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German authorities infuriated as Munich Islamic Centre promotes beating of 'unruly' women

woman muslim burka
© Leonhard Foeger / Reuters
Germany faced a major influx of migrants from the Middle East in 2015, which was subsequently followed by a rise in crime across the country and protests by Germans who have demanded changes to migration policies.

The Munich Islamic Centre (IZM) has faced a wave of criticism after controversial content on its website, namely recommendations to husbands on how to handle conflicts within their families, were highlighted by Bayerischer Rundfunk 24. A subsection on the website, titled Wife and Family, suggested, citing the Qur'an, that a husband can beat his "unruly" spouse, albeit only as a last resort after admonishing her and rejecting her in the bedroom.

According to Bayerischer Rundfunk 24, these recommendations have been instructing visitors to the website for the last 15 years. The outlet indicated that the German Muslim Community (DMG) had promised on behalf of the IZM to make amendments to certain sections of the centre's website back in March 2019, but ultimately failed to do so. The DMG explained the delay as being due to a variety factors, such as illness of those responsible for the site's content, but vowed to fix everything within two weeks.

The revelation by the German media outlet caused outrage among local politicians. A member of the city council and of the committee on integration, Cumali Naz from the Social Democratic Party (SPD), strongly condemned the recommendations provided by IZM.

Laptop

Someone changed El Paso shooter's MyLife page from Democrat to Republican after his arrest

crusius 1
The Walmart-Cielo Vista Mall shooter in El Paso, Texas, was identified this afternoon as Patrick Crusius from Allen, Texas outside of Dallas.

Washington Examiner reporter Anna Giaritelli posted the name and a photos of the alleged shooter, sourced to law enforcement, "A law enforcement official in El Paso told me the Walmart shooter is in custody. Patrick Crusius of Dallas. Just turned 21 years old this week."


Patrick Crusius has a profile on MyLife.com.

MyLife is an American information brokerage founded in 2002 as Reunion.com. MyLife gathers personal information through public records and other sources to automatically generate a "MyLife Public Page" for each person, described by MyLife as a "complete Wikipedia-like biography on every American."

At 2:46 PM today MyLife had this profile for the deranged killer Patrick Crusius.

Comment: And the political polarization continues, seemingly confirming all the Left's worst fears about white supremacy. Moderates on both sides should do themselves a favor, calm down, and read Haidt and Lukianoff's book, Coddling of the American Mind. If they don't learn some lessons there or elsewhere, things will only get worse, which is precisely what some want to happen.

See also:


Megaphone

At odds with conservative pessimism regarding free speech on campus

Free Speech march
© Education News
The problem may seem worse than ever, but progress has been made — and there's a real shot to make more.

At a recent conference, I talked to a young college graduate who dabbles in journalism and he said, rather offhandedly, "There's always good attention paid to stories about free speech on campus." This produced a hearty laugh from me, because the overwhelming interest in campus-speech issues is a recent development.

Indeed, over my first ten years at the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education (2001-11), we begged people to pay attention to the fact that it was shockingly easy to get in trouble for what you said on campus. It is real progress that now when I bring up free speech on campus, very few people ever say, "I didn't realize it was an issue." Yet even though the issue is more prominent in public conversation than it's ever been since the emergence of "political correctness" in the late '80s and early '90s, whenever I talk to conservatives, there is often a deep sense of pessimism about what can be done about campuses.

Arrow Down

Germany reports migrant deportations often result in attacks and injuries to federal officers

Migrant deportation germany
© Reuters / Tobias Schwarz
Last year, 284 officers were attacked while carrying out deportations, and 71 of them were injured.
Foreigners slated for deportation in Germany punch and kick police officers, engage in "rehearsed" violence, and even bite off their own tongues just to avoid being sent home, a new report reveals.

Last year, 284 officers were attacked while carrying out deportations, and 71 of them were injured, German paper Welt am Sonntag reported on Sunday, citing the Federal Police.

The assaults happened during incidents related to deportation flights, for which the Federal Police is responsible. In 2017, some 274 officers were attacked while trying to deport foreigners.

The police did not specify the severity of the officers' injuries, and the report did not provide a detailed breakdown of the circumstances in which they were inflicted. In one recent case, an officer in Munich fell and broke his kneecap after a 26-year-old migrant from Sierra Leone slated for deportation had "panicked" on airstairs.

In other cases, the deportees acted more violently. Federal police union chief, Ernst Walter, who accompanied people on many deportation flights, told the paper that officers have sustained "kicks, punches and headbutts" during such operations.

Heart - Black

Modern slavery: The global business supply chain employs 40M people working in slave-like conditions

global slave labor trade

Many countries that supply consumer goods have high percentages of people working in conditions of slavery, enduring long shifts and exhausting conditions without the choice to leave. The fashion industry is notoriously marred by the use of forced labor, as is the tech sector.
Slavery has been illegal worldwide for just about four decades, since Mauritania finally abolished it in 1981.

But slavery didn't end there. According to the latest report by the Walk Free Initiative, presented today (July 17) at the UN Headquarters in New York, there were 40.3 million people living in conditions of slavery in 2018, most of them women.

There isn't an official legal definition of modern slavery, but the UN describes it as the condition of people whose work "is performed involuntarily and under the menace of any penalty." Modern slaves can be coerced to work through explicit measures like violence, but also through subtler means like financial pressure, or by limiting someone's movement by retaining their identification.

While it's easy to believe that slavery is limited to poor or underdeveloped countries, or countries with a questionable human rights record, it is actually happening everywhere. Recently, for example, there was two cases where diplomats kept staff in their US residencies who were working in conditions of slavery.

The UN and its member states committed to eliminating slavery by 2030, along with human trafficking, forced labor, and child labor. The commitments are part of the UN's sustainable development goals — a set of ideals the world's governments pledged to tackle in 2015.

Comment: Interesting that foaming at the mouth liberals who busy themselves tweeting about racism and multiple 'phobias' don't choose to focus on this real problem affecting millions around the world.


Heart - Black

'Passport for migration': DNA tests reveal migrant trafficked toddler to Texas border by falsely claiming to be his father

Migrant Texas border child trafficking, fake father migrant Texasw

Border Patrol agent holds a toddler brought into the United States illegally by a Central American migrant.
Customs and Border Protection posted an image on its social media page on Wednesday showing a Central American toddler whom it says was brought into the country by a migrant who falsely claimed to be his father.

The picture shows a Border Patrol agent holding the infant boy, whose right hand is gripping a small package of crackers.

CBP says the picture was taken at a migrant processing facility in Donna, Texas.

'On July 17, McAllen USBP agents encountered a group of 12 people comprised of family units and unaccompanied children who turned themselves in,' CBP wrote in its Instagram post.

'Record checks revealed an individual traveling with his alleged son had 2 previous immigration arrests in El Paso Sector just in the past month.

Given the recent apprehensions and the age of the child, agents requested the assistance of HSI to administer a rapid DNA test.

'The test revealed there is no parent-child relationship. The man admitted he was not the child's father, but knew the mother and had permission to take the child.

Attention

9 killed as gunman opens fire in Dayton bar district, hours after Texas massacre -UPDATE: 10 dead

Police officers in Dayton, Ohio
© Matthew Hatcher / Getty Images / AFP
Police officers in Dayton, Ohio.
Nine people have been killed in a mass shooting in downtown Dayton, Ohio while 26 others were injured. The gunman was taken out by officers responding to the incident.

The shooting happened in the area of East 5th Street in the Oregon District of Dayton in the early hours of Sunday local time, and just hours after another mass shooting in El Paso, Texas.

Dayton police said the shooter used some kind of a long gun in the attack and most likely acted alone. They said they were working on identifying the gunman and establishing the motives behind his rampage.

Miami Valley Hospital spokesperson Terrea Little confirmed that they had received 16 victims from the shooting, but wouldn't provide further details. The police initially reported that there were 16 injured survivors, but Dayton Mayor Nan Whaley later said 26 people were hurt in the gun violence.

Comment: UPDATE from RT: Dayton shooter used Kalashnikov-type rifle, 10 dead - mayor
The Dayton, Ohio mass shooting suspect used a Kalashnikov-type rifle to kill 9 people before being killed by police, the city mayor said. Local hospitals treated 27 people in the aftermath, and some remain in critical condition.

Mayor Nan Whaley and other Dayton officials gave an update on the night shooting in the city's historic center. The Kalashnikov-wielding attacker was wearing body armor and had several high-capacity magazines for his rifle, the mayor said. He was shot dead by police officers, who arrived at the scene less than a minute after the massacre began.

Of the 27 people who were brought to hospitals or walked in with injuries in the aftermath of the shooting, 15 have been discharged. Five patients are in critical or serious conditions, with multiple surgeries scheduled to treat them.

Whaley said the Oregon district, where the shooting took place, will be open later in the day.
See also: Murderous rampage unfolds at Walmart in El Paso, Texas: Eyewitnesses report multiple gunmen - UPDATE: 20 dead


Info

Why I want to start a free speech trade union

union
Last April, the historian Niall Ferguson called for a NATO of the pen. Inspired by the 1949 North Atlantic Treaty in which 12 Western democracies agreed that "an armed attack against one or more...shall be considered an attack against them all," he suggested that "professional thinkers — academics, public intellectuals, writers of any stripe" should sign a "Non-conformist Academic Treaty" in which they promise to come to each other's defense if one of them is "called out" on social media or "investigated" by their employer. Among the victims of these modern-day witch-hunts Ferguson cited Bret Weinstein, Bruce Gilley, Nigel Biggar, Roland Fryer, Samuel Abrams, Peter Boghossian, Jordan Peterson, and Roger Scruton, and said the lesson was clear: "we either hang together or we hang separately."

This struck me as an excellent idea, but I could also see a practical difficulty. One of the reasons NATO succeeded in deterring Soviet expansion into Western Europe is because it didn't require any individual country to make the first move in response to Soviet aggression. Rather, NATO provided an institutional framework that enabled the signatories of the treaty to respond collectively, thereby pooling the risk.

Comment: See also:


House

California homeschool numbers quadruple in past three years

homeschooling
© shutterstock
Whether it be a perceived political indoctrination, a disagreement with vaccine laws, or increasingly large classroom sizes, homeschooling numbers in California are breaking at the seams. The surge in California homeschooling, for many, is considered proof of a state with an overreaching and broken system.

Back in 2016, California passed one of the toughest mandatory vaccine laws in the nation. At the time, there was nothing like SB-277 anywhere in the nation. With SB-276, a bill that would allow the state's public health department to review medical vaccine exemptions, waiting in the wings for passage, many parents remain on edge. Even celebrities like Jessica Beil are protesting SB-276 for what they feel is an overreaching law that intimidates medical professionals.


In California, there's a vaccine divide. The state, on one side, is attempting to reduce exemptions. Parents seeking medical freedom are on the other side hoping to expand choices.

Comment: There are many reasons parents may wish to homeschool their children, some mentioned in the above article, but many others as well. That the practice would be demonized and smeared is evidence for what public schools really are - indoctrination camps. "No child left behind" takes on a new meaning when considered in this regard.

See also:


Dollars

Bayer CEO opens door to Roundup settlement as lawsuits swell

bayer logo sign
© Krisztian Bocsi/Bloomberg
Bayer AG Chief Executive Officer Werner Baumann said he'd consider a "financially reasonable" settlement of litigation over the weedkiller Roundup as the caseload swells and the company's shares slump anew.

The number of lawsuits from people in the U.S. who say the herbicide caused them to develop cancer rose by about 5,000 to 18,400, Bayer said in a statement. The company also revealed more troubles at its crop-science division on Tuesday after bad weather curbed demand from farmers.

Quarterly sales and earnings missed estimates and the German company questioned its ability to meet its full-year forecast. The shares fell 3.4 percent in Frankfurt.

Comment: Allowing for a settlement would be letting the company off too easily. They deserve to be liquidated and the spoils given to those who have suffered under their poisons.

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