Society's ChildS


Heart - Black

Public reacts with fury after Gingrich encourages Republicans to politicize woman murdered by illegal immigrant

Mollie Tibbetts
© ReutersMollie Tibbetts
The Republican Party could score big in the midterms if Mollie Tibbetts, a woman thought to have been murdered by an illegal immigrant, becomes a "household name," Newt Gingrich has mused, inciting fury on social media.

The longtime GOP sage and former Republican Speaker of the House and presidential candidate contacted Axios to make sure that the outlet was covering the murder of Iowa college student Mollie Tibbetts. A Mexican citizen living in the US under a false name was charged with her killing, and president Donald Trump and other Republicans have seized on the tragedy to push for tougher immigration laws - while framing the Democrats' stance on illegal immigration as dangerous.

"If Mollie Tibbetts is a household name by October, Democrats will be in deep trouble," Gingrich noted. "If we can be blocked by Manafort-Cohen, etc., then GOP could lose [the House] badly."

Quenelle

Syrian Army trolls jihadists in Idlib with latest spy video

Sarmada
© Syrian Arab ArmyStill of Sarmada video
The Syrian Arab Army continued their trolling campaign in the Idlib Governorate, Friday, as their Tiger Forces released another spy video from behind enemy lines.

The official media wing for the Tiger Forces released footage from the jihadist stronghold of Sarmada this week, as one of their spies roamed around the town without being caught by Hay'at Tahrir Al-Sham or the Free Syrian Army (FSA).

Eye 2

Flashback American claiming to be a general for Saudi Arabia accused of war crimes In Yemen

Stephen Toumajan Yemen
© Martin B. Cherry for BuzzFeed News/dvidshub.netStephen Toumajan
"We would call him 'Little Napoleon.'"

Stephen Toumajan spent most of his professional life as an officer in the US Army - but these days the country he serves is not the US but the United Arab Emirates. He is a major general for the Emirati military, according to his own statements and a UAE government website.

He commands the UAE's military helicopter branch at a time when that country's forces are fighting one of the world's deadliest conflicts: the brutal war in Yemen, which has left over a million people with cholera, 8 million people at risk of starvation, and 5,000 children dead or wounded. The UAE and its partners in the war have been accused of atrocities. Toumajan says he is not involved in that war.

To be a UAE general is a step up for Toumajan, who left the US Army as a lieutenant colonel and once had a side gig running a women's bust-enhancement business in Tennessee called Breast Wishes.

More importantly, it represents a marked escalation of the role US private military contractors play in foreign conflicts. While military contractors have become deeply entwined in warfare all over the world, they traditionally have stuck to strict limits: advising, training, and supplying foreign armies - but not actually serving in them. It's the distinction between being a contractor and a mercenary. Toumajan's role blurs that distinction.

Bad Guys

Lunacy: Toronto city councillor says Muslim-only subsidized housing is acceptable

Joe Cressy
© Rene Johnston / Toronto StarCouncillor Joe Cressy
A Toronto city councillor says a provision that allows only Ahmadiyya Muslims access to a city-subsidized apartment building is not unfair.

"We want people to live in a culturally-appropriate setting," said Councillor Joe Cressy, of Ward 20 Trinity-Spadina.

This week, about 11,000 people looking for subsidized housing were removed from the waiting list at Ahmadiyya Abode of Peace, a 14-storey apartment building on Finch Avenue West. About 100 of the 166 residential rental units are designed as rent-geared-to-income.

Chart Pie

Pew polls Russia: 71% don't believe Russia interfered in US election, 81% have confidence on Putin

russia day
© Artyom Geodakyan/TASS via Getty ImagesA celebration for Russia Day on June 12 in Moscow’s Red Square.
pew russia
In the wake of allegations that the Russian government used social media and other tactics to disrupt the 2016 United States presidential election, roughly seven-in-ten Russians believe their government did not try to influence the election. Only 15% say their government did try to meddle, a new Pew Research Center survey shows.

More broadly, Russians are about evenly split over whether their country tries to influence the internal affairs of other countries: 45% say yes, 46% say no. In contrast, an overwhelming majority of Russians (85%) think the U.S. government interferes in the domestic affairs of other countries.

Regarding relations with the West, roughly eight-in-ten Russians think that Western sanctions, initially imposed on account of Russia's annexation of Crimea from Ukraine in 2014, are having an effect on the Russian economy, with 47% saying the sanctions are having a major effect. Tensions with the West are palpable for many Russians: Eight-in-ten consider NATO a threat, with 45% saying the organization is a major threat to their country.

Globally, Russians believe their country is playing an increasingly important role. Nearly three-in-four (72%) think Russia plays a more important role in the world than it did 10 years ago, up from 59% last year. Most, however, also believe Russia does not get the respect it deserves. About six-in-ten say Russia should get more respect internationally than it does, with roughly half as many (32%) saying Russia is as respected as it should be.

Comment: The U.S. miscalculated in the 1990s. Their NATO/EU expansion, 'democracy promotion', and aggression toward the Russian Federation only turned Russians against them, creating a potential enemy instead of an ally. Now Russia is going her own way, and aside from the nuisances of having to deal with the world's dying superpower, Russians seem to be content with that.


Ambulance

Symptom of a national crisis: At least 95 people in New Haven, Connecticut overdose on K2 in two days

K2 overdoses New Haven CT
© Bill Sikes / APA police officer speaks to a man walking in New Haven Green park on 15 August.
When a raised voice breaks out above the downtown din in New Haven Green park, the shouts are often drawing attention to yet another person who has had a bad reaction to the synthetic cannabinoid K2, also known as spice.

The drug users who frequent the 16-acre park in New Haven, Connecticut, which is just steps away from Yale University's gothic campus, describe that reaction as a "fallout", and so far it has happened to 95 people over the course of two days this week.

This mass, rapid-fire overdose event was a sped-up version of what is happening across the US as local and federal governments struggle to reduce the colliding impacts of opioid, methamphetamine, cocaine and other addictions.

Phil Costello, the clinical director for homeless care at Cornell Scott-Hill health center, works often in the Green from his temporary office under a tent. "That batch that came in yesterday, with all the people falling out, has just made this basically a mass casualty incident," Costello said.

He and a team of other nurses and addiction counselors stood by cots, ready with bottled water and the overdose reversal agent narcan, which has proved largely ineffective against synthetic cannabinoids.

Comment: Is Neoliberalism creating an epidemic of mental illness? Wrenching society apart


Attention

France: Counter-terrorism troops open fire on car that tried to ram them, vehicle still on the run

French soldiers of the anti-terror security
© AFPFILE PHOTO French soldiers of the anti-terror security forces Sentinel Operation
Soldiers from Operation Sentinel, deployed in the aftermath of the 2015 Paris terrorist attacks, opened fire on a suspicious car that was trying to hit one of them. The driver is currently on the run and is wanted by police.

The incident took place in a suburb of Lille in northern France on Saturday evening. However, the information did not emerge in the French media until the next day.

According to preliminary data, the driver of the vehicle made maneuvers which were considered dangerous by Operation Sentinel soldiers. The troops fired at least three shots at the vehicle, which attempted to hit one of the soldiers. The driver managed to flee the scene and the vehicle is being searched for by police.

Comment: There has been a wave of car ramming attacks and other concerning events in Europe recently:


Fire

Explosions and huge fire at Zurich central station

Zurich station fire
A huge fire broke out in a commercial building near Zurich main station in the early hours of Saturday morning. By Sunday morning traffic was moving again in some areas, after the disruption of the previous day.

Swiss public television SRF said the Bahnhofbrücke to Central areas had been opened to traffic again in the night. The underpass near the Swiss National Museum up to the Rudolf-Brun-Brücke remain closed as the building is still unstable, SRF said, quoting the Zurich city police.

The first calls about the fire came in at 2.16 AM on Saturday, a spokesman from the Zurich emergency services told the Swiss news agency SDA-ATS. The flames shot several metres high into the sky and could be seen around the city.

Comment: The fire could have been due to the renovation works, but, considering the time of night that it occurred, it could also be arson:


Bullseye

After US cancer ruling precedent Vietnam demands Monsanto compensate Agent Orange victims

Agent Orange
© Stan Honda
Following the unprecedented $289mn verdict against Monsanto in California, Hanoi is seeking justice for victims of exposure to the Agent Orange - the notorious chemical the firm supplied to the US military during the Vietnam War.

After a San Francisco jury proved Monsanto not invincible and ordered the chemical giant to pay $289 million to a school worker who argued he got terminal cancer after using its Roundup herbicide, Vietnam has also demanded compensation from the St. Louis-based company.

"The verdict serves as a legal precedent which refutes previous claims that the herbicides made by Monsanto and other chemical corporations in the US and provided for the US army in the war are harmless," deputy foreign ministry spokesperson Nguyen Phuong Tra said Thursday. "Vietnam has suffered tremendous consequences from the war, especially with regard to the lasting and devastating effects of toxic chemicals, including Agent Orange."

Comment: The legacy of Agent Orange & Monsanto - Have things changed?


Bad Guys

Meddlers caught red-handed: Vietnam jails two Americans for 14 years for plotting to 'overthrow state'

James Nguyen
© Vietnam News Agency/AFP/Getty ImagesJames Nguyen is one of the two Americans sentenced to 14 years' jail in Vietnam.
A court in Vietnam has sentenced two Americans to 14 years in jail for to "attempting to overthrow the state", state media reported.

James Nguyen and Angle Phan were accused of plotting to hijack radio stations to broadcast anti-state messaging and of arranging anti-state protests, as members of the California-based Provisional National Government of Vietnam.

The pair had apparently been brought over from the US to "develop their force and direct other members in the country to conduct anti-state activities."

The previously unknown group had been declared a terrorist organisation by the Vietnamese government in January after 15 of its members were charged with an alleged failed plot to blow up the airport in Ho Chi Minh City.

Comment: Where isn't the US deepstate failing at diplomacy and opting for subversion?