Society's Child
News that Germany isn't raising the alarm due to the 2019-nCoV outbreak in Italy prompted many established media to report on it, with CNN being no exception. The broadcaster's actual report cited a German foreign ministry spokeswoman who said Berlin wasn't issuing a travel warning for Italy at the moment, but their Twitter publication wasn't as accurate.
Now, you have to read carefully to spot the blunder.
"Germany is currently not considering closing the country's borders with Italy due to the coronavirus outbreak, its foreign ministry said," it reads.

Locals scuffle with riot police in Karava on the island of Lesbos, Greece, February 25, 2020
Around 500 people attempted to block the unloading of heavy machinery and police reinforcements on the island, which will house a new migrant camp. Locals set fires and brawled with riot cops as police attempted to restore order, according to local media.
Photographs taken at the scene show demonstrators armed with large sticks skirmishing with police. Other photos show protesters fleeing as the police fired tear gas.
Comment: This, after Greek ministers admitted that the mass migration situation is like a ticking time bomb, and numerous riots by refugees at the facilities? Could the EU & IMF backed economic coup be partly to blame for Greece's willingness to follow such dire policies?

Sinn Fein President Mary Lou McDonald addressing a rally at a packed Liberty Hall in Dublin.
Sinn Fein shocked the Irish political establishment in an election earlier this month by securing more votes than any other party for the first time, almost doubling its vote to 24.5% on a vow to fix the country's housing and health systems.
But it has been frozen out of government talks by centre-right rivals, Fianna Fail and Prime Minister Leo Varadkar's Fine Gael, who have both refused to contemplate sharing power due to policy differences and Sinn Fein's history as the political wing of the Irish Republican Army.
The two parties, who have alternated in power for 100 years, on Tuesday held talks about possibly sharing power for the first time.
"They are doing everything they can to keep people who voted for us out of government," Sinn Fein leader Mary Lou McDonald told a packed hall of 500 people, with a couple of hundred more waiting in freezing wind outside. "Sinn Fein wants to be in government and we want to deliver."
'Keep the Home Fires Burning' was the name of a hugely popular Ivor Novello song during the First World War. The British government has just released a 2020 cover version. It's called 'Keep the Home Fires burning so long as it's not coal or wet wood burning in them.' Nowhere near as catchy, is it?
The government is acting, it says, on grounds of public health and in accordance with its 'Clean Air' strategy.
It claims that wet wood (that's wood with a moisture content of at least 20%), and coal, is responsible for 38 percent of PM2.5 pollution in the UK. PM2.5s are particles less than 2.5 micrometers in diameter which, by penetrating deeply into the lung, can cause various diseases. A British Medical Journal research paper found that "positive associations between short term exposure to PM2.5 and risk of hospital admission were found for several prevalent but rarely studied diseases, such as septicemia, fluid and electrolyte disorders."
So, it has to be good, this banning of wet wood and coal fires, doesn't it? Well, not if it plunges even more people into fuel poverty - and prevents people from heating their homes adequately. How many deaths will that cause?
The economic backdrop to the government's announcement, which cannot be ignored, is that according to the latest statistics (from 2017), there are 2.53 million "fuel-poor" households in England, ie 10.9 percent of the total number of households. National Energy Action puts the figure in Britain as a whole at 3.5mn.
There were reports of stone-throwing by protesters, with some seen bearing metal bars, when fresh skirmishes broke out on Tuesday between people supporting the legislation and those against it.
Comment:
Update on 2/26/2020: Delhi is slowly returning to normalcy following 72 hrs of communal riots that killed 27 people and injured more than 200. Police arrested 106 and registered 16 FIRS (First Information Reports), they also used drones to scan roof tops to monitor the troubled area.
In a tweet on Wednesday, Modi called for his "brothers and sisters in Delhi" to end the unrest, noting that efforts are being made to restore "calm and normalcy" in the capital.Delhi High Court expressed anguish over the police's failure to file the FIR's against the BJP leaders who made inflammatory speeches at the Pro-CAA rally. These protests are against the ongoing occupation and blockade of a road at Shaheen Bagh for over 2 months now.
Police have deployed small drones in the area in an effort to better monitor areas of northeast Delhi still experiencing violence. A video posted to social media purportedly shows law enforcement officers using remote controls to pilot the small aerial vehicles.
See also:
- Police clash with violent pro- and anti-CAA protesters in Delhi hours before Trump set to visit Indian capital
- Trump defends Modi, refuses to weigh in on citizenship law

FILE: Peter Nygard attends the 24th Night of 100 Stars Oscars Viewing Gala at The Beverly Hills Hotel in Beverly Hills, Calif.
Nicholas Biase, a spokesman for the US Attorney's Office in Manhattan, confirmed to The Post that the raid was carried out but would not elaborate or provide details.
Photos from the scene show federal agents and city cops swarming throughout the company's Broadway headquarters, and hauling away at least a half-dozen cardboard boxes from the building.
Naomi Seibt has been attacked as a "climate change denier" for working with the Heartland Institute, a libertarian think-tank funded by oil and gas companies and conservative groups. But the young German insists she's not denying climate change, just trying to inject some reason into the debate - a demand which has only caused her detractors to shriek louder.
"I don't want to get people to stop believing in man-made climate change, not at all," she told the Washington Post on Monday, while acknowledging she found the idea that human activity alone was responsible for the warming planet "ridiculous." The outlet's profile of the young activist, whom it not-so-subtly dubs "the anti-Greta," proceeds to paint her as a puppet of the Heartland Institute, which is "paying [Seibt] to question established climate science" - as if she would never have done so on her own.
Hrafnsson was pulled out of the crowd as he attempted to enter the public gallery of Woolwich Crown Court on Tuesday morning, he told RT, after someone shouted "Where is the WikiLeaks editor?"
Explaining that he was given "no grounds" for the order and was unable to locate the head of the court to get an answer, he recorded and released a statement denouncing his exclusion from the supposedly-public proceedings as "outrageous" and calling on the public to "demand some answers — because I'm not getting any."
Officials reported 322 confirmed cases of the virus, 100 more than a day earlier. In a worrying development, they said some of the new cases showed up in parts of Italy well outside the country's two hard-hit northern regions.
Tuscany reported its first two cases, including one in the tourist destination of Florence, while Sicily recorded three: all of them tourists from the worst-hit Lombardy region, where more than 200 people have tested positive.
The Liguria region, known as the Italian Riviera, also reported its first case, but cautioned that the definitive result for the 70-year old still needed to come from Italy's infectious diseases institute.
Officials also reported three new fatalities in Lombardy, bringing the total to 10. All three were elderly patients.
Mr Assange is fighting extradition to the US to face trial over the leaking of classified US military documents.
His lawyer dismissed claims he "knowingly" put lives at risk by publishing the names of informants.
He told Woolwich Crown Court that a book by the Guardian newspaper was to blame for the names being published.
Comment: See also:
- Day 1 of Assange's US extradition hearing: Key facts to know
- We're asking one question in Assange's case: Should journalists be punished for exposing war crimes?
- The UK, the US, and Assange: A tale of three extraditions
- We're asking one question in Assange's case: Should journalists be punished for exposing war crimes?
- Over 1,000 journalists from across the world unite in defence of Julian Assange
- 'Every journalist should feel a cold, icy hand running down their spine': Assange's extradition case examined in new RT doc
- Palestinian flag, Yellow Vests, Anonymous masks: Wide range of protester groups join demonstration in support of Assange












Comment: As is the state of American news and the quality of its education. That said, countries around the world are closing their borders due to the coronavirus:
- Coronavirus infections and deaths lead to travel bans in Middle East
- Coronavirus' deadliest day in China, WHO declares international health emergency, countries close borders - UPDATES
- Don't buy China's story: Clues that coronavirus may have leaked from a lab
Also check out SOTT radio's: The Health & Wellness Show: Public schools: Where creativity, freedom and critical thinking go to die