Society's ChildS


Vader

Italian official fired for supporting Russia

Stefano Gizzi
© GIULIO NAPOLITANO / AFP
Stefano Gizzi has had his powers revoked after he published a photo of the letter 'Z' and expressed solidarity with Moscow

Stefano Gizzi, the Councilor for Culture in the commune of Ceccano, Italy has had his powers revoked after sparking outrage by publicly expressing support for Russia in a now-deleted Facebook post.

The official shared a picture of the letter 'Z', which is now associated with Russia's ongoing military offensive in Ukraine, as it has appeared on Russian tanks and vehicles participating in the operation, and wrote: "Solidarity with Russia, the Ribbon of St. George, victorious over the Dragon."

The post was apparently taken down by Facebook shortly after it was published, but it nevertheless managed to spark a wave of outrage, as several of Gizzi's fellow politicians, including from his own 'Lega' party, called for him to be fired and for the Mayor of Ceccano to distance himself from Gizzi and his "shameful" and "intolerable declaration."

Comment: Now, when masks fall down, we can inevitably see who is aligned with nazis (disguised as democrats) and who is really against the evil on this planet. Interesting times.

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Russian Flag

Number of French that agree with Moscow on Ukraine revealed

Newspaper seller Paris
© Kiran Ridley / Getty ImagesNewspaper seller sets up his stand in Paris, France.
A substantial number of French people remain skeptical about the Western narrative on Russia's attack against Ukraine and want to hear what Moscow has to say about its actions, results of a new poll released on Monday have shown. More than half of respondents queried by the French Institute of Public Opinion (IFOP) agreed with at least one Russian "hypothesis" of why its attack against Ukraine was justified, the polling firm said in a report.

The most agreed-with argument was that the US and the EU had "encouraged Ukraine to request integration with NATO" to gain leverage in its standoff with Russia. A total of 30% of people polled said this was true, with 29% calling it false.

The argument that the persecution of Russian-speaking Ukrainians by their government had validated Moscow's military action was accepted by 28% of people and rejected by 31%. The statement that discrimination has been ongoing for years in some parts of the country was backed by 23%, with 32% rejecting it.

Russia's claim that its national security had to be protected by all means due to NATO's drive to integrate Ukraine was deemed true by 22% of respondents, while 42% thought it false.

Comment: Or maybe, some people aren't as stupid as Bouygues thinks they are.


Bad Guys

Ontario cop charged for posting video praising truckers

Constable Erin Howard
A Durham police officer who posted a video of herself speaking in support of the Freedom Convoy as it headed towards Ottawa is now facing charges under Ontario's Police Services Act.

Durham Regional Police Service (DRPS) had originally announced they were investigating Constable Erin Howard in January after she posted the 1-minute video to a now-deactivated Twitter account.


Stock Down

Best of the Web: Farmers on the Brink

house by sea
"Farming looks mighty easy when your plow is a pencil and you're a thousand miles from the corn field." - Dwight D. Eisenhower

It was a spooky time to be out at sea off the US East Coast on Halloween in 1991. A strong storm system over the maritime provinces in Canada merged with the remnants of Hurricane Grace, forming a new, epic, and dangerous Nor'easter. The winds of this new storm breached 70 miles per hour and a wave as high as 100 feet was measured off the coast of Nova Scotia, but the storm was not renamed as either a tropical storm or a hurricane - instead, it is known only colloquially as simply the Perfect Storm. Six fishermen from Massachusetts perished when their vessel Andrea Gail sunk in open waters, and the story of the storm and of that tragedy became the subject of a best-selling book and a blockbuster feature film.

While the concept of a perfect storm is often too casually assigned in popular culture, it is difficult to find a more apt description of what has been unfolding in the global agriculture markets over these past several months. The tempest caused by the European energy disaster has merged with the hurricane of consequences flowing from Russia's invasion of Ukraine, forming the genesis of a generational crisis in food that will leave few unaffected. While we've been warning about just such a scenario for some time, after spending the past two weeks traveling across the US Midwest and conferring with our contacts in the agricultural sector, even we are a little spooked by what we've learned. In a financial crash, the correlation between all asset classes converges to one. The coming crash in global food supply will be driven by a similar phenomenon across virtually every input into farming - they are all spiking to historic highs simultaneously, supply availability is diminishing across the spectrum, and the time to reverse the worst of the upcoming consequences is rapidly running short.

Other than that, things are great.

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Cow Skull

Tucker in Twitter jail: TV host suspended over 'hateful' trans tweet, 'a biological man is a man'

tucker carlson
© Fox NewsFox News host Tucker Carlson
Twitter has censored Fox News host Tucker Carlson over a tweet defending conservative accounts the platform had censored for saying that a biological man is a man.

The Daily Caller co-founder and Tucker Carlson Tonight host's tweet included screenshots of the notices that Twitter had sent The Babylon Bee and Turning Point USA founder Charlie Kirk.

"But wait," Carlson's tweet said. "Both of these tweets are true."

A Twitter spokesman told The Daily Wire that Carlson's tweet violated the Twitter Rules on hateful conduct.

Comment: Tucker's reply:




Family

Andrew Nekrasov: "The majority in Russia supports Putin, for them the war is a form of resistance"

andrew nekrazov Florian Rötzer
Andrei Nekrasov and Florian Rötzer
Andrei Nekrasov (lead image, left) is a Russian screenwriter and playwright, film and theatre director, and philosopher who emigrated from Russia in 1980.

Born in St Petersburg in 1958, he studied acting and directing at the Russian State Institute of Performing Arts; literature and philosophy at the University of Paris; and film-making at the film school of Bristol University. He has written and directed plays in German in Bonn and Berlin.

He conducted this interview in German, and declined to say where he is currently living, except that it is a "neutral country". Here are his career credits and fifteen films.


Comment: Of note, Nekrasov is the director of the censored film The Magnitsky Act - Behind the Scenes, exposing
American huckster Bill Browder


Florian Rötzer (right), 69, was co-founder and editor-in-chief of the online magazine Telepolis published by Heise Verlag between 1996 and 2020. Since January 2022, he has directed the online magazine, Krass & Konkret, published by Buchkomplizen and Westend Verlag.

The interview was conducted on March 5. Read the German original.

Padlock

China is shutting down Shanghai in two phases to control Covid

china covid
© Hector Retamal | Afp | Getty ImagesHealth workers wearing protective gear as a measure against the Covid-19 coronavirus walk down a street in Jing’an district in Shanghai on March 26, 2022.
China's biggest city Shanghai began a two-stage lockdown Monday as authorities attempt different strategies to maintain growth, while trying to control the country's worst Covid-19 outbreak since the pandemic began.

Shanghai, a city of 26 million people on the southeastern coast of China, is a hub for finance and international business in the country. The city is also home to the world's largest container-shipping port.

The Shanghai Stock Exchange remains in operation. The exchange announced Sunday night that stock issuance applications and other paperwork can be done online, with deadline relaxations as needed.

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Stock Up

The ruble shrugging off Western sanctions

Ruble notes
© REUTERS/Maxim Shemetov
The Russian currency strengthened to more than a one-month high during trading on Tuesday, surging over 10% amid signs of progress in peace talks between Russian and Ukrainian negotiators. The looming ruble-for-gas payments deadline has also been lifting the currency.

The ruble was trading below 83 against the US dollar in its strongest reading in a month. It also gained against the European common currency to trade at around 93 rubles per euro.

Comment:


Георгиевская ленточка

Russian Orthodox Patriarch Kirill's SUPPORT of Russian invasion explained

Kirill
© Sputnik / Aleksey NikolskyiFILE PHOTO: Patriarch Kirill. Orthodox church threatens rich Russians with hell Patriarch Kirill says the wealthy should share with those in need.
The Jerusalem Post reran a piece that originally ran on The Conversation and Reuters, entitled "Why is Russia's church backing Putin's war?" Its author, Dr. Scott Kenworthy, a professor of Comparative Religion at Miami University, gets a whole lot right in this piece, and for that reason we are reprinting it in full below. After Dr. Kenworthy's piece, we offer some additional comment based on "on the ground" experience in Russia, and with the Orthodox Church as it operates here.
Why is Russia's church backing Putin's war? Opinion by Scott Kenworthy: Church-state history gives a clue

Since Russia's invasion of Ukraine, the leader of the Russian Orthodox Church has defended Russia's actions and blamed the conflict on the West.

Patriarch Kirill's support for the invasion of a country where millions of people belong to his own church has led critics to conclude that Orthodox leadership has become little more than an arm of the state - and that this is the role it usually plays.

The reality is much more complicated. The relationship between Russian church and state has undergone profound historical transformations, not least in the past century - a focus of my work as a scholar of Eastern Orthodoxy. The Church's current support for the Kremlin is not inevitable or predestined, but a deliberate decision that needs to be understood.

Eye 1

IS claims killing of 2 in Israel, 2nd rampage in a week

shooting attack In Hadera
© AP Photo/Ariel SchalitIsraeli Zaka Rescue and Recovery team carry the body of a victim at the scene of shooting attack In Hadera, Israel, Sunday, March 27, 2022. A pair of gunmen killed two people and wounded four others in a shooting spree in central Israel before they were killed by police, according to police and medical officials. The identity of the gunmen was not immediately known, but police called them "terrorists," the term usually used for Arab assailants.
The militant Islamic State group claimed responsibility on Monday after a pair of Arab gunmen killed two Israeli police officers and wounded four others in central Israel before they were killed by police, authorities said.

Israeli leaders condemned the killings and pointed to the timing. Sunday's attack came on the eve of a special meeting between the foreign ministers of four Arab nations and the United States in the Israeli Negev. It was the second deadly attack carried out by Arab assailants in an Israeli city in less than a week. Both attacks came ahead of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan.

"This was murder for the sake of murder and terror for the sake of terror," Israeli Foreign Minister Yair Lapid said, flanked by the minsters from the U.S., Baharain, Morocco, Egypt and the United Arab Emirates.

Comment: See also: