Welcome to Sott.net
Sat, 16 Oct 2021
The World for People who Think

Society's Child
Map

Boat

Stranded cargo ship Ever Given refloated: Suez Canal says traffic in channel has resumed

suez canal cargo ship evergreen ever given
© Suez Canal Authority/Handout via REUTERS
A view shows the container ship Ever Given, one of the world's largest container ships, after it was partially refloated, in Suez Canal, Egypt March 29, 2021.
The giant container ship Ever Given that blocked the Suez Canal for almost a week was fully floated on Monday and traffic in the waterway would resume, the canal authority said in a statement.

A Reuters witness saw the ship moving and a shipping tracker and Egyptian TV showed it positioned in the centre of the canal.


Comment: More information from Bloomberg News:
Ships were starting to move in the Suez Canal after the dislodging of the giant Ever Given container ship cleared the key trade route for traffic.

At least three vessels were on the move, according to ship-tracking data. The return of navigation will come as a relief for global trade that was under strain even before the latest crisis.

There were 437 ships waiting to transit through the waterway, shipping agent GAC said earlier, citing the canal authority. Container shipping company Hapag-Lloyd AG expects the backlog to be cleared within four days.

The Ever Given reached the Great Bitter Lakes, where it will undergo inspections. Horns sounded in celebration after the ship was earlier freed from the canal's bank in an operation that involved moving 30,000 cubic meters of sand.




TV

CNN runs propaganda piece explaining the 'secret' behind Joe Biden's 'popularity': Twitter erupts with mockery

Joe biden cnn Anderson cooper
© REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst
Joe Biden with CNN's Anderson Cooper
CNN is being accused of pushing propaganda after publishing a fawning news 'analysis' attempting to explain that President Joe Biden's recent poll success is due to him doing "popular things" on "popular issues."

"Biden's secret to success is simple: he's addressing the issues Americans care about, while his weaker issues are those that most Americans don't seem as worried about," CNN's breakdown reads.

The article cites a recent ABC/Ipsos poll that showed Biden leading on issues like the handling of the Covid-19 pandemic, but earning majority disapproval on situations like the migrant surge at the US/Mexico border and his handling of gun violence.

Book

Cynical Theories review: Stephen Anderson takes Social Justice Warriors to philosophical task

cynical theories

Cynical Theories (l), Michel Foucault (r)
The spectacle of benighted cities overrun with black-clad marauders, downtowns declared 'sovereign territory', businesses sacked, churches aflame, and police squads besieged by angry demonstrators, in the leading democratic countries of the world, gobsmacked the public in 2020. How modern civilization has degenerated to such a point is one of the many marvels of what anyone must admit was a very memorable year.

Into this situation has come a new book authored by James Lindsay and Helen Pluckrose, Cynical Theories: How Activist Scholarship Made Everything About Race, Gender and Identity - And Why This Harms Everybody (2020). Pluckrose and Lindsay, you might remember, are two of the three scholars implicated in the famous 'Sokal Squared Hoax', involving the producing of fake academic papers with subjects such as whether dog parks were part of 'rape culture' or the ethnographic analysis of men who attend 'breastuarants'. Silly enough to be laughable, but couched in postmodern academic jargon, several such papers passed for serious contributions to Social Justice Studies and were subsequently published in peer-reviewed journals. The tectonics, and high hilarity, produced by the scandal, have continued to reverberate throughout academia since. In this book, however, Lindsay and Pluckrose take on a more serious task: that of illuminating how academia ever fell to such a low-level of critical self-awareness, and how the public has followed it into postmodern follies of various kinds.

Boat

Ted Cruz: Cartels, human smugglers are 'taunting' border patrol as they enter US illegally

Ted Cruz
© Alex Wong/Getty Images
US Senator Ted Cruz (R-TX)
Texas Republican Sen. Ted Cruz said on Friday that he saw human traffickers and cartel members "taunting" U.S. Border Patrol as they cross into the U.S. illegally.

Cruz posted a video at 2:15 a.m. from the southern border, where he described his observations of the conditions.
"We have been listening to and seeing cartel members, human traffickers right on the other side of the river, waving flashlights yelling and taunting Americans, taunting the Border Patrol, because they know that under the current policies of the Biden administration they can flood over here."
"They're getting paid $4-5000 a person to smuggle them into this country and our policies, when they smuggle them in, the Biden administration releases them," he added.


Comment: Lights, Scamera, Action? An incident recorded by CNN comes into doubt:
Screenshot CNN Rio Grande
© CNN.com Screenshot
Observations on the Border
The accuracy of CNN's 'Reliable Sources' newsletter, touted as disproving misinformation with fact-checks, has been called into question. The latest issue is riddled with errors and misrepresents a story critical of the network.

About a week ago, CNN aired a report on the migration situation at the US' southern border. A large chunk of the piece was dedicated to dozens of people who were crossing the Rio Grande into Texas just as the TV crew was passing by on a motor boat, seizing the chance to film them.

The video drew the attention of the American Prospect, a progressive liberal outlet, which said there may be something fishy about it. It suggested that the CNN crew was duped into filming an event staged by advocates of stricter border control, and that the US Border Patrol may have been in on the ruse.

The publication put forward a number of arguments to make its case. Videos of the same event, or one very similar, are available online and were widely covered by outlets skeptical of migration. The person conducting boat trips across the river was wearing a face mask and distinctive fatigues - indicating he knew he would be filmed and was not afraid to be caught, since he made no attempt to blend in with the passengers. The crossing allegedly happened in a location only accessible to the Border Patrol, and took too long for a genuine operation conducted by somebody avoiding law enforcement. The list goes on.

The suspected deception, seemingly an embarrassing one for CNN, was picked up on by right-wing outlets like Fox News and went viral. An apparent attempt at damage control came in the form of the latest issue of 'Reliable Sources', CNN's newsletter, which lamented that "there is simply too much disinfo and misinfo promoted by bad-faith actors and others to keep tabs on."

The newsletter called The American Prospect "a progressive website," assured that "obviously, CNN did not stage the crossing," and cited a statement by "Customs and Border Patrol" categorically denying involvement in any sort of a staged photo op.

Considering the inaccuracies and a failure to address the core of the issue, it's no surprise that David Dayen, the executive editor of the American Prospect, unleashed a furious rebuke of CNN and its writer, Oliver Darcy, who penned the sloppy 'Reliable Sources' issue.

In a Twitter thread, Dayen pointed out that the Border Patrol's statement may not be truthful and thus was not valid evidence. He also outlined other problematic parts of the attempt to fact-check the "misinfo," and said the newsletter even failed to accurately quote the response he gave them about the claim he had published.

"We're going to have more on this in a followup. But it is so sleazy of @CNN to duck us for a week, then have their 'media' 'reporter' run a BS story that lumps us in with conspiracy theorists. With the 'evidence' that an untrustworthy agency said so."
See also:





Bomb

Suspected suicide bombing outside Catholic church in Indonesia injures at least 20

Police officers Indonesia
© AP Photo/Masyudi S. Firmansyah
Police officers inspect the area near a church where an explosion went off in Makassar, South Sulawesi, Indonesia, Sunday, March 28, 2021. A suicide bomber blew himself up outside a packed Roman Catholic cathedral on Indonesia's Sulawesi island during a Palm Sunday Mass, wounding a number of people, police said.
At least 20 people were injured in what's suspected to be a suicide bombing outside of a Catholic church in Makassar City, Indonesia, on Sunday.

Indonesian police, who are conducting an investigation with the anti-terror unit, reported that the two suspected bombers both died in the incident. No other deaths have been reported.

Among those injured include a security guard, who tried to stop the two suspects from entering the church, which was holding a service for Palm Sunday, according to the Associated Press.

Comment: The moment of the blast was caught on a CCTV camera.


A video from the scene shows debris scattered near the gate at the building's side entrance.


Indonesian media quoted the South Sulawesi Regional Police spokesperson, Kombes E. Zulfan, who described the explosion as a suicide bombing. One of the bombers was identified as a member of a group involved in a militant attack in the Philippines in 2018, police chief General Listyo Sigit Prabowo later told reporters.

National police spokesperson Argo Yuwono later told reporters that two suspected perpetrators were riding a motorbike as they tried to enter the church. He added that a charred vehicle and human remains were found at the scene. Overall, 14 people were hospitalized, according to Yuwono.

Wilhelmus Tulak, a priest at the church, told a local TV station that a parking attendant was burned when he tried to stop the attack.

See also:


Airplane

6 dead, 1 injured in small plane crash in Mexico during flight to Tucson

CRASH
A small plane heading for Arizona crashed in the northern Mexico border state of Sonora on Saturday, killing six people and injuring another, authorities said.

The Cessna had taken off from the city of Hermosillo in Sonora on a flight to Tucson, Arizona, when it crashed shortly after takeoff.

The dead included a Sonora state government economic development official, Leonardo Ciscomani. The pilot was also among the dead.

The state prosecutors' office said the cause of the crash was under investigation.

Source: AP

Pistol

4 found dead in separate Austria, Switzerland shootings

Mistelbach

Mistelbach, Austria
Authorities in Austria say a woman and a four-year-old girl were found shot to death in a car in a rural area north of Vienna

A woman and a four-year-old girl were found shot to death in a car in a rural area north of Vienna, Austrian authorities said Sunday.

Police are trying to determine the whereabouts of the 29-year-old woman's ex-partner.

A spokesman for Lower Austria police said a witness reported finding a car with two bodies inside early Sunday afternoon in the Mistelbach district, 40 kilometers (25 miles) from the capital.

Officers didn't immediately find a firearm at the scene before cordoning it off for specialist investigators, said police spokesman Raimund Schwaigerlehner.

Attention

5 dead, 1 hospitalized after helicopter crashes near Alaskan glacier

GLACIER
Five people died and one remains in serious but stable condition after a contracted helicopter crashed Saturday night in Alaska's backcountry, authorities said.

A written statement released late Sunday by Tordrillo Mountain Lodge, a ski resort northwest of Anchorage, confirmed that the helicopter was on a heli-ski outing and carrying two ski guides, three lodge guests and a pilot, the Anchorage Daily News reported.

Arrow Down

Death toll rises to 18 in Egypt building collapses

Building collapse in Cairo leaves five dead

Building collapse in Cairo leaves five dead
The death toll from a building collapse in the Egyptian capital Cairo on Saturday has risen to 18, state media said.

"Emergency crews in Cairo managed to retrieve 18 corpses from under the rubble of the collapsed... property," the Al-Ahram newspaper reported.

Cairo's governorate initially reported five people were confirmed dead and 24 wounded in the incident, in the Gesr Suez district near Heliopolis, eastern Cairo.


2 + 2 = 4

Tens of thousands want teacher who showed cartoon of Prophet Muhammad to class reinstated

Gary Kibble

Gary Kibble, the headteacher, apologised for the use of the cartoon.
More than 50,000 people have signed a petition to reinstate the suspended teacher accused of showing his class a cartoon of the Prophet Muhammad.

Parents of children at Batley Grammar School protested outside the school for several days running last week after children said they had been shown the cartoon during a religious studies lesson.

Gary Kibble, the headteacher, apologised over the use of the "inappropriate" image, which is thought to have been taken from the French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo.

Comment: See also: