Society's Child
On May 20, parts of its Disney World reopened, including outdoor restaurants, entertainment venues and its shopping district, Disney Springs. Visitors must now follow rules that require all guests to wear face coverings, pass fever tests and maintain a distance of 6 feet from other guests whenever possible.
Attractions Magazine shared a video last week of two Imperial soldiers encouraging visitors to "move along" and "stay in your sector" as they patrol from a balcony above a shopping plaza.
Pre-recorded banter between the two troopers can be heard over a loudspeaker.
"Hey, you! With the face covering!" yells one Stormtrooper in the video.
"They all have face coverings," the other mocks.

Muhammed Momtaz Al-Azhari, 23, is charged with attempting to provide material support or resources to a designated foreign terrorist organization, according to a federal criminal complaint. He is being held in the Pinellas County Jail at the request of federal agents.
Muhammed Momtaz Al-Azhari, 23, is charged with attempting to provide material support or resources to a designated foreign terrorist organization, the Department of Justice announced Wednesday.
Al-Azhari was arrested Sunday in a federal sting operation in which he acquired weapons from an FBI informant with whom he'd shared his desires to carry out a mass shooting on behalf of a terror group, according to a criminal complaint.
The document refers to the terror group as the Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham, or ISIS.
Al-Azhari, a U.S. citizen, served three years in prison in Saudi Arabia after being convicted in 2015 of attempting to join a terrorist organization there while traveling to Syria to fight against the Syrian government, according to the complaint. In late 2018, he returned to the U.S. — first to California, where his grandmother lives, and then to Tampa.
He spent much of this spring trying to illegally acquire guns from an undercover FBI agent posing as an eBay seller, the complaint said. Al-Azhari called off the deal after Tampa police arrested him for trying to carry a pistol into a Home Depot. The complaint goes on to say that Al-Azhari worked at a Tampa Home Depot, though it doesn't specify which one.
Comment: Kiss anything resembling the life you used to know. All in the name of keeping us "safe".
- Snowden: Governments using Covid-19 to build "architecture of oppression" and mass surveillance
- Here comes the Covid-19 Gestapo: Illinois Democrat introduces $100 billion 'contact tracing army' bill. It's name? 'HR 6666 TRACE'
- Contact tracing: Universities quietly develop Covid-19 'risk score' app to mainstream Black Mirror-style social credit for students
- The Worst is Yet to Come: Contact Tracing, Immunity Cards and Mass Testing
- Your "immunity passport" future begins to materialize as airlines call for digital id tracking systems
- Massachusetts contact tracing program handed to Clinton-linked NGO with questionable past
No email, no explanation, no courtesy call or text.
That's what happens when your Twitter account is de-verified by the SJWs in Silicon Valley - as I discovered first-hand today.
According to them (and for reasons unbeknown to me) I am no longer deemed to be a person who is "authentic" or "of public interest" - something, admittedly, my closest friends have been telling me for years.
Four armoured US military vehicles were stopped by Syrian Army forces while attempting to cross a checkpoint on the M4 highway in the province of Al-Hasakah near the suburbs of Tall Tamer. The American military convoy was travelling towards the village of Derdara as it tried to cross a sliver of territory in the country's northeast controlled by the Syrian Army, and was forced to turn back.
But as the convoy was turning to drive away from the checkpoint, locals poured out from their homes to express their discontent with the presence of US forces. Videos and photos, shot by a local Sputnik correspondent, show how around a dozen children living near the checkpoint started pelting the leaving American military transport with stones.
Comment: Not the first time. Won't be the last.
- Yankee, go home! Syrian children pelt US convoy with stones
- Not welcome: Syrian troops force another US convoy to turn around, go back where it came from

St. Louis Police Chief John Hayden speaks to media about the shooting of four police officers on June 2, 2020.
Hundreds of people had gathered across the St. Louis region Monday to protest the Memorial Day death of George Floyd in Minneapolis. A rally in O'Fallon, Missouri, drew upward of 2,000 people and featured marchers walking arm-in-arm with police officers.
But tensions rose after the sun fell in downtown St. Louis.
Just after midnight, four officers, all men, were shot near 16th and Olive streets. All four were conscious and authorities said their injuries were not thought to be life-threatening.
"I believe some coward randomly shot at the police line," St. Louis police Chief John Hayden said.
Hayden held a news conference about 1:45 a.m. and said two officers were shot in the leg, one was shot in the foot and one more was shot in the arm.
An exasperated Hayden said he was trying to make sense of the night's "mayhem."
"I don't know what else to say," Hayden said. "This is horrible."
Comment: In Buffalo, New York, a driver rammed their vehicle into a group of police:
Two officers sustained serious injuries. A similar incident took place in NYC:
See also:
- This is not a revolution. It's a blueprint for locking down the nation
- Stacks of BRICKS mysteriously appear near riot hotspots all over US, journalists demand answers
- Twenty unanswered questions to the George Floyd protests, how did we get here?
- Think US cops need to be better armed? Here's why full-on European-style riot control police wouldn't work in America
- Strongest solar flares in years coincide with riots, reminding us that solar activity and unrest are historically linked
- Candace Owens spars with Soros-funded NGO over alleged hand in Minneapolis unrest: 'Don't throw money at black Americans to riot'
The Health Protection Regulations previously banned people leaving home without "reasonable excuse", but the provision has been replaced by stringent curbs on where people can sleep and gather together.
The law, which will be laid in parliament on Monday, says: "There is a gathering when two or more people are present together in the same place in order to engage in any form of social interaction with each other, or to undertake any other activity with each other."
While the powers are in force, "no person may participate in a gathering which takes place in a public or private place outdoors, and consists of more than six persons, or indoors, and consists of two or more persons".
Media, politicians and celebrities who spent the past three months lecturing Americans about the importance of staying home and keeping at least six feet away from all other humans lest they catch or spread the deadly coronavirus have suddenly pivoted on a dime - seemingly as one - to cheering on those Americans defying their advice to pour into the streets and join nationwide protests against police brutality.
Wall-to-wall Covid-19 coverage gave way overnight to endless footage of police whaling on protesters, rioters burning buildings and looting, and massive crowds in the streets of every major American city. Nary a word was spoken about social distancing, or lockdowns, or anything relating to the "new normal" we'd been ordered for months to understand was our only future.
It's not every day one sees a stack of bricks just lying around unattended, especially when there's no construction to be seen - but a rash of reports of pallets of bricks turning up as if by magic in over half a dozen cities over the weekend has investigators trying to get to the bottom of who's seemingly giving would-be rioters the tools they need to turn what began as peaceful protests violent.
A group of protesters in Dallas called attention to the unexpected bounty of construction materials near the city's courthouse on Saturday. "Ain't no damn construction around here!" a savvy demonstrator says in the clip, while another urges his fellow protesters to "do better."

Police stand guard as firefighters work to extinguish a fire at a section of shops looted amid demonstrations in the aftermath of George Floyd’s death on May 31, 2020 in Santa Monica, California.
Santa Monica Police Chief Cynthia Renaud announced the number of arrests Monday morning during a press conference, stating that the actions did not represent the city itself or its residents.
Comment: See also:
- Twenty unanswered questions to the George Floyd protests, how did we get here?
- 'Do something positive. Stop making excuses': George Floyd's brother condemns violent protesters
- Big-city Dems who had imposed strict coronavirus lockdowns now let George Floyd rioters flout rules
- Injustice & inequality are the real cause of US riots - but the establishment who created the problem now cowardly blame Russia
- 'Most of you are weak': Trump tells governors to 'DOMINATE' rioters in scathing phone call as riots across the country continue
- Strongest solar flares in years coincide with riots, reminding us that solar activity and unrest are historically linked












Comment: Al-Azhari reportedly told the informant the following: His lawyer had this to say - important to keep in mind given the history of FBI sting operations resulting in the capture of inept terrorist-wannabes with no actual connections to terrorist groups: That said, by all indications, Al-Azhari seems to be the kind of low life who would want to join ISIS, but is just too incompetent to actually do so.