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Don't worry, be Russian: 86 percent of population say they're happy; cite family, good health and good jobs

Happiness poll Russia
© Sputnik / Alexei Danichev
The number of happy people is high in all socio-demographic groups, but those 25 to 34 and with high income are more inclined to call themselves happy (90 percent).
A record number of Russians say they are happy, a new survey reveals, with family, good health, and a good job making them feel that way.

"The level of happiness among the Russians, based on subjective impression, stands at 86 percent," state-run pollster VTSIOM said on Thursday. It's the highest mark since the annual research was first conducted 24 years ago.

The number of happy people is high in all socio-demographic groups, but those 25 to 34 and with high income are more inclined to call themselves happy (90 percent).

Family (33 percent), good health (21 percent), children (18 percent), and a good job (17 percent) are the main reasons for Russians to consider themselves happy, the researchers said.

Comment: The Russian people are quite fortunate given their government's emphasis on improving life for its citizens, despite the often challenging political and economic climate. They are doubly fortunate for NOT living in the 'freedom and democracy' loving West which is clearly disintegrating.

Doing things right: Versus:


Bomb

Pregnant wife of Sri Lanka bomber blows herself up with her 3 children, kills police - additional blast heard outside Colombo

sri lanka ibrahim house
© ABC News: Eric Tlozek
Police outside the Ibrahim house, where a pregnant woman detonated a suicide vest.
The pregnant wife of a Sri Lanka bomber detonated a suicide vest when police raided the affluent family's home in the wake of the terror attacks, killing her own children.

Another of the suicide bombers behind the deadly string of attacks that killed 359 people and injured 500 on Easter Sunday studied in Australia before returning to settle in Sri Lanka.

Abdul Lathief Jameel Mohamed studied in the UK before doing postgraduate study in Melbourne. Prime Minister Scott Morrison did not identify the man, but said he had lived in Australia with his wife and child on a student visa and left in 2013.

Sri Lanka's deputy defence minister Ruwan Wijewardene told a press conference most of the suicide bombers were well-educated and from wealthy families. Some had law degrees, and all were Sri Lankan, he added.

Comment: According to RT, Reuters had a different account:
Citing a source, the agency said that it was Ilham Ahmed Ibrahim, the younger of the two brothers, who detonated a bomb, taking his own life as well as those of his children and his alleged spouse.
Another explosion occurred near Colombo. Luckily no casualties have been reported:
The blast occurred on empty land behind the magistrate court in the town of Pugoda, 40km east of Colombo. Police say the explosion was not controlled like several blasts in recent days, when police blew up suspicious objects.

Officials also temporarily closed the road to Colombo international airport and canceled outgoing flights after a suspicious vehicle was stopped at the entrance to the airport car park on Thursday morning. Services, however, quickly returned to normal as the concern proved to be a false alarm.
Police arrested a 26-year-old man carrying assault rifle ammo, maps, and six passes to parliament:
Local reports say police were responding to a tip-off when they found the 26-year-old carrying several parliamentary passes and a rough map marking out the road route to the parliament. They also found a vehicle which was possibly modified to carry a bomb, although no explosives have been found.

A canine unit was deployed to search for explosives but found nothing. Police recovered a tablet device, three mobile phones, a dozen SIM cards, T-56 assault rifle ammunition, and several credit cards during the raid.
...
The as yet unnamed 26-year-old suspect is due in court Thursday. Overall, the number of people arrested in connection with the attacks has risen to over 100, and eight of the nine suicide bombers have been named so far.

Sri Lankan President Maithripala Sirisena asked his defense minister and chief of police to resign Wednesday.

Sri Lankan police arrested a further three people, seizing 21 grenades and six swords during a raid in Colombo, though authorities did not specify whether the raids were directly related to the Easter Sunday bombing investigation.

Police forces from at least six countries are assisting Sri Lankan authorities with their investigations, including Scotland Yard, the FBI, the New Zealand Police, the Australian Federal Police, Danish and Dutch police, and Interpol.

It has also emerged that one of the suicide bombers, Ilham Ahmed Ibrahim, the son of a billionaire spice tycoon, was previously arrested and subsequently released by police.

"It was the suicide bomber of the Cinnamon Grand bomb attack who was released earlier," Sri Lankan government spokesman Sudarshana Gunawardana said. Ibrahim's father, Mohamed Yusuf Ibrahim, has been arrested on suspicion of aiding and abetting his sons.
India reportedly sent 3 alerts to Sri Lanka before the attack, the last one just hours before the attack itself:
The first alert was on April 4, and it came from investigations by Indian agencies that followed after the National Investigation Agency (NIA), in December 2018, stumbled upon the videos of National Thowheed Jama'at (NTJ) leader Maulvi Zahran Bin Hashim while probing the Islamic State (IS) Coimbatore module.

In the first alert, the agencies told Sri Lanka that, apart from churches, the Indian High Commission in Colombo could be a target. The second alert was sent a day before the attack and was even more specific than the first one in that it mentioned the possible targets, the officials said.

The last alert was sent hours before the suicide bombers attacked the three churches and four hotels.

"The information about the attacks were a result of detailed analysis of information gathered through technical means and human sources," one of the officials said. Sri Lankan Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe acknowledged that alerts had been sent by India.

"India gave us the intelligence but there has been a lapse on how we acted on that... intelligence was not conveyed down the line," Wickremesinghe told NDTV in an exclusive interview.

HT spoke to multiple officials in the central intelligence agencies who confirmed that the videos of Hashim, in which he exhorted Muslim youth from Sri Lanka, Tamil Nadu and Kerala to establish an Islamic rule in the region, were analysed in detail and investigated further by India's external spy agency R&AW (Research and Analysis Wing). The videos were stored in the pen drives, memory cards, mobile phones and CDs/DVDs, recovered by NIA on December 19, 2018 during raids at Kuniyamuthur, Ukkadam, Otteri in Chennai, Tindivanam near Villupuram, and Variety Hall Road in Coimbatore, from the premises of six ISIS suspects, Mohammed Ashiq A, Ismail S, Samsudeen, Mohammed Salauddin S, Jafar Shadik Ali and Shahul Hameed.

The six IS members were arrested on September 1, 2018 for planning to attack Hindu leaders/activists in Coimbatore.

The Coimbatore module members, a second intelligence official said, also regularly listened to Hashim's speeches. All six have already been charged by NIA.

"Hashim's video, which appeared to be the latest, showed he was aggressive and he repeatedly assured the cadres that something big would happen soon to teach a lesson [to the members of communities which do not follow the Sharia]," said the officer quoted above.

Further investigation also revealed that some of the Coimbatore module members were in touch with some Sri Lankans, who also followed Hashim.

"Bin Hashim had a major role in radicalising these youngsters on both sides [India and Sri Lanka] to be part of Islamic State," said the second official who added that the Coimbatore module had no idea of what was being planned in Sri Lanka.

Indian agencies subsequently discovered Hashim's mobile numbers as well and found that Hashim was in touch with some IS functionaries in neighbouring Bangladesh. A senior government official who did not wish to be named said that Bangladesh too needs to be on the alert.

Based on the analysis by NIA and further information gathered done by the Intelligence Bureau and R&AW, a communication was sent to Sri Lanka about the possible attacks.

The Sri Lankan authorities evidently took the information lightly, and, in turn, sent out a nationwide alert only on April 11.

Preliminary investigations have revealed that Hashim blew himself up at Shangri-La hotel in Colombo on Sunday.
See also:


Che Guevara

Activists guarding Venezuela's DC embassy brace for US seizure - takeover meant to shore up failed Guaido coup

protest venezuela embassy washington
© Reuters / Joshua Roberts
Activists occupying the Venezuelan embassy in Washington in solidarity with President Nicolas Maduro's government are bracing for confrontation as authorities prepare to try to seize the building on behalf of the opposition.

The Embassy Civilian Protection Collective has promised not to leave the embassy until the US comes to an agreement with the Venezuelan government to end the regime-change operation it is attempting on its soil. As of Wednesday evening, the deadline Venezuelan diplomats were given when they were ordered to leave the US, Secret Service agents were encircling the diplomatic building, which is considered Venezuelan property under international law. The group believes they will attempt to seize it by force on Thursday.

Hotdog

Nanny city: NYC to ban hot dogs to combat climate change

hot dog vendor
New York City is the first city in the United States to eliminate processed meats.

Mayor Bill de Blasio approved an ambitious $14 billion Green New Deal on Monday, April 22, to combat climate change. The plan will cut purchases of red meat by 50 percent in its city-controlled facilities such as hospitals, schools, and correctional facilities. The new commitment builds off of the Meatless Mondays campaign that was adopted by all NYC schools in 2017.

"It is a difficult plan. It is a necessary plan.... Estimates that tell us that we have only 12 years to get it right. Let's be clear, we have until 2030 to change things fundamentally, or our lives won't be the same," de Blasio said at an Earth Day event yesterday.

Comment: Mayor de Blasio is also seeking to ban any new construction of steel and glass skyscrapers in favor of more climate friendly materials. The major probably thinks he's leading the charge into a Green New World. It's more likely that he's leading the city off a cliff by damaging entire industries that have supported New Yorkers.

One Twitter user expressed his exasperation thusly:




Sheriff

Baltimore's mayor's properties subject of Fed search in connection with book scandal

Baltimore Mayor Catherine Pugh
© ABC
Baltimore Mayor Catherine Pugh
Federal authorities on Thursday executed search warrants at the home and several locations tied to Baltimore Mayor Catherine Pugh as part of an investigation into whether she improperly profited from a no-bid book deal steered to a Maryland medical system while she served on its board.

The FBI and criminal investigators from the Internal Revenue Service executed court-authorized search warrants at the home of the Democratic mayor, a second residence she owns, city hall, a non-profit the mayor has worked with, and the downtown office of her attorney, FBI spokesman Dave Fitz said.

The home of Gary Brown, a former Pugh aide, is also being searched.

Handcuffs

Hamas reportedly arrests Palestinian comedian who lambasted Gazan, Qatari govt's

palestinian flag
© AP Photo / Bernat Armangue
On Wednesday, Hamas security forces arrested prominent Palestinian comedian Hussam Khalaf for "misusing technology." A writer told Sputnik that while Hussam certainly had much to criticize in Hamas' administration of Gaza, suspicions that his criticisms of Qatar got him booked "are far from illegitimate."

Sources in the Hamas-governed Gaza Strip told the Jerusalem Post Thursday that Hamas security officers took Hussam in for questioning the previous day in his native town of Rafah, at the southern tip of the tiny autonomous territory.

"They took him in their car, and since then we haven't heard from him," his brother told the Post.

Khalaf, also called "The Brain," was known for criticizing both Hamas and Qatar in satirical videos posted online - something the Jerusalem Post notes is covered by the term "misusing technology."

Cross

Why are liberals using language that denigrates the world's largest religion?

Sri Lanka attacks Christian churches
© REUTERS/Athit Perawongmetha; Global Look Press via ZUMA Press/Xinhua
Following Sri Lanka's Easter tragedy, high-ranking Democrats engaged in a game of semantics gymnastics, dancing around the name of 'Christians'. Republicans took it as proof of democratic enmity to Christianity.

In the aftermath of Sunday's carnage, which left over 350 people dead and many more injured, a group of Democratic leaders, including Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton, took to Twitter to offer their condolences to friends and families of the Sri Lanka victims. If we were living in less complicated times that would have been the end of the story.

But of course these are not less complicated times. Thus, the memory of the Easter Sunday bombing victims was overshadowed by Obama and Clinton, as well as other Democratic politicians' use of the term "Easter worshippers" as opposed to the seemingly more appropriate "Christians."

"The attacks on tourists and Easter worshippers in Sri Lanka are an attack on humanity," commented the former US president.


A few hours later, Hillary Clinton tweeted out her own sympathy message, also using the strained, awkward-sounding "Easter worshippers" nomenclature. "I'm praying for everyone affected by today's horrific attacks on Easter worshippers and travelers in Sri Lanka," she commented.

Do the PC thought police have a valid objection this time?

Comment: Going by recent events, shadowy forces want to spark a 'clash of civilizations'
The one thing that the New Zealand and Sri Lankan terrorist attacks have in common other than the large number of worshipping civilians that were killed is that the perpetrators tried way too hard to have their attacks spark a "Clash of Civilizations" between Christianity and Islam. The Australian terrorist responsible for the New Zealand attacks scrawled the names of famous Balkan figures and battles associated with the wars against the Ottoman Empire onto his guns and gear before gunning down dozens of Muslims, while the Sri Lankan terrorist network specifically targeted Christians and luxury hotels during Easter in order to get the majority-Christian West's attention. Both series of terrorist attacks were deadly provocations meant to incite Christian-Islamic animosity and advance the "Clash of Civilizations" blueprint for dividing and ruling the Eastern Hemisphere in the 21st century.
See also: From Christian faith to nihilistic void


Snakes in Suits

Pepsico suing Indian farmers for growing exclusive variety of potatoes without a license

pepsico sues indian farmers potatoes

Over 190 farmers, scientists, activists and unions from across the country have signed a protest letter in support of the sued individuals. “Potato-growing farmers have nothing to worry and we can’t allow such intimidation as we will fight against it in court as well as on the streets if needed,” said Ambubhai Patel, Vice President of the Bharatiya Kishan Sangh.
Farmer leaders and activists in Gujarat have launched a protest against US food and beverages giant PepsiCo after it sued nine farmers in the state for illegally growing and selling a kind of potato exclusively registered by the company. PepsiCo claims it has sole rights to grow the particular variety of tubers for the manufacture of its Lay's brand of chips.

The nine farmers belong to the Sabarkantha and Aravalli districts of Gujarat, with each holding around three to four acres of land on an average.

Last week, a commercial court in Ahmedabad had directed the farmers - Chabilbhai Patel, Vinod Patel and Haribhai Patel - to stop growing and selling the potatoes till April 26, when it will next hear the case. The court has also sought a response from the three over the company's claims of infringing on its rights.

On PepsiCo's request, the commercial court also appointed advocate Paras Sukhwani as court commissioner to conduct an inquiry into the dispute and prepare a report.

Over 190 farmers, scientists, activists and unions from across the country have signed a protest letter in support of the sued individuals. "Potato-growing farmers have nothing to worry and we can't allow such intimidation as we will fight against it in court as well as on the streets if needed," said Ambubhai Patel, Vice President of the Bharatiya Kishan Sangh.

Comment: India's farmers plan mass march to national parliament to call attention to neo-liberal-caused agrarian crisis reaching 'civilization proportions', suicide of over 300,000
Rural India is plagued by farmer suicides, child malnourishment, growing unemployment, increased informalisation, indebtedness and an overall collapse of agriculture. Those involved in farming and related activities are being driven to migrate to cities to become cycle rickshaw drivers, domestic servants, daily wage labourers and suchlike.

Hundreds of thousands of farmers in India have taken their lives since 1997 and many more are experiencing economic distress or have left farming as a result of debt, a shift to (GM) cash crops and economic liberalisation. According to this report, the number of cultivators in India declined from 166 million to 146 million between 2004 and 2011. Some 6,700 left farming each day. Between 2015 and 2022 the number of cultivators is likely to decrease to around 127 million.

[..]

From the geopolitical lending strategies of institutions like the World Bank to the opening up of food and agriculture to foreign corporations via WTO rules and the US-India Knowledge Initiative on Agriculture, there is an ongoing strategy to displace the existing system of smallholder cultivation and village-based food production with one suited to the interests of global seed, pesticide, food processing and retail corporations like Monsanto-Bayer, Cargill and Walmart.



Snakes in Suits

First drug firm CEO to be charged in the opioid epidemic is paraded in handcuffs

laurence doud III

Former CEO of Rochester Drug Co-operative Laurence Doud III was indicted on federal charges on Tuesday his alleged role in fueling in America's devastating opioid crisis
The former CEO of a drugs company has turned himself in to authorities after he was charged for his role in fueling America's devastating opioid epidemic.

Laurence Doud III was indicted on federal charges on Tuesday following an investigation into lax distribution of controlled substances by Rochester Drug Co-operative.

The 75-year-old became the first pharma CEO in the U.S. to face prosecution for allegedly ignoring red flags while his company delivered massive hauls of powerful painkillers to pharmacies across the country.

Doud was handcuffed before he appeared in Manhattan federal court on Tuesday.

He is now awaiting arraignment on two counts of criminal conspiracy related to drug trafficking.

Attention

UN finally gains access to shelters at US-controlled Rukban refugee camp

Syrian Rukban refugee camp
© AP Photo / Raad Adayleh
The Rukban refugee camp lies in the US-controlled zone around its military base in At-Tanf, making it hard for humanitarian workers to access. The UN has only been able to organize two humanitarian convoys to Rukban since November 2018.
The United Nations for the first time gained access to shelters at Syria's Rukban refugee camp and called for a third humanitarian aid delivery after assessing the situation there, UN Assistant Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs Ursula Mueller said during a UNSC meeting on Wednesday.

"Today our teams accessed the shelters for the first time," Mueller said. "The deployment of a third humanitarian convoy to Rukban remains urgent - to avoid the deaths of more children."

Mueller, who is a Deputy Emergency Relief Coordinator, said Syrian authorities have so far refused to grant the United Nations permission to arrange another humanitarian aid delivery to the camp.

"The UN has requested access to provide life-saving assistance, but on Monday was informed by the authorities that such a convoy would not be possible," she said. "We continue to advocate for full, unimpeded and sustained access to shelters, as well as areas of origin and destination, and to people en route, to adequately support the humanitarian needs of those leaving Rukban."

The Rukban refugee camp lies in the US-controlled zone around its military base in At-Tanf, making it hard for humanitarian workers to access. The UN has only been able to organize two humanitarian convoys to Rukban since November 2018.

Comment: See also: