Society's ChildS


Bullseye

Best of the Web: Why the Nanny State and paranoid parenting are creating a Fragile Generation

child bubble wrap
© Joanna Andreasson
One day last year, a citizen on a prairie path in the Chicago suburb of Elmhurst came upon a teen boy chopping wood. Not a body. Just some already-fallen branches. Nonetheless, the onlooker called the cops.

Officers interrogated the boy, who said he was trying to build a fort for himself and his friends. A local news site reports the police then "took the tools for safekeeping to be returned to the boy's parents."

Elsewhere in America, preschoolers at the Learning Collaborative in Charlotte, North Carolina, were thrilled to receive a set of gently used playground equipment. But the kids soon found out they would not be allowed to use it, because it was resting on grass, not wood chips. "It's a safety issue," explained a day care spokeswoman. Playing on grass is against local regulations.

And then there was the query that ran in Parents magazine a few years back: "Your child's old enough to stay home briefly, and often does. But is it okay to leave her and her playmate home while you dash to the dry cleaner?" Absolutely not, the magazine averred: "Take the kids with you, or save your errand for another time." After all, "you want to make sure that no one's feelings get too hurt if there's a squabble."

The principle here is simple: This generation of kids must be protected like none other. They can't use tools, they can't play on grass, and they certainly can't be expected to work through a spat with a friend.

And this, it could be argued, is why we have "safe spaces" on college campuses and millennials missing adult milestones today. We told a generation of kids that they can never be too safe-and they believed us.

Red Flag

Women staffers in Westminster are naming MPs with histories of sexual harassment in secret WhatsApp group

british parliament
© GettyNone of the MPs have been named, but the allegations could trigger a scandal in Whitehall resulting in resignations
Female staff in Westminster are naming "sex pest" MPs in a secret WhatsApp group, it has been claimed.

The group, made up of researchers, aides and secretaries, is said to have accused politicians, including cabinet members, of being "very handsy" and "not safe in taxis".

None of the MPs have been named, but the allegations - reported by The Sun - could trigger a scandal in Whitehall resulting in resignations, a source told the paper.

"The usual old suspects are there but there have been some surprising younger names crop up," the source said.

Cow

"This is an animal welfare issue": 'Unstunned' halal meat banned in school meals by Lancashire council

Halal meat
© Regis Duvignau / Reuters
An English council has voted to ban schools from serving halal meat from animals that are not stunned before slaughter. It follows an impassioned debate between the Muslim community and those arguing the practice is "abhorrent" and "inhumane."

The proposal to ban halal meat from unstunned animals was brought by Geoff Driver, the Conservative leader of Lancashire County Council. "This is an animal welfare issue, nothing more, nothing less," he said, according to the Lancashire Telegraph.

"The reason it has been raised now is because the contract for meat supplies is coming up for renewal," he said. The practice is "abhorrent" and "really, really cruel," he added. He denied the vote was Islamophobic or anti-Semitic.

Lancashire currently supplies 27 schools with "unstunned" halal meat, catering for up to 12,000 children. During a heated debate on Thursday night, councillors voted 41 to 24 to ban the meat from county-run schools. Fifteen councillors abstained.

Comment: See also: Denmark bans kosher and halal slaughter as minister says 'animal rights come before religion'


Pharoah

Survey reveals majority of Americans believe in ancient advanced civilization while a third believe in alien astronauts

Atlantis painting
© Sputnik/Igor BoykoReproduction of Atlantis painting (1979) by artist Vladimir Smirnov.
Something bad is going on in America, and I'm not entirely sure whom to blame. For the past few years Chapman University has conducted a Halloween-themed study of paranormal and superstitious beliefs tied to Americans' worst fears. Included in the survey questions were items related to subjects of interest to us: ancient astronauts, lost advanced civilizations, etc.

The latest survey was released this week, and for the first time a clear majority of American now professes to believe in a lost Ice Age civilization similar to Atlantis. Across the board, fringe history beliefs reached new heights. People write to me all the time to ask why I bother to talk about "crazy" topics like aliens and Atlantis. I am flabbergasted to report now that it is because more Americans now believe in Atlantis than do not.

The 2017 Chapman University Survey of American Fears Wave 4 found that 55% of Americans believe in Atlantis or another lost ancient super-civilization. Additionally, 35% now believe space aliens visited ancient people in the past. Such figures are simply astonishing, even after accounting for the fact that technically speaking Atlantis and aliens are not "paranormal" per se.

Comment: The author calls the growing beliefs of Americans in Atlantis or aliens as a "total failure of public education and science advocacy", so clearly he thinks these ideas are nonsense. But what the other misses is that science has so far been totally unable to explain the discrepancies in what scientists and historians tell us about human's ancient past, and what the actual records and evidence shows. He is clearly invested in the official historical narrative, but as can be seen a majority of Americans no longer believe that the official story is the truth. That is not a failure, it is a testament to peoples' ability to think for themselves and ignore what "experts" and authority figures tell them. See also:


Snakes in Suits

Flashback Former Thatcher cabinet minister admits Establishment 'may well' have covered-up Westminster paedophile ring

Lord Tebbit Thatcher pedophile coverup
Former member of Margaret Thatcher's cabinet in the 1980s says the feeling among some was that the establishment was to be protected.
A former cabinet minister in Margaret Thatcher's government believes there "may well" have been a political cover-up over child abuse in the 1980s.

Lord Tebbit, who served in a number of ministerial posts under Thatcher, made the startling comments when talking about the missing 40-page dossier detailing claims of a Westminster paedophile ring.

Speaking on BBC1's The Andrew Marr Show, Lord Tebbit said it was "the thing people did at the time".

He said: "At that time I think most people would have thought that the establishment, the system, was to be protected and if a few things had gone wrong here and there that it was more important to protect the system than to delve too far into it.

Comment:


Smoking

Geopolitics doesn't stop tobacco giant Philip Morris from doing business in Russia

Cigarette factory
© Alexei Danichev / SputnikCigarette tobacco mixture shop, Philip Morris Izhora factory.
The decline in relations between Washington and Moscow has not damaged tobacco giant Philip Morris' business in Russia, according to the company.

"We don't see any special difficulties since our production is located on the territory of the Russian Federation. Not only are we a Russian producer, but also a Russian exporter," Aleksey Kim, corporate affairs director at Philip Morris Russia told RIA Novosti.

He was speaking after talks in the United States with the head of the Russian Minister of Industry and Trade Denis Manturov on the sidelines of the Russia-US business council in New York. "We try to take a pragmatic look at the way things stand now," said Kim, adding that Philip Morris remains committed to expanding its plant near St. Petersburg.

Laptop

Black activist says Twitter banned her as 'Russian bot'- looking to sue

Charlie Peach twitter
© Charlie PeachCharlie Peach - banned by Twitter
Among the 201 Twitter accounts suspended from the platform for "Russian interference" in the 2016 US election was an African-American activist from Atlanta. Now she has come forward, telling RT she may sue the company for the unjustified suspension.

Twitter banned the 201 accounts in September, citing "prohibitions against spam" and other rule violations. Additionally, the company found 179 accounts that were "linked or related" to those banned by Facebook. Multiple media outlets, including Reuters, the New York Times and CNN, called the accounts "Russia-linked."

RT has spoken to a banned Twitter user, who says she was swept up in the anti-Russia operation.

RT independently confirmed the identity of the owner of the Twitter account @PoliticsPeach, who asked to be identified by the name she previously used on the platform, Charlie Peach. RT confirmed that Peach is an African-American woman based in Atlanta, Georgia.

Bad Guys

'Safe space' cancer spreads: British students' union employs 'safe space marshals' to control debates - compared to 'Mini police state'

censorship free speech
© Andrea Speer / Global Look Press
King's College London (KCL) students' union is adopting 'safe space marshals' to control student events. Critics say the £12 per hour paid to the new guards out of students' union contributions is "subsidizing intolerance."

Marshals are being employed by the students' union to patrol debates and make sure speakers do not offend the audience. They have powers to take immediate action against any participant who is being offensive or discriminatory.

The news, however, sparked widespread criticism. Many are concerned the strategy poses a threat to freedom of speech, one of academia's founding principles.

Microscope 2

Boston hospital offers controversial DNA scans of newborns - most parents decline over privacy and genetic discrimination concerns

Genetic screening, DNA testing
© CBS This Morning)An innovative DNA test being performed at Brigham & Women’s.
Doctors at Brigham and Women's Hospital are offering new parents a landmark genetic scan that screens newborns for around 1,800 conditions. But most parents are declining the controversial test.

The trial allows newborns to be tested before showing symptoms of diseases, including some cancers.

Robert Green, medical geneticist at Harvard and co-director of the BabySeq Project along with Alan Beggs, told CBS This Morning the scan could "absolutely" save a child's life in the future.

But as Green told CBS This Morning, there are also drawbacks to the program.

Light Sabers

University of Virginia requires incoming students to undergo 'implicit bias' program

privileged problems
The University of Virginia now requires all incoming freshmen to complete an "Understanding Implicit Bias" educational program during their first months on campus.

The "Understanding Implicit Bias" module, which the university described in an email as a part of its "commitment to a diverse, inclusive community that follows truth wherever it may lead," was tested on 300 first-year students early in the semester, but was recently made mandatory for all first-year students.

The module "pressured us to associate black [people] with bad things, and white [people] with good things."

Comment: See: Questioning the consensus: Maybe we can't really measure "implicit bias"