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'Worst is yet to come': NYC shootings skyrocket after anti-crime unit disbanded

NYC shootings June 2020,

NYC has seen 100 shootings in May, the first time the city had hit that number in around five years.
Shootings in New York City increased by a massive 358 percent over the last seven days, compared with the same time last year. The skyrocketing numbers have prompted the police commissioner to warn the worst is yet to come.

There were 12 shootings during the seven-day period in question last year, while 2020 has seen 55. More than 70 people were wounded in the 55 shootings, with at least 19 injured on Saturday when the city saw over a dozen incidents, most of which occurred in the Bronx. In one of these incidents, a man died after being shot in the neck while washing his car.

"It takes a long time to turn a ship that sees an iceberg directly in front of us,"said New York City Police Commissioner Dermot Shea, adding that the numbers had been trending upward "for a while" and that he had warned of a "storm on the horizon" in December.

Shea also said NYC had seen 100 shootings in May, the first time the city had hit that number in around five years.

The latest figures come only a week after Shea ordered the disbanding of an anti-crime unit which saw plainclothes police officers stopping individuals and searching for weapons. The effort at reform was sparked by nationwide protests following the killing of George Floyd by a Minneapolis police officer last month.

Comment: Chicago isn't faring any better. The city just witnessed one of the deadliest Father's Day weekends on record as 104 people were victims of gun violence. This is just after experiencing its deadliest Memorial Day weekend:
From Friday evening to Monday morning, 104 people were shot in Chicago. Among them was three-year-old Mekay James. He was hit by a bullet on Saturday while riding in a car with his father, who was the intended target, police said. The young child was rushed to hospital but was pronounced dead shortly after.

Two teenage boys, ages 17 and 16, were killed just over an hour before James' death, when a male suspect approached them and fired shots. Later the same day a 13-year-old girl died after being shot in the neck while watching TV in her home.[..]

Police Superintendent David Brown said that police are working on tracking down those responsible for the shootings. He added that "gangs, guns and drugs" are the common thread in those shootings.
"Good men throughout this city should be celebrating with their families on a beautiful day, but instead, a number of Chicagoans will be spending Father's Day grieving the loss of their children," he said at a press conference.
See also: As woke world protests 'systemic racism' in the USA, Black-on-Black murders break 60-year-old record in Chicago


Arrow Down

Baiting Christians? BLM activist wants to expunge all statues of Jesus because they were created as tools of oppression

Jesus facepalm
Shaun King said Monday it's time for anything resembling "white Jesus" to be expunged from the public square.

The staunch Black Lives Matter activist made the comments as online activists continued to debate which statues and monuments were culturally unacceptable in 2020.

The May 25 death of George Floyd, a 46-year-old black man, under the weight of Minneapolis police served as the impetus for activists to tear down statues of historical figures like Christopher Columbus and George Washington.

"Yes," Mr. King said regarding his support for tearing down images of Christ. "All murals and stained glass windows of white Jesus, and his European mother, and their white friends should also come down. They are a gross form [of] white supremacy. Created as tools of oppression. Racist propaganda. They should all come down."

Comment:


Snakes in Suits

Gov. Cuomo committed one of the worst atrocities by sending thousands of Covid patients to nursing homes full of vulnerable elderly individuals

New York nursing home Covid deaths
The 56th Governor of New York, Andrew Cuomo, had the grave misfortune of presiding over one of the states hit hardest by COVID-19. According to a recent poll the governor has enjoyed a sky-high approval rating due to his leadership during the ongoing crisis.

Prior to the pandemic, he was polling at a dismal 3/10 favorable rating whereas now he is seen as one of the most liked politicians in the country with a new rating of 7/10. Some people like his brother and CNN anchor Chris Cuomo even asked if he was considering running for president because of his new popularity.

However, his record is far from stellar. He may have easily committed one of the greatest atrocities of the crisis: Mandating the transfer of over 4,500 COVID-19 patients to nursing homes full of vulnerable and elderly individuals which eventually saw over 6,000 deaths.

Comment: See also:


Arrow Down

Ohio business owner whose store was destroyed by looters, now being threatened for cooperating with police

Kelly Kandah, colossal cupcakes
An Ohio business owner told "Fox & Friends" on Monday that she is receiving threats for cooperating with law enforcement officials investigating the looting of her cupcake store last month.

Kelly Kandah, the owner of Colossal Cupcakes in Cleveland, which was destroyed by looters, said some of those threats include people telling her that when her store is rebuilt, "it's going to get hit again."

She said she also received complaints that her cooperation with investigators is "unfair," that she shouldn't be cooperating with the FBI and that what she is doing is "against the cause, which I'm actually absolutely for the cause, but it's upsetting people that I would involve the police over something such as property."

Comment:


Hardhat

Watch as police clear streets of Nantes with tear gas on 1yr anniversary of man's death during crackdown on a party

nantes police protest
© Ruptly
Police tear-gassed groups of youths on the streets of Nantes, some of whom were attending the 'Fete de la Musique' event, while others were demonstrating on the first anniversary of the death of Steve Canico in a police crackdown.

Eyewitness footage from the scene shows large crowds sprinting away from police through the streets of Nantes as tear gas canisters rained down from the sky.

Thousands gathered throughout Sunday in a silent march in memory of 24-year-old Steve Canico who died at the music festival in 2019, after disappearing during a police baton charge and tear gas barrage along the banks of the Loire.

Stock Down

Dollar as reserve currency waning, Yuan showing promise - Deustche Bank

China
© STR | AFP | Getty Images
A Chinese bank employee counts 100-yuan notes and U.S. dollar bills at a bank counter in Nantong in China’s eastern Jiangsu province on August 6, 2019.
The currency markets are currently facing "multiple cross-currents" amid fears over a potential second wave of coronavirus cases in the world, said Deutsche Bank's Sameer Goel, who is chief Asia macro strategist.

A "big question" for investors right now over the U.S. dollar is whether it should be trading at a safe-haven risk premium as concerns rise over a potential second wave of virus infections, Goel told CNBC's "Street Signs" on Monday.

He said that in a potential resurgence of cases, the U.S. dollar could weaken against most of its peers in developed markets, and to an extent, possibly China too.

Comment: See also: A crash in the dollar is coming


Stock Down

UK's lockdown forces poorest to take on more debt

poverty uk
© Alamy
Even before the coronavirus, living standards had flatlined amid wage stagnation and austerity.
Poorer households are twice as likely as high-income households to have turned to borrowing to tide them through the coronavirus crisis, new figures suggest.

A study for the Resolution Foundation highlights the precarious position of millions of people's finances as the economic fallout of the pandemic deepens.

It found in a survey that the average worker in a shut-down sector of the economy had just £1,900 in savings in May, compared with £4,700 of savings among those able to keep working from home.

Comment: See also:


Info

Dogs are pets, not food? Yulin, China, dog meat festival to begin this weekend

dog market china

Our partner group activists rescued 10 puppies who were on offer for slaughter and sale at a market just outside Yulin.
Once again, we are seeing heartbreaking visuals from Yulin, China, in the run-up to the annual dog meat "festival" there this Sunday. A video recorded by Humane Society International's partners on the ground shows rows and rows of dog carcasses lying on tables or being butchered with cleavers, all in defiance of a Chinese Ministry of Agriculture statement last month that dogs are not meant for human consumption.

Also in the video you'll see puppies, who were on offer for slaughter and sale at a market just outside Yulin, being rescued by Chinese animal activists. The activists, upon seeing the 10 puppies, questioned the stall holder about how the animals had been acquired, and he agreed to let the activists take them. The dogs are now being cared for at our partner shelter.

"I couldn't believe that anyone would even want to eat these adorable little darlings," said one of the activists, Jennifer Chen, who can be seen lifting a puppy from the cage in the video. "My hands were trembling...he kept licking my hands, and unbeknown to him I could easily have been a dog meat eater."

China has made progress in recent months toward ending the dog meat trade, most significantly by confirming earlier this month that dogs are considered pets and not meat. While this is not in itself a ban on the trade, two cities — Shenzhen and Zhuhai — have banned the consumption of dog and cat meat.

Comment: The thing about official bans in China is that certain things are illegal on paper, and common in practice, like prostitution. So while the government may make certain statements about dog and cat meat, the facts on the ground are likely different. What's promising in the above report are the observations that there seems to be less supply and demand. For more on the topic, see:




Briefcase

Teenagers discover human remains in luggage on Seattle beach

seattle luggage human remains
© TikTok
Luggage jammed full of human remains was found on a Seattle beach Friday — a chilling discovery that appears to have been made by teens making videos on TikTok.

One of the bags was spotted on a shoreline, near the popular tourist attraction Pike's Place Market, while another was found floating in the water, the Seattle Police Department said in a press release.

A video posted on TikTok the following morning shows several young people stumbling across a black suitcase on a rocky shoreline, and laughing — before they realize what's inside.

"Something traumatic happened that changed my life," TikTok user UghHenry writes in the caption of the video, which was posted Saturday morning along with the hashtags #crime #murder and #washington.

"We found this black suitcase. We were joking that maybe the suitcase would have money...[But] the smell was overwhelming," it states.

Books

To Kill A Mockingbird and Huckleberry Finn books banned from Minnesota school syllabuses

To Kill A Mockingbird and Huckleberry Finn
© GETTY
To Kill A Mockingbird and Huckleberry Finn books BANNED from Minnesota school syllabuses
Two classic American novels have been banned from syllabuses at schools in Minnesota, USA. The reason being a concern that racial slurs used in Harper Lee's To Kill a Mockingbird and Mark Twain's The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, could make pupils feel "humiliated or marginalised". According to The Telegraph, The Duluth school district, which includes over 20 schools, is removing the books from the curriculum for ninth and 11th grade English classes.


Comment: Grades can also make kids feel humiliated and marginalized, maybe schools should ban those too.


However, copies of Lee and Twain's classics will remain in the school libraries.

While Duluth district's curriculum director Michael Cary has said To Kill A Mockingbird and Huckleberry Finn will be replaced by books that "teach the same lessons" without using racial slurs.

The American Library Association have listed the two novels as among the most banned books from 2001-2009, mainly due to the offensive language used by some characters.

Comment: Banning these books, among others, is contributing to raising a generation of snowflakes who can't function in the real world because they've been sheltered from everything harsh and real about life.