Society's ChildS


Bad Guys

Google caught flagging GOP fundraiser emails as 'suspicious'

google censorship graphic
© MRC
Memo says Google is sending them directly to spam

Google is at it again — and GOP campaign donations could be a casualty.

The search giant has been caught this summer flagging Republican fundraising emails as "dangerous" spam — keeping them from hitting gmail users' inboxes — while leaving similar solicitations from Democrats untouched, a consulting firm warned.

That's despite repeatedly sparking headlines and lawsuits in recent years over the allegedly partisan practice. Last year, a federal judge tossed a lawsuit filed by the Republican National Committee that complained of biased email filtering.

X

EU Covid grants spent on yachts, luxury cars and swinger clubs - report

covid store closed quarantine lockdown
© Getty Images / Beata Zawrzel/NurPhoto
Warsaw has halted payments to investigate the reported misuse of multimillion-euro grants

Poland has suspended the distribution of EU funds intended for post-Covid pandemic recovery in the hospitality, tourism, and culture sectors, following controversy over alleged misuse of the money. Some of the funds were spent on boats and luxury furniture, as well as a grant registered to the address of a swingers' club, Politico reported.

The scandal erupted after the Polish authorities published interactive online maps displaying grant recipients in a bid to showcase openness of the recovery program. The data, however, revealed that the funds bankrolled yachts, a pizzeria that added tanning beds, and, in one widely shared case, a business in southern Poland registered at the same address as a sex club.

Finance Minister Katarzyna Pelczynska-Nalecz said on Tuesday that no additional funds would be released until each of the roughly 2,400 grants, totaling around 1.2 billion zlotys (€282.3 million/$330 million), undergoes individual scrutiny.

Stock Down

Roblox stock gets punished as outrage rises against platform for enabling child abuse

stock market plunge drop graphic
© Lemon_tm
Shares of Roblox (NYSE:RBLX) are in red on Friday after multiple reports of backlash against the online gaming platform for not doing enough to protect its young user base against child predators.

RBLX stock is down over 9% in early open market trading on the NYSE.

NBC News reported that the Louisiana attorney general filed a suit against the company on Thursday, alleging that its failure to implement strong safety protocols for children has made it "the perfect place for pedophiles."

According to a report from People, a new federal lawsuit has been filed against Roblox in California alleging that its practices enable child predators to operate without oversight, and the number of lawsuits against the company for child exploitation has crossed over 300.

Comment: Roblox faces class-action suit from parents for exposing children to sexual content and grooming


Star of David

Israeli Official Arrested in Nevada Child Sex Operation Is Released and Back in Israel

netanyahu
© AP Photo/Alex Brandon
A top cybersecurity official for the Israeli government was arrested in Nevada during an undercover operation targeting child sex predators.

Tom Alexandrovich was apprehended and faced felony charges of "Luring a Child with Computer for Sex Act," according to the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department, which assisted in conducting the operation from nearby Henderson, Nevada.

"A multi-agency operation targeting child sex predators led to the arrest of eight individuals over the last two weeks," the department said in a release published on Friday. The release lists the names of 38-year-old Tom Artiom Alexandrovich and seven others.

Sometime after the arrest became public, Alexandrovich's LinkedIn profile was deleted. According to a screenshot posted online, his LinkedIn said he is the Executive Director of the Israel Cyber Directorate, which is a government agency that operates under the office of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Alexandrovich was in Las Vegas to attend this year's Black Hat Briefings, an annual gathering of cybersecurity professionals. He posted a photo of himself at the conference on his LinkedIn before the account was deleted.

Stop

Groups calls on Delaware to revoke Gaza Humanitarian Foundation's corporate charter over complicity in genocide

Pals with empty box
© APA youth carries an empty box of relief supplies from the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, as displaced Palestinians walk near a food distribution center in Rafah • June 1, 2025
The Center for Constitutional Rights is joining local organizations in calling on Delaware's Attorney General to investigate the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, which is registered in the state, for its complicity in war crimes, crimes against humanity, and genocide in Gaza.

This week, CCR sent a letter to Delaware AG Kathy Jennings detailing how the GHF is complicit in war crimes, crimes against humanity, and genocide in Gaza. According to CCR, Jennings is obligated to sue the organization in order to revoke its corporate charter.

The letter declares:
"GHF woefully fails to adhere to fundamental humanitarian principles of humanity, neutrality, impartiality, and independence and has proven to be an opportunistic and obsequious entity masquerading as a humanitarian organization."
Jennings has not publicly acknowledged the demand.

Comment: See also:


Footprints

650,000 fighting-age men have fled Ukraine

Training
© Kostiantyn Liberov/Libkos/Getty ImagesYoung recruits undergo military training on an obstacle course • recruiting center • Kiev
The authorities in Kiev have struggled to deal with widespread draft evasion throughout the conflict with Russia.

At least 650,000 Ukrainian men of fighting age have fled the country since the conflict with Russia escalated in 2022, The Telegraph reported on Thursday. Others are hiding inside Ukraine or bribing officials to avoid being sent to the front, as the military faces its worst manpower crisis yet, the newspaper wrote.

According to the report, draft evasion in Ukraine is "tipping into crisis" amid Russian advances in the Donetsk region. Earlier this week, DeepState, a monitoring group with ties to the Ukrainian Defense Ministry, described the situation as "chaotic" with Russian troops "accumulating forces for further advancement."

Kiev's general mobilization, which mandates all able-bodied men aged 25 to 60 to serve in the armed forces, has failed to make up for ongoing battlefield losses and has led Ukrainian commanders to voice concerns over persistent manpower shortages.

Desertions are rising sharply, Ukrainian MP Anna Skorokhod said last week, adding that almost 400,000 Ukrainian servicemen have abandoned their units without authorization, and many - including volunteers - have no plans to return due to abysmal treatment from superiors.

NPC

British cops wore jogging outfits to elicit catcalls and then arrested some men who hit on them: report

surrey uk police
Officer Abby Hayward and another Surrey Police Department officer who went undercover as civilian joggers in a bid to catch sexual harassers were catcalled within their first 10 minutes.
From catcalls to the doghouse.

Female cops in England went undercover as joggers, wearing tight-fitting clothes in a bid to elicit catcalls — and then arrested some of the men who hit on them, according to a report.

The Surrey Police Department created a trial task force, which lasted about a month, and led to 18 arrests for offenses like sexual assault, harassment, and theft, the Telegraph reported.

Officer Abby Hayward and another Surrey Police Department officer who went undercover as civilian joggers in a bid to catch sexual harassers were catcalled within their first 10 minutes.

Stormtrooper

Color revolution? Serbian president suggests foreign interference as violence erupts during nationwide protests

serbia protests
© N1 Serbia via AP Photo
Violent clashes have broken out across Serbia between anti-government protesters and ruling party supporters, leaving dozens injured. The Balkan country has been wracked by unrest for months. Activists are demanding early parliamentary elections and accountability for the deadly collapse of a railway station canopy late last year.

The fiercest standoff took place on Wednesday in the city of Novi Sad, where protesters gathered around the office of the ruling Serbian Progressive Party (SNS). The party's supporters and protesters threw flares and other objects at each other, with demonstrators also smashing the building's windows.

Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic said that 64 people were injured at the premises of SNS in Novi Sad alone. He claimed that the protesters "approached from the rear with sticks, cannon shots, [and] attacked," adding that the pro-government activists "will not retreat, they opposed the beaters and blockaders" whom he called "thugs."

The president added that 16 police officers who intervened were also injured while accusing unnamed foreign powers of orchestrating the unrest. "Persons who violated the law will be apprehended... Tonight, we have averted a catastrophic scenario planned by someone from abroad," he said.

Syringe

Dutch lawyer blindfolded and taken to high-security prison for exposing the crimes of covid

Arno van Kessel
© UnknownArno van Kessel
In the Netherlands (where I now live), on June 11 at 5:00 a.m., the Dienst Speciale Interventies (Special Intervention Service) invaded the home of lawyer Arno van Kessel.This elite counterterrorism unit combines personnel from the Dutch National Police Corps, the Dutch military police and the Dutch Armed Forces.

Rather than stopping terrorism, however, this unit was the one terrorizing the Kessel family, including his wife and three children, who were held at gunpoint. Kessel was then blindfolded and taken to a high-security penal institution in Vught, Netherlands.

Comment: How many of the covid perpetrators were ever arrested, let alone brought to stand trial? One or two, more like none. Years after the fact, they are black-bagging a lawyer in front of his family who dare think to prosecute.


Handcuffs

Over 20,000 arrested in Iran on suspicion of espionage during war with Israel

Iranian policeman
© Associated PressIranian police
Officials are urging citizens to 'maintain vigilance' as they did during the 12-day war, as the hunt for infiltrators continues.

Iranian police arrested around 21,000 people on various charges during the 12-day war with Israel, Iran's national police force reported on 12 August.

According to local media, more than 7,850 public tips were received during the fighting, leading to the arrests.

The spokesperson of the Iranian police, Saed Montazer al-Mahdi, noted that the Iranian Cyber Police (FATA) handled 5,700 cybercrime cases, including internet fraud, unauthorized withdrawals, and a cyber attack on the Nobitex exchange.

He said 2,774 "illegal citizens" were detained, with 261 people arrested on suspicion of espionage and 172 detained for unauthorized filming - some for filming "sensitive centers" around the country. Examinations of the suspects' mobile phones led to the opening of 30 special security cases.

Comment: An Israeli long-term infiltration into Iran? Wouldn't doubt it for a minute, nor likely is Iran its only target.