Society's ChildS


Cult

Mao's Cultural Revolution has arrived in America

mao cultural revolution poster china
© Jean Vincent/AFP/Getty ImagesA small group of Chinese youth walk past several dazibao, revolutionary placards, in February 1967 in downtown Beijing, during the "Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution."
From 1966 to 1976, Chinese society suffered under what we now call the Cultural Revolution.

The Cultural Revolution, previously known as the Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution, was a multifaceted affair undergirded by a vicious, fanatical campaign to destroy the "Four Olds."

In 1971, The New York Times described the campaign thusly:
"One of the early objectives of the Cultural Revolution in China ... was to wipe out the 'four olds' — old things, old ideas, old customs, and old habits.

"The 'four olds' had already suffered setbacks in the years of Communist rule preceding the Cultural Revolution, but the Maoist leadership tried to use the new revolutionary upsurge launched in 1966 to eliminate them completely.

"In the turbulent years from 1966 to 1968, what remained of old religious practices, old superstitions, old festivals, old social practices such as traditional weddings and funerals, and old ways of dress were violently attacked and suppressed. Visual evidences of old things were destroyed, and there was an orgy of burning of old books and smashing of old art objects."

Comment: Forewarned is forearmed. More on the background of this pernicious mind virus:


Syringe

New York lifts remaining COVID-19 restrictions after reaching experimental shot goal

Governor Andrew Cuomo
© Reuters
New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced Tuesday that all remaining COVID-19 restrictions "would be relaxed as of today" after the state reached its goal of vaccinating 70% of the adult population, but mask-wearing would remain in effect for some. Effective immediately, businesses in the state will no longer have to follow social distancing rules or limit how many people are allowed inside, Cuomo said at his press conference from the World Trade Center in Manhattan.

However, masks will still be required in schools, subways, large venues, homeless shelters, hospitals, nursing homes, jails and prisons.

"Today New York State reached our goal of 70% adult vaccination," Cuomo's account tweeted during the press conference. "That means we can return to life as we know it. Effective immediately, state-mandated COVID restrictions are lifted across commercial and social settings."

Comment: See also:


Cult

The super-woke self-police: Waitrose Market virtue signals by removing 'racist' kaffir leaves from its spice shelf following a total of ZERO complaints

waitrose market kaffir leaves
© drian DENNIS / AFP; (inset) Kaffir lime leaves. ; Getty Images / Eskay Lim / EyeEmShoppers visit a Waitrose supermarket in Frimley, south west of London on March 29, 2020.
Waitrose, a supermarket temple for the UK's middle class, has chosen to rebrand 'Kaffir lime leaves' in case they cause offence to South Africans, even though no one has bothered to complain. Warning: may contain woke ingredients.

I am going to have to be quick here, because I'm in a bit of a panic. I have a load of cookbooks to censor or ditch after finding out my bookshelf and spice rack are totally racist, and could see my Saffer neighbours report me for hate speech unless I atone for my thoughtlessness.

Thanks, Waitrose. Thanks for flagging the vicious casual racism that shelters in kitchens nationwide under the guise of crab, mango, lime and chilli salad and those other multi-ingredient Southeast Asian dishes that make your eyes water and mouth go numb.

Comment: It appears the crazy has no bottom.

From the decree that 'black' should be capitalized when describing a person (but not 'white'), to changing names of decades-old beloved sports teams, to the insane arguments that a movie cast 100% with people of color doesn't represent enough shades of melanin, it's clear the mind virus of woke is overtaking the mush-brained majority.


Stock Down

Lawsuit filed over Indiana's enhanced unemployment withdrawal

unemployment application
© Eblis/Getty Images
There is now a lawsuit over Governor Holcomb's decision to remove Indiana from the enhanced federal unemployment program. The suit is the first to try and stop a state from opting out. Twenty-five states have decided to end federal benefits for their citizens.

Indiana Legal Services, which provides free legal help across the state, joined the Concerned clergy of Indianapolis, and the law firm of Macey, Swanson, Hicks and Sauer, in suing to keep the state in the program.

Governor Holcomb ordered Indiana out of the enhanced unemployment system last month, and the last of the extra $300 per-week checks are supposed to be cut on Friday.

Cell Phone

India strips Twitter of legal immunity for '3rd party content' amid row over new regulation - reports

twitter screen logo
© Reuters / Brendan McDermid
New Delhi has reportedly revoked Twitter's shield against prosecution for illegal user content, saying the platform failed to comply with new regulations as police filed their first case against the site over a violent video.

The social network became the first American platform to lose the legal protections on Wednesday, with the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology claiming the site had not yet come in line with new social media rules implemented in late May, according to several local media outlets.

"Due to their non-compliance, their protection as an intermediary is gone. Twitter is liable for penal actions against any Indian law just as any publisher is," an unnamed ministry source told NDTV.

Comment: See also:


Dollar

Canada: May inflation accelerates at fastest pace in a decade

non-essential goods
© REUTERS/Carlos Osorio/File PhotoA woman looks on as she walks past cordoned off aisles of non-essential goods at a Walmart store in Toronto, Ontario, Canada April 8, 2021.
Inflation in Canada in May accelerated at its fastest pace in a decade for a second month in a row, driven by surging shelter and vehicle prices, as the impact of the statistical comparison to tanking prices last year eased, data showed on Wednesday.

Canada's annual inflation rate accelerated to 3.6%, from 3.4% in April, Statistics Canada said. That was slightly ahead of analyst expectations that the annual rate would rise to 3.5%.

"The whole base-effect narrative is getting pretty tired. We're dealing with durable month-over-month increases that could be supply-chain driven in Canada," said Derek Holt, vice president of Capital Market Economics at Scotiabank.

Comment: See also:


Eye 2

A Western-backed war couldn't destroy Syria, now sanctions are starving its people

Douma Syria
© REUTERS/Omar SanadikiWomen walk at a market in Douma, in the eastern suburbs of Damascus, Syria March 10, 2021. Picture taken March 10, 2021.
A little over a decade ago, Syrians lived in safety and financial security. After ten years of war on Syria, while safety has largely returned, Syrians are struggling to exist under increasingly crippling Western sanctions.

As Syrian analyst Kevork Almassian noted, "Were it not for the CIA regime change war, arming & training tens of thousands of multinational terrorists, draconian sanctions, foreign occupation of North & East, looting the oil & burning the wheat, Syria would've now a brilliant economy & high standard of living."

When I first visited Syria in 2014, and in the years following, mortars and missiles fired from terrorist groups occupying eastern Ghouta pummeled Damascus on a daily basis. Likewise in government-controlled areas of Aleppo, and elsewhere around Syria.

Comment: Starvation sanctions enable the US to inflict maximum suffering whilst also avoiding the negative publicity associated with more overtly aggressive actions, like a bombing campaign: And check out SOTT radio's: Behind the Headlines: Confessions of an Economic Hitman: Interview with John Perkins


Microscope 2

Ex-CDC chief Robert Redfield explains belief COVID came from China lab

Former CDC Director Robert Redfield
© REUTERSFormer CDC Director Robert Redfield argued COVID-19’s human-to-human spread contradicted the behavior of other coronaviruses.
Former CDC Director Robert Redfield defended the theory that COVID-19 escaped from a Chinese lab, arguing the deadly bug's efficient human-to-human spread contradicted the behavior of other deadly coronaviruses with similar profiles — and was simply not "biologically plausible."

"I said before that I didn't think it was biologically plausible that COVID-19 went from a bat to some unknown animal into man and now had become one of the most infectious viruses," Redfield said during an interview with Fox News.

"That's not consistent with how other coronaviruses have come into the human species. And, it does suggest that there's an alternative hypothesis that it went from a bat virus, got into a laboratory, where in the laboratory, it was taught, educated, it evolved, so that it became a virus that could efficiently transmit human to human," he added.

Comment: See also:


Syringe

Moscow city orders compulsory COVID-19 shots for 2 million workers

vaccination centre in central Moscow, Russia January 18, 2021
© REUTERS/Shamil Zhumatov/File PhotoA man walks past a sign outside a vaccination centre in the State Department Store, GUM, amid the outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), in central Moscow, Russia January 18, 2021
Moscow city authorities ordered all workers with public facing roles to be vaccinated against COVID-19, one of the most forceful steps taken anywhere in the world to compel employees to get shots.

A decree on Wednesday listed a range of jobs - from hairdressers, retailers and taxi drivers to bank tellers, teachers and performers - for which vaccination will now be obligatory. Deputy Mayor Anastasia Rakova said the list covers more than 2 million workers in the Russian capital.

Companies were given a month to ensure at least 60% of staff had received first doses, or face fines or temporary closure.

At least one provincial region, the Kuzbass in Siberia, issued a similar order, which said "certain categories of citizens" would be required to get shots, and state agencies as well as businesses must vaccinate 60% of staff by mid-July.

Comment: It's likely that there are centers of power behind the curtain that are much more powerful than any nation state in the world, including Russia and Putin as its leader, that are directing the whole "show".

Is this a sign of things to come? Will other countries follow suit and make the vaccine mandatory? Or, will the Western media use this government decision in Russia as another reason to accuse Putin of being a dictator?

See also:


Chalkboard

Perspex screens should be scrapped over fears they increase Covid transmission, restrict airflow, UK government told

perspex screen school covid
Ministers have reportedly been advised to scrap perspex screens in pubs, restaurants and offices over fears they may actually increase Covid transmission.

Whitehall has drawn up "clear guidance" urging the Government to ditch the screens after it emerged they could potentially block airflow in public venues, according to documents leaked to Politico.


Comment: And what about masks? Does it really take a government study well over a year to conclude that perspex screens and masks restrict airflow?


Perspex screens have been in place at counters, and between desks and tables in venues since summer last year.

Comment: The 'difficulty' described with the slow down of the vaccine roll out is likely the same issue seen elsewhere in the world; those who were willing to suffer being part of the vaccine experiment have already done so and now the government is having to work on coercing those who have thus far declined the governments offer.

As one example, the UK government are now making the vaccine compulsory for those working in the care homes. Just one of the unintended, albeit predictable, consequences of this will be that the poorly paid and often understaffed care homes will likely suffer a reduction in experienced care staff.

Notably, it's the most vulnerable, whom the government claims to be wanting to protect the most, who have suffered some of the worst treatment, as a direct result of government policy, throughout this manufactured crisis: