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Propaganda

Craigslist drops personal ads after anti-online sex-trafficking bill passes

Craigslist
Craigslist has yanked its personal ads section in the wake of an anti-online sex trafficking bill that passed in Congress this week.

The Allow States and Victims to Fight Online Sex Trafficking Act, or FOSTA, makes websites criminally liable for content that its users post, including prostitution ads and sex-trafficking content.

Craigslist - whose personals include bawdy categories such as casual encounters - said it pulled ads because it wasn't worth running afoul of the new law.

"Any tool or service can be misused," the website said in a statement. "We can't take such risk without jeopardizing all our other services, so we are regretfully taking craigslist personals offline. Hopefully we can bring them back some day."

Heart - Black

15 years ago, America destroyed my country and no one remembers or cares

baghdad bombing 2003
© International Press Association
The initial "shock and awe" bombing of Baghdad when the U.S. invaded Iraq in 2003, less than two years after the attacks of September 11, 2001.
I never thought that Iraq could ever be worse than it was during Saddam's reign, but the 2003 US invasion changed that

When I was 12, Saddam Hussein, vice president of Iraq at the time, carried out a huge purge and officially usurped total power. I was living in Baghdad then, and I developed an intuitive, visceral hatred of the dictator early on. That feeling only intensified and matured as I did. In the late 1990s, I wrote my first novel, I'jaam: An Iraqi Rhapsody, about daily life under Saddam's authoritarian regime. Furat, the narrator, was a young college student studying English literature at Baghdad University, as I had. He ends up in prison for cracking a joke about the dictator. Furat hallucinates and imagines Saddam's fall, just as I often did. I hoped I would witness that moment, whether in Iraq or from afar.

I left Iraq a few months after the 1991 Gulf War and went to graduate school in the United States, where I've been ever since. In 2002, when the cheerleading for the Iraq war started, I was vehemently against the proposed invasion. The United States had consistently supported dictators in the Arab world and was not in the business of exporting democracy, irrespective of the Bush administration's slogans. I recalled sitting in my family's living room with my aunt when I was a teenager, watching Iraqi television and seeing Donald Rumsfeld visiting Baghdad as an emissary from Ronald Reagan and shaking hands with Saddam. That memory made Mr. Rumsfeld's words in 2002 about freedom and democracy for Iraqis seem hollow. Moreover, having lived through two previous wars (the Iran-Iraq war of 1980 to 1988 and the Gulf War of 1991), I knew that the actual objectives of war were always camouflaged by well-designed lies that exploit collective fear and perpetuate national myths.

Sherlock

Iowa family of four reported missing are found dead in Mexico

The Sharps
© Register
Kevin, Amy, Sterling, and Adrianna Sharp of Creston have been reported missing during their vacation in Mexico. This undated photo shows the family.
A family of four on vacation from southwestern Iowa was found dead in a Mexican resort-town condominium Friday morning, authorities said.

Kevin Wayne Sharp, 41, Amy Marie Sharp, 38, and their children, Sterling Wayne Sharp, 12, and Adrianna Marie Sharp, 7, were found dead by authorities after conducting a welfare check in Tulum, Mexico.

The State Attorney's Office of Quintana Roo, a state on the Yucatan Peninsula, confirmed the ministry is investigating the cause of the family's deaths. During the initial inspection, there were no signs of injury or violence to the bodies or in the room, authorities said.

Jana Weland, Amy Sharp's cousin, told ABC News the family went to Mexico to enjoy the beach and meet friends. There were no signs of forced entry into the condo, Weland said in a video posted to Twitter by the Des Moines ABC affiliate.

"They went to sleep and never woke up," she said.

The U.S. State Department confirmed the bodies of four U.S. citizens were found in Akumal, Mexico, which is near Tulum on the Caribbean coast of the Yucatan Peninsula.

Comment: Update 26 Mar 2018 - Mexican authorities are now saying that they have ruled out foul play, and suspect that the family died from inhaling toxic gas.


Fire

Travis AFB: Fiery car crash treated as terrorist attack

TravisAFB carfire
© KTVU.com
An incident at an air base in Northern California is reportedly being treated as a terrorist attack by US authorities, including the FBI and Air Force. A vehicle caught fire after breaching the main gate of Travis Air Base.

The car was full of propane tanks, according to local media. The vehicle erupted in flames shortly after crashing through the main gate of the base on Wednesday night, leaving the driver dead.

At present the incident is being treated as "an act of terrorism," according to a report by Fox News. In a separate release, the US Air Force (USAF) said the FBI are helping the military to investigate the matter, but added that "no additional information is available at this time."

The Air Force Times reported on Thursday that explosive ordnance disposal units and the Office of Special Investigations were among the first to respond to the incident.

Comment: More from KTVU.com:
Investigators said Friday that they are stumped as to why a man who emigrated 25 years ago from India drove a flaming minivan full of propane tanks and gasoline cans through the main gate of a major Northern California Air Force Base this week, but see no evidence of terrorism.

Hafiz Kazi, 51, died in the Kia minivan Wednesday night after veering through the gate at Travis Air Force Base and crashing, said FBI agent Sean Ragan. Kazi had no known links to terrorism, did not leave behind a manifesto or any threats or explanation, and a video found on a cellphone provided no clue.

Air Force gate personnel initially thought they were dealing with a vehicle accident when Kazi crashed and they realized he was on fire. No shots were fired as he entered the base, and it was only after the fire was out and they broke through the locked minivan doors to aid Kazi that they realized it was loaded with five propane tanks, three gallon-size gasoline cans and several cigarette lighters, Ragan said. Also found was a gym bag with personal effects and three cellphones.

Kazi's body was so badly burned that he had to be identified by fingerprints. Ragan said he is a native of India who has lived in the United States since 1993 and was a permanent legal resident. Kazi never served in the military and has no known ties to the air base, he said. "We know what happened," Ragan said. "Now the question is why. Why was he there? What led him there? And we don't know the answers to that, quite frankly.

Kazi appeared to work as a cab driver in the past, but that investigators haven't determined if he was currently employed. It's not clear if he owned the minivan. "We don't have any evidence of any religious affiliation or anything at this point," Ragan said. "As of right now, we know of no other associates."



Footprints

Diverted SDF commanders limit US-led coalition's Ops

SDF in Raqqa
© CBS News
Syrian Democratic Forces
The US-led coalition has had to scale back its fight against Daesh in eastern Syria as scores of commanders from the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) have left the area to battle Turkish forces in the northwestern town of Afrin, Operation Inherent Resolve spokesman Col. Ryan Dillon told Sputnik.
"Clearly, with the amount of fighters that have left - the SDF had announced 1,700 [fighters] - a lot of those are, and I'll be very blunt about this as well, the majority of the leadership of these elements are Kurdish. So a lot of the leaders of these elements in the Middle Euphrates River Valley have departed," Dillon said in a phone interview from Baghdad on Thursday. "We've been limited now in our ability to conduct intensive operations and really put the pressure" on the Islamic State terror group.
Dillon said while the vast majority of SDF fighters have remained behind to continue battling Daesh, the loss of allied military leaders has taken its toll on anti-terror operations. "Things have slowed down because of the operations that happened in Afrin," he said.

Heart - Black

Police kill mentally ill woman as she exits her burning car

Decynthia Clements
Disturbing footage has been released that shows the confrontation between police and a mentally ill woman who they claim was suicidal when they initiated a standoff that led to the officers shooting and killing the woman as she jumped out of her burning vehicle.

Decynthia Clements, 34, was found sitting in her car on a gravel road on March 12, and officers claimed that when they tried to approach her, she drove away. She was approached again on the highway, this time by multiple officers.

The Body Cam footage shows an officer pulling on the locked door handles of Clements' car and knocking on the windows in an attempt to get her to step out of the car. He then begins yelling at her to open the door of the vehicle, but her response is muffled by the closed window.

"Cynthia, don't make this any harder on yourself, just open the door," the officer yelled as Clements responded by talking animatedly and waving around a cigarette. She then proceeded to smoke the cigarette inside the car while the officer waited outside her door with his flashlight aimed at the vehicle.

The stand-off lasted for more than an hour, and after Clements began to drive her car forward several feet, more officers arrived at the scene. They then boxed her car in between two patrol cars to prevent her from moving.

Attention

As Syrian refugees are heading home, the West is ready to attack

Syrians return
© Reuters
Syrian refugees returning home
How many years have you been living in Beirut?" I asked my barber, Eyad, after he told me, beaming, that in three months from now, he will be returning home, to Damascus.

Even one year ago, such conversations would not be easy to commence. But now, everything has been changing, rapidly and, one wants to believe, irreversibly.

Although nothing is truly irreversible, the better things are on the ground in Syria, the more threatening the West is becoming, particularly the United States. Now it is, once again, intimidating Damascus, ready to attack the Syrian army, something that could easily drag Russia and others into a lethal confrontation. The war! The West is clearly obsessed with perpetual war in Syria, while most of the Syrian people are passionate about bringing back an everlasting peace.

Smoking

Anti-smoking fascism: New York wants to ban smoking while walking

gun and smoker
Currently, within the city of New York, it is against the law to smoke a cigarette on mass transit, in public restrooms and restaurants, businesses, libraries, sports arenas and gyms, zoos, bars, and parks, and a myriad of other places. These smoking bans are upheld by police who enforce them and they can and will use extreme force to make sure you comply.

Now, however, lawmakers want to have police go after people who dare to smoke and walk at the same time. On Thursday, a Queens Democrat proposed legislation to the New York City Council to ban smoking while walking. Seriously.

"In a perfect world, every smoker would have the self-awareness to realize that smoking and walking down a crowded sidewalk subjects everyone behind you to breathing in the fumes," City Councilman Peter Koo said in a statement. "Unfortunately, we've all had the experience of getting stuck behind a smoker while walking down a crowded city sidewalk. If you want to smoke, stand off to the side. People can easily walk past you. But if you're smoking and walking down the sidewalk, you're forcing the people behind you to breathe it in."

While no one is advocating for innocent bystanders to be forced to breathe in someone else's cigarette smoke as they walk down the sidewalk, the answer to stopping it is certainly not going to be found in the police state.

Bad Guys

Russia and Britain: Chronicling an enduring but fruitless rivalry

british russian flags
The ongoing crisis between Britain and the Russian Federation over the poisoning of a former GRU colonel on British soil is the latest episode in what for a number of years has effectively been a 'Cold War' between Russia on the one hand, and the Western alliance nations comprised of Nato and the European Union on the other. It is important, nonetheless, to note that friction and dissonance between Russia and Britain has been an enduring one spanning the centuries. It is a rivalry that has been predicated on cultural differences, ideological antagonism and imperial ambition. It can in many ways be argued to be in essence a recurring clash of civilisations which today is fixated on the attempts of the Anglo-Saxon powers and their Western allies to maintain their global military and economic domination in the face of a surgent Eurasia at the centre of which is Russia. But with the ideological Cold War with the old Soviet Union long ended, a crucial question that continues to elude discussion concerns the efficacy of Britain's prolongation of a 'rivalry' with a faraway Eurasian power.

Culture
"All shall serve the state Only a strong ruler can save Russia Only strong rule and a united state can repel the enemies at our borders". - Words of Ivan the Terrible at his coronation in the Kremlin in Sergey Eisenstein's 1944 film about the first Tsar of Russia.
A useful starting point would be to emphasise the historical distinctions between Russian and British conceptions of the state as well as the perceptions held by the respective populaces of the role of the state. While the origins of both the British and Russian states are rooted in the autocratic rule of monarchs, the concept of state in feudal England arguably never bore the hallmarks of the sort of absolutism that developed in Russia where the equivalent term for state, gosudarstvo, connoted a sovereign who ruled with unfettered and unaccountable power.

Info

Militant neutralized in counterterrorism operation in Dagestan linked with IS

Russia's Special forces
© Sputnik/ Magomed Aliev
Special forces' soldier on an anti-terrorist operation, Dagestan
The militant who was killed during a counterterrorism operation in the Russian North Caucasus region of Dagestan was aligned with the Islamic State international terrorist group banned in Russia, the country's National Anti-Terrorism Committee (NAC) said on Saturday.

"Spetsnaz of Russia's FSB Federal Security Service supported by the National Guard and police had sealed off the house where the bandit was holed up. The criminal who had refused to lay down arms and surrender was neutralized in a fight," the committee said.