Welcome to Sott.net
Tue, 02 Nov 2021
The World for People who Think

Society's Child
Map

Dollar

The state evicts a 79-year-old veteran from his home over back taxes

old man evicted
A 79-year-old veteran suffering from dementia was evicted from his long-time family home on Friday, and his belongings scattered across the front yard, after failing to pay a $6,000 property tax bill.

"All this is furniture from my living room," Billie McGruder, who lived in the house for decades, told a crew from CBS DFW. "It's out there for everybody to see."

Only two weeks prior to his 80th birthday, McGruder got a knock on the door informing him that it was time to vacate the home he inherited from his parents who bought the house in the 1930s.

"They come to evict me for back taxes," said McGruder.

Tarrant County records reveal that authorities seized his home over nearly $6,000 in unpaid taxes and auctioned the property off to a real estate company for $38,000.

While Tarrant County Precinct 8 Constable Michael Campbell told WFAA that the eviction followed standard protocol, with the property being sold on January 2, 2017, to a new owner, McGruder said he didn't know what was happening to his home in recent months, didn't understand the letters about overdue taxes or realize that his home was being put up for auction.

Handcuffs

Moroccan organizer of protests in Rif region and Al Hoceima sentenced to 20 years by Casablanca court

Moroccan counter terrorism BCIJ

Members of the Moroccan counter-terrorism efforts, the newly set-up BCIJ (described as Morocco's FBI)
The Moroccan leader of protests over economic and social problems in the Rif region and the northern city of Al Hoceima was sentenced to 20 years in prison on Tuesday by a Casablanca court, Reuters reports.

Nasser Zefzafi, who is about 39 years old, was arrested in May 2017 and transferred to a prison in Casablanca after organizing demonstrations in his hometown of Al Hoceima in what came to be called as "Hirak al Chaabi" in Arabic or "popular movement." He was charged with undermining public order and threatening national unity.

As part of the same verdict, Nabil Ahmijeq, Wassim El Boustani and Samir Aghid were also given 20 years in prison while three others received a 15-year jail sentence.

Seven activists were sentenced to five years in prison and six others were handed a 10-year jail sentence.

Stop

Tunisian imams discourage pilgrims from completing Hajj as Saudis use money to fund wars

Muslim Hajj pilgrims Kaaba stone
© Fırat Yurdakul/Anadolu Agency
Muslim Hajj pilgrims try to touch Kaaba stone as they circumnavigate around the Kaaba, Islam's holiest site, located in the center of the Masjid al-Haram (Grand Mosque) in Mecca, Saudi Arabia on 22 August, 2017
The Union of Tunisian Imams called on the Grand Mufti of the Republic to discourage pilgrims from travelling to complete the Hajj this year because of the high costs of the trip and the fact that the money is used by Saudi Arabia to pay for its wars in other Muslim countries.

Local media reported General-Secretary of the Union of Tunisian Imams, Fadhel Ashour, saying: "It is better to spend this money to improve the conditions of the Tunisian people."
Saudi Arabia uses the money of Hajj in the aggression against Islamic countries such as Syria and Yemen, which is contrary to Sharia.

Comment: Any attempts to inhibit the Saudi's brutal assault on Yemen should be applauded. See also:


USA

The sad state of childhood poverty in America

hungry children, poverty,homelessness
For the children and the flowers are my sisters and my brothers,

their laughter and their loveliness would clear a cloudy day.

And the song that I am singing is a prayer to non-believers,

To come and stand beside us, we can find a better way.

-- From a John Denver song: 'Rhymes and Reasons')

-

As a nation, we have lost our way! In the "political wheeling and dealing" of Washington government's elites, far too many of these elected officials continue to pursue only their own self-serving interests. Getting re-elected is all that matters to these people. So the agendas and subsequent support of rich and powerful individuals and groups have become their priority rather than the common good and the critical needs of our nation.

One of the "buried issues" you never hear very much about in Congress or the White House is the appalling rate of poverty among children in the United States. But the primary advocate for children in America, Marian Wright Edelman, leader of the The Children's Defense Fund, has been relentless in her demands for better treatment of the poor children in our nation. Here is what she wrote to the newly-elected president in January:

Comment: Being a poor child is a direct result of having poor parents. What's one of the main drivers of poverty in many cases? Single parent homes. Unless there is an increase in responsible behaviors amongst men and women throwing more government money at the problem is unlikely to break the cycle of poverty.


TV

Why media reporting on Venezuela is biased and inaccurate

Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro
© European Press Agency
Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro
A review of Alan MacLeod's Bad News From Venezuela

For almost 20 years, the US government has been trying to overthrow Venezuela's government, and establishment media outlets (state, corporate and some nonprofit) throughout the Americas and Europe have been bending over backwards to help the US do it.

Rare exceptions to this over the last two decades would be found in the state media in some countries that are not hostile to Venezuela, like the ALBA block. Small independent outlets like VenezuelAnalysis.com also offered alternatives. In the US and UK establishment media, you are way more likelyto see a defense of Saudi Arabia's dictatorship than of Venezuela's democratically elected government. Any defense of Venezuela's government will provoke vilification and ridicule, so both Alan MacLeod and his publisher (Routledge) deserve very high praise for producing the book Bad News From Venezuela: Twenty Years of Fake News and Misreporting. It took real political courage. (Disclosure: MacLeod is a contributor to FAIR.org, as am I.)

Comment:


USA

America is dividing against itself, again!

Eagle vitriol flag
© David Foldvari
On May 22, 1856, Representative Preston Brooks entered the floor of the United States Senate, approached abolitionist Senator Charles Sumner, and beat the senator with a cane, almost taking his life.
Brooks was provoked by a passionate anti-slavery speech that Sumner had delivered in the Senate three days earlier, in which he assailed Senator Andrew Butler of South Carolina, a relative of Brooks, for his pro-slavery stance.

This sad and gruesome history is related on the website of the U.S. Senate, which concludes saying, "The nation, suffering from the breakdown of reasoned discourse that this event symbolized, tumbled onward toward the catastrophe of the civil war."

We ought to be concerned that again, today, the nation appears to be flirting with this uneasy territory where "reasoned discourse" is breaking down.
The president's press secretary, Sarah Sanders, was asked to leave a restaurant in Lexington, Virginia, where she was having dinner because, well, she works for Donald Trump. Stephanie Wilkerson, owner of the Red Hen restaurant, said she asked Sanders to depart because "there are moments in time when people need to live their convictions. This appeared to be one."
But what exactly are the "convictions" that Wilkerson was living in this incident? That you refuse to talk, associate, do business with anyone you disagree with? This is America?

Comment: Until Americans can step back, look at the big picture, recognize the congelation aspects of civil strife that lead to confrontation and then actively choose to recalibrate, the aspect of civil war increases in option and intensity.


Russian Flag

The Resounding Success of the World Cup is a Great Victory for Football but an Epic Fail for Russophobes

world cup 2018
© Kai Pfaffenbach / Reuters
Mexico fan kisses a toy trophy, Luzhniki Stadium, Moscow, Russia, June 17, 2018
The 2018 World Cup is shaping up to be the best ever. It's a far cry from the negative media coverage that surrounded the Mundial before it began, which sought to de-legitimize Russia's hosting of the event and put fans off going.

Has there ever been a World Cup that has left so many people with egg on their faces.

We were told by indignant neo-cons and virtue-signaling Western 'liberals' that it was a disgrace that Russia, a country of which they did not approve, was being allowed to host the tournament. It would be like the 1936 Nazi Olympics, MPs and media pundits assured us. 'Putin's World Cup' would be the worst World Cup ever.

Fans who went would be in fear of their lives as three out of every four Russians was a racist, homophobic football hooligan and the fourth was like Frankenstein's Monster. England's players could be drugged in their hotel to "slow them down."

In fact, the World Cup has turned out to be absolutely brilliant.

Star of David

US legislative candidates, critical of Israel, face political attacks - but norms may be changing

Leslie Cockburn
© Getty Images/KJN
Virginia Democrat Leslie Cockburn labeled a 'virulent anti-Semite'
As the US mid-term legislative elections approach, several Democratic candidates are facing accusations of anti-Semitism for their critical stance on Israel, highlighting the relevance of the Middle East conflict in US politics.

Still, at least three of those candidates have secured their party's nomination, challenging a prevalent norm in US politics where being perceived as hostile to Israel can be a career-ending taboo.

Candidate Ammar Campa-Najjar, who is running for Congress from San Diego, was chastised by Israeli media for being the grandson of an alleged militant. Campa-Najjar's grandfather, Muhammad Youssef al-Najjar, was an officer in the Palestine Liberation Organisation (PLO) who was assassinated by the Mossad in 1973 in Lebanon.

Various US and Israeli media outlets, including Haaretz, the San Diego Tribune and the Times of Israel, slammed Campa-Najjar's grandfather, calling him a "terrorist". Israel had linked the candidate's grandfather to the Munich attack in 1972 when a group of Palestinian gunman seized and killed 11 Israeli athletes at the Olympic games in Germany. While distancing himself from his grandfather, Campa-Najjar still acknowledges his Palestinian identity.

Comment: The not-so-blind are beginning to see 'a patch of blue' in the stormy sky of intolerance and manipulation by the pro-Israel forces controlling America.


Info

Milo Yiannopoulos defends his 'gun journos down' trolling email after Annapolis shooting

Capital Gazette scene
© Joshua Roberts / Reuters
Capital Gazette newspaper shooting scene in Annapolis, June 28, 2018.
Following the Capital Gazette shooting, right-wing pundit Milo Yiannopoulos said his 'gun journos down' statement was not a call for violence, and accused left-wing press of exploiting deaths while the bodies are 'barely cold.'

Before authorities even named the motive behind the fatal shooting of five people at the Capital Gazette in Annapolis, a number of journalists and activists took to Twitter to blame it on words President Donald Trump and Yiannopoulos have spoken about the press. Yiannopoulos issued a response via Facebook emphasizing that he "wasn't being serious" when he called on vigilantes to gun down the press.

"The bodies are barely cold and left-wing journalists are already exploiting these deaths to score political points against me. It's disgusting. I regret nothing I said, though of course like any normal person I am saddened to hear of needless death," the 33-year old wrote.

Boat

Malta allows 230 migrants stuck on humanitarian ship to come to shore

The Lifeline is the second charity ship that Italy has shut out of its ports this month after the new anti-immigrant Interior Minister Matteo Salvini said private rescue vessels would no longer be welcome
© Twitter
The Lifeline is the second charity ship that Italy has shut out of its ports this month after the new anti-immigrant Interior Minister Matteo Salvini said private rescue vessels would no longer be welcome
A humanitarian ship that has had about 230 rescued migrants on board for almost a week will enter a Maltese port today, ending a standoff with Italy which refused to let the ship dock.

Maltese Prime Minister Joseph Muscat said seven European Union countries had offered to share the burden of the migrants with Malta. The Lifeline ship, operated by German charity Mission Lifeline, is due to dock at around 16:00 GMT.

"Lifeline will be granted permission to enter a Maltese port, where procedures for identification, ascertaining their asylum eligibility, and distribution to other member states will start immediately," Muscat told reporters.