Society's ChildS


Bad Guys

Reports that clashes between army, protesters in northern Lebanon injured nearly 80 people

lebanon civil unrest economy army
© REUTERS / Mohamed Azakir
Overnight clashes between protesters and army personnel in the northern Lebanese city of Tripoli have left 76 people injured with 16 requiring hospital visits, state news agency NNA reported Sunday morning.

According to the agency, continuous unrest in Lebanon's second-largest city started when protesters began vandalizing stores and hurling what appeared to be Molotov cocktails at the government building, prompting the army to intervene.

The army had regained full control by Sunday morning but several facilities were destroyed, the agency reported.

Comment: The conventional view is that mismanagement and corruption have been eating away at the Lebanese economy for some time. However, as Israel's neighbor, it's a prime target for destabilization by subtle means. Israel stands to gain in innumerable ways by the disintegration of Lebanon.
Lebanon's Prime Minister Hassan Diab accused the longtime Central Bank governor, Riad Salameh, of orchestrating the local currency's crash, and criticized what he called the governor's "opaque" policies that the premier said covered up major banking sector losses and capital flight.



Handcuffs

Businessman close to Venezuela's Nicolás Maduro arrested in Cape Verde on way to Iran, US seeks extradition

Alex Nain Saab Moran
Maduro and Alex Nain Saab Moran
A Colombian businessman indicted by U.S. authorities as the chief money launder for Nicolas Maduro's regime in Venezuela has been detained in the African island archipelago of Cape Verde.

Alex Saab was detained on June 12 as his San Marino-registered jet made a refueling stop in Cape Verde on its way from Caracas to Iran.

U.S. Justice Department spokeswoman Nicole Navas Oxman said on June 13 that Saab was arrested in Cape Verde on an Interpol red notice.

Maria Dominguez, Saab's U.S.-based attorney, confirmed his arrest.

Clipboard

UK reviewing social-distancing rule ahead of potential easing of lockdown on July 4th

Boris Johnson, covid
© POOL/AFP via Getty Images
Prime Minister Boris Johnson said Britain's two-metre social distancing rule was under review ahead of a potential further easing of lockdown measures on July 4, adding his room for manoeuvre was increasing as the incidence of COVID-19 falls.

"As we get the numbers down, so it becomes one in 1,000, one in 1,600, maybe even fewer, your chances of being two metres, or one metre, or even a foot away from somebody who has the virus is obviously going down statistically, so you start to build some more margin for manoeuvre," he said on Sunday.

"We'll be looking at that and keeping it under constant review as we go forward to the next step in our plan, which is as you know July 4."

Comment: Just remember, the 'killer' virus is completely innocuous when protesting (not the lockdown mind you, but only BLM protests):


Light Sabers

Black Lives Matter protesters who toppled a statue on their own heads have created the perfect culture war metaphor

statue toppled
© AFP / Parker Michels-Boyce
Protesters in Virginia seriously injured one of their own when they pulled down a stone statue onto his head. This unintended tragedy sums up the irresponsible thoughtlessness of their actions.

In summary, an excited crowd mounted a Confederate monument as part of the current wave of statue-felling and pushed a large stone figure onto a man who was standing underneath it, seriously injuring him and reportedly leaving him in a coma. You can see the video below, and it's worth watching before I get into a lengthy torturing of this metaphor as a warning of where we stand and what might come next.

In the opening few seconds of the video, we see the crowd caught up in the fever of what must seem like a revolution. There's music playing in the background, and somehow there seems to be a plentiful supply of sledgehammers. Seriously, who buys them?

Red Pill

Best of the Web: MSM still predicting a Covid APOCALYPSE, but their web of lies is collapsing around them

medical worker
© Reuters / Caitlin Ochs
The mainstream media is still trying to drum up fear and hysteria on the basis of cherry-picked statistics. A glance at the figures is enough to prove them liars. Someone should let them know: no one is listening anymore.

The US has recently surpassed 2 million cases, according to official figures, representing almost one-third of the world's coronavirus infections. Much of the reporting on recent statistics features words like 'spikes', 'surges', and 'hot spots', but patterns in the statistics suggest that some areas have dwindling levels of the virus, while it is only now beginning to spread in others.

What can I say? They're lying. There has been a clear and persistent drop in cases ever since the peak towards the end of April, about six weeks ago. This is just another example of MSM outlets publishing half-truths, cherry-picked statistics, and agenda-driven stories in order to push their narrative. Your best bet for getting good information is alternative outlets like this one and various lone voices on Twitter.

Guinness

When will Irish lives matter, too?

black lives matter flag
© Getty Images / Brian Lawless
UK Black Lives Matter go on as if they've been the only ethnic minority subjected to racism. They should look at the bigger picture - and, in particular, reflect on how the Irish have actually had it harder than them.

I feel those #BLM protesters in the UK should count their lucky stars that some of their deplorable behaviour - such as defacing statues of war heroes and attacking British Bobbies - hasn't been met with extreme force by the police... yet.

They should remember that there was actually a time when British authorities didn't hesitate to shoot dead their own unarmed civilians who were participating in a peaceful protest. Let's not forget Bloody Sunday in 1972, an atrocious act far worse than the deplorable death of George Floyd.

On that fateful day, British paratroopers indiscriminately sprayed bullets into a peaceful crowd - some waving white flags in a desperate effort to stop the massacre - on the streets of Derry. Do you know how many British citizens died that day? Thirteen died immediately - many of them fathers with young children and another with an unborn child on the way - and a further one much later in the hospital. Twenty-six others were injured.

Arrow Up

Polish president says LGBT ideology worse than communism

Duda
© AP Photo/Czarek SokolowskiIn this Feb. 19, 2020 file photo, Poland's President Andrzej Duda campaigns for his re-election in Warsaw, Poland.
Polish President Andrzej Duda accused on Saturday the LGBT movement of advancing ideas that are more harmful than communism and said he agreed with another conservative politician who stated that "LGBT is not people, it's an ideology."

Duda's remarks came from the small southwestern town of Brzeg as he was holding a rally for his presidential re-election.

Gay rights is emerging as a key campaign theme in the presidential election as the race grows close between Duda, backed by the nationalist conservative ruling party Law and Justice, and Warsaw Mayor Rafal Trzaskowski, who has called for tolerance for gay and lesbian people.

Comment: Notably there are a number of similarities between the two ideologies, from the active destruction of the family to the subversion of reality:


Bad Guys

Atlanta police chief steps down after police shooting of Rayshard Brooks at Wendy's drive-thru - UPDATES: New footage emerges, rioters burn down Wendy's

Rayshard Brooks
The Atlanta police chief stepped down Saturday hours after the death of a 27-year-old Black man who was shot by an officer while fleeing during a struggle at a Wendy's drive-thru late Friday night, according to the Georgia Bureau of Investigation.

Rayshard Brooks had been asleep in his car in a Wendy's drive-thru, causing other customers to drive around the car, the Bureau of Investigation said. Police were dispatched to the Wendy's around 10:30 p.m., and conducted a sobriety test on Brooks, who failed the test, according to the officials.

"During the arrest, the male subject resisted and a struggle ensued," the Bureau of Investigation said. "The officer deployed a Taser. Witnesses report that during the struggle the male subject grabbed and was in possession of the Taser. It has also been reported that the male subject was shot by an officer in the struggle over the Taser."

Comment: If only there were a way to examine evidence and law to determine what should be done.

UPDATES: Sunday 14th June @ 12:00 CET
Meanwhile, newly-release surveillance footage of the incident appears to back claims by the Georgia Bureau of Investigation that Brooks grabbed a taser from an officer and aimed it back at police chasing him, at which point he was shot.

"These new videos indicate that during a physical struggle with officers, Brooks obtained one of the officer's Tasers and began to flee from the scene," the GBI said.

"Officers pursued Brooks on foot and during the chase, Brooks turned and pointed the Taser at the officer. The officer fired his weapon, striking Brooks."

The fatal police-involved shooting triggered a new wave of protests in Atlanta, with activists accusing officers of racism and extrajudicial execution of yet another 'unarmed black man' in the wake of ongoing nationwide protests over the death of George Floyd.


Atlanta protesters TORCH Wendy's restaurant where Rayshard Brooks was killed by cops


A massive crowd of protesters shut down I-75/85 at University Avenue, marching towards the parking lot of the fast food restaurant where the Friday shooting took place.


Apparently holding Wendy's partially responsible for the fatal incident, protesters torched the drive-through, which is located "dangerously close" to a gas station.







Another video from a surveillance camera released by authorities showed that while Brooks was indeed shot while attempting to flee - he wasn't unarmed and was aiming a taser he snatched from an officer back at his pursuers.



Blackbox

Who's to blame? These three scientists are at the heart of the Surgisphere COVID-19 scandal

the lancet retracted
© E. Petersen/Science
Three unlikely collaborators are at the heart of the fast-moving COVID-19 research scandal, which led to retractions last week by The Lancet and The New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM), and the withdrawal of an online preprint, after the trove of patient data they all relied on was challenged. The three physician-scientists never were at the same institution nor had they ever before written together, but they are the only authors in common on the disputed papers, and the other co-authors all have ties to at least one of them. Their partnership, which seized a high-impact role during a global public health crisis, has now ended disastrously.

The first author for both retracted papers was cardiac surgeon Mandeep Mehra, an eminent Harvard University professor who works at Brigham and Women's Hospital (BWH) and is known internationally for cardiovascular medicine and heart transplants. He provided the kind of gravitas that can fast-track papers to leading journals. In a statement provided by BWH, Mehra said he had met another of the trio, cardiac surgeon Amit Patel, in "academic and medical circles," and that Patel had introduced him to Sapan Desai, a vascular surgeon and founder of Surgisphere, the tiny company that supplied the data. Journal disclosures, however, also indicate Mehra received compensation from Triple-Gene, a gene therapy company Patel co-founded to develop cardiovascular treatments.

Desai publicly aspired to combine big data and artificial intelligence (AI) in ways that he said can replace randomized controlled clinical trials. For a brief moment, it seemed that Surgisphere's enticing data set, said to include nearly 100,000 detailed patient records from about 700 hospitals on six continents, would settle questions about the possible benefits of various drugs — including the controversial antimalarial hydroxychloroquine — for COVID-19 patients.

Comment: See also: Governments And WHO Changed Covid-19 Policy Based on Suspect Data From Tiny US Company


X

"We mean literally abolish the police": Activists reject spin on movement's call to defund the police

defund police
© AP Photo/Elaine Thompson
The New York Times has run an opinion column by Mariame Kaba denouncing efforts by Democratic leaders and the media to try to spin the call for defunding the police as just a reallocation of funds and a new set of priorities and a new structure for policing. Kaba wrote "Yes, we mean literally abolish the police." That opinion piece follows a warning by Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., that Democrats and others trying to "repackage" the push to "Defund the Police" Notably, while the New York Times apologized for publishing an opinion piece by a ranking U.S. Senator on the use of federal troops to quell rioting, it has now problem with publishing a column calling for the abolishment of police. As discussed earlier, this is a movement that is moving rapidly to the left and repackaging is now considered counter-revolutionary.

Kaba states what people in the streets has been saying (including rallies chanting "no more cops") even as some in the media has mocked those who claimed that "defund the police" could actually mean defunding the police or that "dismantle the police" could actually means dismantling the police. Indeed, recently Minneapolis City Council President Lisa Bender told CNN's Alisyn Camerota that people who are concerned about their personal safety after defunding police are simply speaking "from a place of privilege."

Kaba rejects "liberal reforms" from congressional Democrats and Joe Biden including calls for cracking down on police misconduct or ordering reforms: "Enough. We can't reform the police. The only way to diminish police violence is to reduce contact between the public and the police." She states that police have always been a "force of violence against black people" dating back to slavery. At a minimum, Kaba wants police cut "in half" because "fewer police officers equals fewer opportunities for them to brutalize and kill people." For this reason, Kaba explains "We don't want to just close police departments. We want to make them obsolete."