Society's Child
The search term "Condom Challenge" will bring up more than 279,000 results on YouTube, most of which show young people performing this gross and dangerous trick.
In the stunt, a teen takes a condom up one nostril and attempt to pull it out of their mouth or out of the other nostril. This is actually a trick that has been performed by professionals in sideshows for generations. However, none of these kids are professionals and many of them are getting sick and risking permanent damage to their bodies.
In a recent column for Forbes, Bruce Y. Lee, a Johns Hopkins professor said, "anything else that goes up your nose can damage the sensitive inner lining of your nose, cause an allergic reaction, or result in an infection."
Doctor Carol Cooper told The Sun that this stunt could even kill someone.

A 3D-printed Twitter logo displayed in front of Russian flag, October 27, 2017.
Eagle-eyed Ben Nimmo, a fellow at the Atlantic Council, has tweeted advice for Twitter users to help them identify "Russian troll-factory accounts" on the social media platform.
What gives the Russian trolls away, Nimmo advises, is their tendency to use imperfect English. For example, Nimmo highlights the "inability" of so-called Russian trolls to use the words 'a' or 'the' because the Russian language itself does not use definite or indefinite articles.
The Persei shopping mall has caught fire in Moscow's east on April 4, evacuation is underway and there are casualties, an emergency services source told Sputnik.
According to preliminary information, the fire started on the fourth floor of the building.
"The fire was given the 2nd rank of complexity, there are injured, visitors are evacuated by the rescue ladder," a source in the local emergency services told Sputnik.
Comment: Here's a list of some of the major fires in Russia so far this year:
- Fire filmed engulfing high-rise apartments in Chechnya, Russia
- 53 dead, dozens of children missing after tragic mall blaze in Kemerovo, Russia - conflicting reports
- Post-apocalyptic scene: Fire-hit Russian wax museum is the stuff of nightmares
- Russian warship catches fire in Far East port, crew members safely evacuated
- 1 person killed, another hospitalized in massive apartment block fire in Russia's Tyumen

Muslih Sheikh Khalil, 24, is treated at Gaza City’s al-Shifa hospital for an injury caused by a bullet that fragmented in his leg. He is among 800 people injured when Israeli forces opened fire with live ammunition at Palestinians taking part in Land Day rallies along the Gaza-Israel boundary, 30 March; Sixteen Palestinians died by Israeli fire
This article contains graphic images.
Palestinians are calling for escalating global campaigns to isolate Israel after its army killed 16 people in the Gaza Strip and wounded almost 1,500 others.
Meanwhile, Israel has rejected calls for an international investigation and its defense minister has commended soldiers on Friday's slaughter.
"Evoking memories of the South African apartheid regime's massacre of peaceful protesters in Sharpeville in 1960, Israel's military committed a new massacre against Palestinian civilians as they were peacefully commemorating Palestinian Land Day," the Palestinian Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions National Committee (BNC) said Monday.

Russian President Vladimir Putin pauses during a news conference in Ankara, Turkey, April 3, 2018
"Tomorrow we convene a session of the Executive Council of the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons in order to sort out this situation in detail. We have prepared at least 20 questions for discussion. We hope that this discussion will put an end to this issue," Putin said in Ankara, where he held a joint press conference with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.
In a rare comment on the case, in which the UK is accusing Moscow of poisoning former double agent Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia with a military-grade nerve agent, Putin said he was baffled by how quickly the incident turned into a full-blown attack on Russia.
Comment:
- Russia's 13 questions to OPCW over Skripal case
- 20 more questions that need to be answered about the Skripal case
- The UK's narrative in Skripal case has discrepancies - but dissent is not allowed
- Russian Foreign Ministry: Analysis of Skripal case suggests UK intel services involved in incident
- We Can Actively Assume That Skripal Was Poisoned by The British Government
A jury found ex-attorney Mark Benavides guilty on six counts of continuous trafficking of persons on Tuesday.
Benavides is accused of trading legal services for sex with his female clients, then recording those sexual encounters.
During the trial, San Antonio Police Department detective Manual Morales testified that police found a filing cabinet at Benavides' home containing 246 of what the detective called "pornographic DVDs" that showed Benavides having sex with women who police said were Benavides' clients.
Some of the graphic and sexually explicit videos were played for jurors. A video was so graphic that a female juror fainted as the panel left the courtroom last Tuesday.
Syrian soldiers have found documented proof of the secret cooperation between a US-based company and terrorists in Syria in the tunnels discovered after the liberation of East Ghouta, the Fars news agency reports, citing anonymous source in the army. The source refused to give the name of the company, due to the sensitivity of the information and the fact that the investigation is still ongoing. But he reassured that the documents are corroborative and prove that the terrorists were funded and even paid regularly by the US organization.
On Sunday Syrian Catholics celebrated the Easter holiday, marking the resurrection of Jesus. The service was also held at the Damascus Patriarchal Cathedral of the Dormition of Our Lady (the so-called Az-Zeytun church).
"It's the first time in years that I cry with happiness. We pray and feel safe. We're not afraid for our children anymore," Sirin Dahi, who's come to Az-Zeytun church to celebrate Easter, told Sputnik.
"Today's holiday is highlighted by the joy of the Syrian Army's victory in Eastern Ghouta. We're happy that we're safe to celebrate Easter," Lin Istanum, a young Syrian, said.
This is par for course in the immensely plot hole-riddled Skripal case, which since the story broke has been an endless barrage of ever-changing contradictory narratives the details of which nobody is certain of to any degree at all... except that Russia definitely did it.
We've been told that the Novichok was planted in Yulia Skripal's suitcase. We were told that it was administered via the air vents in their car. We were told that it was delivered by a weaponized miniature drone. We were told that the Novichok was smeared on the family's car door handle. Now it's either the house door or Russian buckwheat cereal, depending on who you're reading.
Comment:
- Stating the obvious: Moscow suspects UK may have staged Skripal poisoning to rally people against Russia
- We Can Actively Assume That Skripal Was Poisoned by The British Government
- 'Absurd': Russia ridicules EU Council's weasel-worded statement on Skripal case
- Boris Johnson admits British Government has stocks of nerve agent used to poison Skripal
The headline leads you to believe that, finally, maybe there might be a discussion of this existential question with a (sadly) obvious answer, but that would be delusional. In reality, the Times is not asking the question. It mocks you into thinking the question is a legitimate one. The real title should be: "Muslim Grievances, Why We Are Right to Whine After Jihadis Attack."
The piece is not written by a legitimate, reasoned, and brilliant scholar of Islam like, say, Ibn Waraq, Bat Ye'or, or Robert Spencer. No, this absurd propaganda is by one of the Times' resident shills for Islam, Atossa Araxia Abrahmian, coming in form of a review of Journey Into Europe: Islam, Immigration, and Identity, the latest installment in Islamic studies professor Akbar Ahmed's series on Muslims around the world.
Comment: This is a very complex issue. Can Islamic civilization coexist side by side with European civilization? Probably not on equal terms, depending on whether we are considering a scenario in Europe or in a Middle Eastern country - and which country. If in Europe, it is the Islamic part that needs to change and adapt to local standards; it is after all the 'guest culture', so to speak, and as the minority, it cannot expect the majority to adapt to them. If in the Middle East, it depends on which country. Syria, for example, a country with a secular government, had for many years conditions that allowed different Christian and Muslim sects to coexist in peace - until this order was disrupted by external groups of mercenaries and fanatics. In constrast, a country like Saudi Arabia is a totalitarian theocratic monarchy that completely cancels the possibility. Furthermore, Islamic culture is not a monolith - sunnis, shias and wahabis are different - and the same can be said of Christianism.
Speaking of Saudi Arabia, and to complicate the matter further, consider the implications of Mohammed Bin Salman's recent revelations to the Washington Post:
Saudi prince MBS: 'Anglo-Americans asked us to spread Extremist Islam to defeat Russia in Cold War'












Comment: Ben Nimmo is propagandist tool and working the troll factory himself! :wink: