Society's ChildS


TV

Almost everything you consume in terms of media, news, movies, books and even Netflix is propaganda meant to keep you enslaved

Enslaved
Propaganda/Disinformation regularly occurs, with fake or doctored footage/pictures being used. You should never instantly believe everything you see/read.

Scepticism and analysis need to be applied, namely:
  • Who is producing the propaganda?
  • What they are saying?
  • Who is the propaganda directed at? Who are the intended audience?
  • Why?
  • With what effect?

Comment: See also:


People

Counter-demonstration: Berlin clubbers oppose AfD march with dance party

March
© Hannibal Hanschke / Reuters
Thousands of supporters of Germany's rising far-right party, the AfD, are marching in Berlin on Sunday. The demonstration is being met with counter-protests by several groups including some from the city's renowned club scene.

Up to 10,000 people are expected to take part in the march entitled 'Future for Germany,' according to its organizers, the Alternative for Germany (AfD) party. The event sees protesters walk from Berlin's main train station to the Brandenburg Gate.

The right-wing populist party, known for its anti-migrant and anti-Muslim stance, became the largest opposition party to Angela Merkel's coalition government after last year's federal elections.

Star of David

WaPo brands academic who criticized Israel's murder of civilians as 'anti-Semite'

Rabbi Jill Jacobs  Rachel Kahn Troster
Rabbi Rachel Kahn Troster, T'ruah's director of programs (left) and Rabbi Jill Jacobs (right)
On May 18, Rabbi Jill Jacobs published an essay in the Washington Post purporting to distinguish between legitimate criticism of Israel and "anti-Semitism." In the essay, she posted two of my tweets to suggest that I am anti-Semitic [spoiler: I am not]. Since August, 2014, the Washington Post has run numerous articles similarly impugning my character. The paper has never offered me space to write in my own voice, despite numerous inquiries. I submitted an essay to the Post's Outlook section responding to the issues raised in Jacobs' piece, but the paper declined to run it. That essay, as submitted, follows.

When Israeli soldiers open fire on unarmed demonstrators, as they have been doing for over a month in the Gaza Strip, Americans are implicated in the violence, for the United States arms and funds those soldiers. Yet liberal supporters of Israel insist on complicating this straightforward proposition.

Star of David

Gaza killings are tearing the Jewish community apart

Israel snipers gaza protest
© Associated Press/Ariel SchalitIsraeli soldiers on a watch tower along the Israel - Gaza Border, May 15, 2018. Israel faces growing diplomatic fallout from the use of lethal force against unarmed protesters.
Last week I was in Jerusalem as Israeli snipers shot 1360 people on the Gaza border, killing 60 of them; and even as the horror mounted, I was of the opinion that the historic atrocity would change American opinion and allow Democratic candidates to run against Israel. Indeed, in the hours that followed, many celebrities spoke out in outrage, joining brave Natalie Portman; Jeffrey Goldberg the Atlantic editor (and former Israeli army prison guard) acknowledged that a divorce between the American Jewish and Israeli Jewish communities is coming; and the Onion captured the mood with two savage headlines.
"IDF Soldier Recounts Harrowing, Heroic War Story Of Killing 8-Month-Old Child" [link]

Heart - Black

Sweden: Middle-aged women targeting migrant children for sex

sex work migrants
© Will Horner/Al JazeeraMahmoud looks out over Athens. The young Afghan asylum seeker hoped to find a better life in Europe but has become trapped in a life of sex work in Greece.
A documentary by Swedish Radio has highlighted the problem of prostitution in central Stockholm, where so-called "street children," mostly of foreign decent, have become a sought-after commodity among middle-aged ladies. One of the "street kids" described the agreement as beneficial, due to money, food and shelter being offered.

Older women in Stockholm are procuring sexual services from migrant kids of North African descent, said one of the young illegal immigrants roaming the streets of Stockholm, in "Tendens" ("Tendency"), a short documentary by Abdelaziz Maaloum and Anders Ljungberg.

In the documentary, a certain "Amin" is being interviewed. By his own admission, he is 17 years old and comes from Morocco. Before making it to Sweden as an illegal immigrant, he had been to over 20 different countries, including Iceland and Greenland, which are far less common destinations for an asylum seeker.

Comment: While it may be a minority of cases, this is a trend happening throughout Europe where perverse or desperate Europeans are preying on migrants and refugees: Also check out SOTT radio's: The Truth Perspective: Weapons of Mass Migration: Interview with Michael Springmann on Europe's Migrant Crisis


Heart - Black

Palestinian vineyard annihilated with chainsaws, investigators find chilling message in Hebrew

Vandals slashed hundreds of mature grape plants near Hebron
Vandals slashed hundreds of mature grape plants near Hebron, and the odds that the culprits will be caught are slim
The grapes are shriveled. The vineyard is dead. Reduced to a large, dried-out, yellowing stain in the heart of the verdant region along Highway 60 where the road runs past the town of Halhoul, north of Hebron. The "yellow wind" that David Grossman wrote about 30 years ago is a dying vineyard here. Two plots of land, with hundreds of vines that were slashed, their stems and shoots sawed off - and within a week everything here had withered and died.

This is a particularly horrible sight because all the damage was wrought by the hand of man. A wicked, loathsome hand that hates not only Arabs but despises the land itself. In fact, we can assume that it wasn't just one individual who raided and destroyed this vineyard late Tuesday night last week. To saw off that many plants in such a short time requires a few pairs of nasty hands. And someone also had to smear the threatening words in Hebrew on a rock: "We will reach everywhere." All before first light illuminated the dark deed.

When dawn broke, the owner of the vineyard, Dr. Haitham Jahshan, a hematologist, arrived and couldn't believe his eyes. His vines had been ravaged. First he saw one sawed trunk, then another and another - a sea of butchered vines, whose grapes were grown to be eaten, not for wine - until the full scale of the calamity hit home.

Comment: Jewish settlers, many who are there illegally according to international law, are free to terrorise Palestinians as they please and are merely tools of Israel's wider genocidal campaign: Also check out SOTT radio's: The Truth Perspective: Identity Politics on Steroids: How Zionism Outdoes Them All


Fire

Massive fire rips through Europe's 2nd largest theme park

Fire at Europa-Park in Rust, Germany, on May 26, 2018.
© ReutersFire at Europa-Park in Rust, Germany, on May 26, 2018.
A huge fire has broken out at Europa-Park in the German town of Rust, the second most visited theme park in Europe after Disneyland. The inferno prompted the visitors to evacuate as many lamented their favorite attraction online.

A huge plume of black smoke has risen hundreds of meters in sky as a warehouse near the attraction called "The Pirates of Batavia" caught fire on Saturday, the emergencies services said.

The disaster led to the evacuation of visitors from the Scandinavia area of the park closest to the blaze. The police said that, according to preliminary data, there were no deaths or injuries.

Comment: Other high profile blazes that occurred recently:


Control Panel

Civil service reform: White House cracks down on federal employee unions with executive orders

White House
© Flickr.com/Chris Oakley/cc-by
President Trump issued a series of executive orders Friday that could gut federal employee unions' ability to negotiate with agency leaders and represent workers, as well as reduce the time it takes for an agency to fire people for poor performance or misconduct.

Billed as the first step toward broad civil service reform, senior administration officials announced in a call with reporters on Friday afternoon three executive orders aimed at making it easier to fire poor performers and ordering harsher treatment of union representatives.

"Today, the president is fulfilling his promise to promote a more efficient government by reforming civil service rules," said Andrew Bremberg, director of the president's Domestic Policy Council. "Every year, the Federal Employee Viewpoint Survey shows that less than one third of federal employees believe poor performers are adequately addressed by their agency. These executive orders make it easier to remove poor performing employees, and ensure that taxpayer dollars are more efficiently used."

The first order, as described by a senior administration official speaking on background, would reduce the time it takes to fire poor performers and employees suspected of misconduct by standardizing the length of Performance Improvement Plans at 30 days across government. Currently, PIPs vary from agency to agency, and generally run between 60 to 120 days.

Stormtrooper

Brazilian president Michel Temer sends in army as truck protest causes fuel and food shortages

Brazil truck protest
© Mauro Pimentel/AFP/Getty ImagesBrazilian truck drivers partially block the Washington Luiz road (BR-040) during the fifth day of their nationwide strike over rising fuel costs in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on Friday.


São Paulo, the biggest city in South America, in state of emergency over fuel shortages while markets run out of food


Brazil's conservative president Michel Temer has ordered the army and federal police to clear highways blockaded by striking truck drivers after a protest over soaring fuel prices entered its fifth day.

The blockades have paralysed much of the country's economy and prompted São Paulo, the biggest city in South America, to declare a state of emergency over fuel shortages.


Comment: From Reuters:
South America's biggest city and main business hub declared a state of emergency on Friday, suspending non-essential administrative services to save fuel amid a trucking protest that has blockaded major Brazilian highways for five days.

In a statement, City Hall said the state of emergency would allow it to seize private goods such as fuel stored at a gas station and make purchases without going through standard budgeting and bidding procedures.

"I have actioned the federal security forces to unblock highways and I am asking governors to do the same," Temer said in a televised address on Friday. "We will not let the population do without its primary needs."

The protests began over fuel prices but have been further stoked by widespread anger over repeated graft scandals involving prominent politicians - including Temer himself.

In São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro, supermarkets and restaurants are running low on supplies. Some factories have shut down, bus services been reduced and even the Refugees World Cup, scheduled to take place in São Paulo on Saturday, has been cancelled.

Comment: More from Reuters:
The protest will stretch into its sixth day on Saturday. South America's largest city and economic hub Sao Paulo decreed a state of emergency, as did Rio de Janeiro.

Gas stations and airports across the nation ran out of fuel, supermarket shelves went bare and hospitals said they were running out of supplies. Public transport and trash collection was reduced or halted across the country, and many schools canceled classes as teachers could not get to work.

Lack of feed supplies may cause one billion birds and 20 million hogs to die, Brazilian meat group ABPA said.

"Those blocking the highways and acting in a radical manner are hurting the population," Temer said in a televised address. "We will not allow hospitals to run out of supplies to save lives. We will not allow children to be harmed by the closure of schools."

Yet Friday night, much of the country remained paralyzed.

Public Security Minister Raul Jungmann said at a Friday night news conference that there were over 500 blockades on roadways across Brazil, but that was half of those registered 24 hours before.

Brazil's oil regulator ANP said once roads are completely cleared, it would still take a week to normalize fuel supplies nationwide.

In response to the threat of military action, Abcam, a Brazilian truckers association that says it represents 600,000 drivers, called on them to no longer block roads.

However, it encouraged drivers to keep protesting and not deliver goods, meaning it was likely the situation would remain critical.

Accord, little action

Negotiators for several trucker groups agreed late on Thursday to suspend their blockages for 15 days after the government vowed to subsidize and stabilize diesel prices, which may cost 5 billion reais ($1.4 billion) this year.

To win over truckers the government promised to extend for 30 days a 10-percent diesel price cut announced by state-led oil company Petroleo Brasileiro SA.

Shares of Petrobras, as the company is known, closed down nearly 1.4 percent on Friday after plunging 19 percent in the prior two days, as the blockades continued.

But the Abcam trucking association that ignited the strike was not among the parties that signed the accord and insisted on Friday it would not do so until Congress puts diesel tax cuts into law, which would take several days at the quickest.

No trucks were able to enter the port of Santos, Latin America's largest, and oilseeds crushing group Abiove told Reuters that soy exports would halt on Saturday if truckers did not allow access to major ports.

ABPA said 152 poultry and pork processing plants had indefinitely suspended production.

Auto production, which contributes about a quarter of Brazil's industrial output, ground to a halt on Friday in the latest blow to a fragile economic recovery following the worst downturn in decades.

($1 = 3.65 reais)
This illustrates how easily infrastructure can collapse.


Arrow Down

With control of just over 20% of EU countries Social Democracy is dying in Europe

unión europea
© EFE
During the last election cycle, a large portion of the US population became enticed by Bernie Sanders, who repackaged the old idea of socialism under a new name: Democratic Socialism. The younger generations, who don't have much of a perspective outside US politics, ate up the old socialist's dogma even though the world has seen these ideas fail before.

One of the most devastating failures of Democratic Socialism came from the Bolsheviks during the Russian Revolution. Their revolution turned into one of the worst genocides in world history. However, Europe has implemented a much tamer version of Democratic Socialism over the past several decades called Social Democracy. Although these attempts did not erupt into genocide, their failure now seems just as inevitable. Populism is the new ideology in Europe and it is now overwhelmingly defeating Social Democracy.

In the Italian election that took place just over two months ago, the populists and right-wingers handed the centre-left (Social Democrats and others) a decisive defeat. The Democratic party was expecting to do poorly in the election, but now senior figures within the party admit that it was much worse than they expected.

Comment: Since the economic doctrines of socialism and communism collapsed, the Left has been struggling to find its flag. A combination of capitalist practices with some 'socialist' safety nets looked like the best bet. But since this is not radical enough to thrill the masses, they have opted to focus on the politics of identity and minorities, with the unfortunate effect that divisions in society have been exacerbated rather than mitigated. No wonder people are now turning away from the Left.