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Thu, 04 Nov 2021
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Fire

Terrorist attack at Damascus police station reportedly carried out by a child

bombing scene
© Omar Sanadiki / Reuters
File Photo
A blast that hit a police station in a southwestern neighborhood of the Syrian capital, Damascus, was reportedly carried out by a child wearing an explosive belt. There are varying accounts on the number of victims.

RT's Lizzy Phelan, reporting from Syria, says state television has aired pictures of a girl who was allegedly a suicide bomber. There are no other casualties except for a police officer who has minor injuries, Phelan said in a tweet.



Comment: ISIS brainwashed thousands of children in Mosul to carry out suicide attacks, make explosive belts


Attention

Princeton Is Latest Ivy League School to Suspend Men's Sports Team Over Vulgar Materials

Princeton University campus
© Mark Makela for The New York Times
Princeton University suspended the season of its men's swimming and diving team after the discovery of material on its electronic mailing list that was "vulgar and offensive as well as misogynistic and racist," the university said Thursday.

A final decision whether to cancel the season will be made in the next few days, John D. Cramer, a university spokesman, said in an interview.

The suspension came after an anonymous complaint made this week alerted officials to "several materials" that were offensive, including in electronic correspondence, the university said in a statement.

Mr. Cramer would not discuss specifics of the other materials, including their content or when they were created, but confirmed that the comments were made about members of the women's swimming and diving team.

Attention

British transport workers launching series of strikes during holiday season

transport strikes UK Dec 2016

The Southern Rail strike hit train services to one of the capital's main airports, Gatwick
From trains and planes to parcels, British workers are gearing for the festive season with a string of strikes, rounding off a year of action that began with an unprecedented walkout by doctors.

Hundreds of thousands of commuters were on Friday left stranded for the third day this week after staff on Southern Rail, which runs trains from southern England into London, stopped work.

The strike heaped pressure on London's already overcrowded Tube and bus network and hit train services to one of the capital's main airports, Gatwick.

Air travellers also face the prospect of disruption after British Airways cabin crew voted to strike over pay.

They have not yet announced a date but the action could begin as early as December 21 -- the date that many British schools finish for the Christmas holidays.

Attention

Scam? David Brock's super PAC may have made $1 million in fraudulent rent payments to a non-existent company

David Brock's Super PAC, American Bridge 21st Century, might be making rental payments to a company that does not exist.

Square 516S Office Venture LLC, owns the building that General Services Administration and American Bridge operate out of.
brock suppperpac
GSA is a government organization, and they make their rental agreements available for public review.

Lets's compare rent payments made by GSA to those made by American Bridge.

Flashlight

Shirley Oaks' 'industrial scale' abuse: Children's home sex abuse survivors publish harrowing report

Shirley Oakes Survivors
© shirleyoakssurvivorsassociation.co.uk
More details are emerging on the alleged sexual abuse of dozens of children at a care home in London, as survivors publish their own 129-page report after losing faith in the official inquiry.

According to Shirley Oaks Survivors Association's (SOSA) own investigation, two men dressed as Father Christmas abused children at the Croydon facility, just one in a horrifying list of crimes that date as far back as the 1960s. The report was compiled by former residents who lost hope in the controversial Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse following the resignations of its two first chairs and prestigious panel members.

Some of the survivors described the harrowing experience at the children's home, including alleged sexual abuse and beatings. Paul Annon, who was put into care with his brothers after their mother died, was only five or six years old when his abuse at Shirley Oaks started.

Pistol

Police depts in U.S. anticipate Trump's promised release of federal high-caliber military gear

militarized police
If president-elect Donald Trump keeps his promise, surplus military grenade launchers, bayonets, tracked armored vehicles and high-powered firearms and ammunition will once again be available to state and local U.S. police departments.

National police organizations say they'll hold Trump to that promise.

President Barack Obama issued an executive order restricting that access in 2015 amid an outcry over police use of armored vehicles and other war-fighting gear to confront protesters in Ferguson, Missouri, after the fatal shooting of Michael Brown. Since then, federal officials have recalled more than 1,800 items, which have been destroyed through target practice or otherwise disposed of, officials say.

But state and local police organizations have protested, insisting that military-style vehicles and gear help protect officers' lives and public safety — for example, a privately manufactured, tracked armored vehicle played a key role in the police response to the mass shooting at a county government building in San Bernardino, California, in December 2015.

During his campaign, Trump sided with the police. In September, he promised to rescind the executive order in a written response to a Fraternal Order of Police questionnaire that helped him win an endorsement from the organization of rank-and-file officers.

Snakes in Suits

No records of 'faithless elector' Chris Suprun as a 9/11 first responder

Chris Suprun
© USA Today
Chris Suprun threw out first pitch at a Rangers game in 2015.
The Republican elector who has gotten national attention for refusing to vote for Donald Trump at the Electoral College on Dec. 19 was apparently not a first responder on September 11, 2001 as he has stated for years and has a questionable career history, according to an investigation by WFAA.

Chris Suprun, 42, portrays himself as a heroic firefighter who was among the first on the scene after the third plane flew into the Pentagon on 9/11.

In a heavily-publicized editorial this month for the New York Times, Suprun stated that as a member of the Electoral College he will not cast his ballot for Trump because the president-elect "shows daily he is not qualified for the office."

Suprun, a Dallas resident for more than a decade, even used his résumé to establish credibility in the Times piece, writing in the second paragraph: "Fifteen years ago, as a firefighter, I was part of the response to the Sept. 11 attacks against our nation."

Comment: How did this con-artist even get to be an "elector" in the first place? Smells like a con-artist...


Calculator

DuPont in $50 million settlement over Virginia mercury pollution - US Justice Department

DuPont logo
© AP Photo/ Steve Helber, file
DuPont chemical company agreed to pay $50 million to settle claims stemming from the release of mercury from its Waynesboro, Virginia facility, the US Department of Justice said in a press release on Thursday.

"The Departments of Justice and the Interior joined with the Commonwealth of Virginia today to announce a proposed settlement with DuPont valued at approximately $50 million to resolve claims stemming from the release of mercury from the former EI du Pont de Nemours and Company (DuPont) facility in Waynesboro, Virginia," the release said. "Over 100 miles of river and associated floodplain have been contaminated by mercury in the South River and South Fork Shenandoah River watershed."

Government natural resource trustees will use the funds to implement projects that will compensate the public for the injuries related to natural resources and associated losses, the release said.

Comment: See also:


Dollar

Militants in Aleppo 'make a fortune' selling humanitarian aid to residents

Refugees in Aleppo
© Sputnik/ Michael Alaeddin
Military correspondent Kamel Saker told Sputnik Arabic about the humanitarian situation in liberated Aleppo and efforts by the Syrian Army to help people.

"I've been in Aleppo for several days and I've seen how the military, political and humanitarian situation in the city evolved. Yesterday, I visited four districts freed of terrorists. The evacuation of people to tent camps is well organized. The Syrian military command managed to find personnel to help civilians. Everything necessary has been supplied, including transport, food and medicines," Saker said.

The reporter also said that militants made money on selling humanitarian aid, particularly food, to locals. "When Syrian soldiers entered apartments occupied by militants they saw that they had made a fortune selling food supplies. They were monopolists and banned other people from selling foods. They set prices 20 times higher than they should be," he said.

Comment: More truths come out on the West's 'humanitarian aid' efforts.


Syringe

$60 million drug bust: 'Largest known seizure of heroin' in Afghanistan revealed by DEA

Afghan farmer collecting opium bulbs
© Goran Tomasevic / Reuters
A massive 20 tons of drugs with a "conservative" street value of about $60 million were seized from a "super lab" run by suspected Taliban connected trafficking network, the US Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) has revealed.

The biggest-ever seizure of heroin in Afghanistan "if not the world" took place last October in a joint operation between the DEA, American Special Forces and Afghanistan's Sensitive Investigative Unit and National Interdiction Unit.

The haul included 129 kilograms of crystal heroin, 6.4 tons of heroin base, 134 kilograms of opium, 12.5 tons of morphine base and 12 kilograms of hashish.