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Thu, 04 Nov 2021
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Palestinian family attacked by mob of Israeli settlers storming West Bank village; IDF uses tear gas against the Palestinians

Settler attack Palestinians West Bank
© Adel Ammar / B'Tselem / Twitter
B’Tselem reported that the IDF used tear gas and live rounds against the Palestinians and didn’t detain any settlers.
A Palestinian family was forced to flee under a barrage of stones when an angry mob of Israeli settlers stormed the village during tension in the West Bank. None of them were detained, human rights groups say.

Human rights groups Yesh Din and B'Tselem said that around 50 Israeli settlers from Yitzhar in the West Bank entered the neighboring Palestinian village of Urif on Saturday, smashing windows of cars and hurling stones at houses.

Security camera footage from Urif shows a group of masked men run down the road and throw stones at a family as they were about to get into a car. The father and the hijab-clad mother rush to grab their children and then flee in the house, while several of the stones hit the vehicle's roof. The mob then proceeds to attack another car, parked nearby.


Binoculars

2 more fatal falls at Grand Canyon follow dozens of others

The Skywalk hangs over the Grand Canyon
© AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin, File
In this March 20, 2007, file photo, the Skywalk hangs over the Grand Canyon on the Hualapai Indian Reservation before its grand opening ceremony at Grand Canyon West, Ariz. Two recent deaths in which men plummeted to their death in the Grand Canyon follow dozens of apparently accidental fatal falls since the national park was established 100 years ago.
Two recent deaths in which men plummeted in the Grand Canyon follow dozens of apparently accidental fatal falls since the national park was established 100 years ago.

Michael Obritsch, of Santa Rosa, California, died April 3 after falling from the edge of the South Rim in Grand Canyon Village, near the Yavapai Geology Museum.

His body was found 400 feet (more than 122 meters) below the rim, according to park officials.

A tourist from Macau, China, fell to his death on March 28. The man was at least 50 years old, park officials said.

Cell Phone

Facebook investors want to 'check Zuckerberg's power' and oust him from company chair

Mark Zuckerberg
© Reuters / Aaron P. Bernstein
Facebook's shareholders are gearing up for a fresh attempt to oust its founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg as chairman, as well as shake up the company's governance, in the wake of "severe controversies" for the social network.

Documents filed by Facebook to the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) on April 12 outline the schedule of business for the company's annual shareholder meeting at the end of next month, and include eight shareholder proposals. One of these calls for replacing Zuckerberg as company chair with a new independent member, so as to clearly separate the roles of company chair and CEO.

Bad Guys

No 'housewife': UK 'jihadi bride' Shamima Begum was a gun-toting member of Daesh's morality police

Shamima Begum jihadi bride
The young woman has denied any wrongdoing during her time with the terror group and claimed she was only a "housewife" to her jihadi husband.

Shamima Begum, the young woman who ran away from the UK to join Daesh when she was 15, was actually a member of Daesh's so-called "hisba", which acted as a morality police on terrorist-occupied territories, a report by The Sunday Telegraph reads.

An anti-Daesh activist from Deir Ez-Zor reportedly told the newspaper that Begum - who claimed she was only a "housewife" during her time with the terror group - had been seen wielding an automatic weapon and shouting at Syrian women for wearing brightly coloured shoes.

"Members of our group from Raqqa knew her well", the activist, Aghiad al-Kheder, told the newspaper. "There were lots of young European women in the hisba. Some of them were very harsh and the local population became very scared".

Comment: See also:


Airplane

American Airlines extends flight cancellations of Boeing MAX 737 planes until August

AA Boeing Max 737

An American Airlines Boeing 737 Max 8 lands at LaGuardia Airport on March 11, 2019, in Queens, New York.
American Airlines is extending a cancellation of flights aboard any Boeing 737 Max aircrafts in its fleet until August, the company said in a letter to its employees.

In the letter, American Airlines CEO Doug Parker and President Robert Isom said that they believed the aircraft would be re-certified before August, but added that removing the planes until then would allow them to better plan for the busy summer travel season.

"Once the MAX is re-certified, we anticipate bringing our MAX aircraft back on line as spares to supplement our operation as needed during the summer," the letter states.

American Airlines estimates that the cancellations will affect approximately 115 flights per day - or 1.5 percent of the company's total flying each day through August 19.

Comment: Wise decision: Officials find additional software problem in Boeing 737 Max flight control system

See also:


Evil Rays

Roger Scruton: An Apology For Thinking

I recently gave an interview to the New Statesman, on the assumption that, as the magazine's former wine critic I would be treated with respect, and that the journalist, George Eaton, was sincere in wanting to talk to me about my intellectual life. Not for the first time I am forced to acknowledge what a mistake it is to address young leftists as though they were responsible human beings. Here is my brief response to an unscrupulous collection of out of context remarks, some of them merely words designed to accuse me of thought-crimes, and to persuade the government that I am not fit to be chairman of the commission recently entrusted to me.
George Eaton Roger Scruton

George Eaton posted this picture of himself drinking champagne to celebrate the sacking of the “right-wing racist and homophobe Roger Scruton.” He has since apologised for the picture but says he stands by the interview.

Attention

Large, flightless bird attacks and kills its fallen owner near Gainesville, Florida

A cassowary

A cassowary
A large, flightless bird native to Australia and New Guinea attacked and killed its owner when the man fell on his farm in Florida, authorities said Saturday.

The Alachua County Fire Rescue Department told the Gainesville Sun that a cassowary killed the man Friday on the property near Gainesville, likely using its long claws. The victim was apparently breeding the birds, state wildlife officials said.

"My understanding is that the gentleman was in the vicinity of the bird and at some point fell. When he fell, he was attacked," Deputy Chief Jeff Taylor told the newspaper. He said first responders got a call at 10 a.m. Friday and rushed the man to a hospital for trauma care but he died.

Quenelle

Snowden's lawyer says no evidence to justify Assange eviction, John Pilger's warning and Twitter schools the Foreign Affairs Committee on free speech

robert tiboo snowden assange
© N.Y. Jennifer
Robert Tibbo, left, and Edward Snowden in Moscow on July 26, 2016.
Robert Tibbo, a lawyer for NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden, told RT that he believes Ecuador's decision to strip away Julian Assange's asylum is based on a very weak legal case and may amount to a breach of the constitution.

"Number one, there is a very high threshold to strip someone of an asylum. For what's available in [the] public domain, I don't see any evidence that would justify President [Lenin] Moreno or his administration stripping [Julian Assange] of that asylum status," Tibbo told RT.

The lawyer said that by giving Assange only a "30-minute notice" before revoking his asylum and citizenship, Ecuador appears to have violated his rights under its own laws.

Arrow Up

Popular YouTuber and Brexiteer Sargon of Akkad selected as Ukip election candidate

Carl Benjamin sargon
© YouTube
Carl Benjamin has amassed hundreds of thousands of followers on his YouTube channel
Ukip has selected an anti-feminist Eurosceptic YouTube commentator as a candidate should the UK take part in European Parliament elections next month.

Carl Benjamin, who posts online using the moniker Sargon of Akkad, is one of two candidates the Eurosceptic party named on Thursday to stand in the southwest region.

"We went through an exhaustive process to sift over 190 potential candidates down to those the national executive committee representatives and I felt were most suitable," Ukip leader, Gerard Batten said.

"This list is based on a number of factors that we felt would select candidates to fight for a real Brexit after the European elections. Ukip's priority is to have MEPs who will fight to make Brexit happen."

Comment: For more on some of those mentioned in the article, see:


Dollar

Facebook spent over $20 million dollars on security for Mark Zuckerberg last year

Mark Zuckerberg
© Paul Zinken/EPA
Mark Zuckerberg out running with bodyguards in Berlin in 2016. Personal security topped his 2018 security costs.
Facebook more than doubled the money it spent on top executive Mark Zuckerberg's security in 2018 to $22.6m, a regulatory filing has showed.

Zuckerberg drew a base salary of $1 for the past three years, and his "other" compensation was listed at $22.6m, most of which was for his personal security.

Nearly $20m went toward security for Zuckerberg and his family, up from about $9 million the year prior. Zuckerberg also received $2.6m for personal use of private jets, which the company said was part of his overall security program.

Facebook in the past few years has faced public outcry over its role in the spread of disinformation and political propaganda online, data breaches and privacy concerns.

It includes Russia's alleged influence on the 2016 US presidential election and revelations that Cambridge Analytica, a political consultancy hired by Donald Trump's 2016 presidential campaign, obtained personal data from millions of Facebook profiles without consent.