Society's Child
Bishop sent a letter of concern to US Secretary of Agriculture Sonny Perdue about the Maryland lab and called for an investigation into the cruel practices.
Bishop's letter explained that the kittens are fed toxoplasma-infected meat for two to three weeks. The animals' feces are collected during that time and harvested for parasites. Most shockingly, the USDA admits that the kittens "usually do not become sick" as a result of eating the meat and are therefore healthy when they are killed.
Police stopped traffic and told several buildings to evacuate as authorities dealt with the leak. One of the buildings evacuated was the Circulo de Bellas Artes, where a forum on fighting fake news was being held.
'Fake News: How to fight false news in Europe' was attended by international media, social media giants and politicians who were forced outside mid-forum. Attendees included Spanish Vice President Soraya Sáenz de Santamaría, President of the European Parliament Antonio Tajani and Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales.
Of course, it wasn't long before the Russians were blamed for the leak, as someone joked that the gas leak must have been the work of Russian hackers. Other attendees joked about the gas leak itself being fake news.
The leak occurred when work was being done in an underground carpark, Madrid's emergency services said. The problem was soon fixed and the emergency services announced everything was back to normal.
Ian Rice, whose son was killed along with another two teenage boys after the man crashed into them, slammed the police for failing to bring justice to the victims and their families. The perpetrator was given 13 years for dangerous driving.
Jaynesh Chudasama, 28, of Hayes in west London, smashed into the teen group - comprising of Harry Rice, a semi-professional footballer, George Wilkinson, 16, an apprentice electrician, and Josh McGuinness, 16, a laborer - as they headed to a party on 26 January.
She never got that chance.
When she told her husband Donny William Eaton her plans, he cut her throat with a pocketknife and left her for dead inside their Marietta home.
As jury selection was about to begin in his trial Monday, Eaton, 65, pleaded guilty to malice murder, felony murder and aggravated assault and was sentenced to life in prison, Cobb County District Attorney's Office spokeswoman Kim Isaza said Tuesday in a news release.
Mohammed, who was captured in 2003 and subsequently waterboarded repeatedly, has asked a military judge at Guantanamo Bay permission to share six paragraphs of information related to Haspel with the Senate, the New York Times reports. It is unclear whether the judge will rule in time for the information to be shared prior to Haspel's Wednesday confirmation hearing.
A Senate Intelligence Committee report found that Mohammed was waterboarded 183 times, slapped, slammed against a wall, and given unnecessary rectal examinations in the weeks after his capture. During his interrogations Mohammed made a series of confessions that were later determined to be false.
That's according to prolific tweeter Louise Mensch, the former conservative British MP turned Russiagate conspiracy theorist. Mensch tweeted out her theory in response to allegations of sexual assault against New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman by four women.
Schneiderman, who filed a lawsuit against Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein in February, has been a vocal supporter of the #MeToo movement. He has vigorously denied the allegations made against him and maintained that he has not assaulted anyone and "never engaged in non-consensual sex." Nonetheless, Schneiderman said the allegations would prevent him from leading the Attorney General's office at a "critical time" and has resigned.

Social media trains and programs us like rats were trained to get hits of dopamine in well known experiments
On Tuesday, Google CEO Sundar Pichai will take the stage at the search giant's I/O event, where he'll likely make similar exhortations.
But amid the calls for more apps and gadgets, a group of tech insiders - some of whom worked closely with Facebook and Google's top brass - are preaching a different Silicon Valley gospel: Slow down and think about what you're doing.
The Centre for Humane Technology, a non-profit organisation formed earlier this year by engineers and investors who profited from the past decade's social and mobile boom, is having a moment, as concerns over the reach, power and influence of tech grow.
The problems, they say, go beyond headlines about data leaks, password breaches and election interference. Tech giants like Facebook and Google have gained sway over billions of people through subtle Pavlovian techniques that keep them coming back for more.
Comment: If the above doesn't put things into better perspective, the following video surely will; warnings straight out of the mouths of social media programmers:
Customers were left out of pocket and struggling for funds. Payments including salaries were not made, cards were declined and customers were unable to pay for urgent goods and services.
Ulster Bank has blamed the issue on 'human error' and claims this morning that the issue has been rectified. Although it has taken some customers four days to be able to make urgent payments.
This was a weekend of bank 'errors'. In the UK, TSB faced a 'meltdown' after scheduled IT maintenance went somewhat awry. Many customers found themselves unable to access their accounts, whilst some even had access to other peoples' money.
Comment: Silver is also a good choice for a number of reasons. Given the level of control that Big Banking seeks to have on the world, it would be no surprise to learn that some of these ATM 'glitches' are really testing how people would respond to having no access to their money, or conditioning them to get used to such eventualities. On the other hand, these may all just be precursors to much larger financial events.
See:
- Nothing to see here: More Deutsche Bank trouble as IT glitch temporarily blocks ATM access
- Biometric banking coming to an ATM near you
- Kansas: Welfare recipients to be limited to $25 ATM withdrawal
- EU discuss 'limiting ATM withdrawals'

Ebola is one of the world's most notorious diseases, being both highly infectious and extremely lethal
"Twenty-one cases of fever with haemorrhagic indications and 17 deaths" have been recorded in Equateur province, it said, citing a notification to the ministry as of May 3.
It is the DRC's ninth known outbreak of Ebola since 1976, when the deady viral disease was first identified in then-Zaire by a Belgian-led team.
In Geneva, the World Health Organization (WHO) said lab tests in the DRC confirmed the presence of Ebola virus in two out of five samples collected from patients.
"WHO is working closely with the government of the DRC to rapidly scale up its operations and mobilize health partners, using the model of a successful response to a similar... outbreak in 2017," it said in a statement.
Comment: See also:
- Pathogenic research: Scientists can now create air transmissible Ebola and other lethal viruses
- The CDC covered up mishaps at high security biosafety labs containing Ebola and smallpox
- Russian and Canadian researchers successfully tested Vaccine to Prevent a Western 'Monopoly' in Ebola Treatment
The organizers of the march called on everyone who wants to pay tribute to their relatives perished during the years of the war, to take to the streets across Russia in a symbolic action.
As the head of the vast column reached Red Square, it was joined by President Putin, who held a photograph of his late father, who fought in WWII.
"I think that my father, like millions of ordinary soldiers, and he was an ordinary soldier, has all the right to walk through this [Red] square," President Putin told the journalists.
Comment: It was such a smashing idea by the Russians to start this tradition.
'Immortal Regiment' marches now take place globally.
27 million died at the hands of the Nazis in Russia/USSR.
That's 4.5 'holocausts', by the way.













Comment: The universe trolled the real purveyors of fake news!