Society's ChildS


People

Saudi women launch Twitter campaign to end male guardianship

Saudi women
© Flickr/minxin76
Tens of thousands of Saudi women took to Twitter after Human Rights Watch (HRW) launched a social campaign aimed against cultural paternalism and male guardianship in Saudi Arabia, a country notorious for its oppression of human rights.

The effort was triggered after HRW released a July report on the state of women's rights in the country. The watchdog report highlighted that so-called male guardianship, a strict form of gender-based cultural domination, is "the most significant impediment to realizing women's rights in the country, effectively rendering adult women legal minors who cannot make key decisions for themselves."

Comment: Saudi Arabia's male guardianship still limits women's rights - reforms on paper only


People

After huge Venezuela protest march, government says foiled coup plot

Venezuela's Foreign Minister Delcy Rodriguez
© REUTERS/Marco BelloVenezuela's Foreign Minister Delcy Rodriguez speaks during a meeting with the Diplomatic Corps in Caracas, Venezuela September 2, 2016.
Venezuela's socialist government said on Friday it thwarted a coup plot this week as opponents planned to build on their biggest protest in more than a decade with further street action demanding a referendum to remove the president.

Buoyed by rallies in Caracas on Thursday that drew hundreds of thousands, the opposition coalition is planning more marches on Sept. 7 to demand a plebiscite against President Nicolas Maduro this year.

But with the election board dragging out the process and Maduro vowing there will be no such vote in 2016, it is hard to see how the opposition can force it.

"It was the day they wanted: massive, peaceful and inspirational. But that success leaves a key question in the air: 'What next?'" wrote pollster Luis Vicente Leon in the aftermath of Thursday's opposition-dubbed 'Takeover of Caracas'.

Camcorder

Youtube censorship?: Video site inexplicably removes ad money, angers users

youtube
© Osman Orsal / Reuters
YouTube content creators are up in arms over the video website removing their ability to earn money through advertisements. Many are also confused as to why their work is no longer considered "appropriate."

Beginning late Wednesday night, the Google subsidiary began removing monetization from many videos as part of a decision to better enforce its community guidelines, including what content is considered inappropriate for advertising.

YouTube did not notify its users beforehand that it would suddenly enforce its guidelines more stringently, leading many content creators to believe it was a new policy.

YouTuber Philip DeFranco, who has more than 4.5 million subscribers, had at least 40 videos demonetized. He described the feeling as "a little bit like getting stabbed in the back after 10 years."

Clipboard

Critical stories Americans weren't told of while the corporate media bashed Colin Kaepernick

Kaepernick’s protest
We have become a nation obsessed by often-hollow symbology, and as this week's frothy contention over San Francisco 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick's protest refusal to stand for the national anthem, that obsession by corporate media and the public comes at the expense of confronting real issues for the purposes of reform.

In fact, the decision to sit out the Star Spangled Banner has a pointed nuance even Kaepernick and his supporters might not realize — Francis Scott Key's song, penned during the war of 1812, glorifies slavery and oppression. Its rarely-sung third verse, as noted by the Intercept, states:
"No refuge could save the hireling and slave

From the terror of flight or the gloom of the grave,

And the star-spangled banner in triumph doth wave,

O'er the land of the free and the home of the brave."

Cloud Grey

Tarmac altercation and press disputes mar opening of Obama's trip to China

Barack Obama for the G20 summit.
© APBarack Obama arrives on Air Force One at Hangzhou Xiaoshan International Airport in Hangzhou in eastern China's Zhejiang province on Sept. 3 for the G20 summit.
President Barack Obama's trip to China for the G20 summit Saturday opened with an unusual tarmac altercation involving Chinese and U.S. officials, including national security adviser Susan Rice.

After Air Force One landed in Hangzhou, a Chinese official began shouting at White House staff after the traveling American press contingent was brought onto the tarmac, according to pool reports.

The Chinese official also attempted to block Rice and Deputy National Security Adviser Ben Rhodes after they lifted a blue rope holding back press and walked to the other side of it, closer to Obama.

Apple Red

Principal of Chicago's #1 rated school writes scathing resignation letter to mayor Rahm Emanuel, rebukes "ideological and politically driven policies"

Blaine Elementary School
Troy Anthony LaRaviere was, until this week, the principal of Chicago Magazine's #1 neighborhood school, Blaine Elementary School. LaRaviere became the principal of Blaine back in 2010, saying he would bring the 6th ranked school to the top of the list and he would use empirical evidence to support the school practices he and his fellow educators applied to their student body.

About two years into his tenure, after dealing quietly with the mountains of bullshit that Chicago Public Schools (CPS) get from up high, he began speaking out about his misgivings with what he felt was mismanagement. When Emanuel announced sweeping budget cuts to education a couple of years ago, Troy LaRaviere publicly criticized Emanuel and others. This led to LaRaviere being chastised publicly, and the beginnings of a campaign to oust LaRaviere began, you know, corporate gangster-style.

Troy LaRaviere has been battling, on principle, to stay principal the past couple of months, but the announcement of his school's success—in a publication that Emanuel and others laud—LaRaviere was given the opportunity to resign on his terms and in an open letter addressed to Mayor Rahm Emanuel. It's one of the best pieces of writing on public education and the fundamental problems with education "reformers" in both the Republican and more importantly the Democratic Party. On his school's accomplishments LaRaviere writes:

Comment: That Rahm Emanuel is still in politics at all is a wonder - given his incredibly destructive track record:


Ambulance

Over 120 Canadians opted for euthanasia since law passed in June

Doctor at hospital bed
© Philippe Wojazer / Reuters
Some 120 people have opted for doctor-assisted death, or euthanasia, in Canada since the State Senate passed a controversial law, allowing patients to voluntarily end their lives. The actual number may be higher as the government has not started an official count.

According to the broadcaster CBC News, which tried to obtain data from all 13 of Canada's provinces, most of the cases were recorded by coroners in Ontario (49) and British Columbia (46), with Alberta, Manitoba and Saskatchewan reporting 27 medically assisted deaths between them.

However, the actual figures may be significantly higher, as the remaining eight provinces were unable or did not agree to share the information citing the possible "infringement of confidentiality or distress for families who may identify with the numbers."

Official figures have not been drawn up, as Canada's federal government has not started officially tracking assisted suicides. The authorities have also yet to come up with regulations as to what information should be recorded when a person demands a medically assisted death.

Comment: Further reading:


Heart - Black

Charlie Hebdo's new caricature depicts Italian quake victims as pasta & lasagna

Italy earthquake aftermath
© Stefano Rellandini / Reuters
Italian politicians and the public are fuming over a "disgusting" satirical cartoon published by controversial French weekly Charlie Hebdo, which made fun of the victims of an earthquake that left nearly 300 people dead and obliterated entire towns.

Charlie Hebdo, which made headlines in 2015 after a terrorist attack that followed the publication of a series of controversial Mohammad cartoons, has just released another controversial satire.


Comment: Hundreds of people are killed in an earthquake, and the sickos at Charlie Hebdo call it 'lasagna'. What a disgusting display of pathological humor. All together now, "Je ne suis pas Charlie!"


Fire

Oil fires cast black cloud over Iraqi town retaken from Islamic State militants

Oil fires in Iraq
© Reuters
It gets darker earlier these days in the northern Iraqi town of Qayyara, which Islamic State militants abandoned about a week ago after setting fire to many of the region's oil wells.

Smoke billowing into the sky during a Reuters visit on Monday blotted out the sun in central districts hours before nightfall, producing an apocalyptic scene in this desert settlement which lacks electricity amid 49 degree Celsius (120°F) temperatures.

The Iraqi military's recapture of Qayyara, along with a nearby airbase in July, is the latest and most significant advance in a U.S.-backed push to Mosul, the largest city under Islamic State control anywhere in its self-proclaimed caliphate.

Baghdad wants to retake Mosul before the end of the year, which it says will effectively end the militants' presence in Iraq more than two years after they seized a third of its territory. Some officials from countries in the U.S.-led coalition supporting the Iraqi forces have said that timeline may be too ambitious.

Comment: Remember the 1991 Iraq war when Kuwait's oil was set on fire by the retreating Iraqi army?

Kuwait oil fires



Heart - Black

UK health officials to bar routine operations for obese people and smokers

People exercising
© Juan Carlos Ulate / Reuters
People suffering from obesity and smokers could be denied basic operations across the UK's National Health Service (NHS), according to health officials in North Yorkshire.

Patients with a BMI (body mass index, weight in kilograms divided by height in meters squared) above 30 will be refused most operations for up to a year. The new rules may be applied to hip and knee operations, which are two of the most common surgeries carried out by the NHS.

If the patients lose 10 percent of their weight, the operations could be allowed to take place more quickly, officials added.

Smokers who refuse to kick the habit will be denied operations for six months, but may get to the waiting list earlier - by proving that they had quit smoking and had gone without cigarettes for at least eight weeks.