Society's ChildS


Syringe

How big pharma weaves its web

Web occupant
© Unknown
I never set out to be an advocate. I wasn't a doctor, scientist, or policy expert. I was just a regular person who, like so many, blindly trusted that our healthcare system was designed to protect us.

But life has a way of pulling us into the arena when we least expect it.

After the tragic and unexpected loss of my husband Woody to the antidepressant Zoloft he was prescribed for insomnia, I was thrust into a world I never imagined — one where medicine wasn't solely about healing, but deeply entangled in a system that prioritizes profit over safety, buries harms, and keeps the public in the dark.

For over two decades, I've had a front-row seat to how this system truly operates — not the illusion of rigorous oversight we see in medical journals or glossy pharmaceutical ads, but the reality of how industry influence is woven into every stage.

I've met with regulators, testified before the FDA and Congress, filed a wrongful death and failure-to-warn lawsuit against Pfizer, and earned a seat on the FDA's Psychopharmacologic Drugs Advisory Committee as a consumer representative.

I've also spoken at and participated in global conferences like Selling Sickness, Too Much Medicine, and the Harms in Medicine meeting in Erice, Italy — where some of the world's leading experts acknowledge what few in mainstream medicine dare to say:
Our healthcare system isn't about health — it's about business.
And in this business, harm isn't an accident. It's built into the system.
The more I uncovered, the more I realized: We aren't just patients. We are customers.
And we are all trapped in Big Pharma's spiderweb of influence.

Comment: The business of medicine...Bullseye.


Bullseye

Bill looking to cut candy and soda from SNAP benefits heads to Idaho governor's desk

soda
© CC BY 2.0 / eddie welker / Soda
An Idaho bill looking to cut candy and soda from SNAP benefits is headed to Governor Brad Little's desk.

If signed, House Bill 109 would allow Idaho's Health and Welfare Director to request a waiver from the USDA to exclude soda and candy from the list of SNAP eligible foods.

If the waiver is not granted, the bill says the state will re-submit its request annually until granted.

In the bill's statement of purpose, sponsor Representative Jordan Redman (R-Coeur d'Alene) writes in part,
"Food stamps are currently fueling the junk food epidemic." He concludes, "Banning soda and candy from food stamps would prioritize health and nutrition while also reducing taxpayer's out-of-control Medicaid costs. Make Idaho Healthy Again!"
The bill passed through the senate on Monday, with a vote of 48 in favor, 20 against.

Arrow Down

UK MP's call for digital identity to 'tackle illegal immigration'

Is there anything Digital Identity CAN'T do?
Digital ID
© Off-Guardian
It turns out that the solution to illegal immigration is instituting a nationwide system of digital identity, issued to every baby at birth and containing all your social, education, financial, medical, and employment information.

At least, according to the 40 or so Labour MPs who co-signed an open letter calling for such a system.

Of course, that digital ID could solve the immigration "problem" should come as no surprise. After all, it can solve every "problem".

It can make sure our elections aren't rigged. It can protect our children on the internet. It can prevent the spread of disease. It can lower crime. It can tackle truancy and benefit fraud. It can government eliminate inefficiency.

Oh, it's good for the economy too!

Yay!

Warning

'Better that Ukrainians don't know the truth' - Kiev's spy chief

Budanov
© Vladimir Tarasov/Keystone Press Agency/Global Look Press/FileKirill Budanov, Main Directorate of Intelligence of the Ukrainian Defense Ministry • May 2024
Many Ukrainians cannot handle the "harsh reality" of the conflict with Russia and should be kept in the dark about the details, General Budanov, Kiev's military intelligence chief, has said.

Three-star general Kirill Budanov expressed his views on information censorship during wartime in a conversation with journalist Anna Maksimchuk on Saturday, suggesting that much of the truth of the conflict should only become public knowledge to Ukrainians in the future.
"During wartime, knowing the whole truth is not necessary. Otherwise, people may develop opinions. Some minds are not prepared to grasp the harsh reality. Let's not put them to the test. Everything should be dosed."
Since 2020, Budanov has led the Main Directorate of Intelligence of the Ukrainian Defense Ministry (HUR) - an agency reportedly rebuilt from scratch by the CIA following the 2014 armed coup in Kiev to serve as a tool against Russia.

Comment: It is precisely the ongoing 'hide and deny' that is doing Ukraine and the world no service. 'The people' deserve to know the whole truth and choose the way forward. It is their lives, their country.

Not to be:
Ukraine needs to introduce defense-linked censorship of the country's press, the nation's top military commander General Aleksandr Syrsky said in an interview with Radio Bayraktar broadcast on Thursday. Restrictions should be aimed at hiding sensitive information about troops from Kiev's enemies, the general suggested, explaining that anyone can access any information nowadays.

The general justified his proposal citing 'established' wartime practices that have arisen out of 'necessity,' adding that he did not seek to infringe on anyone's rights.
"I do not want to introduce a dictatorship like in North Korea. We are not the first to wage a war... there is a certain established package of measures that are absolutely mandatory."
According to Syrsky:
"Certain 'sensitive information' such as the march routes of various military units should be hidden from the public eye, particularly now, when the information space is accessible to everyone."
At the same time, the general said:
"The public should be kept informed about the real situation so that the people understand that the war is near and there is no such sharp difference between the front and the rear."
Kiev introduced what it called a United News TV tele-marathon, a 24/7 joint information program produced by the country's major media outlets, soon after the start of the conflict in February 2022.

The telethon has faced criticism for monopolizing television broadcasting and stifling dissent. In 2023 several Ukrainian opposition-linked channels claimed they were excluded from the telethon due to their political stances. Vladimir Zelensky has also openly called the telethon a 'weapon', adding that it "works for Ukraine and against Russia."

In October 2024, the European Commission questioned the operation and public funding of the telethon in its annual report on Ukraine's progress toward accession to the bloc. Kiev brushed off the concerns. In 2024, the Ukrainian government spent about $17 million on the project and is expected to pour just as much money into it this year.

Kiev has also repeatedly considered restricting or even blocking the messaging platform Telegram, citing national-security concerns. In March 2024, the nation's military intelligence (GUR) head, Kirill Budanov, labeled Telegram a potential national-security threat.



Arrow Up

DOGE's border expert reveals terrifying number of illegals on Medicaid: 'It's just ramping up'

Gracias
© ScreenshotAntonio Gracias heads DOGE's border team
Head of DOGE's border team, Antonio Gracias said around 1.3 million non-citizens are currently claiming Medicaid, at an estimated cost of around $6.5 billion.

The stark revelation came after Gracias and his team began probing the huge uptick in non-citizens who were assigned Social Security numbers last year. The figure leapt from 400,000 in 2021, to more than two million in 2024. Among those are people who have entered the US legally on visas and green cards and who pay into the US tax system.

But a large proportion are undocumented migrants who are benefitting from 'maximum pay' and 'minimum collection,' Gracias said. He told the All-In podcast:
"The defaults in the system, from Social Security to all benefit programs, have been set to maximum inclusion, maximum pay for these people, and minimum collection. Already, we found 1.3 million of them on Medicaid as an example. And we found people in this population registered to vote."
According to Medicaid.gov, the average annual cost per Medicaid enrollee is between $4,000 and $7,000, meaning the cost for all non-citizen beneficiaries tops out at $6.5 billion.

Attention

Third parties trying to derail US-Russia talks - Putin envoy

Dmitriev/Witkoff
© worldtribune.com/youtube.com/KJNRussian Investment Envoy Kirill Dmitriev • US Middle East Envoy Steve Witkoff
Certain countries and politicians don't want to see positive ties between Moscow and Washington. Certain countries want to throw a wrench into the normalization of Russian-American relations, President Vladimir Putin's investment envoy, Kirill Dmitriev, has said. He made his comment following a rare three-day trip to Washington, where he met with top US officials.
"Different countries are trying to derail this dialogue, derail the restoration of the Russian-American relations. The negotiations have been accompanied by a lot of rumors, incorrect quotes, and incorrect interpretations.

"A lot of people are interested in preventing the development of our relations. We are seeing a coordinated campaign in the media, attempts by various politicians to undermine the relations between Russia and the US, and attempts to distort the statements made by Russia. It happens on a daily basis. The best way to overcome disinformation is direct dialogue."
Dmitriev reportedly met with Trump's Middle East envoy, Steve Witkoff, who has been one of the key US negotiators on Ukraine.

Truck

The Biden admin handed out commercial truckers' licences to unvetted migrants like candy...

unvetted migrants truck crashes commercial licenses
© American Truckers United
Now US highways are a public safety & national security nightmare

Several major highway collisions across the U.S. have raised serious red flags about public safety and national security threats.

American motorists remain entirely unaware that tens of thousands — if not hundreds of thousands of migrant truck drivers, some of whom cannot read English- are operating fully loaded 80,000-pound big rigs on the nation's highways.

The latest big rig crash occurred just weeks ago in Austin, Texas, involving a migrant driver who spoke little English but held a non-domicile commercial driver's license (CDL). The horrific crash left five people dead and 11 injured.

Comment:




Some states are stepping in:


A sensible addendum:




Handcuffs

Police make 30 arrests a day for offensive online messages

Maxie'Rosalind
© Simon Jacob/The TimesMaxie Allen and Rosalind Levine arrested on suspicion of harassment, malicious communications, causing a nuisance on school property
Civil liberties groups say that the authorities are over-policing the internet and threatening free speech using vague laws.

The police are making more than 30 arrests a day over offensive posts on social media and other platforms. Thousands of people are being detained and questioned for sending messages that cause "annoyance", "inconvenience" or "anxiety" to others via the internet, telephone or mail.

Custody data obtained by The Times shows that officers are making about 12,000 arrests a year under section 127 of the Communications Act 2003 and section 1 of the Malicious Communications Act 1988.

Increasing over time

Number of arrests made under section 127 of the Communications Act 2003 and Section 1 of the Malicious Communications Act 1988 police forces in England and Wales:

Year/Arrests - Data for 35 forces
2017: 5,502
2018: 6,591
2019: 7,734
2020: 9,962
2021: 11,403
2022: 12,437
2023: 12,183


The acts make it illegal to cause distress by sending "grossly offensive" messages or sharing content of an "indecent, obscene or menacing character" on an electronic communications network.

Mr. Potato

Clown world: UK "Women's" billiard championship match has two transgender men squaring off

women pool championship great britain billiards
Two transgender men, Harriet Haynes and Lucy Smith, reached the finals of the UK Ultimate Pool Women’s Pro Series.
This is about as clownshow as you can get.

When a woman's champion is crowned by Ultimate Pool for Sunday's Pro Series event, the "winner" will be a transgender — yes, a biological male. And the reason is due to Lucy Smith and Harriet Haynes, both trans athletes, being in the final.

In the 2024 campaign, Haynes ended things as the No. 1-ranked female Ultimate Pool Pro Series player, and it looks like that Haynes is now headed towards winning the championship again in 2025. Haynes also won the title in 2022, while being the runner-up the next year in 2023.

Per the official website of Ultimate Pool, the champion gets 1,800 pounds, which is around $2,320. The second-place competitor receives 900 pounds, or around $1,160. The remainder of the top placements get 2,700 pounds, and that's combined with 16 players total being paid. So in this case, the biological males will get the same amount of money as all of the 14 women they placed above.

In other words, this is an absolute travesty.

Target

Leftist mob on UC Davis campus destroys conservative group display and tent

Davis
© Fox News
A mob of roughly 30 masked protesters at UC Davis attacked a tent for a conservative student group, the UC Davis chapter of Turning Point USA. It proceeded to destroy the tent and displays without any intervention from campus police, who were shown standing nearby. The police followed the rampaging mob and did not attempt to detain anyone. The mob appears to have been led by Antifa members, a violent anti-free speech group.

Dressed in their signature black with masks and umbrellas, the group tore down the tent and assaulted some of the students by shoving and grabbing them. They actually returned to finish the job. The protesters carried a large banner with the words "ACAB," which stands for all cops are bastards.

The university said in a news release that it is investigating. However, the university insisted:
"The event with the guest speaker took place on schedule and was completed without further incident. The university protected the free speech rights of the campus community throughout the event."
"Without further incident" has that feel of asking "other than that, how was the play, Mrs. Lincoln?"