Society's ChildS

Briefcase

Elon Musk keeps role as Tesla chairman vowing to solve Model 3 production problems

Elon Musk, Tesla
© Stephen Lam / Reuters
Tesla's shareholders have re-elected three directors and voted against removing Elon Musk as company chairman. He says the electric car company will solve its Model 3 production problems.

Before the meeting, several major shareholding companies had insisted that the chairman and CEO titles should not be held by a single person. Institutional Shareholder Services (ISS) said Musk is too busy with Twitter wars instead of "resolving the manufacturing challenges."


Investor Antonio Gracias, Tesla's lead independent director; James Murdoch, the CEO of Twenty-First Century Fox Inc; and Elon Musk's brother Kimbal have all been re-elected as Tesla directors. Some shareholders had raised questions about their qualifications or independence.

Comment: "More about love than finance"? How very reassuring to shareholders.


Fire

Huge blaze in hotel near London's Hyde Park, black smoke spreading over city

mandarin hotel fire london
© Press AssociationA huge plume of smoke billows from the roof of the Mandarin Oriental in Hyde Park
Almost 100 firefighters are at the scene of a major fire at London's Mandarin Oriental Hotel near Hyde Park in the wealthy borough of Knightsbridge.

Fifteen fire engines and 97 firefighters are currently at the scene trying to extinguish the blaze, London's Fire Brigade has reported.

Transport for London said roads have been closed as emergency services deal with the incident.

Newspaper

Seymour Hersh: Spies, state secrets and the stories he doesn't tell

Seymour Hersh
© MediumSeymour Hersh
When a reporter has covered 50 years of American foreign policy disasters, the last great untold story may be his own.

That, more or less, is the premise behind a new memoir by Seymour Hersh, the investigative journalist who has been revealing secrets and atrocities - and often secret atrocities - to great acclaim since he exposed the My Lai Massacre in 1969.

Hersh's book, economically titled Reporter, is focused on the work. "I don't want anybody reporting about my private life," he once said, and Hersh abides by his own request. In lieu of the personal, we're treated to the professional: Hersh's rise from the City News Bureau of Chicago to the United Press International to the Associated Press.

His breakthrough, however, was as a freelancer: Hersh, famously, received a tip about William Calley, a court-martialed Army lieutenant accused of killing 109 unarmed South Vietnamese civilians in a village nicknamed "Pinkville." Calley was elusive. Hersh drove into Fort Benning and found him under house arrest. For the resulting dispatches, Hersh was awarded the Pulitzer Prize in International Reporting in 1970.

Hersh continued to report - most notably, perhaps, for The New Yorker - on post-9/11 activities; the Iraq War; Iran; and, contentiously, the killing of Osama bin Laden.

He is now at work on a book about former Vice President Dick Cheney.

Hersh and I recently met at his office in Washington, DC, where I found his desk covered in stacks of files. We talked, and kept talking over lunch, about myriad topics, including protecting sources, self-care, Gina Haspel, and revealing secrets.

Arrow Down

UK: Multiple failures to disclose evidence leads to rape and sexual assault cases being dropped

inmate
© Erika Kyte / Getty Images
Almost 50 rape and sexual assault cases have been halted after revelations that prosecutors failed to hand over evidence to defense lawyers. As a result, the Director of Public Prosecutions has been slammed by MPs.

DPP Alison Saunders attended the Commons Justice Committee on Tuesday, facing off with MPs who accused her of failing to take action within the prosecutor's service.

Saunders said the prosecution's failure to disclose evidence in sex crime cases - including a case that nearly saw an innocent man, Liam Allan, jailed on 12 counts of rape and sexual assault after falling victim to a vexatious ex-girlfriend - admitted that the problem was systemic and due to "cultural failings."

She admitted that such failings had "been there for a long time," but said that she has now "accepted... that [scrutiny of disclosure] has been frankly too late in the process. It is about doing this as early as possible."

DPP Saunders was accused of failing to take adequate action by MPs on the Commons Justice Committee yesterday. Saunders hit back, telling the committee that she doesn't "think it was inadequate." She added: "I think there were lots of improvements."

Hourglass

How humanity could become impossible to propagandize

Human spiral
© BluThe Human Situation
I've been writing a lot about how the ability to control public narratives is the only real power in this world, and how the need of the ruling elites to wield that power explains everything from the feigned panic about "Russian propaganda" to Wikipedia's bizarre editing policies to why Joy Reid still has a job. In my opinion it is impossible to overemphasize the impact that narrative and the myriad agendas to control it has on human life. Indeed, if a critical mass of individuals experienced a deep enough insight into the nature of mental narrative, all of our challenges as a species could be resolved very easily.

A search for the word "narrative" on the WikiLeaks website turns up tens of thousands of results. This is because the manipulators who work for the institutions that tend to have documents leaked to that outlet are well aware that the actual raw information about a government, a political campaign, event, etc. have far less impact on the way the public thinks about them than the sparkly, simplified, tweet-sized stories (narratives) that get circulated about those things on a large scale.

For example, if you ask an American political pundit about the president's dealings with North Korea, you will likely be told that Trump is either a brilliant strategist who is almost single-handedly bringing peace to the Korean Peninsula or an incompetent imbecile who is getting "played" by Pyongyang, depending on which side of the partisan divide that pundit is loyal to. Both sides have access to the same information, but they are advancing wildly different narratives about it, because each side has an agenda that they know will be advanced if their narrative becomes dominant. In reality, neither narrative has much to do with what has actually been going on in the Korean negotiations, but that's another story.

Comment: If we - collectively and as individuals - are not in control - who and what is, and what are we going to do about it? Is 'not fueling what isn't true' the biologic necessity for survival?


Attention

Social Security and Medicare to go belly-up sooner than expected

Soc Security wave
© Matt Carrot
While the rest of America fulminates over Roseanne and Samantha Bee and NFL visits to the White House, a rather large piece of news just broke - a piece of news that essentially spells doom for the future of American governance. Here's the news:

Whoops.

Medicare and Social Security, along with Medicaid, represent a majority of the federal budget each year, and represent mandatory spending. And Social Security has been running a negative cash flow for years. Our gigantic national debt number doesn't include unfunded liabilities to these programs. According to some studies, if we include expected shortfalls from Medicare and Social Security in the debt, our debt is actually $90.6 trillion.

Comment: Social Insecurity!


Family

DNA testing service breach involves 92M user accounts

DNA Data Breach
© IDG Connect
Genealogy and DNA testing service My Heritage has revealed that the details of more than 92 million user accounts have been compromised in a cybersecurity breach.

Emails and hashed passwords of users who registered for the service, up to and including October 26, 2017 - the date of the breach, were found on a private server, the company confirmed Monday. The incident was brought to the ancestry site's attention by a security researcher who came across the file named 'myheritage' on a private server outside of MyHeritage.

Upon analysis of the file, the company confirmed it was legitimate and included the email addresses and hashed passwords of 92,283,889 users.

MyHeritage is an Israel-based ancestry platform where users can create family trees and search through familial and historical records. It has some 35 million family trees on its website, according to a report from Israeli media last year.

Clipboard

They may be able to drive now, but there are still plenty of things women in Saudi Arabia can't do

muslim woman driving
© Faisal Al Nasser / Reuters
Saudi Arabia has begun issuing driving licenses to women as it prepares to lift the ban on female motorists. However, the move has illuminated other ways in which females are discriminated against in the notoriously strict state.

Ten women received the first Saudi licences on Monday, with about 2,000 more expected to join the new community of female drivers before the ban expires on June 24. The women already held driving licences from the UK, Lebanon and Canada, but had to take a driving test before having the right granted to them in Saudi Arabia.

While women can now vote and drive, the milestone is still tinged by oppression as women must still seek male permission to get a licence - as they are required to do for all other important decisions. Here are eight ways in which women are still discriminated against in the Gulf kingdom.

Comment: Don't fret. Saudi Arabia has been generous in other ways:


Clipboard

Russian lawmakers want to scrap patient confidentiality for teens to combat STDs and unwanted pregnancies

party girl
© Yevgeny Odinokov / SputnikA school graduate at the Gorky Central Park of Culture and Leisure.
Russian MPs have drafted a bill that, if passed, would cancel doctor-patient privilege for people under 18, claiming that such a move would better enable parents to fight post-puberty problems and substance abuse.

Business-oriented mass circulation daily Kommersant reported on Wednesday that the legislature of central Russia's Samara region had prepared a draft increasing the age at which patients can rely on confidentiality in relation to their communication with doctors from current 15 years to 18 years.

An explanatory note attached to the bill by its sponsors states that "children in their late teens often have no desire to inform their parents or guardians about various problems of the puberty period, such as early pregnancy, sexually transmitted diseases, injuries received in conflicts with their contemporaries, and addiction to alcohol, tobacco and other substances."

The sponsors also attached some statistics to their draft, claiming that up to 22 percent of schoolchildren in Russia are sexually active and, in the final year of secondary school, this proportion is even higher at almost 38 percent. They also state that, according to the WHO, three percent of 11-year-old boys in Russia, seven percent of 13-year-old boys, and 12 percent of 15-year-old boys drink alcohol at least once a week.

Newspaper

'This world is a better place without her': Siblings publish scathing obituary of late mother

mourners at cemetery
People say you shouldn't air your dirty laundry in public. That's seemingly not the view of Jay and Gina Dehmlow, a disgruntled duo who posted a savage obituary of their late mother Kathleen in their local newspaper.

The obituary, published in Minnesota's Redwood Falls Gazette, has been shared more than 36,000 times online and tells the life story of 80-year-old Kathleen Dehmlow. From her birth in 1938 in Wabasso, Minnesota, the five-paragraph piece remembers her marriage in 1957; the birth her two children, Gina and Jay; her 1962 pregnancy by her husband's brother Lyle; and her decision to "abandon her children" and move to California.

"She passed away on May 31, 2018, in Springfield and will now face judgement. She will not be missed by Gina and Jay, and they understand that this world is a better place without her," the obituary closes.