Society's Child
One such project could be a railway that will be able deliver goods from Russia to South Korea through North Korea. "Once the Trans-Korean Main Line is built, it may be connected to the Trans-Siberian Railway. In this case, it will be possible to deliver goods from South Korea to Europe, which would be economically beneficial not only to South and North Korea but to Russia as well," Moon Jae-in said in an interview with Russian media ahead of his state visit to Moscow.
A gas pipeline coming from Russia to North Korea to be extended to the South is another possibility, he said. "We can also build a gas pipeline via North Korea, so that not only South Korea will receive Russian gas but we will also be able to deliver it to Japan," the South Korean president said.
The bizarre exchange reportedly occurred on a flight from London Luton Airport to Skopje in Macedonia. A video obtained by Viral Press reveals how the passenger got into a heated debate with airline staff after he ate part of a baguette that, he believed, contained ham. The incident was filmed by another person on the plane.
The male passenger repeatedly insisted that the sandwich contained pork despite reassurances from staff that it did not. The sandwich was reportedly labelled "Turkey ham," which is a product made from cooked turkey and water that is cut into slices.
WARNING: Contains offensive language
Weber's ordeal began after she took her child to the hospital for a cough.
While the doctor diagnosed the infant with a cough, and deemed him to be in stable condition, he recommended that Zayvion stay. Instead, Weber decided to take her child home after inquiring if there was anything else that needed to be done or tests run.
"After waiting, I had asked to leave because I wanted to put my kids to bed and I had my three-year-old with me and I asked if there was anything else that had to be done," said Weber. "They said 'No, there was no other testing or anything that needed to be done.'"
In only a matter of days police were knocking on her door and took the child to the doctor - where Weber says there were already foster parents waiting in the room.
"She checked him out, all his vitals were stable," she said. "They already had a foster parent in the room, in the room to remove my son before they ever proved ... before they ever proved there was an emergency situation."
Comment: More examples of the long arm of Child Protective Services:
- State-sponsored kidnapping: Family has home-birthed babies taken away by CPS for not using hospital
- Child Protective Services kidnaps children to protect them from kidnappers
- Bad idea: Erie County to place CPS workers in schools
- Homeschooling your child in New York City may earn you a visit from CPS for neglect
This is because the manipulators and smear merchants who have made their careers paving the way for oligarchic agendas have been successful in killing off sympathy for the plight of Assange. As we discussed yesterday, sympathy is key for getting narratives to take hold in public consciousness. This is why western corporate media will circulate pictures of dead children all day long when it's in the interests of advancing longstanding imperialist agendas, but never when those children were killed by western weapons. If you can tug at someone's heart strings while telling them a story, the story you tell them will slide right in with minimal scrutiny. And it works the other way, too: if you can prevent someone's heart strings from being plucked while hearing about a legitimately heartbreaking story, you can prevent that story from taking hold. Kill all sympathy for a dissident journalist and you kill all belief in his side of the story.
And Assange's side of the story is indeed devastating to the preferred narrative of the US-centralized empire. A journalist (yes, journalist, per definition) who publishes 100 percent authentic documents exposing the inner mechanics of power structures all over the world, who was forced to seek political asylum at the Ecuadorian embassy in London in order to avoid extradition by the same government which brutalized Chelsea Manning, is on its face a highly sympathetic story. And it does tremendous damage to the narrative that America and its close network of allies are freedom-loving democracies whose systems of government are nothing like those naughty, oppressive regimes they seek to topple.
So they smear him. As often as possible, using whatever they can, they smear his reputation. Because if they can kill all sympathy for him and his outlet, it's as good for their agendas as actually killing him.
"This is incredible," the host of The Rachel Maddow Show uttered live on air on Tuesday when she began reading the recent scoop by the AP on children of detained illegal migrants. The story detailed how babies and youngsters, forcibly separated from their parents by border control, reportedly get transferred to the so-called "tender-age" shelters.
As Maddow read the report, she appeared to become distressed. The Emmy-winning political commentator clearly couldn't hold her composure, bursting into tears. "I think I'm going to have to hand this off," she said sobbingly after a few attempts to pull herself together.
Comment: The policies were brought in by Clinton, selectively ignored by Obama, and now being applied as written by Trump, who maintains the law should be upheld. Focusing on Trump misses the point. Congress is the body that passed those laws.
- HRW: Bill Clinton's laws created a shameful immigration system of mass detention and abuse of refugees and migrants
- 'This is the Trump era': AG Sessions reveals enforcement plan at US-Mexico border
- Examining the legality of Trump's decision to separate immigrant children from their parents
- California federal judge rules ACLU lawsuit challenging constitutionality of immigrant family separation may proceed
- Inside the California shelter for child illegals separated from parents
Video of the cruel stunt was shared on Snapchat last month, according to local government officials in Kansas City. Missouri police are now hoping to identify the kicker, with the state ready to file charges against him.
"Please help us identify the people involved in this video showing a man kicking a poor cat. We plan to file animal cruelty charges," the Kansas City government tweeted.
WARNING: Video contains animal cruelty
The Supreme Court in Canada, in two 7-2 rulings, found that the law societies of British Columbia and Ontario could deny Trinity Western University accreditation for its law school because of the university's community covenant that included the code of conduct.
The justices ruled that the covenant would impede LGBT students from attending the proposed law school and those who attended would be at risk of significant harm.
Comment: Would the Supreme Court rule the same way if this hadn't been a Christian university, but rather a Muslim or Jewish one?
Grabar is not alone in trying to wean himself off Facebook for various reasons. Some do it because they realize it can be a waste of time, while others do it because of the company's inability to protect (or lack of interest in protecting) its members' personal data. The company has mistakenly released data of nearly 100 million of its members and friends of members to third parties, and many of them have used the data for illicit purposes. While Facebook says they are not losing members, some recent statistics paint a different story. According to a Pew study, only 51 percent of U.S. teenagers use the service now, down from 71 percent in 2015. This was the first time the numbers have fallen.
Grabar found that the messages he received actually reinforced his decision to stay off the platform. On one day he received two emails telling him a distant friend had posted a new photo. On another day he received a message telling him that 88 people liked a post in a group he belonged to. And on another day he received an email telling him there was a post to his college alumni group.
Comment: Back in its early days, the messages that you'd get from Facebook would also show what it was people were liking or the comment itself. Now, it only tells you that someone did something but it won't show the details, forcing you to log in to see what it was about. In any case, despite their harassment, people are still leaving the platform. See also:
- Facebook users spending 24% less time on platform
- Facebook is uncool and younger users are leaving
- Facebook desperately trying to entice inactive users back
- Facebook: Time to cut ties with this surveillance system?
A family has finally won a settlement in the tragic death of their mother, but the only people held liable for the cop who tried to kill a dog and killed an innocent mother instead - are the taxpayers.
On Monday, the taxpayers of Burlington, Iowa were told that they will be hit with a $2 million bill to pay for a police officer who shot and killed an innocent mother. The tragic scenario was captured on video and the fact that most of that video remains a secret was part of the reason the family received the settlement in the wrongful death suit.
The settlement was announced on June 6, but the amount had not been made public until Monday.
Last month, during a federal court hearing in Davenport, Iowa, officials revealed that the confidential police video - a key piece of evidence in exonerating a cop who killed the innocent mom - does not corroborate the cop's claims that he was bitten by a dog before firing the fatal shots that accidentally killed the mother of two.
As TFTP previously reported, the Burlington police department released a 12-second clip from a Burlington Police officer's body cam showing him shooting and killing Autumn Steele.
Comment: Previously:
Video footage shows cop trying to shoot dog but killing innocent mother instead
It's not just me saying that either. I've interviewed more than one big name conservative who has told me that they moved over to the right in large part because the other liberals they were around were such insufferable human beings.
John Hawkins: ...I always find the stories of people who ideologically move from the left to the right to be fascinating and I noticed that you used to be a liberal who even worked for Ron Dellums...
Michael Medved: Ron Dellums helped to make me a conservative.
John Hawkins: How so? What caused you to move to the right?
Michael Medved: First of all, even at the time I went to work for Dellums, I knew better. Because I was never that far out. I mean I supported Robert Kennedy, not Eugene McCarthy.
John Hawkins: Dellums was even a Communist, wasn't he?
Michael Medved: Yeah, he basically was. I worked for Dellums for 6 weeks and then I couldn't stand it anymore. Because I think he so clearly demonstrated some of the most malign and malevolent tendencies of the American Left. Corruption, drug use, Communist sympathies if not Communist party membership.
Comment: The article was written five years ago, but seems even more relevant today.
For a deep analysis on the liberalism vs conservatism divide, we recommend Jonathan Haidt's excellent book: The Righteous Mind: Why Good People are Divided by Politics and Religion















Comment: Russia's talent for negotiating respectfully with countries to cement win-win agreements makes it a natural ally.