Society's ChildS


Better Earth

'Thank you Russia for beating hate with love' - New Zealand supporter's heartfelt letter to football fans

‘Thank you Russia for beating hate with love’ – New Zealand fan’s heartfelt letter to football fans  Matt Fejos
© Matt Fejos
When New Zealand failed to become the 32nd and final qualifiers for the Russia 2018 World Cup, going down 2-0 to Peru in their play-off second leg in Lima, it shattered the dreams of their steadfast official supporters group - 'The Flying Kiwis'.

The group had hoped for a return to Russia since visiting last summer for the 2017 Confederations Cup, held in four Russian cities from June 17 to July 2, and in which New Zealand played in the opening match against hosts Russia at St. Petersburg Stadium.

‘Thank you Russia for beating hate with love’ – New Zealand fan’s heartfelt letter to football fans  Matt Fejos
© Matt Fejos
Defeat hit 'All Whites' fan Matt Fejos the hardest. The Wellington native traveled to all three New Zealand games at the tournament, from St. Petersburg to Sochi and back.

Comment: Also See: 'Everything is great': Crimea celebrates 2 years since historic referendum to rejoin Russia


Heart - Black

Indonesian smugglers stuffed exotic birds in drainpipes (PHOTOS)

exotic_birds1
© Wildlife Conservation Society / AFP
Police in Indonesia have smashed a smuggling ring for allegedly stuffing 125 exotic birds into drainpipes. The arrests are part of a wider clampdown on the lucrative illegal trade in the animals.

Four men were arrested following the discovery of 41 endangered white cockatoos and 84 eclectus parrots, which had been stuffed into plastic piping. The piping had been cut and sealed at the ends with wire, AFP reports.

USA

The Bundy Trial and why it should matter to you - A conversation with John Lamb


Cliven Bundy and his sons have been incarcerated for nearly two years. Regardless of your position on the matter you must ask yourself how American citizens can be held so long without trial. John Lamb discusses Ryan Bundy's recent release to a halfway house and the latest developments in the case.

Attention

Protections for anonymous speakers jeopardized by Appeals Court ruling

freedom gag
© livelaw.in
A federal appeals court has issued an alarming ruling that significantly erodes the Constitution's protections for anonymous speakers - and simultaneously hands law enforcement a near unlimited power to unmask them.

The Ninth Circuit's decision in U.S. v. Glassdoor, Inc. is a significant setback for the First Amendment. The ability to speak anonymously online without fear of being identified is essential because it allows people to express controversial or unpopular views. Strong legal protections for anonymous speakers are needed so that they are not harassed, ridiculed, or silenced merely for expressing their opinions.

In Glassdoor, the court's ruling ensures that any grand jury subpoena seeking the identities of anonymous speakers will be valid virtually every time. The decision is a recipe for disaster precisely because it provides little to no legal protections for anonymous speakers.

EFF applauds Glassdoor Inc. for standing up for its users' First Amendment rights in this case and for its commitment to do so moving forward. Yet we worry that without stronger legal standards-which EFF and other groups urged the Ninth Circuit to apply (read our brief filed in the case) - the government will easily compel platforms to comply with grand jury subpoenas to unmask anonymous speakers.

Comment: Are the courts bowing to intelligence agency power instead of upholding civil protections?


Star of David

Jerusalem: Underground 'city of the dead' to replace burial plots

city of dead
© rolzur.comArtist rendition.
An underground 'city of the dead' is being built in Jerusalem after the holy city ran out of burial plots.

A huge network of catacombs excavated beneath a mountain over the past two years will provide enough space for 22,000 graves. Tunnels half a mile long and a network of lifts connecting the outside world with the crypts have been dug out of the ground.

Specialist drilling teams have bored down 45 metres under the Mount of the Resting to build the unique city.

The two-year project, costing £37million, is scheduled for completion at the Har HaMenuchot Cemetery - Israel's largest - next year. And it should mean there's enough space for the city's dead at the cemetery for the next 25 years.

underground digger
© rolzur.comDiggers drill down 45 meters.

Boat

UN World Food Programme predicts second wave of refugees to sweep Europe

famine
© Middle East Transparent
Middle East is only getting worse, the head of the UN World Food Programme said. He added there is a clear link between hunger and migration.

Living conditions, mostly food distribution, in refugee camps in crisis-affected regions had deteriorated dramatically before the European migrant crisis struck in 2015, David Beasley, the executive director of the World Food Programme (WFP) told German newspaper Die Zeit.

"We paid a heavy price for this mistake and I'm afraid we're about to make it once again," Beasley believes. According to the UN food chief, while many asylum seekers wanted to stay in their home region, the lack of food has driven them away. "If they don't have enough food, they will leave. And many of them would go to Europe," Beasley said.

While the UN has been seemingly making progress in fighting world hunger over the last 10 years, the number of people suffering hunger worldwide has now dramatically increased again, Beasley said, adding that the food crisis is caused mainly by wars and climate change. Yemen is threatened by famine because Saudi Arabia is blocking the country's ports, preventing aid deliveries, Beasley said, urging Gulf countries not to stand aside but instead join the food aid program for crisis-stricken regions.

A WFP report from March says that some 108 million people across the globe faced "crisis food insecurity or worse," a dramatic increase from 2015 when the figure was 80 million. The document says that major food crises were fueled by "conflict, record-high food prices and abnormal weather patterns."

Comment: See also: NATO's "war on terror" in Africa and the Middle East leaves carnage, disease and famine in its wake


Eye 1

Surveillance state: Microphones to help Swedish cops hear shots & screams will be installed

swedish cops
© TT News Agency / Anders Wiklund / Reuters
Stockholm police hope to speed up their response times with the help of special microphones. Due to be installed next year, they will be able to detect and report sounds of shooting or screams as the country experiences its peak crime rates this decade.

The new microphones will become an addition to surveillance cameras already dotting the Järva area near the Swedish capital. Linked to a management center, the hidden microphones will be set to detect shooting, explosions, glass shaterring and screams, says the police officer in charge of camera surveillance, Joakim Söderström, cited by SVT Nyheter.

Once it detects a relevant noise, the microphone sends a signal to a police center. Following the alert, police officers in the area will receive a text message or an email. "If we can be in place just a few minutes earlier, it's enough to save someone's life," Söderström explained.

2 + 2 = 4

OU offers guide on how to conjugate pronouns

Learn how to conjugate 'any type of pronoun'!

gender guide
An LGBT "ally" program at the University of Oklahoma offers students eight possible pronouns to use while interacting with peers, presenting the options in a chart that includes words such as "persself" and "eir."

The university's LGBT Ally Program Resource Guide, a 40-page handbook offered through the school's Gender + Equality Center, gives students nearly ten options to use when addressing their schoolmates.

Eye 2

Transgender killings hit all-time high, advocacy group blames Trump

Trump
© ReutersAn advocacy group is blaming US President Donald Trump for a rise in transgender killings.
The killing of transgender people has spiked to an all-time high in the United States with advocacy groups reporting that there have been at least 25 transgender homicide victims so far this year.

In a report released Friday, the Human Rights Campaign revealed that 102 transgender people have been killed in the US over the course of the past five years. The figures reached an all-time this year with 25 deaths.

Another monitoring group, the National Coalition of Anti-Violence Programs, calculates that 26 transgender people have been killed in the US this year. Both groups say their counts may be incomplete because transgender victims are sometimes misidentified in reports.

The Human Rights Campaign have been quick to lay the blame for the rise in killings at the door of US President Donald Trump.

Stock Down

A myth for the majority: The great retirement con

Frankly put: retirement is now a myth for the majority

retirement con
The Origins Of The Retirement Plan

Back during the Revolutionary War, the Continental Congress promised a monthly lifetime income to soldiers who fought and survived the conflict. This guaranteed income stream, called a "pension", was again offered to soldiers in the Civil War and every American war since.

Since then, similar pension promises funded from public coffers expanded to cover retirees from other branches of government. States and cities followed suit -- extending pensions to all sorts of municipal workers ranging from policemen to politicians, teachers to trash collectors.

A pension is what's referred to as a defined benefit plan. The payout promised a worker upon retirement is guaranteed up front according to a formula, typically dependent on salary size and years of employment.

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