Society's Child
Black Lives Matter protesters attempted to erect an autonomous zone near the White House on Monday, according to various witnesses on social media.
One photograph on Twitter showed a sign reading, "Black House Autonomous Zone," with several protesters trying to affix it to chainlink fencing.

A woman takes a selfie picture posing next to a street poster depicting George Floyd.
I don't like vigilantes at the best of times. But when a 16-year-old organiser of @Smithtown_Racist_Callouts brags about outing peers for making racist comments online, in order to prevent them from going to college, you know that something really scary is going on.
There are now numerous groups of teenagers in the United States who are devoted to the project of exposing and humiliating other children whose remarks they perceive as racist or problematic. Anonymous Instagram accounts devoted to calling out racist comments made by fellow students have appeared in the United States. Within a few hours, one such account launched at San Marcos High School in San Marcos, California, attracted around 900 new followers.
Comment: The penalty for non-conformity among teenagers is getting more severe. These kids likely have no real understanding of the damage they're doing, nor any true understanding of what they're trying to get their peers to conform to. But consequences for those they've deemed 'racist' are very real. The whole thing is chilling to the extreme.
See also:
- Football and politics never mix well. Shirts emblazoned with 'Black Lives Matter' legitimise the movement's extreme aims
- Muhammad Ali's son: Dad would have hated 'racist' BLM
- Oh, come on! Now TV networks are using private detectives to check if reality show stars might have sent a racist tweet or two?
- Postmodern logic: Not being racist isn't enough, Germans must be 'anti-racists,' President Steinmeier insists
- San Diego man fired for alleged racist gesture, but he says he was just cracking his knuckles. His accuser has changed his tune
- MSNBC spends entire segment depicting lockdown protestors as racist confederates
Health officials announced last week residents must wear face coverings in public settings where they may come within six feet of another individual who is not from the same household.
But people of color do not have to follow the new rule if they have "heightened concerns about racial profiling and harassment" over wearing the masks, officials said.
"No person shall intimidate or harass people who do not comply," health officials said.
Comment: People don't seem too happy about it. Via RT:
[...]
The order has prompted an outpouring of criticism and confusion, with netizens baffled that such a blatantly discriminatory policy could pass muster in 2020, some even labeling it outright racist.
The legality of the new order also became a hot topic, as many argued the rule would never stand up in a courtroom.
"Get arrested, someone!!! This is a lay-up civil rights case," one netizen urged, while another asked"How the hell is this legal?"
Some critics saw more sinister forces at work, musing that orders mandating face masks - whose effectiveness are still a matter of dispute among experts - are a "power grab," having more to do with politics than public health. Similar concerns over politicized health advice were raised amid widespread protests inspired by the police killing of George Floyd in late May, in which many public health experts outwardly encouraged demonstrations, despite previously warning that all mass gatherings - including protests over Covid-19 lockdown measures - posed significant risk.
Many of the same experts have also cautioned that black and Latino communities are especially vulnerable to the coronavirus, making Lincoln County's new face mask exemption all the more confounding.
[...]

A police officer operates a drone carrying a QR code for drivers to register their vehicles online when entering Shenzhen, China.
The measures have often been billed as temporary necessities rushed into place to help track infections, but governments have been accused of denting civil rights with the widespread use of techniques such as phone monitoring, contact tracing apps, and physical surveillance such as CCTV with facial recognition.
Top10VPN, a pro-digital privacy website that reviews secure internet connection software, has maintained a database since March of digital and physical surveillance measures implemented to fight the virus.
As of Wednesday, it showed digital tracking was in use in 35 countries, with contact tracing apps in at least 28 countries, half of which use GPS location data. Meanwhile, more than half of the apps do not disclose how long users' data is stored.
Comment: See also:
- Techno-Tyranny: US National Security State Using 'COVID-19 Pandemic' to 'Copy China' And Implement AI-Based 'Do-Over' of Western Civilization
- Security theater: COVID-19 and the normalization of the global surveillance state
- Surveillance a price worth paying to beat coronavirus, says Blair thinktank
- Orwell's 1984 is no longer fiction
Investigation Discovery premiered a three-hour special, "Who Killed Jeffrey Epstein?" on May 31, the first segment in a three-part series, that focused on Epstein's August 2019 death in federal custody. The series addresses Epstein's alleged co-conspirator Ghislaine Maxwell, his links with billionaire Leslie Wexner, founder of the Victoria's Secret clothing line, and others, as well as the non-prosecution deal he was given.
The special followed on the heels of Netflix's release of "Jeffrey Epstein: Filthy Rich," a mini-series that draws on a book of the same name by James Patterson.
Promotional material for "Who Killed Jeffery Epstein?" promises that: "... exclusive interviews and in-depth investigations reveal new clues about his seedy underworld, privileged life and controversial death. The three-hour special looks to answer the questions surrounding the death of this enigmatic figure." Netflix billed its series this way: "Stories from survivors fuel this docuseries examining how convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein used his wealth and power to carry out his abuses."
Neither documentary however deals at all with Epstein's suspected ties to the world of intelligence.

Bartolomé Esteban Murillo's original work (left) and two attempts at restoring it.
A private art collector in Valencia was reportedly charged €1,200 by a furniture restorer to have the picture of the Immaculate Conception cleaned. However, the job did not go as planned and the face of the Virgin Mary was left unrecognisable despite two attempts to restore it to its original state.
The case has inevitably resulted in comparisons with the infamous "Monkey Christ" incident eight years ago, when a devout parishioner's attempt to restore a painting of the scourged Christ on the wall of a church on the outskirts of the north-eastern Spanish town of Borja made headlines around the world.
Comment: Yeah, that's what we thought too...

Stabbing knife, check. Scary mask, check. Nazi-like insignia, check. Occult manual, check... An actual photo the DoJ says U.S. Army Pvt. Ethan Melzer uploaded somewhere in the expectation his superiors and military intelligence would never notice...
Pvt. Ethan P. Melzer, 22, confessed to plotting what he intended to be a mass casualty attack during an interview with U.S. agents on May 30, according to the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Southern District of New York.
Melzer was arrested on June 10 by the FBI. During the interview, Melzer called himself a traitor against the United States and admitted that he intended to cause as many deaths among his fellow service members as possible, according to the indictment.
Melzer enlisted as an infantryman through the Army's delayed entry program in December 2018 and started his active duty service in June 2019, said Army spokesman Lt. Col. Emanuel Ortizcruz.
Melzer was stationed in Vicenza, Italy, and was slotted to deploy to Turkey. The staff judge advocate from the 173rd Airborne Brigade, also based in Vicenza, helped investigate Melzer, and a picture included in his now unsealed criminal complaint indicates he was a paratrooper in the same brigade.
Comment: A White Supremacist plot... using jihadi Muzzies?
That makes no sense, on the face of it.
There is indeed (or there was at least) a movement/group called 'Order of Nine Angles', but it's a British group from the 1960s, probably an offshoot of Aleister Crowley's Order of the Golden Dawn, and appears to be defunct today. There's even a rather large Wikipedia entry on it.
The army undoubtedly attracts low-intelligence people, but you're borderline retarded if, in this day and age, you're speaking 'anonymously' to what you've been duped into believing are mysterious 'wizards' and 'world-changers', divulging sensitive military intel to them in the apparent expectation that your communications won't be noticed.
This sounds like a sting operation. Which would mean the Private was set up to believe he was talking to 'Neo-Nazi White Supremacist Islamic Jihadis' plotting the 'overthrow of the system', and 'race war'.
Speaking of which, the media angle on this is, of course, emphasizing 'white supremacist terrorists in our midst'...
The same people who over predicted deaths in Sweden by 2000% now claim they have "the highest death rate in the world." But death rates in Sweden are lower than San Marino, Belgium, Andorra, UK, Spain, Italy, New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Washington DC, Louisiana, Michigan, Illinois, Pennsylvania and Maryland.

Christ Church college in Oxford. Joosten, 61, holds the regius professorship of Hebrew at the University of Oxford and is attached to the college.
Jan Joosten, 61, who holds the prestigious regius professorship of Hebrew at Oxford, was suspended by the university's Faculty of Oriental Studies and Christ Church college on Monday night. He is considered one of the most distinguished biblical scholars of his generation.
The academic, who lives in the Bas-Rhin region of France, was sentenced by a court in the city of Saverne last week over possession of about 27,000 images and 1,000 videos after he admitted the facts of the case, Agence France-Presse reported.
For over two weeks, riots have erupted across America, and it doesn't look like they will stop soon. Protesters and cops have been killed. A black man has just been shot by police in Atlanta, triggering another riot.
Reading about all this turmoil, I think back to my one visit to the Twin Cities, in 2014. Arriving in Saint Paul on a train from Williston, North Dakota, I checked into a motel, and was on the streets by dawn. It was July 4th!
Wandering around haphazardly, I ended up at Langford Park, where there was a large picnic. Old people relaxed on lawn chairs, kids ran around and the Pig's Eye JassBand was swinging to Gershwin's "Strike Up the Band." Having been to many cities in at least 35 states, I had never encountered such a wholesome and tranquilly joyous gathering. It was as if I had stumbled into a vast Norman Rockwell painting, or time traveled to an America of half a century ago.










Comment: See also: