Society's Child
Well, then you would be wrong.
Apparently public funds have been expended for college professors to take class trips in search of Bigfoot in New Mexico. To stop this practice, Senator George Munoz has sponsored a bill to ban public funds from being spent on "looking for or catching a fictitious creature" in his state.
To drive this point home, the bill doesn't just specify publicly funded searches for Bigfoot, but for Yeti, the Abominable Snowman, Pokemon, leprechauns and the Bogeyman as well.
Citigroup, Wells Fargo, SunTrust Bank and BNP Paribas are among the 17 banks targeted in a letter signed by pension funds, asset management companies, and organizations.
The signatories have a total of $653 billion in assets under their control.
"We are concerned that if DAPL's projected route moves forward, the result will almost certainly be an escalation of conflict and unrest as well as possible contamination of the water supply," the letter reads.
"Banks with financial ties to the Dakota Access Pipeline may be implicated in these controversies and may face long-term brand and reputational damage resulting from consumer boycotts and possible legal liability."
On Friday, the group known as Strike4Democracy coordinated more than a hundred actions as a part of the #F17 protests, where tens of thousands of people took to the streets in major cities across the US, including Chicago, St. Louis, New York City, Pittsburgh and many more.
On their Facebook page, Strike4Democracy calls for a day of mass strikes against "ICE raids, travel bans, Trump's mobilization on the border wall, as well as attacks on the rights of workers, women, people of color, the LGBTQ+ community, and our environment."
The group calls on participants to skip work and school, while refraining from spending any money.
In Denver, protesters shut down a downtown Wells Fargo Bank in protest of the Dakota Access Pipeline.
Comment: Together, these useful idiots speak with one voice saying: NO to reality.
Uber executive David Plouffe was fined by the Chicago Board of Ethics after a 5-0 vote Thursday. They ruled that he had acted as an unregistered lobbyist in 2015 when he contacted Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel (D) in regards to regulations for commercial drivers accepting passengers at city airports.
Plouffe managed Obama's 2008 presidential campaign before joining Uber. He is also working with Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg, NBC reported.
In addition to Plouffe's $90,000 fine, Uber will be fined $2,000. While neither Uber nor Plouffe disputes the allegations, they believe that Plouffe should only be required to pay the $1,000 minimum. However, the Board defended its decision by arguing that "each day that a violation continues shall constitute a separate and distinct offense to which a separate fine shall apply," the Chicago Tribune reported.
The illegal lobbying became public when Emanuel released hundreds of personal emails concerning public affairs due to mounting lawsuits accusing Emanuel of violating the state's open records law.

Town of Viransehir in Sanliurfa southern city of Turkey. February 17, 2017
The blast happened around 8:45 pm local time (17:45GMT). Authorities believe the car belonged to a teenager who was seen parking the vehicle at the site of the explosion.
The bomb was detonated remotely, according to Sanliurfa Governor Gungor Azim Tuna. The young boy was killed and at least 15 others were injured in the blast. Conflicting reports suggested the child was either six or three years old.
Meanwhile, according to the information obtained from the provincial governor's office by Reuters, at least 17 people were injured.
Daniel Ramirez Medina, who was brought to the US illegally at age 7, was arrested at his home in Des Moines, Washington, on February 10 during an ICE raid targeting his father who was in the country illegally and was a "prior-deported felon."
ICE agents noticed Ramirez' "gang tattoo," according to a Thursday court filing by Jeffrey Robins, assistant director of the US Office of Immigration Litigation. Ramirez was quizzed about the tattoo and gang affiliations, to which he responded that he "fled California to escape from the gangs," but "still hangs out with the Paizas in Washington State," the federal court documents say.

Fathy Shebana, a farmer from Sinjil, told Mondoweiss he and his community fear for their future.
Today, much of that land is gone — annexed by the Israeli occupation of the West Bank for the use of illegal Israeli settlements. Since Israel passed a new law on February 6, dubbed the Regularization Law, Fathy and his community fear for the future of their land and livelihoods.
The law retroactively legalized at least a dozen settlement outposts built on private Palestinian land, and laid the framework for easily legalizing other outposts in the future.
Former store clerk Erik Steffensen said he'll never forget his robber's words, "Hands up! Empty your registers!" He said his co-worker asked, "Wait, is this real right now?" He said the robber answered, "Oh this is very real."
Steffensen worked overnight to pay for his Mizzou classes by day. After the hold-up, he feared it would happen again as he heard news about more robberies nearby. He remembers telling himself, "So this is happening on my street, that means we're bound to get hit for sure."
It's getting so bad across the country, Atlanta leaders are proposing millions of tax dollars for extra police patrols to combat overnight robberies.

Students' campaign march through Oxford universities for removal of Cecil Rhodes statue. Glum bunch, eh?
By analysing the censorious policies and actions that have taken place on British campuses, Spiked concluded that 63.5 percent of universities actively censor speech and 30.5 percent stifle speech through excessive regulation. You can barely go a few days without encountering a new op-ed covering censorship on campus. Maajid Nawaz describes the students demanding censorship as members of the "regressive left". Milo Yiannopoulos calls them "snowflakes".
With all of this book-burning and platform-denying madness sweeping up much of the media's interest in campus culture, the gradual rise of another group of students has gone under-reported. British and American millennials and post-millennials - also known as 'Gen Z' - are warming to conservatism. To understand why this is happening, it is important to consider the vast changes that have taken place in Western student politics over the last fifty years.
Comment: Students, in particular, are unwilling to be society's child. But, humanity is fickle. Duality, over time, is the universal 'dynamics balancer' of societal extremes.
Rep. Rick Little (R-Chaparral) introduced House Bill 166 (HB166) on Jan 18. The legislation would simply remove industrial hemp from the state's list of controlled substances. This would open the door for a full-scale commercial hemp market in the state by treating it like any other crop for farming.
HB166 would not require any license to grow hemp, and it would create no state regulatory structure. In short, the state would treat industrial hemp like other plants, such as tomatoes. By ending state prohibition, residents in New Mexico would have an open door to start industrial hemp farming should they be willing to risk violating ongoing federal prohibition.
Comment: Considering the ongoing disaster at Fukushima with the continual outpouring of radiation into the Pacific Ocean, the commercial production of industrial hemp may prove to be highly useful. It has the ability to decontaminate soils from radiation and toxic metals and is considered one of the best phyto-remediative plants available.












Comment: Stay strong, New Mexico. The truth is out there.
'Bigfoots are real. The evidence shows it'