Society's ChildS


Quenelle - Golden

Recent poll reveals Maduro the leading candidate favored by nearly 56% of Venezuelans

Maduro election
© ReutersA recent poll by ICS reveals that Venezuela's incumbent President Nicolas Maduro is leading vote intention.
The question in the International Consulting Services survey was: 'If elections were today, who would you vote for?'

A recent poll by International Consulting Services (ICS) reveals that Venezuela's incumbent President Nicolas Maduro, candidate for the Broad Front for the Homeland, is leading vote intention with 55.9 percent of support for the upcoming May 20 elections.

The poll conducted between April 20 and May 4 places Henri Falcon of the Progressive Advance party in second place with 25.4 percent of support of likely voters, and Javier Bertucci, Hope for Change candidate, in third with 16.2 percent of support.

Comment: No doubt Western regime change creators will be most unhappy that their efforts appear to be failing and will double down on efforts to install a more 'favorable' choice or strangle the country economically in the process:


Candle

As Kilauea eruptions continue, many Hawaiians accept their fate at the hands of Pele

Merrie Monarch Festival Hawaii
© Dennis Oda / 2009Before the annual Merrie Monarch Festival competition in Hilo, many halau visit Halemaumau crater to honor Pele. At left, members of Halau Ka Liko Pua O Kalaniakea throw lei and ti leaves into the crater after performing a chant and hula.
As threats from the latest Kilauea eruptions continue in Puna, many speak of the dramatic lava flows as the work of Pele, the goddess of fire and volcanoes.

These Native Hawaiians and other Hawaii residents accept the volcanic activity that has consumed 36 structures and displaced hundreds of residents as demonstrations of Pele's power and beauty. And there is no way to stop her.

Pelehonuamea, or Pele of the sacred earth, is also known as "ka wahine ai honua," woman who devours the land. She is also called Madame Pele or Tutu Pele.

"I usually use Tutu Pele because she's an ancestor to me and one of our family aumakua, or family guardian, so we have great respect for her," said Lilikala Kame'eleihiwa, a professor at the Kamakakuokalani Center for Hawaiian Studies on the University of Hawaii's Manoa campus. "We have a personal relationship with Pele."

Comment: 'This is her land': Kilauea's eruption comes with a cultural connection to Pele


Airplane

Chinese pilot lands flight after window falls off, copilot nearly sucked out of plane

Airplane
© Anna Zvereva/Tallinn, Estonia/Wikimedia Commons
Sichuan Airlines Flight 3U8633 was forced to make an emergency landing at China's Chengdu Shuangliu International Airport on Monday after one of the airplane's cockpit windows fell off mid-flight.

According to Reuters, though no passengers were injured in the incident, the Civil Aviation Administration of China's Southwest Regional Administration (CAAC) stated that one of the pilots suffered scratches and waist pains. A flight attendant also received a minor injury during the accident.

​The domestic flight, which was traveling from Chongqing to Lhasa, landed at the Chengdu Shuangliu airport roughly 20 minutes after the window broke.

Speaking to Red Star News, pilot Liu Chuanjian revealed that seconds after the malfunction, his fellow pilot started to get sucked out of the window, along with parts of the plane's control unit.

Comment: See also:


Pistol

New York's governor sued over NRA smear campaign

Cuomo
© KPTVNY Governor Andrew Cuomo
The National Rifle Association filed a lawsuit on Friday against New York state officials, including Governor Andrew Cuomo, over what the group referred to as a "blacklisting campaign" staged against them by the defendants.

According to the NRA's complaint, New York's governor and Department of Financial Services actively worked to convince banks and insurers to cease doing business with the gun-rights organization in a "campaign of selective prosecution, background exhortations, and public threats." New York officials are accused of running a politically-motivated crusade that hinders the right of the NRA to "speak freely about gun-related issues and defend the Second Amendment" according to the suit.

Earlier this month, NYDFS imposed a $7 million fine on Lockton Cos., LLC, the insurance broker that administered NRA Carry Guard - which offers personal firearms liability policies.

On Wednesday, British insurer Lloyd's of London announced that it would end all coverage made available through the NRA, deeming the Carry Guard program an unlawful policy issued "to gun owners for acts of intentional wrongdoing."

Governor Cuomo also ordered a directive issued by the NYDFS which resulted in the regulatory agency sending a letter to state-chartered banks and other financiers, deterring them from doing business with the NRA.

Comment: Cuomo has initiated his own form of sanctions on the NRA. The statement: "The NRA's lawsuit is a futile and desperate attempt to advance its dangerous agenda to sell more guns," totally misses the point of the Second Amendment.


Wedding Rings

Only one state in the US has outlawed grown men marrying little girls: Delaware

child marriage
© TheFreeThoughtProject.com
When Americans think of pedophiles, they may think of an adult stalking and assaulting a child in an isolated case. But a form of pedophilia of that is often ignored - even though it affects hundreds of thousands of children - was considered "legal" in every state in the United States up until this week.
Delaware became the first state in the country to officially ban child marriage by signing House Bill 337 into law, which prohibits marriage of individuals under 18 years of age. The law closes loopholes allowing children to enter into legal marriages with parental consent, or because they are pregnant. It also gives the court authority to annul marriages where one of the individuals involved was under the age of 18 at the time.
As The Free Thought Project has reported, child marriage is an ongoing problem across the county and "alarmingly, the number of children married away to fully mature adults could be much higher than the already-startling number. Ten states provide only fragmentary statistics or none at all."

An investigation from Frontline revealed disturbing statistics, which showed that between 2000 and 2015, at least 207,459 minors were married in the United States. While a percentage of those cases were 16- and 17-year-olds, an alarming number of states allowed children as young as 10 and 12 years old to marry, and in nearly 90 percent of the cases, young girls married adult men.

Comment: Delaware has set the example. See also:


Attention

Puerto Rico: Lonely and listless, some older storm survivors consider suicide

Don Gregorio
© WRLNDon Gregorio, victim of Hurricane Maria
A social worker, Lisel Vargas, recently visited Don Gregorio at his storm-damaged home in the steep hillsides of Humacao, a city on Puerto Rico's eastern coast near where Category 4 Hurricane Maria first made landfall last September.

Gregorio, a 62-year-old former carpenter who lives alone, looked haggard. He said he had stopped taking his medication for depression more than a week earlier and hadn't slept in four days. He was feeling anxious and nervous, he said, rubbing his bald head and fidgeting with the silver watch on his wrist. His voice monotone and barely audible, he told Vargas he had had thoughts of suicide.

Indeed, the overall suicide rate in Puerto Rico increased 29 percent in 2017, with a significant jump after Hurricane Maria, the Puerto Rico Department of Public Health reports, and that anguish is continuing.

Gregorio's descent from heartbroken but determined storm victim to this moment of despair is a path traveled by many older people here in Puerto Rico. Psychologists and social workers, like Vargas, say elderly people are especially vulnerable when their daily routines are disrupted for long periods. Those who were once active, she said, now stay home alone.

Yoda

As Gaza sinks into desperation, Norman Finkelstein makes a devastating case against Israeli brutality

March of return gaza protest
© Said Khatib/Agence France-Presse/Getty ImagesA Palestinian woman covers her face as smoke billows around her during clashes with Israeli forces along the border with the Gaza strip on May 11, 2018, as Palestinians demonstrate for the right to return to their historic homelands in what is now Israel.
Israel celebrates a double anniversary on May 15 this year, the founding of the state and the formal establishment of the Israeli Defense Forces, the name the state gave to its combined army, navy, and air force. Armed statehood fulfilled the political Zionists' dream of gathering Jews from the ancient Diaspora under their own government in what they declared to be their "promised land." During the battle over the land between 1947 and 1949, the IDF expelled three-quarters of the indigenous population. Of the 750,000 Palestinian Arabs who fled, 250,000 took shelter in Gaza, a tiny pocket of southwest Palestine then occupied by the Egyptian army. The destitute and traumatized refugees were three times more numerous than the 80,000 Gazans who took them in.

The United Nations passed but did not enforce annual resolutions calling for the refugees' return. Israel invaded the territory in 1956, withdrew under American pressure in 1957, and invaded again in 1967. As its population grew to nearly 2 million souls packed into a pocket five miles wide and 40 miles long, Gaza has become a byword for misery. Former British Prime Minister David Cameron, no advocate of the Palestinian cause, called it "an open-air prison."

X

'No end in sight': Israeli forces will continue to 'massacre' Palestinians, professor tells RT

Wounded man
© Ibraheem Abu Mustafa / ReutersA wounded Palestinian is evacuated during a protest against the US embassy move to Jerusalem.
The cycle in the Middle East will likely continue with no end in sight, as Palestinians peacefully protest and Israeli forces continue to "massacre" them, retired sociology professor James Petras told RT.

"I think the massacres by Israel will continue, the peaceful protests from Palestinians will continue. I don't see any resolution, unfortunately," said Petras, a retired professor at Binghamton University in New York. He added that he believes "murders by the Israelis are on the increase."

"I think this is a pattern which we will be witnessing in the next period with Trump's increasing bellicosity towards Iran. Who knows how it can end, if not a regional war."

Petras spoke to RT on the day of the US embassy's relocation from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem - a move which he says is an "absolute violation of international law." He noted that such a stance is supported by the European Union and the major countries in the world.

Arrow Down

'This is state terror': Foes & allies criticize Israel's heavy handed force in wake of embassy move

Protest
© Reuters 28A pro-Palestinian protest in Istanbul on Monday.
Russia, France, and the UK have expressed consternation over the legality of the US Embassy moving to Jerusalem, and Israel's heavy-handed response to the clashes it has provoked, which have reportedly caused over 50 deaths.

"We have publicly criticized the move multiple times," said Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov. "International resolutions declare that the status of Jerusalem - one of the most important issues of the entire peace process - must be resolved in direct negotiations between Israel and Palestine."

French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian also said that Donald Trump's decision, made last December, "violated international law,"but expressed particular alarm at IDF tactics.

"France calls on all actors to show responsibility to prevent a new escalation," Le Drian said in a statement. "France again calls on the Israeli authorities to exercise discernment and restraint in the use of force that must be strictly proportionate."

Bomb

12 civilians killed, 25 injured in car bomb explosion in Idlib, Syria

Idlib bomb attack
At least 12 civilians were killed and another 25 injured in Syria's Idlib province from a bomb attack on Saturday, according to the White Helmets Civil Defense.

Mustafa Haj Youssef, director of the White Helmets in Idlib, said that a bomb-laden car exploded in front of a hospital in the city center.

The blast also damaged nearby houses and vehicles, Youssef added.