Society's ChildS


Red Flag

Seriously? L'Oreal executive thinks male make-up counters could hit stores within five years

male make up
Male make-up counters could become a reality within five years, the UK boss of L'Oreal has said, as it is no longer a taboo for the "selfie generation".

In an interview with the Daily Telegraph, Vismay Sharma, the cosmetics giant's UK managing director, said that demand for make-up among men was growing fast.

Speaking about the industry as a whole, he said male-targeted counters in department stores and drug stores could be a reality in "five to seven years".

According to Mr Sharma taboos are changing and make-up is becoming more accepted for men among what he describes as the "selfie generation".

Stock Down

French jihadist de-radicalization center costing millions labeled a 'fiasco' by locals after being shut down

jihadist deradicalization center
© Charlotte Dubenskij / RT
Inappropriate and a waste of money - these are just two of the concerns listed by locals in a French commune that hosted the country's first de-radicalization center. While this very "experimental" facility got shut, other "small structures" could be opened.

The first - and so far the only - center was opened almost a year ago. It was aimed at solving the issue of radicalization, and was set to give therapy sessions and so-called 'citizenship classes' to assist marginalized youths with reintegration to French society.

The Pontourny center, in the commune of Beuamont-en-Veron, central France, was set to accommodate 25-30 people for 10 months at a time.

At the time of its opening, officials were enthusiastic, with local deputy Jean-Patrick Gille announcing that the center could be "an answer to parents who are in doubt," adding it would be an institution where "one could accompany their youths."

People 2

Majority Americans support attacking N. Korea if it strikes South but are against preemptive attack

kim jong un
© KCNA / Reuters
The majority of Americans support using US troops to defend South Korea in the event of an attack by the North - for the first time in 27 years of polling on the issue, according to the Chicago Council on Global Affairs.

Americans' support for military action against North Korea grew from 47 percent two years ago to 62 percent in the council's latest poll.

However, the survey found that a preemptive attack against North Korea's nuclear program does not have wide support. Overall, 28 percent of Americans favor sending US troops to destroy North Korea's nuclear facilities and 40 percent favor conducting airstrikes against its nuclear production facilities, according to the Chicago Council on Global Affairs.

"Military action carries with it the very real risk of retaliation and escalation, and as in past surveys, lacks public support," the group wrote.


Comment: As has often been the case in the US, preemptive attacks against another nation is rarely what the people want. This is why the Deep State has to resort to so many false flags - to get the public in line with what they want to do. See: False Flags: An American Tradition


Gear

Director of CAGE Dr Adnan Siddiqui: 'Toxic' Prevent strategy fueling radicalization in Britain

UK policemen
© Peter Nicholls / Reuters
Prevent, the British government's counter-radicalization strategy, is fueling extremism rather than tackling it, according to the director of CAGE, speaking after a top anti-terrorism officer said criticism of the policy is the result of "ignorance."

Dr Adnan Siddiqui told RT the policy is "toxic" and "overwhelmingly" targets Muslims and their beliefs.

"Across the board Prevent is acknowledged as a deeply toxic policy. This has been echoed by hundreds of academics, politicians who've called for the policy to be scrapped, trade unions and student bodies.

"Additionally, the policy has been accused of fueling extremism by the former UN special rapporteur on the rights to freedom of peaceful assembly and of association."

Camcorder

Shocking video of Russian freestyle wrestler Yuri Vlasko's murder appears online

Shocking video of Russian wrestler Yuri Vlasko
© Издательский дом Информ Полис / YouTube
Yuri Vlasko, murdered at the end of June in the Russian Republic of Buryatia, has appeared online.

The footage shows one of the attackers stabbing Vlasko, who was wearing a red track suit, in the chest among a group of people standing on the shore of Lake Baikal.

Magnify

'Shocking' experience: Utah mayor goes undercover for three days as homeless man

homeless person
© Kevin Lamarque / Reuters
The mayor of Salt Lake County, Utah went undercover as a homeless person with just the clothes on his back before deciding where to place a new shelter. He has now spoken out about his experience, saying he "didn't feel safe" due to drug abuse and violence.

Mayor Ben McAdams can generally be found wearing a suit as he governs Utah's most populous county.

However, he broke that rule on March 24, when he left his office wearing jeans, sneakers, and a hoodie, and embarked on his new adventure as a homeless person.

He and an unnamed colleague left the comfort of their homes, their IDs, and their money behind. For three days and two nights, they immersed themselves with the city's homeless population, spending one night in a shelter and one on the streets.

The experiment, according to McAdams, was aimed at "deepening" his understanding of the current homeless system before he was forced to make a decision on where to place the county's third homeless resource center - a decision he knew would anger residents of whichever town he picked.

Star of David

First time for everything: Israel revokes Arab-Israeli terrorist's citizenship

Zayoud
© The Times of IsraelAlaa Raed Ahmad Zayoud, decitizenized
Israel has for the first time in its history stripped an Arab-Israeli of his citizenship. The move is in response to a car-ramming and stabbing attack that left four people injured two years ago. Human rights groups were quick to criticize the measure as setting a dangerous precedent.

Alaa Raed Ahmad Zayoud's Israeli citizenship was revoked Sunday by the Haifa Magistrate's Court. The man had been convicted on four counts of attempted murder and sentenced to a 25 year prison term in June last year. In October 2015, Zayoud drove his vehicle into an IDF soldier before getting out and stabbing three civilians near the Gan Shmuel Kibbutz.

"For every citizen, alongside his rights, there are commitments," Deputy President of the Haifa Magistrate's Court, Avraham Elyakim, said in his ruling. "One of them is the significant and important commitment to maintaining loyalty to the state, which is given expression also in the commitment to not carry out terror acts to harm its residents and their security."

Describing the sentencing as "suitable and proportional" given the crimes committed by Zayoud, the judge expressed hope that the measure will dissuade potential future attacks on Israelis.

Comment: With reports out of Israel, it is difficult to ascertain when facts are facts or the narrative is altered, through coercion, to serve a purpose.

Times of Israel also reported:
"The court decision strengthens the deterrent and strengthens our campaign to protect the security of the country," Deri said in a statement. "The decision states unequivocally that anyone who harms the state or its citizens can't be a part of it."

Zayoud had admitted to investigators that his attack was "nationalistically motivated," a police term indicating a terror attack. His confession marks a retraction from his initial claim that the attack was an accidental car collision, and the stabbings an act of self-defense after he was attacked by onlookers.

In his testimony, Zayoud told investigators he wished to kill himself by killing Jews.
There may be two very different stories of Zayoud's attack.


Bomb

British jihadists in Syria trained by secretive ISIS unit to launch UK suicide attacks

Armed jihadists with ISIS flag
© AFPArmed jihadists with ISIS flag
British extremists in Syria are being trained to carry out suicide attacks on their return to the UK, an Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS/ISIL) fighter captured by Kurdish forces claims.

The fighter told his captors that many European extremists were sent to the shadowy al-Kharsa Brigade upon arrival in Syria, where they would undertake months of arduous training in preparation for attacks, according to a report by the Rupert Murdoch-owned Times newspaper.

"It takes seven months to be trained in al-Kharsa brigade," the fighter reportedly said under interrogation.

"It is very hard. Every European who crosses the border to Syria, they are offered [the opportunity] to join. If 20 start the training, only five finish it. Then after that they go back to Europe and attack."

Comment: See also: Be very afraid: Report claims Interpol fears ISIS trained 173 bomb attackers for Europe


Archaeology

How ISIS uses middlemen to smuggle antiquities to the West for profit

syria antiquities
© AFP/GETTY IMAGESA marble bas-relief from the Middle Euphrates valley, likely looted by Islamic State, according to French officials. The object was seized at Paris’s Roissy airport in March 2016 after arriving from North Lebanon.
A stream of plundered antiquities flowing out of Syria and Iraq to Western art collectors is dependent on men like Muhammad hajj Al-Hassan.

Mr. Al-Hassan, a 28-year-old Syrian, says he started to trade antiquities in 2015 after being contacted by a top official of Islamic State who sought his archaeological expertise to find Western buyers.

Later, he became a cog in an international supply chain smuggling art looted by ISIS.

ISIS's territorial grip is fading fast: Iraq has declared victory over the terrorist group in Mosul and ISIS is fighting to hold its self-proclaimed Syrian capital Raqqa - the last major city under its control. But the group's legacy of looting will linger for many years, law-enforcement officials say, in much the same way that art looted by the Nazis continues to surface 70 years later. The ancient statues, jewelry and artifacts that ISIS has stolen in Syria and Iraq, are already moving underground and may not surface for decades, according to these officials and experts in the trade.

"Once looted in Syria and Iraq, objects enter a gray market shrouded in secrecy," said Michael Danti, an archaeologist who directs the Boston-based Cultural Heritage Initiatives and advises the U.S. State Department on the looting of antiquities in Syria. "It's a problem that will stay with us for years to come."

Western security officials say they expect revenue from looted antiquities from Iraq and Syria to become an increasingly important source of money for ISIS if its other revenue streams, such as oil, continue to dwindle.

Smoking

Brit think tank concludes smoking is good for the economy

cigarettes
© Reuters / Suzanne PlunkettA shopkeeper reaches for a packet of cigarettes in a newsagent in London
If you're trying to break the habit, look away now! Smoking brings in £15 billion ($19.5 billion) to the UK economy each year, according to the Institute of Economic Affairs (IEA).

But before you take a patriotic puff, take a look where the money is made. Besides clawing in revenues from the high tax on tobacco, the state also saves a bundle on unpaid benefits, treatment, and pensions, thanks to the high mortality rate among smokers. Cough.


Comment: One wonders where they got their figures. On the one hand, obesity is a true cause of lower life expectancy due to metabolic derangement leading to a host of health problems. Blaming smoking for higher mortality rates is a canard. But to conclude that more death is an economic benefit is pure psychopathy.

The IEA claims that although cancer treatment, house fires, and cleaning up cigarette butts on the street cost the UK economy up to £4.6 billion per year, the habit brings in more than three times that figure every year.

Overall, £24 billion is brought in through the so-called "sin tax."