Society's ChildS


Blackbox

Mysterious drones flying nighttime patterns over northeast Colorado leave local law enforcement stumped

eastern plains colorado
© RJ Sangosti, The Denver PostA farmhouse sits abandoned on County Road 24 in Yuma County on May 1, 2017. Law enforcement officials say they are stumped by nocturnal drone flights over Yuma and Phillips counties in northeast Colorado.
Phillips County sheriff says there are at least 17 of the aircraft that fly between 7 and 10 p.m. nightly

A band of large drones appears to be flying nighttime search patterns over northeast Colorado — and local authorities say they don't know who's behind the mysterious aircraft.

The drones, estimated to have six-foot wingspans, have been flying over Phillips and Yuma counties every night for about the last week, Phillips County Sheriff Thomas Elliott said Monday.

The drones stay about 200 feet to 300 feet in the air and fly steadily in squares of about 25 miles, he said. There are at least 17 drones; they emerge each night around 7 p.m. and disappear around 10 p.m., he said.

"They've been doing a grid search, a grid pattern," he said. "They fly one square and then they fly another square."

The sheriff's office can't explain where the drones are coming from or who is flying them. The estimated size and number of drones makes it unlikely that they're being flown by hobbyists, Undersheriff William Myers said.

The Federal Aviation Administration told the sheriff's office that it had no information on the drones, and the U.S. Air Force said the aircraft aren't theirs, Elliott said.

Magic Hat

Millennials are turning to magic & astrology for 'empowerment' because liberal ideology failed them

Harry Potter tour guide Greta Clarke
© REUTERS/Neil HallHarry Potter tour guide Greta Clarke poses for a portrait at her home in London
Increasingly open to astrology, magic and sorcery while happy to virtue signal on behalf of any PC-saturated issue, the entire millenial generation seems wholly unequipped to face the daunting challenges of adulthood.

They may not know how to change a flat tire, cook a simple meal or stop living in their parents' basement, but Millennials - the tech-savvy demographic typically born between the years 1981 to the early 2000s - seem increasingly preoccupied with subjects of a less practical nature ever since graduating from college.

Whether it is symptomatic of Trump Derangement Syndrome, some kind of New Age mysticism or perhaps spending four long years studying impractical liberal arts courses, it's hard to say. But many people are looking to empower themselves with alternative techniques once ridiculed as sheer quackery.

This week, for example, NBC published a lengthy essay that celebrated the rise of interest in astrology "in an insecure world."

Christmas Tree

Best of the Web: Merry Christmas in Syria: Liberated from terror by Russia, oldest Christian country celebrates birth of Jesus

syria christmas
© AFPSyrians gather for the lighting of the Christmas tree in Aleppo's Aziziyah neighbourhood on December 21, 2019.
Flashy firework displays and bright lit Christmas trees popped up all across Syria to celebrate Christmas, a joyous day not only for the Christian minority, but to people of other faiths living in the country.

Christians were among the minority groups persecuted by various Islamist militant forces, which tore Syria into pieces since 2011. The central government has managed to regain control over most of the country, and life there is slowly returning to normality. That includes celebrating Christmas openly and without fear of sectarian violence.


Newspaper

Confidence Building: BJP launches social media campaign to reach out to minorities

Modi CAA media campaign
Hours after Prime {Minister} Narendra Modi gave an in depth clarification on the federal government's stand concerning the Nationwide Register of Residents (NRC) from the Ramlila Maidan, the Bharatiya Janata Celebration (BJP) has launched an enormous public consciousness marketing campaign on the social media and thru its cadres to achieve out to the Muslim neighborhood and dispel their doubts on the difficulty.

The BJP's clarification has been necessitated after a slew of protests broke out throughout the nation, just a few of which additionally witnessed violence. The CAA and NRC have develop into emotive points among the many Muslim neighborhood. Sources acknowledged it is for that reason that the federal government and the BJP have determined to achieve out to the neighborhood to dispel any myths concerning the difficulty. The CAA grants Indian citizenship to non-Muslims who entered the nation from Pakistan, Bangladesh and Afghanistan until December 31, 2014.

Comment: Mean while, a German student who was studying at IIT-Madras was asked to leave the nation for participating in the Anti-CAA protests in violation of his visa terms.
A second source told ThePrint that a "discreet inquiry" was initiated against Lindenthal after they received complaints about him carrying a poster that said, '1933 to 1945; We Have Been There', pointing to Nazi rule in Germany.

The source also said officials from FRRO did visit Lindenthal after they found out about his alleged proximity to a Marxist group, Chinta Bar, which organised the protest at IIT-Madras. The source said the officials asked him about the purpose of his visit, checked his document and asked him why was he at the protest.

The official, however, said they did not ask Lindenthal to "leave the country" and also did not give him anything in writing.

"He was told that he has committed a violation and his visa could be cancelled. He then told us that he had already booked tickets because he was anyway leaving for home for Christmas," the source said.

Speaking to The Indian Express, however, Lindenthal said he was given "oral directions" to leave the country and so he returned to his hostel, booked his tickets and left.



Newspaper

Periodic Exercise: India approves funds for census and population survey

India's national population register exercise
India's federal cabinet approved funds on Tuesday for a census and population survey to be conducted in 2020, amid fears that the database could be used to build a controversial citizens register that has been opposed by hundreds of thousands of people who have taken to the streets.

The government approved 87.54 billion rupees ($1.23 billion) for conducting the census and 39.41 billion rupees for updating the National Population Register (NPR).

The census collects data on population, economy activity, social and cultural aspects, migration and demography, down to the lowest administrative level.

Comment: While talking to media, Indian home minister clarified that no documents needs to be submitted for NPR. He mentioned:
  • People can submit the information in Govt. created App.
  • The information asked in NPR is not useful for NRC and both are based on different constitutional laws. This needs to be done with census as it is done in 2011.
  • it is used for planning of development programs( like education, gas, toilets, housing etc.) that benefit the citizens.
  • This is standard procedure that had been done in many states before and needs update every decade (to accomodate people's life changes -deaths, births, movement from one state to other etc.)
  • Some of the information gathered is needed for the activity of mapping the houses to be started in April 2020. There is no change in the time table and it is as per the plan.
  • CAA mainly impacts states adjacent to Bangladesh( West Bengal and North Eastern states). But, the protests in other states is created by opposition parties for their politics. There is no provision to remove the citizenship in CAA.



Fire

Sweden: The wages of self-loathing is civil war

Sweden civil war
The Danes have put extra resources into controlling the country's links to Sweden because of bombs going off in Denmark due to people coming from Sweden. The people from Sweden are Islamist criminals. The Swedish government reacted to the Danish move by calling the Danes Nazis. Swedish society has changed for the worse, and the Swedish people are aware of what they have lost.

All this is known, but what is interesting is that a former head of the Swedish truck-maker Scania, a Mr. Leif Ostling, has said Sweden is headed for civil war because of the problem of its violent migrants who have no inclination to integrate into Swedish society. As a successful businessman, his views can't be dismissed as being from some sort of antisocial loon living in his mother's basement.

This raises the question: how do you have a civil war in this day and age? Having a civil war is aspirational, but is it achievable?

The population of Sweden is now 10.1 million, of which 8% are of the Islamist persuasion. The first question is, who owns the guns, and how many are there?

This site says civilians in Sweden are estimated to hold 2,296,000 guns, legally and illegally, of which about half are rifles. There is a big hunting tradition in Sweden. As of the year 2011, licenced firearms per 100 head of population was 6.5, and registered guns per 100 people was 18.9. So the average gun-owner has three of them.

Comment: See: Triumph of the right in Sweden is a result of the total failure of liberalism


Eye 1

Smart home tech, police, and your privacy: Year in review 2019

smart tech
If 2019 confirmed anything, it is that we should not trust the microphones and cameras that large corporations sell us to put inside and near our homes. Thanks to the due diligence of reporters, public records requesters, and privacy researchers and activists, consumers have been learning more and more about how these "smart" home technologies can be hacked, exploited, or utilized by the police and other law enforcement agencies.

Because many technologies that record audio and video store their data on a cloud maintained by the company, police can gain access to stored content by presenting a warrant to those companies — bypassing consumers altogether. For instance, in November, police in Florida obtained a warrant for the recordings from an Amazon Echo that may have overheard a crime. This means that whether people think their Alexa is listening or not, their Alexa could be listening. Because Amazon stores and maintains that data, things said in the device's presence can be made accessible to police via a warrant presented to the company.

Law enforcement's access isn't the only concern associated with smart speakers. Researchers recently learned you could hack an Alexa or Google Home by shooting a laser at it.

Star

Syrian army liberates new areas in Idlib province

Syrian arab army
The Syrian army continued operations against the terrorist groups stationed in southeastern Idlib on Monday, and regained control over several new regions. A Syrian military source told the Arabic-language service of Sputnik news agency that three other villages have been freed from the terrorists in the eastern and southeastern parts of the town of Ma'arat al-No'eman in Idlib.
"Seyedi Ali and Ja'afar regions and the two towns of Fa'aloul and Kharbat Ma'arat in eastern Idlib were recaptured by the Syrian army on Monday," the source said.
Meanwhile, reports from southern Idlib said that militants have blocked efforts to open a safe corridor for the evacuation of civilians in southern Idlib in a move to take people hostage and use them as a shield against army attacks as Ma'arat al-No'eman, one of the terrorists' main strongholds in the region, could fall to the government troops fast.

Pistol

Royal prerogative: Saudi court sentences 5 commoners to death for Jamal Khashoggi murder

Khashoggi
© AFP/Ozan KoseMurdered Journalist Jamal Khashoggi
A Saudi Arabian court on Monday sentenced five people to death but placed no blame on the royal family for the murder of Jamal Khashoggi, a Saudi journalist working for The Washington Post when he was killed in Istanbul last year.

The prosecutor's office in Riyadh announced the sentences, saying the five were guilty of "committing and directly participating in the murder." Three other defendants were sentenced to a total of 24 years, the prosecutor's office said.

Khashoggi, a frequent critic of the Saudi ruling family, was living in self-exile in Turkey when he entered the Saudi Consulate in Istanbul on Oct. 2, 2018, in search of paperwork related to his planned marriage. He was never seen again, and his body was never found.

The court rulings drew scorn from Agnes Callamard, a U.N. special rapporteur whose inquiry into the murder resulted in a damning report targeting Saudi Arabia's royal family.

"Bottom line: the hit-men are guilty, sentenced to death. The masterminds not only walk free, they have barely been touched by the investigation and the trial," Callamard tweeted after the sentences were announced. "That is the antithesis of Justice. It is a mockery."


Comment: Khashoggi's fiancee wants answers:




Star of David

Issawiya: East Jerusalem neighborhood on frontline of Israeli occupation

Israeli forces
© Muhammed Qarout Idkaidek/APAIsraeli forces on guard as bulldozer demolishes buildings in Issawiya, 17/12/2019
It's been six months of unrest in Issawiya. Excessive police brutality and indiscriminate daily raids by Israeli forces with no justification have left residents of the East Jerusalem district exhausted - and there is no end in sight.

"What's been happening is very violent police raids, by very violent policemen who lack any values," Ahmad Adam Masri, an Issawiya local described of the campaign that residents say is the most brutal and prolonged in living memory. "What goes on in the alleys of Issawiya is oppression, is suffering, is injustice and we've been tolerating it for six months."

Since June, dozens of heavily armed soldiers from the border and riot police units have entered Issawiya almost every evening, staking out positions around the district under the pretext of security.
Issawiya
© Hazem Bader/AFPPalestinians throw stones during clashes with Israeli police in Jerusalem’s neighborhood of Issawiya on June 28, 2019, a day after a Palestinian was shot and killed by police during a protest in the same neighborhood.