Society's Child
These allegations were made earlier this month by Kaleb Cole, an accused member of the white supremacist group Atomwaffen. Cole was arrested in February 2020 for allegedly participating in an Atomwaffen intimidation campaign against Jewish people and journalists of color.
On Aug. 13, Cole filed a motion to suppress evidence seized during the FBI's search of his Texas home. According to Cole, the FBI failed to disclose the sordid background of one of its confidential informants in the bureau's application for a search warrant.
"Police prefect expresses its support to the 13 injured police officers," the police department tweeted.
It added that three people had been arrested.
Almost 160,000 demonstrators took part in the nationwide rallies against the health passes on Saturday.
With screaming headlines in bold and large font such as, 'Will this nightmare ever end?' and 'Mutant virus skyrockets...' and 'Fear grows across the country: VIRUS PANIC', and 'Coronavirus horror: Social media footage shows infected Wuhan residents 'act like zombies', it is no wonder many people are in a state of panic.
In times when many are suffering mentally and physically under unnecessary and prolonged lockdowns, the incessant fear porn is causing excessive anxiety, which in turn will affect the health & mental well-being of some, if not many.
Comment: See also:
- Fear is Contagious, And The Government is Using it to Control You
- 'Pure fear porn': Media 'expert' ripped for predicting the coming of COVID-22, a much-more deadly, vax-resistant 'super variant'
- Use of fear to control behavior in Covid crisis was 'totalitarian', admit scientists
- 'A State of Fear': New book exposes UK's unethical psyops team that ramps up anxiety over Covid-19 to control a compliant public
China bans exams for six-year-olds stating pressure 'harms health', limits gaming time for under-18s

Students leave school after finishing the first day of the National College Entrance Examination (NCEE), known as Gaokao, in Beijing on July 7, 2021.
China's exam-oriented system previously required students to take exams from first grade onwards, culminating in the feared university entrance exam at age 18 known as the gaokao, where a single score can determine a child's life trajectory.
"Too frequent exams... which cause students to be overburdened and under huge exam pressure," have been axed by the Ministry of Education, according to new guidelines released Monday.
Comment: South China Morning Post reports that the under-18s will be restricted to gaming for one hour a day on weekends and public holidays:
Beijing has issued a new rule limiting the gaming time for players aged under 18 to between 8pm and 9pm only on Fridays, Saturdays, Sundays and statutory holidays, marking the country's most stringent measure yet to tackle gaming addiction among young people.Whilst these various bans can and will be circumvented for those who are sufficiently determined, it seems that China's government is attempting to foster a society that it considers will be the most beneficial for its people:
The National Press and Publication Administration (NAAP), China's top watchdog for gaming and other forms of online media, formally issued the rules to combat gaming addiction among teenagers, according to a report by state media outlet Xinhua.
The previous rules, introduced in 2019, limited the play time for minors to no more than 90 minutes each day and 3 hours on statutory holidays.While the direct impact on Chinese gaming companies such as Tencent Holdings and NetEase may be limited as players under 18 currently account for only a small part of revenues, over the longer term the new rule could gradually erode the country's player base.© AFP
China’s top watchdog for gaming and other forms of online media, formally issued the rules to combat gaming addiction among teenagers.
That's not necessarily a bad thing.
The notice also states that companies must strictly implement the real-name registration and login system in their games and not provide access to video games for those who are unregistered.
The gaming unit of Tencent said in a statement on Monday that it supports the new regulation and will implement the new requirements as soon as possible.
"Many parents have said that the gaming addiction problem among teens and children has gravely affected their ability to learn and study as well as their physical and mental health, even causing a series of societal problems," a spokesperson for NAAP told Xinhua.
Parents and experts in the West report similar issues, and, notably, the recommendations are that children's gaming time needs to be restricted.
NAAP said that gaming companies are the main entities responsible for stopping children from becoming addicted to games. Beijing's heightened scrutiny of the industry in recent months has already hit the stock prices of Chinese gaming giants such as Tencent, NetEase and Bilibili.
After a state media article described video games as "spiritual opium" earlier in August, Tencent, the world's largest gaming company by revenue, lost US$43 billion from its market valuation in a matter of hours. Tencent has lost more than US$400 billion in value since a high in February.
In their recent quarterly reports this month, Tencent and Bilibili both emphasised that they have faithfully implemented the anti-addiction measures required by state authorities and that minors have become a small portion of their overall user base.
Tencent said that players under 16 accounted for just 2.6 per cent of its gross gaming receipts in China, with those under 12 accounting for just 0.3 per cent. Bilibili said that minors contributed only 1 per cent of the company's gaming revenue.
- China to "promote socialism with Chinese characteristics" in national curriculum
- China to ban karaoke songs with 'illegal content' that endangers national unity
- China blocks cryptocurrency Weibo accounts in 'judgment day' for bitcoin
- China's graft watchdog rebukes 'mukbang' binge-eating, drinking videos
"The hatred for Trump deranged these people so much, that they're unwilling to objectively study it. So someone like me that's in the middle on it, I can't tell you because they will not study ivermectin. They will not study hydroxychloroquine without the taint of their hatred for Donald Trump."The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) warned Americans last week not to take ivermectin, a drug sometimes used to treat parasitic worm infections in humans and livestock. "You are not a horse. You are not a cow. Seriously, y'all. Stop it," the FDA said in a widely shared tweet.
In April, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) concluded after a series of trials that hydroxychloroquine, a drug touted by Trump during his presidency, "had little or no effect on preventing illness, hospitalization or death from COVID-19."
A reporter at the event in Ohio pressed Paul about those warnings from the CDC and FDA.
"I don't know if it works, but I keep an open mind," Paul responded.
Comment: Those who want to skew information will slander the messenger and disavow the proof.
See also:
- Top Yale Doctor/Researcher: 'Ivermectin works,' including for long-haul COVID
- Covid deaths plunge after Mexico City introduces ivermectin, hospitalizations down 76%
- YouTube suspends Ron Johnson for one week for recommending HCQ
- Twitter blocks European MEDICAL JOURNAL after it published study on promising ivermectin treatment for Covid-19
- Ivermectin update
- Ivermectin's success in battling COVID-19
- Objective:Health: Ivermectin: The Suppressed Miracle Drug for Covid-19
- Study on early hydroxychloroquine treatment of COVID-19 patients shows 98.7% cure rate
- Ohio withdraws ban on Hydroxychloroquine, Fauci accused of 'misinformation campaign'
- Vindicated: Trump-touted COVID-19 drug hydroxychloroquine works, according to new study
The C.1.2 strain has been linked to "increased transmissibility" and is said to have mutated the most from the original virus, which first emerged in the Chinese city of Wuhan, the Mirror reported.
The strain has a mutation rate of about 41.8 mutations per year, almost double the global mutation rate seen in any other existing variant of concern, according to experts at South Africa's National Institute for Communicable Diseases and the KwaZulu-Natal Research Innovation and Sequencing Platform.
The number of C.1.2 genomes in South Africa has risen from 0.2 percent in May to 1.6 percent in June and 2 percent in July, according to scientists, who also have found 14 mutations in nearly 50 percent of the variants that had a C.1.2 sequence.
Comment: Here again is the misconception that the COVID vaccines offer protection. They don't. It is an unverified experiment.
Video shared on social media showed a booming shootout and men dressed in black marching hostages down a street in Araçatuba, 320 miles from São Paulo and home to almost 200,000 people.
After ransacking at least two bank branches, the criminals drove away with hostages on their cars' roofs, clinging on to keep from sliding off. At least three people were killed in the clash, including two civilians.
The brazen attack is the latest in a series of increasingly violent bank heists in Brazil. Experts believe a pandemic welfare programme for poorer Brazilians has encouraged robbers to plan bold raids in sleepy regional cities where bank branches are storing more cash.
More than 20 heavily armed men carried out the robberies in Araçatuba, using 10 cars, said Álvaro Camilo, the executive secretary of Sao Paulo's military police. As the gang made their getaway, they also left a trail of explosive booby traps across the city. Camilo urged people not to leave their houses until the explosives have been found and deactivated.
As he pulled into the driveway about 4:30 pm (Kabul time), children — his own as well as those of his brothers and other relatives — swarmed around Zemari's Toyota Corolla car.
His 12-year-old son, Farzad, asked if he could park the car, to which Zemari obliged. He put Farzad in the driver's seat and then he switched over to the passenger side.
That's when, the family says, an "American missile", which was fired from a drone, drilled through the car, slammed into the ground and detonated, killing 10 people instantly.
Among the deceased include 40-year-old Zemari, an engineer and employed with a Japanese firm in Kabul, four kids — aged between 2 and 5 — and his 25-year-old nephew who was about to get married, Zemari's brother Emal said on Monday.
Comment: Just the News writes:
The Washington Post reported early Monday morning that a single extended family was the victims of a nearby strike that occurred as the family was returning to their home Sunday afternoon.
"Bodies were covered in blood and shrapnel, and some of the dead children were still inside the car," a neighbor told the outlet.
U.S. Central Command says the strike targeted an Islamic State vehicle bomb that posed an "imminent" threat to the Kabul airport. "We are aware of reports of civilian casualties following our strike on a vehicle in Kabul. It is unclear what may have happened, and we are investigating further. We would be deeply saddened by any potential loss of innocent life," said Central Command in a statement.
Eyewitnesses said the rockets were launched from a car and were aimed towards the airport on Monday morning. It appears Salim Karwan, a neighbourhood adjacent to the airport, was hit in one of the blasts. No one has yet claimed responsibility for the attack.
Smoke could be seen rising above buildings in the north of the city, where the Hamid Karzai international airport is located, and gunfire could be heard after the explosions.
Locals reported hearing the activation of airport's missile defence system, and pictures on social media showed shrapnel falling on to rooftops and the street, suggesting that at least one rocket had been intercepted.
Social media posts, which could not immediately be verified, also showed a vehicle in flames after being apparently struck by retaliatory fire.
In Washington, the White House issued a statement saying President Joe Biden was being briefed on "the rocket attack at Hamid Karzai international airport" in Kabul.
Comment: RT reports that IS-K claimed responsibility, claiming to have launched six unguided rockets (at least five of which were reported to have been intercepted by the airport's air defense systems).
Meanwhile on the border with Pakistan, two Pakistani soldiers were killed by militant fire from Afghan militants. The Pakistanis responded, allegedly killing 2-3 and wounding 3 or 4 others (according to their report). TTP (Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan) claimed responsibility but denied suffering any casualties.
The Metropolitan Police is reportedly consulting its 30,000 officers on the current uniform. With the contract with its current uniform supplier set to expire in 2023, the force is said to be reviewing what changes need to be made when a new contract is signed.
According to The Sun, the Met might be violating the Equality Act (2010) by not providing separate uniforms for non-binary and gender-fluid officers. An officer, identified as 'Alex Blue', is quoted by the paper as stating that the lack of an alternative uniform would amount to "indirect discrimination."
Comment: UK police are becoming a parody of themselves. Are they trying to not be taken seriously? Because if so, it's working.
See also:
- UK police keep painting cars with rainbows to stamp out anti-LGBTQ bigotry... but critics would prefer 'anti-knife crime' vans
- Slow collapse: UK police ABANDONED investigations into over 1,000 crimes daily in 2020 - one in seven probes dumped within 24 hours
- 'Being offensive is a crime': UK police quickly apologize for bizarre LGBT ad campaign
- UK police stake out hairdresser for defying lockdown, follows £17,000 fine for staying open
- UK police threaten lockdown fines over snowball fights, backtrack following online backlash
- UK police forces want officers to wear LGBT rainbow flags - this virtue-signalling nonsense has to stop















Comment: See also: