Society's ChildS


Bandaid

Kadyrov: Free Russia from 'Stalin's spirit' by burying him in Georgia

Stalin remains burial
The head of the Chechen Republic has proposed handing Joseph Stalin's remains over to Georgia, suggesting that the move would bring relief to Russians as the spirit of the late Soviet dictator would leave the country.

"As for Stalin's remains, we should express our goodwill and hand them over to Georgia so that he can be buried in his home country. Georgia was a part of the Soviet Union that Stalin headed, and it would be logical and just if Georgia gets an opportunity to bury him. And millions of Russian residents would breathe freely knowing that Stalin's spirit has left Russia," Ramzan Kadyrov said in an interview with Interfax.

The Chechen leader also reiterated his position that Vladimir Lenin's body should be taken out of its Red Square Mausoleum and buried. He added that this is just his personal opinion and he was not seeking to insult anyone's feelings.

Attention

Don't just give thanks. Pay it forward one act of kindness at a time

"As we express our gratitude, we must never forget that the highest appreciation is not to utter words, but to live by them."-John F. Kennedy
JFK Quote
© IZQuotes
It's been a hard, heart-wrenching, stomach-churning kind of year filled with violence and ill will.

It's been a year of hotheads and blowhards and killing sprees and bloodshed and takedowns.

It's been a year in which tyranny took a step forward and freedom got knocked down a few notches.

It's been a year with an abundance of bad news and a shortage of good news.

It's been a year of too much hate and too little kindness.

Now we find ourselves approaching that time of year when, as George Washington and Abraham Lincoln proclaimed, we're supposed to give thanks as a nation and as individuals for our safety and our freedoms.

It's not an easy undertaking.

How do you give thanks for freedoms that are constantly being eroded? How do you express gratitude for one's safety when the perils posed by the American police state grow more treacherous by the day? How do you come together as a nation in thanksgiving when the powers-that-be continue to polarize and divide us into warring factions?

It's not going to happen overnight. Or with one turkey dinner. Or with one day of thanksgiving.

Thinking good thoughts, being grateful, counting your blessings and adopting a glass-half-full mindset are fine and good, but don't stop there.

This world requires doers, men and women (and children) who will put those good thoughts into action.

It says a lot (and nothing good) about the state of our world and the meanness that seems to have taken center stage that we now have a day (World Kindness Day) devoted to making the world more collectively human in thoughts and actions. The idea for the day started after a college president in Japan was mugged in a public place and nobody helped him.

Unfortunately, you hear about these kinds of incidents too often.

Dollars

Outsourcing the problem: UK to pay France extra cash to block new wave of Calais migrants

Migrants
© Pascal Rossignol / ReutersMigrants are still attempting to cross to Britain every week as Britain to offer more cash to France
Britain will give France extra cash to bolster the UK border at Calais after a surge in attempted illegal crossings. Migrants and refugees spend their days huddled under bridges around the French port, hoping to smuggle themselves into the UK.

Sources in France told The Times that ministers are looking to spend £80 million ($106 million) on a renewed security contract for the Eurotunnel terminals at Calais, Dunkirk and Coquelles. Britain has already paid a reported £124 million ($164 million) to boost security on the other side of the channel since 2015, as the migration crisis across Europe exploded.

Evidence has emerged of a rise in the number of smuggling attempts in recent weeks as winter weather conditions worsen. Over the last few months, there has been a steady increase in the number of arrivals to France, as migrants wait to be smuggled over the border.

Easter Egg 2

Male Canadian politicians walk around Ottawa in pink heels 'to draw men's attention to violence against women' (VIDEO)

canadian MPs heels
As part of the 'Hope in High Heels on the Hill' (hope in high heels on the parliamentary hill), Canadian parliamentarians walked through Ottawa's center in pink high-heeled shoes. The action is aimed at ending violence against women.

"Violence against women and children will not stop if boys and men are not included in the conversation or part of the decision. I am proud to have participated with male colleagues at the second annual event, Hope in High Heels on the Hill, "said Sven Spengemann, a member of the Liberal Party of the Canadian House of Commons, one of the participants in the action.

The initiative of holding such an action was decided to be introduced last year by the Minister of Democratic Institutions Karina Gould after she took part in such a walk in Burlington, USA. The main purpose of such an event is to draw men's attention to the problems of women and the cessation of violence.


Gold Seal

Antidote to political correctness: Milo's old school creating 'unsafe space' to examine 'disturbing ideas', presented without trigger warnings

langton boys school, antidote political correctness
The program is described as the “antidote to the poison of political correctness” and will examine “the most beautifully disturbed and disturbing ideas, all of them presented without trigger warnings.”
A school notorious for inviting alt-right speaker Milo Yiannopoulos to speak has introduced a controversial new program called 'unsafe space,' where students will study Mein Kampf and learn that not all cultures, genders, and sexual orientations are equal.

Simon Langton Grammar School for Boys in Canterbury, where Yiannopoulos was once a student, is causing another stir after creating the 'unsafe space' forum for sixth-form students. The program is described as the "antidote to the poison of political correctness" and will examine "the most beautifully disturbed and disturbing ideas, all of them presented without trigger warnings."

Comment: No wonder this school produced Milo!


Handcuffs

Six suspected ISIS members from Syria arrested in Germany, reportedly plotted Christmas market attack

German policemen
© AFPGerman policemen
Six Syrian asylum seekers suspected of being ISIS members and plotting an attack against a "public target" have been detained in a large-scale operation by police in Germany. Local media report that the suspects had targeted a Christmas market.

Some 500 officers took part in a joint raid on eight apartments in the cities of Kassel, Hannover, Essen and Leipzig early on Tuesday morning, police said in a statement.

The operation, led by Hessen Criminal Police and the attorney general's office in Frankfurt am Main, targeted six Syrian nationals, aged between 20 and 28, who were asylum seekers in Germany since 2014-2015. These people "are suspected of being members of the foreign terrorist group, the self-proclaimed Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS)."

Arrow Down

Leftist rage: Anarchist University of Illinois graduate instructor assaults students during anti-Trump protest

tariq khan assaults university illinois students
A University of Illinois graduate instructor was arrested for assaulting two students during an anti-Trump protest Thursday, stealing the phone of one student and throwing it on the sidewalk.

Tariq Khan is a PhD candidate at the university and has taught courses such as "Constructing Race in America" and "U.S. Gender History since 1877." He is also involved with various anarchist and communist organizations including Black Rose Anarchist Federation and Antifa, in addition to working with the undergraduate socialist students.


Comment: It's becoming more obvious by the day that Western society is rapidly embracing totalitarianism; only those who espouse the 'official views' are allowed a voice. Universities are now disciplining instructors for merely showing controversial videos for discussion purposes, while coddling others who are openly affiliated with extremist organizations.


Attention

Canadian university bullies student who dared to play Peterson clip from The Agenda

Lindsay Shepherd The Agenda
© CBCSteve Paikin, host of The Agenda
Lindsay Shepherd's flaw was showing a segment from the exchange that featured the person Mr. Matte was debating: Jordan Peterson

These are dark days in Ontario.

A three-minute news clip from the Ontario government's TV station prime time show The Agenda has roiled higher education in the province.

Not everyone is blessed to live in Ontario, so perhaps not all reading this know of that worthy program. The Agenda frequently takes the format of an hour-long panel discussion, and selects its panelists with a regard for the delicacies of balance and political correctness so refined as to qualify as a fetish. It is fervently progressive, its more diligent fans - and they are numerous - are equally so. The Agenda has the quiet earnestness and soothing quality only to be found elsewhere in those now dwindling classical music programs that rotate Liberstraum and The Blue Danube Waltz to soothe the twilight hours and forestall the torments of insomnia.

All of this is to say, by way of prelude, that The Agenda may be the last public affairs program in North America that is relentlessly civil, crushingly moderate in style and substance. It is calm. It is respectful. It is still. Yet three minutes of it has rocked the province. How so?

Comment: The article below contains an audio recording of the inquisition hearing Ms. Shepherd was required to attend. Scary listening.

Controversy sparks after Wilfrid Laurier TA shows Jordan Peterson video


Handcuffs

Japanese serial killer faces first of nine murder charges

Takahiro Shiraishi
© AFPSuspect Takahiro Shiraishi covers his face as he is transported to the prosecutor's office from a police station in Tokyo on November 1, 2017.
Japan's "Twitter killer", who is suspected of murdering and dismembering nine people he met on social media, was charged with his first count of homicide on Monday.

Takahiro Shiraishi, 27, is believed to have lured his mostly female victims - aged between 15 and 26 - to his apartment near Tokyo, where he killed them and cut up their bodies.

He has admitted murdering all nine, and was on Monday charged with the homicide of Aiko Tamura, 23.

Shiraishi, who allegedly stashed bits of bodies in coolers around his small apartment, is believed to have made contact with suicidal victims on Twitter and offered to help them die.

After Tamura went missing in October, her brother managed to hack into her Twitter account and noticed a suspicious handle, according to local media.

The brother helped police find and follow Shiraishi, who was arrested last month when investigators found him in his apartment with the festering remains of nine people.

Comment: See also: Serial killer arrested in Tokyo after search for missing 23-year-old woman turns up dismembered bodies, severed heads in apartment (UPDATE)


USA

US: Sexual harassment troubles mount in statehouses around the country

work sexual harassment
© Officer's Choice Blue
When Kirsten Anderson submitted a memo detailing her concerns about sexual harassment at the Iowa Capitol, she expected comments about women in the office - their sex lives, breast sizes and the length of skirts worn by teenage pages - to stop.

Instead, Anderson was fired seven hours later from her job with the Iowa Republican Senate Caucus.

After four years of litigation that ended in September, the state agreed to pay $1.75 million to settle her claim, leaving taxpayers footing the bill. Her case is among the first in a recent wave of high-profile sexual harassment cases that have roiled state legislatures around the nation, highlighting the moral and financial liability states faces as claims pile up.

Since last year, at least 40 lawmakers - nearly all men - in 20 states have been publicly accused by more than 100 people of some form of sexual misconduct or harassment, a USA TODAY NETWORK analysis found.

Comment: The Trials of Masculinity, Feminism and the Modern Male