Society's Child
It's not hard to spot the group of people clustered at a gas station. A car partially obscures the scene, but the bright lights of the boarded up business still highlight some members of the small crowd.
I start jogging toward the station, phone in hand, ready to record. Richie, our director of video, told me earlier on that phone call that he was following a group of armed individuals at the time. I remembered them - their arrival near the courthouse, the fights that had broken out with them earlier in the evening, how one member of the group seemed too nervous to be handling a weapon.
The scene there is chaotic - people yelling, shoving, making threats, then a crowd chasing a young man. Richie is already onsite and, as I'm heading to meet him, the moments leading up to the first shooting are already playing out. Richie sees the alleged shooter hurrying down the street, gun in one hand and fire extinguisher in the other, until he reaches a sort of corner in the parking lot of the gas station.
Meanwhile, I'm moving more rapidly toward the chaos. The key moments caught on video begin to come into focus for me, although I'm not close enough to make out specific faces yet. There's a loud bang. I stop immediately - I didn't grow up around guns. It sounds like a gunshot. I'm just not sure.
A few beats go by after the first shot - enough time for me to be able to get out my phone. As if on autopilot, I hit the record button.
Lately, there's been considerable debate over the accuracy of presidential polls. While recent polls show Joe Biden ahead, a number of pundits speculate that some Donald Trump supporters may be hesitant to share their true opinions when polled by phone. That hypothesis is gaining traction, leading some to argue that Trump may be leading despite what the latest numbers show. It's also being fueled by the belief that 2020 will be a repeat of the 2016 election, when Trump polled poorly in advance of the election, but still went on to win the Electoral College vote.
Despite the current debate on whether there are segments of Trump (or Biden) backers reticent to express their true opinions in phone polls, there's been little empirical investigation into if the phenomenon actually exists. Pundits on major broadcast and cable news networks, such as Fox News and CNN, continue to speculate on the potential impact of so-called "shy Trump voters" on the outcome of the November presidential election result. In a recent article published in The New York Times, David Winston says the following:
Comment: One has only to look at the nightly MSM reporting on Leftist violence to understand why Trump supporters would be reluctant to declare themselves.

People gather for a vigil, following the police shooting of Jacob Blake, a Black man, in Kenosha, Wisconsin, U.S., August 28, 2020.
"Kyle Rittenhouse will be served justice and pay for his crimes, either by the justice system or by his fellow Americans," Gill tweeted on Friday. The Black Lives Matter supporter, who has more than 25,000 followers on Twitter, blocked replies to his message. He later took his tweets into social-media hiding, allowing only approved followers to see his recent and former posts, amid heavy backlash.
Comment: The Rittenhouse case may be a watershed moment in the leftist violence ripping the country apart:
- New footage of Kenosha shootings during riot paints a different picture
- 'Clear case of self-defense': Pundits argue video evidence exonerates 17-year-old charged with Kenosha killings
- Teenager Kyle Rittenhouse in Wisconsin shootings charged with six criminal counts: complaint
- Online vigilantes archive defamatory tweets about Kyle Rittenhouse in anticipation of lawsuits likely to come
- Kenosha police arrest alleged agitators who arrived in out-of-state vehicles filled with terrorist gear

A man confronts police outside the Kenosha Police Department in Kenosha, Wisconsin, August 23, 2020.
To those fed a diet of mainstream media disinformation, the protests sweeping the US are just that: protests. They're grassroots affairs, expressions of discontent and resentment at a status quo that oppresses African Americans and denies them the rights and privileges afforded to whites.
That may have been true for all of about a day following the death of George Floyd back in May, and some of the protesters no doubt still feel that they're fighting the good fight. But far more have taken to the streets to commit brazen acts of violence, looting, and criminality. Thousands have been injured, and more than 32 people have been killed, including the two shot in apparent self-defense by teenager Kyle Rittenhouse in Kenosha on Tuesday night.
The riots have been enabled by Democrat leaders who have at best excused and at worst encouraged the most base excesses of the mob.
The bill, introduced by Sen. Scott A. Surovell (D-Fairfax), eliminates mandatory minimum sentences for assault and battery charges against police, judges, magistrates, correctional officers and firefighters. Democrats argued that the felony, which carries a minimum six-month sentence, is too harsh of a penalty as it is frequently used in encounters that are inconsequential.
While the charge remains to be a felony, the measure gives a judge or jury the power to reduce it to a misdemeanor if the incident did not result in a bodily injury.
Republicans claimed that the law would make it more difficult for officers to do their jobs and for departments to find new recruits. GOP senators called for the bill to be taken up during next year's session.
Comment: The Dems do not want their opposition forces curtailed in any capacity, especially prior to the election. Will the negation of punitive consequences reduce or magnify the desire and willingness to inflict harm on the police and other officials?
"Operation Not Forgotten" resulted in the rescue of 26 children, the safe location of 13 children and the arrest of nine criminal associates. Additionally, investigators cleared 26 arrest warrants and filed additional charges for alleged crimes related to sex trafficking, parental kidnapping, registered sex offender violations, drugs and weapons possession, and custodial interference. The 26 warrants cleared included 19 arrest warrants for a total of nine individuals arrested, some of whom had multiple warrants.
Darby Kirby, chief of the Missing Child Unit said:
"When we track down fugitives, it's a good feeling to know that we're putting the bad guy behind bars. But that sense of accomplishment is nothing compared to finding a missing child. It's hard to put into words what we feel when we rescue a missing child, but I can tell you that this operation has impacted every single one of us out here. We are working to protect them and get them the help they need."The U.S. Marshal's Office is taking on child traffickers around the country. Historically, the U.S. marshals are famous for the manhunt. This kind of work is right up their alley and it was surprising to learn they had not been utilized to find missing children up until now.
Comment: The article states: 'Every forty seconds a child is abducted in this country.' This is a jaw-dropping statistic!
Comment: See also:
- MindMatters: Dark Triad Politics: The Psychology of the Far Left and Alt Right
- Dark Triad traits and entitlement linked to both authoritarian political correctness and white nationalist beliefs
- Narcissists, psychopaths, and manipulators are more likely to engage in 'virtuous victim signaling' - study
The research published in the British Medical Journal (BMJ) involved a cohort of children aged 19 or under who had tested positive for coronavirus and been hospitalized between January and July of this year.
Of the 651 underage cases reviewed across England, Scotland, and Wales, only 18 percent required intensive care, the authors report. Six children - about 1 percent of the total cluster - had died, but they suffered from cardiac anomaly and bacterial sepsis, or were immunosuppressed by chemotherapy that hindered the coronavirus treatment.
Comment: And these coronavirus treatments likely did not include the tried and tested, but now egregiously banned, Hydroxychloroquine: Spain, US & Russia using Hydroxychloroquine to treat coronavirus while France, Italy and Belgium ban it due to WHO concerns
Eighty-nine percent of the cohort were eventually discharged from hospital and the remaining 10 percent were undergoing treatment at the time of publication. "Children and young people have less severe acute Covid-19 than adults," the researchers concluded.
Comment: As reported yesterday in British newspaper The Times, only a few children who were already suffering from a severe illness died with coronavirus.
See also:
- Everything You Think You Know About Coronavirus...
- UK gov wants to track & trace children if schools open in case of a 'second wave'
Neolithic man had a similar problem dealing with his livestock. Homo sapiens' success has relied not insignificantly on cattle - their dairy, meat, leather and manure. Yet the cow's ancestor, the auroch, was quite a different beast. It was fast, aggressive and dangerous - hardly conducive to be corralled into predictable channels of behaviour. So, about 10,500 years ago, man started to deliberately breed the most docile aurochs for domestication.
The key word here is docile, which comes from the Latin docere, meaning "to teach" (as does, say, 'doctorate' and 'document'). Being docile means being compliant and following commands, which means submitting to a system of thought.
Whereas animals, however, typically need to be bred to have a higher level of reasoning to be taught commands, human beings, already being quite smart, need to be dumbed down. You won't disobey an order if you lack the cognitive ability to question it. This is particularly pertinent to the smooth running of a modern world system which relies on millions of individual souls, each with their own nuanced life history and perspective, thinking and acting in the same way.
Comment: See also:
- A Scientific Look at The Mask Fallacy - And Why We're Told to Wear Them
- Facemasks, Lies, Damn Lies, And Public Health Officials: "A Growing Body of Evidence"
- Dr Mercola Interviews Denis Rancourt: 'There is no Scientific Evidence That Facemasks Inhibit Viral Spread'
- Face masks are making statists of us all
- Your Mask is Making You Meaner, Dumber, More Afraid & Less Safe
- 'Masks Are Symbolic,' say Dr Fauci and The New England Journal of Medicine













Comment: Here's Richie McGinniss's account, as told to Tucker Carlson:
See also: