Society's Child
Is Bernie Sanders wrong? Fidel Castro did not give Cuba literacy or better healthcare, claims lawyer
But Castro did not give Cubans literacy. Cuba already had one of the highest highest literacy rates in Latin America by 1950, nearly a decade before Castro took power, according to United Nations data. In 2016, the Washington Post fact-checker Glenn Kessler debunked a politician's claim that Castro's rule significantly improved Cuban healthcare and education.
In today's Cuba, children are taught by poorly paid teachers in dilapidated schools. Cuba has made less educational progress than most Latin American countries over the last 60 years.
The first blockbuster that Harvey Weinstein produced was Quentin Tarantino's Pulp Fiction. In that movie there is a male rapist named Zed, who gets his comeuppance at the hands of one of his victims, crime boss Marsellus Wallace. Once Wallace escapes Zed's clutches, with the help of Butch (Bruce Willis), he promises to extract revenge on Zed by getting "medieval on his a**".
"Zed's dead, baby. Zed's dead," Butch tells his girlfriend Fabienne, after he returns with Zed's chopper as a trophy.
Zed is Harvey Weinstein: grotesque and vile... and about to get payback for his depravity.
Attorneys for former stripper Lunden Alexis Roberts, the mother of Biden's child, requested in an email on Feb. 17 that he appear in Little Rock next week for a deposition, but Biden said the request to appear in person was "unduly burdensome and oppressive."
"My client can be available April 1, 2020," Biden's attorney, Brent Langdon, wrote to Roberts's attorneys, court documents show. "My client cannot be available prior to that date."
Langdon added that a filing Sunday by Roberts's attorneys notifying that Biden's deposition would take place on March 5 was "unnecessary" and that it served to ignite "media attention" and to unreasonably "annoy, embarrass, or oppress" Biden.
Lukas Romson, one of the country's leading trans activists, is prepared for the worst. "There will be no serious trans activists in the show, because none of us trusts Malou at all," he says. "I'm afraid she'll just use us."
But the fact that a mainstream programme is devoting so much time to the issue demonstrates just how much the debate has shifted in Sweden over the past year. "It's been a very big change and very sudden," Romson adds. "Everyone - but especially young people - feels worse because of what they perceive as the media's hatred of them."
The immediate trigger for Von Sivers's themed week is a report from Sweden's Board of Health and Welfare which confirmed a 1,500% rise between 2008 and 2018 in gender dysphoria diagnoses among 13- to 17-year-olds born as girls.
Comment: Clearly there is more going on here than just a bunch of kids "realizing" they are the wrong gender. It's a social contagion. See the following, and the links in the comment there:
But it also reflects a rapid change in public opinion. Just a year ago, there seemed few official obstacles left in the way of young people who wanted gender reassignment treatment.
In the autumn of 2018, the Social Democrat-led government, under pressure from the gay, lesbian and transgender group RFSL, proposed a new law which would reduce the minimum age for sex reassignment medical care from 18 to 15, remove all need for parental consent, and allow children as young as 12 to change their legal gender.
The Reuters-Ipsos survey released Tuesday found Sanders's lead stretching into the double digits for the first time, with the senator holding an 11-point advantage in the race and a 3-point edge over Biden among black voters.
Overall, 26 percent of surveyed Democrats and independents said they would vote for Sanders, a self-identified democratic socialist, while Biden and former New York City Mayor Mike Bloomberg (D) tied in a distant second with 15 percent support.
Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) and former South Bend, Ind., Mayor Pete Buttigieg garnered the backing of 10 percent of respondents. Four percent said they would vote for Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.), while 3 percent said they'd back billionaire activist Tom Steyer.
Sanders cemented himself as the clear front-runner for the Democratic nomination after a decisive victory at the Nevada caucuses last weekend. The victory came on the heels of a win in New Hampshire and a close second-place finish behind Buttigieg in Iowa.
The Vermont senator's continued rise in the latest Reuters survey corresponded with a significant increase in support from African American voters. Twenty-six percent of respondents in that demographic said they would back Sanders, a 7-point jump from a previous poll conducted between Jan. 29 and Feb. 19.
The Nobel Peace Prize was founded in 1901 by Alfred Nobel, an arms manufacturer. His family factory first gained notoriety for producing weapons for the Crimean War of 1853-1856. Alfred Nobel invented dynamite and various other powerful explosives. These explosives were used to devastate people in conflicts such as the Spanish-American War.
After Nobel's brother died, because of a journalistic error, the public believed that Alfred Nobel had died. In his obituary, he was portrayed as an amoral businessman who made millions of dollars off of the deaths of others. His critics declared that "the merchant of death is dead" and that Alfred Nobel "became rich by finding ways to kill more people faster than ever before."
Comment: See also:
- German parliamentary group nominates Edward Snowden, Julian Assange and Chelsea Manning for 2020 Nobel Peace Prize
- Greta nominated for Nobel Peace Prize AGAIN, as adults use teen to push climate narrative at expense of peace message
- Greta 'put them against the wall' Thunberg nominated for Nobel Peace Prize, sane people everywhere respond
- Trump Derangement Syndrome spreads: Republicans are 'actual demons,' 'zombies,' says New York Times Nobel Prize-winning columnist
- Is a stock market crash imminent? Nobel Laureate sees trouble 'bubbles everywhere'
- It's another great Nobel Prize year for intelligent design
- The scandal of the Nobel Peace Prize: Should Trump win 2019's?
- Norwegian committee criticized for selecting Ethiopian prime minister for Nobel Peace Prize
Ministry spokesman Kianush Dschahanpurat said on February 26 that a total of 139 people -- an increase of 44 from the previous day -- have tested positive for the virus in various parts of the country.
Jahanpour urged Iranians to avoid "nonessential travel," particularly to hard-hit areas of Iran.
He said 15 of the new COVID-19 cases surfaced in Qom Province; nine in Gilan; four in Tehran; three in Khuzestan; two each in Sistan and Baluchistan, Kohgiluyeh and Boyer-Ahmad, and Fars; and one each in Markazi, Kermanshah, Ardebil, Mazandaran, Lorestan, Semnan, and Hormozgan.
Meanwhile, President Hassan Rohani acknowledged that it may take "one, two, or three weeks" to get control of the virus in Iran, which has posted the highest death toll from the virus outside of China.
There was no plan to quarantine any district or city, Rohani said, according to a transcript posted on the Iranian presidency's website.
Comment: A suspected case in a Canary Islands hotel with 1000 tourists caused its lockdown. An Italian doctor who recently stayed there tested positive for the virus. Cases in Italy surged from 222 to 283 yesterday. An Austrian high school was also locked down after fears a teacher - who had just returned from northern Italy - had the virus. Bahrain has ordered all schools and kindergartens to be shut down for two weeks after nine new cases were confirmed, bringing the total in Bahrain up to 17. All new cases in Bahrain were individuals who had arrived from Iran.
If the virus isn't brought under control in the next three months, the IOC may cancel the Olympic Games in Tokyo scheduled for the end of July. Meanwhile, the American CDC is warning Americans to prepare:
"It's not so much a question of if this will happen any more, but rather more a question of exactly when this will happen and how many people in this country will have severe illness," Dr. Nancy Messonnier, head of the CDC's National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases, said during a conference call with reporters on Tuesday.With any hope, the signs of a slow-down in new cases in China will be replicated in countries just starting to see cases. Everyone is not out of the woods yet, but it looks like the chances of runaway, exponential spread of the virus is low at this point. Until that happens, however, it's better safe than sorry. Also, a new WHO report speculates that two thirds of cases may have gone unreported:
"We are asking the American public to prepare for the expectation that this might be bad," she added. "Disruption to everyday life might be severe."
Americans need to be prepared for schools and workplaces closing, and even elective medical procedures getting delayed, as the US healthcare system ramps up efforts to contain and control the spread of the virus in the coming weeks.
The CDC is operating "as if we are going to see community spread in the near term," Messonnier said. So far, the CDC has tested a total of 426 people and found 14 cases of COVID-19, twelve of which were travelers returning from China, and two were direct transmissions.
The US government is implementing an "aggressive containment strategy" and instituting extensive travel advisories, but this will get more difficult as the virus spreads in countries beyond China.
Messonnier explained that COVID-19 has fulfilled two out of three criteria to become considered a pandemic — causing illness that has resulted in death and sustained direct transmission — and is "moving closer" to the third, worldwide spread.
A new report from a WHO infectious disease modeling team based at Imperial College London is estimating about two-thirds of Covid-19 cases worldwide have gone undetected. The analysis suggests the global spread of the novel coronavirus is significantly greater than the current volume of confirmed cases.See also:
"We are starting to see more cases reported from countries and regions outside mainland China with no known travel history or link to Wuhan City," explains Natsuko Imai, one of the authors on the new report.
...
As of February 23, 2020, there are over 78,000 confirmed cases of Covid-19, the vast majority of which are concentrated in China. Prior studies have suggested most cases present with mild symptoms. Only a small minority of confirmed cases seem to progress into serious pneumonia-like disease, leading some researchers to suggest the virus may have spread wider than current numbers indicate.
...
The report concludes it is very likely a number of undetected chains of transmission have begun in many countries across the globe. Director-General of the World Health Organization Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus affirmed this growing concern during a recent WHO briefing.
...
While the difference between an epidemic and a pandemic may be a somewhat semantic one, based on the geographic spread of the disease, Nuzzo suggests the terminology does fundamentally affect how we deal with the virus on a local level.
"I am of the belief ... that we are in the early stages of a pandemic," said Nuzzo. "I think it's important for us to ... talk openly about whether containment of an epidemic is possible, or whether we are exacerbating pandemic spread, because my worry is we're diverting resources from the community level."
- Iranian deputy health minister tests positive for coronavirus - lawmaker claims death toll 4x higher than revealed
- US and South Korea may scale back joint military exercises over coronavirus fears
- Italy struggles to contain coronavirus outbreak as cases spread to Tuscany and Sicily
- Don't buy China's story: Clues that coronavirus may have leaked from a lab
Good on Toby Young for defending people's right to blaspheme against PC orthodoxy.
The beautiful thing about the mad reaction to Toby Young's Free Speech Union (FSU) is that it proves why the union is so necessary. No sooner had Young unveiled his censorship-busting union than the illiberal liberals were out in force to mock it and ridicule it and to insist that, actually, there is no free-speech crisis in the UK. It's a right-wing myth, they claim. There is no widespread censorship. People aren't being shipped off to gulags for expressing an opinion. Apparently, the free-speech 'grift' - God, I hate the word 'grift' - is just a bunch of pale, male and stale blokes pissed off that they can no longer say the N-word or talk openly about women's boobs. Freedom of speech is not under threat, the Young-bashers claim, and anyone who says it is is probably just an Islamophobe, transphobe or some other breed of phobe itching to spout bile with 'no consequences'.
Comment: See also:
- Freedom of speech? Abby Martin banned from speaking at US university for refusing to sign pro-Israel pledge
- Constitutional Court ruling: Turkey's Wikipedia ban violates freedom of speech
- 92% of Americans feel their freedom is threatened
- Arizona Supreme Court strikes powerful blow in defense of free speech and religious freedom
- Israel firsters are killing free speech in America for everyone
- Professor calls free speech 'racist'
- College hosts free speech training after harassment of conservative group

Footage shows enormous flames and smoke billowing into the night sky as fire crew douse it with water
Cameras aboard the SkyFOX helicopter of FOX 11 Los Angeles showed two explosions and the fire at Marathon Refinery Carson, about 19 miles south of downtown Los Angeles, just north of Long Beach.
The blaze started around 10:50 p.m., according to the Los Angeles County Fire Department.
One of the explosions went off before a fire started burning at a cooling tower at the refinery, fire officials said.
The blast lit up the night sky in the city of Carson and sent a large cloud of smoke into the air. The nearby 405 Freeway was temporarily closed to traffic in both directions but was later reopened, the station reported.
Crews were keeping the flames in check via fixed ground monitors while they worked to depressurize the system, according to fire officials.
Comment: Last month two people were killed after a massive explosion at a factory in Houston, Texas.
This comes just three months after another major incident at a refinery in Port Neches, Texas.
Not much is known about her condition or the circumstances of the incident aside from the fact that she was hit by a car while crossing the street and is in the hospital with multiple broken bones.
Law and Crime noted that there is no evidence that Ziv's injuries have anything to do with her role as a witness in the Weinstein trial, but the timing and the fact that Weinstein is notorious for his ruthless intimidation tactics makes the incident suspicious. Weinstein's reputation led many potential witnesses and even journalists to fear for their lives when dealing with his case.














Comment: See also: