Society's ChildS

Eye 1

Israeli logic: IDF ridiculed after taking a stance on commander caught stealing apples from Palestinians, massacring thousands of Palestinians is self-defense

Soldiers stealing apples
© Mussa Qawasma / ReutersAn Israeli soldier shouts during clashes with Palestinians at a protest against U.S. President Donald Trump's decision to recognize Jerusalem as the capital of Israel, in the West Bank city of Hebron
The Israeli military has been flamed online after news of its suspending a squad commander. The IDF said it didn't condone his act of stealing apples from a Palestinian street vendor, which he did amid a crackdown on protests in occupied West Bank.

The unit from the Givati brigade was deployed to to Hebron and patrolled an area near the Palestinian city's market on Saturday, when the act of petty theft took place, according to Haaretz. The soldiers had been ordered to deal with any disturbance in the wake of Washington's recognition of Jerusalem as the Israeli capital.

The unidentified squad commander seized an opportunity to take three apples from an abandoned vendor stall and share them with his subordinates. He probably didn't expect that anyone outside of the squad would notice, but the episode was not only witnessed but also filmed by a group of Palestinians hiding in a building nearby. The video was published online and quickly went viral.

The IDF responded by suspending the man from his position until a full investigation is conducted. A spokesman for the military said the thief was facing disciplinary action. The IDF also made a statement on its Twitter account, saying it "does not condone this behavior". The responses to the tweet, some of which are in broken but intelligible English, are probably not what the Israeli command would like to see.

Comment: See also: How Israel uses the holocaust to deflect from its own damning similarities with the Nazi regime


Bullseye

Why the self-deceptive sexual inquisition has crossed the line into vengeance

#MeToo, sexual harassment
© Lucy Nicholson / Reuters
The tsunami of allegations about the sexual misbehaviour of men prominent in public life shows no sign of abating. Almost every day sees another high-profile man accused of sexual assault or harassment, leaving him fighting for his reputation and career.

In Los Angeles at the weekend I watched a terrific film that provides an illuminating if unintentional commentary upon the current furore. Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri opens in the UK next month. The plot revolves around a woman called Mildred Hayes whose daughter has been raped and murdered.

Mildred is nearly driven mad by grief and rage over the fact that the murderer has not been caught. Convinced that this is because the police are indifferent to a brutal sex crime against a young girl, she uses three huge billboards to shame the local police chief into action.

The film is beautifully written and brilliantly acted and directed. It is a deeply black comedy which, through an often nightmarish and surreal plot, also conveys the bleakness of life for those who have been dealt an unfavourable hand by fate.

Question

Why are record numbers of American farmers killing themselves?

The suicide rate for farmers is more than double that of veterans. Former farmer Debbie Weingarten gives an insider's perspective on farm life - and how to help

Debbie Weingarten
It is dark in the workshop, but what light there is streams in patches through the windows. Cobwebs coat the wrenches, the cans of spray paint and the rungs of an old wooden chair where Matt Peters used to sit. A stereo plays country music, left on by the renter who now uses the shop.

"It smells so good in here," I say. "Like ..."

"Men, working," finishes Ginnie Peters.

We inhale. "Yes."

Ginnie pauses at the desk where she found her husband Matt's letter on the night he died.

Bulb

China looking to deploy 'swimming pool' sized nuclear plants to provide reliable winter heating

china nuclear power
With its smog-prone north desperate to slash coal consumption, China is looking to deploy nuclear power to provide reliable winter heating, raising public safety concerns - though developers say the risks are minimal.

State-owned China National Nuclear Corp (CNNC) recently conducted a successful 168-hour trial run in Beijing for a small, dedicated "district heating reactor" (DHR) it has named the "Yanlong".

With the north facing natural gas shortages as cities switch away from coal, CNNC presented the "DHR-400" as an alternative heat supplier for the region, with each 400-megawatt unit capable of warming 200,000 urban households.

Attention

Israeli security guard wounded in knife attack; unnamed Palestinian man taken into custody

Israeli police
© Ronen Zvulun / ReutersPedestrians stand behind a police cordon as Israeli police patrol the area where a man was stabbed at the central bus station in Jerusalem December 10, 2017.
An Israeli security guard has been severely wounded in a stabbing attack outside Jerusalem's central bus station, paramedics say. The knifeman has been taken alive into custody.

Medics at the scene treated a 25-year-old man for a stab wound to his upper body, Magen David Adom (MDA), head of Israel's national medical emergency service, said on Twitter. The attack occurred on Jaffa Street in central Jerusalem.

Little is known about the attacker beyond the detail that he was neutralized and sustained a head wound, but survived.

Comment: Trump recognizes Jerusalem as Israel's capital - makes it official, Israel controls USA


Attention

Russian police search for man with grenade launcher seen in St. Petersburg metro station

St. Petersburg Metro
© Alexei Danichev / SputnikA train arrives at station of the St. Petersburg Metro.
Russian police are looking for a man who was reportedly seen riding the St. Petersburg Metro with what appeared to be a rocket launcher. The manhunt was launched after other passengers reported the issue to police.

Eye 1

Trump administration sued by Center for Biological Diversity for allowing 'unlimited' dumping of fracking waste into Gulf of Mexico

Oil rig
© Henry Romero / ReutersA general view of the Centenario deep-water oil platform in the Gulf of Mexico off the coast of Veracruz, Mexico.
The Trump administration is being sued by an activist organization for allegedly allowing oil companies to dump waste from fracking and drilling into the Gulf of Mexico, without considering the detrimental effect it will have on marine life.

The Center for Biological Diversity filed a formal notice of intent Thursday, after the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) finalized a Clean Water Act permit in September for new and existing offshore oil and gas platforms operating in federal waters off the coasts of Texas, Louisiana and Mississippi.

The Center allege that the Trump administration approved the permit - which allows unlimited amounts of waste fluid and chemicals to be dumped into the Gulf of Mexico - without evaluating the effect it will have on sea turtles, whales and other marine life.

Comment: See also:


Newspaper

IBU strips rights of Russian Biathlon Union to vote

IBU President Anders Besseberg
© EPA/MARTIN SCHUTT, archiveIBU President Anders Besseberg
The Executive Board of the International Biathlon Union (IBU) has decided to abridge the rights of the Russian Biathlon Union over doping abuses, IBU President Anders Besseberg said on Sunday.


Comment: Where is the evidence? Also, if a member of the Russian Biathlon Union has been found to be doping, why is the RBU being punished for it? Does every union get punished this way when one of their members inevitably gets caught doping? No they don't. This is just more politicized nonsense emanating from the West to demonize Russia.


According to Besseberg, the Russian Biathlon Union has been stripped of the right to vote at congresses and nominate its candidates.

The IBU Executive Board met on Sunday to discuss the situation following the International Olympic Committee's (IOC) decision of December 5 to suspend the Russian Olympic Committee's membership over multiple doping abuse allegations, thus banning the Russian national team from taking part in the 2018 Winter Olympic Games in South Korea's PyeongChang under the national flag.

The IOC accused Russia of systematic abuse of anti-doping rules at various sporting events, including the 2014 Sochi Olympics. The IOC vowed however to observe the rights of clean athletes. Those who match the proposed criteria may be invited to the 2018 Games as "Olympic athletes from Russia," under a flag with five rings, it said.

Fire

Sweden: Masked youths pelt Jewish synagogue with Molotov cocktails during pro-Palestinian demonstration

Swedish police
In Gothenburg, Sweden, group of masked youths have attacked a synagogue with Molotov cocktails, amid a global backlash against the US decision to recognize Jerusalem as the capital of Israel. Three people were arrested following the incident, prosecutors say.

"A burning object has been thrown" just outside the synagogue building, Lars Tunefjord, commanding officer at the police regional management center told Sveriges Radio. The officer added that police are currently at the scene conducting a "technical investigation and searching for the perpetrators."

Three people were arrested early on Sunday, a spokeswoman for the Swedish Prosecution Authority said, according to Reuters. The official did not report any motive for the attack. It was also unclear whether the attack was linked to Trump's recognition of Jerusalem as Israel's capital.

According to witness accounts, a fire started in the yard of the synagogue shortly after 10:00pm local time, after pro-Palestinian protesters, demonstrating against President Donald Trump's decision to recognize Jerusalem as the capital of Israel, pelted the building with burning projectiles. One of the firebombs landed just outside the synagogue compound where local Jewish students were holding an event.

Comment: Palestine, Turkey and Jordan outraged at Trump's decision for US to recognize Jerusalem as Israel's capital (VIDEOS)


Heart - Black

Diabetic amputee honks at unmarked police car; cop takes his car and leaves him stranded on the street

police road rage victim
© NJ.com/Reena Rose Sibayan
Road rage is a very real and very dangerous issue in America today. All too often a simple honk of the horn can end in a wreck, violence, or worse. However, when the person who rages carries a badge and a gun, they can claim legal authority to ticket, kidnap, cage, or kill you. Kieran Walsh, a 59-year-old Marine veteran, and partial amputee learned the hard way what a cop's road rage looks like when he was left stranded on the side of the road last month.

Walsh, who suffers from diabetes was on his way to pick up medication on November 27 when he noticed a car barrelling dangerously toward him. Walsh then briefly honked his horn as the car came "flying down" the street. It was an unmarked police car, occupied by Officer Stephen Salot.

Because Salot claims the authority to detain people for victimless crimes, he moved to pull the person over who would dare to honk at him. "Evidently he didn't like that," Walsh said of the brief horn beeping.

Since he can't exactly tell Walsh that he pulled him over in a fit of road rage, Salot told Walsh that he pulled him over because his handicap placard was hanging from his rearview mirror while he was driving and this allegedly obstructed his view.

After Salot had him pulled over for the non-crime of a hanging handicap tag, he then noticed that the sticker on Walsh's license plate had expired-music to the ears of this would-be tyrant.