Society's Child
Despite what corporate media and politicians tell us, the positive indicators of soaring stock market valuations, rising real estate prices and the rigged unemployment figures that don't count the jailed, the recently released from jails and prisons, and those who've given up on finding work or those working part time who desperately want full time hours real life for most real people hasn't got any better since 2008 or 2009.
Last week an extraordinary and shameful study emerged from the National Center on Family Homelessness confirmed it by demonstrating that almost 2.5 million children in the US were homeless at some point during 2013. That's one child in every thirty, in what we're accustomed to thinking of as the richest nation on earth. In the most recent months for which statistics exist, the rate of homelessness among children is spiking, increased 8% nationally from 2012 to 2013, and by 10% or more in 13 states and the District of Columbia. In 2006 one in 50 children were homeless. In 2010 it was one in 45. Now, in the age of Obama, the 2013 number is 1 in 30.
The causes of homelessness among children are not your comforting stereotypes of drug use and mental illness. These are "comforting" because they encourage us to blame the drug-addicted, and pity the mentally ill, and our comfort keeps us from questioning the capitalist system which declares that we must have poverty in the midst of plenty, or wondering why we ourselves are no more than a month or two from homelessness.
That's what parents might be wondering after they see student Hunter Whitney's recent "mystery mush" lunch.
Had a very #healthylunch today. The apple definitely made up for the "mystery mush" #ThanksMichelleObama pic.twitter.com/RWCnQRCxJKWhen asked, the student theorized it was rice or an "artificially flavored rice substitute."
- Hunter Whitney (@huntwhitney4) November 13, 2014
Whitney confirms the lunch was served at Richland Center High School in Wisconsin.
Marissa Garrett tweeted:
So disappointed in this modified Thanksgiving lunch.. @MichelleObama#ThanksMichelleObamaShe then provided this photo:
- Marissa Garrett (@marissajgarrett) November 18, 2014
@EAGnewspic.twitter.com/CL2EYNMte6Jess Sency tweeted this ball of who-knows-what:
- Marissa Garrett (@marissajgarrett) November 19, 2014
Yum school lunches #thanksmichelleobama
pic.twitter.com/eS27j75Oae
- Jess Sency (@Jess_Sency) November 18, 2014
Comment: What's next? More control, of course! Fascism is here, now. There are forces behind the scenes manipulating the education of children, along with the food they eat. Stupid, malnourished, hungry people are much easier for psychopaths to dominate.
- The Untold History of Modern U.S. Education
- US: How Our Government Has Merged With Corporations
- Public school: A conspiracy against ourselves.
It is more profitable than Goldman Sachs Group Inc., has a better credit rating than J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. and hasn't seen profit growth drop since 2003. Meet Bank of North Dakota, the U.S.'s lone state-owned bank, which has one branch, no automated teller machines and not a single investment banker.He backs this up with comparative data on the BND's performance:
[I]ts total assets have more than doubled, to $6.9 billion last year from $2.8 billion in 2007. By contrast, assets of the much bigger Bank of America Corp. have grown much more slowly, to $2.1 trillion from $1.7 trillion in that period.
. . . Return on equity, a measure of profitability, is 18.56%, about 70% higher than those at Goldman Sachs and J.P. Morgan. . . .
Standard & Poor's Ratings Services last month reaffirmed its double-A-minus rating of the bank, whose deposits are guaranteed by the state of North Dakota. That is above the rating for both Goldman Sachs and J.P. Morgan and among U.S. financial institutions, second only to the Federal Home Loan Banks, rated double-A-plus.
Comment: Costa Rica also has a public banking system that works well. Unfortunately options such as this are unlikely to gain much traction here as the US government is in league with Wall Street's rapacious banksters. For more information on the corruption of the banking system, see the transcript of the SOTT Talk Radio: Interview with 'Web of Debt' author Ellen Brown - How the banking system controls the world.
Comment: How close are we to 1984?:
- 13 quotes from George Orwell's 1984 that resonate more than ever
- It's 30 years late, but Orwell's 1984 has arrived
- Beyond Orwell's worst nightmare
- Pathocracy: Brave New World or 1984?
- The U.S. has become a worse Police State than Orwell could imagine
- Orwell's 1984 come true: Oceania's 'irregular warfare' against Eurasia
Comment: "Stunning lack of judgement, cold calculation, impetuous immaturity, grooming of victims, lack of insight into harm caused"....sounds like a sex-offending psychopath. And as with all psychopaths, these sex offenders in dresses should be removed from society.
RT: Miss Guevara, it's a pleasure to see you here in Moscow again.
Now, you once said once that your father's ideas will last as long as there is injustice in the world. If your father was alive, what do you think would upset him the most today?
Aleida Guevara: Actually, I don't really like having to deal with this sort of question about my father, who is not with us anymore. It's difficult for me to speak for him or say what he would be doing. But judging by the speeches he made, by his personal notes and letters, I can say that he always cared a lot for his people and for the poor in particular. And I am convinced that he would be deeply concerned over what is happening in the Arab world now. He would definitely be thinking of ways to help. He was always respectful of people. And though he criticized socialism quite heavily, he had a lot of respect for the Soviet people, too. That's why I believe he would have been deeply frustrated over what is going on between Russia and Ukraine - after all, these people have lived in harmony for so many years... That's why all of this aggression looks so unnatural to us. So yes, I think my father would take a keen interest.
RT: In one of your interviews with RT you said that if Ernesto Che Guevara were alive, he would be supporting Hugo Chavez in every possible way. Unfortunately, Chavez passed away some time ago. So who would Che Guevara be backing today, and in what ways?
AG: He would be backing all the revolutionary movements, I guess. He was a great revolutionary himself, and he would be helping all the men and women who are trying to change their lives. I have close connections to the landless workers' movement in Brazil, who are fighting for access to land in order to make a living. In spite of the difficulties that the movement has faced for more than 25 years, they've been able to make huge progress across the continent and in Brazil in particular. And frankly speaking, I do believe that this movement does encourage Latin America to move ahead. But decisions made by Evo Morales, Nicolas Maduro and Rafael Correa are also important. My father always appreciated staunch advocates of a certain ideology who know exactly what they want in life. No matter if he agreed or disagreed with them, he would certainly give a hand to those leaders who are willing to change their peoples' lives for the better.
A HAZMAT crew from the N.Y.F.D. arrived on scene shortly after, whisking the woman's body away.
Although test results are pending, authorities apparently decided to leave the hair salon open to the general public, failing decontaminate it against all standard Ebola protocols.
"We were in the building and all of a sudden the other owner came from the store. And then he said someone dropped in the store. We ran in there, there was a person lying on the floor" with blood coming "from her face, nose and mouth, everything", reports one eyewitness, who said that he "didn't touch her".
It is not yet known if the woman died of Ebola, while authorities maintain that it was just a "heart attack".
Comment: "Heart attack"? How many heart attack symptoms include bleeding "from her face, nose and mouth, everything"? Seems like a lame attempt at spinning a very serious incident.
Researchers have evidence that ebola could not only be transmitted by air, but an unknowing victim may not show symptoms.
Shepard Ambellas is the founder, editor-in-chief of Intellihub News and the maker of SHADE the Motion Picture.

Yolanda Ostoloza, 39, faces up to 15 years in jail after being convicted of sexually exploiting the girl.
- Yolanda Ostoloza faces 15 years in prison for sexually exploiting the girl
- She was arrested after undercover detectives set up date with her daughter
- Ostoloza, 39, told police she thought the girl was going to do 'fetish stuff'
Yolanda Ostoloza, 39, faces up to 15 years in prison after she was convicted of promoting prostitution and endangering the welfare of a child in Manhattan Supreme Court.
She was arrested in January after undercover Bronx detectives set up a date with her daughter at the New York Hilton in Midtown and struck up a deal to pay $200 for an undisclosed sex act.
The girl told detectives that she was just 15 and her mother was waiting for her at another hotel, the New York Daily News reported.
'Think about what a barely 15-year-old girl is supposed to be doing. Planning for her Sweet 16, preparing to get her driver's permit,' Manhattan Assistant District Attorney Rachel Ehrhardt said in summations at the trail.
'Doing her homework during her sophomore year of high school. Maybe even thinking about a high school sweetheart.'
'But for [Ostoloza's daughter], her mother had another plan for her... sexually exploit her child for money.'
Officers found Ostoloza waiting for her daughter at the Double Tree Metropolitan, where she was arrested and later charged. Her arrest was part of a NYPD crackdown on prostitution across the city during Superbowl week.
According to the Daily News, after she was arrested, the mother told police she thought her daughter was just going to do 'fetish stuff'.
One day before the mayor of Ashkelon decided to ban Arab construction workers from kindergartens, a high school teacher in the city sent a group of students an image of a Muslim cemetery with the caption, "In times like these, it's important to remember there are also good Arabs! And they can be found here."
The teacher sent the image on Wednesday to a group of 11th and 12th graders via the social messaging service WhatsApp, Ynet reported.
The math teacher reportedly regretted sending the image to his students, saying he sent it to them accidentally and that it was intended for a different group on WhatsApp, according to Ynet.
After receiving the image, one student responded that it was inappropriate to send such an image to students.
The Education Ministry called the incident "extremely grave" and told Ynet that the image "goes against the values of the Education Ministry and the country."
It added that local authorities in Ashkelon would be summoning the teacher for disciplinary action.
The ministry said it would continue to follow the case to ensure the correct disciplinary measures are taken, but told Ynet that "it should be noted the teacher apologized to his students and expressed regret for his actions."













Comment: The more knowledge you gather now, the more choices you'll have when confronting potentially catastrophic situations.
- SOTT Talk Radio: Surviving the Psy-pocalypse - Interview with Stefan Verstappen
We can a learn a lot from the Russian experience: