Society's Child
Despite this ruling, Americans from sea to shining sea continue to call for the arrest, or even death, of those who'd dare express their opinion through the use of the Old Glory.
The very essence of freedom is tolerating peaceful forms of expression, no matter how uncomfortable they make us feel. Sadly missing the point, however, are folks who fail to understand that burning or desecrating a flag without fear of punishment from one's government, is what liberty is all about.
That being said, when police are called in to investigate a photo of a high school student standing on a flag, as if a crime has taken place, liberty for all is under attack.
Letter from RFK Jr. Supports New Investigation
The ban on video and audio recordings at Sirhan Sirhan's parole hearing on February 9 meant the world depended on the one reporter allowed inside the hearing to tell us what happened. He had to condense "more than three hours of intense testimony" into 854 words.
Elliot Spagat's lively account of the proceeding for the Associated Press omitted one very important document that shooting victim and Kennedy family friend Paul Schrade presented to the parole board. This was a letter from Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to US Attorney General Eric Holder, dated September 25, 2012, supporting Schrade's request for a new investigation of his father's murder:
Paul was a close friend and advisor to my father. He was standing beside my father when Daddy was killed and Paul was himself wounded by a bullet. With boundless energy and clear mind, Paul continues to pursue my father's ideas, an endeavor to which he has devoted his life. He organized with the support of my mother and my family the building of the new Robert F. Kennedy Community Schools on the former Ambassador Hotel site. Paul and his team...strongly believe this new evidence is conclusive and requires a new investigation. I agree and support his request for a new investigation.
Comment: For a deeper look at how the 'Deep State' constructs and perpetrates assassinations and the myth of the 'lone nutter,' watch the profoundly insightful must-see documentary: 'Evidence of Revision: The Assassination of America'.

Cars of emergency services arrive after an explosion in Ankara, Turkey February 17, 2016
The TAK, which is a splinter group of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK), vowed to continue its attacks, Reuters reported, citing the group's statement published on Friday.
It identified the perpetrator of the Ankara bombing as a 26-year-old Turkish national born in the eastern city of Van.
The militant group operates in Turkey and northern Iraq and is regarded as a terrorist organization by Ankara and the US. It has claimed responsibility for a number of attacks since 2004. The latest one was the December mortar attack at Istanbul's Sabiha Gokcen airport that killed one man and damaged five aircraft.
The TAK has said that it severed links with the PKK. The latter, in turn, has reportedly denied having any control over the TAK.
Comment: So much for Erdogan's hysterical "Those damn dirty Syrian Kurds done it!" ranting and raving. (Not that it was believable in the slightest.) As for TAK, they seemingly came out of nowhere in 2004. No one seems to know who started the group. Which is curious, to say the least. Who pulls their strings?
In all probability, 'splinter group' is here code for 'intelligence outfit pretending to be the opponent', or 'pseudo-gangs' as the British counter-insurgency operatives called them. Whether or not the Turkish government was directly involved, the Ankara bombing was very probably a NATO operation.
It is simply far too convenient that 'terrorist attacks' are happening in Turkey at a time when the 'Mad Mullah' in charge there is exterminating Kurds in Turkey, Syria and Iraq - for which he badly needs Western public support - and his direct involvement in funding and arming ISIS has been exposed to all the world by Russia.
Black Lives Matter forms alliance with Oregon occupier supporters to fight for police accountability
The media and the political establishment would like to see these groups divided, because if they unify, they could make a strong and worthy opponent for the current control system.
The media coverage of the two anti-establishment groups has attempted to pit them against each other, using their difference in culture to hide the fact that they are facing the same oppressor. Luckily, it seems that many people within both of these groups are too smart to fall for such divisive tactics.
After police killed Oregon occupier Robert "LaVoy" Finicum earlier this month, there has been a push by his supporters for the department to release the name of the officer who was responsible. In response, legislators have proposed a bill that would shield the officer from having his identity released, which could have implications for other cases in the state.
After working 33 years, he's facing a 55% cut to his pension benefits, a blow which he says will "cripple" his family and imperil the livelihood of his two children, one of whom is in the fourth grade and one of whom is just entering high school.
Dorsey attended a town hall meeting in Kansas City on Tuesday where retirees turned out for a discussion on "massive" pension cuts proposed by the Central States Pension Fund, which covers 400,000 participants, and which will almost certainly go broke within the next decade.
"A controversial 2014 law allowed the pension to propose [deep] cuts, many of them by half or more, as a way to perhaps save the fund," The Kansas City Star wrote earlier this week adding that "two much smaller pensions also have sought similar relief under the law, and still more pensions are significantly underfunded."
"What's happening to us is a microcosm of what's going to happen to the rest of the pensions in the United States," said Jay Perry, a longtime Teamsters member.
Jay is probably correct.
Born in September 2012, Ahmed Mansour Karni was swept up in an indictment listing his name along with 115 other defendants accused of participating in riots and demonstrations on January 3, 2014. Despite that fact that Ahmed was only a year and a half old at the time, he was reportedly charged with four counts of murder, eight counts of attempted murder, vandalizing property belonging to the Egyptian Health Administration in his home province of el-Fayoum, threatening soldiers and police officers, and damaging vehicles belonging to security forces. Convicted in absentia, Ahmed was sentenced to life in prison on Tuesday.
Comment: A one year old child charged with four counts of murder?! Another sign of the times. Insanity has spread across the globe, how could any so called system of law convicted a child that young?
With a wink of an eye refugees at King Abdullah Park camp made their first purchases at a local supermarket on Tuesday, as part of the new program designed to simplify the redeeming of their monthly UN food aid. Developed by partners of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) the system is now being used by the WFP.
The project uses the EyeBank product created by iris specialist firm IrisGuard that uses the UN Refugee Agency's biometric registration to identify the recipient of virtual funds. Once the eye has been scanned the system pulls the data on a particular individual from UNHCR's registration database, before relaying the transaction to the Jordan Ahli Bank using the Middle East Payment System (MEPS). Once confirmed the funds are deducted from the refugee's monthly allowance before the purchase receipt is printed.
Comment: A vision of things to come. There are legitimate concerns as to the security of this data for storage and usage which implicates a potential endangerment and unintended consequences to those scanned. Interesting how technology is foisted upon the human populations with no recourse or the ability to object. Do we see eye-to-eye with this program? Can we just look away?
Trust isn't running very deep in Crystal City at the moment, and now the water has been running black.
Residents in Crystal City took to social media Wednesday night to share pictures of dark-colored water running out of their taps. The city said it's sediment that was flushed into distribution lines when the tower was drained to be worked on.
The city is advising residents to boil their water and/or let it run before using it.
Comment: That is just nuts! Who would think and suggest that boiling the water would make black water okay to drink or use?
It was still being passed around by the beachgoers after its death and was later left discarded in the sand. The dolphin was left on the sand after it died.
The dolphin was from the La Plata - also known as the Franciscana - variety, found off the coasts of Argentina, Uruguay and Brazil. It is considered a "vulnerable" species because there are only about 30,000 left in the world.
The YouGov poll found 43 percent of respondents felt the empire had been a "good" thing while 19 percent said it was "bad".
At its peak in 1922, the British Empire governed one-fifth of the world's population and one-quarter of the world's land area. Slave-trading, famine, concentration camps, massacres; those all sound like a history that would evoke a sense of shame, not pride.
But this isn't about bashing Britons for being proud of their history and telling them to feel ashamed instead. It's about the fact that they — too many of them — don't actually know their history. The history of the empire is not widely taught in UK schools — and what is taught is a watered-down or varnished version of the truth.
As British-Nigerian historian and writer David Olusoga put it: "The empire has become reduced to the abolition of slavery, the building of the Indian railways and some vague talk about the rule of law, British values and the spread of the English language."














Comment: More examples of blind adherence to a piece of cloth that most certainly does not represent freedom and liberty.