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Russia is prepared to stay online amid global blackout as crucial internet law comes into effect

connected world
© Pixabay / Pete Linforth
The new measures will make sure the internet does not collapse in Russia even if hostile nations decide to cut it off from the worldwide web completely, lawmakers say.

The legislation, called the 'Sovereign Internet Bill' during its development stage, essentially requires internet companies to install government-provided equipment that would make traffic flow only through servers located and registered in Russia. This would allow communication and exchange of data between Russian users to go on unimpeded if they suddenly become cut off from servers located abroad.

The step will help defend the country against cyberattacks, which are becoming more damaging and widespread. The lawmakers also said the regulations will ensure that the Russian segment of the web, the Runet, continues to function smoothly if isolated from the rest of the world.

Internet service providers from now on must also run regular cybersecurity tests and drills. The head of the IT committee in the State Duma, the parliament's lower house, Leonid Levin, said these tests "will not be noticed by the ordinary users." The cost of internet access will not go up, since the equipment will be paid for by the state, he added.

The law prompted concerns that Moscow may use it to control the flow of information and censor online content. Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev dismissed the fears, saying Russia is not going to erect a Chinese-style 'great firewall'.

Propaganda

'NY Times' produces a weak report on the Israeli soldier sentenced to 1 month in prison for murdering a Palestinian boy

gaza mourners
© Mahmoud Ajour/APA Images
Relatives of Othman Helles who was shot dead by Israeli troops during clashes at Gaza-Israel fence mourn during his funeral in Gaza city on July 14, 2018.
The New York Times did the bare minimum today in reporting on the Israeli soldier who was sentenced to only one month in prison for murdering a young Gazan demonstrator last year. The victim was a 14-year-old boy, Othman Helles, and video evidence showed he was clearly unarmed. In the print edition, the Times headline did not include the shocking short prison sentence, and the Times used some of its other techniques to minimize the damage to Israel's reputation.

Use the passive voice: The second paragraph reports that ". . . hundreds of Palestinians were killed during the [Great March of Return] protests. . ." Why not "Israeli soldiers killed 183 Gazans and wounded another 9204. Gazans killed 1 Israeli and wounded 11."

Ignore the leading Israeli human rights organization: B'Tselem has issued impassioned warnings ever since the Israeli snipers first opened fire on Gazans back in 2018, including calling on soldiers to disobey orders to shoot. And just the other day, B'Tselem accused the Israeli military of wrongly dropping inquiries into 3 other killings and said the probes had only been originally opened to give "an illusion of a functioning apparatus for seeking accountability."

Cover up Israel's vicious right wing: No doubt Israeli settler/colonists and others are already blasting the one-month sentence as too harsh. Let's hear from them.

On the plus side, Times reporter David Halbfinger did give the victim's father a chance to speak. Rami Helles said that he feared the Israeli soldier's light punishment would continue to "encourage his colleagues to kill in cold blood."

Comment: Those figures bear repeating. 183 Gazans killed, 9204 wounded. 1 Israeli killed, 11 wounded. Israel is a rogue, murderous state. And the IDF soldier shouldn't have gotten only 1 month in prison. He should be imprisoned for life, or executed. But when the leaders of the country are just as criminal and murderous as the soldiers, you can't expect justice.

See also:


Bullseye

Starbucks sued for unfairly punishing white employees

Starbucks
© AP Photo/Charles Krupa
A regional Starbucks manager fired after the high-profile arrests of two black men at one of the coffee shops in Philadelphia has filed a wrongful termination suit against the company. Shannon Phillips accuses Starbucks of unfairly punishing white employees like her in response to the widely publicized arrests last year.

In the lawsuit, obtained by CBS Philadelphia, Phillips says she lost her job after objecting to the company putting another white manager on leave.

A Starbucks spokesperson says they are ready to defend their case in court. "We deny the claims of the lawsuit and are prepared to defend our case in court," the spokesperson told CBS Philadelphia.

Phillips' lawyer, who refused to comment, is asking for a jury trial.

During the 2018 incident, Rashon Nelson and his business partner Donte Robinson were taken away from the Starbucks in handcuffs after a manager called police because the two had not made a purchase. Instead, the men told the manager they were waiting for a third person to arrive for a business meeting.

Comment: Starbucks 180,000 employees radicalized after anti-bias training - 'Coffee cultivation merely extends the system of colonial oppression'


Attention

Monsanto wins $7.7b lawsuit in Brazil - but farmers' vow to continue fight against 'amoral' royalty system

brasil farmers protest Monsanto

“Monsanto is amoral, it will do anything for profits” Luiz Fernando Benincá, a soybean producer and litigant in the class action suit against Monsanto.
A Brazilian appeals court has decided in favor of Monsanto, the global agribusiness conglomerate, in a landmark class-action lawsuit filed by Brazilian farmers' unions.

The court's nine justices unanimously ruled on Oct. 9 that farmers cannot save seeds for replanting if the seeds are harvested from Monsanto's patented Roundup Ready soybeans, which are genetically engineered to withstand direct application of the company's Roundup herbicide.

The Brazilian ruling aligns with similar decisions in the U.S. and Canada. Courts in all three countries determined that, as a product of genetic engineering, Roundup Ready soybeans are protected by domestic patent law.

In a public statement, Monsanto - which was acquired by Bayer in 2018 - said the decision will strengthen "agricultural innovation in Brazil."

How strict patenting of seeds affects innovation, however, is a matter of debate. And the lawsuits challenging Monsanto's aggressive pursuit of its patent rights raise a vexed legal issue: When intellectual property laws that protect companies conflict with the rights of farmers to plant their fields, who should win?

Comment: As resistance against the abusive practices of Bayer/Monsanto continues to grow, the corporation's choke-hold on Brazilian farmers may only be temporary:


Magnify

UPDATE-Orinda police: Contra Costa Sheriff's Office investigate mass shooting Halloween night, at least 4 dead, 4 injured

Shooting
The Contra Costa County Sheriff's Office and the Orinda Police Department are investigating a Halloween night shooting involving multiple victims in Orinda Thursday, according to authorities.

The Contra Costa County Sheriff's Office reported Thursday night the investigation into the shooting was active in the area of Lucille Way and Knickerbocker.

A tweet by the Contra Costa Sheriff's Office public information officer indicated that multiple people were shot in the incident.

Comment: UPDATE from ABC News:
Shooting at California Halloween party leaves 4 dead, 4 injured

At least four people were shot dead at a house party in California on Halloween night, authorities said.

Four others were injured in the shooting, which occurred in the city of Orinda, some 9 miles northeast of Oakland.

"We are still investigating the scene," Orinda Police Chief David Cook told ABC News in an email Friday morning.



Smoking

Juul whistleblower claims company sold at least one million contaminated vaping pods

JUUL vape
© AP
Former Juul senior vice president Siddharth Breja filed a lawsuit on Tuesday alleging that he tried to raise concerns about the contamination of Juul's mint refill kits.
Juul has been accused in a lawsuit of selling at least one million contaminated vaping pods by a former company executive who claims he was fired for flagging safety concerns about product quality.

Former Juul senior vice president Siddharth Breja filed a lawsuit on Tuesday saying that he tried to raise concerns about the alleged contamination of Juul's mint-flavored e-cigarette nicotine pods, as well as the sale of expired products.

He claims then-CEO Kevin Burns responded to his concerns by saying: 'Half our customers are drunk and vaping like mo-fo's, who the f*** is going to notice the quality of our pods?'

Breja claims that he was fired by the e-cigarette company in March for being a whistle-blower and raising concerns about the alleged contamination.

He claims Juul knew the pods were contaminated but still sent them to market. He said the company refused to recall the pods or issue a product health and safety warning.

It is not clear from the lawsuit what the pods were contaminated with.

Comment: See also


Handcuffs

Migrant who murdered elderly woman fooled German authorities to get asylum, had history of crime, lived on benefits, and spent time gambling and looking at porn

polizei
© Global Look Press / Karl-Josef Hildenbrand
FILE PHOTO.
A suspect in a high-profile murder of an elderly woman in the German eastern state of Thuringia may have created a false identity in order to live in Germany, police revealed as the man was brought to court.

A man that now stands accused of a brutal murder of his 87-year-old neighbor could have been deported from Germany long ago - had he not forged his entire story upon entry, the police disturbingly revealed.

Asked about any "inconsistencies" in the suspect's profile during the hearing, the Criminal Superintendent of the city of Jena, Jens Thiel, said that the data extracted from the man's smartphone suggests the background he provided to the German migration authorities might be completely false.

The suspect arrived to Germany back in 2011 and claimed to be an accompanied minor from Afghanistan. He also said his name was Auwel Nom Lakab. Now, the man is being identified as Mohammed A., and police say he may have lied about his date of birth too.

Comment: Is it any wonder with the surge in migrants and the resulting chaos that Germans are voting for populist politicians in their droves? Also check out SOTT radio's: The Truth Perspective: Weapons of Mass Migration: Interview with Michael Springmann on Europe's Migrant Crisis


Fire

Japan's Shuri Castle in ruins as inferno ravages 600 year old UNESCO site

shuri castel
© Twitter/@ryukyushimpo
Shuri Castle
An inferno has erupted inside Japan's Shuri Castle, completely leveling parts of the 600-year-old UNESCO World Heritage site as emergency responders struggle to contain the flames.

The castle, located in Okinawa's provincial capital of Naha, went up in flames early Thursday morning. Its main hall and a nearby building have so far been destroyed, while another structure on the site continues to burn.

People in the area were evacuated, but no injuries have yet been reported. Dramatic photos on social media show the castle's main hall entirely engulfed in flames as its roof began to cave, shortly before collapsing altogether.

Aerial footage taken before and after sunrise depict the progress of the fire as it tore through the site.

Comment: See also:


Cult

Arctic kindergarten killing: Man cuts sleeping boy's throat in Russian daycare center 'on the orders of Satan'

Russian Investigative Committee

Russian Investigative Committee
A horrifying tragedy has occurred in an Arctic Russian city, when a local man sneaked into a daycare center and knifed a six-year-old boy in his bed. Some reports suggest the perpetrator was having a psychotic episode at the time.

The shocking killing happened on Thursday in Naryan-Mar, one of the northernmost cities in Russia, located in the Nenets autonomous region. According to local law enforcement, the killer made his way into a daycare center during nap time. Once inside, the man killed the six-year-old boy right in his bed.

The man was apprehended and identified as a 36-year-old local resident. The police said he was intoxicated when he committed the gruesome crime.

Comment: See also: Horrifying footage of drugged up transgender axe attacker who claims 'demonic possession'


Light Saber

'Powerful countries strongly motivated to de-dollarize' - US analyst

CNBC

Anne Korin from the Institute for the Analysis of Global Security
The U.S. dollar has been the world's major reserve currency for decades, but that status could come under threat as "very powerful countries" seek to undermine its importance, warned Anne Korin, from the Institute for the Analysis of Global Security.

"Major movers" such as China, Russia and the European Union have a strong "motivation to de-dollarize," said Korin, co-director at the energy and security think tank, on Wednesday.

"We don't know what's going to come next, but what we do know is that the current situation is unsustainable," Korin said. "You have a growing club of countries — very powerful countries."

Comment: China, and a number of other countries, have also been loading up on gold - the US not being one of them (at least officially).

See also: