Society's ChildS

Dollars

Foreign aid: Migrants' remittances to Mexico & Central America jumped to $53 billion in 2018

migrants remittances central america
The remittances provide a huge stimulus to the countries that export their populations to the U.S. labor market. But that stimulus also imposes huge economic costs, including civic turmoil, poverty, high rates of crime, and loss of foreign investment.
Legal and illegal migrants sent $53.4 billion in remittances back to Mexico and Central America in 2018, or more than double the cost of building a border barrier on the U.S.-Mexico border, according to a World Bank report.

Remittances to Mexico reached $33.7 billion in 2018, up 21 percent from roughly $27.8 billion in 2016, the bank reported.

Remittances from the three Central Americans countries are being spiked by the growing inflow of asylum-seeking migrants into blue-collar jobs throughout the U.S. economy, via the border's catch-and-release laws. The outflow to Central America rose to $19.7 billion in 2018, up from $15.8 billion in 2016, according to the bank.

The outflow to Central America rose 25 percent in just two years.

GOP legislators have urged Congress to pay for the $22 billion border wall by taxing migrants' remittances.

The money sent back from the United States to Central America includes many migrants' payments to the cartels who traffic them into the U.S. economy. The trafficking debts can start at $5,000 per head.

Comment:


Eye 1

21 bodies found on US-Mexico border after a drug-gang shootout, Trump was to visit nearby town

US-Mexico border
© AFP Photo/Julio Cesar AGUILARTamaulipas has become one of the most violent states in Mexico as rival drug cartels fight each other for its strategic position on the US border.
Mexican authorities said Thursday they had found 21 bodies on the US-Mexican border after a drug-gang shootout in a town near where President Donald Trump was due to visit later in the day.

The bodies -- some of them badly burned -- were found Wednesday in the border town of Miguel Aleman, about 170 miles (270 kilometers) from McAllen, Texas, the city Trump was due to visit as he continues his push to build his long-sought border wall.

"We have reports there was a shootout yesterday (Wednesday) between two criminal groups that ended with 21 people dead," the security spokesman for the state of Tamaulipas, Luis Alberto Rodriguez, told Mexican TV news channel Milenio.

"Some of them were burned. Seven vehicles were also located... It was a confrontation between two rival groups that are involved in a turf war over drug-trafficking routes."

Cult

Religion as weapon: Member of new 'Ukrainian Church' does not know the Lord's Prayer

orthocox priest man and crowd
Ukrainian Church continues to show no indication that it is a Church seeking salvation from the Lord; rather, it is a nationalist spectacle.

On January 6th, 2019 a large crowd was gathered, presumably near a site of the newly established "Ukrainian Orthodox Church", a hodgepodge assembly of Ukrainian hyper-nationalists, neo-Nazis and probably a lot of Orthodox Christians who do not understand, or wish to understand what is being done against their faith. The crowd, represented by at least two priests, accosted a young man who was evidently part of this new glorious community and asked him one or two simple questions: "Do you know the Lord's Prayer?", "Do you know the Creed?"

The young man did not know.

Document

Dark Overlord hackers release second cache of 9/11 docs

NYC 9/11
© Forbes/Mideast Saudi/US Associated Press
The Dark Overlord hacker group has released decryption keys for a second batch of 9/11 documents, totaling over 7,500 files. Additional document leaks containing "more secrets" and "more truth" have been promised, for a price.

The first batch of the supposed 18,000 documents was made available by the hackers at the weekend, along with a decryption key for 'layer 1' of the dump. The documents are believed to have been stolen from insurance companies, law firms and government agencies, and the hackers originally demanded an unspecified bitcoin ransom to keep them unreleased.

After apparently failing to secure the ransom, the group then took bitcoin donations from the public, releasing 'layer 1' after collecting $12,000 - but then also releasing 'layer 2' on Wednesday despite not meeting its funding target.

So far, no 'smoking gun' has emerged detailing conspiracy or government involvement in the terrorist attacks. Instead, the documents build up a picture of insurance litigators brainstorming to see who they could sue for damages in the wake of the attacks. In emails, the lawyers discuss targeting the airlines, airplane manufacturers, the Federal Aviation Authority, the terrorists themselves, and foreign entities.


Comment: See also:
Hacker group threatens to leak secret documents on 9/11 'truth' unless paid in bitcoin - Update: 650 docs released


Document

US Coast Guard removes tip sheet about supplemental income for employees affected by shutdown

US Coast Guard
The U.S. Coast Guard says it has removed a tip sheet that directed employees to hold garage sales and start babysitting to survive the partial government shutdown that has left thousands of members without pay.

The five-page tip sheet titled "managing your finances during a furlough" was first reported by the Washington Post and includes other suggestions for Coast Guard employees, including tutoring, turning "your hobby into income" and becoming a mystery shopper at grocery stores to supplement income.

The sheet was part of the Coast Guard's support program, which offers assistance to employees needing help with counseling, legal services and mental health. It was taken down Wednesday evening.

Comment: The Coast Guard obviously made a huge mistake offering basic income strategies in the Age of Selected Offence. They would have been better off throwing a tantrum about the wall and calling Trump a literal Nazi.


Heart - Black

Alberta cop repeatedly runs over an injured deer with his squad car

deer on road
A woman recorded a disturbing video with her cell phone last week as a police officer repeatedly ran over a suffering deer with his car as if to torture the poor animal.

Erica Pritchard took the video on January 5th as she was driving her father along a scenic route. She witnessed a vehicle slam into the back of a young deer which apparently broke its back legs.

According to Pritchard, no one was hurt in the crash except for the deer. However, when the Lethbridge officer arrived on the scene, Pritchard says she was disgusted at what happened next.

The officer then proceeded to run back and forth over the deer multiple times.

"I figured that that's not what you're supposed to do," said Pritchard, who then started to film the disgusting act. "Hearing the deer screaming every time he ran over it was shocking."

Attention

Antifa twitter account doxxes Daily Caller staff amid Ocasio-Cortez fake nude scandal

tucker carlson and ocasio-cortez
Tucker Carlson (L) Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez(R)
An Antifa Twitter account has posted the home addresses, phone numbers, and social media accounts of what appears to be the entire staff at the Daily Caller.

The collection of personal information belonging to those at the Caller was posted hours after Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez tweeted that Republicans have been circulating a fake nude photo of her, which she said was subsequently published by the Daily Caller.

The website had published a story about how people on the internet were claiming a not-so-scandalous photo of legs in a bathtub was of the New York Rep., but later corrected the article to clarify that it was not her.

Target

Yellow Vests take aim at the power behind the throne - plans being laid for a bank run

French bank
In what may be the most audacious and appropriate act done yet by the Gilets Jaunes, the participants of this movement appear to be planning a run on banks in France. It is the bankers who have stood to benefit from supporting Macron's rise in power -and through the boy-king's tried and true brand of society-crushing neo-liberalism and austerity measures.


Heart

Russian NHL ace Malkin donates $60K to victims of Magnitogorsk tragedy

Evgeni Malkin
© Global Look press / imago sportfotodienstEvgeni Malkin
Pittsburgh Penguins star Evgeni Malkin has donated $60,000 to help victims of the apartment block explosion in his hometown of Magnitogorsk, which claimed the lives of 39 people and left dozens without a home.

The tragedy occurred on New Year's Eve, when a suspected gas leak led to an explosion which caused an entire block of the high-rise building to collapse.

Comment: 4 killed, 35 missing after gas explosion rips through residential building in Russia - UPDATE


Windsock

Yellow Vest protester seen pounding riot cop turns out to be ex-champion boxer of France (UPDATES)

Christophe Dettinger
© RuptlyFormer boxer Christophe Dettinger clashes with a riot cop on Saturday.
A Frenchman who was captured pummeling a riot police officer during Yellow Vest protests in Paris has been revealed to be a former professional boxer.

Former light heavyweight champion of France, Christophe Dettinger, was filmed repeatedly punching the officer, who was wielding a baton and a shield, as the protest turned violent on on a bridge in central Paris on Saturday. Video footage of the incident went viral over the weekend, leading to the boxer's identification by police.


Comment: The Yellow Vest protests are seeing no signs of letting up. The majority of the French want Macron OUT, and a reasonable standard of living.

Update

Former champion Christophe Dettinger has since come out and urged the Yellow Vests to 'continue the fight peacefully'. RT reports:
The former champion, who has since been detained by police, describes himself as a "normal citizen" who has watched French politicians "gorging themselves" on the backs of average people. "I am French, I am proud to be French, I am not extreme left, I'm not extreme right, I'm a citizen. I love my country, I love my homeland," he says.

"Yes, I reacted badly, but I defended myself," the boxer explains, before becoming visibly upset and calling on French citizens to continue their anti-government protests. "French people, Yellow Vests, I am wholeheartedly with you, we must continue the fight peacefully, please," he says.
Here is his statement on Facebook:


Update 01/10/19

The French authorities are now looking to make an example out of Dettinger as he has been denied bail and will remain detained pending his trial on February 13:
"They leave him in prison! Dictatorship! You will see Saturday!" supporters of Yellow Vest ex-boxer Christopher Dettinger cried out in the courtroom as the decision of his detention was announced. The hearing took place late on Wednesday in the 23rd chamber of the Criminal Court of Paris.

Originally scheduled for immediate judgement on charges of "intentional violence against a person endowed with state power," the court granted Dettinger's request to postpone the trial in order to provide him time to prepare a defense.

However, they also decided that he would remain in jail in the meantime instead of being released under judicial supervision as he and his lawyers had hoped, provoking anger and cries of outrage in the tense courtroom. The court also refused his team's request for additional information or judicial investigation.


Dettinger himself declared that he was "not proud" of his actions, but had reacted to being teargassed and seeing a heavily-armored gendarme striking a young woman.

"I got gassed, I could not find my wife, I saw gendarmes bludgeoning people, a lady who was on the ground, I did not have control," he said as his eyes started to brim with tears, adding that he nonetheless "should not have hit" the officer, and that he is responsible for raising three children.

The lady in question, who was present in the courtroom, told RTL the ex-boxer had "saved her life" from a police officer who was attacking her before having to deal with someone his own size.

In a video posted on social media before his arrest, Dettinger made a similar argument explaining his actions, claiming that his anger had mounted after seeing "pensioners getting gassed." The former lightweight described himself as a "normal citizen" sick of watching French politicians "gorging themselves" at the expense of the people, and encouraged a peaceful fight moving forward.

Dettinger's lawyer stressed that he wore no protective gear to the protest and had "not come to fight,"and his sister told the court he "did not want any notoriety," yet the fight is as undeniable as his status as a symbol for the movement. Before being shut down, a fundraising website had accumulated $130,000 toward his court-costs, with hundreds of donors praising him for having the "courage" of a "champion" and calling him "our national boxer."
See also: