Society's Child
Soldiers of Odin made its Swedish vigilante debut in the province of Dalarna last weekend, patrolling the towns of Borlange, Hedemora, and Säter, Dagens Nyheter newspaper reported. It was later spotted in Stockholm.
The group has about 100 full members in Sweden and nearly 5,000 supporters, spokesman Mikael Johansson told Avesta Tidning newspaper.
Sweden is the fourth country to be 'patrolled' by Soldiers of Odin, which was created in late 2015. But although the group says it is protecting its chosen locations against "immigrant violence," it has been accused of being a front for a Nazi organization - a claim which Johansson denies. "Violent crime is rampaging, while police resources are on the decline. Before they get together any more resources, we help them the best we can," he said.
However, according to the group's Facebook page, the founder of Soldiers of Odin has "National Socialist views," but "his writings are not the group's writings," YLE reported.
Johansson did acknowledge that some of the group's individual members also have clear links to right-wing extremism, but maintained that those traits are part of their private lives, rather than a feature of Soldiers of Odin.
"The way the Soldiers of Odin is built [can be] compared with a motorcycle gang. It is structured in much the same way. We want to get the right people, but we do not want to get into right-wing guys who think they can go out and fight in the streets," Johansson said.
The water systems, which reported lead levels exceeding Environmental Protection Agency standards, collectively supply water to 6 million people. About 350 of those systems provide drinking water to schools or day cares. The USA TODAY NETWORK investigation also found at least 180 of the water systems failed to notify consumers about the high lead levels as federal rules require.
Many of the highest reported lead levels were found at schools and day cares. A water sample at a Maine elementary school was 42 times higher than the EPA limit of 15 parts per billion, while a Pennsylvania preschool was 14 times higher, records show. At an elementary school in Ithaca, N.Y., one sample tested this year at a stunning 5,000 ppb of lead, the EPA's threshold for "hazardous waste."
"This is most definitely a problem that needs emergent care," Melissa Hoffman, a parent in Ithaca, forcefully pleaded with officials at a public hearing packed with upset parents demanding answers.
Rumors that the playwright's head was stolen by 18th century trophy hunters have long been dismissed as folklore, but the first archaeological investigation of Shakespeare's grave suggests something is rotten in Stratford-upon-Avon.
The investigation was carried out for a UK TV programme at the Holy Trinity Church in the medieval market town where he grew up and lived his final days.
The team used the archaeologist's favorite new tool called LIDAR, a non-invasive ground penetrating radar that analyzed the grave.
"We came across this very odd, strange thing at the head end," said lead archaeologist Kevin Colls. "It was very obvious, within all the data we were getting, that there was something different going on at that particular spot. We have concluded it is signs of disturbance, of material being dug out and put back again."
Colls said this backed up a story published in Argosy magazine in 1879 which said Shakespeare's skull had been stolen in 1794.
The investigation also discovered that the playwright's family was buried in shallow graves beneath the church floor and not in a large family vault.

Subway passengers use escalators during the rush hour at the subway station in Vienna
Iryna L., a 27-year-old manager, said she was on her way to work on Monday. Suddenly a man "of North African origin and approximately 25 years old" approached her and started stroking her hand. When she asked him to stop, the man kissed her.
"It happened very quickly. He sat near me in the full carriage and stroked my hand. I cried out 'stop' and moved myself to another seat, he tapped me on the shoulder, pulled me to him and kissed me on the mouth," she said, as cited by Austrian Heute newspaper.
Comment: The above reads like something you'd find in the dictionary under the phrase sexual harassment. How the police can say it isn't harassment is beyond logic. Sounds like police in Vienna are openly encouraging men to harass women.
Iryna said she hit the attacker with her bag and he ran away.
According to police, Robert Dentmond called 911 Sunday evening and told operators he was walking around with an M16 rifle at an apartment complex and that he was going to kill himself before he hung up on the operator.
Officers responding to the scene discovered Dentmond holding what they believed to be a real weapon and began a dialogue with the teen, stating he dropped the toy gun before picking it up and beginning to walk away.
"Deputies gave verbal commands to drop the weapon which he initially did, and as we tried to establish a rapport with the individual, to try to get him to move away from the weapon, he picked it up, rearmed himself, and started walking toward an occupied apartment complex," says Lieutenant Brandon Kutner, spokesperson for the Alachua County Sheriff's Office.
People are always talking about how they are afraid of terrorism. Or economic collapse. You know what I'm afraid of?
The younger generations of college students who have apparently been socially engineered to be complete and utter pansies who run crying to authorities any time someone disagrees with them and who beg to have everyone stripped of their First Amendment right to free speech because they apparently have the backbones of garden slugs.
On Saturday, NSA whistleblower spoke to the Free Software Foundation's LibrePlanet2016 conference regarding free software, cybersecurity, and privacy. He joined the event through video conference from Russia. During the event, Snowden explained that he was able to release the secrets of America's mass surveillance projects more securely by using free software.
The whistleblower praised Debian, Tails, and Tor observing that what he did in 2013 never could have happened without the help of free software. He also advocates that activists and journalists switch to free and open source software to secure their privacy against the omnipresent US surveillance state.
Comment: Is there any endeavor whatsoever that Bill Gates has laid his hands on that hasn't in some way served the twisted goals of corporations, elite organizations or intelligence agencies - while also being in some way detrimental to the average person?

A man shouts for help to salvage his furniture after his house was destroyed by a Saudi-led air strike in Yemen's capital Sanaa, February 25, 2016
"For the past year, governments that arm Saudi Arabia have rejected or downplayed compelling evidence that the coalition's airstrikes have killed hundreds of civilians in Yemen," Philippe Bolopion, the deputy global advocacy director for Human Rights Watch (HRW), said in a public release.
"By continuing to sell weapons to a known violator that has done little to curtail its abuses, the US, UK, and France risk being complicit in unlawful civilian deaths," he continued.
Comment: The US/UK/France can't stop selling arms to the head-choppers. That's how they get them to ISIS, their most successful creation.
Courtesy of the West: UNICEF reports 87 million children under 7 have spent entire lives in conflict

Children run while competing in "Freedom Marathon" marking the fifth anniversary of the Syrian crisis, in the town of Marat Numan in Idlib province, Syria, March 23, 2016.
UNICEF statistics also reveal that one in 11 children before the age of six spend their most critical developmental period under the specter of constant violence.
"In addition to the immediate physical threats that children in crises face, they are also at risk of deep-rooted emotional scars," Pia Britto, UNICEF Chief of Early Child Development, says.
The root cause is the irreversible damage done to the brain. Before the age of seven, child brains are known to activate more than 1,000 brain cells - or neurons. These neurons are capable of firing off thousands of times per second, connecting to thousands of others. Extreme trauma caused by constant exposure to violence is very hazardous to the child's cognitive, psychological and social development, the authors explain.
Comment: The US/UK/EU is sowing the wind and will reap the whirlwind of all the damage they have caused around the world.

Belgian troops man a roadblock near Brussels' Zaventem airport following Tuesdays' bomb attacks in Brussels, Belgium, March 23, 2016.
Ibrahim El Bakraoui blew himself up at the Brussels' Zaventem Airport on Tuesday, Federal Prosecutor Frederic Van Leeuw said.
Before the attacks Ibrahim left a note, where he wrote that he felt increasingly unsafe and feared landing up in prison. El Bakraoui said he was "in a hurry, doesn't know what to do" and was "surrounded by all sides."
Comment: Apparently, being in a hurry and surrounded doesn't stop a suicide bomber from taking time out from his busy day to write and note and sign his name to it (or whatever he did to let people know that he wrote it).
The note was found on a computer in a trash can in Brussels' Schaerbeek neighborhood.











Comment: See also: Untold history of Finland: Fascist origins, Russophobia and today's anti-Muslim hysteria