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Mon, 08 Nov 2021
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Che Guevara

Poll: One in two US millennials would rather live in a socialist or communist country than a capitalist democracy

coca cola communism
'This report clearly reveals a need for educating our youth on the dangerous implications of socialist ideals'

In a Halloween tweet that's since gone viral, Donald Trump Jr. jokingly (although who really knows these days?) took the opportunity to impart an important political lesson to his cute little daughter.


Perhaps he should share his wisdom with millennials.

According to the latest survey from the Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation, a D.C.-based nonprofit, one in two U.S. millennials say they would rather live in a socialist or communist country than a capitalist democracy.

What's more, 22% of them have a favorable view of Karl Marx and a surprising number see Joseph Stalin and Kim Jong Un as "heroes."

Really, that's what the numbers show.

Comment: The statistic highlighted in red is the key one. Whatever 'isms' are blamed, the fact is that there is something profoundly rotten in the state of USA. They can build all the curricula they want, but if they don't drain the swamp, it'll not change the US' trajectory - which might well see the country end up acquiring aspects indistinguishable from Communist regimes.


No Entry

'Predatory' and 'toxic': More Kevin Spacey allegations emerge from House of Cards set

Kevin Spacey
© Eloy Alonso / Reuters
U.S. actor Kevin Spacey.
Kevin Spacey created a "pattern of sexual harassment" on the House of Cards set, according to past and present show employees cited by CNN. The Oscar-winning actor was earlier dropped by both talent agency CAA and his publicist, Staci Wolfe of Polaris PR.

On Thursday, CNN reported eight people who work or worked on the House of Cards series set characterized the hit show's work environment as "toxic." The staffers, who spoke to CNN on condition of anonymity, deemed Spacey's behavior "predatory," saying it featured unwanted touching and mostly targeted young and male production staffers.

On top of that, an anonymous former production assistant recounted an incident wherein he and Spacey were in a moving car close to the set. Spacey was driving them to his trailer and allegedly put his hand down the production assistant's pants. "I was in a state of shock," the former staffer alleged. "He was a man in a very powerful position on the show and I was someone very low on the totem pole and on the food chain there."

The production assistant asked for details of what happened next not to be disclosed for fear that so doing would identify him.

Once they had reached the trailer, Spacey allegedly cornered the production assistant, blocking his exit and making inappropriate contact.

Comment: Kevin Spacey allegations of sexual abuse reveal Hollywood's rampant and pervasive problem of male predators targeting young men


Red Flag

Trump's pick for Consumer Product Safety Commission routinely defended companies with deadly products

andrew weimer

Tamra Weimer holds photos of her son, Andrew Weimer, who was 15 years old when he died from an ATV accident, during a news conference in Oklahoma City in 2006, called to discuss the Oklahoma Legislature’s failure to pass a bill aimed at reducing deaths due to children riding all-terrain vehicles.
DANA BAIOCCO, PRESIDENT Donald Trump's pick to sit on the Consumer Product Safety Commission, made her name helping companies avoid responsibility for harmful products. A partner at law firm Jones Day, Baiocco has represented big tobacco and fought in court against asbestos workers who developed mesothelioma.

But the cases she's litigated that may conflict most directly with the CPSC's mission of protecting the public from dangerous products involve all-terrain vehicles. While the CPSC was leading a campaign over ATV safety, Baiocco was representing Yamaha in several suits over its two-person Rhino ATV.

One involved a 14-year-old boy named Michael Kennedy, who was driving a Yamaha Rhino on a gravel road in North Carolina in 2004, when the ATV tipped over onto its side. The boy's legs were trapped under it. When they were freed, his bones were so badly broken they poked through his skin at several points, according to the complaint in a lawsuit over his injuries. Kennedy lived, but he had to have part of his foot removed and will never again walk as he did before the accident.

Kennedy wasn't the only one who had trouble with the Rhino, an off-road vehicle that looks like a cross between a monster truck and a golf cart. Fifty-nine people died in similar accidents involving the vehicle between 2003, when it was introduced to the market, and 2009.

HRC Blue

Biggest winners from Trump's tax reform bill could be millennials

millennials trump

'Oh god, not a tax cut, please. I'll be forced to reconsider my hate for Trump and question the MSM for once.'
The release of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 this week constitutes a monumental step forward on the path to comprehensive tax reform. House Republicans have put forward a serious and thoughtful plan to fix many of the dangerous features of our broken tax code.

The response from Democrats, however, has been predictable: They were so anxious to dust off their tired class warfare manual that they didn't bother to find facts to back it up. Luckily, the Washington Post fact-checkers took a much more serious interest in proofing their claims, digging a little deeper finding:
In their haste to condemn the GOP tax plan, Democrats have spread far and wide the false claim that families making less than $86,100 on average will face a hefty tax hike. Actually, it's the opposite. Most families in that income range would get a tax cut.
The document Democrats had relied on estimated the effects of the unified framework, which was released in September. With details on where the income tax brackets will actually fall released in the bill today, we have an even clearer picture of how much tax relief American families and businesses can expect.

Cross

Pope Francis again suggests that priests be allowed to marry

pope francis marriage weddings

Married Catholic priests coming soon?
Pope Francis has requested a debate over allowing married men in the Amazon region of Brazil to become priests, in a controversial move that is likely to outrage conservatives in the Church, Vatican sources say.

The pontiff took the decision to put a partial lifting of priestly celibacy up for discussion and a possible vote by Brazilian bishops following a request made by Cardinal Claudio Hummes, the president of the Episcopal Commission for the Amazon, Il Messaggero newspaper quoted the sources saying.

Cardinal Hummes reportedly asked Francis to consider ordaining so-called viri probati, married men of great faith, capable of ministering spiritually to the many remote communities in the Amazon where there is a shortage of priests, and evangelical Christians and pagan sects are displacing Catholicism.

Attention

White House placed on lockdown due to 'suspicious activity' along the north fence

white house police
© Joshua Roberts / Reuters
A person has been detained following "suspicious activity" at the north fence of the White House, the Secret Service tweeted. The presidential manor was put on lockdown and the area along Pennsylvania Avenue was closed following the incident.

Reporters were told to leave the north lawn of the White House, CBS News said.

Although the Secret Service declined to immediately elaborate on the incident, Washington DC police spokeswoman Margarita Mikhaylova said authorities are investigating a suspicious package outside the White House, according to the Washington Post.

A suspect called in a threat stating that explosives had been planted along the north fence, WTTG-TV reported citing police.

Footprints

UK: Poor coordination blamed as 56K immigrants slated for deportation go missing

migrants
© Ognen Teofilovski / Reuters
Poor coordination and communication have been blamed for almost 56,000 foreign nationals slipping through the fingers of the Home Office, absconding before the government could deport them.

Two reports published by the Independent Chief Inspector of Borders and Immigration, David Bolt, have detailed the shortfalls of the Home Office's Reporting and Offender Management (ROM) processes and its management of non-detained Foreign National Offenders (FNO), which monitor about 80,000 immigration and asylum cases across the UK.

Those monitored include individuals who have overstayed their visas, foreign offenders and people who entered the UK illegally. In September 2016, data shows almost 40,000 individuals were required to report at one of three London Reporting Centres.

Staff at the busiest of the three, Becket House, were found to be spending just two to three minutes on each interview - to meet daily quotas.

Георгиевская ленточка

Hockey star Alex Ovechkin forming 'Team Putin' movement ahead of 2018 Russian presidential election

putin ovechkin
© Sergey Guneev / Sputnik
Russian President Vladimir Putin (R), hockey player Alexander Ovechkin (L), Sochi.
Russian NHL powerhouse Alex Ovechkin says he is forming a "Team Putin" movement, amid a presidential race swirling with young media celebrities. Putin himself, however, is yet to announce whether he is to run for another term.

The Washington Capitals captain broke the news on his Instagram page which boasts nearly 1 million subscribers. Ovechkin, who has been always open about his sympathy for the Russian leader, explained his decision to dive into politics by saying, "Personal awards and trophies are great, but in hockey, as well as in any other matter, the team is more important for the victory."

"Me, personally, I would like to be a part of this team," the star striker wrote, without elaborating on who he sees as prospective members of the movement and what precisely it plans to do besides backing the Russian president.

Dollars

Utah nurse roughed up and arrested by police receives $500K settlement

Alex Wubbels arrest
© YouTube
Alex Wubbels, the nurse who was wrongly arrested in July, has settled with Salt Lake City and the University of Utah.
Alex Wubbels, the Utah nurse who was forcibly arrested in July after refusing to draw a patient's blood without consent, a police warrant, or probable cause, received a large settlement from Salt Lake City and the University of Utah on Tuesday.

What's the history with this case?
  • Wubbels in July refused to draw the blood of an unconscious patient, who was brought in to the hospital as an accident victim, without a warrant.
  • Detective Jeff Payne of the Salt Lake City Police Department arrested Wubbels for not complying with his orders, restrained her, and placed her in a patrol vehicle. Wubbels was later released without being charged.
  • Video of the incident was captured on bodycam footage of another officer who was present.
  • The incident was widely publicized, and as a result, Payne - also a police phlebotomist - was suspended from the city police department's blood-draw unit with pay. He was later put on administrative leave pending investigation.
  • Additionally, Payne was fired from his second job as an ambulance driver.
  • Salt Lake County district attorney Sim Gill later confirmed that he opened a criminal investigation into the incident.
  • As a result of the incident, the University of Utah Hospital changed its policies regarding police presence in patient care areas.
  • The FBI began looking into the incident, investigating whether or not Wubbels was subjected to a violation of her civil rights.
  • Payne was fired from the police department in October after an internal investigation found he had violated departmental policies.

Heart - Black

Cop shoots fleeing suspect in the back 9 times and stomps his head; receives Medal of Valor for the murder

police shooting
Connor Zion, 21, was in the midst of a psychological breakdown when he became violent and was subsequently killed. However, the manner in which he was killed has led to a federal court ruling that the police officer who killed him can now be sued for using excessive deadly force.

"When police confront a suspect who poses an immediate threat, they may use deadly force against him," Judge Alex Kozinski wrote for a unanimous three-judge panel of the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals this week. "But they must stop using deadly force when the suspect no longer poses a threat."

When a suspect falls to the ground after he's been shot in the back as he fled, that suspect is, by most definitions, subdued and no longer a threat. However, despite collapsing to the ground after being shot in the back, Orange County sheriff's deputy Michael Higgins felt it necessary to stand over Zion as he bled out on the ground and fire nine more shots into him at point-blank range. For good measure, Higgins then backed up, took a running start, and began stomping Zion's face into the concrete.

In 2014, Higgins was cleared of the murder of Zion, only days after Zion's mother filed a $25 million wrongful death lawsuit.