Society's ChildS


Star of David

World Health Organization: Israel refusing access to medical care for Gaza residents - 20% of applicants are cancer patients

gaza child hospital
A fifth or 20% of medical applications submitted in August by patients in the besieged Gaza Strip were denied, by Israel, a permit to leave for medical treatment in East Jerusalem or Israeli hospitals were for cancer patients, according to a monthly report by the World Health Organization (WHO).

On Thursday, WHO published their monthly report on health access for Palestinians in the occupied territories, showing that 18% of the denied applications were for orthopedics and 14% for neurosurgery patients.

Several Palestinian patients have died while waiting for an Israeli permit to get life-saving treatment that is not available in Gaza.

Family

Russian military: Over 300 civilians left Idlib safe zone past 24 hours

Idlib, city
© Reuters/Ammar AbdullahCity of Idlib, Syria
More than 300 people left Syria's Idlib de-escalation zone through the humanitarian corridor over the past 24 hours, the Russian Defense Ministry's Center for Refugee Reception, Distribution and Settlement said Saturday in a statement.

"In total, 301 refugees (112 women and 141 children), 10 vehicles and 100 heads of cattle have passed via the Abu al-Duhur CP [checkpoint] to Aleppo province from the Idlib de-escalation zone," the statement reads.

It is noted that medical care was provided to 175 Syrians, including 81 children.

Earlier in September, Russian President Vladimir Putin and his Turkish counterpart Recep Tayyip Erdogan signed an agreement aimed at setting up a 9-12 mile demilitarized zone in Idlib province along the contact line of the armed opposition and the government forces by October 15.

Comment: See also:


Arrow Down

How a 124-year-old statue, reviled by Native Americans, came down

Early Days Statue
© American Renaissance/Jeff Chiu/AP"Early Days" Statue depicts a Native American at the feet of a Spanish cowboy and Catholic missionary in San Francisco.
In the middle of the night and with dozens of Native Americans watching, San Francisco city workers tied safety ropes around a 124-year-old bronze statue and pulled. Carefully, they dislodged the piece from a granite platform and laid it on top of a flatbed truck. It was a moment stoked with meaning. After decades of effort, the Early Days statue, a symbol of colonization and oppression to many, was gone.

Those who gathered at the removal last week didn't celebrate with fire torches. They only prayed, sang hymns, and looked on morosely at the empty platform. That's what happens when civic institutions, in this case the city arts commissions, finally see a people as worthy of protection.

"I feel like it is a win. I feel good about it. [But] there is still a lot of work to be done," Desirae Harp, a Mishewal Ona*tsáTis (Wappo) and Diné (Navajo) tribe member told me.

Erected in the aftermath of the California mission era, the Early Days statue depicts a Native American on his back, defeated, a Catholic priest above him pointing to the heavens, and an anglicized vaquero bestriding the scene in triumph. The statue is part of the Pioneer Monument celebrating the state's origins. Native Americans saw it as dehumanizing art but no one had managed to convince politicians to take it down. It wasn't until gender- and racially-diverse city boards, as well as backlash against Eurocentric depictions of dominance, that change came.

Arrow Up

Railway link confirmed to connect Russia's St. Petersburg with Germany's Berlin

Railway
© Wolfgang Rattay / Reuters
Russia and Germany have agreed to connect Germany's capital Berlin with St. Petersburg, which is often branded Russia's northern capital.

The news, first published in the Russian media, was confirmed by Germany's Federal Ministry of Transport and Digital Infrastructure. The train will go from Germany to the Russian exclave city of Kaliningrad and then onwards to St. Petersburg, the ministry has confirmed in a letter to RT.

Fire

Harrowing scene: Deadly car explosion shakes Pennsylvania town

Explosion
© Twitter / ThouzandFloyd
At least one person died after a car explosion struck a neighborhood in Allentown, Pennsylvania. Witnesses of the harrowing scene say the fire was "crazy" and that "streaks of blood" were seen around the explosion.

Debris from the car, which reportedly was split in half after the blast, was reportedly strewn around the whole block on Sunday. The explosion was felt far beyond the area and was heard throughout the town, local newspaper the Morning Call reported.

"The fire was crazy," resident Carlos Perodin, who lives not far from the scene, told local media. Others revealed that they "saw body parts, streaks of blood around the explosion."

Hammer

Life in a gynocracy: Distorting language and statistics to advance an agenda

metoo sign
The performance of women this week - from Senator Dianne Feinstein to Christine Blasey Ford to the howling mobs on Capitol Hill - made me seriously consider surgically altering my sex. They are demanding special treatment because of their sex and in the process placing all of us - male and female alike - at peril of witch hunts against men and then, in time, against all who will not bow to their rule.

My Facebook friend Alex Bensky reminded me of the advantage to me of transgendering:
Ah, then we'd be unable to criticize your politics, your social viewpoints, your choice of teams to root for, and anything else you say because we'd be transphobic.

‪As a footnote, I've seen an estimate that the transgender population is about 0.05% of the population. This is hardly a warrant for beating up people but it is not clear to me why unless we substantially alter social arrangements that have existed in almost every known human society and celebrate...not just accept but celebrate...transgenderism, we are mean, hateful people.

X

Booth at a Brighton University event offered new students tips on how to be prostitutes

University students
© AlamyAn advice service with a stand at Brighton University fresher’s fair says that one in six students either does sex work or is thinking about doing so.
A university has been accused of encouraging its students into prostitution after hosting a stand at its freshers' fair advising new undergraduates how to be sex workers.

Alongside the hockey team and Amnesty International, the freshers' fair at Brighton University last week also included a stand run by the Sex Workers' Outreach Project (Swop) Sussex, which calls itself an "advocacy" and advice service "representing student sex workers".

Swop tweeted last week: "1 in 6 students does sex work or thinks about turning to sex work. We can help."

Comment: This is pretty gross. One has to wonder if the value of a University education is worth the price prostitution inevitably has on your soul.

See also:


Black Cat

ThinkProgress editor Ian Millhiser under fire after call to confront Republicans 'where they sleep'

Jeff Flake protester
© J.D. Durkin/Cheddar / ReutersA protester confronts Senator Jeff Flake in an elevator. Still image obtained from a social media video
The justice editor for left-wing opinion site ThinkProgress tweeted out a call to confront GOP lawmakers everywhere, including, apparently, in their homes. Commenters have pointed out all sorts of problems with that.

"Tell me again why we shouldn't confront Republicans where they eat, where they sleep, and where they work until they stop being complicit in the destruction of our democracy," Ian Millhiser wrote on September 28, retweeting a CNN report on Senator Jeff Flake (R-Arizona). Flake was cornered by protesters in an elevator before the Senate Judicial Committee was to vote on Brett Kavanaugh's Supreme Court nomination.

The opposition was hoping that Flake, who is not running for reelection, would side with the Committee Democrats in turning Kavanaugh down. While the Arizona Senator voted for Kavanaugh's nomination to proceed to the Senate floor, he requested a limited FBI probe into sexual misconduct allegations against the judge.

Comment: More irresponsible incitement from the loony Left. What will they do if/when the tables turn?


Bizarro Earth

Ukraine still refusing to hand over stolen Dutch masterpieces

museum art holland
January 9th, 2005, became a "black Sunday" for the Dutch city of Hoorn. On that day the local museum was stripped of 24 rare paintings. Ten years later, some of the stolen masterpieces resurfaced in Kiev, and Dutch investigators believe that the rest are still in the hands of Petro Poroshenko's corrupt elite.

Westfries Museum hostess Marjam Faber said that the 2005 robbery was a shock to locals. She said that one of the museum's artifacts - the coffin of Hoorn's 17th-century vice-admiral Peter Floris - was turned by criminals into a "Trojan horse."

The whereabouts of a stolen art collection, which includes paintings from the Dutch Golden Age by Jan van Goyen, Jan Linsen and Jacob Waben remained unknown for a decade. And its reappearance has made the story even more complicated, turning a plain old-fashioned burglary into a political thriller with "fake news" on the side.

Comment: Following the US-backed coup in Ukraine, lawlessness is clearly running rampant:


Briefcase

Elon Musk to step down as chairman, must get pre-approval before saying anything about Tesla as part of SEC fraud settlement

Elon Musk SEC settlement
Since the whole affair started over a tweet, Musk is required to receive pre-approval for anything he says or posts about Tesla.
Elon Musk has settled with the US Securities and Exchange Commission, which had sued him for fraud over his tweets about taking Tesla private. Musk will have to step down as chairman, but gets to keep his CEO status.

According to the settlement filing, Musk has 45 days to step down as chairman of the board of directors of Tesla, and is banned from holding the position for three years. He will also have to pay a $20 million fine.

And since the whole affair started over a tweet, either careless or intentionally misleading, Musk is required to receive pre-approval for anything he says or posts about Tesla, "in any format, including, but not limited to, posts on social media (e.g., Twitter), the Company's website (e.g., the Company's blog), press releases, and investor calls."

Another $20mn will be paid by Tesla to settle claims it had failed to vet Musk's initial tweet.

The SEC complaint accused Musk of misleading investors with his August 7 tweet which said he had secured funding to take Tesla private at $420 a share, boosting the company's stock by more than 10 percent. Musk soon recanted, saying he would keep Tesla private and triggering investors' fury. The SEC ruled Musk's initial words "were false and misleading because they lacked any basis in fact."

Comment: Elon Musk gets sued by the SEC for misleading investors