Society's Child
The stela with a bronze bas-relief depicts an armed trooper in Nazi gear, and a tablet reading: "To Estonian men who fought in 1940-1945 against Bolshevism and for the restoration of Estonian independence." It caused a lot of controversy after being erected at the cemetery in the town of Lihula in August 2004.
The government ordered its removal less than two weeks later, saying that the memorial created unnecessary links between Estonian independence fighters and the German invaders. Nazi sympathizers staged rallies on the spot where the stela once stood. Last year, one such demonstration attracted around 200 people.

Seems convicted pedophiles have no problem maneuvering themselves to prey on children as long as it's under the LGBTQ+ banner.
Thirty-two-year-old Albert Garza is a registered sex offender who was convicted of assaulting an eight-year-old boy in 2008, yet that has not hindered him from dressing in garish women's clothing, calling himself "Tatiana Mala Nina," and performing in front of kids.
When the story broke, one news site suggested an alternative name for "Drag Queen Storytime," with a headline that blared, "Pederast Story Hour in Houston."
Facebook has updated its "community standards" to carve out a few exceptions to its "no death threats" policy. Calls for "high-severity violence" are now permitted, as long as they're directed at individuals "covered in the Dangerous Individuals and Organizations policy" or individuals "described as having carried out violent crimes or sexual offenses" by media reports. After all, are people banned from Facebook really people at all?
The change was spotted on Tuesday by commentator Paul Joseph Watson, who along with his former Infowars boss Alex Jones was one of a handful of mostly-conservative personalities banned from Facebook in May under its "Dangerous Individuals" policy. Back then, even mentioning one of the banned names could get a user banned - unless the mention was derogatory.
Jeff and his former spouse Anne Georgulas are trying to resolve a parental dispute over their son, James. Anne insists that James identifies as a girl, calls him Luna, and envisions hormone therapy and eventually sex-change surgery in the future. Jeff rejects the idea and says his son is perfectly comfortable being a boy in his presence. The pair are fighting a legal battle, with a court temporarily ordering Jeff not to impose a male identity on the child.
The order forbids Jeff from calling his son James in front of anyone who knows him as a girl, and this significantly limits what they can do together, he told RT's Sophie Shevardnadze.

Allison Nimlos, a type 1 diabetes advocate from the US, during a trip to buy lower cost insulin in London, Ontario, Canada, June 29, 2019.
Notice that, in the US, she can afford the luxury object in her left hand, no problem. But not the essential object in her right hand...
In the US, the price of insulin has nearly doubled in five years. In order the get the life-saving medicine, a group of people from Minnesota recently spent 15 hours driving more than 815 miles in a bus to Canada, where it is much cheaper.
Many Americans just can't afford to buy the drugs they desperately need at home, the trip's co-organizer Quinn Nystrom told RT, adding that the price difference across the border is "huge."
"I just went to CVS in Minneapolis, Minnesota. The retail price of the vial [of insulin] is $340. When I went to London, Ontario to pick it up at Walmart pharmacy there, in US dollars the retail price was $26.
From the high cost of insulin, I've had to go into debt because of it. I've had to put it on credit card. I've had to reach out to family members to help me pay for it because it had gotten too expensive, and I can't cover it because of astronomical cost."
Comment: Three companies in particular are major culprits here: US firm Eli Lilly, Danish firm Novo Nordisk, and French firm Sanofi. They need to be broken up and/or see swathes of their operations heavily regulated. As things stand, they're operating as powerful, shadow governments, grossly distorting market equilibrium.
Alas, they have politicians in their pockets because they're so rich they write the laws...

A squirrel was allegedly fed meth by a man in Alabama so it would stay aggressive, officials said.
The squirrel was removed from the alleged drug den by investigators following a bust at an apartment in Athens, according to authorities.
One man, identified as Ronnie Reynolds, 37, was arrested at the scene, but the Limestone County Sheriff's Office is still looking for another suspect — the alleged "caretaker" of the squirrel — identified as Mickey Paulk, 35.
Comment: Update: June 19 from Fox News:
Alabama man says 'attack squirrel' not on meth, disputing officials' claim
The outlandish tale of a meth-fueled "attack squirrel" just got even nuttier.
The wanted Alabama man who police alleged fed a pet rodent methamphetamine to keep it aggressive has spoken out while on the lam — and he says his pet squirrel is no druggie.
Mickey Paulk, 35, released a Facebook video on Tuesday — alongside a squirrel — after the Limestone County Sheriff's Office said he was wanted on multiple charges including possession of a controlled substance.
Investigators raided a home in Athens on Monday looking for Paulk after they were told he'd been caring for an "attack squirrel." Paulk wasn't there, but police found another man, who they arrested on drug charges.
They also found the squirrel.
It's illegal to have a pet squirrel in Alabama. Officials said they released the critter into the wild, as "there was no safe way to test the squirrel for meth."
But in his video, Paulk appeared to suggest he was somehow reunited with his critter pal — and not because the squirrel came back looking for a fix.
"They said it was a trained attack squirrel in a residence that was on meth," Paulk is heard saying in the video. "You can't give squirrels meth, it would kill them. I'm pretty sure, but I've never tried it."
Warning: Graphic Language
The 35-year-old said the squirrel is just over 10 months old and described his personality as being "an a--hole, he's a mean motherf-----. No doubt."
"But he's not a trained attack squirrel, and he's not on meth, I'm pretty sure," Paulk said. "I better not find out he's on meth anyway. I don't think he likes that s---. The squirrel is safe. The public isn't in danger in any way from the methed-out squirrel in the neighborhood."
Paulk claimed police invented the story because they were "mad" he wasn't at the home and questioned how he could be charged if he wasn't in the house at the time of the raid, during which deputies said they seized meth, drug paraphernalia and body armor. Paulk said he no longer lived at the home, though, some of his belongings were still there.
He described the situation as a "joke," and assured "the animal lovers out there" the squirrel is doing well.
"Look at the camera, look at the camera, don't squeak at me," Paulk said at the end of his video as he talked to the supposedly sober squirrel.
Putin juxtaposed the common roots and Orthodox Christian religion of the Ukrainian and Russian peoples with the values of the Western world.
"I, for one, believe that Russians and Ukrainians are one people. We are essentially the same nation."
Comment: They are indeed one people. In this context, the border between them is absurd and serves to harm people on both sides of it, rather than protect them. It's similar to Taiwan/Hong Kong and China.
The picture shows just how complicit the mass media has become in convincing Generation Z (Gen Z) adults into accepting TSA-style checkpoints at public venues.
USA Today's caption says it all,
USA Today's reporter Dawn Gilberston, offers a disturbing glimpse into the mass media's collusion with TSA-style checkpoints at public venues.Annabel Hess, right, signed up for PreCheck at an RV outside the gates of the Country LakeShake music festival in Chicago in late June at the urging of her roommate Catie Hjerpe, left.
The story describes how happy a young woman is to join IdentoGo's TSA PreCheck just so she can avoid check-in lines at music festivals.

Twitter will begin deleting tweets that contain “dehumanizing language towards religious groups, which threatens to open a Pandora's box of nebulous social-justice concepts, and will almost certainly result in accusations of unfairness and bias.
Starting Tuesday, the social media platform will remove reported tweets that directly attack religious groups with "dehumanizing language." For example, the company says that hypothetical tweets like "We need to exterminate the rats. The [religious group] are disgusting" will be deleted.
Though Twitter did not say if the accounts posting such tweets would be suspended, it did say that tweets posted before Tuesday will be deleted without "any account suspension," indicating the company will hand out bans for tweets made after the rule comes into force.
Comment: Whatever the stated intentions, the goal is more draconian censorship - and conservatives will continue to be in the cross-hairs:
- Orwellian Media: Censorship happens in the blink of an eye
- Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey goes on CNN & admits Twitter has 'left-leaning bias'
- Twitter suspends more conservative and pro-Trump accounts prompting new accusations of censorship
- CEO Jack Dorsey admits Twitter was 'too aggressive' in targeting conservatives
- Social Media bias: Twitter bans Alt-Right troll for criticizing CNN while ignoring graphic death threats against Assange
- Project Veritas catches Twitter engineers explaining how they censor conservative viewpoints (VIDEO)

Blackboy Park in the city of Joondalup has long borne the slang name of the indigenous Australian plant Xanthorrhoea because it boasts five of the shrubs. The plants were previously commonly referred to as Blackboys but have, in recent decades, been rebranded ‘Grass Trees.’
Blackboy Park in the city of Joondalup has long borne the slang name of the indigenous Australian plant Xanthorrhoea because it boasts five of the shrubs. The plants were previously commonly referred to as Blackboys but have, in recent decades, been rebranded 'Grass Trees.'
After some political pressure, the city council will now consult with the local community about a potential name change before finalizing plans with the state geographical names authority. The mooted name change has caused something of a stir online with some wondering if it is necessary. "You're kidding. It's a black boy, suck it up," one person said, while another asked: "What isn't offensive any more?"
However, others argued that the name change is long overdue. "The problem is not that the name is 'politically incorrect.' It's that the Xanthorrhoea/grass tree got that nickname for racist reasons in the first place," another commenter wrote.










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