Society's Child
Brackley business Beekeeper Honey, run by the Manton family, found 40 of its hives had been stolen on Saturday. Each hive holds roughly 25,000 bees each, and they are believed to have been taken between February 17 and February 24.
Beekeeper Lara Manton was in charge of the stolen bees when the honey-making insects went missing. She said this time of year the Manton family carry out regular checks to ensure the hives are not damaged due to the adverse weather. It was during one of their routine checks that they discovered their hives had seemingly evaporated into thin air.
"They were in a field between Fringford and Bicester, which you can't see from the road. So it is weird, someone must have scouted them out or knew they were there. That's what worries us."
As many as 71 percent of young US citizens are ineligible to serve in the armed forces, research conducted by the Heritage Foundation in mid-February says. This state of affairs - which that the study describes as "alarming" - could soon lead to a serious shortage of recruits for the US military, which relies on a "constant flow of volunteers every year."
Out of 34 million people aged between 17 and 24, over 24 million are unable to join the armed forces, the paper says, warning that the US military will "inevitably suffer from a lack of manpower." It further adds that it is not a "distant problem" as the military is already experiencing problems with recruitment.
The US Army in particular is expected to have a hard time meeting its 2018 goal to enlist just 80,000 volunteers, the study says. "I would argue that the next existential threat we have... is the inability to man our military," Army Major General Malcolm Frost, the commander of the army's Initial Military Training Command, said during a panel discussion co-hosted by the Heritage Foundation back in October 2017.
Russian defense companies have created a plane-mounted laser that can hit satellites - at least according to an anonymous source quoted by Russian news agency Interfax. On Saturday, an Interfax report cited the source as saying that weapons maker Almaz-Antey has "completed work on the anti-satellite complex," which includes the laser and associated ground control gear.
Independent and Western observers have not yet verified the claim. But the Russian program does exist. Last April, Almaz-Antey general designer Pavel Sozinov told Russian news agency Ria Novosti that Russian leadership had ordered the company to develop weapons that could interfere electronically with or achieve "direct functional destruction of those elements deployed in orbit."
The US$8 billion,1,814-kilometer Turkmenistan-Afghanistan-Pakistan-India pipeline (TAPI) was officially inaugurated on Friday, in full pomp, and with proceedings broadcast live on Afghan TV, on the Turkmen-Afghan border close to Herat.
Afghanistan's President Ashraf Ghani hosted Pakistan's Prime Minister Shahid Khaqan Abbasi, Turkmenistan's President Gurbanguly Berdymukhamedov and India's Minister of State for External Affairs M.J. Akbar.
Assuming there are no major glitches - and that's a major "if" - TAPI should, in theory, be finished by 2020. So far, though, endless deadlines have come and gone.

A man wearing a kippah visits the former Nazi death camp Buchenwald, April 12, 2015
Jewish people have "a completely different system of values, a different concept of truth," Henryk Zielinski, a priest and editor-in-chief of Catholic magazine 'Idziemy' ('We are going') told broadcaster TVP during a show aired last Saturday. He proceeded to claim that truth was a very flexible notion for Jews.
Zielinski argued that "the truth corresponds to facts" for the Poles but, for Jews, "truth means something that confirms to [their] understanding of what's beneficial." If a Jew is religious, "then truth means something God wants," the priest claimed. In secular Jews, "the truth is subjective or whatever serves Israel's interests."
Close to 80 sportsmen and women affiliated to national sporting organisations are expected to have cases heard before either the New Zealand Sports Tribunal or NZ Rugby Judiciary after being caught allegedly buying banned substances, mainly fat-stripping steroid clenbuterol, off an illegal website.
The website, clenbuterol.co.nz, has since been shut down by medical regulatory agency Medsafe, and its owner Joshua Francis Townshend was jailed after admitting to 129 offences under the Medicines Act.
Comment: Anecdotally. But if everyone's honest with themselves, then we don't want drug-free sports; we want drug-fuelled sports. Because that's what we currently have.
That's also why it's doubly useful to bash Russia for doing it - we get to exculpate ourselves, or at least imagine that we are.
Lilley, originally from Lincolnshire, killed 18-year-old Aaron Pajich at her home in Perth, Australia, to tick murder off her 'bucket list,' the prosecution claimed. She and accomplice Trudi Lenon, 43, were sentenced to life imprisonment with a 28-year minimum term by the Supreme Court of Western Australia on Wednesday.

A U.S. B-52 Bomber sits on a flightline with munitions loaded on a newly installed conventional rotary launcher in its bomb bay, at Al Udeid Air Base, Qatar, Nov. 17, 2017.
"We will do everything we can to support the ANDSF fight against the Taliban in order to drive them to the negotiating table," Randall Schriver, the assistant secretary of defense, said Tuesday to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, referring to the Afghan National Defense and Security Forces. "Fundamentally, our goal is to convince the Taliban's senior leadership that its goals are better pursued through political negotiation rather than violence." Put another way, as Brigadier General Lance Bunch, who heads the the air campaign in Afghanistan, did in an interview with Defense One: "This is all part of our overarching strategy to continue to put pressure on the Taliban until they realize they've basically got a binary choice: They can negotiate and reconcile, or live in irrelevance and die. We'll continue to go until the Taliban reconcile."
President Trump, as part of his strategy for the longest U.S. war, has reluctantly sent more Americans to Afghanistan. There are now 14,000 U.S. troops in the country, with plans to send another 1,000. At the height of the war on terrorism, there were about 100,000 U.S. troops in the country. Since that time, the Taliban has re-emerged as a potent force. It now controls about one-third of Afghanistan, more territory than at any point since the U.S.-led invasion in 2001.
Comment: It sounds as if the Taliban is winning... Unless the U.S. wishes to utterly destroy the entire country, they may end up waiting a long time for the Taliban to come to the negotiating table. But then again, maybe that's the point: an excuse never to leave.
There are more than 66 investigations by the Broward County State Attorney's office into Broward County Sheriff's deputies and employees, ranging from drug trafficking to kidnapping since 2012, according to a 2014 Brady list produced by the Broward State Attorney's office. Forty of the investigations occurred under embattled Sheriff Scott Israel's watch. His office is now under investigation for allegations that his deputies failed to allow first responders from treating patients at the scene of Stoneman Douglas High School shooting on Feb. 14, and failure of his deputies to enter the school during the rampage that left 17 people dead, according to reports.
Over the weekend Israel fought back on calls for his resignation saying the actions of his deputies were "[not] his responsibility" when they failed to enter the high school that was under siege by Nikolas Cruz, 19. Police responded to calls regarding Cruz over 45 times over a seven-year period, although Israel disputes the report, stating his office only received 23 calls during that time frame. The FBI also received a detailed call on Jan. 5, warning that Cruz had posted disturbing images of slaughtered animals and comments on his Instagram saying he wanted to kill people, according to reports. The FBI stated on Feb. 16, that the tip was not forwarded to the FBI Miami Field Office.
Comment: Aside from the above, two years ago Sheriff Israel was accused of creating a political machine paid for with taxpayer money:
A log of employees hired by the sheriff shows 10 workers were hired since 2013 into "outreach'' roles, their salaries totalling $634,479.Clearly the people of Broward County, Florida are not getting proper leadership from their sheriff. They should make that crystal clear during the next election and choose a new sheriff more fit for public service.
[...]
The outreach workers, who mainly attend community events, are in addition to political activists and others Israel hired into community affairs roles, writing and designing printed pieces about the agency, and sharing it on social media. The employee log shows six hired into community affairs roles, their salaries totaling $388,729.
Israel's opponents say he's built a publicly funded political machine, paying back supporters with jobs and using them to keep him in office.
In a string of Twitter posts Tuesday, Dotcom targeted social media giants Twitter and Facebook, the US intelligence services and former President Barack Obama of deep state collusion, and warned of an ongoing "invisible war" between the US, Russia and China. This conflict is fueling "an out-of-control technological arms race," he added, leading us into a third world war.













Comment: Russia and China are capable of achieving much more impressive technological feats - militarily and otherwise - with a lot less cash, in a shorter time, and seemingly without all the 'complications' that plague the crumbling Western nations: