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Quenelle - Golden

French riot cops brutally arrest 2 women... but retreat in face of big crowd of anti-Covid pass protesters in Paris mall

france riot cops
© Twitter / Nicole Elisei
French riot police officers have been scolded for brutally arresting two women, after backing away when confronted by a big group of protesters against the so-called coronavirus health passes, who stormed a mall in central Paris.

Hundreds of people forced their way into the Forum des Halles shopping center on Saturday, amid a nationwide string of demonstrations against the Covid-19 restrictions and mandates. The group was seen chanting 'Freedom!' inside the mall, which is partially underground and connected to the metro transit hub of Chatelet-Les Halles.


To restore public order, authorities deployed a riot police unit, BRAV-M, a French acronym for the Motorized Brigades for the Repression of Violent Actions - even though the crowd was not even technically defying the ban on entering shopping centers without a health certificate, since Forum des Halles is one of a handful of Paris venues exempt from the coronavirus pass mandate.

Wolf

Knife attacker shot dead by police in New Zealand, man was under "24/7" police surveillance - UPDATE

knife attack new zealand
© Facebook
A man was shot dead on Friday afternoon by police after entering a West Auckland supermarket and stabbing at least six people, who are now in hospital.

The alleged terrorist was a Sri Lankan national who arrived in New Zealand in 2011 and became a person of national security interest from 2016, authorities said.

Ardern said his ideology was IS-inspired, but he was a "lone-wolf".

"What happened today was despicable. It was hateful, it was wrong, it was carried out by an individual, not a faith, not a culture, not an ethnicity, but an individual person who was gripped by ideology that is not supported here by anyone or any community.

Comment: The sheer number of attacks that are carried out by suspects known to the authorities and who are often under surveillance prior to committing their crimes has led some researchers to some rather chilling conclusions: And check out SOTT radio's: UPDATE: Some more details:
Ahamed Aathil Mohamed Samsudeen arrived in New Zealand 10 years ago on a student visa and spent three years behind bars in his new country after authorities twice caught him with hunting knives and found out he owned and shared extremist propaganda content inspired by the Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS) group. In a warning court report, the man was described as having a sense of entitlement, extreme attitudes and an isolated lifestyle.

However, earlier this year, a judge ruled his IS videos were not of the worst kind of illicit material and ordered that he be released and put under supervision instead. He lived at an Auckland mosque, from where he took a train and traveled to the Countdown supermarket, tailed by police at a distance.

The attacker's every move had been monitored around the clock for 53 days from July, the police commissioner told the media on Saturday, saying that some 30 officers had been involved in the operation. The man was "highly paranoid," used counter-surveillance measures and on some occasions confronted members of the public who he thought were on his tail, Coster claimed.

On Friday, police officers in charge of the attacker were unable to follow him too closely in the supermarket as they could have disclosed themselves. Due to coronavirus restrictions, not many people were at the shop, so police waited near the entrance instead.

"The surveillance team following him observed him taking a trolley at the supermarket and begin shopping as we had observed him doing on previous occasions," Coster explained, adding, "He was shopping as normal for approximately 10 minutes before the attack started." The man, who grabbed his weapon from the supermarket shelf, was "very clever in the way he planned it," or just "opportunistic and did it at short notice," the police official concluded.

Countdown said on Saturday that all knives and scissors had been removed from its shops, for people "to feel safe," and the supermarket group is considering whether to continue selling the items in the future. Other supermarkets followed suit, local media reported.

The attacker, who in 2017 was headed for Syria, presumably to join IS terrorists, but got arrested at Auckland Airport, had been known to multiple New Zealand agencies and the prime minister herself was personally aware of him before the Friday attack. "This was someone who was known to our national security agencies and was of concern and was being monitored constantly," Ardern said, adding, "There are very few that fall into this category."
His family released the following statement:
We wish to begin by saying that our family would like to send our love and support to those who were hurt in the horrible act yesterday.

We are so shaken by what has happened and we do not know what to do. We hope these words will help bring some peace to your beautiful country. We are ready to help you all in the healing process no matter what it is needed from us.

We hope to find out with you all, what happened in Aathil's case and what we all could have done to prevent this. We are heartbroken by this terrible event. My father still doesn't know my brother is dead because he has been missing him so much and is very ill these days.

Unfortunately, Aathil was suffering from some mental health problems in his life. He suffered a lot during his political torture at home. We were grateful he found the country where he wanted to live.

We saw his mental health got worse and worse during the last 10 years or so. He spent a lot of his time in prison and was always struggling with some court cases. When we heard that he was in prison in New Zealand, we thought it would do him some good but didn't realise he would spend so much time there. He also had many problems in prison. He always wanted help and support. He told us that all the time.

Aathil did spend a lot of time online and that was a problem we saw. He wanted to impress his friends from Sri Lanka on Facebook. He wanted to share the sufferings and injustices. He saw himself as someone fighting those injustices.

Some of us visited your beautiful country New Zealand in 2013. We love your country and your people and we know from what we have seen since the Christchurch attack that you are good people. We want to stand with you. We have lost Aathil. We don't know what to do while our father is still very ill and doesn't know about this situation. Aathil was the youngest and very close to my father. He grew up with my parents in the family home while the rest of us grew up mainly in hostels. Aathil was the baby of the family. My mother is so upset.

Aathil always contradicted what he was told. He would hang up the phone on us when we told him to forget about all of the issues he was obsessed with. Then he would call us back again himself when he realised he was wrong. Aathil was wrong again yesterday. Of course we feel very sad that he could not be saved. The prisons and the situation was hard on him and he did not have any support. He told us he was assaulted there.

We have done this statement quickly because Aathil's name has been published now. We have not had time to plan advice or safety for any of us who all live separately. We have not had a chance to discuss this because some of us were being interrogated. We are hoping we will be safe where we are. We hope you will all be safe where you all are too.

We all have to try to accept this. I pray that God will help us all to heal from this very sad day. We are thinking of you all. We are thinking of our parents. We are thinking of the boy who left us and the innocent people were injured yesterday. Our lives have changed forever. We realise that it will take us some time to come to terms with this. We are thinking of the injured, both mentally and physically. May we all heal from this together. God be with you. Amen.

We ask for privacy as we grieve and process what has happened.

May God Bless all those impacted.
UPDATE: Samsudeen's mother claims he was radicalized by neighbors from Syria and Iraq, who took care of him after he suffered an injury (he fell several storeys from a building in 2016). "It looks like they brainwashed him. Then he started posting on Facebook," she said. Jacinda Arden claims officials had been trying to deport him for years.


Penis Pump

17 dead, 41 injured during celebratory firing in Kabul, Taliban announce retaking of last province Panjshir

Afghanistan party
© STRINGER/EPA-EFE/REX/Shutterstock
Celebrations have broken out across Afghanistan since US forces withdrew
At least 17 people were killed by celebratory gunshots fired by the Taliban in Kabul on Friday, according to reports.

The Shamshad news agency said "aerial shooting" in the Afghan capital killed 17 people and wounded 41.

Tolo news agency gave a similar toll.

It comes as the Taliban claims it has seized the last remaining region in Afghanistan which had been holding out against the group.

The gunfire drew a rebuke from the main Taliban spokesman, Zabihullah Mujahid.

Comment: Western aid isn't what is going to turn Afghanistan around, what's likely more important is what the Taliban do in cooperation with China and Russia that will likely make the real difference: As America's attempt to Westernise Afghanistan by force fails, Kabul may now find its place in Russian & Chinese-dominated Eurasia


Target

Experts call for rigorous audit to protect California governor recall

ballots
© AP/Rich Pedroncelli
Sacramento County Registrar of Voters office sorting machine • August 30, 2021
A group of election security experts on Thursday called for a rigorous audit of the upcoming recall election for California's governor after copies of systems used to run elections across the country were released publicly.

Their letter sent to the secretary of state's office urges the state to conduct a type of post-election audit that can help detect malicious attempts to interfere.

The statewide recall targeting Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom, set for Sept. 14, is the first election since copies of Dominion Voting Systems' election management system were distributed last month at an event organized by MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell, an ally of former President Donald Trump who has made unsubstantiated claims about last year's election. Election offices across 30 states use the Dominion system, including 40 counties in California.

Election security experts have said the breaches, from a county in Colorado and another in Michigan, pose a heightened risk to elections because the system is used for a number of administrative functions — from designing ballots and configuring voting machines to tallying results.

Comment: The right to vote, and what it stands for, is now in tatters, serving to widen the divide amongst both leadership and constituency.
Shirley Webber
© AP/Rich Pedroncelli
CA Sec. of State Shirley Webber on election security at the Capitol in Sacramento, CA.
Eight computer security experts wrote to California Secretary of State Shirley Weber, urging her to order a post-vote audit to protect the outcome from possible manipulation and litigation. Their letter was first reported on Friday by the Associated Press (AP).
"If an actual cyberattack silently changes the outcome of the election, or any other procedural or software error does, a properly conducted RLA based on trustworthy paper ballots will detect it and correct it (with high probability). If the election outcome is correct in the first place the RLA will provide strong public evidence that it is, creating a 'firewall' against litigation and disinformation seeking to discredit the outcome."
RLA stands for risk-limiting audit, a type of check that focuses on the correct count of votes by a computer system. It involves securing a sample of paper ballots, counting them manually and comparing the result to how the machines tallied the same ballots.

Conducting one after the September 14 vote is necessary due to last month's leak of proprietary software used by Dominion Voting Systems, the experts said. The copies were reportedly distributed during an event in South Dakota organized by MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell.

University of Michigan professor J. Alex Halderman's 25,000-word report detailing how the machines can be tampered with to change votes was sealed by a federal judge.

Some rightwing pundits sounded the alarm after hearing the news, apparently taking it as an indication of a brewing plot to alter the outcome of the recall vote, should it not favor Governor Newsom. There was recently a shift in opinion polls pointing to him likely staying in office.

Commentator Mike Cernovich, whom critics call a conspiracy theorist, said:
"They are already telling us what they are going to do! Remember when audits were treason and an attack on democracy? Now it's time to change positions because of the California recall."
A representative of Dominion downplayed the concerns, saying federal officials didn't see the leaks of its software as significantly increasing the risk to elections.
Meanwhile, the PTB have rallied around Newsom, providing the 'Hail Mary' funding to blitz the state with endorsements.

See also: Soros dumps $1M into pro-Newsom PAC to fight recall effort


Bullseye

Corporate America would never allow a 'healthy food mandate' like they have 'mask mandates' - junk food is far too profitable

junk food
© shutterstock.com
The CEO of a health food company has learned the hard way that reciting medical data and coming to logical conclusions, like favoring a health mandate to prevent obesity, will bring out the corporate beast in the woke mob.

'If you wish to learn who rules over you, simply find out who you are not allowed to criticize,' goes the famous saying. If that is true, then Americans are being ruled by a truly domineering tyrant, who can't bear to hear advice that just might save the entire kingdom.

Jonathan Neman, CEO of the upscale salad chain Sweetgreen, broke some uncomfortable truths to the millions of Americans who are bursting around the waistline: being obese in the age of Covid could lead to their even more untimely death.

Airplane

Plane crashes into building in Connecticut

plane crash trumpf building farmington
© Twitter
The Cessna Citation 560X took off from Robertson Field Airport around 10 a.m. on September 2, 2021.
Four people on a plane that crashed into the Trumpf Inc. building in Farmington on Thursday morning have died.

Farmington police said the crash happened just before 10 a.m.

The plane, which took off from Robertson Airport in Plainville, had mechanical failure during take-off, and eventually crashed on the ground and ended up hitting the Trumpf Inc. building on Hyde Road.

Comment: The names of the deceased have been released:
On Friday, Farmington police identified the two pilots as 55-year-old William O'Leary of Bristol and 57-year-old Mark Morrow of Danbury. The two passengers were identified as 33-year-old Courtney Haviland of Boston, Massachusetts and her husband, 32-year-old William Shrauner.

Trumpf Inc. posted to social media that all employees who were inside the affected building have been accounted for with two injuries reported.

One of two people injured inside the Trumpf headquarters was badly burned when the plane came down on the building. He is now in the burn unit in Bridgeport after first being treated at Hartford Hospital.

News 8 spoke to an expert who said two pilots are required to fly this kind of aircraft. He says the Cessna Citation 560X business jet is considered to be a very comfortable and capable aircraft.

"First thought that comes to mind is, it was an aircraft malfunction of some sort," said Mike Teiger, an active private pilot. "It's an executive jet, the runway is 3,600 feet which is long enough for an aircraft to take off. Weather was not a factor. It was a very clear day, there was no difficulty as far as runway conditions," Teiger said.

News 8 also spoke to Eric Buhrendorf, the owner of an IT services company called EVERNET out of Hartford and a private pilot based at Robertson Airport for the last few years.

"This is just a sad case of bad luck," Buhrendorf said. "It's just so heartbreaking that there's a loss in this capacity."

Brook Haven Properties LLC in Camden, Delaware, owned the jet. It is not currently known whether this particular aircraft has had mechanical issues in the past.
It was a narrow shave for the employees of Trumpf Medical Systems. Symbolic?


Quenelle - Golden

Thousands flood Paris streets (yet again) protesting against Covid-19 health passes across France

france protest covid pass sanitaire
© Reuters / Gonzalo Fuentes
Protest against the French government's covid 'passe sanitaire'
More than 200 demonstrations against the so-called coronavirus health pass have been scheduled for Saturday across France. In Paris alone thousands of people joined rallies against what they call a violation of people's rights.

Massive crowds flooded the streets of the French capital on Saturday. Several thousand demonstrators marched through the Boulevard Saint-Marcel in the southeastern part of the city toward the Place de la Bastille.

People were holding placards that read 'Stop', chanting 'Freedom' and beating drums. Some of the protesters were seen wearing yellow vests - a symbol of another massive protest movement that was active in France for about a year and a half between October 2018 and March 2020.

Doberman

UK creates new pet abduction law after rise in dog thefts

miitary dogs and handlers
© Agence France-Presse
The offence is among the recommendations of a task force launched in May to tackle the reported rise in dog and other pet thefts, which have soared during the coronavirus crisis

The British government unveiled plans Friday to make pet abduction a new criminal offence, in response to a pandemic-fuelled spike in dognapping and other animal thefts.

The offence is among the recommendations of a task force launched in May to tackle the reported rise in dog and other pet thefts, which have soared during the coronavirus crisis.

The price of some dog breeds has increased by as much as 89 percent since several lockdown periods in Britain, as interest in owning a pet surged, according to the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra).

Laptop

Cyber-attack on customer and an error took down NZ's third-largest ISP

laptop
© Unsplash
Working from home and home schooling came to an abrupt halt for some internet users on Friday.
The country's third-largest internet provider, Vocus NZ, says a cyber attack on one of its customers and a subsequent error was the reason many internet users were knocked offline around lunchtime on Friday.

Vocus owns the Orcon, Slingshot and Stuff Fibre internet brands and also provides the internet infrastructure for Sky Broadband which was also impacted.

The problems began shortly after 1pm, but appear to have been resolved at about 2pm.

Handcuffs

New Zealand police surround address after Covid-positive man escapes quarantine

New Zealand police
© Kai Schwörer/Getty Images
New Zealand police have arrested a Covid-positive man who escaped from quarantine in Auckland.
Man was arrested later by police in full protective equipment who had sealed off the Auckland property.

A Covid-positive man absconded from a managed quarantine facility in central Auckland on Thursday, prompting New Zealand police to respond to the incident in full protective equipment.

Officers surrounded and cordoned off an address in Ōtāhuhu, south Auckland, after being told of the escape from the facility in Ellerslie, about 10km away (six miles) away. The person was was later arrested.

Comment: It seems as though New Zealand has taken a page from the book of their next door neighbor Australia in implementing a police state, complete with 'quarantine facilities' and hunting down violators with full hazmat suits. All over a minor respiratory virus.

See also: