Society's ChildS


2 + 2 = 4

Oh, the irony! Thousands of UK children at risk of 'indoctrination' in illegal schools

Classroom
© Julie Gordon/Reuters
Thousands of children across the UK may be at risk of indoctrination in a growing number of 'illegal schools' an investigation by the UK schools watchdog Ofsted has revealed.

Ofsted inspectors have identified 100 suspected unregistered schools across the UK since January when a taskforce was set up to investigate the problem. Last month, the education watchdog issued warnings to schools in cities including London, Birmingham and Luton, where 350 children were found on the premises.

Ofsted chief inspector Sir Michael Wilshaw warned this number is likely to be just "a small proportion of the illegal schools operating across the country" and that new suspected cases were being reported every week.

In a letter to Education Secretary Nicky Morgan, Wilshaw said inspectors are "deeply alarmed" by what they have found. "The evidence they have gathered so far during this short period firmly reinforces my belief that there are many more children hidden away from the view of the authorities in unregistered schools across the country than previously thought," he said.

Sheriff

New York police used 'body bags' to restrain, arrest 122 people in 110 days

NYPD 'body bag' arrest
© Via YouTube/Nexonews.com
In March, a video was posted to YouTube showing NYPD macing a man and then restraining him in what the uploader described as a "body bag," zipping it all the way over the arrested man's head. The bag, which we learned is called an EDP bag (but sometimes referred to as a "burrito"), is used to restrain people who are emotionally disturbed, and there don't appear to be any guidelines for the NYPD specifying EDP usage. The New York Times has a piece out today on the restraining devices, and reports that they were used 122 times between January 1st and April 20th in 2016. That comes out to more than once a day.

The man restrained in the bag in the video posted in March allegedly failed to pay his subway fare, the Times reports, and he's said to have became violent when officers tried to arrest him, flailing his arms, kicking, and spitting. He allegedly struck one officer in the head with his elbow and injured another. He now faces charges for felony assault, among others—but his lawyer, Andrew Miller, says that's completely backwards.

"He was the victim of the assault, instead of the other way around," Miller said, calling the officers' actions "excessive and totally unreasonable."

According to the product description for a similar bag as the one that appeared in the video, "the EDP Bag deploys in a split second and can be used to secure an EDP (emotionally disturbed person) in just moments. The fabric is strong and allows fluids to pass through, and can be cleaned and decontaminated easily after each use." It retails at about $750.


Comment: The NYPD are a gang of thugs and criminals who engage in rampant brutality and jawdropping misconduct.


Arrow Down

Hurting all over: Aberdeen, UK suffers in oil price downturn

aberdeen oil price collapse
© Jeff Mitchell/Getty Images The oil price collapse is still looming over Aberdeen
"It has got to the point where I run into old friends and ask them whether they're in work, almost as a greeting. It's become the same as asking 'how are things?'," says oilfield safety worker Spencer Owen.

"In Aberdeen just having a job answers a lot of that question."

After months of dragging oil prices the capital of North Sea oil is caught in the grip of a vicious downturn which has wrought financial pain throughout the local economy. Dips are to be expected of a city so deeply dependent on the fluctuating price of oil, but the latest downturn is unlike anything its 195,000 residents have seen before.

The oil price rout has run deeper and longer than any oil market downturn in history, and comes at a time when the aging North Sea basin is losing its economic edge against cheaper exploration areas.

As the economic contagion spreads through Aberdeen, so do the anecdotes of its fall from one of the richest cities in the UK to a city in crisis.

Tales of oil executives queuing up for food banks or to sell their Rolexes to overwhelmed pawn brokers are breathlessly repeated by cab drivers. One tells of how financed sports cars are being abandoned in dealership forecourts overnight by those unable to keep up with payments. Another claims to have driven an enterprising young man to snap up a paid-in-full Porsche from a desperate owner to re-sell at a profit in London.

"I've been driving people from the Aberdeen airport into town for almost twenty years so I've seen downturns before. This one is different," says one driver.

Comment: So much suffering, not only in oil industries around the world, but the industries dependent on this fundamental enterprise. All for the purpose of hurting Russia. But psychopaths have never themselves with the "little people".


USA

Chris Hedges: Welcome to 1984

1984
The artifice of corporate totalitarianism has been exposed. The citizens, disgusted by the lies and manipulation, have turned on the political establishment. But the game is not over. Corporate power has within its arsenal potent forms of control. It will use them. As the pretense of democracy is unmasked, the naked fist of state repression takes its place. America is about—unless we act quickly—to get ugly.

"Our political system is decaying," said Ralph Nader when I reached him by phone in Washington, D.C. "It's on the way to gangrene. It's reaching a critical mass of citizen revolt."

Cell Phone

Judicial discretion: Checking hubby's phone may land Saudi women a flogging, a fine and jail time

Saudi cell phones
© Fahad Shadeed / Reuters
Women in Saudi Arabia could be sent to jail and flogged if they check their husband's telephone without his knowledge and consent. The matter is not covered in the Kingdom's Islamic laws, but would instead be seen as a violation of privacy. They are not allowed to drive or even go out in public on their own. According to lawyer Mohammed Al-Temyat, who describes himself as a member of the Saudi government's Family Security Program, women can be brought before a court if a lawsuit is filed against them, the Independent reports. The committee was set up in 2005 seeking to improve access to social services.

There is no set punishment for this offense, as it is not covered by Islamic law. Therefore punishments come under judicial discretion, which can mean jail time. "I would like to clarify that this subject involves the husband and the wife and it is a Ta'zir offence so it is possible that there would be a flogging, a fine, imprisonment, just signing a pledge or even nothing," Al-Temyat told the Makkah newspaper, as cited by the Independent.

"It is a Ta'zir offence not identified legally, so the punishment is dependent on the damage caused from it. If there was no damage caused, there could be no punishment," the lawyer added. Not surprisingly, the claims led to plenty of angry comments on social media, with users condemning the move. "They [men] get annoyed with women 'only' checking her husband's phone, whilst a woman lives all of her life in an 'inquisition'. Whether that is regarding her clothing, sayings or behavior," a female Twitter user wrote, as cited by the Independent.

At the end of April, Deputy Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, who has been granted unprecedented powers under the rule of his father, said Saudi Arabia isn't ready to allow women to drive cars, dismissing suggestions the ban would soon be lifted. "So far society is not persuaded [by women driving] - and it has a negative influence - but we stress that it is up to Saudi society,"he said, adding that it is not "a religious issue as much as it is an issue that relates to the community itself that either accepts it or refuses it," Gulf News reported.

Other restrictions faced by women in the ultra-conservative country include being forced to wear loose-fitting gowns and being barred from going anywhere without a chaperone. They cannot open bank accounts, work in certain jobs, attend university, undergo medical procedures, or travel outside the country without permission from a male guardian - usually their husband or a relative. Some of the country's most prominent clerics have cautioned against females driving, issuing religious decrees against it. Grand Mufti Sheikh Abdulaziz bin Abdullah al-Sheikh recently said that allowing women to drive was a "dangerous matter that should not be permitted." In 2013, Sheikh Saleh al-Lohaidan said that females risked damaging their ovaries and producing children with clinical problems if they drove.

Comment: Oppression: The cages you see and the cages you don't.


Arrow Down

Suffering in silence: One-fifth of Britain's WWII generation living below the poverty line

pensioners poverty Uk
© Stefan Wermuth / Reuters
A fifth of pensioners over the age of 75 are living below the poverty line, according to a scathing new report published by Independent Age, a charity group for the elderly.

The 'silent generation' of older pensioners who lived through the Second World War are much more likely to live in persistent poverty than younger 'baby boomer' pensioners, the research found.

The report revealed some 950,000 older pensioners are living in poverty. On average, the weekly income of over-75s is £59 less than that of younger pensioners, and £112 less than working age adults.

"These findings show how misleading it is to treat all 11.8 million pensioners in this country as one group. It would be foolish to assume that inequality simply ceases to exist at retirement age, but that is exactly what some of the recent rhetoric around 'intergenerational unfairness' does," said Janet Morrison, chief executive of Independent Age chief.

Comment: Overly harsh austerity measures have turned Britain into a country of destitution, where extreme poverty, malnutrition and Victorian diseases are now soaring. Those most vulnerable are paying the price for social cuts while the rich have seen their wealth double.


Ambulance

Daesh fighters treated in Turkish hospitals, Daesh pays the bills

hospital
© Osman Orsal / Reuters
Islamic State terrorists wounded on the Syrian battlefield regularly travel to Turkey for complex and costly medical treatment, according to tapped phone calls apparently ignored by Ankara's security forces, and handed to the media by opposition MP Erem Erdem.

Transcripts of phone recordings that were obtained by international media conversations with Ilhami Bali, a 'prominent' figure within Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS/ISIL) terror group, who has a US€1.3 million bounty on his head, shed additional light on the lucrative business of medical treatments apparently offered by Turkish medical facilities to jihadist fighters.

According to the information previously made public by Erdem, IS militants and their families regularly get escorted back and forth through the Syrian-Turkish border with the help of local middlemen and a lack of counter-measures from authorities.


Comment: Further reading:


Георгиевская ленточка

Jamala's "Ukrainian" parents prospered in Russian Crimea

jamala
Why doesn't the current winner of "Eurovision" - Susana Jamaladinova (Jamala) - like to talk about her family, and why do they flatly refuse to move to Kiev?

She insists her father doesn't want to leave their house in the expensive resort village of Malorechenskoye near Alushta: "We were one of the first Crimean Tatars who bought a house in Crimea. My mom taught piano, while my dad is a conductor by profession. But he realized that he would not be able to provide for his family making music, and began to grow vegetables and fruits. We have a large garden there - figs, persimmons, and pomegranates..."

"I tried to persuade my parents to leave for a long time. But they said no," says Jamal. "They built a house and cultivate a garden with their own hands, and now I asked to give that up in a second.... They, of course, are still in Crimea. All my attempts and talks have been unsuccessful. Mom can't leave dad, dad can't leave grandfather... It is very painful and hard. I understand that they can't go. Pomegranate trees grow in our yard, persimmons, figs... This house cannot be so easily quit. They are not afraid even, say, to die, no matter how scary it sounds, but they refuse to leave the house."

Comment: More on the Eurivision joke, from Niall Bradley: Western war on Russia: European Broadcasting Union rigs 'Eurovision 2016' to prevent Russian favorite from winning


Fire

Massive fire in tyre dump near Madrid; 9,000 people evacuated

Madrid tyre fire
© Pedro Armestre/AFP/Getty ImagesTwo neighbours of Sesena, Spain wear masks as they wait for other relatives to evacuate a residential area affected by the toxic fumes produced by tires burning in a nearby dump.

Authorities believe the fire in the sprawling tyre dump - which is thought to be Europe's largest - was intentionally set


More than 9,000 people have been evacuated from a large apartment complex near Madrid after a raging fire at a tyre dump sent toxic clouds of black smoke into the sky, Spanish officials said.

About 8,000 apartment dwellers had already left their homes in Sesena as the thick smoke poured out from the fire that started before dawn, the regional government of Castilla-La Mancha announced.

It said ambulances were being sent to the complex to evacuate people with health problems who could not leave on their own.

The order was issued because weather conditions were expected to change overnight, raising the risk that the smoke could inundate the apartment complex even as firefighters reported progress in trying to bring the fire under control. The dump is less than six miles from the complex.

About 70 per cent of the tyres had burned by Friday night but authorities did not know when the blaze would be completely extinguished, said Francisco Martinez, the regional government's environmental minister.

Eye 1

Bay Area: FBI secretly planted microphones to record public conversations

government spying
© thefreethoughtproject
It seems that every rock overturned reveals a new depth to government spying on its own citizens - in this case, literally.

Major cities have uncovered several secret operations in recent years that have sparked outrage. In 2013, Seattle police were forced to deactivate a hidden WiFi mesh network system that was funded by Homeland Security. This past month a Phoenix, Arizona resident documented a strange box that appeared on his utility pole; it was later claimed by the bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms and Explosives, a branch of the U.S. Department of Justice - the ATF would neither confirm nor deny ongoing surveillance in the area.

Now the heavily populated Bay Area of San Francisco, home to nearly 1 million residents and countless millions more visitors, has been exposed to have been part of an ongoing operation to secretly record public conversations, perhaps dating from 2010. Emphasis added: