Society's Child
Newsom, who is facing a closer-than-anticipated recall election, spoke to the Sacramento Bee in an interview last week in which he grew angry at critics of California.
Clips from interview have since gained steam online, where they have been making the rounds on social media.
A trove of internal documents published by journalist Christopher Rufo on Wednesday purported to show a diversity training course put on by the financial services giant last year, largely centered on promoting "racial equity and progress."
Trafficking heavily in concepts such as "white privilege," "microaggressions" and "intersectionality," the course informs white staffers of their duty to be dedicated anti-racist "allies," which includes reflecting on their own inborn racism and deferring to people of color so as not to "speak over" them.
Israel already required children aged 12 and over to show a Green Pass re-introduced late last month showing a person's vaccination and testing status and whether they had recovered from Covid.
Prime Minister Naftali Bennett said from next Wednesday the state would fund unlimited tests for children aged three to 11. The Magen David Adom emergency service said it had opened 120 rapid antigen testing centres nationwide.
A Cambridge resident told the Guardian on Thursday that the US-based payment processing company had informed them they were potentially "violating international sanctions" by buying an English-made novelty rug on the handmade crafts store Etsy.
"My account was suspended and, in an email, which mistook me for the seller, it informed me I was advertising PayPal as a method of payment for items that may originate from Iran," the user claimed, adding that the company also warned them the account would be "terminated" unless they could provide evidence showing that the mousepad was made outside of Iran.
The metaphysical social media chatter was triggered by national media coverage of the recent death of Texas native Patricio Elizondo, a diabetic who suffered from heart problems. After Elizondo fell ill in early August, his daughter suspected that he may be suffering from a resurgence of congestive heart failure. The 76-year-old was soon hospitalized after he began having difficulty breathing - a common symptom of heart failure, which can lead to fluid building up in the lungs causing shortness of breath.
But doctors said that a chest X-ray revealed that Elizondo had actually caught Covid. He passed away on August 3 due to lung damage caused by the virus, a cardiologist who treated Elizondo said.
A former college professor living out of his car is accused of setting fires near the area of the massive Dixie Fire in Northern California.
CBS Sacramento reports forty-seven-year-old Gary Stephen Maynard was arrested Saturday for setting fire to public land. He's accused of setting the Ranch Fire near the Mendocino National Forest.
US Forest Agents began investigating the former Santa Clara University and Sonoma State University criminal justice professor on July 20 when he was spotted by someone acting strangely near the Cascade Fire.
Court documents reveal a witness saw Maynard come out of the woods where one of the fires was sparked. They said the man was "mentally unstable."
"Witness 1 believed the man was mentally unstable, describing the man as, 'mumbling a lot and having bipolar-like behavior,'" the court documents detailed.Investigators were quick to place a tracking device on Maynard's vehicle looking for answers for who or what sparked the Dixie Fire, the largest single wildfire in California history. They also found additional evidence he might have stoked more fires.
Hackers who stole more than $600 million in cryptocurrency from a protocol known as Poly Network have returned more than half of that sum, after Poly Network pleaded with the culprits to return their haul Tuesday.
"Dear hacker," an open letter from Poly Network read. "The amount of money you have hacked is one of the biggest in defi history. Law enforcement in any country will regard this as a major economic crime and you will be pursued. ... The money you stole are from tens of thousands of crypto community members, hence the people.
Comment: RT reports:
In an improvised Q&A session held through transaction notes, the attacker claimed they wanted to expose a vulnerability in the platform's contract calls to "beat any insiders or hackers." Calling the Poly Network a "decent system," the hacker explained that they did not want to divulge the "bug" to a project team because "anyone could be the traitor."See also:
They claimed that "saving" the assets in a secure account was the "only solution." In subsequent messages, the attacker said that they were angry at the network for making them a scapegoat before they had a chance to explain themselves, and insisted that they had no intention to launder the coins. "That's always the plan! I'm not very interested in money," the attacker said, claiming they perpetrated the hack "for fun."
Claiming that their motivation was "to do something cool but not harmful," the hacker raised even more eyebrows by asking for donations in support of his stunt.
So far, the attacker has racked up around $3,500 - a far cry from the $613 million worth of tokens snatched from the platform.
Poly Network is a transnational decentralized finance platform that operates on the Binance Smart Chain, Ethereum and Polygon blockchains, connecting them in one cyber-spot so that they can cut out intermediaries, thus making coin transfers easier and cheaper.
- US regulators want the 'crypto' out of cryptocurrency - because that will help them use it to control your every move
- Crypto mining business hit by China's ban on speculation, bitcoin tumbles
- Gold, crypto, unemployment and the 'Great Reset'
- Mastercard will let merchants accept payments in crypto this year
- China says US is an 'EMPIRE OF HACKERS,' mocks cyber-accusations in wake of Crypto AG scandal
- Crypto CIA spy op revelations makes us see US' Huawei objections in a new light

A satellite image of the oil spill taken Sunday showed its size at nearly 80 square kilometers.
A Russian-Kazakh consortium said Monday that 12 cubic meters of oil had spread over 200 square meters on Saturday when a Greek-flagged tanker was taking on oil at a terminal in southern Russia. The Caspian Pipeline Consortium's statement added that the situation was "normalized" by Sunday and did not pose a threat to local wildlife or humans.
But the Russian Academy of Science's (RAN) space research institute said a satellite image taken on Sunday showed the size of the oil spill to be almost 80 square kilometers, with a 19-kilometer oil slick stretching from the shore to the open sea.
Comment: Earlier this year, Russia announced it will block the profits of companies responsible for polluting the environment.
See also:
- Undersea gas pipeline rupture causes fire in Gulf of Mexico
- 'Ecological disaster': Mysterious oil spill covers Israel's coastline in toxic tar balls, judge places gag order on press
- Mysterious mass death of endangered seals on shores of Russia's Caspian Sea
CodeMonkeyZ, Ron Watkins, spoke at Mike Lindell's Cyber Symposium on Wednesday morning. Watkins brought with him the alleged images from before and after a software update of the Dominion Voting Systems in Mesa County Colorado. During his presentation, there were connection and audio problems.
On Tuesday night Mesa County Colorado Clerk Tina Peters stepped forward as the whistleblower behind CodeMonkeyZ's explosive report on Dominion Voting Machines last week. Tina Peters leaked documents to Ron Watkins, CodeMonkeyZ, last week before the planned Lindell Symposium. The Gateway Pundit reported on this leaked information last week.
Comment: See also:
- Despite claims to the contrary, data in Lindell's South Dakota reveal NOT proven to be false
- One of many IT heroes uncovers damning evidence regarding potential for fraud within Dominion voting machines
- Not the Sec of State (Katie Hobbs), not the election vendor (Dominion), and not the Maricopa County Board of Supervisors, NO ONE, is admitting illegally deleting files requested by Senate auditors
- Prescient academic paper for 2019 lays out current election crisis - the plan from the beginning?
- MyPillow CEO, Mike Lindell, predicts Biden and Harris may resign over latest election claims
As of Tuesday, the CDC "was working with the state's health department" to get the data right, according to a report from Fox News.
Florida's health department called out the incorrect CDC information publicly, stating earlier this week: "Wrong again. The number of cases @CDCgov released for Florida today is incorrect. They combined MULTIPLE days into one. We anticipate CDC will correct the record."
Comment: More from the Gateway Pundit:
The CDC *knowingly* combined several days worth of reporting and condensed it into one day.
The Florida Health Department took to Twitter to correct the record - AGAIN:
"This is not accurate. Florida follows CDC guidelines reporting cases Monday through Friday, other than holidays. Consequently, each Monday or Tuesday, there will be two or three days of data reported at a time. When data is published, it is attributed evenly to the previous days."
Another news site reported the CDC's inaccurate information and sounded the alarm on the record number of Covid cases in Florida.
Again, this is based on MULTIPLE DAYS of reporting into one.
The CDC knows this and falsely reported that Florida is experiencing record number of hospitalizations in an effort to attack Governor DeSantis.














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