Society's ChildS


Info

Shaq rejects celebrity status: 'These people are out of their freaking mind'

Shaquile O’Neal
© Turner SportsShaquile O’Neal
Shaquille O'Neal is done.

The four-time NBA champion and one of the greatest basketball players of all time renounced his celebrity status in an interview with the New York Post. The 7-foot-1 former Los Angeles Lakers superstar, who is also one of the most recognizable athletes, is done with the glitz and glamour.

"These celebrities are going freaking crazy and I don't want to be one. I denounce my celebrity-ness today. I'm done with it," he told the New York Post on Friday.

"I don't want to be in that category. Celebrities are crazy, they really are. Don't call me that anymore. These people are out of their freaking mind with how they treat people, what they do, what they say. That's never been me. I never want to be looked at like that."

Comment: The original interview further reveals why Shaq doesn't want to be associate with celebrities:
"I came from nothing," he said. "But, just because I made it doesn't mean I'm bigger than you, smarter than you — just because I have more money doesn't mean I'm better than you. I've never been that way and I never will be that way. So I don't want to be in that category of people.

"When they talk about Shaq, what do you say? 'He's a nice guy.' Because what else can you be? You're either nice or you're the A-word, and I definitely won't be looked at as the A-word," he said.

"I want people to say, 'Bro, he's nice. He didn't have an entourage. His people didn't take my phone because I took a picture and threw it.'"
Shaq may have some strange and wrong opinions. But society would do well to take after him in valuing the virtues of kindness, generosity, and humility more than status, money, and one's image.


Black Magic

New York hospitals sack their unvaxxed employees as police state's jaws snap shut: From 'healthcare heroes' to 2nd-class zeroes

new york protest vaccine mandate
© Reuters / Andrew KellyProtest against vaccine mandates in NYC
New York has begun firing and suspending healthcare workers who refuse to get inoculated with the experimental Covid-19 shot, proving the mandate from the state that once praised its 'frontline heroes' is really just about power.

Monday was the deadline for New York's healthcare workers to receive their first vaccine dose, and the state's facade of blissful obedience has already begun to crack. While New York City Health + Hospitals head Dr. Mitchell Katz has reported that just 5% of city nurses were unvaccinated (and presumably kicked to the curb), the number across the state is significantly higher - 16%, according to Governor Kathy Hochul, who spoke on Saturday of potentially filling the staffing void with National Guard service members or out-of-state medical workers as she declared yet another statewide disaster emergency.

Handcuffs

Wayne Couzens 'used police ID and handcuffs to kidnap Sarah Everard'

sarah everard
© Family Handout/CPS/PASarah Everard’s mother, Susan, told the court she remained ‘tormented’ at the thought of what her 33-year-old daughter endured.
Sentencing hearing told that Met officer 'hunted for a female to rape', as footage shows him staging a false arrest of his victim.

Wayne Couzens used his police warrant card and handcuffs to lure Sarah Everard off the street before strangling her with his police belt and burning her body, depriving her family of the chance to say a final goodbye, a court has heard.

Video footage released on Wednesday showed Couzens, then a serving Metropolitan police officer, staging a false arrest of Everard as she returned from a friend's house in south London in March during a period of coronavirus lockdown measures.

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Info

Campaigner's new book lays bare the battle between feminists and the trans lobby that demands natal males access women-only spaces

feminism for women julie bindel book cover
© thejuliebindel.com'Feminism for Women' (2021) by Julie Bindel.
Julie Bindel's Feminism for Women resets the narrative on a women's movement recently driven off course by transgender activists who skew the reality of prostitution, porn and male violence against females.

When I asked what she had learned at school one day last week, my 12-year old daughter told me they had been talking about feminism and the #MeToo movement. I didn't dare ask any more at the risk of straying into an enemy minefield.

But I doubt that Julie Bindel's "Feminism for Women: The Real Route to Liberation" is on the reading list at her school. Which is a shame, because Bindel's take on feminism in her new book is a refreshing reminder of what drives genuine campaigners like her. As the title suggests, it attempts to reset the narrative that has come to consume feminism's true goals.

Comment: It sounds like the book is probably so steeped in identity politics as to be unreadable, however, the feminist's gripe with trans women pushing women out of the picture is legitimate.

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Bad Guys

CIA's purported plans to abduct & kill Assange shows lengths US will go to attack press freedom - WikiLeaks editor-in-chief to RT

WikiLeaks Editor-in-Chief Kristinn Hrafnsson
WikiLeaks Editor-in-Chief Kristinn Hrafnsson told RT the revelations about alleged CIA plans to kidnap and kill Julian Assange show how far US agencies are willing to go to "crack down" on journalists exposing its "dark secrets".

Speaking to RT's Afshin Rattanshi on his show Going Underground, Hrafnsson said the CIA's effort to "craft a new definition" for WikiLeaks had meant that the group would be considered "hostile agents" - which, he added, was "basically a licence to kill".

According to a bombshell Yahoo News report on Sunday, the CIA had sought to define Assange and other journalists as "information brokers" - a process that culminated in former Director Mike Pompeo infamously designating WikiLeaks a "non-state hostile intelligence service" so as to allow the agency to conduct "offensive counterintelligence" activities on the group.

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Eye 1

New York won't extend unemployment benefits to healthcare workers fired over COVID-19 vaccine mandate

intubating covid patient
© Mario Tama/Getty ImagesClinicians work on intubating a COVID-19 patient in the ICU at Lake Charles Memorial Hospital in Lake Charles, Louisiana on August 10, 2021.
Healthcare workers who refuse the COVID-19 vaccine and are fired for failing to comply with a new state law will not be able to collect unemployment benefits unless they present a doctor-approved request for medical accommodation, according to the New York Department of Labor.

New York's new vaccine mandate, which goes into effect Monday, makes it necessary for workers in New York's hospitals and nursing homes to have received at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine. Employees working at in home care, hospice, and adult care facilities need to be vaccinated by October 7. The mandate also applies to all out-of-state and contract medical staff who practice in New York.

Comment: While they're doing their best to screw over medical staff who have the audacity to refuse vaccinations, it is patently obvious that they're only screwing themselves. When you're struggling with a nurse shortage, you don't fire one quarter of your nurses! New York is going to be a really bad place to get sick or injured come October.

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Syringe

Tennis star Jeremy Chardy: I regret getting vaccinated, I have series of problems now

tennis Jeremy Chardy
Former world No. 25 Jeremy Chardy says he has a "series of problems" after taking the COVID-19 vaccine and his 2021 season is over. This summer, 34-year-old Chardy decided to get vaccinated and it didn't work out well for him.

Chardy, now ranked at No. 73 in the world, claims he is unable to train and play. "Since I got my vaccine [between the Olympics and the US Open], I have a problem, I have a series of problems. As a result, I can't train, I can't play.

[...] I prefer to take more time to heal myself and be sure that, in the future, I won't have any problems," Chardy told L'Equipe.

Comment: With athletes like Chardy citing negative effects on performance, is it any wonder other athletes, like the NBA's Jonathan Isaac, are avoiding vaccination?

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Syringe

Nicola Sturgeon delays 'botched' vaccine passport scheme

Nicola Sturgeon
© CREDIT: Jeff J MitchellNicola Sturgeon introduced a two-week grace period for venues on Tuesday
The First Minister announces that bars, hotels and nightclubs will now have until Oct 18 to get arrangements in place

Nicola Sturgeon has delayed the enforcement of her "botched" vaccine passport scheme after the hospitality industry warned it was unworkable and a sharp drop in Covid cases raised more doubts over why it was needed.

Only days before the scheme comes into force, at 5am on Friday, the First Minister announced she was giving the premises where it would apply another two-and-a-half weeks to prepare.

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Syringe

Orlando Magic's Jonathan Isaac defends freedom of choice to reject COVID jab

Jonathan Isaac
© YouTube
'Our understanding of antibodies, of natural immunity, has changed a great deal from the onset of the pandemic and is still evolving,' Isaac said.

The Orlando Magic's Jonathan Isaac defended his decision not to get the COVID-19 jab on Monday night as a freedom that should be afforded to everyone.

"I thank God, I'm grateful that I live in a society where vaccines are possible and we can protect ourselves and have the means to protect ourselves in the first place. But with that being said, it is my belief that the vaccine status of every person should be their own choice and completely up to them without the bullying, without being pressured, or without being forced into doing so," Isaac said.

Comment: Isaac might be one of the most free-thinking and eloquent players in professional sports. His argument is reasonable, which is clearly making it difficult for the press to smear him as an antivaxxer nutcase (although they're trying to do it anyway).

See also: Ex-NBA champ urges end to 'iron fist' lockdowns, claims influencers & police are being prevented from speaking about Covid


Stormtrooper

Ontario doctor faces restrictions for allegedly spreading false statements about COVID-19

Dr.Patrick Phillips
© Twitter
Kirkland Lake area physician and Richmond Hill doctor facing investigation

Another Ontario doctor has been called on the carpet for questionable activities related to COVID-19 misinformation.

One week after a Richmond Hill doctor drew large crowds of people seeking vaccine exemptions, a Timiskiming-area physician is facing restrictions by the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario (CPSO).

In a release issued this morning, the College said allegations that Dr. Patrick Phillips is incompetent and engaged in "disgraceful, dishonourable or unprofessional conduct," have been referred to the Ontario Physicians and Surgeons Discipline Tribunal.
"In light of Dr. Phillips' refusal to co-operate with the College's investigation or comply with our remedial efforts, the College is further imposing restrictions," the statement said.
Restrictions that took effect at 11:59 p.m. Sept. 27 prevent Phillips from providing medical exemptions in relation to masks, vaccines and testing for COVID-19. He is also restricted from providing ivermectin, Fluvoxamine and Atorvastatin in relation to the coronavirus — medications that are unproven and potentially dangerous.

Comment: Canada, like many other countries in the world, is becoming a totalitarian state. Doctors and medical staff who disagree with the official party lines and actually want to follow the science are removed from their positions, threatened and sanctioned. Everybody must comply with the official narrative and obey the rules no matter what. It doesn't matter if those rules have anything to do with science and public health. They are even monitoring their social media accounts, what they talk and write about, and what they like or dislike. Welcome to the "new normal."

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