Society's ChildS


Briefcase

The United States of work - the tyranny corporations exercise over all of us

employment prison
© Marcel Ceuppens
Employers exercise vast control over our lives, even when we're not on the job. How did our bosses gain power that the government itself doesn't hold?

Work no longer works. "You need to acquire more skills," we tell young job seekers whose résumés at 22 are already longer than their parents' were at 32. "Work will give you meaning," we encourage people to tell themselves, so that they put in 60 hours or more per week on the job, removing them from other sources of meaning, such as daydreaming or social life. "Work will give you satisfaction," we insist, even though it requires abiding by employers' rules, and the unwritten rules of the market, for most of our waking hours. At the very least, work is supposed to be a means to earning an income. But if it's possible to work full time and still live in poverty, what's the point?

Even before the global financial crisis of 2008, it had become clear that if waged work is supposed to provide a measure of well-being and social structure, it has failed on its own terms. Real household wages in the United States have remained stagnant since the 1970s, even as the costs of university degrees and other credentials rise. Young people find an employment landscape defined by unpaid internships, temporary work, and low pay. The glut of degree-holding young workers has pushed many of them into the semi- or unskilled labor force, making prospects even narrower for non - degree holders. Entry-level wages for high school graduates have in fact fallen. According to a study by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, these lost earnings will depress this generation's wages for their entire working lives. Meanwhile, those at the very top—many of whom derive their wealth not from work, but from returns on capital—vacuum up an ever-greater share of prosperity.

Comment: Corporations will fight tooth-and-nail against any move to bring such ideas about freeing oneself from their shackles to fruition:


Handcuffs

German prosecutors say Iraqi arrested in connection with Dortmund bus attack led ISIS unit - UPDATE

Borussia Dortmund team bus
© Kai Pfaffenbach / ReutersBorussia Dortmund team bus
A suspect detained in connection with the bombing of the Borussia Dortmund team bus came to Germany from Iraq, where he supposedly led an Islamic State unit responsible for numerous abductions and killings, the Federal Prosecutor's Office said.

The Federal Prosecutor's Office (GBA) said in a statement on Thursday it has issued an arrest warrant against a 26-year-old Iraqi national, identified as Abdul Beset A., on suspicion of having links to Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS/ISIL).

The suspect was earlier detained in connection with the bombing of a bus carrying the Borussia Dortmund football team to a Champions League game against AS Monaco. The GBA's statement noted investigators have so far produced "no evidence" of the suspect's direct involvement in the attack.

However, it is strongly suspected that Abdul Beset A. joined IS in late 2014 in Iraq. Later, he led a unit of 10 militants whose task was "to prepare and execute abductions, extortions and killings."

Comment: German prosecutors say there is no evidence that an Iraqi man detained after bomb blasts hit a top soccer team's bus was involved in the attack.
However, they said in a statement that "so far the investigation has turned up no evidence that the suspect participated in the attack" in Dortmund on April 11.

They have asked a court to keep him in investigative detention.
See also: Bomb scare: Triple blasts near Borussia Dortmund football team bus - Update

Update: It still isn't clear who was responsible, as there have been multiple claims for responsibility:
Three identical letters found at the scene of the bomb blasts claimed the attack was carried out "in the name of Allah," but have been treated with skepticism by both investigating police and prosecutors.

The wording of the three identical letters immediately raised suspicions as they do not fit the MO of extremist terrorist groups such as Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS/ISIL).

Specific threats to sportspeople and other celebrities as well as demands for the closure of Ramstein Air Base and the withdrawal of German planes from Syria stood out as atypical to federal prosecutors investigating the case.

The wording and target choice have prompted speculation that the letters were decoys intended to deflect attention away from the real perpetrators.

"It is indeed doubtful," Frauke Koehler, a spokeswoman for the federal public prosecutor's office, said when asked to comment on the authenticity of the letters as cited by Sky News. She would not make any further comment on the matter as the investigation is ongoing.
...
The German newspaper, Tagesspiegel, claims to have received an anonymous email from a far-right group also claiming responsibility for Tuesday's attack which left Spanish defender Marc Bartra with a broken wrist and led to one police officer being treated for shock.

The emailed note allegedly claimed there would be another attack on Saturday, April 22 with the threat being investigated by German federal prosecutors.

The message reportedly criticized the German government's stance on multiculturalism, references Adolf Hitler, and claims a "Cologne squad" is poised to spill "colorful blood." This may be a specific reference to a pro-tolerance rally scheduled to take place in Cologne next week, reports DW.

Investigators also received a claim of responsibility from a far-left group but have dismissed it as inauthentic.

Further intrigue has emerged in the case, as the detonators used in the attack were allegedly military-grade, reports Reuters citing a source close to the investigation.

"The technically perfect construction of the explosive devices in Dortmund, which could have attacked any vehicle on any other road in Germany, is really worrying," Bavaria's Minister of the Interior, Joachim Herrmann, told local German news outlet Welt am Sonntag.
And get this: the explosives used may have been German military.
The explosives used in the attack on the Borussia Dortmund team bus may have come from the German military, local media report, citing sources close to the investigation.

Around 100 investigators from the German Federal Criminal Police Office (BKA) are looking into the incident, one of whom spoke to the Welt am Sonntag newspaper on Saturday.

"The explosives in the pipe bombs, which were filled with metal pins, might have come from the stocks of the Bundeswehr [German armed forces], but that's still being checked," the newspaper quoted the anonymous investigator as saying.

The source added that specialized training was needed to use the military detonators, which are hard to acquire.
Update (April 21): German police arrested a suspect, a German-Russian who they say was planning a financial scam (i.e., no terrorism involved) using the football club's market shares:
The 28-year-old suspect was arrested by the German GSG 9 elite counter-terrorist unit on Friday morning, near the university town of Tubingen, the Federal Prosecutor's Office (GBA) confirmed in a statement.

The man, identified in local media as German-Russian dual citizen Sergey W., was charged with attempted murder as well as inflicting serious bodily harm through the use of explosives.

Financial motives are now thought to have been behind the triple bombing on the Borussia Dortmund football team last week, which happened as the team made its way to its home stadium for the Champions League quarter-final match against French team Monaco.

The prosecutor's office says Sergey W. had bought 15,000 shares in the club just before the bombing, and planned to speculate on them if the stock price plummeted.

The so-called 'put options' he bought would have allowed him to sell the shares at a pre-determined price, entitling him to as much as $4.3 million (€4 million) if their value fell, according to Bild.

The investigators also say the man bought the shares while staying in L'Arrivee hotel - where Dortmund players were staying before their match - citing examination of his IP address.

He was also booked into the same hotel during the day of the attack, and his room overlooked the street where the explosions hit the bus. The blast injured Dortmund player Marc Bartra and a police officer. The GBA's statement said that the bus had no armored protection or bulletproof windows.

Speaking at a news conference later on Friday, GBA spokesperson Frauke Koehler said that searches had taken place in four different cities, though investigators had found no evidence that the suspect had an accomplice.

Police had also found various communication devices in the suspect's apartment, she said, adding that the explosives he had used left "minimal residue," which complicates any further investigation.

Citing its own sources, Germany's Der Spiegel weekly reported that the suspect was conscripted into the German Army and served between April and December 2008.

However, the outlet says that it's still unclear where the suspect learnt how to handle explosives, as he actually served in a medical regiment in the town of Dornstadt, where he was responsible for electrical maintenance engineering.

Earlier reports suggested the explosives used in the attacks could have come from the German military. The investigators have not confirmed this, however, saying they have no "exact data" on the nature of the explosives.

A spokesman for the Russian embassy in Germany, Denis Mikerin, said the mission is verifying the suspect's Russian citizenship.

"At the moment, we are checking whether or not he is a Russian citizen," Mikerin said, as cited by RIA Novosti. "If confirmed, our consulate is ready to render necessary support to him."

The spokesman added that the suspect had not contacted the Russian consulate in Bonn.

It is yet to be established if the explosive devices used in the attack, packed with nails to increase the effect, were detonated remotely from inside the hotel. It is reportedly likely that Sergey W. stayed at the L'Arrivee even after the blast.

Following the explosion, which caused panic and chaos among terrified hotel guests, the suspect went to the L'Arrivee restaurant and ordered a steak, Bild reported.



Attention

False flag alert: Operation Gotham Shield will simulate nuke detonation over Manhattan

nuke explosion
False flag watch is now active.

A general alert is out for something major in the near or immediate future. Hopefully, it is just another false alarm, instead of another false flag. Either way, danger is at hand.

Given all that is going on in the world, it is downright eerie to discover that the federal government is once again staging mock disasters that draw disturbing parallels with current world events.

In just a few days, during April 24-26th, Operation Gotham Shield will commence.

It is a tabletop, joint agency exercise involving FEMA, Homeland Security and a myriad of law enforcement and military agencies. WMD, chemical and biological units will all be on hand as a response is tested for a "simulated" nuclear detonation over the United States' foremost urban center, in the iconic and densely populated island of Manhattan and nearby shores of New Jersey.

Pistol

Video released of cop shooting librarian during 'don't shoot' demonstration

shooting
She only intended to support police — whose collective, national reputation has been sullied by countless questionable killings — so, Mary Knowlton attended the Citizens Academy to try and understand the dangers of policing firsthand.

Instead, the 73-year-old retired librarian discovered too late why the pervasive fear of law enforcement in the United States is not only perfectly justified, it's sound advice — Punta Gorda Police Officer Lee Coel fatally shot Knowlton during a demonstration for which she volunteered — because the inexcusably inept cop had loaded live instead of blank rounds in his firearm.

Coel and Punta Gorda Police Chief Tom Lewis have both been charged over the August 9, 2016, shooting — the former has pled not guilty to felony first-degree manslaughter, the latter, with second-degree misdemeanor culpable negligence.

Now, local network WINK has obtained video of the tragic shooting — which shows moments of confusion and shock in the aftermath of Coel's demonstration gone horrifically awry.

Comment: Citizen police academy crowd watches in horror as librarian, age 73, is shot dead


House

Five injured after house explodes in north central Texas

Dawson home explosion
© The Dallas Morning News
Five people were hurt late Thursday night after a house suddenly exploded, according to Navarro County Sheriff Elmer Tanner.

It happened about 11 p.m. at a home in the 500 block of West Highway 31 in Dawson.

Emergency crews were able to rescue all five people from the home. Three of them were flown to a Dallas-area hospital, Tanner said. It's unclear how they're doing. Two others were being treated for non-life-threatening injuries.

A neighbor said an elderly couple lives inside the home. Three of their family members were staying with them when the explosion happened.

Homeowners Cathy Spruiell and her husband Dwain Spruiell are in stable condition at Parkland in Dallas. Another person in the home is also at Parkland.


Brick Wall

Separate anti-radicalization 'jihadi jails' being built for extremist prisoners in UK

Jihadi jail
© Denis Balibouse/Reuters
The British Ministry of Justice has announced that plans will go ahead to separate extremist prisoners from mainstream inmates and isolate them in "jihadi jails" to deter radicalization.

Three separation centers will be built as part of high-security prisons to incarcerate subversive prisoners who are thought to have been involved in planning terrorist attacks, or who represent a threat to national security either in person or through radicalizing others.

Construction of the first purpose-built block will begin at HMP Frankland high-security prison in the coming weeks, with two more to follow.

Plans to create the separation centers, which will have the capacity to hold up to 28 inmates, came after an inquiry found that "incapacitation units" are needed to keep Islamists and jihadis from manipulating other people.

The special units will hold people promoting all forms of extremism, including that of the far-right, and will be used to isolate "self-styled emirs" who attempt to draw other prisoners to extremist Islamic principles.

Oscar

Barghouti freed to travel, will receive Gandhi award at Yale, as will Ralph Nader

Omar & Ralph
© Palestine Chronicle/nader.orgOmar Barghouti and Ralph Nader
This is special: On Sunday afternoon at Yale, Omar Barghouti, leader of the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions campaign (BDS), will receive a Gandhi peace award, along with Ralph Nader. At the last minute Barghouti was allowed by an Israeli judge to travel to the States.

Rebecca Vilkomerson of Jewish Voice for Peace will introduce Barghouti.

JVP's recent conference in Chicago included a video'd shoutout to Barghouti, who was then jailed by Israel on alleged tax offenses and facing days of interrogation. The arrest came at the same time as a new law barring travel to Israel by those supporting BDS, and as a government minister was vowing to undertake the civil "elimination" of BDS supporters.

After his release, Barghouti was subjected to a gag order and barred from leaving Palestine. Israel was pursuing a "McCarthyite witchhunt" against him, he told EI. But a judge reportedly suspended the travel ban.

Comment: See also:


Toys

Russia passes law banning bizarre baby names

The law will ban figures, abbreviations, numerals, symbols and characters, which are not letters (except a dash)

Babies in Russia
© Boris Kavashkin/TASS
Russia's State Duma (lower house of parliament) passed the bill on Friday, which ban parents from officially giving their babies names that are foul words, numbers, titles or abbreviations.

The law will ban figures, abbreviations, numerals, symbols and characters, which are not letters (except a dash), obscene words and titles or positions as baby names, Pavel Krasheninnikov, the head of Duma committee for state construction and legislation, told TASS.

Vader

This man has no shame: Internet firestorm erupts after John Podesta's tweet endorsing pizza

podesta comet ping pong
On Thursday, John Podesta took to Twitter to post a link to a Washinton Post piece written by James Alefantis, the owner of the now famous Comet Ping Pong Pizzeria in Washington, D.C. In his Tweet, Podesta made the tasteless and terrible joke, while downplaying actual concern about the pedophilia and child trafficking that currently plagues the planet.

I know I'm asking for it but the community is great and the pizza is great too. Thanks James.

In what appears to be an attempt to reverse troll his accusers, Podesta only gave them fodder for an all-out Twitter assault.


Comment:


Bad Guys

Study finds BP oil spill caused $17.2 billion in damage to natural resources in Gulf of Mexico

BP oil spill damages
© U.S. Coast GuardThe first-ever comprehensive appraisal of the BP Deepwater Horizon oil spill's financial impact on natural resources found that it did $17.2 billion in damage.

The six-year study is the first-ever financial evaluation of spill's impact


The 2010 BP Deepwater Horizon oil spill did $17.2 billion in damage to the natural resources in the Gulf of Mexico, a team of scientists recently found after a six-year study of the impact of the largest oil spill in U.S. history.

This is the first comprehensive appraisal of the financial value of the natural resources damaged by the 134-million-gallon spill.

"This is proof that our natural resources have an immense monetary value to citizens of the United States who visit the Gulf and to those who simply care that this valuable resource is not damaged," said Kevin Boyle, a professor of agricultural and applied economics in the Virginia Tech College of Agriculture and Life Science and one of the authors on the paper.

Comment: The true costs of this horrific disaster to those whose lives have been irreparably changed can never be measured.