Society's Child
Waitrose Food magazine said editor William Sitwell had quit, adding that it considered this "the right and proper move."
Freelance journalist Selene Nelson told BuzzFeed News that after she pitched a series of stories on vegan cooking to Waitrose Food, Sitwell replied with an email saying: "How about a series on killing vegans, one by one."
The email added: "Expose their hypocrisy? Force-feed them meat? Make them eat steak and drink red wine?"
Nelson said she was shocked by the remarks and found Sitwell's attitude "seriously bizarre."
Authorities busted the prostitution ring in the city of Murcia Wednesday, making 13 arrests and seizing three flats after one of the victims managed to escape and raise the alarm.

FILE PHOTO: An Assyrian relief is seen displayed at the Iraqi national museum in Baghdad July 15, 2015.
The exquisitely-detailed artefact, which depicts an Assyrian deity, will go under the hammer at Christie's in New York on Tuesday - with critics of the high profile art sale claiming that the piece belongs in a museum, preferably in Iraq.
The seven-foot-tall (2.1 meters) frieze is believed to have been purloined from an ancient Assyrian palace in Nimrud, in what is now present-day Iraq, in the mid-nineteenth century. The sculpture was packaged up and shipped westward by an enterprising young Brit who was reportedly given permission by the Ottomans to carry out his ancient treasure hunt. The relief eventually found its way to the United States, sitting largely forgotten in a Virginia seminary. A routine audit conducted last year revealed the sculpture's true value, sending insurance costs through the roof.

Three women have accused Tariq Ramadan of raping them in separate attacks in France and Switzerland.
Ramadan denies rape, the women stand by their allegations, but in recent weeks the case has increasingly played out in the public arena. Supporters of the well-known academic, who has spoken out against restrictions on the Muslim headscarf in France, say the justice system there is biased against him. They say the 56-year-old father of four is the victim of a conspiracy, has not been given due process and should not be on remand in jail, where he is being treated for multiple sclerosis in a hospital wing.
Lawyers for the Muslim women who accuse him insist it is a case of vulnerable women being raped by a powerful man.
Henda Ayari, 41, a former Salafist Muslim who is now a feminist activist, went to police last November and accused Ramadan of rape, sexual violence, harassment and intimidation. She said he raped her in a hotel room in the east of Paris in spring 2012 during a conference where he was speaking. "He choked me so hard that I thought I was going to die," she told Le Parisien newspaper.
Everyone knows that enjoying a drink or a meal on a cafe terrace in France means inhaling large quantities of cigarette smoke... and that's just the non-smokers.
For readers of The Local, cigarette smoke takes away from the cafe terrace experience and the majority of them think it's time it should be banned.
In a Facebook poll, 73 percent of people said they thought it should be banned while just 27 percent voted in favour of keeping it.
Similarly, in the same poll on Twitter 69 percent voted in favour of banning it and 31 percent in favour of keeping it.
The shocking incident occurred as the law enforcers gathered for a social evening at one of the offices, local media report. Much alcohol was consumed and after some time "the men lost the sense of reality and assaulted the woman," sources told Komsomolskaya Pravda newspaper.
Russia's Investigative Committee said on Wednesday that it had initiated a criminal case "over collective rape of a junior detective" in the capital of Russia's Republic of Bashkortostan, adding that the "23-year-old woman was attacked by three colleagues at their place of work."
"You gotta make money too," Stewart said. "You've got electric bills, you've got food. This guy is, he's giving you all cash. The cash flow in the Trump era for these TV shows -"
Amanpour interrupted him, saying: "We the journalists, we, I think, believe our job is to navigate the truth and do the fact checking and all the rest of it."
"I think that journalists have taken it personally," he said. "They're personally wounded and offended by this man. He baits them. And they dive in."
Stewart went on to say that when Trump criticizes them, they make a big show of hitting him back.
Comment: Takes one to know one?
See also: Journalists create a 'safe space' to discuss how to cover the Trump presidency
The 53-year-old woman was driving along the rain-slicked US 60 in Wickenburg, Arizona, on October 12, when she lost control of her car, crashing through a fence and plummeting 50ft down a ravine.
But in a rare silver lining, rather than smashing into the ground, something which would have probably turned out to be fatal, her vehicle "landed in a mesquite tree where it remained suspended above the ground," according to the Arizona Department of Public Safety.
The woman, who has not been identified, was found when a highway maintenance crew member and a rancher who were chasing cattle noticed a hole in the fence. As they stood by the damaged fence they noticed the car in the tree and called the emergency services.
A June 2018 "welcome booklet" for US troops arriving in Saudi Arabia to train local forces bristles with casual racism disguised as amateur ethnography, including gems like "The population of [Saudi Arabia] is mainly composed of descendants of indigenous tribes that have inhabited the peninsula since prehistoric times with some later mixture of Negro blood from slaves imported from Africa."
Muslim comedian Hasan Minhaj brought the pamphlet to the public's attention in a recent Netflix special that clearly embarrassed the Pentagon enough to remove the pamphlet from their website - it's no longer available except through the Google cache (really, CentCom, you didn't think it was that easy to vanish from the internet, did you?).
'Firearms & Molotovs': Central American migrants reportedly set fire to Mexican immigration facility
The fire was reportedly started at a facility dual-purposed as a checkpoint and makeshift detention center for Mexico's National Migration Institute (INM) in Pijijiapan, Chiapas, when a group of migrants housed there set fire to their mattresses, Televisa Noticiasreported. According to local public safety director Jaime Marroquin, authorities were housing 21 men, five women, and three children which were in the process of being deported. The migrants reportedly set fires to give cover to their escape.













Comment: While the West attempts to make a profit from the priceless artefacts it's illegal war produced, Russia has goes out of its way to work with the countries to restore their historic sites.
See also:
- Israel proven to be involved in grand theft of ancient Middle Eastern artefacts
- Looted treasures: Britain's colonial legacy lives long in UK museums
- Ukraine still refusing to hand over stolen Dutch masterpieces
- Syria's de-mining operation uncovers ancient Greek mosaic floor
Also check out SOTT radio's: Behind the Headlines: Perfidious Albion: If Russia is a Rogue State, What is the UK?