Society's Child
Islamophobic incidents have rocketed by almost 600 per cent in Britain following the New Zealand terror attack, a monitor has reported.
Tell Mama said that in the week after 50 Muslim worshippers were gunned down, offenders used "language, symbols or actions" linked to the atrocity to target Muslims in the UK.
"Cases included people making impressions of pointing a pistol to Muslim women and comments about British Muslims, and an association with actions taken by the terrorist in New Zealand," the monitor said.
It came after an alleged terror incident linked to the Christchurch massacre, attacks on mosques in Birmingham and several arrests over online statements.
"Such surgeries are, in my opinion and in the opinion of the church, a crime against God," Metropolitan Hilarion, the head of the Russian Orthodox Church's external relations department, said in an interview.
He explained that the church doesn't recognize a person's "new" gender after sex affirmation surgery.
Hilarion reiterated that the Russian Orthodox Church "will never recognize such lifestyle as normal... when children from the cradle are being taught that there is a biological gender and a gender they can choose."

In this March 18, 2019, file photo, a student lights candle during a vigil to commemorate victims of March 15 shooting, outside the Al Noor mosque in Christchurch, New Zealand. New Zealanders are debating the limits of free speech after their chief censor banned a 74-page manifesto written by a man accused of massacring 50 people at two mosques.
The ban, issued Saturday, means anybody caught with the document on their computer could face up to 10 years in prison, while anyone caught sending it could face 14 years. Some say the ban goes too far and risks lending both the document and the gunman mystique.
At the same time, many local media organizations are debating whether to even name the Australian man charged with murder in the March 15 attacks, 28-year-old Brenton Tarrant, after New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern vowed she would never mention him by name.

Monsanto's weedkiller Roundup has been at the centre of over 1,000 US court cases over alleged cancer link.
The CEO of the German chemical giant Bayer has insisted that the $63-billion (€55.6-billion) takeover of the American agrochemical and agricultural biotechnology corporation Monsanto in 2018 was a "good idea" despite the huge legal costs that are building up over the firm's Roundup weedkiller.
When asked by a journalist from the German newspaper Frankfurter Allgemeine Sonntagszeitung, Bayer CEO Werner Baumann said that "the Monsanto acquisition was and is a good idea."
The multi-billion dollar takeover has turned out to be plagued with other massive expenses.
Two months after the acquisition was completed, Monsanto lost a court case in the US to Dewayne Johnson, a school groundskeeper suffering from terminal non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, who has sued the chemical giant over the glyphosate-based weedkillers Roundup and Ranger Pro.
Comment: See also:
- Los Angeles County Board bans use of Roundup for all county departments
- More than 11,000 people are now suing Bayer over Roundup cancer link
- Bayer Monsanto faces a second trial over Roundup causing cancer
- French, German farmers destroy crops after GMOs found in Bayer seeds
- Bayer Acquisition: Exit glyphosate, enter glufosinate?
- Glyphosate blues: Bayer hit by new wave of lawsuits over Monsanto's toxic Roundup weed killer
- Monsanto and Bayer are moving to create a marijuana monopoly
- Monsanto-Bayer: Eliminating the name will not erase the history
- Bayer needs more than an aspirin to cure its Monsanto-sized headache
- Thousands of glyphosate cancer-risk lawsuits filed against Bayer's Monsanto
- Monsanto woes stack up as Bayer stock keeps falling

Supporters of Chelsea Manning say she is being held in 'solitary confinement' in an Alexandria, Virginia detention center.
Since being sent to a detention center in Alexandria, Virginia earlier this month, "Chelsea has been placed in administrative segregation... a term designed to sound less cruel than 'solitary confinement,'" the Chelsea Resists group said.
"However, Chelsea has been kept in her cell for 22 hours a day.
"Chelsea can't be out of her cell while any other prisoners are out, so she cannot talk to other people, or visit the law library, and has no access to books or reading material. She has not been outside for 16 days," they added.
Comment: See also: Chelsea Manning sent back to jail for refusing to testify in secret proceedings against Wikileaks
- Bradley Manning denied a whistleblower defense
- Bradley Manning subjected to illegal pretrial punishment in Wikileaks case
- Bradley Manning, America's martyr for open government
- Bradley Manning wants to live as 'Chelsea' in jail
- Top 5 revelations of US imperial treachery that landed Chelsea Manning in prison
- Chelsea Manning in first interview after release: Leaking US military files was 'responsibility to public'

Hizb-ut Tahrir Scandinavia supporters attend the Friday prayers at Christiansborg Palace Square in Copenhagen, Denmark, March 22, 2019
Members from Stram Kurs (Strict Course) staged their counter-demonstration at Christiansborg Palace Square in Copenhagen on Friday, as members from Hizb-ut Tahrir Scandinavia gathered to pray for the Muslim victims of the recent Christchurch mosque massacres.
Footage of the counter-protest shows Stram Kurs leader Rasmus Paludan and other supporters of the fringe party gathered on the edge of the square, while the Islamist rally can be heard in the background.
A man then proceeds to light the book in a small grill, while some warm their hands as it goes up in flames. The party has previously called such actions "Bacon a la Koran."
After doctors at Harvard affiliated Boston Children's Hospital misdiagnosed 15-year-old Justina Pelletier's rare blood disorder as a mental condition, she was confined against her family's will, and forcibly separated from her parents. Denied medication and treatment, she lost the use of her legs and suffered incredible pain before Martin Gottesfeld exposed the situation by launching a cyber-attack against the hospital's network.
Comment: He briefly knocked their website offline while they were running their annual fundraiser. And he got 10 YEARS for it...
While Pelletier was reunited with her family as a result, Gottesfeld was arrested and prosecuted for the hack which saved her from horrific conditions. His wife Dana spoke with RT about the case.

Viking Sky cruise ship arrives at the port of Molde, Norway.
The Viking Sky was towed to safety by two tugboats, with one sailing in front of the vessel and the other behind it.
The luxury cruise ship, which set sail with almost 1,400 passengers and crew aboard, sent out an SOS signal on Saturday. It was drifting in rough waters near a rocky coast after all its engines stopped working.
At one point, it approached land at a distance of just 100 meters, with passengers posting dramatic photos. But the crew was eventually able to start one of the engines and avoided crashing.
The hair-raising incident occurred in the port city of Nakhodka on Russia's Pacific coast. The bar's clientele, however, managed to escape the rampage as people were quick to react, disarming the perpetrator, local media report.
A video that surfaced online shows people bravely surrounding the man as he brandishes a chainsaw. Screams of fright are heard in the background as people attempt to get the would-be horror movie villain to the ground.
The ousted student, who was not identified, is the second person from the Ivy League college caught up in the coast-to-coast scandal in which federal prosecutors allege dozens of wealthy parents lied and paid massive bribes to get their children into elite schools.
Rudolph "Rudy" Meredith, the former head women's soccer coach at Yale, was arrested in the federal probe dubbed "Varsity Blues" and charged with conspiracy to commit wire fraud and honest services wire fraud. Prosecutors said Meredith, 51, was paid a $400,000 bribe by William "Rick" Singer, identified by authorities as the ringleader of the scam, to accept a student even though the applicant did not play soccer.
The Yale student's parents had allegedly paid Singer $1.2 million to get their daughter into the prestigious Connecticut school, prosecutors said.










Comment: It looks very much like, to some great extent, the engineers of the Christchurch massacre are getting their wish; to generate ever-worse division in Western countries (which they then blame on Russia, China, etc).
See also: