Society's Child
The video shows a column of fire engulfing the vehicle.
A series of loud bangs can be heard throughout the footage of the incident provided by RT's Ruptly video agency. No official explanation has been provided for the noise, which sounds somewhat similar to gunfire. Witnesses in the video can be heard suggesting that the bangs come from firecrackers exploding inside the burning minibus.
Americans living paycheck to paycheck were highlighted in a recent report from the Federal Reserve that showed four in ten adults say they couldn't produce $400 in an emergency without going into debt or selling something. And now a partial government shutdown that is seeing nearly 800,000 federal workers not getting paid has fueled the discussion on Twitter about how brief income lapses can be disastrous for some households.
Another Twitter user wrote: "Broke my lease to accept new fed job for which I have to attend 7 months of training in another state. Training canceled with shutdown. Homeless. Can't afford short(?)-term housing/have to work full-time for no pay/returning Christmas presents."
Comment: With many people living on the brink of poverty, it won't be long before we see only two classes; the ultra rich and poor. See also:
- America's middle class is being systematically destroyed
- When the next economic crisis occurs two-thirds of the country will be out of cash almost immediately
- The U.S. economy has left behind and forgotten the lives of millions
- Ron Paul: Financial market correction could make economy 'worse than 1929'
A Marine spokesperson did not identify the Marine but said no suspects have been arrested and that there is no threat to public.
Earlier on Saturday, the Dutch police said that four individuals had been detained in Rotterdam on suspicion of involvement in terrorist activities.
According to Germany's Zeit newspaper, the 26-year-old Syrian national was detained at an apartment in Mainz, with the flat having been searched by the police. The German police worked in cooperation with the Dutch colleagues, the news outlet added.
The detainee is due to appear before court on Sunday, with the issue of his extradition to the Netherlands expected to be considered.
Technology teams worked feverishly to quarantine the computer virus, but it spread through Tribune Publishing's network and reinfected systems crucial to the news production and printing process. Multiple newspapers around the country were affected because they share a production platform.
The attack delayed distribution of Saturday editions of the Los Angeles Times and San Diego Union Tribune. It also stymied distribution of the West Coast editions of the Wall Street Journal and New York Times, which are printed at the Los Angeles Times' Olympic printing plant in downtown Los Angeles.
By Saturday afternoon, the company suspected the cyberattack originated from outside the United States, but officials said it was too soon to say whether it was carried out by a foreign state or some other entity, said a source with knowledge of the situation.
"We believe the intention of the attack was to disable infrastructure, more specifically servers, as opposed to looking to steal information," said the source, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to comment publicly. The source would not detail what evidence led the company to believe the breach came from overseas.
After a weeklong trial, the Palestinian Grand Criminal Court found Akel guilty on Monday of trying to "cut off a part of the Palestinian land and adding them to a foreign country," the Jerusalem Post reported.
Bylaws established by the Palestinian Authority (PA) prohibit the sale of land to a "hostile state or any of its citizens." PA bylaws require residents to obtain permission from the PA itself before carrying out these types of transactions.
Akel reportedly acted as the broker in the sale of the home, jointly owned by the Alami and Halabi families and located in the Muslim quarter of Jerusalem. According to the Post, the home fetched the owners a whopping $500,000 from Ateret Cohanim, an Israeli Jewish organization known to purchase Arab-owned properties in the area.
Presently, the bank accounts of Akel and the two families have been frozen by the PA.

In one of the violent incidents early on New Year's Day, a woman was shot at a nightclub in Hackney
A man died after being stabbed outside a private party in Park Lane, in the West End, at about 05:30 GMT.
Two men, aged 37 and 29, and a woman, aged 29, were also stabbed.
About an hour earlier, a woman was fatally stabbed in Southwark and at around the same time a woman was shot at a nightclub in Hackney.
Comment: New Years Eve saw a spate of seemingly random attacks and outbreaks of violence all over the planet:
- 8 injured, 1 critically, as car plows into NYE revelers in downtown Tokyo
- UK: 3 injured in knife attack at Manchester Victoria Station, suspect can be heard shouting "long live the caliphate"
- Man with knife makes bomb threat leading to evacuation of Amsterdam's Schiphol Airport
- Thailand: Man guns down 6 family members, kills himself as New Year's party goes wrong
- Man Rams Vehicle into Crowd in Germany, Four Injured
Syrians saw off the year 2018 under a glittering canopy of festive lights and elaborate decorations adorn the streets of many cities, towns and villages throughout much of the country.
Izraa, a town in the southern province of Daraa, was liberated from US Coalition client terrorism in July 2018 after the surrender of the armed groups. Residents celebrated Christmas for the first time in seven years and they celebrated in style.
In Damascus, people poured onto the streets of the Old City without fear of a rain of mortars from extremist groups in Eastern Ghouta, an area fully cleansed of armed groups, by the Syrian Arab Army and allies in April 2018. I walked among the thousands of civilians who gathered around the towering Christmas trees and jostled each other to take selfies next to the myriad of Christmas displays that lined the streets.

Chicago police say data-driven policing has helped drive down the number of murders in the Windy City, but it still posted the highest number of homicides for an American city in 2018.
The country's third most populous city still accounted for more murders than the combined total in Los Angeles and New York, which both have bigger populations.
More than 550 people were killed in the Midwestern city in 2018 as of December 23, mostly as a result of gun violence fueled by gang and turf rivalries, and the illicit drug trade.
But shootings in the Windy City were down almost a third in 2018 as compared to a peak in 2016, and murders were down by 27 percent from two years ago, when they hit 757, according to police data -- a 20-year record.
City police chief Eddie Johnson said data-driven policing and stronger community partnerships had played a significant role in the reduction of violent crime.
STRATCOM's New Year's greetings come in the form of a 40-second video of the B-2 Spirit bomber in flight. The aircraft deploys two GBU-57s - huge bunker buster bombs known as Massive Ordnance Penetrators - which hit a target on the testing grounds.
"Times Square tradition rings in the New Year by dropping the big ball... if ever needed, we are #ready to drop something much, much bigger," STRATCOM tweeted, referring to the traditional celebration in New York City and it's dropping crystal ball.














Comment: For more on the devastating gas explosion, see: 4 killed, 35 missing after gas explosion rips through residential building in Russia - UPDATE