Society's ChildS


Megaphone

Huge explosion rocks commercial building in Bangladesh, 17 dead, 140 injured

dhaka bangladesh
© AP Photo/Abdul GoniFire officials carry a body of a victim after the explosion in Dhaka.
At least 17 people have been killed and 140 injured in an explosion inside an office building in the Bangladeshi capital Dhaka, police and fire service officials have said.

The explosion shook the fourth and fifth floors of a five-storey building in Gulistan, a major hub for wholesale goods in the capital, shortly before 5pm local time (11:00 GMT) on Tuesday.

Authorities could not immediately provide the reason behind the huge explosion in the bustling commercial area.

Comment: See also: Explosion & huge fire at coke and gas plant near Moscow


Megaphone

Over 1 million march in France at sixth major rally this year, 56% of French people support rolling strikes

paris protest 20243
© Mohammed Badra/EPAProtesters demonstrate in Paris against the government's planned reform of the pension system.
More than 1.2 million protesters marched in France on Tuesday as rail workers and refinery staff began rolling strikes and trade unions stepped up their campaign to try to stop Emmanuel Macron's plan to raise the pension age to 64.

For the sixth time since the start of the year, trade unions called a nationwide day of strikes and demonstrations. Many protest rallies attracted bigger crowds than previous ones organised since mid-January, including in Marseille, one of France's biggest cities, authorities and local media said.

"The idea is to bring France to a standstill," said Fabrice Michaud of the railway workers' branch of the CGT trade union.

Rail unions called for rolling, open-ended strikes, which could affect all national trains as well as international routes including the Eurostar. Bin collectors and truck drivers joined the action.

Comment: These strikes and protests are ostensibly about the retirement age, in much the same way the Yellow Vest protests were initially about fuel price hikes, but ultimately they're about the collapsing living standards for the average person; and these strikes and protests with a greater frequency and attended to by increasingly larger numbers of people across Europe:


Pocket Knife

Rhode Island mom outraged after teacher's union allegedly harassed her, framed her at private meeting

Solas/Fox
© Fox & Friends/Screengrab/Nicole SolasNicole Solas allegedly obtained slides with her photo after a teacher leaked them.
Nicole Solas slammed those responsible as 'psychopaths'...

Rhode Island mom Nicole Solas slammed an area teachers' union she claimed harassed her and made her the topic of a "secret meeting" after she made a records request regarding the district's curriculum.

Solas told Fox News' Rachel Campos Duffy Sunday on Fox & Friends Weekend:
"They painted me like a wanted enemy of the state simply because I submitted public records requests.

"There were 250 teachers that attended where they were alerted to me being an attack on public education."

Solas, who was sued by her daughter's school district last year, said presentation slides condemning her at the secret meeting were leaked to her by a teacher.

Che Guevara

Antifa should be labeled for what it is — a hate group

atlanta cop city antifa attack
© Atlanta PDPolice in Atlanta arrested 23 Antifa members as domestic terrorists for attacking a police facility.
In June 2020, the Southern Poverty Law Center posted an article entitled, "Designating Antifa as domestic terrorist organization is dangerous, threatens civil liberties."

The organization that supposedly tracks extremism in America dismissed the idea that Antifa was a threat to anyone.

The "anti-fascists" are "broad, community-based" and "represent a large spectrum of the political left." "Individuals loosely affiliated with Antifa are typically involved in skirmishes and property crimes at demonstrations across the country," the article hand waves.

"But the threat of lethal violence pales in comparison to that posed by far-right extremists."

Will the SPLC change its tune now that 23 members of Antifa were arrested as domestic terrorists for violently attacking a police facility outside Atlanta?

People 2

In Loco Masculi: The feminization of the American university is all but complete

toxic masculinity women protests
© Reuters / Arnd WIegmannA woman protests against 'toxic masculinity' on the streets of Zurich, Switzerland, June 14, 2020
Sometimes a single incident efficiently summarizes a larger trend. So it is with New York University's selection of its new president, Linda Mills, a licensed clinical social worker and an NYU social work professor. She researches trauma and bias, as well as race and gender in the legal academy. She is a documentary filmmaker and teaches advocacy filmmaking. She serves as an NYU vice chancellor and as a senior vice provost for Global Programs and University Life. In all these roles, Mills is the very embodiment of the contemporary academy. The most significant part of her identity, however, and the one that ties the rest of her curriculum vitae together, is that she is female, and thus overdetermined as NYU's next president.

Mills is part of the Great Feminization of the American university, an epochal change whose consequences have yet to be recognized. Seventy-five percent of Ivy League presidents are now female. Nearly half of the 20 universities ranked highest by Forbes will have a female president this fall, including MIT, Harvard, and Columbia. Of course, feminist bean-counters in the media and advocacy world are not impressed, noting that "only" 5 percent of the 130 top U.S. research universities are headed by a black female and "only" 22 percent of those federal grant-magnets have a non-intersectional (i.e., white) female head.

These female leaders emerge from an ever more female campus bureaucracy, whose size is reaching parity with the faculty. Females made up 66 percent of college administrators in 2021; those administrators constitute an essential force in campus diversity ideology, whether they have "diversity" in their job titles or not. Among the official diversity bureaucrats installed in their posts since July 2022, females predominate: the vice chancellor for equity, diversity, and inclusion at the University of California, San Diego; the vice chancellor for equity, diversity, and inclusion at UCLA; the vice president for diversity, equity, and inclusion at Maryville University in Missouri; the chief diversity officer and vice president for diversity, equity, and inclusion at the School of Education at the College of Charleston in South Carolina; the vice president for diversity, equity, inclusion, and belonging at Kansas State University; the associate dean of diversity, equity, inclusion, and belonging at the University of Kansas School of Law; the vice chancellor for diversity, equity, and inclusion at the University of California, Santa Cruz; the vice president for inclusion and community impact at Herzing University in Wisconsin; the associate provost for faculty and diversity initiatives at Muhlenberg College (this associate provost also became Muhlenberg's first chief diversity officer); the first chief officer of culture, belonging, and community building at Delta College in Michigan; the vice president for diversity, equity, and inclusion at the State University of New York, Plattsburgh; the vice provost for faculty diversity, equity, and inclusivity at the University of Texas, Austin (a lateral move from the position of managing director of diversity in UT's office of the executive vice president and provost); the vice president for equity, culture, and talent at Prince George's Community College — all are female.

Syringe

Punctuated emergence: Pandemic policies arise primarily from the unbounded myopia and stupidity of the people who govern us

The playground at Lincoln Park is closed during the pandemic in Los Angeles
© APU GOMES/AFP via Getty ImagesThe playground at Lincoln Park is closed during the pandemic in Los Angeles on March 21, 2020.
Conspiracy and coordination were important at the beginning, but national governments and their institutions rapidly assumed the initiative in all areas of pandemic policy.

We are witnessing an unprecedented, comprehensive failure of policy, medicine and science. The world will never be the same.

Arguing the conspiracy-or-emergence question with respect to pandemic policy is a little like weeding the garden. You are never quite done with it, and every few months you find you have something more to say.

In this instance, I must thank friend-of-the-blog Igor Chudov for providing the opportunity. He disagrees with my view that Covid policies owe less to creepy conspiratorial globalists, than they do to the unbounded stupidity of our leaders, boring institutional dynamics, and feedback effects. He's explained why in an extensive post that everyone should read.

Comment: Why not both? A plan crafted at the top of the elite hierarchy, carried out by petty, mendicious minions on the ground who were happy to enforce it, without reallly understanding the larger picture. eugyppius does give a nod to the possibility,
What you'll find there, is much evidence that mass containment came to the West via three specific events, the significance of which became apparent only in retrospect:
but then sweeps onward to the nuts and bolts of it all. Only by the imposition of mass lockdowns could the ground be prepared for the imposition of the type of control dreamed of by the WEF, Agenda 30 etc.


Eye 1

Colorado woman faces no jail time for statutory rape, pregnancy by 13-year-old boy: report

Andrea Serrano
© Fountain Police Department Facebook.Andrea Serrano, 31, of Fountain, Colorado, was arrested on June 27, 2022, for alleged sexual assault on a 13-year-old child.
A 31-year-old woman who admitted to having sex with a 13-year-old boy and getting pregnant with his child will serve no jail time, according to reports.

"I feel like if she was a man, and he was a little girl, it would definitely be different," the victim's mother said. "They would be seeking more. I feel like because he is not a woman, they are not. They are having compassion for her."

The Fountain Police Department in Colorado arrested Andrea Serrano in June 2022 on felony charges of sexual assault on a child by one in a position of trust and sexual assault on a child.

Camcorder

Best of the Web: Tucker Carlson releases exclusive Jan. 6 footage, says politicians, media lied about Sicknick, 'QAnon Shaman'

jan 6 capitol
© AP Photo/Julio CortezFootage from Jan. 6 released exclusively by "Tucker Carlson Tonight" dispel multiple narratives pushed by politicians and the media about the events that occurred that day.
'Tucker Carlson Tonight' was the first to look at over 40,000 hours of surveillance footage from the Capitol Building on Jan 6.

Tucker Carlson released never-before-seen footage from the Jan. 6, 2021 riots at Capitol Hill that appear to dispel several narratives pushed by the Democrat-controlled House Select Committee and the legacy media.

House Speaker Kevin McCarthy granted "Tucker Carlson Tonight" an exclusive first look to over 40,000 hours of security camera footage from the Capitol Building that were hidden from the public for over two years. On Monday, Carlson offered the first glimpses of footage involving key figures from that day.

Attention

Cost of living: Grocery inflation hits new record high of 17.1%, data shows

grocery store cost of living
UK grocery inflation continued to climb during February to reach a new record high of 17.1%, according to closely-watched industry data.

Kantar Worldpanel reported that the increase over the past 12 months meant that families faced a potential £811 annual rise in the cost of their regular shopping basket.

It had been hoped that a decline in the pace of grocery prices during December would mark a turning point in that element of the cost of living crisis.

But Kantar later revealed that temporary Christmas discounting had been largely responsible, as the big four chains fight to maintain market share amid the challenge posed by discounters and other cheaper rivals.

Bizarro Earth

1 in 8 homes suffering fuel poverty in UK, energy bills have TRIPLED despite 'price cap'

Government figures show 4.1 million children are now living in relative poverty
© Getty
Just under one in eight of all households in England were found to be fuel-poor in 2022. Now in 2023 the true impact of the energy crisis over the past 12 months has been revealed with the release of shocking new statistics. Express.co.uk has analysed the harrowing picture of fuel poverty in England.

Britons paid more in household energy bills in 2022 than any other year in history, with the ensuing cost-of-living crisis stretching budgets to and beyond breaking point for many.

After four consecutive rises since February 2021, the state energy regulator Ofgem had the price cap set at £4,279 by the end of the year - over triple the average annual bill just three years earlier.

On Monday, Ofgem announced that from April 1, the price cap would fall by almost £1,000 to £3,280 -but with a £500 increase to the Energy Price Guarantee (EPG) scheduled at the same time, the pain of the last year is likely to endure for many throughout 2023.

Comment: See also: