Society's ChildS

Gear

Hong Kong's color revolution continues for 12th week as brick-throwing protestors face off with police

hong kong color revolution Aug 2019
© REUTERS/Kai PfaffenbachDemonstrators stand behind barricades, surrounded by tear gas, during a protest in Tsuen Wan, in Hong Kong, China, August 25, 2019.
Hong Kong has been rocked by more unrest after anti-China protesters faced off with riot cops. Photos and videos of the street skirmishes show police using tear gas in an attempt to disperse brick-throwing demonstrators.

Heavy rain didn't stop protesters from marching through the city on Sunday, a day after a similar rally turned violent and led to more than two dozen arrests.

Restrictions were reportedly placed on public transport to stop activists from assembling, but thousands of protesters still managed to rendezvous at a sports stadium and march through the city's Tsuen Wan district.

Comment: More on the Hong Kong 'protests' (color revolution):


2 + 2 = 4

Failing grades: America's factory-style government-monopoly schools

Grosse Pointe South High School
© umdetGrosse Pointe South High School
As a semi-retired business writer who taught in Detroit 35 years ago, I returned to the classroom because a local high school was unable to replace a Latin teacher who had resigned. I hold an advanced degree in medieval studies and renewed my certification to teach Latin, history, and social studies. Once in class, I witnessed firsthand the politicized atmosphere of today's factory-style government-monopoly schools.

My first exposure to school politics came when I renewed my certification. The 1982 certificate listed only the courses I could teach. In contrast, the 2018 version had a 300-word "Code of Ethics" that amounted to a profession of faith in collectivism, egalitarianism, state schools, and diversity (typically limited to superficial things like skin color and sex, not ideas). Nonetheless, I proceeded, thinking I couldn't possibly make matters worse. That much was correct.

Grosse Pointe South High School is architecturally interesting, sits in a higher-income community, and is considered a good school by locals.

After an interview and teaching a few "test" classes to first- and second-year students, I was hired. Within a few days, however, it was clear that many students did not understand English grammar, much less Latin fundamentals. In response, I taught remedial grammar and outlined how students could pass my course with a "C" or "D." There were some excellent students, but test scores were not distributed in a bell-shaped curve. It was an "inverted" bell, or bimodal distribution โ€” with scores clumped at the two extremes.

Poor preparation was only the tip of the iceberg. Students did not bring books to class, relentlessly complained about homework, and expected high grades regardless of proficiency. When I asked questions, I uncovered some alarming facts:

Comment: None of the above is surprising as American schools have long been a front for indoctrinating the plebes. See:


Rocket

Female NASA astronaut accused of committing 'first crime in outer space' after estranged wife alleges fraud

Anne McClain
© Sergei Savostyanov/TASSAnne McClain
Decorated NASA astronaut Anne McClain is accused of stealing her estranged wife's identity and improperly accessing her bank account while McClain was on a six-month mission aboard the International Space Station โ€” likely the first crime ever committed in space.

The wife, Summer Worden, a former Air Force intelligence officer who lives in Kansas, and McClain have been locked in an ugly divorce since 2018 that includes a nasty parenting dispute over Worden's 6-year-old son, whom McClain was helping to raise before their split, the New York Times reported. Worden never consented to McClain adopting the boy, who was a year old when they met in 2014.

McClain was supposed to be part of NASA's first all-female spacewalk in March before it was canceled for a lack of properly fitting spacesuits.

Propaganda

Wikipedia has ICE facilities listed under 'concentration and internment camps' section

wikipedia ICE facilities

Likely will not be edited or removed any time soon


Wikipedia, the online Encyclopedia, which has been routinely accused of left wing bias, has a list of ICE facilities under a section titled "concentration and internment camps," and is keeping it there despite critics requesting it be removed.

The list of ICE facilities reappeared on the concentration camps page after Democrats, including Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, used the rhetoric to describe US holding centers on the border with Mexico.

Comment: See also:


Magnify

Hong Kong protesters copying colour revolutions, but some struggle to explain why they're there

Hong Kong
© Reuters / Ann Wang
Demonstrators in Hong Kong formed a human chain throughout the city, all of a sudden inspired by long-forgotten protests from 3 decades ago. Many however seemed lost about the state of the current standoff with their government.

RT America's Sara Montes de Oca asked the protesters why they are not satisfied with the government's response to their demands, which appear vague at best.

"The bill was not withdrawn, there was no independent investigation, I don't recall the rest of the three like precisely, but I am sure none of them were answered in a constructive way," one protester said.

Rallies in Hong Kong started at the end of March, over a proposed bill on extradition to the Chinese mainland that the government has since declared "dead." But the protesters want it officially withdrawn, and have added more demands: resignation of Hong Kong's Chief Executive Carrie Lam, for media to stop calling the protests "riots," pardons for all protesters, and an independent inquiry into police response.

Comment: See also:


Dollars

Top UK bankster argues for new 'synthetic hegemonic currency' to replace sinking dollar

Buck&Bit
© Reuters/Dado RuvicForm and Function
Bank of England head Mark Carney has urged his fellow central bankers to embrace tech like Facebook's Libra to build a multipolar system, warning against "swapping one currency hegemon for another" - unless it's their hegemon.

Acknowledging that the US dollar's days as the world reserve currency are numbered, he gushed that "technology has the potential to disrupt the network externalities that prevent the incumbent global reserve currency from being displaced" - and to ensure that Western central banks are properly positioned to take the helm in whatever system replaces it.

Carney declared that a Libra-like currency - with a few tweaks to silence critics - can bring about a new "multipolar international monetary financial system" (IMFS) during a speech at the Fed-sponsored Jackson Hole Economic Policy Symposium on Friday.

Comment: See also:


Handcuffs

DOJ: 2018 Federal arrests - 64% were non-citizens

ICE arrest
© Fox NewsICE arrest
Federal arrests of non-citizens has increased exponentially over the past two decades, and account for the majority of all federal arrests, data released by the Justice Department revealed.

Non-citizens made up 64% of all federal arrests in 2018 despite making up 7% of the U.S. population, according to Justice Department data released Thursday and reviewed by the Daily Caller News Foundation. Between 1998 and 2018, federal arrests of non-citizens grew by 234%, while federal arrests of U.S. citizens climbed 10%.

While the numbers provide credence to President Donald Trump's argument that illegal immigration results in increased crime, immigration experts also pointed out that migrant apprehensions make up a significant portion of current federal arrests.

Clipboard

New plan cuts more than $1B off New York rail tunnel cost

Tunnel
© Victor J. Blue/The New York Times via AP, PoolThis Oct. 17, 2018 file photo shows damage to the Hudson River rail tunnel in New York. On Friday, Aug. 23, 2019, New York and New Jersey submitted a plan that cuts nearly $1.5 billion off the cost of a new rail tunnel project under the Hudson River. Repairing the existing century-old tunnel that was damaged in 2012's Superstorm Sandy would cost about $1.8 billion, or about $200 million more than previous estimates.
New York and New Jersey submitted a new plan for a rail tunnel project under the Hudson River that cuts nearly $1.5 billion off the previous cost estimate, as officials seek to break a funding impasse with the federal government that has stalled progress in recent years.

The plan announced Friday envisions design and construction savings that would reduce the new tunnel's estimated cost from just over $11 billion to $9.5 billion. Repairing the existing century-old tunnel that was damaged in 2012's Superstorm Sandy, and is a source of frequent delays due to crumbling infrastructure, would cost about $1.8 billion, or about $200 million more than previous estimates.

The net cost decrease means the states will seek $5.4 billion from a federal grant program instead of $6.8 billion, project officials said in an email Friday.

Handcuffs

Kentucky high school teacher charged with raping 15-year-old student

Kendall Burk
© Grant County Sheriff's OfficeKendall Burk
A high school science teacher in Kentucky was busted for having sex with a 15-year-old boy in her car and at her home over summer break, authorities said.

Kendall Burk, 23, has been removed from Grant County High School in Dry Ridge after being charged Wednesday with four counts of rape and sodomy for the alleged off-campus sexual encounters with a male student, WLWT reported.

The hookups, which began in June, took place on four occasions and happened as recently as July 3. Two of the trysts occurred in Burk's Dry Ridge home, while the other encounters were in her car, investigators told the station.

Grant County High School officials reported Burk to a school resource deputy about a "possible inappropriate relationship" with a student on Wednesday, sheriff officials said in a news release.

A message seeking comment from district officials was not immediately returned Friday, but Burk has been removed from the classroom, according to the district's superintendent.

"While these events, of course, sadden us, our first priority - and that of the law enforcement with whom we work - is and must always be the protection and safety of students," superintendent Matthew Morgan told WLWT. "We express our appreciation to those who worked with us to this end."

Eye 1

HARPA: Trump admin considering use of big tech snooping devices for 'early diagnosis of neuropsychiatric violence'

Big Tech
The Trump administration is considering a proposal that would use Google, Amazon and Apple to collect data on users who exhibit characteristics of mental illness that could lead to violent behavior, The Washington Post reported Thursday.

The proposal is part of an initiative to create a Health Advanced Research Projects Agency (HARPA), which would be located inside the Health and Human Services Department, the report notes, citing sources inside the administration. The new agency would have a separate budget and the president would be responsible for appointing its director.

HARPA would take after Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, or DARPA, which serves as the research arm for the Pentagon. The idea was first crafted in 2017 but has since gotten a renewed push after mass shootings killed 31 people in El Paso, Texas, and Dayton, Ohio, in August.

The Suzanne Wright Foundation approached the president recently and proposed the agency include a project called Stopping Aberrant Fatal Events by Helping Overcome Mental Extremes, or Safe Home, the report notes, citing two people familiar with the matter.

Comment: While addressing the issue of mental illness and gun violence seems logical, this appears to be an attempt to allow the government to further erode what little personal privacy the public has now. This also ignores the fact that in many of the mass shooting events, the perpetrators were previously known by authorities to be dangerous and nothing was done. Considering the fact that many of these shootings bear the signature of false flag domestic terror events, additional government snooping will do nothing to prevent more of the same.