Society's ChildS


Corona

'We don't care about coronavirus': Thousands attend mass prayer in Afghanistan during Ramadan, defying quarantine

Muslims praying Afghanistan
Thousands of defiant Muslims have held public prayers during Ramadan in Afghanistan, ignoring Covid-19 safety measures. Their radical leader previously said that dying from the virus would be a form of martyrdom.

A large crowd of followers of hardline Salafist preacher Mujib Rahman Ansari had gathered for an open-air group prayer near the Gazer Gah Sharif pilgrimage site in Herat, Afghanistan's third-largest city. The worshippers sat in tight rows, close to each other, ignoring social distancing norms and not wearing masks or other protective gear.

"We don't care about the coronavirus. We believe God created the coronavirus. I think it is just a creation of God, just as we are. It was God's will to create such a virus," one of the attendees told Ruptly video agency.

Comment: Despite the fear from those who've bought into the hysteria, these worshipers are likely to fair just fine.


Attention

Half the world's workers face losing their jobs, says International Labor Organization (ILO)

Informal workers are the world's most vulnerable
© Danish Siddiqui/ReutersMigrant labourers wait for work at a market in Delhi, India. Informal workers are the world's most vulnerable, and the outlook for them is not bright
The loss in working hours due to the coronavirus pandemic means 1.6 billion workers may lose their livelihoods.

Nearly half the world's workers are at immediate risk of losing their jobs, the International Labour Organization (ILO) said on Wednesday.

The sobering statement will ring alarm bells in economies around the world, with every nation on the planet likely to be affected by the devastating fallout from the spread of coronavirus.


Comment: Or the choice to over-react to the virus - and destroy what was left of an already collapsing economy in an effort to reset the Central Bank and Wall Street-built house of cards.


Some 1.6 billion workers in the informal economy - almost half of the global labour force, and those at the most vulnerable end of the employment ladder - are in danger of losing their livelihoods, said the ILO, the oldest agency of the United Nations, in its latest report.

"For millions of workers, no income means no food, no security and no future. Millions of businesses around the world are barely breathing," said ILO Director-General Guy Ryder.

Comment: See: Millions more US jobless than reported


Black Magic

Alex Jones threatens to EAT globalists and neighbors to keep children from starving amid Covid-19 pandemic

Alex Jones
© Reuters/Nuri ValibonaAlex Jones speaks to protesters demonstrating against extended stay-at-home orders amid coronavirus disease pandemic in Austin, Texas.
InfoWars founder Alex Jones is trending on social media and making waves with critics, including his ex-wife, thanks to a video rant in which he says he's ready to cannibalize his neighbors to survive the Covid-19 pandemic.

"I'll admit it. I will eat my neighbors. I'm not letting my kids die. I'm just going to be honest," Jones said during a live broadcast of his show this week.

Jones continued to rant about having a "few years" worth of food stored up, but he doubled down on the promise to "eat" his neighbors should it come to that.

"I'm literally looking at my neighbors now, going, 'Am I ready to hang them up and gut them and skin them and chop them up?' And you know what, I'm ready. My daughters aren't starving to death. I'll eat my neighbors," Jones said.

Jones continued by saying "globalists" will be the first up on the menu.


Comment: Joking or not, the man is completely unhinged.

See also: Alex Jones: The Pied Piper of Extremism Who Brands "Truth-Seeking" as Mental Illness


Stock Down

Best-case scenario: German economy may need at least eight years to recover from Covid-19 recession, report says

Volkswagen assembly line
© Reuters / Pool / Swen PfoertnerA worker at the Volkswagen assembly line in Wolfsburg, Germany. April 2020.
The German economy continues to contract, losing €15 billion ($16.6 billion) a week due to the recession caused by Covid-19, a new report has said. It warned that it will take at least eight years for the country to recover.

Germany is expected to lose between five and 10 percent of its GDP by the end of 2020, the German branch of the US-based consulting firm McKinsey & Company wrote in its recent report.

The economy contracted by 25 percent in April compared to the previous year, which amounts to losing roughly €15 billion ($16.6 billion) per week.

The analysts at McKinsey warned that the German economy will return to its pre-pandemic growth level in 2028, if the country enacts structural reforms towards more automation and AI-based industries. "Otherwise, the return to the original growth model will no longer be feasible in this decade," the report said.
Even if the nationwide stoppage of production like in Italy or Spain can be avoided, it is already becoming apparent that the consequences of the pandemic will exceed those of the 2008/2009 financial crisis in certain dimensions.
By McKinsey's estimates, the pandemic-induced crisis has affected up to nine million workers, which is "seven times more that during the peak of the [2008-2009] financial crisis."

Attention

SouthFront's YouTube channel has been terminated without warning or explanation

Youtube ban
On April 30, we reported that Facebook permanently banned SouthFront's public page with about 100,000 followers.

Now, the situation appears to be even worse.

On May 1 (in the evening by CET), YouTube terminated SouthFront's channels with a combined sum of approximately 170,000 subscribers. The main YouTube channel in English had over 152,000 subscribers, 1,900 uploaded videos and about 60,000,000 views.

Bullseye

UK Supreme Court rules against government's attempt to suppress Boycott Divest Sanctions movement

UK supreme court
The British government has suffered a major defeat in its attempt to curb the pro-Palestine Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) campaign in a long running legal battle with the UK's largest organisation campaigning for Palestinian human rights.

The Palestine Solidarity Campaign (PSC) won the landmark case in the Supreme Court today in its challenge to the government regulations which restrict Local Government Pension Schemes (LGPS) from divesting contrary to UK foreign and defence policy. The regulations limited the possibility of divestment from companies involved in or profiting from Israel's human rights violations.

In bringing the legal case, the PSC had raised concerns about threats to freedom of expression, government overreach in local democracy and the right of pension holders to have a say in the investment and divestment of their funds.

The legal battle between the government and the PSC began in 2016 when the Department for Communities and Local Government issued guidance which prohibited LGPS from going ahead with divestment from foreign states and the UK defence industry. This included a prohibition against divestment from companies on the basis that they trade in products produced in the illegally occupied Palestinian territories. Human rights activists and free speech advocates viewed the guidance as an attempt to curb the rise of the BDS movement.

Comment: In the meantime, the BDS movement in the US continues to face an uphill battle...


Bulb

Florida sherrif invites Americans to witness historic space shuttle launch despite NASA's authoritarian lockdown wishes

NASA astronauts
© SpaceXNASA astronauts Bob Behnken and Doug Hurley familiarize themselves with SpaceX’s Crew Dragon, the spacecraft that will transport them to the International Space Station as part of NASA’s Commercial Crew Program.
Brevard County Sheriff Wayne Ivey is encouraging people to come to Brevard County to watch the scheduled May 27 historic launch of a SpaceX rocket with two astronauts aboard.

It would be the first launch of astronauts from U.S. soil since the end of the space shuttle program in 2011. Scheduled for 4:32 p.m., the 230-foot-tall rocket will take astronauts Bob Behnken and Doug Hurley to the International Space Station in a Crew Dragon capsule.

But Ivey's invitation runs contrary to a NASA recommendation for people to watch the launch on television. Administrator Jim Bridenstine reiterated that call on Friday during a pre-launch news conference ahead of the May 27 mission.

"We are asking people to watch from home," either online or on television, Bridenstine said, as a way to guard against the spread of the coronavirus.

Pirates

Rival Saudi, UAE-backed militants clash over Yemen territory

UAE-backed Yemeni separatists
© ReutersUAE-backed southern Yemeni separatists patrol a street during a campaign to seize unlicensed motorcycles in Aden, Yemen, December 10, 2019.
Once-allied rival militants, backed by Saudi Arabia and the UAE, have engaged in intense clashes in Yemen's strategic Socotra Island, exposing a deep rift in a Riyadh-led coalition.

Local sources said infighting between Saudi-sponsored mercenaries loyal to Yemen's former president Abd Rabbuh Mansur Hadi and armed units of the so-called Southern Transitional Council (STC), which is supported by the UAE, over the control of Socotra's provincial capital of Hadibo.

Witnesses also told local media that the UAE-aligned elements had fired artillery shells at residential areas near Hadibo.

Shells struck the mountainous district of Haybat, about 20 kilometers outside Hadibo, said resident Aden al-Ghad.

Yemen's former prime minister Ahmed Obeid bin Daghr tweeted that the UAE-backed militants were trying to take control of Socotra's provincial capital, "using all types of heavy weapons".

People 2

South Dakota throws parade in honor of their governor who refused draconian lockdown measures

Kristi Noem
© MARK WILSON/GETTYKristi Noem, now the Republican governor of South Dakota, speaks at the Conservative Political Action conference (CPAC), on February 10, 2011 in Washington, DC.
Republican South Dakota Governor Kristi Noem had an impromptu parade thrown in her honor on Tuesday in the capitol city of Pierre. A local construction company organized the parade to show appreciation for her handling of the coronavirus epidemic.

Noem, the state's first female governor, was one of a handful of governors not to issue an order shuttering non-essential businesses during the ongoing epidemic.

The parade, organized by John Morris of Morris Inc. construction company, featured "literally hundreds of cars," fire trucks and other vehicles honking their horns and sirens while Noem watched, apparently surprised, from a local park.

Governor Noem shared video of the event on her Twitter account along with the words, "I am so blessed to serve the people of the great State of South Dakota. You folks made my day!"


Padlock

Cause and effect: Is England's lockdown racking up the bodies?

Lockdownsign
© Getty Images
Here (from the official source; h/t Meme Pusher) are the all-cause weekly deaths for England and Wales, 2010 until 17 April 2020.
Chart b
© UnknownEngland & Wales, Weekly All Deaths, 2010-2020
The blips peaking around January are (the assumption goes) the flu season. The jump at the very end is presumably due to coronavirus. The dashed line is the same, but subtracting COVID-19 deaths from the totals. Before we get into this, here is a blow-up of the picture so the end is better seen:
chart 2
© UnknownEngland & Wales: Weekly All Deaths, 2017-2020
First thing to note is there is a bit of a Christmas signal; at least, after 2012. Right around Christmas the all-cause deaths take a regular dip. Before? Nothing. This suggests a reporting and not biological difference. Government workers taking the week off at different rates, or whatever.