Society's Child
The footage shows Assange, who has visibly lost weight, conversing with what could be his fellow inmates.
The camera then shows a small shabby cell, with books and papers strewn around the floor. While RT can't independently verify if it was Assange's own cell, the journalist and publisher is seen walking in the room at the beginning of the video.
Former Oklahoma state Sen. Jonathan Nichols, 53, was found dead inside his home in Norman on Wednesday night from an apparent gunshot wound, police said. Cops are working with the Oklahoma Medical Examiner's Office to determine the exact cause and manner of death.
His death comes just one day after former Arkansas state Sen. Linda Collins-Smith, 56, was found fatally shot outside her home in Pocahontas on Tuesday. Police are investigating her death as a homicide.
Former Arkansas Sen. Linda Collins-Smith was found dead in her home Tuesday from an apparent gunshot wound

Skin whitening - Salons like this one in Johannesburg, South Africa, offer facials that make use of skin lightening products.
J.R. is part of the growing market for skin whitening products around the world. Shopping malls, cosmetics shops, and online retailers sell a vast number of different soaps, lotions, creams, and more, catering to women and men. Some of them target particular body parts: the face, the hands, the underarm, or even the vagina. From Manila to Mumbai and Jakarta to Johannesburg, celebrities endorse skin lightening or bleaching products in larger-than-life billboards, promising "whiter skin from within" or offering to make users "fair and handsome." In the Philippines, where I live and work as a medical anthropologist, even the national basketball league has an official skin whitening product.
This trend isn't harmless. People who are already socially or financially marginalized may end up spending significant amounts of money on products they can ill afford. The whole notion of desiring paler skin relies upon and emphasizes toxic ideas of white superiority. And many skin whiteners are associated with proven skin damage or other health risks. Inorganic mercury, for example, described by the World Health Organization as a "common ingredient found in skin lightening soaps and creams" often used in Africa and Asia, can cause kidney damage. Hydroquinone, found in skin exfoliants, including J.R.'s facial lotion, has been flagged by regulatory agencies around the world due to safety concerns.
Some countries, such as Ghana and Rwanda, have banned skin whitening products altogether. Yet whitening remains popular-and is big business. According to industry estimates, the global skin whitening industry is expected to reach US$31.2 billion by 2024.
As both a physician and a medical anthropologist, I recently dove into this issue as part of the Chemical Youth Project: a multi-country study that looks at the roles of chemicals (from energy drinks to perfumes and vitamins) in the everyday lives of young people seeking to "boost pleasure, moods, sexual performance, appearance, and health." From 2012 to 2015, our team, led by medical anthropologist Anita Hardon of the University of Amsterdam, interviewed over 400 young men and women in different parts of the Philippines-including students, young professionals, tour guides, pedicab drivers, and construction workers. Whitening products were very popular among our informants, with more than half reporting that they had used them at least once in their life. I decided to explore the topic more, carrying out 10 focus group discussions specifically about whitening. Where does the desire to whiten skin come from, I wanted to know, and is it changing?

The logo of the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, Sept. 8, 2017, at the Department of Veterans Affairs office in Washington, D.C.
The Department of Veterans Affairs issued more than $280 million in excessive fess between 2012 and 2017, and took no action despite knowing that veterans were owed refunds, the VA Inspector General report found.
In many cases, third-party lenders rely on the VA to certify that a veteran is exempt from certain fees when applying for a home loan. But its exemption certificates were "outdated, incorrect, or missing exemption status resulting in veterans being incorrectly charged a funding fee," according to the report.
The Under Secretary for Benefits responded to the report by saying the problem would be corrected by the end of July.
For the past six months, the Transportation Security Administration has allowed migrants released from the custody of other Homeland Security agencies to board flights to other parts of the country despite the passengers lacking any of the 15 documents it states are the only acceptable forms of identification.
Since early December, the agency has avoided temporarily changing federal policy and also not introduced a permanent solution to address this new phenomenon, despite no indication border apprehensions and mass releases are slowing down any time soon.

Children and workers are seen at a tent encampment near the Tornillo Port of Entry on June 19, 2018 in Tornillo, Texas.
The new emergency shelters come amid record-high levels of asylum seekers at the U.S.-Mexico border, including thousands of kids arriving each month in the hopes of meeting up with parents and other relatives already inside the U.S. The kids often spend several weeks or even months in temporary shelter before they can be placed with a sponsor.
Mark Weber, a spokesman for the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services' Office of Refugee Resettlement, said Friday the new emergency facility in Carrizo Springs, Texas, called "The Studios" will open soon. Weber said other several other military bases remain under consideration, including Fort Sill in Oklahoma, as a way of expanding capacity by 3,000 among all the sites. There are currently some 13,000 migrant minors in HHS custody.
Democrats have criticized the facilities, which are often not subject to state child welfare licensing requirements because they are temporary emergency shelters. One such shelter, tent-like facilities in Tornillo, Texas, shuttered amid political pressure and protests and many of those kids were shuttled to Homestead in Florida.
Daesh, a terror group outlawed in many countries, planned to use Western nationals and English-speakers to conduct attacks against the US by sending them through the US-Mexico border, according to the testimony of a captured Daesh member, as reported by a study from the International Center for the Study of Violent Extremism (ICSVE), published in Homeland Security Today.
A Canadian man with dual citizenship from Trinidad identified only as Abu Henricki al Canadi (Father of Henry from Canada), disclosed that he traveled to Syria and joined the ranks of Daesh fighters, but was removed from active duty due to chronic illness. In 2016, however, he claimed that a Daesh intelligence wing approached him and "invited" him to join a group of other Trinidadians on a mission to infiltrate the US.
According to 'Canadi', the group would be tasked with infiltrating various financially-sensitive institutions including US banks and companies for the purpose of conducting attacks on the US financial system as a means to "cripple the US economy."
In the wake of a recently filed lawsuit challenging the constitutionality of the University of Illinois, Champaign-Urbana bias response team, The College Fix reviewed the 265 bias complaints the public university fielded during the last year. The lawsuit charges the university's Bias Assessment Response Team (BART) with being a literal "speech police" force.
At the end of each school year, the university issues a report detailing all of the previous year's bias reports, and the report for the most recent year available, 2017-18, summarizes the complaints and how campus officials followed up in just about every case.
While there were 265 total complaints, 98 of them involved a single incident in which the campus shuttle, Suburban Express, sent an e-mail attempting to attract Asian students that said "You won't feel like you're in China when you're on our buses."

Alain Finkielkraut and the French women's football team
During a Wednesday night appearance on France's CNews channel, a reporter asked Finkielkraut if he plans on watching France's upcoming Women's World Cup match against South Korea on Friday.
"Ahh, well no," the academic responded. "I do not like women's football."
Surprised, the journalist pressed Finkielkraut. "Why? What's the difference?" she asked.
"Stop with 'equality, equality!' Equality yes, but with a little difference. Of course it's great that women play football," he explained, clearly annoyed with the questioning.
The CNews host cut across Finkielkraut, accusing him of condescension.
"I am not being condescending. It does not fascinate me, that's not how I want to see women... And what next? You're going to ask me to watch a boxing match between women, then a rugby match... I don't want to."
Comment: What you want doesn't matter, Finkielkraut. The diversity brigade demands total conformity.
It would not be 2019 without at least one "woke" take about a historical event on the magnitude of D-Day. Enter the Washington Post, which published an article by Cambridge history PhD Ruth Lawlor, decrying the "darker underbelly" of "racial inequality and a militant form of misogyny" that accompanied the Normandy landings and the subsequent liberation of western Europe.
Lawlor noted that after the landings complaints of rape began to surface in alarming numbers as Americans pushed inland. By April 1945, Allied Supreme Commander Dwight D. Eisenhower stated that "wanton destruction, rape, and other crimes" had become widespread in liberated territory.
The historian then brings racism into the mix. According to Lawlor, white US soldiers were frequently let off the hook for raping civilians, escaping punishment on mental health grounds, while black GIs were treated far more severely for their "violent and lustful" conduct.











Comment: It's at least plausible that some ISIS members discussed exploiting the U.S.-Mexican border, but it looks like that's as far as it went - if Canadi being truthful. Despite hyped reports over the past few years, actual cases are hard to come by, as Speckhard points out above. There are reasons why ISIS attacks are so rare in the U.S. - and nonexistent in Israel, for example... And it's not entirely due to their 'intelligence-gathering capabilities'.