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Anti-Zionist Israelis join in solidarity with the Great March of Return: 'We can bring this Apartheid system to an end'

israel anti apartheid
© Screenshot
A group of 50 Anti-Zionist Israelis joined the Great March of Return from the Eastern side of the fence that besieges the Gaza Strip.
A group of 50 Anti-Zionist Israelis joined the Great March of Return from the Eastern side of the fence that besieges the Gaza Strip. The group, called Return, raised Palestinian flags that could be seen by the Palestinian protesters and chanted calling for the Right of Return.

A phone conversation between the protesters and Dr. Haidar Eid, a BDS activist protesting West of the fence' took place. "One day we will cross the fence and you will be able to join us, and we will join you", promised Eid.

During the demonstration the protesters witnessed the use of lethal and excessive force by the occupation forces.


Comment: There are still some Israelis with a conscience.


Sheeple

White privilege is real, but liberals are perpetuating it

Eric Kaufmann
© Andy Ngo
Eric Kaufmann
After hosting African-American writer Ta-Nehisi Coates on his television show, Jon Stewart asked Coates whether America's changing demographics could finally upend the anti-black society portrayed in Coates's autobiographical Between the World and Me. Coates was doubtful, but Stewart, speaking for many white liberals, replied, "I hope you're wrong." Stewart's presumption is that America's ethnic transformation will relegate whites, and their prejudice, to the sidelines, ending racial inequality.

Regardless of whether Coates is correct to portray American society as tilted against African-Americans, his skeptical response was closer to reality than Stewart's. The stereotypes, worldviews and institutional practices that advantage native-born whites over other groups - in America and Europe - arise as the result of a complex interaction between individuals and collective representations. Stereotypes about African-Americans are passed on from parents and peers, encoded in cultural products, and internalized by blacks themselves, who may come to cherish them and condemn other African-Americans for failing to "act black," i.e. comply with those stereotypes. To imagine this thinking is limited to white people is naïve and belied by the research literature. In fact, stereotypes about African-Americans are easily acquired by Asians, Latinos and even African immigrants. Meanwhile, stereotypes about Hispanics and Muslims may be adopted by African-Americans. What distinguishes whites is not that they are uniquely susceptible to embracing stereotypes about other races and ethnicities. It's that stereotypes about whites are, for the most part, positive rather than negative.

Arrow Down

WikiLeaks founder Assange's lawsuit over asylum conditions denied by Ecuadorian judge

Assange
© Reuters / Peter Nicholls
An Ecuadorian judge has thrown out the lawsuit by Julian Assange, objecting to the revised terms of his asylum at the Embassy of Ecuador in London, where the WikiLeaks founder has been trapped since 2012.

The judge made the decision following a lengthy hearing held by teleconference. Ecuador will maintain Assange's asylum as long as he wants to keep it, but he must follow the rules laid out for him by the government, an unnamed government official told Reuters on Monday.

The new rules, which were leaked earlier this month by an opposition politician, involve a list of restrictions Assange has argued violate his "fundamental rights and freedoms" as well as Ecuadorian and international law. Among them are restrictions on discussing politics and receiving visitors, and demands of Assange to pay for his own food, medical care, laundry and related expenses of living at the embassy starting December 1.

Ecuador has also threatened to seize Assange's pet cat if he did not care for it properly, according to the leaked regulations.

Comment: See also:


Document

UK blocks repatriation of 'Jihadi' doctor detained by SDF

daesh ISIL
© Sputnik/Andrey Stenin
The 40-year-old dual citizen of the UK and Pakistan, who was working at a Cornwall hospital before he left for Syria two years ago, is suspected of fighting for terrorists despite him claiming that he was simply helping the population in areas under Daesh control.

The British government is refusing to take back the NHS doctor, who is being held in captivity in Syria by Kurdish fighters on suspicion of ties to Daesh, The Daily Telegraph reports.

The captive, identified by the newspaper as Muhaamad Saqib Raza, 40, was detained four months ago by the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), a Kurdish-led militia, as he was trying to flee Syria.

Bullseye

'Do as I say, not as I do': NYT, Google cheerlead for #MeToo but do they practice what they preach?

metoo
© Reuters / Brian Snyder
The New York Times and Google have acted as bullhorns for the #MeToo movement, but their advocacy apparently has limits: Both companies have been accused of botching cases where employees were accused of sexual misconduct.

#MeToo activists cried foul after the New York Times recently revealed that the man credited with creating the Android mobile platform, Andy Rubin, was allowed to discreetly resign from Google. It came after executives learned that he had been accused of coercing a fellow employee into having sex with him.

Instead of being unceremoniously fired and publicly shamed in the media, Rubin has reportedly received a $90 million golden parachute - and heaps of praise - from the tech giant.

Attention

Pennsylvania prosecutor will ask AG Sessions to approve death penalty for synagogue shooter

memorial Tree of Life synagogue
© Reuters / Cathal McNaughton
Mourners visit a makeshift memorial outside the Tree of Life synagogue.
A Pennsylvania prosecutor says he will ask US Attorney General Jeff Sessions to greenlight his request to pursue capital punishment for Robert Bowers, who gunned down worshippers in a Pittsburgh synagogue.

Scott Brady, attorney for the Western District of Pennsylvania, said he launched a necessary legal procedure so prosecutors will be able to proceed with the maximum possible penalty in the case of Bowers, who has been charged with 29 criminal counts for the murder of 11 people at the Tree of Life synagogue in Pittsburgh on Saturday.

Brady is seeking authorization from Sessions to pursue the death penalty, AP reported.

Per US law, each federal death penalty case must be authorized by the AG upon consultation with local attorneys.

Comment: See also:


Pistol

Shots fired at Republican party headquarters in Daytona Beach, Florida

Trump sign
© Volusia County Republican Party / Facebook
Someone opened fire on the Republican Party headquarters in Volusia County, Florida, leaving the building's windows smashed and the offices riddled with bullet holes.

Staff locked up and left the GOP headquarters - which sits in an inconspicuous strip mall unit next to a vape shop and a restaurant in Daytona Beach, just northeast of Orlando - on Sunday afternoon. When they returned on Monday morning, they found the building shot up and the sidewalk littered with broken glass.

Police say at least four shots were discharged into the office, and that the shooting took place some time after 4pm on Sunday. They are currently reviewing CCTV footage from the location, and so far have no witnesses.

Volusia County GOP chairman Tony Ledbetter called the incident "obviously politically motivated," and blamed Democrat supporters.

Comment: See also:


Heart - Black

Milking horror for political gain: Bipartisan calls for unity in wake of recent attacks fall on deaf ears

Pittsburgh Tree of Life shooting
© Reuters / Charles LeClaire
A sign at the Pittsburgh Steelers game on Sunday in the wake of the Tree of Life shooting.
Bipartisan calls for national unity in the face of two recent incidents are likely to fall on deaf ears, as both parties try to assign blame for the Florida bomber threats and Pittsburgh shooting 10 days away from the midterms.

"No one should be politicizing what happened this week," Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee chair Ben Lujan said during a Fox News broadcast on Sunday. "We should come together as a country. This should not be a political response, but rather a response at how we can further bring us together."

Lujan's direct counterpart, Steve Stivers, who chairs the National Republican Congressional Committee, responsible for selecting candidates for the upcoming vote, agreed with him live on-air.

Comment: As they say, 'nothing in politics happens by accident' - Listen to SOTT Radio's analysis of the mid-term election madness:

NewsReal: Mail-Bombs, Migrants, Mass Shootings: US Midterm Election Madness



Airplane

All 189 passengers feared dead in plane crash off Jakarta, Indonesia - UPDATE

Lion Air flight JT610 crash
© Reuters
Workers of PT Pertamina examine recovered debris of what is believed to be from the crashed Lion Air flight JT610.
A plane operated by the low-cost Indonesian airline Lion Air crashed while on a domestic flight from Jakarta. It's the first crash ever for Boeing's new 737 MAX 8 model.

"It has been confirmed that it has crashed," Yusuf Latif, a spokesman for the Indonesian rescue agency, said, as cited by Reuters. The plane was on its way from the Indonesian capital, Jakarta to the city of Pangkal Pinang on Sumatra, a flight slightly longer than an hour.

Latif said that the jet lost contact with air traffic control 13 minutes into the flight, and crashed into the sea.

The plane requested an emergency landing almost immediately after it took off, Sindu Rahayu of the Air Transportation Directorate General said at a press conference. He added that the authorities lost contact with the plane after the request.

The plane was packed with 189 passengers and crew, Indonesian National Search and Rescue Agency said. At least 23 government officials were on board, Reuters reports.


Comment: Soerjanto Thanjono, chief of Indonesia's National Transportation Safety Committee, told reporters at a news briefing that the weather was sunny in the general area and had not been a problem, The New York Times reported.

Update

RT reports
All 189 people on board the ill-fated Indonesian Boeing 737 MAX 8 plane, which crashed in the sea on Monday, have "likely" died, search and rescue officials announced.

"I predict there are no survivors, based on body parts found so far," the chief of the nation's search and rescue agency, Bambang Suryo, said. The chilling forecast came out as the operation to locate and recover the wreckage continues.

The packed Lion Air flight JT610 lost contact with ground control 13 minutes after takeoff in Jakarta. Debris from the aircraft as well as passengers' personal belongings were located floating in the Java Sea, as a massive rescue team was deployed to the crash site.

The first-response team has been sweeping the area with divers and ROVs. The rescuers managed to recover a number of bodies and body parts from the water. The images, posted by the Indonesian National Search and Rescue Agency, show body bags transported from the crash site. Oxygen tanks, women's handbags and wallets, all in bad condition, were also found among the debris, the officials reported.


"Debris and 6 bags of pieces of the victims have already arrived in the port of tanjung priuk"

If indeed no survivors are found, this would be the second-deadliest commercial aviation incident in Indonesian history. In 1997, an Airbus A300B4, operated by Garuda Indonesia, crashed into mountainous terrain, killing all 234 people on board.

The aircraft was brand new and considered among the most advanced planes in the airline's fleet, as were the first Boeing 737 MAX 8s that were delivered to Lion Air a little more than a year ago.

Indonesian President Joko Widodo said that the authorities are doing everything they can "to locate the victims." He ordered the National Commission for Transportation Safety to launch a probe into the crash.



Family

Education reformer John Taylor Gatto has passed away but his spirit and work live on

John Taylor Gatto

John Taylor Gatto
The world's most courageous teacher, John Taylor Gatto, passed away on Thursday, October 25, 2018 in New York City, NY.

John lived a life empowering young people to teach themselves.

Named the New York State Teacher of the Year twice, John was a public school teacher for 30 years who then spent another 20 years as a world renowned speaker giving over 1500 speeches in 9 countries.

His work helped expose the origins and purposes of the government monopoly compulsory school system, which include the creation of obedient people who joyfully serve the state and giant corporations.

He spoke about more than the problems in public schools. He also revealed proven methods of learning that empowered his students and other young people throughout human history.

Comment: More information on the pioneering work of John Taylor Gatto: