Society's ChildS


Pistol

James Bond, They, Them: Future 007 could be 'non-binary'

daniel craig
Craig is retiring from the role as the British superspy after his latest appearance in No Time To Die.
In a new interview, longtime James Bond franchise producer Barbara Broccoli said that 007 could be non-binary in future installments.

Barbara Broccoli, daughter of original Bond producer Albert R. 'Cubby' Broccoli, dispelled rumors that Daniel Craig's replacement would be a woman, but then said a future incarnation of Bond could be "non-binary," meaning neither male or female, usually choosing to go by "they" or "them" pronouns.

Craig is retiring from the role as the British superspy after his latest appearance in No Time To Die.

Comment: Maybe conservatives are being a little hyper-sensitive on this one. The fact that the producer has shot down the idea of a female James Bond, (why not make new female characters?) shows that her head is probably in the right place on this one. People need to chill.

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Eye 1

COVID-19: Scotland isolation rules tightened from today as boosters urged in face of Omicron spread

Scotland mask picture
Daily COVID-19 cases reached their highest level in almost a year on Friday
Stricter isolation rules begin in Scotland today - as experts urged people to get their boosters following data that suggests three doses significantly reduces the chance of infection from Omicron.

Daily COVID-19 cases reached their highest level in almost a year on Friday and the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) predicted that, if current trends continue, the UK will exceed one million infections by the end of the month.


Comment: By infection they mean a positive PCR test which is not a reliable method for diagnosing any kind of infection.


Leaders across the country have issued stark warnings about the spread of the variant and have refused to rule out more restrictions amid fears cases will translate into as many as 5,000 hospital admissions a day.

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Attention

Tucker Carlson: This is the definition of a manufactured threat

omicron
Imagine this happened to you: you're sitting on an airplane, you're taxiing down the runway on a trip out of the country and all of a sudden the plane stops and is surrounded by military police. Armed men storm the aircraft and drag a man from his seat. So, of course, it's to assume, at first, that terrorism has just been averted. The passenger must have been trying to blow up the plane with a shoe bomb or something. But no, that's not what this is. The man is not a terrorist. He's something worse than that. He violated COVID restrictions. He's a corona criminal. Okay, you think you're trying to be reasonable here? A man with COVID should not be on a commercial aircraft spreading the virus to everyone else. And of course, that's fair.

But here's the thing - this man doesn't have COVID. He was tested right before he got on the airplane and no trace of the virus was found. So why in the world is he being hauled off the flight by armed men? Well, here's why: because the government has determined that based on his travel history, which they have been tracking, he might someday get COVID. Therefore, in the name of public health, he is being forcibly detained, not for something he has done, but for something that he potentially might do inadvertently. And for that, this man is headed to a COVID camp known euphemistically as a quarantine hotel. But he's not going to be a guest in this hotel. He'll be a prisoner.

Now, all of this just happened. In North Korea, you ask? No. In the Netherlands. One of the most "liberal countries in the world." Home of The Hague, the International Court of Justice. This just happened at the Amsterdam airport. You may have been there, think twice about going back. Or, for that matter, think twice about going to Canada, another supposedly "liberal country."


Magnify

France launches 400 investigations into fake Covid-19 health passes

health pass check
© Jean-Francois Badias/APCOVID health pass check to enter Christmas market
France has opened 400 investigations into networks providing fake Covid-19 health passes, the interior minister has said, as virus-related hospital admissions rise sharply across the country.

In recent days French media have covered the case of a woman with the virus who died in a Paris regional hospital after showing a false vaccine certificate. The hospital's intensive care chief said they would have given the woman immediate antibody treatment had they known that she was not vaccinated.

Authorities have identified several thousand fake Covid-19 health passes in use around France, Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin said on Sunday on RTL radio. He said around 400 investigations had been opened into the peddling of fake passes, including some "connected to health professionals".

He did not say how many people have been arrested so far, or provide details.

The French government is tightening rules on the passes, which are required to enter all restaurants and a growing number of events and venues. To get one, people must show proof of full vaccination, a negative virus test less than 24 hours old, or recent recovery from Covid-19.

Bomb

Teenager 'self-detonates' bomb at Christian convent outside Moscow

Scene of detonation
© Sputnik/Prosecutor's OfficeLaw enforcement at scene of detonation
At least eight people have been injured at a convent in the Russian city of Serpukhov, 100km south of Moscow, after a teenager blew himself up with an improvised explosive device on Monday in an apparent attempted suicide bombing.

According to a source quoted by news agency TASS, the presumed culprit has survived, but is in an extremely serious condition and has lost a leg.

Citing an unnamed law enforcement source, the news agency reported that a man entered the site at around 8am and blew up the door of the Orthodox school located on the property. Police have identified the suspect as an 18-year-old graduate of the school, with some media reports suggesting that he may have been motivated by a hatred of the teachers and nuns, or was previously bullied at the educational facility.

The convent, named Vladychny, was founded in the 14th century.

Police are currently conducting an investigation into the explosion.

"On December 13, an unknown person detonated an explosive device on the territory of a nunnery in Serpukhov," said Olga Vradiy, the Moscow Region spokesperson for the Investigative Committee. "Investigators and forensic experts... immediately went to the scene."

Bullseye

Project Veritas attorney demands Congress open investigation of DOJ leaks to NY Times

James O'Keefe
James O'Keefe
Project Veritas is asking that Congress do more after securing a big legal win this week in a case involving Ashley Biden's diary.

Mark Paoletta, an attorney for the organization, sent a letter to key Congressional leaders Thursday asking that they conduct further oversight after the FBI raided Veritas founder James O'Keefe's home in November, along with the residences of two former journalists for the organization. Paoletta asks that Congress look into the FBI investigation itself, as well as information about the raids that was allegedly leaked to The New York Times.

"It's difficult to imagine the FBI taking such an interest in a diary belonging to someone who wasn't named Biden," Paoletta wrote. "And it's also difficult to imagine the FBI taking such draconian action against the free press if the reporter involved wasn't named James O'Keefe."

Handcuffs

More than 100 alleged 'supporters of Ukrainian Nazi murder cult' arrested in Russia

Ukrainian neo-Nazi
© FSBScreenshot: FSB Detains 106 Members of Ukrainian neo-Nazi Group 'M.K.U.'
More than 100 alleged supporters of a Ukrainian neo-Nazi youth 'murder cult,' thought to be planning to carry out attacks, were detained in an operation spanning across Russia, the country's security service has said.

In a notice published on Monday, the FSB said "investigative measures and actions were carried out in relation to 106 supporters of the ... MKU ... identified in 37 regions," while working alongside Russia's Ministry of Internal Affairs.

According to the statement, two detainees were suspected of preparing arms attacks on educational institutions. Meanwhile, three people said to be responsible for administering the organization's internet channels were also identified, having allegedly propagandized extremist ideology and called for violent actions on the instruction of the organization's founder, Yegor Krasnov.

Comment: Governments elsewhere in Europe have also been cracking down on extremist groups: Although, for some, the definition of extremist is increasingly aimed at those who dare dissent from the government narrative:


Christmas Lights

Boat with 'FJB, Let's go Brandon' theme wins Virginia Christmas lights contest - disqualified 48 hours later for being 'overtly political'

lets go brandon boat christmas lights
© WavyCaptain Bill Berger's boat (pictured), called 'Southern Rock,' decked out with fir trees and lit up with the phrase 'Let's go Brandon' and the letters 'FJB' in Christmas lights, was voted best in show by the crowd at the Yorktown.
A boat captain who won a festive lights display after decorating his boat with illuminations saying 'FJB, Let's go Brandon' was stripped of his gong after the message was deemed overtly political.

Captain Bill Berger's boat, called Southern Rock, decked out with fir trees and reindeer and lit up with the phrase 'Let's go Brandon' and the letters 'FJB' in Christmas lights, was voted best in show by the crowd at the Yorktown.

Both phrases are thinly-veiled replacements recently coined by Conservative groups in place of saying 'F*** Joe Biden.'

But two days after his cheeky entry to the contest won 'Best in Show,' Berger got a phone call with bad news.

Bizarro Earth

Best of the Web: Staff shortages in US & UK hospitals mean THOUSANDS of beds occupied by elderly patients fit to be discharged

NHS logo building
'Staggering' number of frail and vulnerable people stuck on wards as hospitals 'grind to a halt' because of growing social care crisis

Around 10,000 hospital beds are currently occupied by elderly people owing to a lack of available care workers to look after them at home, NHS leaders have warned.

Senior figures said hospitals were "grinding to a halt" because of a growing crisis in social care, which has left "staggering" numbers of frail and vulnerable people stuck on wards for weeks on end.

Experts said shortages of care home staff - with an estimated loss of around 70,000 such workers in six months - had left hospitals overcrowded, even before winter starts and amid fears the growth of the omicron variant could make things worse.


Comment: Knowing the harm the vaccine mandates are having on patients due to dangerously low care home staffing levels, why doesn't the government and the healthcare bosses reverse the ruling? A report from the House of Lords recently revealed that there was no benefit in mandating vaccines on NHS healthcare staff, so why should it apply to care home staff?

It's likely because the government and NHS bosses are willing to sacrifice elderly patients and victimize their carers, but they know if were they to do the same to NHS the publicity generated by respected staff, and the outcry from the public, might put a halt (however temporary) to their ideological agenda.


Comment: The situation is just as dire over in the US, with some states enforcing vaccine mandates, despite there being no federal law requiring that they do, and, in turn, hospitals are struggling to provide care, with at least one A&E having to shut.

Bucks County Courier Times in the US reports that almost exactly the same issues are occurring in the US:
How staff shortages at Bucks, Montco nursing homes, rehabs are delaying hospital discharges, causing longer ER waits

Emergency departments at hospitals in Bucks and Montgomery counties have become especially busy in recent weeks as COVID cases are surging while health care staffing shortages have slowed the hospitals in discharging patients to nursing facilities and rehabilitation centers.

At Lower Bucks Hospital in Bristol Township, delays in discharging patients has affected bed availability throughout the hospital, spokeswoman Michelle Aliprentis said.

"We don't have the ability to discharge them because the nursing homes are unable to accept them. Unfortunately, we are left paralyzed with nowhere to place our patients," she said.

When there are delays in discharges, newer admitted patients must wait in the emergency department for a hospital bed to become available. This has created crowding and delays in treatment for less-acute conditions, officials said.


Numerous 'less-acute conditons' can become deadly if not given the necessary treatment. And we're seeing just that: 10,000+ EXCESS deaths in just 4 months in England, NOT Covid related, lockdown backlog partly to blame


"This results in a little more wait time for people to get their hospital bed and more of the emergency department beds can be filled with people waiting, and that in turn causes a long wait time (in the ED)," said Dr. Gerard Cleary, Jefferson Health-Abington chief medical officer.

The situation with staffing in long-term nursing facilities has become so critical that the Pennsylvania Health Care Association says that the Pennsylvania National Guard members may need to be given basic training in health care in case they are deployed to nursing facilities as some were to a center in Berks County recently.


Deploying nursing staff to do basic care work means hospitals are lacking critically trained staff.


"We have been in communication with the Department of Health, even asking for the National Guard to be prepared to help in facilities," said association President and CEO Zach Shamberg. "What we are seeing now is a domino effect.

"Skilled nursing facilities are unable to accept new residents because they do not have the staff to meet the demand beyond those they are already caring for. We have heard nursing homes have closed wings in their facilities because they don't have enough staff to care for those beds."


Doylestown Hospital spokeswoman Beth Long said, "Yes, there are challenges and delays with discharges due to the lack of open beds at the nursing facilities. This affects the ED because we used to be able to discharge some patients from the ED directly to a skilled nursing facility."

Lower Bucks Hospital has 150 beds split between medical and behavioral health, but staffs according to its census which is 50 patients currently.

"As long as the staffing shortages continue, we will have to take steps to address the increasing volume of patients. It's not often we have to take extreme measures like diverting ambulances, but this strain is a direct result of what's happening throughout the region. We are working on operational adjustments to support continuity of care to the best of our ability," Aliprentis said.


Dr. Larry Brilliant, St. Mary president and CEO, said the hospital with its 377 inpatient beds, is "near capacity."

The hospital is using the new emergency department program, nicknamed PIT for Provider in Triage, to ensure that all patients are treated as quickly as possible and to make the best use of staff and diagnostic equipment.

"We have our surge plans, but they're not being utilized yet; they're ready if we need them," he said.

St. Mary's emergency department has 62 beds for adult patients and 12 for pediatric patients. "If you need a bed, you're going to get a bed," Brilliant said. "We want people to get the care they needed as soon as possible."

Moving patients through emergency rooms quicker

According to a report issued by Medicare, before the PIT program was implemented, the wait time in St. Mary's emergency department averaged 210 minutes, the highest for hospitals in Bucks and Eastern Montgomery County, and higher than the national and Pennsylvania average of 175 minutes for hospitals like St. Mary that have very high volumes of patients, 60,000 or more a year.

The only other similar hospital in the area was Jefferson-Abington, where the wait time averages 197 minutes.

Dr. Darin Geracimos, chairman of the St. Mary Emergency Department, said that with the new PIT program a patient coming in with a heart attack will be seen "in about 5 seconds," as they always have been but someone with a sprained ankle may still have a wait for treatment but during that time, diagnosis of the injury will get underway even when the ED is very busy. That patient will be able to be treated and go home sooner than before.


Despite their attempts to reconfigure how they work, with less staff, adequate care is sacrificed, and patients will inevitably suffer.


The PIT program is used from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through Friday.

Doylestown Hospital has a similar program called MACU (Minor Acute Care Unit) to try to get people treated and out of the ED quicker. Jefferson Abington Hospital also is using its fast-track system in the Emergency Department to get people who can be treated and go home the care they need.

St. Mary now treats everyone coming to the ED as if they have COVID and tries to use social distancing and masks to separate people coming for treatment. The hospital's pediatric emergency department also has seen an increase in patients in part because of an increase in respiratory illnesses in children this year.


Lockdowns weakened and compromised people's immune systems leaving them more vulnerable when the ususal circulaiton of viruses resumes: Lockdowns blocked flu spread, what happens when it returns?


Children who need to be hospitalized are sent to a hospital that treats children as inpatients, of the parents' choosing.

At Doylestown Hospital, Long said, "Our pediatric inpatient census has been steady, but we've been able to provide beds for all who need them. The hospital has 271 inpatient beds, including six for children.

Jefferson-Abington has 665 beds and had 77,000 visits to its ED last year while Jefferson-Lansdale has 140 beds and received 23,000 ED visits.

Fighting COVID and other ways to stay out of the ER

Cleary, of Jefferson Health, advised everyone to get vaccinated against COVID for their own safety and that of others. And he said the emergency department is not the place to come for a COVID test except if the person is having serious symptoms.

He stressed that anyone feeling ill should call their family doctor rather than let their illness wait until they need emergency care.

While hospitals are not telling people to put off care they need, Cleary said some people are growing concerned about having elective surgery until they know their rehabilitation placement, should they need it, is guaranteed.

He said the issues right now with health care staffing shortages are caused because many older medical workers have retired or plan to do so and younger people are more hesitant to begin a health care career while the pandemic is ongoing, particular those who would normally apply for a medical assistant or other low-level and lower paying position.


Over in the UK, the lack of doctors is actually partly a result of doctor's wanting to preserve their salaries: UK's "burnt out" GPs warn many will quit if gov't force face-to-face appointments - same doctors who voted against training more doctors in 2008


The national shortage of daycare workers to tend to young children and older adults also is preventing some people from applying for health care jobs.

"We're challenged," Cleary said.
See also: This is completely avoidable" - New York hospitals prepare for staffing crisis as vaccination mandate forces mass firings

And check out SOTT radio's: NewsReal: NAZI Redux - Covid Camps in Australia, Mandatory Vaccinations in EU




Stock Up

Refund the police: Minneapolis, St. Paul end tumultuous 2021 by increasing police spending

Minneapolis St. Paul
After a nationwide debate about defunding the police, the Minneapolis and St. Paul city councils ended 2021 by doing the opposite - funding police.

A tumultuous year in both cities -- one that saw Minneapolis voters defeat a proposal that would've replaced the Police Department with a safety agency tasked with taking a public health approach to crime -- ended with budget votes that received little fanfare this week. Minneapolis City Council mostly went along with Mayor Jacob Frey's $192 million police budget, while St. Paul City Council added a modest amount to Mayor Melvin Carter's initial proposal. Both reflect increases from the prior year.

The Minneapolis budget reflects a "sustained commitment to public safety," Frey's spokeswoman said Friday. Frey said it will fund five police recruit classes, starting a long rebuilding process after the city lost nearly 300 officers over the past two years.

Comment: See also: