Society's ChildS


Robot

Tesla robot ATTACKS an engineer at company's Texas factory during violent malfunction

auto robotic assembly robots
Two witnesses watched in horror as a fellow Tesla employee rescued the bloodied engineer from an unwitting, but violent robotic assault — perpetrated by an automated assembly device (like these red robot arms above) designed to grab and move freshly cast aluminum car parts.
A Tesla engineer was attacked by a robot during a brutal and bloody malfunction at the company's Giga Texas factory near Austin.

Two witnesses watched in horror as their fellow employee was attacked by the machine designed to grab and move freshly cast aluminum car parts.

The robot had pinned the man, who was then programming software for two disabled Tesla robots nearby, before sinking its metal claws into the worker's back and arm, leaving a 'trail of blood' along the factory surface.

Comment: This article reads like a sensationalist smear piece. The robot "attacked" a worker? Really? Sounds more like an accident involving an automated piece of equipment, something that likely happens all the time in factories with any level of automation. It may be true that Tesla may have higher than average injuries at it's factory, but it should also be kept in mind that the media really seem to have it in for Elon Musk, and Tesla by extention. They really will attack him for anything. Take all this with a grain of salt.

See also:


Flashlight

Prince Andrew is 'in torment' after judge rules for court documents relating to more than 170 associates of Jeffrey Epstein to be made public

prince andrew jeffrey epstein
The Mail on Sunday has learned the Duke of York's name will appear alongside those of scores of Epstein's powerful friends.
Prince Andrew is said to be 'totally tormented' as he braces himself for the scandal over his links to paedophile Jeffrey Epstein to reignite in the New Year.

The Mail on Sunday has learned the Duke of York's name will appear alongside those of scores of Epstein's powerful friends - some of whom have not previously been publicly identified - when a tranche of court documents are published.

The prospect of once again facing intense scrutiny over his friendship with Epstein is said to have plunged Andrew into deep despair ahead of Christmas, which he is expected to spend in Sandringham with his brother King Charles and other Royals.

Comment: See also:


Eye 2

World Economic Forum demands $3.5 trillion per year to 'decarbonize' the planet, 'reach net-zero and restore nature'

world economic forum
The creepy anti-humans who run the World Economic Forum (WEF) have decided that we must do more to save Gaia.

According to a new white paper published Wednesday by the Davos outfit in partnership with McKinsey & Company, it's time to print more money to further devalue the wealth of the common man, in order to pursue the apparent noble goal of "decarbonization."

The Role of Public-Private-Philanthropic Partnerships
"The world needs up to $3.5 trillion of additional investments each year to reach net-zero and restore nature," the report highlights state, adding that an organization spun up by the WEF called Giving to Amplify Earth Action (GAEA) is determined to shake down the relevant parties for the money.

Footprints

Massive migrant caravan heading to US-Mexico border is largest in over a year, may balloon to up to 15K people, activist warns

march
© Juan Manuel Blanco/EPA-EFE/ShutterstockThe migrant caravan making its way to the United States is the largest in over a year, with an estimated 6,000 people en route.
The massive migrant caravan making its way through Mexico to the US border is the largest in more than a year — as it was revealed more than 730,000 asylum seekers have been encountered at the southern border since October alone.

The hordes of migrants — primarily from Cuba, Haiti and Honduras — set off for the United States on Sunday, walking more than nine miles from the Mexican southern border city Tapachula to get to Alvaro Obregón.

An estimated 8,000 asylum seekers are en route, marking the largest migrant caravan approaching the US since June 2022.

Their Christmas Eve dinner comprised sandwiches, a bottle of water and a banana handed out by a local church, and they spent Christmas night sleeping on cardboard or plastic under awnings and tents.

But radical migrant rights activist Luis Garcia Villagran, who is accompanying the group, has warned that the caravan could grow to 15,000 people, carrying signs reading "Exodus from poverty," by the time it reaches the border.

"We won't stop — we'll keep walking,'' he vowed.
march
© APMigrant rights activist Luis Garcia Villagran, who is accompanying the group, has warned that the caravan could grow to 15,000 people by the time it reaches the US border.

Comment: So who's running this show?
The radical activist leading the latest massive migrant caravan from Mexico to the US was once sentenced to 40 years in prison and has already led tens of thousands of asylum-seekers to the border.

Luis Garcia Villagran, a self-proclaimed Evangelical Christian who hails from Mexico, told The Daily Caller in a July 2022 interview:
"We try to help people least protected, especially women and child migrants. Simply, we apply what is in the law."
Villagran, who heads the Center for Human Dignity, boasted at the time that he had guided 40,000 migrants to the border since September 2021 — a figure that has multiplied since then and is expected to swell even more in the coming weeks and months.

The organizer told the outlet that he is not financed or assisted by external organizations — and is motivated by his faith and a belief in the right of migrants to exit their impoverished origins.

Villagran was previously arrested in the Mexican state of Chiapas in 1997 on kidnapping and conspiracy charges, allegations he denied. He was convicted by a judge and sentenced to 40 years behind bars, but working with several human rights groups, he appealed his case and was eventually freed in 2010.

The activist runs his group with his wife, Martha Martinez de la Fuente said he was tortured while in custody — and that those prior struggles also fuel his mission.

A 2021 profile in Mexico Daily described Villagran and fellow organizer Irineo Mujica as media savvy tacticians who attempt to manage perceptions of the migrant movement in addition to the thousands in their charge.
"García is more pastor than protester: pensive, eloquent, cool-headed. Both understand the power of public opinion, and have a knack for politics and an eye for the camera."
As for his caravan this Christmas season, "Today we are the poorest of the poorest of those who are at the peak of need, those of us who do not have money to pay for visas or polleros."

Villagran has vocally criticized American immigration policy in the past, calling it "domineering" and driven by a desire to "impose."

There have been roughly 2 million migrant encounters at the US southern border in the 2022 and 2023 fiscal years.

Nearly a quarter million migrants crossed the perimeter in November alone — a new high for the month and the third highest total in history.

"We won't be stopped, we'll keep walking," Villagran vowed over the weekend, according to a Reuters report.
Census numbers change government dynamics especially when citizenship doesn't matter. Democrats have opened the floodgates and migrants are then delivered to specific locations. Electoral votes are determined by population numbers to gain House seats.


Fire

Explosion at a nickel plant in Indonesia leaves at least 13 dead and 46 injured

nickel plant
© Mast Irham/EPAIndonesian nickel plant on the island of Sulawesi, a hub for the country's production of nickel.
Accident happened during repair work on furnace, says spokesperson for industrial park in eastern Indonesia...

At least 13 people were killed and 46 injured in eastern Indonesia on Sunday after an explosion at a Chinese-funded nickel-processing plant, an industrial park official said.

The island of Sulawesi is a hub for the mineral-rich country's production of nickel, a base metal used for electric vehicle batteries and stainless steel.

The accident occurred at about 5.30am local time (21.30 GMT on Saturday) at a plant owned by PT Indonesia Tsingshan Stainless Steel in the Morowali Industrial Park in Central Sulawesi province, a spokesperson for the complex said in a statement.

"The confirmed number of fatalities is 13 people, consisting of nine Indonesian workers and four workers from China," the spokesperson said in a statement. Forty-six other people were injured, mostly due to exposure to hot steam, he said.

An initial investigation showed the explosion happened during repair work on a furnace when a flammable liquid ignited and the subsequent blast caused nearby oxygen tanks to explode as well, the official said.

Star of David

Best of the Web: This can't be another instance of genocide — Israel believes it's right!

gaza bombing 2023
© Tasnim News AgencyGaza
I used to think it was wrong for Israel to be killing tens of thousands of Gazans with airstrikes and starving hundreds of thousands with siege warfare, but then Israel apologists informed me that some Palestinians did mean things to Israelis in the past, so now I support it.

What Israel is doing in Gaza would only be unethical if everyone in Gaza were a perfect little cherub who'd never committed any violence or done anything wrong ever. I could see getting upset if the IDF was raining military explosives upon a giant concentration camp full of squishy marshmallow-like beings made of pure love and conceived without original sin who do nothing but coo and sing lullabies all day, but in reality the concentration camp is populated by beings who are not nearly that perfect.

Attention

SOTT Focus: Israel Stealing Corpses From Gaza Hospitals And Mass Graves, Harvesting Organs - Human Rights Group


Comment: We missed this report when it came out a month ago. As long-time SOTT readers know, Israel has a long, sordid history with organ-theft and corpse desecration, one which the media or monitoring bodies rarely talk about. So when news about such does seep to the surface, you can reasonably estimate that the extent of it taking place in Gaza right now must be vast and ghastly in scale...


gaza dead shroud
© APPalestinians mourn their relatives killed in the Israeli bombardment of the Gaza Strip, in front of the morgue in Deir al Balah, Wednesday, Nov. 1, 2023.
Concerns about 'organ theft' by Israel's forces from dead Palestinians were raised by Euro-Med Human Rights Monitor.

Israel's army has been accused of stealing organs from the dead in Gaza by an NGO, which called for an independent international investigation.

Euro-Med Human Rights Monitor said on Sunday it had "concerns" about possible organ theft from Palestinian corpses, following reports by medical professionals in Gaza who examined some bodies after they were released by Israel.

The NGO claimed it has documented Israeli forces confiscating dozens of dead bodies from the al-Shifa and Indonesian hospitals in northern Gaza, alongside others in the south.

Bizarro Earth

Electricity shortages loom for North America in 2024, analysis by NERC shows

nyc blackout
FILE PHOTO: Video shows smoke rising from a Con Edison substation in Brooklyn. The company explained that an equipment failure caused the brief power outage that affected all five boroughs of New York City.
Many regions of North America may face electricity shortages starting in 2024 due to increased energy demand and electrification.

According to a report by the North American Electric Reliability Corporation (NERC), over 300 million people in the US and Canada may experience electricity shortages from 2024 to 2028.

The increasing demand for energy from the tech industry and the electrification of buildings and vehicles are major contributors to this potential crisis.

Comment: It seems that the West's decision to escalate tensions in the Middle East, that threatens to destabilise much of the planet, has come just in time:


Eye 1

73 three and four-year olds, hundreds of children under six sent to disgraced NHS transgender clinic

transgender children
© AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis
Children as young as three years old have been referred to Britain's socialised medicine's 'Gender Identity Development Service' transgender clinic, with hundreds of young children referred in the past decade.

382 children aged six and under have been referred to the Gender Identity Development Service (GIDS) in the Tavistock and Portman Trust, known commonly as the National Health Service's transgender clinic, in the past ten years new figures from the Trust reveal. The numbers, published by the Daily Mail, reveal how even the youngest children have been pushed into interacting with the controversial clinic, and that the numbers being referred to GIDS have soared in recent years.

The clinic, which has no official younger age limit to those it will see, has had 12 three-year-olds referred to it between 2010 and 2020, as well as 61 four-year-olds, 140 five-year-olds, and 169 six-year-olds. The number of young people being sent to GIDS year-on-year shows how quickly the concept is spreading, with 136 referrals in 2010-11 to 3,585 a decade later.

Alarm Clock

UK food shortages 'alarmingly likely' next year, University of Belfast warns - malnutrition cases tripled in 10 years

empty shelves
Food shortages are "alarmingly likely" in 2024 as climate change, transportation issues and global conflicts continue to affect supplies, a food security expert has said.

New checks will also be introduced on goods coming into the UK from the EU at the end of January, under the Border Target Operating Model (BTOM), further impacting food imports.

Professor Chris Elliott, of Queen's University Belfast, said that fruit and vegetables would be particularly affected. It follows shortages of eggs and oil throughout 2023, with supermarkets forced to ration tomatoes and cucumbers due to poor weather in southern Europe in February.

Comment: The Guardian reports:
Surge in number of people in hospital with nutrient deficiencies, NHS figures show

More than 800,000 patients were admitted to hospital with malnutrition and nutritional deficiencies last year, a threefold increase on 10 years ago, according to NHS figures that have prompted warnings about the devastating health impact of food insecurity.

Hospital data for England and Wales, obtained by the Guardian, reveals a startling rise in diagnoses linked to poor diet in the past decade, with nearly half a million admissions of patients with iron deficiencies, hundreds of thousands suffering from vitamin deficiencies and more than 10,000 cases of malnutrition last year.
Senior doctors said the trend mirrored their clinical experiences, with a growing number of patients whose health problems are rooted in poverty.

Prof Kamila Hawthorne, chair of the Royal College of GPs (RCGP), said doctors were facing "moral distress" because of a limited ability to help. "It's not like you can prescribe money or food," she said.

"As a nation we shouldn't be having malnourished children. We shouldn't be having children with rickets. We should not be having people with iron deficiencies or low folic acid," Hawthorne added. "There's that sense of this isn't right; what's happening here?"

RCGP is calling for an expansion of free school meals and for stronger policies to improve the affordability of healthy food in supermarkets. Hawthorne said: "I have a reluctance to giving people supplements in a rich country, where they should be able to afford food. It's so counterintuitive."

She added: "There are definitely cases we hear about of parents going without meals so their children can eat. We're hearing of a lot of people going to food banks who would never have dreamt of going to a food bank before."

The Guardian analysed rates of 25 conditions linked to poor nutrition, including vitamin and mineral deficiencies, scurvy, rickets and malnutrition. Over the past decade, there was a steep increase across nearly all of the conditions, based on primary and secondary diagnosis in hospital patients in England and Wales.
malnutrition
Admissions with a diagnosis of iron deficiency more than doubled from 196,685 in 2013-14 to 490,005 in 2022-23, including thousands of child admissions last year. Cases of patients being treated for vitamin B deficiencies (B12, folate and other B vitamins) tripled from 57,406 a decade ago to 167,562 last year. Protein energy malnutrition, caused by insufficient calories or protein, rose from 5,746 to 9,390 cases. In total, there were 824,519 admissions with a diagnosis of at least one of these conditions in 2022-23, up from 293,686 a decade ago.

Prof Sir Michael Marmot, of UCL, who led a landmark review into health inequalities, said that the figures, if representative of an underlying increase in illness, were "really shocking".

"The sceptic in me always asks: is this real, or increased recognition of the problem?" he said. "But that massive increase - wow. It seems likely that there's got to be a real component."

The hospital data does not account for the possibility of increased testing. And experts said this may explain increases in rarer deficiencies, such as vitamin A and thiamine, which are typically monitored in the growing population of bariatric surgery patients. However, experts said that these explanations, and the increase in people following meat and dairy-free diets, were unlikely to fully explain such substantial increases in iron and B vitamin deficiencies.

Rebecca McManamon, a consultant dietitian and spokesperson for the British Dietetic Association, said testing for iron deficiency was very common. "It's a first-line test in A&E for anyone presenting with fatigue or breathlessness. Most GPs would be requesting these tests on a daily basis. It's fair to say there is more awareness, but not enough to explain this increase."

The trend also tracks a stark increase in food insecurity over the same period, with 5.9% of adults reporting not eating for a whole day because they could not afford or access food, 15% of adults reporting skipping meals and 21% of households with children experiencing food insecurity, according to a recent Food Foundation survey.

"As a clinician I'm not surprised," said McManamon. "I see people that have very limited diets. We all know the increasing use of food banks. Food access and food insecurity is a huge thing."

The link between hunger, food insecurity and health is complex, with some people simultaneously being overweight or obese and suffering deficiencies because of diets that are high calorie but lacking in essential nutrients.

Prof Monica Lakhanpaul, a consultant paediatrician at Whittington health NHS trust, said she was encountering more children with iron and vitamin deficiencies and rickets, caused by a lack of vitamin D and calcium, describing the problem as a "hidden crisis".

While there has been a focus on reversing these deficiencies in low- and middle-income countries, she said, children in the UK were increasingly at risk. "We don't screen for it, we actually don't know the scale of the problem on a population basis. That's my worry," she said. "What's on our doorstep we forget about very quickly. We need to know as a nation that people's health in this country is deteriorating."

Nutritional deficiencies are particularly concerning in children, with iron and B12 being critical for brain development; calcium and vitamin D (from sun exposure and dietary intake) are crucial for bone development. "They're going to have health problems further down the line, like brittle bones when they're older," said Lakhanpaul. "We're storing up health problems for later in life."