Society's ChildS


Snakes in Suits

Oprah 'not interested' in 2020 presidential run, 'does not have the DNA for it'

oprah
Oprah Winfrey has said she will not run for US president, after rumours she could stand against Donald Trump in 2020.

In an in-depth interview with InStyle magazine given three weeks before her famed Golden Globes speech, the 63-year-old talk show host said the presidency was "not something that interests me".

"I actually saw a mug the other day," she told the publication, when asked about the twitter trend #Oprah2020. I thought it was a cute mug. All you need is a mug and some campaign literature and a T-shirt. I've always felt very secure and confident with myself in knowing what I could do and what I could not. And so it's not something that interests me. I don't have the DNA for it."


Comment: She also doesn't have any credentials for the job. All she has is support from the Left and an ability to virtue signal in public.


Comment: Previously:


Red Flag

Metropolitan Police faces backlash over failure to prosecute 'horrific' honor killings, forced marriages

New Scotland Yard headquarters
© Dinendra Haria/Global Look Press
The Metropolitan Police is facing fresh accusations of failing its crime victims as the number of "horrific" honor killings and forced marriages being prosecuted in London remains "appallingly" low.

The police force's efficiency has once more been cast into doubt as new figures, obtained through a Freedom of Information (FOI) request, that revealed police recorded 759 honor violence crimes and 265 forced marriages in the capital between 2015 and 2017. However, just 138 people were charged with offences.

The figures also revealed the prosecution rates for both crimes have dropped in the past three years. As national statistics reveal an increasing number of victims making allegations, campaign groups are now calling on the Met to review its strategy so that the crimes are adequately dealt with.

X

California considers straw laws: $1,000 fine for waiters offering unsolicited plastic straws

hands straws
© sott.netPlastics that suck in the environment.
Ian Calderon wants restaurateurs to think long and hard before giving you a straw.

Calderon, the Democratic majority leader in California's lower house, has introduced a bill to stop sit-down restaurants from offering customers straws with their beverages unless they specifically request one. Under Calderon's law, a waiter who serves a drink with an unrequested straw in it would face up to 6 months in jail and a fine of up to $1,000.

"We need to create awareness around the issue of one-time use plastic straws and its detrimental effects on our landfills, waterways, and oceans," Calderon explained in a press release.


Comment: What's wrong with a plastic straw? They don't biodegrade, difficult to recycle, leach toxic chemicals, end up in the oceans, if incinerated they put toxins into the air.


This isn't just Calderon's crusade. The California cities of San Luis Obispo and Davis both passed straws-on-request laws last year, and Manhattan Beach maintains a prohibition on all disposable plastics. And up in Seattle, food service businesses won't be allowed to offer plastic straws or utensils as of July.

Comment: Apparently the fines would be 'the last straw'...that part of the bill to be amended. As consciousness shifts, choices and habits change and products that are eco-friendly and human-tolerant emerge.

See also:


Megaphone

Russian Deputy PM: Olympic ban on Russian athletes gives unfair advantage to other athletes

olympics
© Ramil Sitdikov / Sputnik
Russian Deputy Prime Minister Arkady Dvorkovich says he believes that by banning leading Russian athletes from PyeongChang 2018 the International Olympic Committee (IOC) is "creating good conditions for other athletes."

The Russian Olympic Committee (ROC) initially included 500 athletes in its Olympic application for participation at February's PyeongChang Winter Games, which was sent to the IOC last week. The IOC's Invitation Review Panel, responsible for approving athletes, excluded 111 members, who in its view failed to meet the requirements for competition.

On Tuesday, it became known that several high-profile Russian athletes, including Olympic biathlon champion Anton Shipulin, world champion cross country skier Sergey Ustiugov, and six-time Olympic gold medal-winning short track skater Viktor Ahn, had not been declared eligible to participate in the upcoming Games, despite their clean doping record.

RT met with economist and Deputy Prime Minister Dvorkovich, a member of the Russian delegation at the 2018 Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, to gain his views on the athletes' exclusion.

Comment: A number of former hockey players from the West have commented on the ban as well, pointing out the unfairness of banning players when it is so close to the Olympics and the unfair practice of banning an entire country because of a few athletes who dope. As former hockey coach Scott MacPherson put it:
"You know the Russian hockey team, and I'm talking about it because I'm a hockey person, the players that are on the Russian team are guys that we've played against from the time when we were little kids. We know that they are clean. Unfortunately politics seems to be slipping into athletics and that's really not good. The people that are caught should be prevented from participating, but the people that are clean [should be allowed to compete]. It's an individual decision to use drugs and dope, just like it is in society. Somebody works at a prominent Fortune 500 company and somebody in the office is doing cocaine. Not everyone in the office gets penalized. It is done on the individual bases."
Six-time Olympic champion speed skater Viktor Ahn wrote an open letter to the IOC asking for an explanation on the decision to ban him without any concrete evidence:
"It is outrageous that there is no concrete reason which explains my exclusion from the Olympics, and furthermore people now view me as an athlete who used doping. After all these years in sports, this verdict of preventing me to be in the Olympics has become a symbol of mistrust to me from the side of the IOC as well as the reason of mistrust from the side of the entire sport community.



Beer

Bar in New York City bans use of the word 'literally'

Continental Bar in NYC
© AP/Mary Altaffer
According to the bar, this word is overused by many and is thus very annoying in the English language.

My bar, my rules seems to be the motto of the Continental Bar in New York's East Village, which passed a linguistic ban on the word "literally".

A sign has appeared on the bar's window which reads, "Sorry but if you say the word 'literally' inside continental you have five minutes to finish your drink and then you must leave."

But, "If you actually start a sentence with 'I literally' you must leave immediately!!!" the sign declares.

Christmas Tree

Cannabis 'social' club becomes first in UK to be backed by North Wales police

Cannabis
© Cris Faga/Geisler-Fotopress/ Global Look Press
A cannabis club where people can smoke freely while watching TV or playing pool has been backed by police in the UK. Users at the Teeside Cannabis Club, the first of its kind, pay an annual £35-membership to get high in peace.

The Middlesbrough club, set up by Michael Fisher four years ago, allows for guests to make use of the Class B drug without fear of getting a criminal record.

The club has seen its membership balloon from around 60 to 180 in the past 14 months, according to Fisher, and boasts guests including TV star Jeremy Kyle, who visited while shooting his new series the Kyle Files.

The club resides in the policing district of the Durham Constabulary - one of five forces in the country to have stopped actively chasing cannabis users and small-scale growers.

Comment: See also: Marijuana legalization could raise more than $130 billion in tax revenue and create over a million jobs


Newspaper

British columnist Peter Hitchens sparks row over 'cult' of Jordan Peterson

Jordan Peterson
© Wikipedia/ CC BY 2.0Jordan Peterson has been likened to a cult leader
Journalist and Twitter addict Peter Hitchens has sparked yet another furious row, this time over notorious "anti-snowflake" psychologist Jordan Peterson, claiming a "cult" has formed around the controversial Canadian.

Writing on Twitter, Hitchens insisted Peterson, who shot to fame in 2016, has an obsessive following. Hitchens' followers, many of whom backed Peterson, proceeded to exchange retorts with the Mail on Sunday columnist.

Clinical psychologist and lecturer Peterson was relatively unknown until his campaign against political correctness at his workplace, the University of Toronto, hit the headlines.

The professor uploaded videos in which he said he would not accept the Canadian government's Bill C-16, which proposed including gender identity and orientation in the Canadian Human Rights Act, thus making it illegal to discriminate based on outward expression of gender.

Comment: Regardless of one's opinion of Dr. Peterson, he is at least sparking closer examination and discussion of important issues.


Cut

Liberia imposes 12-month moratorium banning the practice of female genital mutilation

Children
© MissHibiscus / Getty Images
Liberia's outgoing leader Ellen Johnson Sirleaf signed an executive order last week banning the practice of female genital mutilation (FGM) for 12 months, but the moratorium may not be enforceable claim rights activists.

Sirleaf, Africa's first female president, handed over power to former soccer star and president-elect George Weah on January 22, having signed the Domestic Violence Bill as one of her final acts as head of state. The move has not been widely publicized in Liberia as it took place on the eve of Weah's inauguration.

"While we applaud former President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf for signing (the Executive Order on the Domestic Violence Bill), it is too early to celebrate as there is still a long way to go before there is zero tolerance to FGM in Liberia," Grace Uwizeye, part of Equality Now's End Harmful Practices team which campaigns to end FGM, told RT.

"The law itself is not strong enough to deter communities from practising FGM. If someone is found guilty, a judge can either determine counselling or a fine as punishment for perpetrators."

Comment: See also:


Dollars

Home Depot giving one-time cash bonuses to employees after passage of tax reform legislation

Home Depot
© Sue Ogrocki/Associated Press
Home Depot is awarding its hourly employees in the U.S. a one-time cash bonus of as much as $1,000 following the passage of new tax legislation.

The bonus amounts will be determined based on a person's length of service, similar to Walmart's strategy. All of Home Depot's U.S. hourly workers will get at least a $200 bonus, a spokeswoman told CNBC, and the maximum payout is $1,000 for workers who've served at least 20 years.

Comment: See also:


SOTT Logo Radio

SOTT Focus: The Health & Wellness Show: Toxic Feminism and the War on Men

feminismo occidental
Feminism was once defined as the "qualities of females" and for a while was considered a belief in equality between the sexes. From these fairly benign beginnings, modern-day feminism has morphed into something quite ghastly and destructive. Feminist leaders blame the 'patriarchy' for all the ills of society and, in their mad quest for power, hope to start a social revolution and restructure society from the ground up. Perpetuating gender myths, bemoaning the so-called 'rape culture' and toxic masculinity, naming and shaming men through the #MeToo movement and tearing down the traditional family structure, to name just a few of their tactics, are all done under the guise of empowering women. But what will be the cost? Can normal relations between men and women survive this onslaught? Do we really want a world overrun with hysterical harpies and emasculated men?

Join us for this episode of The Health and Wellness Show where we'll discuss this toxic worldview which, like all radical ideologies, will only lead to chaos and misery.

Running Time: 01:46:37

Download: MP3