Society's ChildS


NPC

FT journo scolds Moscow authorities for not instantly removing crashed jet, gets schooled on Twitter

Sheremetyevo crash
© Reuters / Russian Investigative Committee
Most reactions to the plane crash at a Moscow airport on Sunday were of simple sadness and shock - but for Financial Times Moscow correspondent Max Seddon, the tragedy was a chance to gratuitously bash Russian authorities.

Seddon took to Twitter on Monday to chastise Sheremetyevo Airport authorities for the most nonsensical of reasons - because they did not instantly remove the destroyed aircraft from the tarmac after the crash landing which killed 41 people, including two children.

"A day after an Aeroflot flight burnt up at Sheremetevo, the airport has just left it there for everyone to stare at," he wrote, in an apparent attempt to provoke some kind of outrage.

Handcuffs

Authorities make 82 arrests in massive eight-state child exploitation sting

cops
© Georgia Bureau of Investigation
Federal authorities and local police arrested 82 people in a massive eight-state child exploitation sting, according to reports.

A Facebook post by the Georgia Bureau of Investigation (GBI) notes that "Operation Southern Impact III" was held across a number of southern states including Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Maryland, North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia, and West Virginia, according to WBNS TV.

It was a "Great display of local, state, and federal partnerships," the GBI exclaimed.

The mass operation targeted people who were making or distributing child pornography.

Bad Guys

Four arrested for contaminating Russian oil in Druzhba pipeline

russia pipeline
The investigation has revealed a group of companies that delivered contaminated oil to the Druzhba pipeline, four people have been detained in the case, Russia's Energy Minister Alexander Novak said at a government meeting.

"The investigation has revealed a group of companies that transferred standard oil using organochlorine compounds in volumes excessing the norm. The inspection documents have now been handed over to the prosecutor's office, a set of operational measures, investigative actions of the FSB of Russia, the Investigation Committee of Russia are being held, criminal proceedings have been initiated under articles 158, 210 and 215.2. Four people were detained and placed in jail by a court decision," Novak said.

Brick Wall

Border Patrol chief says officers have arrested over 30,000 illegal immigrants in last 10 days

border arrests
A U.S. Border Patrol official said his agency has apprehended more than 30,000 illegal immigrants on the southern border in the past 10 days.

"This is a challenge unlike any we've ever faced before," Chief of Law Enforcement Operations Brian Hastings said Monday on "Fox & Friends."

"We're up to 474,000 arrests so far this fiscal year, and just the last 10 days alone, 33,000 arrests for us," he added. "So, our facilities were not designed to handle this type of flow or more importantly, this demographic - about 63 percent being family units and UACs, or unaccompanied alien children."

WATCH:


Family

Pamela Anderson and Kristinn Hrafnsson pay emotional visit to Assange at Belmarsh Prison: 'We need to save his life'

Assange anderson Hrafnsson
© FullerGareth/AbacaPamela Anderson and WikiLeaks spokesperson Kristinn Hrafnsson address Journalists in Belmarsh Prison in London May 7, 2019
An emotional Pamela Anderson and WikiLeaks editor-in-chief Kristinn Hrafnsson opened up to reporters following the first 'social' visit to Julian Assange since the whistleblower was imprisoned last month.

Anderson and Hrafnsson were the first people allowed to visit Assange, aside from his lawyer, since the 47-year-old was sentenced to 50 weeks imprisonment for violating bail conditions.

The pair looked solemn following the visit on Tuesday, and spoke to reporters outside of the prison about the "shocking" conditions the WikiLeaks founder is being held in. Friend and public advocate Anderson spoke of her love for the Australian and said he has not been able to speak to his children or access a computer or library since his incarceration.

Comment:


Heart - Black

Are France Telecom and its CEO implicated in 35 employee suicides?

France Telecom, Didier Lombard suicides
© Agence France-PresseThe former CEO of France Telecom, Didier Lombard, arrives at his trial in Paris
France Telecom was privatised in 2004, a move which led to major restructuring and job losses. The former CEO, Didier Lombard, and several other executives of the company - which rebranded as Orange in 2013 - have been accused of "moral harassment."

Lombard, who served as chairman and chief executive from 2005 to 2010, went on trial on Monday, 6 May, accused of creating a toxic work culture and inflaming matters with a series of callous remarks.

After its privatisation the company slashed 22,000 jobs from the 100,000-strong workforce and sent another 10,000 employees for retraining, often at the other end of the country.

"I'll get people to leave one way or another, either through the window or the door," Lombard, now 77, said in 2006.

Bulb

San Francisco, Oakland could be first cities in US to ban facial recognition

Visitors experience facial recognition technology at Facebook booth
© Bobby Yip / ReutersVisitors experience facial recognition technology at Face++ booth during the China Public Security Expo
San Francisco could become the first city in the nation to ban any city department from using facial recognition under a proposal that says any benefits of the technology outweigh its impact on civil rights, and Oakland may not be far behind.

In San Francisco, a Board of Supervisors committee is scheduled to vote Monday on the Stop Secret Surveillance Ordinance, which would make it illegal for any department to "obtain, retain, access or use" any face-recognition technology or information obtained from such technology.

The proposal, introduced by San Francisco Supervisor Aaron Peskin in January, would also require public input and the supervisors' approval before agencies buy surveillance technology with public funds. That includes the purchase of license plate readers, toll readers, closed-circuit cameras, body cams, and biometrics technology and software for forecasting criminal activity.

Hearts

Hungry in America?! Childhood hunger in Baltimore gets some needed help from volunteers

volunteers
On Sunday morning, April 28, 2019, two splendid organizations, MOD Pizza and Generosity Feeds, teamed up, and with the help of hundreds of spirited volunteers, held an event to feed the hungry children in our city. It was staged in Locust Point, at the Francis Scott Key School (P.S. 76), on Fort Avenue in Baltimore, only a short distance from historic Fort McHenry.

The energetic volunteers were able to pack "10,000 meals" for the poor within a time slot of 9:30 a.m. & 10:30 a.m. This was only the first part of the day-long program.

Another team of volunteers would replicate their laudable efforts between 11:30 a.m and 12:30 p.m. It was an assembly line type of operation and the organizers took time to carefully prep the participates how to manage. To witness the young children engaging in this noble effort, with their family members, friends and neighbors by their sides, was, indeed, a joy to behold.

Comment: Trillions spent by the Pentagon, unaccounted for, and independent organizations and individuals take it upon themselves to fund raise and feed the children that the military is supposed to protect.


TV

Tom Petty was right: the waiting is the hardest part

Sun setting over America
© Alternet
How to account for Americans being the most anxious, fearful, and stressed-out people among the supposedly advanced nations? Do we not live in the world's greatest democratic utopia where dreams come true?

What if the dreaming part is actually driving us insane? What if we have engineered a society in which fantasy has so grotesquely over-run reality that coping with daily life is nearly impossible. What if an existence mediated by pixel screens large and small presents a virtual world more compelling than the real world and turns out to be a kind of contagious avoidance behavior - until reality is so fugitive that we can barely discern its colors and outlines beyond the screens?

You end up in a virtual world of advertising and agit-prop where manipulation is the primary driver of human activity. That is, a world where the idea of personal liberty (including any act of free thought) becomes a philosophical sick joke, whether you believe in the possibility of free will or not. You get a land full of college kids trained to think that coercion of others is the highest-and-best use of their time on earth - and that it represents "inclusion."

You get a news industry that makes its own reality, churning out
narratives (i.e. constructed psychodramas) to excite numbed minds. You get politics that play out like a Deputy Dawg cartoon. You get a corporate tyranny of racketeering that herds spellbound citizens like so many sheep into chutes for shearing, not only of their money, but their autonomy, dignity, and finally their will to live.

Mr. Potato

Policing the creative imagination: Fiction writers subject to approval from "sensitivity readers" before publication

flare lights up tunnel
At a time when activist displeasure can sweep through social media and destabilize reputations and nascent careers overnight, publishers are taking unprecedented steps in an effort to mitigate the risks. Among these is the use of sensitivity readers - individuals tasked with reading a work of fiction prior to publication in an effort to determine whether or not offense is likely to be caused by an author's portrayal of characters from demographics considered marginalised or historically oppressed. Many readers, I suspect, will have become aware of this emerging trend following a series of nasty controversies in the world of Young Adult publishing.

In 2017, a fantasy novel by Kiera Drake entitled The Continent was attacked for its allegedly racist portrayal of Native Americans. The novel was hastily rewritten following guidance from sensitivity readers. In January of this year, Amelie Zhao's debut novel Blood Heir, set in a fantastical version of medieval Russia, was denounced online because its portrayal of chattel slavery was deemed insufficiently sensitive to America's own racist history. In response, Zhao thanked her persecutors profusely (a dismayingly common response) and explained that she would be withdrawing her novel from publication indefinitely. Like Drake, Zhao "sought feedback from scholars and sensitivity readers," made changes, and a new publication date for her novel has just been announced. Weeks after Zhao withdrew her book, A Place for Wolves, written by sensitivity reader Kosoko Jackson, was also withdrawn by its author following criticisms of his portrayal of an Albanian Muslim villain. It did not go unnoticed that Jackson had participated in the attacks on Zhao. "The schadenfreude," one Twitter user observed, "is delicious."

Comment: Talk about your Orwellian dystopia - 'sensitivity readers' pre-screening literature to make sure nothing is too offensive to the most fragile and reactive members of the potential audience? The author nails it in the last paragraph - literature is often about exploring these questions of identity, something that simply cannot be accomplished if a hyper-sensitive censor is balking at the slightest possible offense. If literature isn't challenging its audience in some way, what's the point?

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