Society's Child
Israel's Population, Immigration and Border Authority delivered the first batch of notices Sunday, telling migrants they have to leave before April 1. The notification says the government arranged their relocation to "a safe third country." In addition to the travel documents and free plane tickets, the migrants will receive a $3,500 cash payment.
The deportation letters does not name the "safe" destination, but describes it as "a country that, in the past decade, has developed tremendously," according to images of the notice circulating in Israeli media. In addition to "some of the highest economic figures in Africa," the receiving country also offers "stability in its regime." Upon arrival, newcomers will be granted a residence and work permit.
Editor-in-chief Bob Roe, executive news director Ken Li and senior reporters Josh Saul and Celeste Katz were all fired on Monday and staffers were told to go home for the day, a source close to Newsweek's newsroom confirmed to The Hill in an email.
The news comes in the wake of recent upheaval at the publication.
Comment: CNN reports more on the chaos at Newsweek:
Multiple sources said staffers at Newsweek are worried for their jobs and have started to reach out to their networks about other employment possibilities. Some were drinking in the office. Katz received a round of applause as she was escorted out of the newsroom, sources said.
Senior writer Matthew Cooper tendered his resignation on Monday as a result of the chaos, saying in a resignation letter obtained by CNN that he has never "seen more reckless leadership."
"It's the installation of editors, not Li and Roe, who recklessly sought clicks at the expense of accuracy, retweets over fairness, that leaves me most despondent not only for Newsweek but for other publications that don't heed the lessons of this publication's fall," Cooper said in the letter.
"Mad" Mike Hughes, a flat-Earth conspiracy theorist who has managed to get significant attention for his now-repeated failed rocket launches, strapped himself into his second homemade rocket Saturday (Feb. 3). But, as Noize TV documented in an excruciating 11-minute livestream of the event, Hughes' rocket never left its pad.
His stated plan, as Live Science previously reported, is to launch himself 1,800 feet (550 meters) above the desert in California and take photos before bailing out in a parachute. These photos, shot from a height anyone can reach by climbing a very tall building or even a small mountain, will, Hughes claims, show that the Earth is flat.
In fact, it's pretty easy for anyone to show that the Earth is round with a simple experiment - though the planet's curvature doesn't become visible to the naked eye until a height of about 35,000 feet (10,700 m).
Comment: If he ever gets off the ground, he's going to be in for a big disappointment.
Just a glimmer of awareness reveals that the true potential of the majority of mankind remains locked away, unable to exert any influence on the course of events on our planet.
Given the scale of this imprisonment, it becomes apparent that the world has been moving on a trajectory invented and directed by a false intelligence, whose interests are diametrically opposed to the intelligence of natural planetary consciousness.
Donald Savastano, who won $1 million playing the New York Lottery's 'Merry Millionaire' game, said on collecting his prize that he had bought the ticket on a whim and was hoping the money would change his life for the better.
"Being a self-employed carpenter, I didn't really have a plan for retirement," Savastano told WBNG at the time. "The money will help with that. I don't have any other extravagant plans. I'll buy a new truck, pay off some debt and invest for the future."
As well as thinking about using his newly found fortune to book a vacation and buy himself a new truck, the self-employed carpenter also took the opportunity to pay for a visit to the doctor-something he had previously not been able to afford.
Comment: You pretty much have to win the lottery to afford healthcare in the US. See also:
- American healthcare - A racket of rackets
- The high cost of sickcare: Big medicine cashes in with needless tests and scans
- $83,046 For A 3 Hour Hospital Visit in the US - Health Care or Money-Making Scam?
An elderly man is fighting for his life in hospital after a gas explosion ripped through a property in Bolton.
Emergency services scrambled to Rydal Grove in Farnworth at around 2.40pm following reports of a blast at the property, where they also found an elderly woman with "serious burns".

A Palestinian man walks near a school that was demolished by Israeli forces
In a released statement, the OCHA acting Coordinator for the occupied Palestinian territories Roberto Valent pointed out that a Palestinian school in East Jerusalem was destroyed by Israeli soldiers, and added: "The demolition was carried out on grounds of lack of Israeli-issued permits, which are nearly impossible to obtain."
"As in Abu Nuwar, hundreds of children attending one of at least 45 schools in the West Bank (37 in Area C" and 8 in East Jerusalem) with pending demolition orders are living in instability, with the specter of school demolition ever-present, threatening their access to education," Valent said in the statement.
In 2009, city planners awarded a development contract to Quantum Immobilien to convert a complex of four buildings dating to the 19th century into a multi-purpose apartment complex. One of the buildings, now known as the Stadthöfe (City Courtyards), served as the city headquarters of the Gestapo - the Nazi secret police who used the facility to interrogate and torture people between 1933-43 during the reign of the Third Reich.
It has been reported that the former teacher of the president, who died at the end of last year in Israel, bequeathed her apartment in Tel Aviv "to Russia."
Due to it's ambiguity, the Russian Embassy in Israel explained that the Israeli authorities are trying to find possible heirs of Mina Yuditskaya's property, and once they are found, a decision will be made on the apartment.
A clinical psychologist initially trained in political science, Peterson is a professor at the University of Toronto who has risen to prominence as a firm advocate of free speech and individual responsibility. Raised as a cowboy on the Canadian plains, he toiled through various trades before entering the ivory halls of Harvard, writing Maps of Meaning, a complex but groundbreaking tome in the psychology of religion. His recently published, and more accessible book, 12 Rules for Life: An Antidote to Chaos, could not come at a more perfect time for Peterson's career, and perhaps, for Western civilization.














Comment: The Independent reports
African migrants protest about the deportation plans in Rabin Square, Tel Aviv
See also: Israel will pay African migrants to leave