Society's Child
Woods attempted to help a man named Andrew MacMasters after the actor came across a since-deleted tweet the veteran posted saying he was going to kill himself because he has "lost everything [and] have nobody."
The 71-year-old actor responded to MacMasters tweet and tried to get him to direct message him.

Supporters of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange demonstrate in front of presidential palace in Quito, Ecuador, October 31, 2018
Last week it became clear that what WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange and his lawyers have been warning for seven years has already happened: He has been charged in a criminal case in the United States. The fear of being extradited and tried in the US has forced him to seek refuge at the Ecuadorian embassy in London since 2012.
This news hardly came as a surprise to those of us who have been following his case or have been convinced that Assange's fate is of profound and historical importance and could define the future of the freedom of the press.
Comment:
- The Assange case will define 'freedom of the press' in the 21st century
- Chris Hedges: The war on Assange is a war on press freedom
- WikiLeaks' Julian Assange should be getting Nobel Peace Prize and a pardon, not confinement
- British tribunal recognizes Wikileaks as media organization
- 'Terrifying' new documents show secret government regulations for spying on US journalists
- Today, I am Julian Assange
- The empire keeps proving Assange right about everything
Many said they have no intention of breaking the law, but were feeling pressure after anti-migrant protests in this Mexican border city amid claims by Trump and the Tijuana mayor that the caravan harbors gang members and criminals, something they strongly deny.
Keven Paul Mejia, a 27-year-old former security guard from the Honduran capital, Tegucigalpa, said there were some delinquents traveling with the group of several thousand who smoke marijuana and get drunk.
But, he said, most are like him, just hoping to land a job in the U.S. "There are more of us who are good, than bad," Mejia said.
Herson Cordonez, a 29-year-old Honduran, said the actions of a few migrants were tainting the image of the 4,000 to 6,000 in the caravan, not all of whom have yet reached Tijuana. "We are not criminals, we are migrant workers," Cordonez said, adding that he was considering trying to get into Canada if the U.S. doesn't want him.
Tijuana officials said late Monday they had arrested 34 caravan members for drug possession, public intoxication, disturbing the peace and resisting police, and they would be deported to their home countries.
Comment: See also:
- MEXICANS protest 'migrant invasion' as Tijuana riot police face off with protesters against caravan
- 'I know I'm not getting asylum': Caravan migrants admit they're just looking for jobs
- Violence erupts as Tijuana residents confront migrant caravan members
- It's a 'migrant tsunami': Tijuana mayor threatens deportation of US-bound migrants amid tensions, clashes
- Growing migrant crowd tests US-Mexico border fortifications
- Migrant caravan taxes Tijuana as it struggles to cope with 'tsunami' of migrants aiming for the US
The company says that a gap in the pipe at the SeaRose platform is what led to a record 250,000-litre spill on Friday, 350 kilometres southeast of St. John's.
"We don't know why this connector has disconnected," said Husky Energy executive Trevor Pritchard on Tuesday.
The leak occurred as the platform prepared to restart production during a fierce storm that was, at the time, the most intense in the world.
Husky says there was a loss of pressure, in an underwater pipe, connecting to the SeaRose, a vessel that helps produce and store oil.
The sea was extremely turbulent - more than 8 metres high - but Pritchard admits Husky did not get, or, even need, permission to operate in such dangerous conditions.
Comment: With extreme weather on the rise all over the planet, and corporate and governmental greed reaching its zenith, one can expect more disasters like this and even greater than this on the horizon:
- Fracking causes strongest quake yet at new site in UK
- Extreme winter storms and wave heights have been increasing over the last 70 years in the Western Europe
- Canada's crude crisis accelerating
The Daily Beast reported on Wednesday that Loomer, the latest conservative figure to be removed from the social media platform, claimed she was suspended over a tweet criticizing Rep.-elect Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.), one of the first Muslim women elected to Congress.
"Isn't it ironic how the twitter moment used to celebrate 'women, LGBTQ, and minorities' is a picture of Ilhan Omar? Ilhan is pro Sharia Ilhan is pro-FGM Under Sharia, homosexuals are oppressed & killed. Women are abused & forced to wear the hijab. Ilhan is anti Jewish," she claimed in a tweet.
Matthew Hedges, 31, has been in a UAE prison for more than six months. The University of Durham PhD candidate went to the country to research his thesis and was sentenced at an Abu Dhabi court on Wednesday in a hearing that lasted less than five minutes, with no lawyer present.
His wife, Daniela Tejada, 27, who was present in the courtroom, said Hedges began shaking when the verdict was read out.
"I am in complete shock and I don't know what to do," she said. "Matthew is innocent. The Foreign Office know this and have made it clear to the UAE authorities that Matthew is not a spy for them."

Israeli settlers took over a Palestinian house in Silwan after Israeli occupation officers forced the Palestinian inhabitants out using gunfire on October 24, 2018
The 700 Palestinians, who make up 70 families, have been going through a legal battle to protect their right to remain in their homes since 2002. Last June, lawyers for the occupation admitted that the process by which settlers organisation Ateret Cohanim received rights to the land was flawed. In spite of this, the judge ruled in favour of the settlers' rights to siege the area.
Comment: Trust Israel to try to hide behind a legalistic figleaf. Military force is the reality and the Palestinians pay for Zionist rapaciousness.
- "We will shoot you if you do anything": Palestinians speak to RT after forced Israeli evictions
- Palestine: Stories from the Old City: 'We Are Not Living Like Human Beings'
- Ethnic Cleansing in a Zionist Fairyland

U.S.-bound travellers were left briefly stranded after an Amtrak train from Montreal to New York City separated into two on the eve of U.S. Thanksgiving, one of the busiest travel days of the year.
Amtrak Train 68, also known as the Adirondack, experienced what officials called a "mechanical issue" after two of its cars separated just outside of Albany around 7:30 p.m. Wednesday.
"I'm on an #Amtrak train going down to NYC for Thanksgiving. About ten minutes out of Albany, heard a pop smelled electrical burning and felt a rush of cold air," passenger Chuck Reeves tweeted along with a photo. "Turned around and looked back and saw the rat of the train is missing."
There were 287 passengers and crew members onboard the train at the time and no injuries were reported.
Tuesday evening, hundreds of fire survivors bedded down for another cold night in the parking lot of the Walmart in Chico, where a community of Camp Fire evacuees has set up an unofficial and unorganized shanty town.
Shortly after 7 p.m., employees of Walmart began posting signs instructing the campers it was time to go.
By Wednesday morning, as rain began falling, many had heeded the signs and left. About 50 tents remained pitched on the grass lot.
But some campers remained resolute, saying they would rather stay in the Walmart lot than take a chance on getting sick or winding up someplace unfamiliar. More than 140 people have contracted norovirus at official shelters, according to reports from Butte County officials.
They are the men and women who operate the United States' controversial drone warfare program - and they frequently get it disastrously wrong.
A newly-released report by the Associated Press claims that one third of people killed by US drones in Yemen this year were civilians with no association to terror groups like Al-Qaeda, the intended targets.
But intention and reality often diverge sharply when it comes to death by US drones - and the horror is not confined to Yemen. From Pakistan to Afghanistan, to Iraq, Syria and Somalia, US drone strikes - which are often hailed by the US military and government as "precise" and even "surgical" - have killed scores of innocent civilians.












Comment:
Update:
Of all the Hollywood elite who virtue signal and pay lip service, it's nice that one in a million like James Woods actually seems to care, and actually does something about it.
See also: