Society's ChildS


Bad Guys

Little outcry over Antifa's equal-opportunity beatdowns of journalists left and right

portland proud boys antifa fight
© Getty ImagesMembers of the Proud Boys fight with far-left counter protesters in Portland, Oregon, on August 22, 2021.
From covering displaced refugees around the globe to the obstacles faced by protesters seeking change in America, freelance photojournalist Maranie Staab believes her camera can be a force for truth and social justice. The work of a "conflict photographer" often requires physical courage in places she has reported from, such as Africa and the Middle East. It certainly did so on Aug. 22, while Staab was covering demonstrations in Portland, Ore.

Members of the left-wing group antifa called her a "slut" and then demanded that journalists assembled to cover the protests "get the f--- out." Staab, a 2020 reporting fellow for the liberal Pulitzer Center, tried to calm the situation. She was assaulted. She told the Willamette Week that they grabbed her phone and smashed it. Then they threw her to the pavement and sprayed her with mace. The ugly assault on Staab (below) was filmed and distributed quickly online, resulting in widespread condemnation. "If we're on a public street and a newsworthy event is occurring, you're not going to tell me what I can and cannot film," Staab told the weekly newspaper.

NPC

The woke are abolishing women

cast of vagina monologues 2001
© GettyActresses Rosie Perez, Glenn Close and Julianna Margulies pose with playwright Eve Ensler at an event to announce an all-star performance of her play The Vagina Monologues, 2001
Last week, the Lancet medical journal became briefly internet-famous when it published the following sentence on its Twitter account: 'Historically, the anatomy and physiology of bodies with vaginas have been neglected.'

The sentence is a pullquote from a bigger article, but boy does it capture the imagination on its own. Like a Hieronymous Bosch painting, you can return to it again and again, always finding something new and surprising to appreciate. There's the musicality of it, all those four- and five-syllable words that roll pleasantly off the tongue. There's the faintly macabre invocation of 'bodies', followed by 'with vaginas', suggesting a collection of corpses accessorized with (but not necessarily attached to) a bunch of birth canals. There's a straightforward descriptiveness, too, almost evocative of content meant for children: if you liked Bananas in Pajamas, you're gonna love Bodies with Vaginas!

Info

WHO 'heartbroken' by Congo sex abuse probe findings

Dr. Matshidiso Moeti
© Sylvain Gaboury/Patrick McMullan via Getty ImagesDr. Matshidiso Moeti.
The World Health Organization's regional director for Africa said on Tuesday that the agency was "heartbroken" by the findings of an independent commission on sex abuse in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

"We in the WHO are indeed humbled, horrified and heartbroken by the findings of this inquiry," Matshidiso Moeti said at a news briefing.

WHO director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said the commission's report made for "harrowing reading".

Comment: UPDATE 28/09/21: Sky News reported that the accused were Congolese and foreigners and that these allegations may be the "tip of the iceberg".
Both foreigners and Congolese nationals were among the 83 alleged perpetrators identified.

The majority were Congolese staff hired on a temporary basis who took advantage of their apparent authority to obtain sexual favours, the report said.

[...]

AP has since obtained recordings of meetings during which WHO emergencies chief Dr Michael Ryan acknowledged that the DRC sex abuse allegations were likely to be "the tip of an iceberg" and were part of a problem that "does reflect a culture as well".

[...]

A member of the Congolese Union of Media Women (UCOFEM), Julie Londo, applauded WHO for punishing staff members involved in the abuse allegations but said the agency needed to go further.

She said: "WHO must also think about reparation for the women who were traumatised by the rapes and the dozens of children who were born with unwanted pregnancies as a result of the rapes.

"There are a dozen girls in Butembo and Beni who had children with doctors during the Ebola epidemic, but today others are sent back by their families because they had children with foreigners...We will continue our fight to end these abuses."



No Entry

US siblings barred from leaving China for three years return home after Huawei executive deal

Huawei sign
© APThe duration of the ban on Cynthia and Victor Liu paralleled the case of Meng Wanzhou, a top Huawei executive.
Cynthia and Victor Liu were slapped with an 'exit ban' by China after they went to visit their grandfather in 2018.

Two American siblings returned home this weekend from China, more than three years after an "exit ban" barred them from leaving the country.

A US official confirmed the lifting of the ban and the homecoming of Cynthia Liu, a consultant at McKinsey & Company and Victor Liu, a Georgetown University student.

People 2

'Bodies with vaginas'?! Lancet slammed for 'erasing women' after promoting latest issue with controversial quote UPDATE: Lancet gives half-assed apology

lancet cover
© Twitter/screenshotThe September 25, 2021 cover of The Lancet, Volume 398 Number 10306.
The prestigious medical journal, The Lancet, is in hot water over its latest issue. A quote on the cover from a senior editor has triggered widespread outrage on social media for "dehumanizing" and "erasing" women.

"Historically, the anatomy and physiology of bodies with vaginas have been neglected," says the pull quote on the cover of its latest issue, with a publication date of September 25.


Comment: Academia is slowly all getting in line with the PC Newspeak, no matter how ridiculous or how many people they offend. It seems most need to experience the "get woke, go broke" phenomenon for themselves before they'll realize that it's true.

See also: UPDATE: The Lancet has apologized. From RT:
Responding to backlash, the prestigious medical journal's chief editor triggered another, with a confusing apology bringing up "transgender health" instead.

Last week's cover of the Lancet "conveyed the impression that we have dehumanised and marginalised women," editor in chief Richard Horton said Monday, adding that regular readers "will understand that this would never have been our intention," as the journal "strives for maximum inclusivity of all people in its vision for advancing health."


Horton apologized "to our readers who were offended by the cover quote and the use of those same words in the review."

However, he then triggered another round of condemnations by pointing out that "transgender health is an important dimension of modern health care, but one that remains neglected," and that the article from which the quote was taken was "a compelling call to empower women, together with non-binary, trans, and intersex people who have experienced menstruation."

Within a few hours, the apology tweet was rivaling the ratio of last week's controversy, with 1,500 replies and quote-tweets to fewer than 200 likes and retweets.

"This is not an explanation but cowardice digging itself a deeper hole," said one reader.

"We're not 'offended.' We're angry with you colluding with the political erasure of women. Especially in a context when you are supposed to be rectifying that historic erasure," said Dr. Jane Clare Jones, an outspoken feminist.

"Your notion of 'inclusivity' demeans and erases women. Your 'apology' is a word salad that offends against common sense and science," wrote journalist and novelist Joan Smith.

Women aren't offended, but "sick of being sidelined, patronised & talked at," said Baroness Jacqueline Foster, a member of the UK House of Lords. "You also presume we don't understand the challenges of trans people - we do - but not at the expense of our being marginalised," she added.



Megaphone

'No means no!' Protests erupt across New York demanding end to vaccine mandates & passports

new york city protest
© Reuters / David 'Dee' DelgadoPeople gather during a protest against mandated Covid vaccines and vaccine passports, in New York City, September 27, 2021.
Large crowds of demonstrators gathered around sites in New York City, as well as upstate, demanding the government repeal mandatory vaccination orders for certain categories of workers and the 'passport' system implemented in NYC.

Protesters were seen marching in Manhattan, Staten Island, and elsewhere in the city on Monday afternoon and into the evening, with one reporter on the scene estimating a crowd of at least 1,000 in the former borough.


Comment: See also:


Oil Well

Millions of Chinese residents lose power after widespread, "unexpected" blackouts; power company warns this is "new normal"

Shenyang Blackout
© WeiboSome traffic lights in Shenyang, the capital of the Liaoning province, suddenly stopped working.
Just yesterday we warned that a "Power Supply Shock Looms" as the energy crisis gripping Europe - and especially the UK - was set to hammer China, and just a few hours later we see this in practice as residents in three north-east Chinese provinces experienced unannounced power cuts as the electricity shortage which initially hit factories spreads to homes.

People living in Liaoning, Jilin and Heilongjiang provinces complained on social media about the lack of heating, and lifts and traffic lights not working.


Comment: See also:


Eye 1

Japan to gradually lift 'state of emergency' measures for the first time in 6 months

japan lockdown mask station
© Reuters/Kevin CoombsCommuters wearing face masks arrive at Shinagawa Station at the start of the working day amid the lockdown, in Tokyo, Japan, August 2, 2021
Japan will lift a coronavirus state of emergency in all regions on Thursday for the first time in nearly six months, as the number of new cases and deaths falls and the strain on the medical system eases, Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga said.

Daily cases have fallen nationwide from more than 25,000 last month to 1,128 on Monday, but the opening will be gradual with some curbs on restaurants and large-scale events staying in place for about a month.

The government will introduce a certification system whereby only approved restaurants can stay open until 9 p.m and a ban on serving alcohol will be lifted everywhere unless local governors object.


Comment: So they're retaining some of the more nonsensical restrictions for the time being.


Comment: It's rather curious that numerous nations have opted to gradually lift lockdowns, and at around the same time, despite the significant differences in restrictions, vaccination rates, cases and deaths; meanwhile Australia's pathocrats are threatening that anybody who has not been vaccinated will not be allowed to live a normal life. Which, taken together, further confirms what has become abundantly clear over the last 18+ months, that little of this is driven by science, and little of it is for the benefit of our health:


Yoda

Canadian Pastor Artur Pawlowski who defied lockdown, ARRESTED again after landing at Calgary airport

pawlowski
Calgary Pastor Artur Pawlowski has been arrested upon his return to Canada from a months-long speaking tour in the United States.
Pastor Artur Pawlowski has just been arrested upon his return to Canada from a months-long speaking tour in the United States.

After landing at the Calgary airport, police rushed onto the tarmac and arrested Pastor Artur the moment he stepped off the plane.

Rebel News reporter Adam Soos was on the scene to report on Pastor Artur's return to Calgary, when he learned that Pastor Artur had been arrested. The reason for his arrest and any charges laid against him are unknown.

Comment: Rebel News follows up:
Immediately upon his return to Canada, authorities arrested Pastor Artur Pawlowski as he was debarking a private plane. They didn't even allow him to say hello to his family, and many were left wondering why he had been arrested. You have likely already seen the troubling arrest footage, but we are now able to bring you an exclusive phone interview of Pastor Artur Pawlowski's first call from behind bars.

Pastor Artur explained that he was arrested on two new charges, and that beyond that he has been given very little information. He does not know what lies ahead, or how long he will be held at this point, but he decried the state of Canada that is becoming more and more like the communist life he left behind as a child. We will continue to provide the latest and most exclusive developments in this rapidly evolving story.

The continued violation of Pastor Artur's fundamental rights has been a point of shame for Canadians, and has drawn a great deal of criticism from people around the world. Police, health officials and politicians alike are once again putting on a repulsive display of authoritarian rule and persecution. The world will take notice, and as always, we will be there to tell the story.




X

Major crypto exchanges stop letting Chinese users sign up after Beijing's renewed crackdown

china bitcoin
© Budrul Chukrut | SOPA Images | LightRocket | Getty ImagesIn this photo illustration, the Bitcoin logo is seen on a mobile device with People’s Republic of China flag in the background.
Huobi, one of the world's largest cryptocurrency exchanges, said it has ceased new account openings for mainland Chinese users after Beijing renewed a crackdown on virtual currencies.

The People's Bank of China declared all virtual currency-related activities illegal including trading on Friday. The Chinese central bank also took aim at overseas exchanges providing services to mainland China users.

Huobi, one of these exchanges, said on Sunday that it would end account registrations for new mainland Chinese users. The company will also gradually retire existing accounts of mainland Chinese users by midnight on Dec. 31, 2021.

Meanwhile Binance, one of the world's largest cryptocurrency exchanges, said that account registrations using Chinese mobile phone numbers are now blocked. The Binance app is also no longer available for download in China.

"Binance takes its compliance obligations very seriously and is committed to following local regulator requirements wherever we operate," a spokesperson told CNBC.