Society's Child
Earlier this year, Jeff Severt's son was given a math problem to solve using a number line and strategies, which is the new Common Core approach used in schools, KSDK reports. The assignment instructs kids to help a boy named Jack subtract 316 from 427.
The answer of 111 can be found in seconds using the old fashioned math, but the new way was difficult for the father to figure out.
According to The Blaze, Severt wrote a sarcastic response on the math problem.
"I have a bachelor of science degree in electronics engineering which included extensive study in differential equations and other higher math applications," he wrote. "Even I cannot explain the Common Core mathematics approach, nor get the answer correct. In the real world, simplification is valued over complication," he added, signing the letter as a "frustrated parent."
Indeed, the 13-year-old "war on terror" has contributed to a grave societal malady that might be deemed "battered citizen syndrome." As the project of a transnational New World Order is laid out, the psychological constitution of the polity must necessarily experience perpetual crises and the threat thereof. Genuinely non-conventional political communication, organization and activism are among the few substantial means of combating battered citizen syndrome and the spiritual and psychological slavery it perpetuates.
This has to be a joke.
I don't think this is a joke.
Please, someone tell me this is a joke.
From EAGNews:
Ebola, the virus that has ravaged Sierra Leone, Liberia and Guinea at an unprecedented rate, continues its devastating spread. The number of dead doubles with each passing month; the bodies unburied. More lives are devastated with each passing day.
And in the absence of a mass-produced vaccine, its treatment - enforced isolation, mass quarantines - now threatens to bring a new crisis: starvation.
Earlier this month, two children who were among the thousands orphaned by the virus, were visited by aid workers in Liberia's capital, Monrovia. At the time, the workers did not have the resources to take the children away. When they returned days later, the children were dead. They died not from Ebola, but starvation.
Yesterday, as the World Health Organisation warned that more than 4,500 people would be dead before the end of the week, a new threat to West Africa's stability emerged: three quarters of a million people may die from malnutrition, as an unprecedented modern famine follows the disease - if urgent action is not taken. While Ebola's direct consequences prompt terror, its indirect results are equally disturbing - food prices spiral, farms are abandoned, meals are scarce and those most in need, the estimated 4,000 orphans of the virus, go hungry.
The funeral procession was held in the village of Beit Laqiya after Friday prayers.
Mourners, waving Palestinian flags and holding pictures of the teen, shouted slogans to demand an end to Israel's murder of Palestinian children. Palestinians also said Israel should be held accountable for its ongoing "crimes."
Bahaa Samir Badir was killed after the Israeli forces raided Beit Laqiya village and opened fire on Palestinians on Thursday.
He was critically injured after being hit by a live bullet in the chest from close range. He succumbed to his wound shortly after the incident.
Following his death, clashes erupted between Palestinians and Israeli security forces at the scene.
Comment: IDF soldiers aiming at innocent children are heartless and spineless creatures that should be locked up for life. Israel should indeed be held accountable for its ongoing bloody crimes, unfortunately it remains quiet at the International Court of "Justice" in the Hague.
See also: 'Shot in the heart': Israeli army kills 13yo Palestinian boy
The background: Scientists set traps in a few Manhattan buildings to catch the pests. "New York rats are a lot wilier than rats in other cities," researcher Cadhla Firth told the New York Times. "We had to bait traps and just leave them open for a week." Once they had their quota, they were able to extract tissue and look for pathogens. Some of the highlights include salmonella, vicious strains of E. coli and Seoul hantavirus, which had never before been found in New York. They even discovered 18 new viruses, including some that seem similar to the virus that causes hepatitis C.
While that may seem scary, scientists are calling it a good thing - now they can figure out how humans might be affected. The takeaway: The big health scares often deal with pathogens in other parts of the world coming here - Ebola comes to mind, along with our old friends SARS and bird flu. That's why politicians get worked into a tizzy tying disease outbreaks to immigration. But one quick look at some rats and it becomes clear that the U.S. is far from some hygienic paradise that can only be spoiled by foreigners. "Everybody's looking [for pathogens] all over the world, in all sorts of exotic places, including us," Columbia professor Ian Lipkin told the New York Times. "But nobody's looking right under our noses."
Rep. Ed Royce, R-Calif., chairman of the House Foreign Relations Committee, sent a sternly worded letter to Secretary of State John Kerry about the Obama administration's handling of the Ebola epidemic in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone.
Royce said he was "deeply concerned" U.S. embassies in those countries were continuing to process visas for non-U.S. nationals despite the outbreak of the deadly disease.
An estimated 100 people per day are applying for U.S. visas at the three embassies, according to Royce. "Of course," he added, "once these individuals are issued a visa by the embassy, they are free to travel to the United States."
In the letter, Royce urged Kerry to contain the Ebola virus "at its source" in Africa before any additional cases reach the United States.
"I was surprised that the Department of State has not already exercised its authority to suspend consular services, which is standard procedure in countries experiencing a major security disruption," Royce wrote to Kerry. "This would be a prudent measure to mitigate the risk of Ebola exposure and contain its spread - a bedrock principal (sic) of health crisis management."

A car is stopped by a herd of bison crossing the highway in Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming, June 8, 2013.
The Montana Fish and Wildlife Commission agreed unanimously to give the bison to the Assiniboine and Sioux Tribes of the Fort Peck Indian Reservation to further the conservation of the country's last herd of wild, purebred buffalo.
The tribe was chosen instead of a proposal to distribute the iconic, hump-shouldered creatures to six organizations across five states, including New York's Bronx and Queens zoos.
"It would be a great celebration at Fort Peck to make this happen," said Becky Dockter, chief legal counsel for Montana's wildlife agency.
The bison, now in confinement at a Montana ranch owned by media mogul Ted Turner, were part of a government experiment that quarantined the animals to produce a band free of the cattle disease brucellosis, which is carried by roughly half of Yellowstone's buffalo.

People make their way at the international arrival terminal at JFK airport in New York.
The man had boarded a flight at Lagos Airport in Nigeria, which was bound for New York's John F. Kennedy Airport. However, once airborne, the man complained of vomiting during the flight and was sick in his seat. He died sometime before the plane landed at JFK, leaving around 150 passengers worried as to why he had passed away.
Upon the plane's arrival at the terminal at around 6am local time, the door was left open connecting the plane to the airport building, "which a lot of the first responders found alarming," the source added, which was reported by the New York Post. Medical officials at the scene conducted a cursory exam and alleviated fears that the Ebola virus was present, according to a local police source.
Comment: As Ebola panic escalates there continues to be questions regarding the reliability of testing. See:
Ebola questions and answers: transmission, infection and false negative test results
Those tests are not entirely foolproof, though:One test for Ebola, the indirect fluorescence assay, is known to have a rather low specificity, and therefore a rather high false negative rate. PCR testing has also been known to miss cases of affliction. (source)In other words, it is possible for an Ebola test to be negative when the person actually does have Ebola.

President Sankara and Leader of the People of Burkina Faso, West Africa, was assassinated 27 years ago in a coup d'état
On October 15, 1987, Burkina Faso president Thomas Sankara, the Marxist revolutionary and a feminist Pan-Africanst leader, was assassinated in a military coup. A week before his death, Sankara said in reference to Che Guevara, "Revolutionaries and individuals can be murdered, but ideas never die."
He changed the nation's name from the French colonial name Upper Volta, to Burkina Faso, which means "the land of the upright people."
He worked in the four short years he was president to create a "third way," during the Cold War in order to separate Burkina Faso's path from the interests of France and the U.S. He pushed against the hegemonic power of France in west Africa, by calling for the end of African nations' debt to international banks and to the colonial nations of the West. He refused to take World Bank loans and instead focused on strengthening local production of food and textiles. Sankara also abolished obligatory labor and tribute payments to village chiefs, female circumcision and polygamy. He began national immunization and river blindness programs, built basic transportation and housing infrastructure, and promoted literacy programs. It was women and the rural poor who were the focus of his revolution and who benefited the most from his presidency.
Comment: To learn more about the oligarchs and how they deal with Leaders that serve us, ordinary people, watch:
The coup against Hugo Chavez
Evidence of Revision: The PTB have been revising history regarding the assassinations of John F. Kennedy, Martin Luther King, Robert Kennedy and others. With lots of historical footage.












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