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Snowflake

Jeff Sessions tells young Conservatives to scorn college culture of 'sanctimonious snowflakes'

snowflakes
© AF-studio / Getty Images
Republicans are finally getting proactive about courting the young vote.

Democrats have been targeting the youth vote for decades, and while young voters often didn't turn out at the polls, they did - in droves - for the 2008 election. But after eight years of Barack Obama - when a lot of those Millennials ended up living in their parents' basements again - the time is ripe for Republicans to put on their own full-court press to win over young voters.

Attorney General Jeff Sessions on Tuesday dropped by the Turning Point USA's High School Leadership Summit in Washington, D.C., and delivered an inspiring speech to conservative high school students, saying colleges today are doing nothing more than creating a generation of "supercilious snowflakes."

"Rather than molding a generation of mature, well-informed adults, some schools are doing everything they can to create a generation of sanctimonious, sensitive, supercilious snowflakes," Sessions said in his speech.

Comment: Schools that coddle their students and try to shield them from reality are doing their students an injustice. Talk about irony.


Chess

'Color us unimpressed': Iran's Foreign Minister dismisses Trump's all-caps Twitter threat

Javad Zarif
© Sputnik / Grigoriy Sysoev
Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif
Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif fired back at US President Donald Trump on Monday, calling 45's all-caps Sunday threat via Twitter unimpressive.

"COLOR US UNIMPRESSED: The world heard even harsher bluster a few months ago," Zarif wrote in a tweet. "And Iranians have heard them - albeit more civilized ones - for 40 yrs."

"We've been around for millennia & seen fall of empires, [including] our own, which lasted more than the life of some countries. BE CAUTIOUS!" he added.

Red Flag

'No Judgement Day until Muslims slay the Jews': Danish imam charged with anti-Semitic speech

Muslim boy prays
© Navesh Chitrakar / Reuters
Muslim boy prays.
Danish prosecutors have charged Imam Mundhir Abdallah after outrage over a 2017 speech, in which he called on Muslims to kill Jews to fulfill their destiny. It is the first charge of its kind under new religious preaching laws.

The disturbing comments, which were filmed and distributed on the imam's social media, prompted Danish prosecutors to issue charges for the first time under the new criminal code, introduced in January 2017.

Light Saber

The war in Syria is over and America lost

Wafideen checkpoint soldier
© LOUAI BESHARA/AFP/Getty Images
A picture taken on March 1, 2018 shows a member of the Russian military police standing guard between the portraits of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad (R) and Russian President Vladimir Putin (L) hanging outside a guard-post at the Wafideen checkpoint on the outskirts of Damascus neighbouring the rebel-held Eastern Ghouta region.
Earlier this month, Syrian regime forces hoisted their flag above the southern town of Daraa and celebrated. Although there is more bloodletting to come, the symbolism was hard to miss. The uprising that began in that town on March 6, 2011, has finally been crushed, and the civil war that has engulfed the country and destabilized parts of the Middle East as well as Europe will be over sooner rather than later. Bashar al-Assad, the man who was supposed to fall in "a matter of time," has prevailed with the help of Russia, Iran, and Hezbollah over his own people.

Washington is too busy over the furor of the day to reflect on the fact that there are approximately 500,000 fewer Syrians today than there were when a group of boys spray-painted "The people demand the fall of the regime" on buildings in Daraa more than seven years ago. But now that the Syria conflict has been decided, it's worth thinking about the purpose and place of the United States in the new Middle East. The first order of business is to dispose of the shibboleths that have long been at the core of U.S. foreign policy in the region and have contributed to its confusion and paralysis in Syria and beyond.

There probably isn't anyone inside the Beltway who hasn't been told at some point in their career about the dangers of reasoning by analogy. But that doesn't mean such lessons have been regularly heeded. The Syrian uprising came at a fantastical time in the Middle East when freedom, it seemed, was breaking out everywhere. The demonstration of people power that began in Daraa-coming so soon after the fall of longtime leaders in Tunisia and Egypt-was moving. It also clouded the judgment of diplomats, policymakers, analysts, and journalists, rendering them unable to discern the differences between the region's Assads and Ben Alis or between the structure of the Syrian regime and that of the Egyptian one.

Comment: That all depends on what the US' goals are in the Middle East. Thus far, it has been only to establish hegemony in the region by any means necessary. As it stands, a radical reformation of their goals is required. Considering that almost all levels of government are firmly in the hands of a psychopathic elite, that will never be possible. Perhaps better that Syria, Russia and Iran continue to 'win'. And let's not forget China either. See also: Pepe Escobar: The Syria connection to Iran, Afghanistan and China


Cult

Billionaire heiress to Seagram's liquor fortune among 4 arrested in connection to NXIVM sex cult

clare bronfman
© NXIVM
Canadian Seagram heiresses Clare, left, and sister Sara Bronfman
Four more people have been arrested in connection to the alleged sex cult NXIVM, including group leaders with such titles "The Prefect" serving "The Vanguard."

Clare Bronfman, 39; Kathy Russell, 60; Lauren Salzman, 42; and Nancy Salzman, 64, were arrested Tuesday on a superseding indictment charging them with racketeering conspiracy.

Bronfman, a daughter of the late billionaire philanthropist and former Seagram chairman Edgar Bronfman Sr., is an heiress to the Seagram's liquor fortune.

Previously charged and added to the new indictment were group founder Keith Raniere, 57, and former "Smallville" actress Allison Mack, 35.

Comment: Previously:


Propaganda

Syrian army photos expose Israeli and Jordanian pharmaceuticals found in terrorist hospital

Jordanian Drugs In Militant Hospital In Suthern Syria
Troops of the Syrian Arab Army (SAA) found a field hospital and a medicine depot, which had belonged to militants in the village of Nabaa al-Sakhar in southern Syria, according to the state-run news agency SANA.

The facilities, which are located in about 16km southeast of the city of Quneitra, included "operating rooms, laboratory, medical equipment and a cache containing large amounts of medicines, some of which are made in Israel and Jordan".

According to the SANA, militants the field hospital was lcoated in one of the schools in Nabaa al-Sakhar.

Comment: For those who aren't paying attention, this is more damning evidence on just who is behind the war on Syria:


Umbrella

Woman at Maryland beach impaled through chest by rogue umbrella

Beach
© Mike Blake / Reuters
A woman in Maryland has been airlifted to a hospital after a rental beach umbrella was uprooted by gusty winds and pierced her chest. She is now in stable condition and is likely to survive the freak accident, authorities say.

The 46-year-old woman was impaled by a runaway beach umbrella on Sunday afternoon as she was visiting Ocean City, Maryland. The woman, who was not identified by authorities, reportedly had no chance to react as the rental sunshade was uprooted by the wind and flew across the sand right into her chest.

Lifeguards at the beach rushed to secure the umbrella that continued blowing around.

"Fortunately, it was not life-threatening. But it was significant enough that our EMS personnel didn't feel comfortable removing it. So what they did was actually cut the top part of the umbrella off so she could be transported," Ocean City spokeswoman Jessica Waters said.

Red Flag

Experts warn statistics underestimate terror threat posed by ISIS women and children returning from Syria

ISIS women terror threat
© Metropolitan Police
Safaa Boular was convicted of plotting to carry out a terrorist attack on the British Museum in London.
Experts have warned about the specific and growing threat posed by women and children who traveled to Syria and Iraq to join jihadists before returning to Britain, claiming statistics have been largely underestimated.

According to research by the International Centre for the Study of Radicalization (ICSR) at King's College London, 850 Britons traveled to Syria and Iraq between April 2013 and last month, including 145 women and 50 minors.

Of the 425 who returned to the UK, only two women and four minors were confirmed as being among them, according to the report 'From Daesh to Diaspora: tracing the women and minors of Islamic State.'

"The British citizens that have now been confirmed as returning to the UK have not been differentiated by gender, or age delineation, though women and minors accounted for 23 percent of British IS affiliates in Syria and Iraq," ICSR researcher Joana Cook said.

Comment: One has to wonder what plans Western governments have in mind for all the returning jihadis they are welcoming with open arms.


Attention

Oxford study findings: Fake, misleading social media posts exploding globally

Facebk-Instagram polit ads
© John Ellswick/AP
Facebook and Instagram ads linked to 'Russian effort to disrupt the US political process' and interfere in the 2016 US elections - released by members of US House Intelligence Committee.
Russia's social media blitz to influence the 2016 U.S. election was part of a global "phenomenon" in which a broad spectrum of governments and political parties used Internet platforms to spread junk news and disinformation in at least 48 countries last year, an Oxford University study has found.

Including U.S. government programs aimed at countering extremists such as Islamic fundamentalists, about $500 million has been spent worldwide on research, development or implementation of social media "psychological operations" since 2010, the authors estimated.

"The manipulation of public opinion over social media platforms has emerged as a critical threat to public life," the researchers wrote. They warned that, at a time when news consumption is increasingly occurring over the Internet, this trend threatens "to undermine trust in the media, public institutions and science." In an earlier analysis covering 2016, the researchers found governments and political parties had deployed social media to manipulate the public in 28 countries.

Comment: Would any of those ads change your mind? FYI: To review the Oxford study, go here.


Attention

Several dead, hundreds missing as hydropower dam COLLAPSES in Laos

Some 6,000 villagers have been left stranded and their homes submerged in flood water after the partially-constructed dam burst on Monday evening

Some 6,000 villagers have been left stranded and their homes submerged in flood water after the partially-constructed dam burst on Monday evening
Hundreds of people are missing and an unknown number believed dead after the collapse of a hydropower dam in southeast Laos.

The accident happened at the Xepian-Xe Nam Noy hydropower dam in the southeastern province of Attapeu on Monday, sparking flash floods in villages in the area and leaving more than 6,000 people homeless.

The dam, which was still under construction, released five billion cubic metres of water, which is equivalent to over two million Olympic swimming pools.

It is not yet known what caused the collapse.