Society's ChildS


Attention

Investigation: 100K Covid Deaths? We don't think so!

švedska covid antitjela
On the 26th January 2021, authorities announced that the UK had surpassed 100,000 deaths due to Covid-19. We've told you time and time again that this number is hugely misleading due to the fact when they started the count in 2020 they initially counted anybody who they suspected had symptoms of Covid. Symptoms that are common with all respiratory diseases that have been around for our entire lives.

Then once they could start testing, with the controversial PCR test they were counting anybody who died within 45 days of a positive test. Then they revised that to 28 days. Then right at the start of the third lockdown they changed those parameters to within 60 days of a positive test. Meaning even if the person was to tragically die in a car accident, if they had received a positive test result for SARS-CoV-2 within the set time frame they have been and are added to the Covid death statistics.

So that number of 100,000 Covid deaths just doesn't add up to us. But you're not just going to take our word for it. So we decided to take a look at official Office of National Statistics data for Deaths in 2020 compared to previous years, and this is what we found...

Comment: See also:


Red Flag

Andy Ngo exposes Antifa and Democrat hypocrisy in new bestselling book

andy ngo unmasked
One of the more irritating consequences of America's ever-increasing polarization is that events, which are considered to be true and crucial by one group, are broadly dismissed as delusion and dogma by the other.

Both Republicans and Democrats are guilty of this willful blindness, but it has taken some effort for America's left-wing to ignore Antifa's violence. Take, for instance, the way in which the East-Coast media has reacted to the events of 2020: "Antifa as Trump imagines it only exists in the conservative mind," wrote one journalist at Vox. Or take this extraordinary act of mental gymnastics by Vanity Fair, which didn't just declare that Antifa was of no threat, but went one step further, saying that the "bogeyman" simply didn't exist.

Biden's Democrats like to pretend that Antifa are simply lentil-eating, art graduates bestowed with the all-American task of punching Nazis. But now, with a Democratic president and total control of Congress, the DNC may finally have to greet the monster that grew under their supervision.

If Joe Biden's eyesight still works, someone should probably give him Andy Ngo's Antifa Unmasked. After all, it seems unlikely that Antifa's violence will stop after something as bloodless as Biden's election victory. As Portland's Mayor Ted Wheeler, who presided over more than 100 days of Antifa-led riots, was forced to admit: his efforts "at de-escalation" were met with "ongoing violence and even scorn from radical Antifa."

Bizarro Earth

Deranged Disney producer Jack Morrissey apologizes for '#MAGAkids into the woodchipper' fantasy

Disney Morrissey
© Twitter, Walt Disney Pictures
Film producer Jack Morrissey apologized on Monday for a social media post envisioning the bloody outcome of Covington Catholic High School students being put into a woodchipper.

Former Alaska Governor Sarah Palin captured and shared Morrissey's since-deleted tweet, which draws on a scene from the 1996 film Fargo in which a character's corpse is fed through a woodchipper:


Morrissey joined a myriad of "verified" Twitter profiles in his response to the narrative of "racist" high school students harassing a Native American. He has since locked his Twitter profile and prevented non-approved followers from viewing his posts.

Comment: Isn't it a bit concerning that a guy who creates movies for kids has these types of thoughts?? Maybe Disney could consider hiring people who don't fantasize about violently murdering children? It seems like a low bar, but maybe it's difficult to find people with just a bit of character in Hollywood these days.


Attention

America's murder rate increase in 2020 has 'no modern precedent,' crime analyst group finds

Do not cross tape
© Flickr / Tony Webster
Murder rates saw a "historic" increase in 2020 compared to 2019, with more than 1,200 additional killings year-over-year in a sample of 34 American cities, according to a study released Monday.

"The coronavirus pandemic, continuing incidents of police violence, and rising homicide and violent crime rates each pose massive policy challenges in their own right, but the interplay between them creates even more difficult decisions for policymakers," states a report from the National Commission of COVID-19 and Criminal Justice (NCCCJ). "Despite this difficulty, leaders at all levels of government should take bold action in responding to all three crises."

Homicide rates jumped by 30% from 2019 to 2020, while gun assault and aggravated assault rates climbed 8% and 6%, respectively, experts found.

"Homicide rates were higher during every month of 2020 relative to rates from the previous year," the report states, calling the 30% surge "a large and troubling increase that has no modern precedent."

Heart - Black

Outrage after police pepper-spray handcuffed NINE-YEAR-OLD girl in Rochester, New York

Police pepperspray girl
© Police bodycam
An internal review was launched after a police officer was filmed pepper-spraying a minor who was sitting in the back of a patrol car. Police claimed the girl was suicidal and threatened to kill her mother.

A minute-long bodycam video shows a girl in handcuffs sitting in the back of a police car. She is distressed and does not appear to be following the officers' commands. The clip was edited to blur the girl's face.

"Come on. I'm gonna pepper spray you, and I don't want to, so sit back. Come on, this is your last chance, otherwise pepper spray is going in your eyeballs. Come on, let's go," an officer says.

"I want my dad," the sobbing girl pleads, to which a female officer replies: "I'm gonna go get him." She adds: "I will fix it," apparently referring to the cuffs.

Eye 1

French government threatens it will withdraw financial aid & fine restaurants that open during lockdown

france restaurant
© AFPThe managers of a restaurant in Metz, eastern France, watching Prime Minister Jean Castex laying out new Covid-19 rules on January 7th.
French Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire warned restaurant owners Monday that they risked losing Covid-19 financial aid if they open in defiance of the pandemic shutdown, following calls to protest and serve clients.

Angry owners say their livelihoods are at risk since the closures were ordered on October 30th, with little prospect of a return to business as usual anytime soon.

Several chefs and thousands of people have already backed a call by Stephane Turillon, a chef in eastern France, for restaurants to open for protest meals on Monday.

Comment: The hospitality industry wouldn't need government aid if they hadn't been forced to close for much of the past year. But then, many of us saw this coming; now that governments have a significant proportion of the population at the mercy of their handouts, those handouts will be used as their means of control. And it's likely that this is a preemptive move, because throughout Europe hospitality venues have been planning a coordinated 'great re-opening' in defiance of the destructive and nonsensical forced closure of businesses: Over 50,000 Restaurants in Italy Declare "I Am Open" Defying Lockdown Measures

See also: Despite bans on protesting The Covid, anti-lockdown protests take place in multiple European countries: Belgium, Denmark, Austria


Handcuffs

Navalny's wife among 5000+ protesters arrested in Russian demonstrations

Yulia Navalny
© Reuters/Yuri BelyatYulia Navalny
Yulia Navalny, the wife of the jailed Russian dissident Alexei Navalny, was detained in Moscow on Sunday, as thousands demonstrated to support freeing her husband.

Thousands marched across Russia for the second week to rally for Navalny, prompting police to use force and arrest over 5,000 people protesting in Russia's 11 time zones, according to the Associated Press. This weekend's arrests have surpassed the roughly 4,000 from last weekend's demonstrations.

After the first round of protests earlier this month, Russian President Vladimir Putin labeled the demonstrations as unlawful and "dangerous." Yulia Navalny was also detained during the first round of protests.

Comment: The Navalny protests continued with intensity, targeting both Moscow and St. Petersburg:
Several police officers placing Yulia Navalny into a van:
Law enforcement gained control, but not without consequences:
An officer can be seen drawing his service pistol after being punched and kicked by demonstrators, who were chasing a small group of policemen down a street just off Sennaya Square in St. Petersburg.

An unconscious man being carried onto a bus in the historic city center as police could be seen making arrests outside.

The opposition-leaning news outlet also reported that journalists wearing identifying yellow vests were detained by officers in riot gear. A video shows one being carried by their arms and legs to an awaiting van.


Tapping the US interest and involvement with Navalny?
A letter to President Biden by allies of jailed opposition figure Alexey Navalny, sparked fierce backlash and calls for harsh measures against high-profile Russian officials and businessmen.

The Anti-Corruption Foundation (FBK), set up by Navalny in 2011, has asked the White House for fresh sanctions, local media reported on Sunday. The group is registered as a 'foreign agent' by the Russian Ministry of Justice, because it has received funding from abroad in the past.

The appeal calls on Biden to target the "corrupt Russian allies of President [Vladimir] Putin." "We would be grateful if the US would take concrete policy and sanctions actions to limit corruption and abuse of human rights,"

Among those on the list are billionaire Roman Abramovich, the country's Minister for Health Mikhail Murashko and 33 other prominent Russians. However, amidst those singled out by the group, seven of those named are already targeted under existing US sanctions lists.

Vladimir Ashurkov, executive director of the foundation, told CNN that the letter was personally addressed to Biden as leader of the world's 'most powerful country.' "If anyone can do anything, it is the United States," he said. The group is reportedly planning to send similar letters to leaders of the European Union and the United Kingdom.

First Deputy Chairman of the Russian Federation Council Committee on Foreign Affairs Vladimir Dzhabarov slammed the organization in comments made to RIA Novosti.
"It smacks of treason. Can you imagine an American organization appealing to Vladimir Putin with a request to impose sanctions on the US president? This must be harshly suppressed. There must be a strong reaction from law enforcement agencies, the Office of the Prosecutor General, and [the state security agency] the FSB."
St. Petersburg experienced an uptick in violence over the past fortnight:
moscow protest
© Sputnik/Alexey MayshevMoscow Protest, week #2
Siberian Federal District protest
© Sputnik/Yevgeny OdinokovNovosibirsk, Russia at -20 degrees Celsius
Clips from Russia's second largest city showed lines of OMON troops, the country's specialist riot police, beating their shields and pushing back waves of demonstrators.

The Union of Journalists of Russia issued a warning after 60 media workers were detained. At least eight of those held by police were in St. Petersburg and footage showed a reporter in a fluorescent yellow 'press' vest being carried off to a waiting vehicle.
See also:
Protesters detained at rallies in support of jailed opposition figure Alexey Navalny in Russia's Far East and Siberia


Dollars

'Torturing the English language': Biden accused of twisting the truth with promise his Covid-19 stimulus plan 'finishes the job'

Ben Franklin
© Getty Images
President Joe Biden is getting criticism from both the left and the right for claiming his American Rescue Plan will help Americans struggling during the pandemic by offering a $2,000 stimulus - an amount also pushed for by Trump.

"$600 is simply not enough when you have to choose between paying your rent and putting food on the table," Biden tweeted on Saturday, referring to the $600 stimulus payment passed in the final weeks of Trump's presidency.

Biden went on to claim his $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan, which he has urged Congress to pass sooner rather than later, "finishes the job of getting $2000 to folks who need it most."

Comment: Those who convinced themselves to believe in Biden and the Democrats find reality a different story. Here's a sampling:



Arrow Down

Oregon law to decriminalize all drugs goes into effect, offers addicts rehab instead of prison

Gullickson
© UnknownJanie Gullickson, recovering drug addict, a chief petitioner of measure 110.
For Janie Gullickson, rock bottom came both slowly and all at once.

A longtime drug and alcohol addict, Gullickson pushes back on the idea that one terrible day on the street leads to an epiphany and a climb back to normalcy. That's what happens in movies, not real life.

"I lived in the bottom for years," says Gullickson, 52. "For me and people like me, I laid there and wallowed in it for a long time."

But if she has to pick the lowest point - one that lasted years, not days, she says - it came shortly after she hit 30 in 1998. At that time, Gullickson had five kids, ages 5 to 11, by four different men. She came home from work one day as a locksmith to find that her ex-husband had taken her two youngest and left the state. Horrified, devastated and convinced that this was the beginning of the end, her life spiraled: She dropped her other son off with his dad, left her two daughters with her mom and soon became an IV meth user.

In prison six years later, Gullickson was contemplating joining an intensive recovery program when a "striking, magnetic gorgeous Black woman walked in the room, held up a mug shot and started talking about being in the very chairs where we were sitting," Gullickson remembers. There was life on the other side of addiction and prison, the woman said. But you have to fight for it. Gullickson believed her.

Alarm Clock

Reddit activists cause silver futures to suffer wave of sales not seen since collapse of Lehman. Or did they?


Comment: UPDATE

ZeroHedge isn't paying close attention. Retail traders at r/WallStreetBets are NOT recommending that everyone 'go short JPMorgan through silver'. Tim Pool reports on how this silver drive is MSM fake news to draw heat away from the hammering Melvin Capital and Citadel are taking from their exposure to high GameStop and AMC stock prices:



silver stock
Having surged by the most since Lehman, topping $30 for the first time since 2013, Silver futures have been taking some heavy volume punishment since the US equity market opened.

The SLV premium to spot does not seem too out of whack here...

Comment: RT reports
GameStop, AMC stocks rise as retail traders look to inflict more pain on Wall Street

game stop
GameStop's stock is likely to continue its rally, as it added over six percent in early pre-market trading on the first trading day of the week. It comes after the company's share price jumped 400 percent last week and surged over 1,600 percent for the whole January.

AMC is also expected to open this month with gains, as its shares rose nearly 20 percent. The movie theater operator's stock gained over 200 percent last week.

Both companies are at the epicenter of the Reddit-driven short-squeeze on big hedge funds. A group of small investors united to boost shares of several firms the funds were betting against as they held short positions against the stock. The coordinated action caused a huge price rally and cost the short-sellers on Wall Street billions of dollars in losses.
Robinhood narrows trade restrictions list to 8 companies, including GameStop

Online brokerage Robinhood has cut down the list of its restricted stocks, from as many as 50 on Friday to eight starting Monday. Trade in short-squeeze names like GameStop has been limited due to last week's explosive rallies.

Companies that still face limitations include GameStop, AMC Entertainment Holdings, Blackberry, and others, Robinhood said, noting that the limits may be "subject to change throughout the day."

Opening new positions in those securities is limited, according to its website, which lists the maximum number of shares and options contracts each user can hold. For those whose current holdings already exceed the limits, their positions won't be sold or closed. At the moment, customers can only buy one share of GameStop's stock and five options contracts.

The millennial-favored stock trading app said on Friday it had put buying restrictions in place after its clearinghouse deposit requirements for equities increased last week. "It was not because we wanted to stop people from buying these stocks," Robinhood said.

The trading app, which is popular among retail investors who fostered the rise of GameStop stock, has been under fire for its decision to restrict trading of high-flying stocks that surged after being touted on social media.

On Sunday, US Senator Elizabeth Warren called for a broader review by the Securities and Exchange Commission on recent trading swings. She said a broker-dealer like Robinhood that invites a lot of individual investors needs to operate "under some basic rules."

"You can't do that in the middle of a trading cycle," Warren told CNN about Robinhood's trading limits. "It's not about protecting people from making bad trades. It's about keeping the playing field level."


Robinhood raises another $2.4 billion from investors

Online brokerage Robinhood raised another $2.4 billion from shareholders, just days after existing investors pumped in $1 billion in funding, the Wall Street Journal reported on Monday citing people familiar with the matter.

Robinhood did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.