Society's Child
The soldiers were members of the 101st Airborne Division. The crash happened Friday night and involved an Army AH-64E Apache helicopter.
The names of the deceased will not be released until 24 hours after next-of-kin notification is complete, officials said.
The crew was conducting routine training at the time of the accident. There were no other casualties. Fort Campbell Fire and Emergency Services members responded to the crash scene.
This is the only story today. For Reuters, for AFP, for the AP; for the Washington Post too. (Journalists have self interest.) "Palestinian journalist in vest marked 'PRESS' shot dead by Israeli troops in Gaza," is the the Post's headline. Reporter Loveday Morris waits many paragraphs to provide the Israeli defense of its soldiers' actions: blaming Hamas for turning the fence into a war zone.
Comment: "You made us shoot your journalists."
One of the wounded journalists was Khalia Aazara, photo below posted by journalist Saad Abedine, who says that 780 in all were injured yesterday.The Palestinian health ministry said 491 Palestinians were shot.
In fact, so scared of its citizens having guns is the United Kingdom that in 2006, the government even banned toy guns under the guise of "reducing violence" with the Violent Crime Reduction Act. Fast forward to 2018 and - as gun rights activists have consistently warned - only criminals and the government have guns.
The result of the incremental stripping of rights has left the citizens of the United Kingdom sitting ducks merely waiting for violent criminals and a corrupt government to take hold. According to multiple new reports, this now seems to be the case.
Scotland Yard has since called an emergency meeting as London is now gripped by unprecedented violent crime. This violent crime spike comes as an ex-senior officer says "police have lost control of the streets."
Comment: See also:
- London Mayor's response to knife crime epidemic: £10,000 on 'knife wands' for schools, effectiveness not being tracked
- Scotland Yard reports large spikes in gun, knife violence as young Britons think it's 'cool' to carry weapons
- Theresa May blamed for police budget cuts that have led to staggering wave of knife crimes in British inner cities
Google employees wrote a letter to the company's CEO, Sundar Pichai, calling on the US tech giant to immediately pull out of a controversial program that many fear could be used for warfare.
A family is outraged after watching cellphone footage of their son and brother being savagely beaten by Indianapolis Metropolitan Police officers during a medical emergency.
The victim, Christopher Knox, who is an epileptic, suffered a seizure while shopping in a Speedway gas station last week. For those unfamiliar with epileptics, often times during and after seizures, they can become severely disoriented.
"Officers might react to a person's dazed behavior, inability to obey directives, and combative response to restraint as actions that the person can control," the website for the law enforcement accreditor CALEA reads. "In fact, when a person with epilepsy has a seizure, he or she is physically unable to control their actions."
Former Catalan President Carles Puigdemont can be released on bail, a German court said on Thursday, adding that while he could still be extradited to Spain on corruption charges he could not be extradited for the more serious charge of rebellion.
Puigdemont was arrested on entering Germany last month on a Spanish-issued warrant.
Spain has accused the Catalan separatist of rebellion and corruption after he organised an unsanctioned independence referendum.

Police guard the cordoned-off area around the home of former double agent Sergei Skripal in Salisbury, April 3, 2018
The niece of Sergei Skripal referred to the Salisbury pizzeria after visiting which her uncle and his daughter had been found by policemen after the March 4 incident. She pointed out that the two allegedly ordered fugu fish - quite a surprising suggestion as this dish is part of Japanese cuisine, and should be carefully prepared to avoid a lethal poisoning. The Zizzi restaurant in Salisbury does not offer any fugu-based dish in its menu.
"Is it difficult to obtain an account and see what people ordered at the restaurant? For some reason this information is classified. Did they eat some unknown dish that you cannot eat? Or is it forbidden in England?" Victoria Skripal said.
Fugu can be lethally poisonous due to its tetrodotoxin; therefore, it must be carefully prepared. The restaurant preparation of fugu, which is served as sashimi and chirinabe, is strictly controlled by law in Japan and several other countries, and only chefs who have qualified after three or more years of rigorous training are allowed to prepare the fish. Domestic preparation occasionally leads to accidental death.
According to police, Skripals had a drink at The Bishop's Mill pub and then ate lunch at Italian restaurant Zizzi, leaving around 3:35pm. However, it hasn't been immediately clear what exactly did they order.
Comment: As a Moon of Alabama commenter points out, the Daily Mail reported that the Skripals ate a seafood risotto pesce with prawns, mussels and squid rings - a dish with a reputation as a source for shellfish poisoning. That's because the paralytic seafood poison saxitoxin is a neurotoxin, which has been weaponized. And it can have similar effects as a nerve agent: "Respiratory difficulty, salivation, temporary blindness, nausea and vomiting may also occur. In extreme cases, paralysis of respiratory muscles may lead to respiratory arrest and death." Of course, if the Skripals simply had a near-fatal case of food poisoning, that still wouldn't explain how Det. Sgt. Nick Bailey also came down with it.
See also:
- John Helmer: 'The Empire Strikes Backwards'
- Yulia Skripal call to cousin and statement to police released - "everyone's health fine, will be discharged soon"
- Article 36: Yulia Skripal is not allowed to telephone her Grandmother?
Capella was recalled from the U.S. Nunciature in Washington, D.C. in September 2017, after the Vatican was informed Aug. 21, by the U.S. State Department, that there was a "possible violation of laws relating to child pornography images" by a member of the Holy See's diplomatic corps.

Palestinians take cover from Israeli snipers during clashes at the Gaza-Israel border at a protest demanding the right to return to their homeland, in the southern Gaza Strip March 31, 2018.
The sources said that an armed Israeli military drone fired a missile at Palestinian protesters near Erez Crossing, in the eastern part of the Gaza Strip, killing one of them, and wounding several others.
Palestinian medics were unable to enter the area due to Israeli army fire, and severe military restrictions on border areas, and were only able to retrieve his body in the morning.
The Palestinian Health Ministry said the slain Palestinian has been identified as Mojahed Nabil al-Khodary, 23, from Gaza city.
Medical sources at the Shifa Medical center in Gaza city, said Red Crescent Medics located the mutilated remains of the slain Palestinian, east of the Zeitoun neighborhood, southeast of Gaza city.
They added that the soldiers also shot five Palestinians with live fire and caused dozens to suffer the effects of teargas inhalation in the same area.
Comment: The ritual slaughter continues:
- US lone Security Council member to block UN inquiry into Gaza violence
- UN warns Israel against "unjustified and unlawful" murder of Palestinians in military occupied Gaza is breach of Geneva conventions
- 'We see you very well': IDF's tweet threatening children with sniper fire enrages social media users
- To silence the press: Six journalists shot by Israel during Gaza protests
- Hard questions for Israel as video shows unarmed teen shot in back by IDF sniper
- Israel is prepared to murder more unarmed protesters in Gaza
- Great Return March: 7 Palestinian protesters killed after IDF launch tear gas and open fire on Gaza border
"You can't decide in 24 hours what type of poison was used and where it comes from," Jose Bustani, a Brazilian diplomat and first director-general of the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW), said in an interview with RT.
Many questions surround the UK's probe into the Salisbury incident, he said, in which former double agent Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia were poisoned by an unidentified nerve agent. The UK began accusing Russia of the attack less than 24 hours after the incident.
"Why didn't they call immediately the OPCW?" Bustani asked. "And why didn't the OPCW volunteer to take action, because it's the role of the organization to go immediately and analyze the victims?"













Comment: Imagine if this had been Putin's government and army. "Russian dictator Putin's army opens fire on peaceful protesters and journalists! 500 shot in one day! One journalist murdered!" In fact, if ANY other country had done this, it would be front-page news for days if not weeks. But Israel gets a pass. That's what happens when identity politics takes over a nation and victim-status is brought up to the level of an absolute.