Society's Child
Transport Minister Omar Alghabra announced today that the federal government will soon require that all public servants be vaccinated — a mandate that he said will also be implemented by Crown corporations and other federally regulated businesses in the coming weeks.
While Canada's vaccination rate is among the highest in the world — 81 per cent of all eligible Canadians have had at least one dose — Alghabra said the country "must do better."
"We need to reach as many Canadians as we possibly can," he said.
After a blitz in April and May, the number of new first doses being administered daily has been stuck at well under 100,000 since mid-June.
That isn't a confession, a disclaimer, or a warning. I am not ashamed of writing propaganda. Most everything you see and read on the Internet, and in newspapers, and on television, and in textbooks, and novels, and on advertising billboards, and everywhere else, is propaganda. There is nothing wrong with propaganda. The question is who is doing it, and what they are doing it for. Here's the definition in the Cambridge Dictionary:
"information, ideas, opinions, or images, often only giving one part of an argument, that are broadcast, published, or in some other way spread with the intention of influencing people's opinions"That is what the column you are reading is ... an attempt to influence people's opinions. Of course, that isn't all it is. Nothing is ever only one thing. But it is absolutely propaganda. And so is everything else that you will read today.
Well, it didn't take too long for Bloomberg to report that the spread of the delta variant could "lead to a repeat of last year's shipping nightmares", and for confirmation look no further than the Port of Los Angeles, the nation's busiest post, which in June saw its volumes dip because of a Covid outbreak at the Yantian port in China, and which is bracing for another potential decline because of the latest shutdown at the Ningbo-Zhoushan port in China, a spokesman said.
Anton Posner, chief executive officer of supply-chain management company Mercury Resources, said that many companies chartering ships are already adding Covid contract clauses as insurance so they won't have to pay for stranded ships.
Comment: Note this report is from the 7th of August.
At a live briefing, Hardalias said that 64 fires are still burning.
The most important ones, he said, were in Attica, Evia island, Ilia (including in Ancient Olympia), Messinia, Mani (the latter three in the Peloponnese) and Tolofona, Fokida, Fthiotida (all in Central Greece), as well as the island of Crete, and Grevena (Macedonia).
He said all available forces were taking part in efforts, and thanked all firefighters and volunteers working under very difficult and often risky conditions in unprecedented times.
Comment: Voice of America reports:
Arsonists Behind More than Half of Italy's Wildfires, Officials SayThe News 24 reports:
About 800 wildfires have struck Italy this year, tripling the normal annual average and causing millions of dollars in damage. But more than half of them were likely started by arsonists or farmers breaching fire rules, authorities say.
A 50-year-old sheep and goat farmer was arrested last week after a surveillance camera captured him setting undergrowth afire Thursday near the town of Montesarchio, 48 kilometers from Naples in southern Italy, near to where another wildfire raged last year.
Local officials say the farmer likely wanted to renew his pasture by burning it off in defiance of strict rules regulating such burns. They say he tried to get rid of his lighter when he spotted Carabinieri officers later heading toward him.© Cronache Nuoresi
General view of a burnt area in the aftermath of a wildfire in Cuglieri, Sardinia, Italy, July 25, 2021, in this screen grab obtained from a social media video.
For law enforcement authorities, even more troubling are the arsonists.
Last week, Roberto Cingolani, minister for ecological transition, told parliament that 57.4% of Italy's recent wildfires were caused by arson, and 13.7% the result of unintentional human action.
"More than 70% of the fires in Italy are our responsibility," he said. "Less than 2% are caused naturally, for example, by a lightning strike. For 4.4%, the cause is undetermined, and 22% are unclassifiable situations in which it is difficult to know what triggered the fire," he added.
With the earth being parched, the fires quickly take hold, Italian officials say, noting that climate change has brought unprecedented high temperatures to the country, drying out the land and making it even more combustible.
Note that it's not just high temperatures that create those conditions, it's extreme drought.
Most of the wildfires have been in the southern regions of Lazio, Campania, Puglia, Calabria, Basilicata and Sicily. Blazes have also occurred in the central provinces of Tuscany, Umbria and Abruzzo, where on Sunday vacationers were evacuated after a wildfire tore through a pine wood near the coastal city of Pescara.
Wildfires on the island of Sardinia have been described by the local media as "apocalyptic," and by the end of the month will likely have caused more economic damage than the costs from blazes in 1983 and 1994. Sardinia has declared an official "state of calamity" and called for more central government assistance.
According to Coldiretti, the country's main agricultural association, the extreme heat and a lack of rainfall are causing a "worrying drought that is decimating crops but also favors the spread of fires and the action of arsonists."© Cronache Nuoresi
General view of a burnt area in the aftermath of a wildfire in Cuglieri, Sardinia, Italy, July 25, 2021, in this screen grab obtained from a social media video.
The association said in a statement that the economic cost was incalculable from the fires, which have "destroyed tens of thousands of hectares of woods and Mediterranean scrub with charred trees, olive groves, destroyed pastures and led to a real slaughter of animals."
Coldiretti also said it believes that 60% of the fires are lit by arsonists, some with mafia ties, in disputes over land or in a bid to force farmers to sell to make way for industrial development.
Mafia motives don't explain the fires in Greece though, so it's likely it's not just organised crime.
"Arsonists are devastating the Apulian countryside," Coldiretti President Savino Muraglia said.
A pair of arsonists were arrested last week in Troina in central Sicily, where solar power plants are being built.
"We must pay close attention to the hypothesis that solar interests want to undermine farmers," Troina Mayor Fabio Venezia told La Repubblica newspaper.
Arson investigations have also begun in Lazio, Calabria and Sicily, where Claudio Fava, head of the regional anti-mafia commission, said at a recent hearing, "We must take note that in Sicily, it is not barbecues and brushwood causing these fires."
Fava said 98% of the island's fires are being caused by "willful misconduct."
Other fires are thought to be started because of personal disputes and grudges. In Puglia, a young farmer near Lecce appeared to have fallen afoul of some of his neighbors in June. A fire burned much of his land, tools and irrigation system.
Militant Kurdish group takes responsibility for forest fires in TurkeyWhilst it's true that some areas are experiencing extreme weather conditions that create the ideal conditions for fires, and there's dangerous 'environmental' policies that prevent tried and tested fire management, like controlled burnings, it also seems to be the case that unusual crimes, including arson, and other violent attacks, are on the rise too, so the theory that a significant number of these fires could be due to arson seems plausible:
The radical initiative "Children of Fire", which allegedly works with the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK), has committed itself to the forest fires in Turkey. Its statement said the group had launched a "fire rebellion" against the Turkish government.
The radical Kurdish initiative "Children of Fire", which is allegedly close to the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK), has taken responsibility for the devastating forest fires in southern Turkey.
In the one from the Kurdish portal Young News The group's published statement states that the reason for the arson attacks are "the fascist Turks who have invaded our country, exploit it and destroy our nature by burning it out" and "spit blood, death and brutality on us Kurds":
"You will see our anger and vengeance in the burning cities, in the ashes and smoke-covered skies, in the mountains and plains sunk in flames."
According to the declaration, the enemy - meaning the Turkish government - "despite all our humanitarian approaches" insists on the policy of genocide against the Kurds. The group has therefore called a "fire rebellion" against the Turkish government.
Regarding the suspicion that the forest fires could be traced back to human activity, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan said:
"We are thoroughly investigating the causes of the forest fires. If there are such traitors who set their own motherland on fire, they will be severely punished for it."
The forest fires in Turkey's southern provinces, where most of the country's resorts are located, have been going on since Wednesday. Six people were killed and more than 400 injured. Because of the fires, numerous tourists were evacuated from hotels in Bodrum and Marmaris. The number of forest fires has now dropped from 107 to five as most have been successfully contained.
The radical initiative "Children of Fire" has repeatedly carried out arson attacks in the forests of Turkey for several years as a reaction to the government's policy against the Kurdish movement and the PKK.
- California college professor set arson fire near Dixie Fire, authorities say
- Two female Islamist terrorists sentenced to 25+ years for Notre Dame 'bombing' attempt in 2016
- Turkey's migrant busses, tear gas attacks and fake news stunts at the Greek border
- Strategy of Tension in Sweden? Twelve bombings in twenty-four days
Debate on the measure began Wednesday evening before State Senator Carol Alvarado began speaking continuously without being able to lean on her desk, drink water, eat or use the restroom. She wrapped just before 9 a.m. local time on Thursday.
Lawmakers in Texas's upper house voted 18-11 in favor of the bill aimed at enhancing election security shortly after she stopped.
'Instead of making it easier to vote, [this bill] makes it easier to intimidate. Instead of making it harder to cheat, it makes it harder to vote,' Alvarado said in one of her last statements.
Comment: The bill might make it easier to intimidate? Bills address actionable circumstances voted into order. There was nothing remotely heroic about the sudden Democratic exodus - a blatant dereliction of sworn duty with every attempt to intimidate.
See also:
- Tucker Carlson: Dems threaten to fly to Washington, prevent Senate vote on SCOTUS nominee by laying down and blocking the door
- Texas Supreme Court smacks down activist judge, rules AWOL democrats can be arrested upon return
Video taken this week by a source in the Rio Grande Valley Sector shows immigrants in a holding facility packed in tightly, with some not wearing masks. This has lead to Border Patrol having to take people apprehended elsewhere in the sector to the temporary holding site underneath the Anzalduas International Bridge in Mission, Texas, where outside temperatures reach above 100 degrees on a daily basis.
"They are way past capacity - so aliens sit outside because where do you take them? Logistically it's a nightmare - people want to go to the bathroom, need to eat, women need to breastfeed, and the list goes on...
This has surpassed the point of sustainability - this is lunacy."
Comment: A whole lot of hot summer to go and no relief in sight...this is human torture - a catastrophe on an international scale. Where are the sanctions on the Biden administration?

An officer pays respect to Ella French at a memorial in Chicago
First Deputy Police Superintendent Eric Carter enraged cops who gathered Saturday night to bid farewell to the late officer, the Chicago Sun-Times reported.
"We don't have 20 minutes for this s — ," said Carter, who demanded that the ambulance bearing her body be taken directly to the medical examiner's office without waiting for the Emerald Society's tradition, according to the paper.
"We're not waiting on the bagpipes. Go ahead and get the vehicle inside. Take it all the way inside. Do not stop," Carter is heard saying in a recording, the Sun-Times reported.
In the 70-page document, issued to schools across the country on Thursday, teachers are instructed not to question students who declare that they are transgender or tell them "it's just a phase". Instead, they are urged to "be affirming" of the students' feelings.
Other "tips" for teachers include asking these students "what name and pronoun" they would prefer to be addressed by and to check if that is "all the time or in certain circumstances".
As well, teachers are encouraged to "ask reflective questions that allow young people to express themselves, explore their gender identity and identify their needs".
The number of French nationals openly disagreeing with the recent introduction of a so-called 'health pass' in the country has doubled since mid-July, with the movement showing no signs of running out of steam, police intelligence services have reportedly warned the government. In a note sent on Thursday, France's central territorial intelligence said it estimates that at least 250,000 people will rally over the weekend, Franceinfo's Radio France reports.
Many families are set to participate, intelligence analysis has shown, with parents being "generally fed up" with school closures during the pandemic and uncertain of health rules at educational institutions at the start of the new school year.
That's according to Anna Lapushkina, the head of the press service of the Moscow transport department, who noted that the payment innovation should be the next step in speeding up passenger traffic through the busy transport network.
Earlier this year, Metro security head Andrey Kichigin revealed that passengers would be able to pay for rides with their faces before the end of 2021.
Now, according to Lapushkina, testing for the service has sampled up, with one line of the Metro now accepting facial payments.


















Comment: See also: It's time for mass civil disobedience against lawless lockdown orders