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Fri, 05 Nov 2021
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Attention

Ethiopian government report finds faulty Boeing sensor reading preceded 2019 737 Max crash

Boeing 747 MAX crash Ethiopia
© AP Photo/Mulugeta Ayene / AP
Airplane parts lie on the ground at the scene of an Ethiopian Airlines flight crash near Bishoftu, or Debre Zeit, south of Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, March 11, 2019.
A faulty sensor reading and the activation of an anti-stall system on a Boeing 737 MAX preceded the crash of an Ethiopian Airlines flight in 2019 that killed 157 people, an interim report by the government in Addis Ababa found.

The accident, following the 2018 crash of the same model plane in Indonesia killing 189 people, led to the grounding of Boeing's 737 MAX worldwide, wiped billions off the company's value and sparked hundreds of lawsuits from bereaved families.

The interim report bolstered the findings of Ethiopia's initial assessment, which linked the crash to a Boeing automated system. The interim report's recommendations did not include any proposed measures for Ethiopian authorities or the airline.

It said two sensors recording the plane's angle - known as the "angle of attack'' or AOA - differed in readings by 59 degrees. "Shortly after lift-off, the left and right recorded AOA values deviated. The left AOA values were erroneous and reached 74.5o,'' the report said.

That was followed by the activation of an anti-stall system known as MCAS which repeatedly forced the plane's nose downward because the sensor was saying it was climbing too steeply, it said.

Comment:


Bad Guys

If you're close to the scene of a crime, police can demand Google to hand over your data

Google crime scene
Google reverse location search warrants have privacy and civil liberties advocates concerned.

The Gainesville Police Department suspected an innocent man was involved in a burglary so naturally they requested that Google give them all of his location data.

Google's legal investigations support team wrote to Zachary McCoy telling him that local police were demanding information related to his Google account. Google replied and said it would release the data unless McCoy went to court and tried to block the request, NBC reported.

The man then searched his case number on the Gainesville Police Department website where he found a one-page report on the burglary of an elderly woman's home ten months earlier on March 29, 2009. Unfortunately for McCoy, the crime occurred less than a mile from the home that he shared with his two roommates.

Caleb Kenyon, McCoy's lawyer, said he was subject of a "geofence warrant." A geofence warrant is essentially a virtual dragnet over crime scenes where police request to sweep up Google location data drawn from users' GPS, Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, and cellular connections from everyone who is near a crime scene.

Attention

Sudanese PM Abdalla Hamdok survives assassination attempt

Car wrecks assassination attempt
© Ashraf Shazly/AFP
Rescue teams, security forces examine damaged vehicles at site of the assassination attempt
Sudan's Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok has survived an assassination attempt after a blast near his convoy in the capital, Khartoum.

Hamdok wrote on Twitter he was "safe and in good shape" following Monday's explosion.

"What happened will not stop the path of change, it will be nothing but an additional push in the strong waves of the revolution," added the veteran economist, who became prime minister in August, months after a pro-democracy movement forced the army to remove longtime President Bashar al-Bashir.

Hamdok also shared a photo of himself smiling and seated at his desk, while a TV behind him showed news coverage reporting he had survived.


Laptop

Former Obama administration's acting DHS IG indicted on theft, fraud charges

Charles Edwards
© CNN/YouTube screengrab
A 59-year-old Maryland man who served as the Acting Inspector General for the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) between the 2011 and 2013 years of Barack Obama's presidency has been indicted for alleged theft and fraud.

The Department of Justice announced the charges against Charles K. Edwards and 54-year-old Virginia resident Murali Yamazula Venkata on Friday. The defendants are each accused of wire fraud, conspiracy to commit theft of government property, conspiracy to defraud the United States, aggravated identity theft, and theft of government property. Venkata is additionally accused of destroying records.

Music

Hits from the recent past that could NEVER survive in today's PC culture

Katy Perry
© REUTERS/Dylan Martinez
Katy Perry performing at Worthy Farm in Somerset during Glastonbury Festival
Putting past art under the spotlight of today's ever-changing woke standards can show us just how ridiculous political correctness has gotten in today's digital age.

Today's world of constantly moving goalposts for woke standards has introduced the phenomenon of putting art of the past under the microscope of today. This has led to classic literature being injected with blackface in the name of inclusivity and classic songs like 'Baby, It's Cold Outside' being redone for audience's new sensitivities.

While the sights of the triggered have been set mostly on creations by folks long dead and buried, it's only a matter of time before social justice warriors work their way up and land on pop culture that made its impact just before the world turned its attention to hashtags and cancel culture.

These songs from the late 1990s and early 2000s, for instance, could never survive in today's ultra-sensitive atmosphere and it would not be a surprise to see any of the artists behind them put on today's digital chopping block and forced to apologize and make amends.

Handcuffs

Chicago mayor defends freeing illegal alien accused of child sexual assault

lightfoot puente
© CPD/Getty Images
Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot (D) and the Chicago Police Department are defending freeing an illegal alien convicted felon who allegedly sexually assaulted a three-year-old girl in a public bathroom.

As Breitbart News reported, 35-year-old illegal alien Christopher Puente from Mexico was charged in Chicago, Illinois, with one count of predatory criminal sexual assault after he allegedly locked himself in a McDonald's bathroom stall with a three-year-old girl and proceeded to sexually assault her.

Puente could have been transferred to Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) custody by Chicago law enforcement officials in June 2019, but instead, the sanctuary city released the illegal alien back into the general public.

In statements to local media, Lightfoot and Chicago Police officials defended their release of Puente months before he allegedly sexually assaulted the three-year-old girl.

Comment: See also:


Chart Pie

Almost 40% of partisan US college students think their political opponents are evil - but why choose the lesser one?

University student poster
© Reuters / Maranie Staab
Syracuse University in New York, US
US college students aren't just suspicious of those with different politics - both liberals and conservatives think the other side is "evil." It's time to stop fighting and ask ourselves who benefits from political holy war.

While previous generations' political activists might have resembled cultists in their single-minded devotion to the Cause (and some still do), today's college students have consigned their ideological opponents to a quasi-religious dark side, according to a survey published earlier this week by the College Fix. More than a third Democrats and Republicans alike told the outlet their political adversaries were "not just worse for politics - they are basically evil."

Both "sides" are apparently guilty of seeing their adversaries in these stark Manichean terms, a reality which might surprise card-carrying members of either party who see themselves as the noble ones in the ideological fray. Some 37 percent of Democrats agreed Republicans were "basically evil," the results showed, while 39 percent of Republicans felt the same about their Democratic counterparts.

It's not exactly surprising that years of partisan sniping, kicked into overdrive by ratings-hungry mainstream media, have both honed Americans' tribal instincts to a sharp point and directed that rancor at their neighbors instead of the billionaires pulling the strings of the political puppet shows unfolding on the news. But these were not grizzled ideologues being queried by CollegePulse about whether their political opponents were truly evil - these were students, theoretically at the age where they're most open to new ideas. If they're already consumed by quasi-religious fervor against their "enemies," what does that say about older generations? Worse, what does it mean for the future of open dialogue or civilized debate, two nearly-extinct phenomena already?

Health

Italian army chief of staff tests positive for coronavirus, death toll rises by 1/3, Iran releases 70,000 prisoners to mitigate spread

milan italy military
© Reuters / Flavio Lo Scalzo
Military are seen on Duomo square in Milan after the Italian government imposed a virtual lockdown on the north of Italy on March 8, 2020.
Italian Chief of Army Staff Salvatore Farina has tested positive for the coronavirus and will remain quarantined in his home, with a replacement taking on his official duties.

Farina announced he is self-isolating after not feeling well and then testing positive for the disease. He will be replaced in his role as chief of staff by General Federico Bonato.

The coronavirus has been especially harmful in Italy, with at least 16 million people having been quarantined in the country due to concerns over the disease.

Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte has announced the closure of schools, gyms, nightclubs, and other venues in the country to help combat the spread of the coronavirus. Citizens living in Lombardy and 14 other provinces also need to get special permission to travel. The restrictions are in place until April 3.

The death toll from the coronavirus has jumped from 233 to 366 in the country, local authorities said on Sunday.

Comment: The death toll rose by another 100 today, bringing the total to 463. Italy's containment efforts have provoked riots in several prisons across the country.

In contrast, Iran has decided to release about 70,000 prisoners, temporarily, to mitigate the spread within prisons, prioritizing those with underlying conditions must vulnerable to catching the virus.

See also:


Stock Down

Russia swiftly reacts to market bloodbath: It's 'ready' for $25 oil

Russian Foreign Ministry
© Reuters / Maxim Shemetov
The Russian Foreign Ministry headquarters and towers of Kremlin in Moscow
Russia's sovereign wealth fund has enough reserves to cover budget deficit for years, even if oil prices stay between $25 and $30 per barrel, the Finance Ministry announced amid a dramatic oil market crash.

Despite Monday being a public holiday in Russia, both the Ministry of Finance and the Central Bank were quick to react to the overnight drop in oil prices of nearly 30 percent. The former said that the Russian National Wealth Fund has $150 billion (more than 10 trillion rubles) worth of liquid assets from additional oil and gas revenues, which is enough to offset a possible shortfall from falling crude prices for 6-10 years.

Comment: Russia has known for years the West is tottering on the edge of financial ruin. Under Putin, it has been putting its fiscal house in order by reducing foreign debt (having already paid off the USSR's old obligations), increasing its gold reserves, finding amicable trading partners, and with the added incentive of U.S. sanctions, developing as much manufacturing and agricultural self-sufficiency as possible. Whatever world events may ensue, Russia seems well-poised to meet them.


NPC

International Women's Day was conceived as a celebration of women's rights, but its turned into a pseudo-feminist nightmare

Woman in red high heels stepping on a shrunken man
© Global Look Press / Rosseforp / imageBROKER.com
When German Marxist activist and women's rights advocate Clara Zetkin tabled the idea of International Women's Day in Copenhagen in 1910, she couldn't have fathomed how badly it would betray both its feminist and socialist roots.

At the time, women across the US and Europe were demanding shorter working hours, better pay and the right to vote, and March 8 was to mark women's achievements, from social to political, while calling for equality and acceptance.

Despite the fact that it was adopted by the worldwide feminist movement in 1967, International Women's Day didn't affiliate with any one group, and sought to bring together women's organisations, governments and charities.

Traditionally, it was marked with cultural cohesion, rallies, networking, prayer, conferences and marches, while in many countries, it's a holiday, including Cuba, Afghanistan, China, Nepal and Madagascar (for women only), and in Russia, where it is similar to Mother's Day.

A tradition hijacked

Sadly, International Women's Day has turned into a theme park complete with matching T-shirts, feel-good clichés and vapid slogans. It's been hijacked not just by female-led media, corporate brands, capitalists and academics, but by the worst cases of modern-day fourth-wave 'feminists'.

Comment: And what did International Women's Day look like this year?
Women, and some men, have marched in capitals around the globe over issues ranging from violence against women to patriarchy to climate change. Some chose topless protests, while some others got a rough response from police.

Late on Sunday, activists took to the streets of Turkey's largest city, condemning violence against women, only to be met with a violent police response.


Marches were held across Pakistan as well, with protesters calling for gender equality and an end to the practice of "honour killings" of women, still practiced in some areas by hardline Muslims. In Islamabad, participants of the Women's Day rally clashed with counter-protesters who advocated conservative values.


In Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan a march opposing violence against women was targeted by a group of masked men, donning traditional Kyrgyz hats. The attackers snatched placards belonging to protesters and beat up some of them. Adding insult to injury, many protesters and attackers were detained by police in the aftermath of the scuffle.


A massive rally for gender equality was held in the Iraqi capital city, Baghdad, where participants spotted coronavirus protection measures.

But in Western countries protesters decided just going on to the streets was not good enough.

In Paris many protesters were seen dressed like WWII feminist icon, Rosie the Riveter, while others chose to wear next to nothing with placards reading 'Stop the patriarchy pandemic!'


FEMEN's performance on the Place de la Concorde combined feminist action with the coronavirus scare, as participants donned hazmat gear - on the lower parts of their bodies, at least - and 'cleaned' the streets of 'patriarchal virus.'

Warning: Explicit Video


Another topless protest was held in London, this time combining climate change scare with feminism. The bare-breasted activists from the Extinction Rebellion group blocked Waterloo Bridge, while the inscriptions on their bodies read 'Climate Murder', 'Climate Rape', 'Climate Abuse' and so on.

Warning: Explicit Video