Society's Child
A government spokesperson revealed that "oil-like" blobs have appeared on several of Japan's southern islands sparking fears that it could cause an environmental catastrophe.

The Shuafat refugee camp can be seen across the separation wall from the Israeli settlement Pisgat Ze'ev.
Bjørnar Moxnes is a member of the Norwegian Parliament
Oslo, Norway, Feb 2 2018 (IPS) - As a member of the Norwegian parliament, I proudly use my authority as an elected official to nominate the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement for Palestinian rights for the Nobel Peace Prize.
Nominating the BDS movement for this recognition is perfectly in line with the principles I and my party hold very dear. Like the BDS movement, we are fully committed to stopping an ascendant, racist and right-wing politics sweeping too much of our world, and securing freedom, justice and equality for all people.
Inspired by the South African anti-apartheid movement and the American Civil Rights movement, the grassroots, Palestinian-led BDS movement is a peaceful, global human rights movement that urges the use of economic and cultural boycotts to end Israeli violations of Palestinian human rights and international law.
The BDS movement seeks to end Israel's half-century of military rule over 4.5 million Palestinians, including the devastating ten-year illegal siege collectively punishing and suffocating nearly 2 million Palestinians in Gaza, the ongoing forcible eviction of Palestinians from their homes, and the theft of Palestinian land through the construction of illegal settlements in the occupied West Bank.
Heiress Abigail Kinoiki Kekaulike Kawananakoa, known as last Hawaiian princess, mired in legal fight
But few know Iolani Palace - America's only royal residence - has relied in part on the generosity of a descendant of that family while the relic of the monarchy's rule now serves as a museum.
Multimillionaire heiress Abigail Kinoiki Kekaulike Kawananakoa, considered by many to be Hawaii's last princess, has paid the palace's electric bills for the past six years.
Rabbi Lynn Gottlieb is a congregational rabbi for 45 years and an advocate for Palestinian human rights since 1966. She serves on several boards dedicated to human rights and is a visual and performing artist. Rabbi Gottlieb recently returned from The Sumud Winter Tour sponsored by the Holy Land Trust. In this interview, Gottlieb shares her impressions as a Rabbi, woman and activist.
Yoav Litvin: You have been traveling to Palestinian towns and villages as an organizer and non-violent activist since 1966 and have just returned from a trip to Palestine/Israel. What were some of the changes you witnessed?
The Russian collusion hoax is unraveling and the Democrats are unhinged.
Hillary Clinton's dirty dossier led to a FISA warrant to spy on Trump's team which then led to Mueller's witch hunt which ultimately led to charges against Trump's former NatSec Advisor General Flynn.

Member of Knesset Oren Hazan, Likud, snaps a photograph with President Donald Trump, May 22, 2017.
"If I was there, she would finish in the hospital. For sure. Nobody could stop me. I would kick, kick her face, believe me".Hazan is known for outrageous statements. For example he recently called Gazan families visiting relatives in Israeli prison "dogs", "human scum" and "beasts".
The Urbn Leaf center posted a picture of the innovative Girl Scout outside its store in the Mission Bay area of the city Friday. The cheeky post calls on customers to pick up some of the treats when they buy 'GSC,' a type of marijuana product flavoured like Girl Scout Cookies.

Tim Cook, CEO of Apple, Mark Zuckerberg, CEO of Facebook, and Jeff Bezos, CEO of Amazon. Composite
But their growing dominance is giving rise to an insidious trend that we shouldn't so happily accept. Just last week, billionaire philanthropist George Soros gave a speech in Davos, Switzerland, in which he attacked Facebook and Google for "inducing people to give up their autonomy" and driving inequality. He's not wrong. In fact, tech giants are just like the monopolists and robber barons that ruled the American economy a century ago. But, while Standard Oil's monopoly was as obvious as the smoke-belching refineries it controlled, the powers of Facebook, Google, Apple and Amazon are less transparent - if not entirely secret.
An average Facebook user has no way of knowing or appreciating the mountain of data the company has collected on them. And the average Amazon shopper is unlikely know that the site steers customers toward its preferred (and often more expensive) products. America's biggest tech giants have at least as much power as John D. Rockefeller and J.P. Morgan did in the early 20th century; it is just much harder to see.

Prisoners gesture from their cell at HaSharon high-security prison, some 40 kilometres northeast of Tel Aviv, on 23 February 2014.
'Sometimes they feel shame, even though we know that they are our enemy and they do this to break us,' said one former woman prisoner
Bethlehem, West Bank - "I remember he brought his chair closer, opened his legs and sat very close to me. It was something ugly for me. It made me feel that he was trying to attack my body," Khawla al-Azraq said, as she recalled the physical intimidation tactics and sexual harassment used by Israeli interrogators when she was only a teenager.
Decades later, al-Azraq, who is now 54, still shudders at the memory of Israeli interrogators brushing their hands across her legs to sexually intimidate her.
"They would sit in a way to be very close to us, to touch our bodies. I remember it was terrible for me at that age," she said.
Al-Azraq is a member of the Fatah Revolutionary Council. Since the age of 14, she has been arrested by Israeli forces four times for her involvement with Fatah and taking part in protests against the Israeli occupation. When she was only 18, she was sentenced to three years in prison.
"The torture, ill treatment, and degrading treatment start from the first moment of the arrest," said Sahar Francis, director of Addameer, a Palestinian prisoners' rights group.
Comment: Rape, torture and shame used as weapons against those who cannot fight back. It is the ultimate demonstration of cowardice.
According to Tokyo Electric Power Company (Tepco), radiation levels of eight Sieverts per hour (Sv/h) have been discovered within the Fukushima nuclear power plant, which was destroyed after a massive earthquake and a tsunami in March 2011.
Tepco, the company that operated the plant and is now tasked with decommissioning it, reported the discovery after making observations in a reactor containment vessel last month.
Eight Sv/h of radiation, if absorbed at once, mean certain death, even with quick treatment. One Sv/h is likely to cause sickness and 5.5 Sv/h will result in a high chance of developing cancer.
Comment: Fukushima is still an absolute disaster and will continue to pose great health risks to the world at large for many years to come. See also:
- Highest Fukushima Radioactivity since 2011 and its 'Unimaginable' Consequences
- Scientists find 'unexpected' radioactivity in groundwater and sands 100km away from Fukushima power plant
- It looks like the 40-year plan to stop the leakage at Fukushima has already failed
- Oh really? No danger seen from Fukushima 'fingerprint' on US West Coast












Comment: Great idea! But don't expect BDS to win the award with snowflake Israel biting and barking due to hurt feelings: