Society's Child
By his own admission, Tore Rasmussen had been detained at Gatwick Airport, London, because British authorities believed his views represented a "serious threat" to the UK.
Thirty-seven-year-old Tore Rasmussen has been living in London since last December. On Friday evening he arrived home after a trip to Austria, but was stopped at passport control by the border authorities. A few hours later he was handed a denial of entry and was ordered to return to Austria with the next flight.
"We have to grow up and I hope that in this process we are gradually coming to an end... but frankly speaking the development of transatlantic relations really concerns me," Germany's President Steinmeier said.
He explained that the reason behind his anxiety is not because he "is looking at a president with some irritating Twitter messages."
The new administration in Washington perceives Europe not as a part of a world community within which countries cooperate, but rather as an arena where every country has to find its way around," the politician clarified.
Comment: See also:
- Yuge mistake: Trump pulls out of Iran deal, plans more sanctions - Iran calls decision illegal, plans to keep deal
- Iranian president Rouhani: Iran may stay in nuclear deal after US withdrawal if it's guaranteed by remaining parties
- The warmakers take aim on Iran
- Iran labels $6B US court verdict a 'mockery' of justice, Americans and 9/11 attack victims
- Trump circles reportedly hired Israeli spy company 'Black Cube' to dig up dirt on Iran deal negotiators
The police have crushed the resumed anti-Macron rallies in Paris, where union activists, joined by students, protested the railway and labor reforms proposed by the French president.
Hundreds of activists have tried to block the work of three Paris stations, but were dispersed by special riot police. About 200 members of the Sud-Rail trade union, armed with firearms, tried to break into the Montparnasse station, causing panic inside, but police forcefully pushed them back.
Mrs. Trump unveiled a new initiative Monday, called "Be Best," which she said aims to educate children "about the many issues they are facing today." As President Trump looked on in the Rose Garden, Mrs. Trump outlined the initiative's three pillars: well-being, social media use and opioid abuse. "Children deserve every opportunity to enjoy their innocence," the first lady said.
The White House says "Be Best" will promote "values such as healthy living, encouragement, kindness and respect." It will also highlight the importance of using social media and the Internet "in positive ways." And it will support families and children affected by the opioid crisis.
Following her remarks, the president signed a proclamation and said the nation is "truly blessed to have a first lady so devoted to our country and to our children."
These people have lost their minds, folks, let me tell you, and the more they become unhinged, the greater the risk of the danger they place others in as well as themselves.
What kind of person breaks into your home? A criminal. Except, in this case, it was a reporter with New York Magazine.
Olivia Nuzzi was assigned a story for New York Magazine to cover former White House Communications Director Hope Hicks, in which she arrived at Lewandowski's home at began knocking.
She stood at the entrance for ten minutes pounding on the door, and nobody answered. At that time, Nuzzi took it upon herself to break into the home and began taking pictures.
The liberal comedian has regularly broken Federal Election Commission rules limiting the total any one person can give to an individual candidate at $2,700 per election. The limit applies separately to primaries, runoffs and general elections.
"Nothing nefarious," the outspoken star and Donald Trump arch-nemesis wrote in an email to the Post. "I was not choosing to over donate.
"If 2700 is the cut off - [candidates] should refund the money," she wrote. "I don't look to see who I can donate most to ... I just donate assuming they do not accept what is over the limit."
O'Donnell said she donates often, and uses the online liberal fundraising platform ActBlue. "My anxiety is quelled by donating to those opposing Trump [and] his agenda - especially at night - when most of these were placed."
Comment: Pay-triotic or addicted to elections?

Rally in front of the US Embassy in Moscow to support Russian pilot Konstantin Yaroshenko.
Yaroshenko's wife Viktoria told Izvestia daily that she talked to her husband by phone a few days back. She said that he feared he would not be able to endure 30 days in a disciplinary cell, because his health was deteriorating rapidly.
"His voice was tired and lost. His sickness is progressing. Konstantin spoke as if he was parting with us, he said he was tired of the torments and that 30 days in the disciplinary cell would kill him, said he would not walk out of it alive," she told reporters.Viktoria also said that neither she nor Konstantin could understand the reasons behind the punishment, as he had always been very cautious and never got into fights with other inmates.
However, she said that the disciplinary cell could be a form of revenge by Fort Dix administration for a recent interview with Izvestia in which Yaroshenko said he feared that he would be set up in order to justify the US' refusal to hand over the Russian citizen to his homeland.
Comment: See also:
- Torture: Russian pilot in US jail in 'pain shock' after surgery without his consent
- Trump refuses pardon for Russian pilot Yaroshenko
- Mother of Russian pilot who was kidnapped and tortured by US government pleads with Obama to return her son
- Jailed Russian pilot's family to sue 'US torture justice' in international courts
- Justice Department rejects extradition request by Russian pilot kidnapped & tortured by US government
In the immediate aftermath of the US Treasury Department's extraordinary decision to impose sanctions on the Russian businessman Oleg Deripaska and by extension his Rusal group, a very interesting article penned by the financial analyst Tim Ashe appeared in the Financial Times.
Discussing the sanctions imposed on Deripaska and Rusal, Ashe made this highly interesting comment
The sharp drop in Russian markets over the past few days and the limited contagion to global markets will have been noted by the US sanctions team. I think they have previously been very nervous over this idea of backdraught from their actions, hurting US institutional investors and causing systemic risks to other emerging markets and indeed global markets. The fact that the April 6 sanctions designations only really impacted Russian markets raises the prospect that the US can roll out asymmetric sanctions against Russia, that officials can be less worried about their actions having a more global impact. This means the Treasury is more likely to follow on from its April 6 actions, assuming no improvement in the relationship with Russia.(bold italics added)
Comment: Once again the Deep State types are bitten by their shortsightedness, but they never seem to learn. If they cut off the US population at the knees who will fuel the war machine?
Alexey Maximov knifed Daria Evdokimova, 21, a dozen times soon after she had withdrawn money from a cash machine in Moscow, it is alleged.
He confessed to stabbing her in the neck, eyes, head and chest, said police sources.
She died on the spot.
He had taken a kitchen knife out "to replay a scenario from his favourite computer game", reported Moskovsky Komsomolets newspaper citing law enforcement sources.
A video caught her last moments as the boy followed her, said police.
The boy was quoted by Mash news outlet as saying: "I did not intend to kill her, I was not going to.
"But a voice inside me told me what had to be done.
"I have always wanted to see when a person dies by your own hand."
He fled the scene of the killing before stealing the 30,000 roubles - £350 - his victim had taken from the cash machine.
Comment: A serial killer in the making, it looks like. As ex-FBI profile Robert Ressler describes in his book, Whoever Fights Monsters, killers like this often develop a depraved fantasy in their teens. Violent material (it used to be detective novels, now it looks like video games might take that place) is used as a type of pornography, deepening the fantasy. Eventually the killer tries to act out his fantasy, but it never lives up to the fantasy. So he tries again, and again, and again...
With a rifle in one hand and the camera in the other, Wassim Issa; a soldier in the 105thBrigade of the SAA's Republican Guards, has been - along his combat duties in fighting terrorist groups - documenting the Army's military operations in almost all frontlines in and around Damascus for the last 4 years.
Wassim was carrying out his duties in the ISIS pocket of southern Damascus when he was hit by a mortar shell. Both his legs were amputated in the bloody attack.














Comment: Agree with them or not, the fact that the UK is barring entry to conservative activists and commentators is a serious red flag. It seems that thought-crimes are now a legitimate reason to prevent someone from entering the country. It seems ideas are dangerous, especially when they contradict the enforced narrative.
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