Society's Child
Some 36.5 percent said the West intends to and have already moved to contain China. Some 41.7 percent say Western countries have such intentions but there exists no obvious action, according to a survey released by the Global Times' Poll Center Tuesday.
The annual survey, "How Chinese people view the world," involved telephone responses from 1,530 people from seven Chinese cities, including Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou and Changsha.
Jin Canrong, deputy dean of the School of International Studies at the Renmin University of China, told the Global Times on Tuesday that this is how the Chinese feel, following the past year's events.
Relations between China and the US have been strained in 2015 due to issues like the South China Sea disputes and cyber security. China and Japan locked horns in disputes around the Diaoyu Islands and Japan's attitude to face up to its wartime history.
In last year's Predictions and Trends for 2015, we told readers to expect some major tectonic shifts in the geopolitical arena. That happened alright, and in the coming 12 months we can expect some of those new realities to solidify, while others continue to take shape.
The good, the bad, and the ugly - here's what to look for ahead in 2016...
Comment: 2016 should prove to be quite interesting, get a good seat and enjoy the show!
In an interview with Sputnik, noted Russian economic expert Vladislav Ginko suggested that in 2016, Russia will be able to outperform EU members as far as economic development is concerned.
According to him, this year will prove to be more successful for those countries that have maintained their economic and financial sovereignty.
Comment: It's encouraging to witness how Russia has successfully outmaneuvered Western machinations against her, and to see those actions backfiring.
- Mush for brains! 'Anti-Russian' sanctions are costing the West thousands of jobs and billions of dollars
- Russia and China make next move to exit U.S. dollar tyranny
- So much for sanctions: Putin says Russian economy stabilizing as crisis has passed

Fast-food workers and their supporters join a nationwide protest for higher wages and union rights outside McDonald's in Los Angeles, California, United States, Nov.10, 2015.
The steepest increases came in Alaska, California, Massachusetts, and Nebraska, who all raised their minimum wages by a dollar. This in turn had made the states of California and Massachusetts the first states the in the country to implement $10-per-hour minimum wages.

A protester throws a gas canister back at police during clashes at North Ave and Pennsylvania Ave in Baltimore, Maryland April 28, 2015.
January
Protesters around the country kicked off the 2015 with a Black Lives Matter demonstration against police brutality. On New Year's Eve, about 100 demonstrators gathered at New York City's iconic Times Square, where Mayor Bill de Blasio and his family presided over the annual ball drop, to stage a 'die-in.' Marchers didn't manage to get onto the square itself, due to the massive number of revelers attending.
On the West Coast, the largest New Year's march was held in Oakland, California, against perceived police force. Over 200 activists staged a noise demonstration where voices, electronics, musical instruments and fireworks were used as a means to get message out, but instead attract a large police presence. After unruly protesters lobbed bottles at the police who were cordoning them off, 29 people were arrested.
Later in the month, 23 Black Lives Matter activists were arrested after chaining themselves to barrels and blocking both sides of an interstate near Boston.
"Today, our nonviolent direct action is meant to expose the reality that Boston is a city where white commuters and students use the city and leave, while black and brown communities are targeted by police, exploited, and displaced," protester Katie Seitz said in a statement.
Comment: Americans of conscience are justifiably outraged over the murderous behavior of police officers who are supposed to protect and serve. Pathological leadership, which exists across the United States, does not know how to solve crises. It does not know how to rebuild, nor how to heal. It only knows how to create additional chaos and point the finger at others. This of course adds more fuel to the fire, degrades society, and quickens the pace of systematic collapse.
What will 2016 bring... the breaking point?

NWH hackers claim they bombarded the BBC website with 600 gigabits a second of messages.
The group, calling itself New World Hacking (NWH), said it bombarded the system with 600 gigabits a second of messages. According to the BBC's business correspondent, Joe Lynam the technology correspondent, Rory Cellan-Jones, had received a tweet from NWH, claiming responsibility for the attack.
"Their ultimate goal, believe it or not, is not to attack the BBC but to go for ISIS (Daesh), the group which often calls itself Islamic State, and all their servers so they cannot spread propaganda from various different websites..."We have to stress we have no evidence, but this group is claiming responsibility for this DDoS attack and they claim their ultimate goal is to take down Isis websites," Lynam was quoted as saying by the British media.
Comment: Vulnerability is everywhere, apparently even for ISIS. Perhaps the next layer of propaganda has been exposed and with it, the next layer of control.
Whereas in 2011 numerous people in Switzerland voluntarily gave up their firearms, today more and more people are purchasing guns.
Swiss army chief André Blattmann warned, "The threat of terror is rising, hybrid wars are being fought around the globe; the economic outlook is gloomy and the resulting migration flows of displaced persons and refugees have assumed unforeseen dimensions,"adding that "Social unrest can not be ruled out."
He further recalled the situation around the two world wars in the last century and advised the people of Switzerland to arm themselves...
Comment: For more background on this, check out: Swiss army chief calls upon citizens to arm themselves in advance of social collapse
Chattanooga Airport spokesman Albert Waterhouse said Allegiant Air Flight 760 landed at about 8:30 a.m. Thursday after reporting an engine problem. No injuries were reported.
Allegiant said in a statement that the plane has been taken out of service and will be inspected. The statement said the flight, which was headed from Orlando to Cedar Rapids, Iowa, had 150 passengers and six crew members. Allegiant said a replacement aircraft will take passengers on to Iowa.
On Wednesday afternoon, Allegiant Flight 736 was diverted from Orlando-Sanford International Airport to T.F. Green Airport in Warwick, Rhode Island, with 151 passengers and six crew members. No one was injured, and passengers were booked into hotels for the night. The airline hasn't said what prompted the emergency landing, but a passenger reported that there was a smell of smoke about halfway through the flight.
Earlier this week, an Allegiant flight heading to Wisconsin landed in North Dakota after having mechanical issues.
Associated Press
Comment: "We heard an unusual noise. Something we've never heard on a flight before," said Matt Starkweather, a passenger on board the Allegiant Air Flight 760, "Like a boom. I guess it sounded like we hit something."
A small selection of aircraft related incidents last year include: Planes suddenly 'disappearing' from radar, sometimes in "unprecedented" blackouts; more planes diverting due to "electrical burning and smoke smells", "engine fires" and plane wings "bursting into flames". See also:
SOTT EXCLUSIVE: Year of the planes Cluster of plane problems as 2014 comes to a close
"Officials discussed the matter of including the book in the curriculum," the ministry said in a statement. "After it seriously examined all the considerations, and weighed the advantages and drawbacks, they decided not to include the book in the curriculum."
"Gader Haya" ("Borderlife") by Dorit Rabinyan won Israel's coveted Bernstein literary prize in 2015. The novel revolves around Liat, an Israeli translator, and Khilmi, a Palestinian painter. They fall in love in New York, but things take a dramatic turn when the two return to their families and homes in Tel Aviv and Ramallah, respectively.
The book was recommended to be added to the school curriculum by a panel of educators and academics, but deemed a threat by senior Education Ministry officials.
Comment: Israel's Education Ministry taking a page out of Erdogan's book, exposing themselves in all their pathological glory, and being totally oblivious to the fact. Do these clowns realize how moronic and fascist they look?
According to the text of the bill, it is now illegal to "take a sample of material, acquire, gather, photograph or otherwise preserve information in any form from open land which is submitted or intended to be submitted to any agency of the state or federal government."
Simply taking a picture or collecting trash from a polluted stream could lead to $5,000 in fines and a year in prison.
Justin Pidot, an assistant professor at the University of Denver Sturm College of Law recently told Think Progress that, "People on the ground, who have been engaged in this kind of data collection in the past, now have to face the worry about being potentially prosecuted. The chilling effect on citizen participation is huge."
Comment: There seems to be a growing trend to silence activists and whistleblowers. Corporate lobbyists are creating such laws by using financial incentives to influence legislators, who apparently value their portfolios much more highly than the health and safety of the planet and its inhabitants.
- Big Food using dirty tricks to block growing food activism
- Surprised? Emails reveal Idaho ag-gag bill was drafted by dairy lobby
- Surging hubris at the Environmental Protection Agency
- Why You Can Be Branded a Terrorist for Fighting Animal Abuse












Comment: The Chinese are well aware of the West's geopolitical maneuvers.