Society's Child
A court in the central Chinese province of Henan said Wang Yun put sodium nitrite into porridge being prepared for her colleague's students, sickening 25.
The attack took place in March 2019 and left one boy severely ill for months before he died in January this year, according to news reports.
The former Democratic presidential candidate tweeted, "Congress needs to pass our bipartisan bill to ban ballot harvesting so no one can exploit our sacred right to vote." She recently introduced the Election Fraud Prevention Act with Republican Illinois Rep. Rodney Davis.
Gabbard also cited a Project Veritas report that claims the practice was rife during Minneapolis's Ward 6 city council special election race. Minneapolis police announced that they are investigating the allegations.
Comment: The warnings are out there and they are not unreasonable. Others agree this is a crisis in the making:
See also:
Pelosi's stimulus bill: Nationwide 'Ballot harvesting' without 'any limit' - what could go wrong with that?
Multiple voters who live in Brooklyn have reported errors — including a wrong name on their ballot envelope — which would invalidate their ballots, according to Gothamist. The error was due to an "outside vendor error," the New York City Board of Elections said Monday in a tweet instructing residents on what steps to take if they encounter the error.
"I just got my New York mail-in ballot today and the security envelope I'm supposed to put it in and sign has some other guy's name and address on it," Nathan McDermott, a CNN reporter and Brooklyn resident, tweeted Monday.
Comment: The military's voter rolls seem to be particularly affected by mail-in ballot irregularities:
Reports from concerned Queens civilians who'd received forms labeled "official absentee military ballot for the general election" began proliferating on social media over the weekend. They may have gone out to everyone in the borough who requested an absentee ballot, according to a Monday report from the New York Post - which has seen several of its own reporters receive them.
While the city Board of Elections has denied a mix-up, instead blaming a typographical error, many who received the ballots fear their votes might be thrown out on a technicality.
Sunnyside city councilman Jimmy Van Bramer told the Post that about a dozen of his constituents had contacted him for advice about what to do with the seemingly-mistaken mailing. "It appears that everyone has gotten this particular ballot," he said, suggesting the early reports were "just the tip of the iceberg."
While the NYC Board of Elections responded to one Queens resident's Twitter query, confirming it was "the correct ballot, even if you are not serving in the military," it has not issued a public statement about the ballots on its own Twitter feed (never mind the usual publicity channels). However, a BOE spokesperson confirmed to the Post that the ballots were legit, explaining the confusion stemmed from a typographical error in which a hyphen between "military" and "absentee" was not printed and insisting the ballots are the same for military and absentee voters.
Despite these attempts at reassurance, the New York State Board of Elections was not pleased to learn of the mistake. Co-chair Doug Kellner pledged to look into the matter, acknowledging that "there are lots of questions of whether there is adequate quality control" at the city BOE.
The seemingly-minor typo could come back to haunt absentee voters if the ballots are challenged after Election Day, and voters already on edge due to the political firestorm that has erupted around mail-in ballots don't need more reasons to distrust the system. Last month, it emerged that a quarter of mail-in ballots cast by New Yorkers during the 2020 primary were disqualified for reasons that were largely the fault of the city's Board of Elections and the US Postal Service.

Protesters set fire to a police station in Minneapolis, Minnesota, US May 28, 2020.
The Times headline blares that the "pledge to dismantle the police department has collapsed," and notes that "a majority of City Council members promised to 'end policing as we know it'" after George Floyd died while in the custody of the Minneapolis police department. Instead, though "they became a case study in how idealistic calls for structural change can falter."
Comment: To quote Not the Bee's masthead: "What a time to be alive!"
President Donald Trump and former vice president Joe Biden face off against each other on Tuesday night, in the first of three debates before November's election. The political slugfest takes place at Ohio's Case Western Reserve University (CWRU), and will be moderated by Fox News's Chris Wallace.
It'll be watched by a studio audience of around 75 people, and by millions of Americans at home.

Activists including Parkland Shooting survivor and activist David Hogg gather before the final mile of the 50 Miles More walk against gun violence which ends with a rally at the Smith and Wesson Firearms factory on August 26, 2018 in Springfield, Massachusetts
Of all the political activists in the United States, I can't think of many that are as divisive as David Hogg. One of the group known as the Parkland kids (the students who survived the 2018 mass shooting at a Florida high school that left 17 dead), David is known for his anti-NRA and anti-gun diatribes. He seemed to become one of the political left's darlings. He is the poster child for gun control in the eyes of many. That in and of itself makes him one of the most divisive figures in politics of the last five years.
Given what he went through and how much he's beloved by the political left and those who describe themselves as woke, you wouldn't expect the young man to be called out for an anti-violence stance. I mean, the entire platform that he stands on is based on this and he went to a school where there was a mass shooting. Despite my substantial disagreements with him, an opinion that comes across like a pacifist doesn't exactly surprise me. I don't believe it should surprise anyone. But when he decried political violence, the "Church of Woke" decided that was a sin, and he had to be punished until his mind was changed and he showed contrition.
All that changed in November 2018 when a former JPMorgan precious-metals trader admitted he engaged in a six-year spoofing scheme that defrauded investors in gold, silver, platinum, and palladium futures contracts. John Edmonds, then 36, pled guilty under seal in the District of Connecticut to commodities fraud, conspiracy to commit wire fraud, commodities price manipulation, and spoofing, a trading technique whereby traders flood the market with "fake" bids or asks to push the price of a given futures contract up or down toward a more advantageous price, and to confuse other traders or HFTs which respond to trader intentions by launching momentum in the other direction. As FBI Assistant Director in Charge Sweeney explained at the time, "with his guilty plea, Edmonds admitted he intended to introduce materially false and misleading information into the commodities markets."

The editorial staff at New York University's student newspaper is resigning after their university-appointed editorial advisor accused of "racism" was hired.
The Washington Square News (WSN) wrote an open letter from the 40 staffed editors "publicizing the grievances" that led to their decision.
"[W]e understand that continuing to work at WSN in our current circumstance would do more harm than good, and we refuse to condone what we have seen over the past three weeks," the address prefaced the widely-felt undermining of their authority as student journalists.
Comment: Sounds like a bunch of snowflakes couldn't take working in a real life journalism environment. They should be happy they still have time to change their majors.
See also:
- An online student attended a rooftop party. He was reported to NYU and suspended indefinitely
- NYU student group demands Black-only student housing on campus
- University criticized for removing David Hume's name amid racist 'distress' concerns
- University campus so woke it segregated whites-only and POC-only cafes
- Indoctrination: Vanderbilt University professors claim US Constitution 'designed to perpetuate white supremacy'
- Washington and Lee University wants to teach students to overthrow the state
This shining victory, whether brief or long term in its tenure, should be savoured to the full by Rufo and Peterson.
One of the more repulsive domestic aspects of the First World War in England was the "White Feather Campaign." Though physically near-weightless, in its symbolism — male cowardice — the white feather was heavier than Tungsten. Women motivated by a hysterical form of patriotism would hand them to any able-bodied man they saw on the streets as a goad to enlisting (or re-enlisting). It was such a shaming experience that it often worked. But in the end, the campaign backfired, because it weaponized an essentially noble feeling and cruelly stigmatized many good and honourable men.
The white-feather campaign went dormant for 100 years, but it is back for deployment in a new kind of battle — a civilizational war in which patriotism has been replaced by oikophobia — cultural self-loathing induced by critical race theory (CRT), which has rewritten the origin story of western civilization in general and the US in particular.
Comment: See also:
- Pull up a chair and let John MacArthur perfectly summarize the cancer of Critical Race Theory for you
- Journalist declares 'one-man war against critical race theory' after nuke lab holds 'white privilege' training
- Eight big reasons critical race theory is terrible for dealing with racism
- 'Become a CO-RESISTOR': Federal agencies defy Trump's ban on 'racial justice' training, leaked documents show
- Shades of Maoist China: FBI running WEEKLY struggle sessions on 'intersectionality' in the name of diversity and anti-racism
- 'Virtually all white people contribute to racism': Treasury Department lectures white employees as part of 'Diversity Training'
- City of Seattle teaches white employees to 'undo their whiteness' in bizarre 'diversity training' sessions












Comment: See also: Poll Suggests Majority of Canadians Support the Death Penalty