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How to kill a thriving metropolis in 7 months: NYC's Covid-19 failure is a vicious spiral directed by a sadistic political regime

Phantom of the Opera
© Reuters / Mike SegarA phantom of "Phantom of the Opera": deserted productions line Broadway's theatre row
Seven months into the pandemic, as many US states inch back toward 'normal', New York is in the grips of a crime wave, reinvigorated lockdowns, and widespread fear of pretty much everything. Thank local government.

New York City has lost billions of dollars in tax revenues on tourism, music, art, theatre, restaurant dining, and everything else that once fueled its mammoth economy over the seven-month Covid-19 pandemic shutdown. It's in worse shape than most US states, and unlike many others, its continued misfortunes are largely of its own making.

The shuttering of the city's iconic Broadway theaters alone has sent hundreds of thousands out of work and signaled to both wealthy city inhabitants and out-of-town visitors that their cash is better spent elsewhere. Theaters announced just weeks ago that performances would be cancelled through March 2021, and the Metropolitan Opera House canceled its entire season through 2021.

New York's famed restaurant scene isn't faring any better. The 'lucky' establishments are finally - as of two weeks ago - allowed to operate at 1/4 capacity indoors, which given the amount of money they've lost over the last 6 months is a band-aid on a cannonball wound. The unlucky ones in New York Governor Cuomo's newly-invoked 'red zones' must continue to seat patrons outdoors in the freezing cold as summer gives way to a damp, chilly autumn. To make matters worse, there's no Thanksgiving parade, no Black Friday shopping, no fun allowed.

Comment: Cuomo and de Blasio's malfeasance and incompetence are now legion. How much longer will it take before enough New Yorkers see these crazed political animals for what they are - and throw these two malevolent hacks out of office??

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Bad Guys

New Facebook policy to reject ads warning of vaccine dangers

facebook censorship
Facebook announced a new global ban of advertisements Tuesday that discourage users from getting vaccines, CNBC reported.

The social media platform said in a blog post the ban will exclude "ads that advocate for or against legislation or government policies around vaccines," CNBC reported. But the organizations running the ads still need approval and an appropriate "paid for by" label accompanying the ad.

"Our goal is to help messages about the safety and efficacy of vaccines reach a broad group of people, while prohibiting ads with misinformation that could harm public health efforts," Facebook's head of health, Kang-Xing Jin, and its director of product management, Rob Leathern, wrote in a blog post Tuesday.

Comment: Facebook had already banned content about vaccine awareness some time ago, and now they're banning ads. Of course this isn't limited to Facebook. Amazon, Google, and Youtube have also attempted to control the dissemination of information about the harms of vaccines. This control is effective for certain types of people who have little to no interest in truth or discovery. But there are those who do want the truth, and such control can do nothing against that.


Black Magic

Best of the Web: Project Veritas: "Guillotines, motherf***er": Colorado Democratic Committee member caught on hidden camera talking violent revolution

Khristopher Jacks
Prominent Colorado Democrat Khristopher Jacks, who sits on the executive committee for the state's Democratic party and chairman of leftist organization "Our Revolution" was caught on undercover footage by Project Veritas promoting a violent agenda for far-left Democrats if President Trump wins in November..

"I am going to do everything morally acceptable to win. I will lie. I will cheat. I will steal. Because that's morally acceptable in this political environment. Absolutely. We are pirates on a pirate ship," said Jacks, who functions as trainer, mentor and on-the-ground quarterback at Our Revolution protests.

"I want to make this point very loudly and very clearly. I said it nicely before, but I'll say it more curtly now. 2020 is a political revolution," he added.


Comment: The above gives some good indication of the sickness and behavior that the far left has devolved to in the US. It also gives some good indication of what people can likely expect to happen if and when Trump wins the election - and as a result, the steps he will be forced to take in order to maintain some semblance of 'law and order'. Then corporate media blabber heads and the those who are already predisposed to hating on Trump can say "See! Told you he was a dictator!!".

So prepare for more chaos and destruction in the US. Coming soon.


Pistol

Man who fired first shots behind Kyle Rittenhouse in Kenosha has been charged

kenosha shooting layout rittenhouse
The man who fired the first shots from behind Kyle Rittenhouse during the fatal incident in Kenosha has been charged.

Joshua Ziminski, 35, has been charged with disorderly conduct and use of a dangerous weapon for firing his weapon during the incident on August 25.

According to the charging document, obtained by The Gateway Pundit, while investigating the shooting by Rittenhouse, Kenosha detectives obtained videos in which Ziminski "was holding a black handgun, which he was holding in his left hand, pointing downward. Detective Howard reports that in reviewing multiple other videos, he was able to see the defendant and Kelly Ziminski, in and around multiple other people on the streets, and the defendant was seen holding the handgun down at his side in said videos."

Comment: See also:


Take 2

Netflix CEO says 'Cuties' is misunderstood, but 'speaks for itself'

ted sarandos netflix ceo cuties
© Frazer Harrison/Getty Images/Screenshot, YouTube
Netflix co-CEO Ted Sarandos said in a Monday interview that the hotly-debated new movie "Cuties" is misunderstood.

"It's a little surprising in 2020 America that we're having a discussion about censoring storytelling," Sarandos said Monday, according to Deadline.

"It's a film that is very misunderstood with some audiences, uniquely within the United States," he continued. "The film speaks for itself. It's a very personal coming of age film, it's the director's story and the film has obviously played very well at Sundance without any of this controversy and played in theaters throughout Europe without any of this controversy."

Comment: See also:


Bizarro Earth

Row breaks out over draft German law that uses only feminine titles

home office
© DPAThe draft law exclusively uses terms such as "Arbeitnehmerinnen" (female employees) instead of the masculine "Arbeitnehmer".
Germany's Justice Ministry has sparked a spat over gender and language by drafting a bill that uses only feminine endings, giving some the impression that it applies only to women.

Legal texts in Germany usually use the masculine version of words such as "employee" or "landlord" to cover both men and women.

But campaigners have been arguing for years that using this language excludes women or gives the impression they are less important.

The draft law on insolvency and restructuring exclusively uses terms such as "Arbeitnehmerinnen" (female employees) instead of the masculine "Arbeitnehmer".

"I think it is good that we are now discussing gender-equal language in legal texts and that a ball has been set rolling," Katja Mast of the Social Democrats (SPD), the party of Justice Minister Christine Lambrecht, told the ARD public broadcaster.

Comment: See also: And check out SOTT radio's: MindMatters: Words As Weapons: The Postmodern Political Strategy


No Entry

Facebook, in a reversal, will now ban Holocaust denial content under its hate-speech policy

facebook
Facebook this morning announced a significant change in how it approaches Holocaust denial content on its social network. For years, the company has been criticized for not taking down this extremely offensive form of content in favor of allowing free speech and distancing itself from taking on the responsibilities of a traditional publisher. Today, it's reversing that position, saying it will now update its hate-speech policy to "prohibit any content that denies or distorts the Holocaust."

The company said it made the decision amid a growing number of online hate speech attacks and is a part of Facebook's newer efforts to fight the spread of hate speech across its platform.

"We have banned more than 250 white supremacist organizations and updated our policies to address militia groups and QAnon," explained Facebook in an announcement, authored by Monika Bickert, VP of Content Policy. "We also routinely ban other individuals and organizations globally, and we took down 22.5 million pieces of hate speech from our platform in the second quarter of this year. Following a year of consultation with external experts, we recently banned anti-Semitic stereotypes about the collective power of Jews that often depicts them running the world or its major institutions," the company said.

Comment: See also:


HAL9000

Google is giving data to police based on search keywords, court docs show

google
© Global Look Press / Armin Durgut
There are few things as revealing as a person's search history, and police typically need a warrant on a known suspect to demand that sensitive information. But a recently unsealed court document found that investigators can request such data in reverse order by asking Google to disclose everyone who searched a keyword rather than for information on a known suspect.

In August, police arrested Michael Williams, an associate of singer and accused sex offender R. Kelly, for allegedly setting fire to a witness' car in Florida. Investigators linked Williams to the arson, as well as witness tampering, after sending a search warrant to Google that requested information on "users who had searched the address of the residence close in time to the arson."

The July court filing was unsealed on Tuesday. Detroit News reporter Robert Snell tweeted about the filing after it was unsealed.

Court documents showed that Google provided the IP addresses of people who searched for the arson victim's address, which investigators tied to a phone number belonging to Williams. Police then used the phone number records to pinpoint the location of Williams' device near the arson, according to court documents.

Comment: See also:


Cult

NYC issues over $150,000 in fines during first weekend of new lockdown

Cuomo NYC lockdown
© TheRealDeal
New York City slapped over 62 people, businesses and houses of worship with over $150,000 in fines during the first weekend of newly imposed COVID-19 restrictions against gatherings, as well as a mask mandate and social distancing requirements, according to the city's Twitter account.


Those summoned by the New York City sheriff include at least five houses of worship in the city's so-called "red zones" where COVID-19 infection rates are the highest. The institutions could face up to $15,000 in fines, according to Sheriff Joseph Fucito (via the NYT).

The Sheriff's office also broke up an illegal rave in Cunningham Park in Queens, where over 110 people had gathered to party. Officials cited and charged the event's organizers with health code violations.

Comment: Good. Continue to sue, sue, sue the government of New York the federal court involved - and Cuomo himself - until all the facts about Covid and the unnecessary lockdowns are out on the table.

See also: Does the Coronavirus make our constitutional freedom of assembly obsolete?


Cardboard Box

It is being projected there could be an "eight billion meal shortage" at America's food banks over next 12 months

food bank line
In 2020, we are witnessing an explosion of hunger in the United States that is unlike anything that we have seen since the Great Depression of the 1930s. Tens of millions of Americans have lost their jobs since the start of this pandemic, and money is running low for a whole lot of people. In fact, I just wrote an article about a survey that found that one out of every five Americans will be out of cash by Election Day. More Americans are slipping into poverty with each passing month, and this has created an unprecedented surge of demand at food banks across the nation. Meanwhile, our growing economic problems are also causing donations to dry up, and so many food banks are facing a major crunch as we head into 2021. In fact, Feeding America is warning that their network of food banks is potentially facing an "eight billion meal shortage" over the next 12 months...
Feeding America, the nation's largest food-relief organization, is warning of a six billion to eight billion meal shortage over the next 12 months, which could leave millions of Americans hungry amid the pandemic.

The dire shortage comes as tens of millions of Americans have turned to local food banks for help amid the pandemic-triggered surge in unemployment and food insecurity.

Comment: And as if that weren't bad enough...