Society's ChildS


Fire

Alleged arson attack destroys future German migration center

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A fire in a gym, destined to be a shelter for hundreds of migrants and refugees, means a southwestern German town is now unable to accommodate any more asylum seekers. Police suspect arson.


Comment: Some people can't think straight through all the fear mongering about refugees.


2 + 2 = 4

Refugees housed in German school gyms, sports facilities, result in tensions, social conflicts

beds
© sputniknews.comSports facilities and gymnasiums become facilities for refugees.
A gym is often the most available facility to house refugees. Currently, in many German regions local gyms are confiscated and used as refugee shelters amid the ongoing migrant crisis. This creates a number of difficulties and provokes social conflicts, an article in Die Welt read.

The Rudolf Harbig hall is one of the main sports facilities of Olympic Stadium in Berlin. It is a training location for many Berlin athletes and a venue for national and local tournaments. Last week, the Senate ordered the gym and some neighboring facilities to be confiscated and used to house refugees. Professional athletes took away their belongings, and then the location was transformed into a shelter for migrants.

The confiscation of sports halls was spontaneous and was not discussed with anybody, Gerhard Janetzky, president of the Berlin Athletics Association, said. He added that the closure of gyms and other locations is harmful to the development of sports. "This is like a ban on being an athlete. The measures do not take into account athletes' interests who are not that ready to help refugees," he was quoted as saying by Die Welt.

Comment: It seems emergency housing of war refugees - men, women, children, babies - (with winter around the corner), is giving some Germans a mental "work out." Perhaps they should exercise their hearts instead.


Question

Another holistic doctor found dead, 11th death in the past 90 days

mitchell gaynor, dead holistic doctors
Another alternative health care practitioner, famed NYC holistic Oncologist Dr. Mitchell Gaynor, was found dead in the woods near his upstate New York home. Gaynor's death brings the total to 11 alternative health care providers that have been found dead in less than 90 days, according to Erin Elizabeth of Health Nut News.

Dr. Gaynor reportedly died a few days ago, after walking away from a car accident. His body was discovered over the weekend in the woods behind his upstate country home, according to Health Nut News.

Comment: Considering the vehemence and aggressiveness with which the medical-pharmaceutical-regulatory cartel are enacting a world-wide push for vaccination; the similar pattern of deaths of microbiologists and other scientists in recent years; and the plethora of facts around the lengths that the vaccine and medical industry will go to in order to cover up their agenda, there is a strong sense of malevolence surrounding the recent deaths of these physicians.


Chart Bar

Gallup poll: 75% of Americans see widespread corruption in government

Three in four Americans (75%) last year perceived corruption as widespread in the country's government. This figure is up from two in three in 2007 (67%) and 2009 (66%).
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While the numbers have fluctuated slightly since 2007, the trend has been largely stable since 2010. However, the percentage of U.S. adults who see corruption as pervasive has never been less than a majority in the past decade, which has had no shortage of controversies from the U.S. Justice Department's firings of U.S. attorneys to the IRS scandal.
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These figures are higher than some might expect, and while the lack of improvement is somewhat disconcerting, the positive takeaway is that Americans still feel fairly free to criticize their government. This is not the case in some parts of the world. Questions about corruption are so sensitive in some countries that even if Gallup is allowed to ask them, the results may reflect residents' reluctance to disparage their government. This is particularly true in countries where media freedom is restricted.

V

Gerald Celente launches National 'Occupy Peace' anti-war movement


Comment: Occupypeace.us


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© occupypeace.us

Celente is an American trends forecaster, publisher of the
Trends Journal, business consultant and author who makes predictions about the global financial markets.
"This peace movement is designed to create a platform to hold elected officials accountable for senselessly prompting war," Celente, head of the Trends Research Institute, said. "It will drive a nationwide initiative to put peace on the ballot."
Celente explained his Institute would work "with peace-minded historians and other experts to create a program that provides the tools to make peace a driving force in the halls of government and in the living rooms of Americans."

He stated that Occupy Peace would promote five basic principles, including: no foreign entanglements; waging war only when imminent threats exist; and having zero tolerance for illegal wars.

The remaining two principles focus on rebuilding the United States and not on nation building in other countries, and letting the American people vote on whether to fund wars.
"Our future is being robbed from us by murderous thieves. Their dream of a never-ending War on Terror has created a living nightmare," Celente asserted. "These psychopaths hijacked our nation's wealth as our economy declines."

Comment: Listen to Lew Rockwell's interview with Celente where he discusses how the U.S. got into this war mongering situation and what we can do about it here: Lew Rockwell interviews Gerald Celente: Psychopaths rule us


Arrow Down

Hysteria: Cop harassed man for eating a hamburger while parked at apartment complex

police state austin tx
Luis Sadly was doing nothing wrong, had committed no crime, and was only trying to enjoy a hamburger while he waited for his friend. However, his innocence was no protection against having his rights violated by the Austin police.

As Sadly minds his own business, he is approached by an Austin Police officer who tells him that he is being detained.

"Why am I being detained?" asks Sadly as he was clearly doing nothing illegal.

"Let's see, it's 2 o'clock in the morning. You're parked here by yourself in a high crime, high drug area," replies the officer.

Apparently sitting in your car by yourself is now reasonable articulable suspicion for a police officer to detain you.

Comment: The Police State, as summed up by Chris Hedges here:
The tyranny of law enforcement in poor communities is a window into our emerging police state. These thuggish tactics are now being used against activists and dissidents. And as the nation unravels, as social unrest spreads, the naked face of police repression will become commonplace. Totalitarian systems always seek license to engage in this kind of behavior by first targeting a demonized minority. Such systems demand that the police, to combat the "lawlessness" of the demonized minority, be, in essence, emancipated from the constraints of the law. The unrestricted and arbitrary subjugation of one despised group, stripped of equality before the law, conditions the police to employ these tactics against the wider society. "Laws that are not equal for all revert to rights and privileges, something contradictory to the very nature of nation-states," Hannah Arendt wrote in "The Origins of Totalitarianism"
"The clearer the proof of their inability to treat stateless people as legal persons and the greater the extension of arbitrary rule by police decree, the more difficult it is for states to resist the temptation to deprive all citizens of legal status and rule them with an omnipotent police."



Handcuffs

Criminal justice fail: Record number of innocent prisoners were exonerated last year

prison fence
When you really break it down, the criminal justice system is the linchpin of a functional government. The government may have many different responsibilities, but their ability to catch criminals and punish them is the most important. In fact, if some libertarians are to be believed, if you were to shrink the government down to the smallest possible size, you would be left with nothing but the military, the police, and the courts.

And some countries like Costa Rica and Dominica don't even have a military. A government with the barest institutions run by a skeleton crew, would essentially consist of nothing more than the courts, the people who were elected to legislate the court's rules, and the police officers tasked with enforcing those rules. While most people would rather give the government more responsibilities and more staff, this is the government at its lowest common denominator.

So what happens if the government sucks at that job? What if they fill their prisons to the brim with nonviolent offenders, while losing the ability to catch real violent criminals? And worst of all, what if they're jailing an alarming number of innocent people?

Comment: The criminal justice system is a travesty. It preys on the poor and disenfranchised while the rich can buy their way out of trouble. Our so-called legal system is full of cases of wrongful imprisonment.


Clipboard

California is #1! U.S. police have killed more than 850 this year (and that's just what is reported)

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© Reuters/Jim Bourg
On Friday morning, the Washington Post reported that "over 700 people" have been shot and killed by police in the United States so far this year. If one accounts for all deaths at the hands of US police however, that number shoots up to 851.

In fact, 51 people have been killed by police in the month of September alone, according to the comprehensive database at killedbypolice.net, and there are still a dozen days left until October.

Fewer than half of all those sent to early graves by police this year — 402 — reportedly had a gun, according to the searchable database project The Counted, created by The Guardian.

At least 211, or approximately 25% of those killed, were black, even though they make up only 12.6% of the United States population.

At least 14 of those that have fallen at the hands of cops this year were minors, some as young as 15 years old.

The North East appears to have the lowest rates of deadly police violence.

There has not been a single person reported killed by police in the state of Vermont. There have been one each in Rhode Island and Maine, three in Connecticut, and 10 in Massachusetts.

California leads the nation in police deaths, with 141 reported by September 18. Texas comes in second with 84.

Comment: Police killings are drastically under reported. Most of the reported cases are done so voluntarily. In one month: 103 people were killed by police in the U.S. in August, while 6 cops were killed in the line of duty


Pistol

No shooter found after high school in Louisville, Kentucky put in lockdown from active shooter reports

Louisville, Kentucky High School
© Facebook
Police in Louisville, Kentucky are responding to a call of an "active shooter" at Western High School.

Western, and the nearby Waller-Williams Environmental School, have both been placed on lockdown.

Officials are saying the lockdown was a precaution, as they are trying to confirm the presence of a shooter. There have been no reported injuries yet.

There is a heavy police and firefighter presence at both schools, blocking the nearby roads. The authorities are saying they received a "phoned in threat" at Western High School. No shooter has been found so far.

Cut

Ridiculous! Native American 2nd grader sent home from school for wearing traditional Mohawk hairstyle

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© Neeta Lind/Flickr Creative Commons
A native American child was sent home from school for wearing a traditional Mohawk hairstyle because the school said it was against dress code, WFAA reports.

The Utah second grader is of Seneca and Paiute heritage and chose the hairstyle because it is commonly worn by Seneca Nation members. But this week his mother received a call from Arrowhead Elementary officials in St. George, Utah, saying she needed to come pick the boy up. He was only allowed to return after a Seneca tribal representative sent the school a letter confirming the haircut is traditional.


Comment: It's none of the school's business.


"It is common for Seneca boys to wear a Mohawk because after years of discrimination and oppression, they are proud to share who they are," wrote William Canella, a Seneca Nation Tribal Councilor, in a letter obtained by WFAA. "It's disappointing that your school does not view diversity in a positive manner, and it is our hope that (the boy) does not suffer any discrimination by the school administration or faculty as a result of his hair cut."

The boy's father, Gary Sanden, told WFAA that he has two sons at the school, and the older one has chosen a non-Native hairstyle, prompting school officials to ask why they didn't cut the younger child's hair the same way. The parents offered to bring in a tribal card, but the school demanded a letter from a tribe official.

Comment: Forcing conformity on a 7- or 8-year-old in the heart of Mormon land.

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