Society's Child
Jimmie Akesson traveled to the Turkish border city of Edirne along with his top aide, having in their sights people set to cross into neighboring Greece. Over 12,000 migrants amassed there shortly after President Recep Tayyip Erdogan made a power move in proclaiming they are free to continue their journey westward.
While at the border, Akesson and his entourage handed out leaflets discouraging migrants from making it into Sweden. "Don't come to us. Sweden is full. We can't give you more money or provide any housing. Sorry for this message," the flyers read.
He was also pictured talking to aspiring migrants, purportedly delivering his message in greater detail.
The images of the Swedish Democrats (SD) leader made rounds on the party's social media accounts, garnering numerous shares and comments.
"We are gradually weaning off [oil], by the way. We are really moving away from it, because the share of non-oil and non-gas revenues is growing. But this requires time, and it cannot be done at the drop of a hat," Putin said in an interview to TASS news agency, released on Wednesday.
Despite the official statistics showing that inflation rate currently stands at around 3.5 percent, Russian people feel that prices are going up and their incomes have been on the decline in recent years, the president acknowledged. Incomes were hit badly by a steep decline in global crude prices, and the government is "obliged" to do something to settle this key social issue, he said.
Comment: Under Putin's astute management, Russia, is well-positioned to withstand the global economic downturn:
- Global growth stalls, Russian economy gathers momentum
- IMF warns of new 'Great Depression', Russia ahead of the curve due to increased cash & gold reserves
- Russia rapidly recovered from sanctions & drop in oil prices - British investment trust
- 'We have chosen the right track': Russia's non-energy exports are booming
Over a dozen terrorists tried to use their weapon of last resort in the strategic town of Saraqeb, which sits on an important highway juncture in Syria's Idlib province, according to the Russian Reconciliation Center for Syria.
In an effort to "frustrate the advance of Syrian government forces" in the western quarters of Saraqeb, they tried to detonate "high-explosive ammunition along with tanks filled with toxic chemicals," the statement revealed. Their attack, however, was to no avail.

Staff at Australian Associated Press' headquarters were told a drop-off in subscribers in the face of free online content meant the company was "no longer viable"
Staff gathered on the newsroom floor at Australian Associated Press' headquarters in Sydney were told a drop-off in subscribers in the face of free online content meant the company was "no longer viable."
"This decision's been made with very heavy hearts. It's been made on an economic and financial basis," chief executive Bruce Davidson said following the announcement.
Riyadh has temporarily suspended Umrah to the two holy cities of Mecca and Medina for Saudi citizens due to coronavirus concerns, according to the state news agency SPA citing an official source in the Saudi interior ministry.
The decision will be assessed regularly and reversed when the situation changes, SPA reported.
Comment: See also:
- The 'Coronavirus Pandemic': Lies, Damned Lies, And Infection Numbers
- Coronavirus global death rate at 3.4 percent, Olympics delay a possibility
- Iran to temporarily free 54,000 prisoners as coronavirus spreads
- European Defence Agency cancels all meetings as two EU officials test positive for Coronavirus in Brussels
- Head of Iran's emergency medical services is latest official to catch the coronavirus
- Iranian supreme leader's advisory council member dies of coronavirus, Italian Lombardy govt to be screened, first case pops up in Russia
The action in my local supermarket yesterday had an undercurrent of stealth desperation; no overt panic buying, no fighting in the aisles, but an edge of suspense. Personally, I cleaned out an entire product-line of cat food, loaded up on cooking oil, rice, dry beans, and evaporated milk — and I wasn't the only one checking out with the sixteen-roll bindle of toilet paper. Obviously, many products were still there on the shelves to get (minus that cat food). Is the time perhaps at hand when a lot of stuff won't be? Just sayin'.
The message is getting out — though not from US authorities yet — that everybody may soon be spending a lot of time home alone. That's exactly what has happened in China and a region of northern Italy. France banned events with more than 5,000 people (why that number, exactly?). Japan has canceled school for the time being — duration unknown for now. So a USA lockdown is not merely hypothetical. These, then, are two fundamental conditions the world faces for a while: nobody moves and nothing gets produced.
After extraordinary blowback, the administration insisted that in the end, any treatment would indeed be affordable. President Donald Trump on Monday morning tweeted that he would be meeting with "the major pharmaceutical companies today at the White House about progress on a vaccine and cure. Progress being made!" The federal government, though, under the Clinton administration, traded away one of the key tools it could use to make good on the promise of affordability.
Gilead Sciences, a drugmaker known for price gouging, has been working with Chinese health authorities to see if the experimental drug remdesivir can treat coronavirus symptoms. World Health Organization officials say it's the "only one drug right now that we think may have real efficacy." But remdesivir, which was previously tested to treat Ebola virus, was developed through research conducted at the University of Alabama at Birmingham with funding from the federal government.
Comment: See also:
- Why do prescription drugs cost so much? Big Pharma is protected by global web of patent laws
- Big Pharma empire behind opioid epidemic now profiting from overdose cure
- 'Cannot be trusted ... causing harm': Top medical journal takes on big pharma
- Big Pharma: It's all about making money and keeping shareholders happy
- A case study of how Pharma is killing science
- FDA medical adviser: 'Congress is owned by pharma'
- WHO, Pharma, Gates & Government: Who's calling the shots?
Activist Tamara Lorincz recently posted a photo of an F-35 ad in a bus shelter in front of Parliament Hill. US weapons giant Lockheed Martin is pushing hard to win a $19 billion contract to supply the Canadian air force with a fleet of new fighter jets.
To gain a share of the public funds on offer arms companies target ads at political and military leaders, promoting their products in washrooms and bus shelters where Department of National Defence (DND) and Canadian Forces (CF) officials congregate. Rideau Institute founder Steven Staples pointed out that "you can't walk around in Ottawa without tripping over some arms dealer on Spark Street."
Arms sellers also sponsor talks and exhibits attended by Ottawa insiders. They promote their brand at the Canadian War Museum, Gatineau-Ottawa airshow, Ottawa Chamber of Commerce, Conference of Defense Associations, etc.
Beyond promoting their wares in the nation's capital, companies advertise aggressively in publications read by Ottawa insiders such as iPolitics, Ottawa Business Journal and Hill Times. "Today's Morning Brief is brought to you by Canada's Combat Ship Team," noted a regular iPolitics ad. "Lockheed Martin Canada is leading a team of BAE Systems, CAE, L3 Technologies, MDA and Ultra Electronics to deliver the Royal Canadian Navy's future fleet of surface combatants." Their ads also foot much of the bill for journals read by military officials such as the Canadian Defence Review, Canadian Naval Review and Esprit de Corps.
Comment: We can find the same dynamic at work for Big Pharma, Big Agriculture, the world of finance, and a whole other slew of industries where individuals work for the government - learn all the ins and outs - and then go on to exploit this knowledge for self gain - much to the detriment of average people who get this product or that policy shoved down their collective throats. And are effectively forced to foot the bill.
On Monday, the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS), which is conducting hearings on the case involving three Russian biathletes - Olga Zaitseva, Yana Romanova and Olga Vilukhina - considered a claim by lawyer Alexey Panich, who said that the documents presented by the IOC contained fake signatures of former Moscow Anti-Doping laboratory chief Rodchenkov.
The Olympic governing body, which was given a day to provide an explanation regarding the alleged forged signatures, confirmed that Rodchenkov had not personally signed the papers, which were used as key evidence against the Russian athletes accused of doping, according to the lawyer.
Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, the head of the World Health Organization, announced the mortality increase during a media briefing, which differed from the previously estimated rate of around 2 percent globally. In comparison, the death rate for the seasonal flu is "far fewer than 1 percent," he said.
"While many people globally have built up immunity to seasonal flu strains, COVID-19 is a new virus to which no one has immunity; that means more people are susceptible to infection, and some will suffer severe disease," Tedros said. "Globally, about 3.4 percent of reported COVID-19 cases have died; by comparison, seasonal flu generally kills far fewer than 1 percent of those infected."
Comment: See also:
- Iran to temporarily free 54,000 prisoners as coronavirus spreads
- European Defence Agency cancels all meetings as two EU officials test positive for Coronavirus in Brussels
- Coronavirus begins its advance in the USA and Europe
- Head of Iran's emergency medical services is latest official to catch the coronavirus
- Trump and the politics of Coronavirus
- Vast majority of UK doctors warn NHS woefully unprepared for outbreak of coronavirus
- Wuhan closes one hospital built to respond to coronavirus amid steep drop in cases
- Iranian supreme leader's advisory council member dies of coronavirus, Italian Lombardy govt to be screened, first case pops up in Russia














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