputed). It's appealing the decision.














Comment: Putting aside Silicon Valley's ties to the Pentagon and Department of Defense for a just a moment, most of the companies coming out of this culturally myopic region are now so politicized that one has to think twice about publicly stating one's views or opinions, no matter how reasonable they may seem to many - out of fear of being identified and labeled in some egregious manner.