Society's ChildS


Bug

Disgraced Prince Andrew to be stripped of 'prince' title — and forced to leave Royal Lodge after Jeffrey Epstein scandal


Comment: But, but... Trump said Epstein was a "democrat hoax"?


Prince Andrew
© Getty Images
Disgraced royal and Jeffrey Epstein pal Prince Andrew will no longer be a prince and will have to move out of his Royal Lodge home, Buckingham Palace announced Thursday.

The late Queen's son will have his title stripped and now be known as "Andrew Mountbatten Windsor," the Palace said in a statement provided to BBC News.

Andrew will also be forced to vacate his taxpayer-subsidized royal home of more than 20 years.

It comes amid renewed pressure on the royals in recent months, following fresh allegations that Andrew maintained ties with convicted pedophile Epstein years after he claimed to have severed communication.

Heart - Black

California's 'Kiddie Stroll' is state-sponsored slavery, selling children for sex

Gavin Newsom
© REUTERSCalifornia Governor Gavin Newsom
California's laws have made children its least protected class.

As a matter of fact, if an American state wanted to establish a formal means of separating children from parents and other loving caregivers to feed a profitable industry, it couldn't be done with much more effectiveness than in California.

In 2023, Gov. Gavin Newsom signed legislation requiring foster parents to "affirm" the LGBTQ identities of any children in their care.

Naturally he hailed it as a giant leap forward for gay rights — but it effectively kicked committed religious believers out of the foster-care system.

Last month, the governor signed AB 495, aka the legal kidnapping bill, which allows an unrelated adult to claim a "mentoring relationship" and exercise parental authority over any child.

Newsom's cronies in the Legislature touted it as a protection for the children of undocumented immigrants who might get whisked away by ICE in the middle of the day — but it effectively put an end to parents' rights.

Then there's SB 357, which bars police from profiling underage prostitutes.

Skull

Mexican journalist found dead with sinister note after reporting on cartel boss arrest

Miguel Angel Beltran
© TikTok/Miguel Angel BeltranMiguel Angel Beltran’s body was found with a threatening note after he reported a gang leader’s arrest.
The murdered body of a Mexican journalist who covered drug cartels was found wrapped in a blanket along a highway — with an ominous note accusing him of "spreading false accusations."

The remains of Miguel Angel Beltran were discovered Saturday on a stretch of highway that connects the northwest state of Durango with the Pacific coast resort city of Mazatlan in the notoriously dangerous Sinaloa state, according to local reports.

The grisly discovery was accompanied by a threatening note that read, "For spreading false accusations against the people of Durango."

The former print journalist had been posting his reports online from a TikTok account under the name "Capo," and on local news outlet La Gazzetta Durango's Facebook page, according to AFP.

Gavel

Judge sides with online publishers in Google ad tech antitrust case

google
© Nicolas Tucat, AFP via Getty Images
A New York federal judge ruled in favor of online news publishers and advertisers who allege Google unlawfully monopolized the digital advertising market and diverted revenue that would have otherwise gone to news operations.

U.S. District Court Judge P. Kevin Castel granted partial summary judgement for Gannett, the country's largest newspaper chain and owner of The Burlington Free Press, the Daily Mail, digital media company Inform and a proposed class of smaller publishers, holding Google liable for illegally monopolizing its advertising placement technology business.

In a complaint filed in 2023, Gannett and the other plaintiffs accused Google of violating federal antitrust laws by abusing its dominant position to control and profit from the technology used by publishers to buy and sell ads across the internet.

In his ruling, Castel pointed to the findings in the Justice Department's antitrust trial against Google in Northern Virginia earlier this year.

HAL9000

Big Tech circles the wagons as evidence of chatbot harms pile up

chatbox danger ai artificial intelligence children
© Levart
'To liberal elites, adults' access to pornography is a hill worth dying on, right up there with abortion and the LGBTQ agenda'

Well, that didn't take long.

Many people have been wondering when artificial intelligence (AI) would jump the tracks and become a malevolent force.

As C.S. Lewis noted, every innovation by man can also be a power over man. Think back to when the marvelous new technology of VHS tapes quickly became the most efficient conveyor of hardcore pornography, later eclipsed by the internet.

Recent news stories about teen suicides inspired by chatbots should put parents on high alert that kids' unrestricted online access is a train wreck waiting to happen.

Megaphone

Free speech: What the hell is going on at Indiana University?

college students
© Shutterstock
With no sense of irony, IU censors student newspaper for reporting on poor free speech ranking

Indiana University banned its student newspaper from printing just days before homecoming weekend — after firing the paper's advisor when he refused to censor critical coverage.

That would be bad enough on its own, but FIRE is taking this one personally, as the Indiana Daily Student reported this hostile campaign was due in part to its coverage of FIRE's ranking Indiana University as the worst public university for free speech.

You read that right. The school's response to the news that they are bad at free speech ... is to censor the news. It's ironic — and not just in the Alanis Morissette sense — that these actions will likely push its overall ranking even lower next year. At least we can't fault them for consistency.

Bullseye

Trump citizenship audit to cut Section 8 housing, other benefits to illegal aliens

government housing section 8 welfare
© Courtesy of the King County Housing AuthorityGovernment-funded housing
While the government remains shut down because Democrats demand free healthcare for illegal immigrants, President Trump has ordered a sweeping audit of federal programs to ensure that other taxpayer-funded benefits are not being distributed to illegal aliens.

The order encompasses at least 28 major programs across multiple federal agencies. Housing audits include the Section 8 Housing Choice Voucher Program and public housing.

The Department of Health and Human Services is reviewing 13 programs, including Head Start, Community Health Centers, Medicaid, and the Title X Family Planning Program, as well as a range of behavioral health and substance abuse grants.

Nutrition and welfare initiatives such as SNAP (food stamps) and TANF (Temporary Assistance for Needy Families) are also included in the audit.

Arrow Down

Europe 'destroying itself' by backing Kiev - Tucker Carlson

Carlson
© Tom Williams/Getty ImagesUS Journalist Tucker Carlson
The conflict with Russia cannot be won by Ukraine, the US media host has argued.

European leaders are being "stupid" and "reckless" by continuing to back Kiev against Russia, effectively destroying both Ukraine and Europe itself, American political commentator Tucker Carlson said in an interview published on Monday.

Speaking to RTVI US, a New York-based Russian-language media outlet, Carlson mocked the idea that Kiev could prevail over Moscow on the battlefield.
"They cannot win this war. All it's doing is destroying Europe. It has already destroyed Ukraine.

"Of course they are not going to beat Russia. Russia is an industrial power, a resource power, a close military ally of China at this point. It's a joke. All they can do is destroy themselves and destroy the world with a nuclear exchange. This is deranged.

"Europe is falling apart because the same people and the same ideas that got us into this war have dominated for 80 years."
A vocal Christian conservative, Carlson tied Europe's current economic decline to decades of secular liberal policies, claiming that the same elites who provoked a confrontation with Moscow had already undermined the continent's cultural foundations.

Brain

Professors' study disputes long-standing claim conservatives are more rigid thinkers

Blue red brain
© AI/CanvaPro72A split brain connected by a web of neurons
A group of professors from several universities recently published a study challenging the long-standing claim in psychology that conservatives are less likely to change their beliefs.

The study, titled "An adversarial collaboration on the rigidity-of-the-right" and published in the journal Political Psychology, argues that much of the previous scientific literature on the subject is "discordant."

It found that broad claims about strong associations between ideology and belief updating are likely unwarranted. According to the study's introduction:
The 'rigidity-of-the-right hypothesis' states that conservatism stems from rigid, inflexible thinking and needs for certainty that coalesce to form an authoritarian 'syndrome' that exists predominantly among conservatives.

This influential framework has formed 'decades of scholarship examining the psychological characteristics underlying political ideology.'
As recently as June of this year, professors from University of Massachusetts published an article claiming that people who prefer well-behaved children hold more authoritarian political views.

Arrow Down

Has wind power REALLY saved the UK £104 billion?

Power Lines
© Off-Guardian Org
Have you heard that wind power has saved the people of Great Britain over one hundred billion pounds in the last decade?

That's the contention of a new study, which has been eagerly picked up and run with by all and sundry across the media landscape this morning.

Is the claim true? We'll get to that.

First, a little background.

The lead author of the paper is Colm James O'Shea. He's a 55-year old hedge fund manager who returned to University in 2023 to get a Masters in Climate Change. Why? We don't know.

The Guardian calls him a "former hedge fund manager", but according to Companies House and his own LinkedIn profile he's still the CIO of COPAC, the hedge fund he created in 2006.

The holdings of COPAC are not currently publicly listed (and their website is peculiarly blank), so I don't know if the fund has any investments in Green Energy projects.

Prior to starting his own fund in 2006, O'Shea had worked for — among others — Soros Fund Management and Balyasny Europe Asset Management. His involvement with Balyasny extended past the end of his employment there, as they are listed as a LLP Designated Member of his COPAC fund from 2005-2009.

A cursory search doesn't show Balyasny to have any green energy holdings either, but they have been buying up gas projects since 2023, including some in Denmark as recently as July...which is potentially interesting.

Does Balyasny benefit from news coverage potentially lowering the price of gas infrastructure? Or are their purchases intended to somehow sabotage the market and increase the price of gas?

Impossible to say at this point. There's nothing concrete in any of this, but there are interesting questions to ask.

But back to the paper itself, and the key question: Has wind power REALLY saved the UK £104 billion?