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Tennessee education bill aims to prohibit textbooks, materials with LGBTQ+ content

teacher classroom children
© Wavebreakmedia/Getty Images
A bill currently in the Tennessee legislature seeks to prohibit the state from approving textbooks and other instructional materials containing LGBTQ+ content.

"The bill, H.B. 0800, was introduced by Representative Bruce Griffey (R - District 75) [pictured] and will be considered by the Education Instruction Subcommittee on March 30," KSDK reported Wednesday.

The bill says public schools need to focus on teaching subjects such as reading, science, and mathematics. It also adds LGBTQ+ content is inappropriate for the classroom and may offend a significant portion of school communities that hold Christian values.

Comment: Not all states have Tennessee's nerve:


Attention

Potentially toxic masks distributed in schools and daycares in Quebec

Toxic masks
© Radio-Canada
Toxic Masks
Grey and blue SNN200642 masks should no longer be used, warn Quebec and Ottawa!

One model of mask distributed to Quebec schools and daycares may be dangerous for the lungs as they could contain a potentially toxic material, according to a directive sent out by the provincial government on Friday.

Radio-Canada has obtained documents showing Health Canada warned of the potential for "early pulmonary toxicity" from the SNN200642 masks made by Métallifer, a Quebec-based manufacturer.
The provincial government, in the directive that was sent by three ministries: education, families and higher education, says:
"If you have this type of mask in stock, we ask that you stop distributing them and keep them in a safe place now."
Some daycare educators had been suspicious of these grey and blue masks for a while because they felt like they were swallowing cat hair while wearing them, Radio-Canada has learned.

Health Canada conducted a preliminary risk assessment which revealed a potential for early lung damage associated with inhalation of microscopic graphene particles. Graphene is a strong, very thin material that is used in fabrication, but it can be harmful to lungs when inhaled and can cause long-term health problems.

Comment: The mask is deadlier than the flu:
Since January, the province has distributed 116 million masks to the school network, 4.6 million of which were of the SNN200642 line. Metallifer sent a statement saying the company does not manufacture the masks, and that when it imported the products from China, they "were fully qualified at the time."

"Since the beginning of the pandemic, Metallifer has used its vast network of suppliers in China to offer its customers quality protective masks that meet current standards," said Metallifer president Michel Filion.

"Nanoform graphene" refers to the carbon coating on the masks. It's made of graphene, a form of carbon, in its nano form, meaning extremely miniscule particles in a single tight layer.

One Quebec kindergarten teacher said the recall, which school boards acted on Friday, was upsetting, especially after she'd noticed feeling unwell wearing masks lately.

Wearing masks everyday, "I find myself a bit more tired and have headaches more often, and I have heard this from numerous coworkers." She said she also noticed they smelled plasticky and would use her own medical masks as often as she could.

The danger was spotted in a preliminary risk assessment, Health Canada said, and there's an absence of "manufacturer's evidence" to prove the masks are safe.

Quebec authorities also said checks are underway with a government procurement office to "trace the establishments that could have received masks containing this particle."
This information was reported in 2014:
A team of biologists, engineers and material scientists at Brown University examined graphene's potential toxicity in human cells. They found that the jagged edges of graphene nanoparticles, super sharp and super strong, easily pierced through cell membranes in human lung, skin and immune cells, suggesting the potential to do serious damage in humans and other animals.

"These materials can be inhaled unintentionally, or they may be intentionally injected or implanted as components of new biomedical technologies. So we want to understand how they interact with cells once inside the body."
[...]
It's listed as a potential irritant of skin and eyes, and potentially hazardous to breathe in or ingest.
See also:
Belgian govt warns that masks it distributed in 2020 may contain TOXIC chemicals


Arrow Up

Border Patrol union president: Trump saw 45-year low in human smuggling at the border; now it's all back

Brandon Judd
© screenshot
Brandon Judd President, National Border Patrol Council
Brandon Judd, the current President of the National Border Patrol Council, joined Rob Schmitt on Newsmax TV to discuss the ongoing Biden border crisis.

Earlier this week Judd chaperoned Republican Senators inspecting the US border at the Rio Grande River in Texas. During his appearance on Newsmax Judd told Rob Schmitt that human trafficking is now up under the Biden administration.

Brandon Judd:
"It's human smugglers who have absolutely no regard for life and it the administration who is allowing these smugglers to generate billions of dollars in profit because they're not securing the border like the last administration did. We were able to stop this huge flood, to go to 45 year lows in illegal smuggling of humans just to get it all back once the election was finalized."
Via Rob Schmitt Tonight:


Comment: See also:




Magnify

Wisconsin Republicans launch investigation of 2020 election

Wisconsin lock boxes
© Scott Olson/Getty Images
Wisconsin lock boxes with ballots stored in a guarded room prior to recount last November
Pushing back against claims of "conspiracy theories" from Democrats, the chair of the Wisconsin Assembly's Campaign and Elections Committee pledges the panel will get answers to integrity questions surrounding last year's elections.

"We're going to pursue it and we're going to get to the bottom of it," state Rep. Janel Brandtjen, R-Menomonee Falls, said Tuesday during debate over a resolution that directs the committee to "investigate the administration of elections in Wisconsin."

The committee in particular will focus on "elections conducted after January 1, 2019." There will be an emphasis on the myriad concerns that arose in November's presidential election, as evidenced by the alarming level of involvement by liberal third-party groups in Green Bay and elsewhere.

The resolution comes with the power to subpoena witnesses and documents, a tool not used in the Legislature in decades, according to legislative sources.

Handcuffs

Fugitive busts cap busy week for border patrol amid migrant surge

US border bus/Man-child
© Reuters/Go Nakamura for NYP
Border Patrol nabbed three wanted criminals at US-Mexico border.
Federal agents arrested three wanted criminals in 12 hours this week at the overwhelmed US-Mexico border.

US Border Patrol and Customs agents arrested a driver and passenger at a border checkpoint near Hebbronville after finding they had active warrants for burglary and larceny, officials said. The fugitives were questioned after a K9 agent sniffed out personal-use marijuana, methamphetamines, and drug paraphernalia in the vehicle, the US Border Patrol in Laredo said in a Facebook post. The suspects were extradited to police departments in Texas and Florida.

Later that evening, agents stopped two undocumented immigrants walking in the brush south of Encinal, and found one of them had an active warrant for assault out of San Antonio, officials said.

The arrests capped off a very busy week for border agents in Texas, as migrants continue to flood the Mexican border.

Megaphone

Risk of asymptomatic spread minimal, variants over-hyped, masks pointless - an interview with Professor Jay Bhattacharya

Bhattacharya

Professor Jay Bhattacharya
New variants are of no concern. There is no need to cancel summer holidays. Millions vaccinated, coupled with immunity from millions of prior infections means we can surf on the crest of the third wave, rather than being remotely concerned about it. In fact, the UK should open now. And vaccine passports, certificates, or whatever name they are being given, will do nothing to improve the health of the population - all headlines we have read and heard over the past week or so.

Except, we haven't. We have heard and read the opposite. And we are instilled with fear from TV and radio adverts, complete with 'that scary voice' all too eager to give listeners nightmares, be it your impressionable primary-school-aged daughter, or a frail older lady now terrified into wearing a mask outside while waiting for a bus with no one within a 50-metre radius. But the reality is that the above headlines could have been written - and all based on science. Jayanta Bhattacharya is a Professor of Medicine at Stanford University and one of the co-authors of the Great Barrington Declaration, the report that called for the focused protection of the vulnerable and no lockdowns, signed by almost 14,000 medical and public health scientists, nearly 42,000 medical practitioners and close to 765,000 concerned citizens.

Comment: See also:


Light Sabers

Myanmar security forces kill more than 100 in deadliest day since coup, calls for 'federal army' to defend civilians grows

Myanmar
© Anadolu Agency via Getty Images
Protesters demonstrating against the military coup in Yangon, Myanmar, on March 27.
Myanmar security forces on Saturday killed more than 100 people, including children, during anti-coup protests, several news agencies reported.

Why it matters: It's the bloodiest day of protests since the military last month overthrew the country's democratically elected government and comes as Myanmar's military celebrates the annual Armed Forces Day holiday with a parade in the country's capital, Naypyidaw.

Context: Protesters have rallied in cities across the country for almost two months, demanding that democracy be restored.

Comment:

https://www.rt.com/news/519388-myanmar-insurgents-warn-actions/
As the death toll from the Myanmar military's crackdown on anti-coup protesters continues to rise, some of the country's ethnic armed groups warned that they "would not just stand by and do nothing" if the killing carries on.

After at least 90 people were reportedly killed on Saturday - as the military celebrated its annual Armed Forces Day - the leader of the Restoration Council of Shan State (RCSS) Yawd Serk said, "(It) isn't an armed forces day, it's more like the day they killed people."

"The ethnic armed groups now have a similar enemy and we need to join hands and hurt those that are hurting the people. We need to join together," Serk told Reuters.
Myanmar
© Reuters
A man stands behind a barricade during a protest against the military coup, in Yangon, Myanmar March 27, 2021
The RCSS, which operates near the border with Thailand, joined a growing list of Ethnic Armed Organizations (EAO) who have condemned the February 1 coup and pledged to stand with protesters. It had previously stated that it would shelter and support victims fleeing from the violence.

Some two dozen EAOs control various regions of the country although 10 are currently signatories to a Nationwide Ceasefire Agreement. Their involvement would further stretch already thinning security force resources.

Already, a parallel government - the Committee Representing Pyidaungsu Hluttaw (CRPH) - has been set up in EAO-controlled areas. The CRPH, composed of elected officials from the ousted National League for Democracy-led (NLD) government, has reportedly begun talks with a number of EAOs.

Earlier this week, the Arakan Army (AA) - a major EAO in the Rohingya-dominated western Rakhine State which has been fighting against armed forces since 2018 - announced its support for the protest movement.

Denouncing Myanmar's military's tactics as "cruel and unacceptable," AA spokesman Khine Thu Kha said on Tuesday, "It is a great sadness that innocent people are being shot and killed all over Myanmar." He added that AA was "together...with the people."

These voices of support have come amidst growing calls from protesters for the formation of a multi-ethnic 'federal army' to protect civilians from security forces - something Serk said he was in favor of.

Despite a nationwide clampdown on mobile internet, social media sites are buzzing with messages urging for the formation of an armed force, although how and where they will find support and resources remains unknown.

Flyers calling for a 'federal army' have been spotted at protests and there are widely-circulated posts of a shield crest for the proposed army, with 14 stars to represent the country's states and regions and seven red lines that supposedly symbolize the principles of political impartiality, ethics and service to an elected government.



Noting that "59 years of Fascist-like occupation" was enough, Maung Zarna, a co-ordinator with the Free Rohingya Coalition, tweeted that he would take up arms since "fascists understand only murder, war and violence" and that the Myanmar generals were "no exception."


Since the coup, a total of 3,070 people have been arrested and 328 people have been killed, according to human rights group Assistance Association for Political Prisoners.

In a broadcast on state television, Senior General Min Aung Hlaing said, "The army seeks to join hands with the entire nation to safeguard democracy. Violent acts that affect stability and security in order to make demands are inappropriate."

The general also reiterated the military's promise to hold elections, but did not provide a timeframe.
See also:


Attention

Google exposes nine-month counter-terror hacking op by 'friendly' government, raising questions about what makes an ally

combination lock
© Pixabay / TheDigitalWay
A Google hacking team has exposed — and shut down — an expert counterterrorism hacking operation by a supposed US ally. While the report hid most details, it raised troubling questions on what constitutes an ally in cyberspace.

The tech giant's Project Zero and Threat Analysis Group hacking teams uncovered and ultimately put an end to a counter-terrorism operation being run by a US ally, according to MIT Tech Review, which detailed the internal struggle at Google over whether to publicize the incident and what it implied for future cyber-espionage (apparently, all's fair in love, war, and malware attacks).

Both Project Zero, which uncovers and exposes security vulnerabilities, and Threat Analysis Group, which tracks hacks believed to be run by governments, helped take down the "friendly" malware attack, which weaponized 11 zero-day vulnerabilities in the course of nine months. A zero-day vulnerability is a flaw that the software's creator and user are unaware exists, a security issue that can be used as a backdoor and otherwise exploited until it is discovered.

Cropping up 11 times in nine months - more frequently than a typical zero-day exploit - the attack targeted devices powered by iOS, Android, and Windows. The exploits were innovative (MIT described them as "never-before-seen techniques") and used infected websites as "watering holes" to deliver malware to unfortunate visitors. The infection process had been ongoing since early 2020.

Heart - Black

Two teen girls arrested for brutal murder of DC Uber Eats driver

Mohammad Anwar
The two teen girls, ages thirteen and fifteen, allegedly assaulted sixty-six year old Mohammad Anwar with a stun gun, before crashing his car. Anwar was killed in the incident.

NBC Washington reports that the two teens face felony murder charges.


NPC

USA Today's race and inclusion editor fired for saying Boulder shooter was 'angry white man,' claims she was punished for 'challenging whiteness'

Hemal Jhaveri USA today
USA Today's race and inclusion editor, Hemal Jhaveri, announced she was fired by the publication on Friday afternoon. Jhaveri said that she was terminated from USA Today and For The Win, a USA Today "sports media property focused exclusively on social news" that started in 2013. Jhaveri claims that she was fired because of a tweet where she assumed that the Boulder shooter was an "angry white man." The suspect in the Boulder shooting is 21-year-old Ahmad Al Aliwi Alissa, who is of Syrian descent.

Hours after the tragic massacre of 10 people at the King Scoopers grocery store on Monday in Boulder, Colorado, Jhaveri wrote on Twitter, "It's always an angry white man, always." Jhaveri was replying to a tweet from fellow sports editor, Julie DiCaro at Deadspin, who said, "Extremely tired of people's lives depending on whether a white man with an AR-15 is having a good day or not."


Comment: A 'dashed off over-generalization' about a race of people is typically called 'racist'. Scratch the surface of critical race theory, and what is easily revealed is neoracism. USA Today's mistake wasn't in being too forgiving of Jhaveri's racism. Its mistake was in creating a position in the first place that presupposes a racist ideology.