Society's Child
Kevin Christians, of Coralville, said a letter triggered his concerns alerting him he was losing access to his daughter's medical records.
At the University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics, parents are no longer able to see test results, messages from doctors and other information once a child turns 12.
The letter said the hospital wants children at that age to be more active in their own health care. Christians said he believes 12 is too young to keep parents in the dark.
Comment: As always, a decent heuristic to live by is that if the mainstream wants you to believe something, believe the opposite, and that will at least be closer to objective reality than the lies they're pushing.
I recently came across an article by The Atlantic titled 'Psychology Has A Healthier Approach To Building Healthier Men'. Written around the same time as the embarrassing failure of Gillette's "Toxic Masculinity" ad campaign, I assume The Atlantic like many other mainstream media outlets was privy to this coming propaganda push and is attempting to rally the leftist troops to defend an ideological partner in crime. YouTube itself has even been aiding Gillette by removing dislikes from the video's vote count, which just goes to show that YouTube (owned by Google) is not a business but a propaganda machine, pure and simple.
Comment: For some background information on Feminism, see:

Joe Tsai, the e-commerce giant’s executive vice-chairman, sharply criticized what he called an attempt by the U.S. government to curb China’s rise via a trade war.
Joe Tsai, the e-commerce giant's executive vice-chairman, also sharply criticized what he called an attempt by the U.S. government to curb China's rise via a trade war.
He struck an optimistic note about China's economy, saying it remained fundamentally strong despite a slowdown, and added that stimulus such as tax cuts needed to be imposed to prop it up even as it battles U.S. efforts to dent its businesses.
U.S. President Donald Trump's administration has not only slapped crippling tariffs on Chinese imports, it has also stepped up scrutiny of Chinese investments in the country and torpedoed many deals citing national security concerns.
Comment: Recent updates on the Huawei case:
- Trudeau fires envoy to China after embarrassing him with the truth on Huawei case
- Huawei threatens to pull its communications infrastructure out of hostile Western countries
- Huawei calls for swift resolution of Sabrina Meng Wanzhou case after reports US will go ahead with extradition request
- China could completely cut off investment into Silicon Valley amid Huawei bust-up
- The price for bending the knee to Washington: Trudeau has bitten off more China dragon than he can chew
The National Iranian Oil Company (NIOC) found untapped light sweet crude oil near the city of Abadan, Bijan Zanganeh, the country's petroleum minister, has announced.
"This is the very first time we've gotten to crude oil inside the Abadan location," Zanganeh said.
"We apologize to anyone who has been offended in any way by either of our statements which were made with good will based on the information we had. We should not have allowed ourselves to be bullied and pressured into making a statement prematurely, and we take full responsibility for it," Foys wrote, according to The Cincinnati Enquirer.
Foys also specifically apologized to Nick Sandmann, the Covington junior identified as the student who wore a "Make America Great Again" (MAGA) hat and smiled at Phillips while the Native American tribal elder banged a drum in his face.
"I especially apologize to Nicholas Sandmann and his family as well as to all CovCath families who have felt abandoned during this ordeal. Nicholas unfortunately has become the face of these allegations based on video clips," he added. "This is not fair. It is not just."
The incident took place on the banks of the Rio Grande, not far from downtown Roma. The rock-throwing and insults were captured in a live video feed taken from the Mexican side by El Tejano.
The video captured the moment when a U.S. Border Patrol boat pulls up to the banks on the northern side to help a group of agents who were trying to arrest a man apparently resisting capture. The man was part of a group of at least four who had just crossed into Roma. In the background, voices can be heard yelling that the agents were being rough with the man. Moments later, various individuals on the Mexican side can be seen running to the edge of the river where they scream several insults and throw rocks, but fall short of their targets.
Phillips, who turned out to be the Maytag Man instead of a "Recon Ranger," has stolen valor for years - falsely claiming in interviews to have been deployed to Vietnam - before carefully changing his wording to clarify that he was a "Vietnam-times" veteran.

A protester holds a flare during yellow vests protest in Marseille, France, January 26, 2019.
Saturday's protest in Paris began uneventful, giving hope of a non-violent demonstration for a change. However, tensions later escalated in the center of the French capital at Bastille Square, with protesters and police engaging in a tense standoff that continued after the sunset.
So far, 52 people have been detained in Paris, BFMTV reports, citing police. Some 4,000 people have taken part in the Paris protest, with about 69,000 demonstrating all across France, according to official data released by the Interior Ministry.
Comment: Macron tried to connect with the protesters by claiming that he was 'one of them' and not a member of the elite. Unsurprisingly, the people weren't having any of it. RT reports:
In an apparent effort to brush aside the label 'president of the rich', President Macron decided to reaffirm that he is a 'man of the people'.There's nothing wrong with being 'of the elite' per se. There will always be elites because of the different strengths and proclivities of people. The problem arises when those elites become 'captured' by ideology and double-down on it even in the face of major unpopularity with said ideology and its implementation.
"I'm not an heir," the president said on Thursday.
"If I had been born with a silver spoon in my mouth, or the son of a politician, you could have a go at me. But that's not the case."
He made the remarks in the town of Bourg-de-Peage during the third round of 'national debates', a series of town hall-like events the authorities hope will help to foster compromise with the Yellow Vest protesters and other critics of the government. Some, however, find it hard to buy Macron's 'I'm one of you' message.
"He obviously doesn't come from lower-income brackets like some of us do," a woman told RT on the streets of Paris.
"He can't understand the everyday problems of French people living on minimum wage," another Parisian said.
"But it's not really important what he says now. His future actions will define his presidency."
Not exactly a man of humble upbringing, Macron comes from a well-off family. Prior to first joining the government as minister of economy and finance, he was an investment banker with Rothschild & Cie Banque.
"He studied in elite schools, as aristocrats do. He was 'made' there. The French elite is created this way," a man told RT.
Even if the president is right about not being born into the elite, his milieu most certainly was, another said.
"Throughout his career Macron has networked with people who were born with silver spoons in their mouths. I think he is more a president for the rich. He is a 'puppet' of the big banks."
In the eyes of his critics, Macron well deserves the 'president of the rich' tag after scrapping the wealth tax, claiming it will prevent capital flight and boost the French economy.
This weekend ('Acte XI') saw major uptick in the numbers of protesters on the streets, by the way...

A collapsed bridge caused by flooding triggered by the dam collapse.
The fire chief Col Edgar Estevão said 100 people had been rescued from the sea of mud released by the dam, according to the G1 news site. Firefighters said they had recovered 10 bodies by Saturday afternoon.
Vale released a list of 412 employees and contractors who were missing. The document lists 412 names of people whom it had been unable to contact and who may be victims of the mudslide. The fire brigade estimated that 300-350 people were missing.
Brazil's president, Jair Bolsonaro, visited Minas Gerais and flew over the disaster area on Saturday, after dispatching three ministers there on Friday.
Comment:
Update 27/01/2019: Hundreds of people are still missing.
The dam, situated near the town of Brumadinho in the Brazilian state of Minas Gerais, was burst on Friday. 300 people are still missing and 370 have been rescued.
It is not yet clear what caused the failure of the dam, which is owned by Vale, Brazil's largest mining company.
On Saturday, emergency services used helicopters and earth-moving machinery in the search for survivors.Only a small number of the victims has so far been identified.
The disaster comes only three years after a similar failure of the Fundão Tailings dam near Mariana, which was co-owned by Vale.
Brazil President Jair Bolsonaro, who flew over the disaster area in a helicopter on Saturday, tweeted that it was hard not to get "emotional" after seeing the scale of the devastation.
He said he had accepted an offer by Israel to send search equipment that could find people buried in the mud.
The local fire services have commented that they don't expect to find any more survivors.
He then went onto highlight that the sanctions affect ordinary Venezuelan people and not the country's leadership, just as US-imposed sanctions on Syria are having the same effect.
Isturiz then revealed that allied countries had to make payment for the food to be reached as the US sanctions prevents Venezuela from making such purchases.
Comment: That's spreading democracy for ya.












Comment: This is surely tied to allowing children unfettered access to vaccines, birth control, STD services, abortions and transgender procedures. The nanny state wins again. Soon, parents will just be glorified child-minders while the state makes all the decisions.