Society's Child
OPEC+ has since reconciled and once again banded together to address the oil market crisis, making myriad pledges and severe production cuts to bolster crude oil prices. But many of the countries that made those pledges have fallen far short of their promises. "OPEC reached a historic deal to cut output by 9.7 million barrels per day in April, but a number of countries fell significantly short in meeting their production targets," reports Markets Insider.
The people behind Prepear software have launched a petition on Change.org, asking Apple to drop its lawsuit which calls on them to change their pear-shaped logo.
The Cupertino-based corporation claims that Prepear's emblem, which it described as "a minimalistic fruit style with a proper-angled leaf," confuses buyers into thinking that the app is affiliated with Apple.The logo "quickly calls to thoughts Apple's popular Apple Symbol and produces a very similar commercial effect," it stated.
However, the Prepear team said that they have "clearly done nothing wrong," insisting that their logo is completely different from the famous 'bitten apple.'
Dr. Helmut Kentler was a star amid the loosening of sexual morals that started in the 60s. A psychologist and sex educator, he lived as an openly gay man and would even by today's standards be seen as a progressive. He set up his Pedagogical Center in Berlin to spread his ideas, and this center would eventually be tasked by the city's senate with placing vulnerable children into care.
Kentler, in a shocking move that was supported by Berlin's left-wing senate of the early 1970s, decided to house these boys with known pedophiles, well aware that these predators would have sex with them. That didn't bother Kentler, who argues as recently as 1999 that pedophilia "can have a very positive effect on a boy's personality development." In a parliamentary hearing in 1981, he claimed that pedophiles made for great foster fathers, as they "fell in love with" the boys. The practice was allowed to continue until 2003.
The attackers struck in the West African country's Kouré area, the agency quoted the governor of Tillaberi, Tidjani Ibrahim Katiella, as saying.
The French foreign ministry said "checks are underway" into the reports of the attack. There was no immediate comment from the government in Niger.
Fox 32 Chicago reported that the shooting occurred Sunday afternoon in the city's Englewood neighborhood. A crowd emerged that faced off against the police and eventually began hurling things at the officers. Police told the Chicago Tribune that someone spread the unfounded rumor that it was a child who was hit.
A police officer told the station that an officer sustained a shoulder injury in the confrontation and one of the police cars had its windows broken. The tension carried on into the night.
While the identity-obsessed left peddles its white-privilege theories, white working-class boys languish at the bottom of the academic pile. The evidence is clear, available for all to see on Gov.uk — white working-class boys are the most consistently disadvantaged social group in our country, after gypsies, and nobody in the mainstream media is willing to fight their corner.
For the BBC to be further perpetuating the critical race theory myth of 'white privilege' adds insult to injury. To suggest 'privilege' is primarily based on skin colour is overly simplistic and, frankly, somewhat racist. That's precisely what the BBC commissioned John Amaechi to say on its educational outlet, BBC Bitesize, last week. Worse, when called out by Andrew Neil on Twitter, John Amaechi acted as if his words were not his opinions after all, but indisputable facts.
Comment: See also:
- The myth of white privilege
- Florida University investigating professor who tweeted 'black privilege is real'
- Picnics and celebrity weddings are the latest to be added to the ever-growing list of things that are racist. Pass the sick bucket
- Woketopia: Michigan, Nevada declare racism 'public health crisis.' Another state expected to do so soon
- The 'Systemic Racism' myth
- Institutional racism in policing is a leftist fiction
- Myth of systemic police racism
- What would Shakespeare say? Rutgers takes a knee to Black Lives Matter, declares English grammar 'racist'

A US flag flies next to a statue of former US President Bill Clinton at a boulevard named after him in Pristina on June 23, 2020.
In the first half of 2020, over 5,800 gave up their citizenship of the US, as compared to the 2,072 Americans who gave it up in all of 2019, as per data from Bambridge Accountants.
Comment: Is it really the "mishandling of the coronavirus" and a hatred of Trump that's driving people out of the US. Or could it be the widespread rioting (unacknowledged by the mainstream media), threats of a civil war, possible mandatory vaccination, dictatorial lockdown measures with virulent citizen enforcers and the rise of the police state?
See also:
- Crash the economy, burn the cities, infect the people: The evil plan to remake America
- Why is wokeness the only protected religion in America?
- The Jonestowning of America
- So much for freedom in America: DC mayor issues order requiring masks outside home or face a fine of up to $1,000
- Engdahl: Is America's 'second wave' of coronavirus a political hoax?
- Leader of radical black-only militia NFAC 'believes in violence' & wants a real-life Wakanda for every black person in America
- America, you've been blacklisted: McCarthyism refashioned for a new age

Patrisse Cullors, left, Opal Tometi, center, and Alicia Garza are the co-founders of the Black Lives Matter movement.
Yet as their popularity grows, I've continued to wonder; How did three Marxist-inspired women who began the BLM movement dupe the entire country?
BLM has become many things to different people. Spirited debates occur between police officers within the same ranks as well as family members and social networks involving cops and the community. Nevertheless, one thing is relatively certain, if you take a public position contrary to the movement, you'll likely be branded a racist.
While pockets of injustice should always be addressed and remedied, have you also wondered how a movement created by radicals spreading disinformation and outright lies have duped an entire country? Moreover, how did it become an enormously powerful entity with political clout that is able to clobber anyone who dares to speak truth regarding its' origin and their ultimate objectives?
You know the people I'm talking about. Some of them are probably your friends and family, people you have known for years, and who had always seemed completely rational, but who are now convinced that we need to radically alter the fabric of human society to protect ourselves from a virus that causes mild to moderate flu-like symptoms (or absolutely no symptoms at all) in over 95% of those infected, and that over 99.6% survive, which, it goes without saying, is totally insane.
I've been calling them "corona-totalitarians," but I'm going to call them the "New Normals" from now on, as that more accurately evokes the pathologized-totalitarian ideology they are systematically spreading. At this point, I think it is important to do that, because, clearly, their ideological program has nothing to do with any actual virus, or any other actual public health threat. As is glaringly obvious to anyone whose mind has not been taken over yet, the "apocalyptic coronavirus pandemic" was always just a Trojan horse, a means of introducing the "New Normal," which they've been doing since the very beginning.
I miss baseball horribly, and its sad, half-assed attempt to present a rump season with no live bodies in the seats only amplifies the loss. But then, I haven't gone to a stadium in twenty years, and I certainly won't pay a hundred bucks or more to sit in Fenway Park. I used to go to night games there all the time when I was a starving bohemian writing for the Boston hippie newspapers back in 1972. You could get a decent field-level seat behind first base for five bucks. When I was a kid in Manhattan in 1960, a bleacher seat in the old Yankee Stadium was a quarter (plus 30 cents round-trip on the IRT subway).













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