Society's ChildS


Bad Guys

EPA officials exposed whistleblowers three minutes after receiving confidential complaint

Environmental Protection Agency
In response to a whistleblower complaint alleging corruption within the EPA's New Chemicals Division, agency officials immediately notified those accused of misconduct.

Within minutes of receiving a complaint from four Environmental Protection Agency whistleblowers in late June, an agency official shared the document with six EPA staffers, including at least one who was named in it, according to records obtained through the Freedom of Information Act. The records — more than 1,000 pages of internal emails — also show that within 24 hours EPA officials sent the whistleblowers' complaint to other staff members who had been named in it. Two days later, the named employees met to discuss it. The releases were not in keeping with the best practices of handling whistleblower complaints, according to several experts contacted by The Intercept, and may have undermined the goals of the staff scientists who filed it.

The scientists' disclosure laid out allegations of corruption within the EPA's New Chemicals Division and provided detailed evidence that managers and high-level agency officials had deliberately tampered with numerous chemical assessments, sometimes deleting hazards from them and altering their conclusions. The environmental group Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility, or PEER, which is representing the whistleblowers, submitted the complaint to Michal Freedhoff, the assistant administrator of the EPA's Office of Pollution Prevention and Toxics, the office that contains the New Chemicals Division, as well as to the EPA inspector general, Rep. Ro Khanna, and The Intercept.

Comment: See also:


Car Black

Britain still wrestling with 'unprecedented demand' for fuel, as govt ministers contradict themselves over when crisis will end

cars
© AFP / Adrian DENNISA line of vehicles queue to fill up at a Tesco petrol station in Camberley, west of London on September 26, 2021.
UK policing minister Kit Malthouse contradicted the Chief Secretary to the Treasury, Simon Clarke, on Friday as government officials gave conflicting timelines for when the country's ongoing fuel crisis would be brought to an end.

Speaking to the media, Malthouse suggested that the long queues and fuel shortages seen at petrol stations across the UK could last for another "week or so," contradicting a government colleague who had suggested that officials had addressed the situation.

On Thursday, Clarke had sought to reassure motorists that the fuel crisis was now "back under control," with the government having outlined a plan to prevent fuel shortages from continuing. The conflicting timelines add to the chaos that has been seen on UK roads in recent weeks, as motorists panic-bought fuel over concerns that the UK is facing an imminent shortage. The government has rejected the idea that there is any need to be concerned, stating that there is not a shortage of fuel, just a lack of HGV drivers to deliver it.


Comment: That's the same thing! If it can't be delivered to the pumps then it's a shortage. They're trying to save face on a technicality.


Malthouse reiterated this on Friday, stating that, while there is still "unprecedented demand" in some regions, demand and supply are coming "better into balance", with a return to normality not expected immediately.

The Petrol Retailers Association has raised concerns in the past week that petrol stations are still running dry quicker than they can secure new fuel supplies from delivery drivers, urging motorists to stop panic buying. The British Army has been put on standby by the government, ready to deliver fuel if needed, as Prime Minister Boris Johnson is preparing to review the current situation, having drawn up a 10-point plan to tackle the fuel crisis.

Megaphone

Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey blasts Facebook's removal of her campaign page: 'Big Tech has gotten out of hand'

Republican Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey
© Brandon GillespieRepublican Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey speaks to Fox News about Big Tech and her opposition to President Joe Biden's proposed coronavirus vaccine mandates.
Republican Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey took a hardline approach to Big Tech this week, blasting Facebook over the temporary removal of her gubernatorial campaign page and accusing it of working alongside President Joe Biden's administration to stop conservatives from speaking out on things like opposition to federal coronavirus vaccine mandates.

Speaking with Fox News Digital, Ivey reiterated she strongly supported Alabamians taking the vaccine, but continued to reject any attempts by the federal government to mandate vaccinations. She blamed her opposition to those mandates as the reason for Facebook taking action against her page - Facebook has called it a mistake - and declared that "Big Tech has gotten out of hand" in its attitude towards conservatives.

"I've been against mandates since day one," Ivey said, before adding she was one of the earliest leaders to speak out on the importance of people getting vaccinated. "I took the vaccine along with state health policy, and took the second shot, and I've even had the booster."

"So I believe in the vaccine. I just don't believe in mandating any level of government. That's just not the role of government," she added. "The mandate that President Biden has rolled out puts an extra burden on our already belabored and beleaguered businesses and employees. And it's just unacceptable."

Comment: See also:


Eye 2

Former French police officer confesses in suicide note to being notorious serial killer & child rapist

gendarme
© Pascal Pochard Casabianca / AFP
A man who served as a gendarme in Paris has admitted to being behind a number of cold-blooded murders and rapes that terrorized France for decades. He took his own life this week, having been summoned for a DNA test.

Identified in the media as François Verove, aged 59, he was found dead on Wednesday in a rented apartment in Le Grau-du-Roi, a resort on France's Mediterranean coast. A note found in the flat read, "I admit to being a prominent criminal who committed unforgivable acts until the end of the 1990s," according to reports in French outlets, which said he had died from a drugs overdose.

Samples from the now-posthumous DNA test were confirmed to have matched those found on evidence at several old crime scenes.

The serial killer, who became known as 'the Pockmarked Man' ('Le Grele') because of witnesses' recollections of his acne-scarred face, is believed to have murdered at least four people and committed at least six rapes, with most of his victims having been underage girls.

Display

Facebook admits targeting kids as young as four, where is the parental outrage?

The 'big' revelation that Facebook has been researching how to attract young children to its platform would only be newsworthy if the social media giant weren't doing so.

There are many things wrong with Facebook, especially the unaccountable control it exercises over today's public square. But researching how to attract and capture tomorrow's customers is not one of them.

Child using Facebook
© FILE PHOTO. Getty Images / Oliver Berg

Comment: The real issue, as has been mentioned, is the lack of protection provided to children from their parents.


Bizarro Earth

Best of the Web: UK farmers face cull of 150,000 pigs after lockdown creates backlog of 'disastrous' proportions

pigs
FILE PHOTO: The Yorkshire stockman, who has not been named, took the drastic measure because they were not killing the animals fast enough
Farmers face having to shoot dead hundreds of thousands of pigs because staff shortages at abattoirs have left too many packed in sheds on farms.

The National Farmers' Union warned as many as 150,000 animals are under threat of being culled in the next ten days.

It said a shortage of butchers means farmers are having to 'throw pigs in a skip' because they cannot be slaughtered and carved.

Nick Allen, from the British Meat Processors Association (BMPA), told the BBC that abattoirs are unable to process pigs at the usual rate because of a shortage of workers.

This means live animals are mounting up on farms and some farmers were 'quietly starting to cull.'

Comment: For more on the issue, check out SOTT radio's: NewsReal: Is The Government Hyping Shortages? And is 'Vaccination Shedding' Really a Thing?




Camcorder

Project Veritas records J&J officials: Kids shouldn't get COVID vaccines, but adults who don't comply with mandates should be 'inconvenienced'

Project veritas J&J vaccine undercover
© Project VeritasProject Veritas undercover
Project Veritas released the third video of its COVID vaccine investigative series today exposing two Johnson & Johnson [J&J] officials, who argue children do not need to take the COVID vaccine in part because of the potential long-term side effects.

One of the exposed J&J employees, a scientist by the name of Justin Durrant, laughs about inconveniencing unvaccinated adults if they refuse to comply with mandates being imposed upon them:

Comment: More excellent work from Project Veritas.

Part 1: Federal Nurse Goes Public: "Government Doesn't Want People to Know That The Covid Vaccine is Full of Sh*t"

Part 2: Project Veritas: Outrage as FDA employee caught saying African-Americans should be vaccinated against their will: "Blow-darts is always the answer"


Light Saber

NYC teachers appeal to US Supreme Court in last-ditch attempt to stave off vaccine mandate

nyc teahers protest vaccine mandate
© Kevin C. Downs/The New York PostAnti-vax teachers and activists protest the mandate in NYC earlier this month.
Teachers opposed to the city's vaccination mandate are appealing to the US Supreme Court in a last ditch attempt to halt Friday's dose deadline.

In a petition to Justice Sonia Sotomayor, four plaintiffs argue for an emergency injunction that would block the city from removing unvaccinated teachers from schools at the end of the workday.

"This Court should grant the injunction after nearly two years of lockdowns, to prevent the largest public-school system in the country from further disrupting the education of hundreds of thousands of students who desperately need in-person teachers," the petition argues.

Comment: Teachers aren't the only ones in the crosshairs:


Quenelle

Kiev fuming as Russia begins pumping gas to Hungary bypassing Ukraine

nord stream gas
© Sputnik / Vitaly Timkiv
Russia's state energy supplier, Gazprom, has begun supplying gas to Hungary through the Balkan Stream pipeline and pipelines in southeastern Europe under a long-term contract signed earlier this week.

As Gazprom reported earlier, two 15-year contracts were signed for the supply of Russian gas to Hungary to a total volume of up to 4.5 billion cubic meters per year and a clause to change supply quantities after 10 years.

Previous Russian gas deliveries to Hungary were supplied using Ukraine's pipeline network. As they now bypass Ukraine, Kiev denounced the deal. It is to request that the European Commission assess the compliance of the agreement against European energy legislation.

Comment: As countries across the planet struggle to meet their energy needs, it's becoming even less likely that any interference by other nations that could potentially reduce supplies will be tolerated:


Airplane

'Heartless' United Airlines vaccine mandate halted in federal court

Pilot vaccine
© Scott Olson/Getty ImagesUnited Airlines pilot receives vaccine
United Airlines reluctantly agreed to postpone its company-wide Chinese coronavirus vaccine mandate Friday until a federal judge is able to hold further hearings in a case brought by six of the airline's employees.

Evidently fearing it could lose Friday's court battle and be slapped with a temporary restraining order (TRO), the airline pivoted 180 degrees and agreed to postpone its mandate until October 15. United Airlines originally told its 67,000 U.S. employees they must be vaccinated against Chinese coronavirus (or secure an exemption) by September 27 or face termination. Instead, unvaccinated employees will now be able to continue working normally while the plaintiffs and the company gather what they need to proceed in court.

Mark Paoletta, a partner at Schaerr Jaffe representing the plaintiff said in a statement:
"We are pleased that under a threat of a Temporary Restraining Order, United Airlines postponed its heartless and unlawful vaccine mandate that would impose on approximately 2,000 employees the unconscionable choice of violating their religious faith, violating their doctors' orders, or essentially losing their job."
Six United Airlines employees are suing the company for its "draconian" Chinese coronavirus vaccine mandate, alleging the company has violated Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) by discriminating against them based on their religious and medical exemptions.