Society's Child
Rutgers University's Brittney Cooper is a master at this. The associated professor of Women's and Gender Studies and Africana Studies who once opined that Jesus was "potentially queer" or was "married to a prostitute," called black city officials she did not like "white supremacists in Blackface," and had nothing but words of "the four-letter variety" after the US Supreme Court allowed for religious exemptions to the ObamaCare contraceptive mandate, now says that the very concept of time itself is ... racially biased.
Which is why when the Louvre Abu Dhabi cancelled a planned showing of the work this week, it caught the eye of art world yet again. Not only that, but the museum's culture department has deflected questions about the work and other museum workers have said that they "do not know where the painting is," according to Inquisitr.
The bottom line: the painting appears to have vanished into thin air.
French officials at the Louvre in Paris expected to get the painting for an exhibition later this year that will mark the 500th anniversary of Da Vinci's death. They hoped that the painting would surface prior to then, but so far, it hasn't.
Hungarian counter-terrorism officers apprehended a Syrian national, in Budapest last week, who had been identified as a high-ranking member of Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS/ISIL). The suspected terrorist, posing as a refugee, reportedly received a prepaid debit card from the EU upon his arrival in Europe - one of 64,000 individuals to receive the taxpayer-subsidized cards.
While the EU insists that a strict screening process is used to ensure the euro handouts reach the right people, the Hungarian government has argued that the embarrassing discovery highlights the grave security threat facing Europe, as jihadists fleeing the Middle East seek refuge abroad.
Philip Ingram, a former British military intelligence officer, agreed, telling RT that Europe must become more diligent as Islamic militants flee Syria and Iraq. "We're seeing a time of transition. They'll transition into something different. This is a very, very dangerous and difficult period, and we need to monitor that transition very closely, to be able to identify and track known jihadists that are coming through," he said.
From tricking Elliott Abrams into proving the United States' power over Juan Guaido, to getting the investigators of the Skripal case to admit they didn't know which country produced the Novichok poison, Stolyarov is no ordinary prank caller. Yet, as he himself is quick to admit, he lacks some of the "moral ethics" a journalist ought to possess. All the same, he and his partner in crime, Vladimir Kuznetsov, have been able to get the truth out of high-ranking officials in ways normal journalists could only dream of.
The duo's brand of "prank journalism" aims to be "useful to society," provoking both rare moments of honesty from powerful figures as well as laughter among audiences. Watch Afshin Rattansi's conversation with the Russian trickster about how he manages to pull off his epic pranks on people at the highest levels of international politics on RT.
As a French historian noted in 1846, "Machine production...brings within the reach of the poor a world of useful objects, even luxurious and artistic objects, which they could never reach before."
Today, I wish to turn to pollution. It is well known that industrialization helped to pollute the environment, but that does not mean that air and water were clean before factories and mills came along! Compared to today, our ancestors had to endure horrific environmental conditions.
Comment: Social and environmental justice warriors and anti-capitalist activists of all types would do well to read a little real history before they roundly denounce the 'modern world'. It is true that we live in an increasingly dystopian society, but that is largely due to the lack of truly moral guidance from authorities and cannot reasonably be laid at the door of technological progress. Indeed, without the creature comforts of modern technology, the immorality of modern Western life would likely be too much to bear.
At the same time, modern creature comforts have led many people to passively accept or ignore the immorality that defines modern Western culture and encouraged the 'social justice' types to misjudge what should be railed against and what should be left well alone. Indeed, a major part of the immorality sweeping Western society is the result of modern technology and comforts that allows fanatical social justice warriors the time and means to promote their twisted view of reality far and wide.
Just today in the New York Times, Neil Irwin notices with some consternation that low interest rates have a strange way of favoring the biggest players in a market. The revelation comes from a chance encounter with on-the-ground experiences of actual entrepreneurs.
Comment: While this may be true, it is also true that the financial system is so manipulated, its values distorted and at the whims of an unaccountable government-corporate elite that whichever system is employed it's unlikely to ever benefit to the little man:
- US retail layoffs up 92% in 2019 - Even Wal-Mart is "quietly closing stores"
- 'Prison time for fraudsters': Salvini calls for elimination of Italy's Central Bank
- Fraud, deception, laundering - Bailed out banks still behaving badly and no one's stopping them
- Banks used tax schemes to steal €55 billion from Europe's treasuries - And they're still at it
If you are an investment banker, and you settle into your seat on a train after a long day of doing investment banking, and after a while you look up from your novel and notice that the person sitting next to you is also an investment banker, a competitor, and not only that but he is doing investment banking right now, and not only that but you can see his email and figure out what company he is working for and what deal he is working on, what should you do?
There is a correct answer, and you are not going to like it, but it is: You should get out your phone and, carefully and casually and without letting him see your screen, you should email the people back at your office and try to get them to pitch his client right now and take the deal away from him, or at least get a role in it. Then your colleagues will scramble to use the information you gather to put together, within the hour, a compelling pitch to the client, and they will call the client and present their credentials and make their pitch, and the client will say "wait how did you even know we were doing a deal, it is secret," and your colleagues will smugly reply "we are investment bankers, it is our business to know what deals are going on, and we are very good at our business, also by the way if I were you I'd have some questions for your current bankers about leaks," and the client will be impressed and hire your bank and fire the other guy's bank.

The reactor units No.1 to 4 are seen over storage tanks for radioactive water at Tokyo Electric Power Co's (TEPCO) tsunami-crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant in Okuma town, Fukushima prefecture, Japan February 18, 2019. Picture taken February 18, 2019.
Analysis of seawater collected last year near St. Lawrence Island revealed a slight elevation in levels of radioactive cesium-137 attributable to the Fukushima disaster, the University of Alaska Fairbanks Sea Grant program said.
"This is the northern edge of the plume," said Gay Sheffield, a Sea Grant marine advisory agent based in the Bering Sea town of Nome, Alaska.
The bombings last week happened over consecutive days, causing last Saturday Mogadishu's Mayor Abdirahman Omar Osman to announce a new counter terrorism strategy to end the wave of attacks by Al-Shabaab sleeper cells thought to be hiding embedded among the local population.
"Since it's a massive operation targeting houses across the city, we ask the public at large to exercise more patience and cooperate with the security personnel in the line of duty," said Mayor Abdirahman Omar Osman.
The exchange of fire erupted as members of India's army, paramilitaries, and the special operations group of the Jammu & Kashmir police force conducted a cordon-and-search-operation following a tip-off, according to local media. The wounded were evacuated and taken to hospital, and are now in a stable condition.
As the cordon was tightened, the militants fired at the forces, triggering a fierce gunfight in which four ultras were neutralized," a police official said. He added that the dead militants were believed to be members of the Pakistan-based Islamist group, Lashkar-e-Taiba, and security personnel was working to identify the dead members.














Comment: See below for more on this 'missing' masterpiece: