Society's ChildS


Sheriff

Arizona: 1 officer killed, 1 hurt by suspect in stolen car

Christian Farrar
© APArizona Police Officer Christian Farrar was killed by a suspect in a stolen car on April 29, 2021.
A felon in a stolen car struck and killed one police officer and critically injured another during a wild chase that temporarily shut down a municipal airport in one Phoenix suburb before ending at a car dealership in another, authorities said Friday.

The chase late Thursday night resulted in the death of Chandler Police Officer Christopher Farrar and left Gilbert police Officer Rico Aranda hospitalized in critical condition with a severe head injury, their departments said.

"Chris was struck and killed by a violent felon in a stolen vehicle following a multi-agency shooting and pursuit," Chandler Police Chief Sean Duggan said Friday.

Info

Feds plan to indict Chauvin, other ex-cops on civil rights charges: report

Derek Chauvin, J. Alexander Kueng, Thomas Lane, Tou Thao mug shot
© Hennepin County Sheriff's Office via APThe Department of Justice plans to indict Derek Chauvin, J. Alexander Kueng, Thomas Lane and Tou Thao on civil rights charges.
The Justice Department officials plan to ask a grand jury to indict Derek Chauvin and the three other former officers involved in George Floyd's death on charges of civil rights violations.

The news comes along with word the feds planned to arrest Chauvin at the courthouse if he was found not guilty on all charges at his state trial last week, The Star Tribune reported.

There was no need for the courthouse theatrics, reportedly aimed at quelling violent protests, as Chauvin was convicted of all three murder and manslaughter counts, and faces 40 years in prison for the deadly arrest.

Comment: See also:


Extinguisher

Australia: Federal Education Minister 'concerned' about colonisation emphasis in proposed curriculum changes

alan tudge
© Alex EllinghausenFederal Education Minister Alan Tudge says he is concerned about some of the proposed changes to the national curriculum.
Federal Education Minister Alan Tudge says he's concerned by the level of emphasis given to teaching First Nations perspectives in the draft national curriculum, while the proposed changes have also been criticised by some Christian groups.

As the revised curriculum fired up debate over the teaching of nation's foundations, Mr Tudge said he would be "looking for some changes" before he'd be prepared to give it his approval.

"I think it is a good development that the draft national curriculum includes more emphasis on Indigenous history. I think we should honour our Indigenous history and teach that well," Mr Tudge said on Sky News on Friday.

Comment: See also:


Megaphone

Making children wear masks is abuse - Tucker Carlson of Fox News

tucker carlson
© REUTERS/Lucas JacksonCarlson said said seeing a vaccinated person wear a mask outdoors was like 'watching a grown man expose himself in public'.
Joe Biden is expected on Tuesday to announce a loosening of federal guidance on mask-wearing outdoors, as the coronavirus pandemic recedes.

Dr Scott Gottlieb, a former Food and Drug Administration chief, wrote recently that though "wearing masks and restricting large gatherings were essential to controlling the pandemic's worst peaks ... infection levels are dropping and vaccination rates rising.


Comment: Vaccination uptake has been low from the US to Russia, so it's unlikely any drop is infection is due to vaccines, it's more likely to be due to the majority of countries nearing herd immunity.


"This is the time to revisit rules on masking and distancing in low-risk outdoor settings like parks and sports venues. Easing these rules would move more activity outdoors, which reduces viral transmission."

Comment: This article which is from The Guardian evidently disagrees with Carlson and instead supports enforced mask wearing for children; masks that are proven to restrict breathing and encourage disease causing environments; and on children that are at vanishingly low risk from the coronavirus: UK schoolgirl sues school trust over forced mask-wearing


Mr. Potato

SNL offers cast members a 'safe space' if they're too triggered to perform with Elon Musk

elon musk SNL
A source revealed to the New York Post that SNL boss Lorne Michaels has a policy where he won't force performers to "do anything they don't want to do." So, Bowen Yang, Aidy Bryant and other cast members who are triggered by Elon Musk's hosting stint will not have to appear with him if they don't want to.


Comment: So the objection some cast members have to appearing onstage with Musk is that he's rich? Is that really what we're talking about here? Self-made billionaires are objects of scorn that should be shunned and shamed? Some people's brains are, at best, merely borderline functional at this point.

See also:


NPC

Professor berates student for calling police 'heroes'

Defund the Police
© Stanton Sharpe/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images
A professor at Cypress College in Southern California berated a student during a Zoom class for calling the police "heroes."

During a communications class, Braden Ellis gave a presentation about "cancel culture" and why it is "so destructive and tearing our country apart."

Ellis told The Daily Wire that during his speech, he mentioned how activists attempted to "cancel" the children's show "Paw Patrol" in light of the anti-police sentiment stemming from the Black Lives Matter movement. Following the death of George Floyd at the hands of police, professors, activists, and journalists alike took to social media to decry why "Paw Patrol" was bad for reinforcing the idea that police are helpful.

Ellis claims that his professor allotted a 10-minute question and answer session for students to respond to the presentation. The professor took the designated time to scold Ellis for his views.

Watch:

Comment: See also: America has a problem with poorly trained police officers, not 'systemic racism'


Quenelle

UK schoolgirl sues school trust over forced mask-wearing

school mask
© GettyThe girl claims the wearing of masks could cause "long-term" health problems for children
A girl is taking legal action against her school for "requiring or encouraging" pupils to wear face masks.

She is suing the Tapton Academy School Trust, which runs schools in the Sheffield area, claiming mask-wearing "risks causing children serious harm".

The 12-year-old, who is exempt from wearing a mask at school, says pupils' physical and mental health are at risk.

The trust said it was following government guidance to avoid spreading Covid-19 among students and staff.

Comment: Masks are ineffective and, by restricting oxygen intake and fostering an unhygienic environment, they're harmful to health, moreover, they're unnecessary because children are at next to zero risk from the coronavirus. And so, with that in mind, why are schools forcing children to wear masks?


Attention

44 killed during stampede at religious festival in Israel, one of worst civilian disasters in country's history

israel stampede
© BBC'In one moment, we went from a happy event to an immense tragedy,' said a rescue service spokesperson
The stampede in which at least 44 people have died at a Jewish religious festival in Israel, is one of the worst civilian disasters in the country's history.

Around 150 other people were also injured in the crush during this year's Lag B'Omer commemorations, which took place on Friday evening - a month after Passover - near the town of Meron in northern Israel.

A crowd thought to be 100,000-strong had gathered for the ultra-Orthodox religious festival at the tomb of the 2nd-century mystic Rabbi Shim Bar Yochai, soon after coronavirus restrictions had lifted.


Comment: Disorder has been known to follow lockdowns, however reports show that Israel's orthodox community have been less concerned about following restrictions.


Bizarro Earth

Anger as Hong Kong orders compulsory Covid tests for city's 370,000 domestic workers after ONE tests positive

hong kong covid
© GovHK.Law enforcement personnel distribute leaflets on coronavirus to domestic workers.
Domestic worker activists have slammed as "stigmatising" a government order that all of Hong Kong's 370,000-odd foreign domestic workers undergo compulsory coronavirus tests by next Sunday after a single worker was diagnosed with two mutant strains.

The controversial move by officials came on Friday after a 39-year-old foreign domestic worker was confirmed to be carrying the coronavirus N501Y and E484K strains on Thursday.

The patient did not have any recent travel history, meaning the mutant strain was transmitted locally. The origin of the infection is still unclear.

Pistol

One year after George Floyd, Minneapolis is 'Murderapolis' again

crime scene
© MTCrime scene Minneapolis, Minnesota
It would be foolish to deny that there's a specific significance when citizens are unjustly killed by the police, as a jury in Minneapolis determined last week happened to George Floyd. Armed agents of the state funded by taxpayer money have special obligations, and that includes avoiding the unjust killing of citizens. When the killing is captured on video, an intense emotional reaction is doubly understandable.

But with the gigantic outpouring of global attention that the Floyd case received — and with virtually every major elite US institution united in both their condemnation of the death-inducing act, and their claimed resolve to continue doing unspecified reparative "work" — it would be foolish to not also notice the comparatively miniscule attention that other instances of unjust killings receive. If one unjust killing (Floyd) generates sustained, historic, society-altering attention, and hundreds or thousands of others generate virtually no attention, the reasons for that disproportionality have to reflect something about a society's cultural and political priorities.

This is especially true in Minneapolis, where the tumult of the Floyd episode and its fallout has now lasted for nearly a full year. Because it simply cannot be disputed that the prevalence of unjust killing and violence in the Twin Cities area has vastly increased since last summer's protests and riots. Minneapolis recorded its second-most homicides ever in 2020 — after only 1995, when the city was ignobly dubbed "Murderapolis" in national media. And the trend has continued to escalate in 2021: between January 1 and April 25, the number of homicides increased by 92% compared to the same period in 2020. More than 80% of the shooting victims in 2020 were black.