Society's ChildS


Hourglass

Americans no longer have faith in our major institutions - is the collapse of our civilization inevitable?

clock is ticking
If the American people have lost faith in almost all of our major institutions, how is our civilization going to survive? If any collective effort is going to work, people have to believe in that effort. That is true whether we are talking about a sports team, a business partnership, a romantic relationship or a nation as a whole. When people stop believing, it is just a matter of time before failure arrives, and at this point the American people simply do not believe in those that are currently running our society. In fact, a recent Gallup survey discovered that faith in our major institutions has dropped to depressingly low levels. The survey asked people if they have a "great deal" or "quite a lot" of confidence in a long list of prominent institutions, and these were the results...

Small business: 65 percent
The military: 60 percent
The police: 43 percent
The medical system: 34 percent
The church or organized religion: 32 percent
The U.S. Supreme Court: 27 percent
Banks: 26 percent
The public schools: 26 percent
The presidency: 26 percent
Large technology companies: 26 percent
Organized labor: 25 percent
Newspapers: 18 percent
The criminal justice system: 17 percent
Television news: 14 percent
Big business: 14 percent
Congress: 8 percent

Health

Those doctors calling for spreaders of Covid misinformation to be punished should be careful what they wish for

woman in mask
The Journal of the American Medical Association recently published a review of alleged 'misinformation' about COVID-19 that physicians were responsible for, either on social media and in other news sources.

In the paper, the corresponding author, Dr. Sarah L. Goff, MD PhD, defined misinformation. She surveyed social media platforms and news sources for anything written by other physicians that fits her selected examples of both. She then proposes that physicians guilty of writing what she judges to be misinformation should be "regulated and disciplined".

Dr. Goff and her co-authors define misinformation as "false, inaccurate or misleading information according to the best evidence available at the time" and disinformation as "having an intentionally malicious purpose".

Stop

Alabama ban on puberty blockers and hormones for transgender children upheld by appeal court judges who insist the drugs may not be safe

Alabama Attorney General Steve Marshall
Alabama Attorney General Steve Marshall can now threaten doctors in his state with lengthy prison terms
Doctors in Alabama now face 10 years in jail if they authorize puberty blockers or hormones to transgender children, after an appeals court backed the state's ban.

A judge in a lower court had put the ban on hold after four families with transgender children ranging in ages 12 to 17 challenged it as unconstitutional.

But the 11th US Circuit Court of Appeals said the ban could go ahead, insisting there are still doubts about the drugs' safety.

It comes as more than 20 Republican-led states face imminent court battles over restrictions they have imposed on medics helping transgender children in the last three years.

Alabama Attorney General Steve Marshall called the ruling a 'significant victory for our country, for children, and for common sense'.

Light Saber

Former leader's trans court case against UK Green Party is a sign of things to come

britain green party shahrar ali
© Eddie MulhollandFormer Green Party deputy leader, Shahrar Ali.
Shahrar Ali's litigation will be watched closely in other parties

How did the Greens become so focused on trans rights that they've ended up in court? The question is at the heart of a landmark action brought by the party's former deputy leader, Dr Shahrar Ali, which is being heard this week. In what is believed to be the first civil case of its kind, he is claiming he suffered discrimination, hostility and victimisation because of his belief in biological sex.

Ali was sacked last year as the Greens' spokesman on policing and domestic safety after he was accused of breaking the party's code of conduct. He was told that his "decision to champion a highly controversial position in the trans rights debate" was incompatible with the role. His offence? Arguing that sex is immutable, an opinion shared by most human beings who have ever lived.

Bad Guys

Inside Australia's secretive (and lucrative) fact checking industry behind a foreign-funded bid to censor Voice debate

barbed wire speech bubble
© Baac3nes / Getty Images

Comment: Ed. note: The topic under discussion is censorship of reporting and debate around the 2023 Australian Indigenous Voice referendum which will ask voters to approve an alteration to the Australian Constitution, creating a body called the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Voice that "may make representations to the Parliament and the Executive Government ... on matters relating to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples". The referendum, conducted by the Australian Electoral Commission, will be held sometime between October and December 2023


Two of Australia's most powerful universities and a multi-billion dollar tech giant are fronting campaigns to silence news coverage of the Voice to influence the referendum.

A Sky News Australia investigation has uncovered a disturbing foreign-financed attempt to block political debate and news coverage around the Voice, which exposes the global fact checking system used by tech giant Meta as non-compliant with its own rules of impartiality and transparency.

In one case, the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology has been allowed by Facebook parent company Meta to block and deplatform Australian journalism, despite the platform knowing it was a breach of the rules Meta founder Mark Zuckerberg established to distance himself from fact checking responsibilities.

Violin

FIRE to Laguna Beach City Council: Let street performers perform

promenade
© unknownThe Promenade on Forest Avenue in Laguna Beach, California
Historic art colony strictly limits music, dancing, and other street performances in pedestrian mall...

Mike Bolger is an award-winning professional musician and street performer from Los Angeles with a diverse resume. If you've listened to Red Hot Chili Peppers, Jewel, or Jimmy Cliff — or watched SpongeBob SquarePants — you might have heard him playing trumpet or accordion.

But thanks to Laguna Beach's unconstitutional restrictions on street performances, one place you won't hear him making music is the Forest Avenue Promenade, a vibrant pedestrian mall in the heart of the city's downtown.

Founded as a bohemian art colony in the early 20th century, Laguna Beach is perhaps the last place you'd expect to find "Footloose"-esque crackdowns on public artistic expression. But like a college with a campus "free speech zone," the city prohibits street performances on the promenade outside of a small "performance deck" — known as the Stage on Forest — and even that area is accessible only to performers who meet the city's approval and obtain a permit. The city enforced the policy against Bolger earlier this year, stopping him from playing outside the performance deck.

In a letter sent to the Laguna Beach City Council today, FIRE explained that the city has no authority to so drastically limit expression in a traditional public forum like the Forest Avenue Promenade.

No Entry

TikTok bans explained: Everything you need to know

TikTok
© NurPhoto/Contributor/Getty Images
The US has had a rocky relationship with TikTok and its Beijing-based parent company ByteDance.

In 2020, former president Donald Trump proposed ByteDance sell parts of its company to Microsoft. If an American company controlled TikTok, it was presumed the app would be less of a security concern for the US and other countries.

By late last year, the US Congress approved a motion to ban TikTok on all federal government-issued devices. In March this year, President Joe Biden's White House ordered all federal employees to remove the app from their devices within 30 days. A day later, the European Parliament ordered members from all three of its institutions to delete the app from government devices -- and urged members to delete it from their personal devices, too.

More than half of US states have also banned or partially banned TikTok from state-issued government devices. In some states, the governors are eager to propose a nationwide ban on the app. Some public, state-funded universities have also banned the app from being used on university networks.

Light Saber

Kansas 98-year-old made First Amendment stand as deputies raid home: 'Get out of my house!'

eric mayer mother police raid marion county record newspaper
© Eric Meyer via APThis screen grab of security camera footage provided by Eric Meyer shows his mother, Joan Meyer, ordering police officers to get out of her house as they searched it Aug. 11, 2023, in Marion, Kan.
Joan Meyer, the 98-year-old co-owner of a storied Kansas newspaper who died the day after police served search warrants on her home and office, appears on newly unveiled surveillance video shouting at officers to get out of her living room.

"Don't you touch any of that stuff," she says at the start of the minute-long clip, wearing a robe and slippers and standing behind a walker.

"Ma'am," one officer begins, before she cuts him off barking, "This is my house!"

Meyer's son, Marion County Record Publisher Eric Meyer, made the clip public Tuesday after a state official said an online search cited as a reason for the raid was not a crime.

Comment: Media giants raise First Amendment concerns over raid on Kansas paper


Handcuffs

Lucy Letby to die in jail after 'cynical campaign of child murder'

lucy letby
© PA
Lucy Letby will spend the rest of her life in jail after being sentenced to a rare whole life order for her "cruel, calculated and cynical campaign of child murder".

The country's worst child killer will die in prison after she refused to attend her sentencing in what families described as "one final act of wickedness".

Letby, 33, was convicted by a jury of murdering seven babies and trying to kill six more while working at the Countess of Chester Hospital neonatal unit between 2015 and 2016.

Comment: See also:


Red Flag

Rutgers students face disenrollment over coronavirus vaccine mandate requirements

old queens
© ROSS LEWIS/GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICAOld Queens is the oldest building and symbolic heart of Rutgers University in New Brunswick, New Jersey
Rutgers University students are faced with disenrollment for the upcoming semester if they do not submit to the school's vaccine mandate.

Rutgers became the first school in the country to mandate the vaccines for students in late March 2021 and has maintained it despite the federal government ending the pandemic emergency declaration in May and most Americans considering the pandemic over.

"It's baffling to see that from what should be a leading voice of science-based rationality, comes arbitrary garbage," Republican New Jersey state Sen. Declan O'Scanlon said in a statement slamming the university. "It's a ludicrous policy; any benefit there might have been from the initial vaccine has long since waned in the face of continuously evolving strains."