Society's ChildS

Eye 1

The rise of surveillance capitalism and big tech utopianism

Surveillance Capitalism
A few years ago after the 2008 financial crash Matt Taibbi of Rolling Stone described Goldman Sachs, that great titan of financial capitalism, as a "great vampire squid wrapped around the face of humanity, relentlessly jamming its blood funnel into anything that smells like money." Fast forward almost ten years and you could say the same, and much worse, about surveillance capitalism, according to Shoshana Zuboff author of Surveillance Capitalism: The Fight for a Human Future at the New Frontier of Power.

This time though the squid is even bigger and it is jamming its blood funnel, via smart phones, smart TVs, tablets & soon even smart homes, into every last nook and cranny of our individual & collective privacy. The very thing that was suppose to set us free and serve us, as internet creator Tim Berners Lee had hoped, has now evolved as Lee said "into an engine of inequity and division; swayed by powerful forces who use it for their own agendas." The capture & commodification of our data, the predatory construction of user profiles and surveillance is in the DNA of surveillance capitalism. Cambridge Analytica is only the tip of the iceberg.

Zuboff points out in her brilliant book that all pervasive, stealthy and omnipresent surveillance capitalism has exploited human experience to collect free raw material for translation into behavorial data. The behavorial surplus - our emotions, fears, our voices and our personalities-is then fed into thinking 'machine intelligence', and then reconfigured into predictive products. Products specifically designed to anticipate what you will do today, tomorrow, and next week by means of behavorial modification. But not only does surveillance capitalism predict it also nudges us, influencing our behaviour through personalised and intrusive targeted advertising.

Handcuffs

Free speech under attack: Man faces year in prison for telling police they are 'pissing on the Constitution'

free speech
After police refused to respond to his calls for assistance, a Texas man gave police a peaceful piece of his mind, but it landed him in jail.

Warning that the government must not be given the power to criminalize speech it deems distasteful or annoying, The Rutherford Institute has asked the U.S. Supreme Court to stop the prosecution of a Texas man who faces up to one year in jail and a $4000 fine for sending emails to police criticizing them for failing to respond to his requests for assistance.

In an amicus brief filed with the Supreme Court, Rutherford Institute attorneys argue that the prosecution of Scott Ogle for sending complaints to a sheriff's office, including one email stating that officials were "pissing" on the Constitution, violates the First Amendment's safeguards for freedom of speech and the right to petition the government for a redress of grievances.

Moreover, Institute attorneys argue that the Texas law under which Ogle was charged, which makes it a crime to send "annoying," "alarming" or "harassing" electronic messages, is so overbroad that it could be used to punish a negative review of a restaurant posted online or caustic Facebook posts.

People

Yellow Vests mobilize for 25th weekend of protests

Christophe Castaner caricature poster
© Reuters / Charles PlatiauA protester holds a sign depicting French Interior Minister Christophe Castaner and the word 'liar' at a march in Paris
Three days after clashing with police at May Day demonstrations, Yellow Vests protesters marched in Paris and across France, in the 25th straight weekend of anti-government anger.

According to the Interior Ministry, 18,900 demonstrators took to the streets on Saturday, the lowest turnout since the movement began as a protest against a planned fuel tax hike in November. However, the Yellow Vests have regularly disputed the figures released by the ministry, accusing officials of downplaying the scale of the protests.

In Paris, protesters demanded the resignation of Interior Minister Christophe Castaner. Castaner had accused Yellow Vests protesters of staging an "attack" on a hospital in the city during Wednesday's May Day protests. Social media footage told a different story, with the protesters seeking refuge in the hospital to avoid police batons and tear gas.

Comment: Muslims and the working class: France's marginalized and natural Yellow Vest allies


Fire

41 dead as Russian Superjet-100 crash-lands, bursts into flames at major Moscow airport - UPDATES

Plane on fire
Panicked passengers rushed to evacuate a burning Aeroflot plane at Moscow's Sheremetyevo Airport after the Sukhoi Superjet-100 made a mind-blowing, fiery crash-landing at a second attempt. At least 5 people were injured.

Footage shared on Twitter appeared to show a dense cloud of black smoke pouring out of flight SU1492 parked on the runway as dozens of ambulances were dispatched to the scene. All 78 passengers were evacuated from the burning wreck, and five have been reported injured.

Comment: Comment: Update from RT:
Only 37 people on board the passenger jet that caught fire during landing at Moscow's Sheremetyevo airport have survived the incident, the Russian Investigative Committee has said.

"According to the updated data that the investigators have obtained, 37 people [out of 78 on board] have survived," the Investigative Committee's spokeswoman, Svetlana Petrenko, told journalists.

The Aeroflot flight SU 1492, en route from Moscow to the Russian northern city of Murmansk, had to turn back to Sheremetyevo after reporting an emergency on board less than half an hour after takeoff.
UPDATE 6th May 2019 12:15:

RT provides the following reports.

Witnesses describe the fire that destroyed the Russian Superjet-100:
At least one person has been confirmed dead in the horrific crash-landing of an Aeroflot Superjet-100 plane with some 80 people on board in Moscow. Witnesses describe how the jet went up in flames as people scrambled to evacuate.

Chilling videos published on social media show the jet sitting on a landing strip of Moscow's Sheremetyevo Airport with its rear engulfed in a firestorm with bursts of flames rising high above the fuselage. At the same time, people are seen desperately evacuating from the front exit and running away from the jet.



"Hell in Sheremetyevo: Sukhoi Superjet 100 en route from Moscow to Murmansk had to turn back because of a fire on board," Dmitry Smirnov, a journalist with Russia's Komsomolskaya Pravda newspaper, wrote in a tweet accompanying the video. "It burns like a torch while the evacuation ... is still in full swing."
Footage of the fire:
Videos have emerged online showing the plane landing in flames and the chaotic evacuation scenes that followed. People rushed to jump from the plane's front exit as an inflatable ramp was deployed.

Fire engines were reportedly on the spot some two minutes after the plane crash-landed and the blaze was extinguished within minutes, but not before it engulfed the entire tail end of the jet.



Russian President Vladimir Putin has expressed his condolences to those who lost their loved ones in the crash and has ordered the authorities to conduct a thorough investigation of the incident. PM Dmitry Medvedev has meanwhile ordered Transport Minister Evgeny Dietrich to create a special commission to look into the crash.
Footage release of people fleeing the plane appears online:
Shocking exclusive video footage shows terrified passengers leaping from the flaming Sukhoi Superjet 100 aircraft at Moscow's Sheremetyevo Airport, after the fiery crash-landing that took over 40 lives.

Aeroflot Flight SU1492 departed Moscow's Sheremetyevo International Airport on Sunday, bound for Murmansk. The plane quickly returned to Moscow after a fire broke out on board, and landed trailing smoke and fire.

Video captured from the tarmac shows passengers leaping from the aircraft, as flames engulf its body and smoke billows into the air. The people then flee down the runway, away from the wreckage.

"Please, please, guys, come on, hurry up!" a voice behind the camera begs, as people are seen fleeing.

The plane was extinguished by fire crews minutes after the evacuation, and ambulances rushed to the scene to tend to the injured. The final death toll may exceed 41, as some survivors remain in critical condition.

The fire consumed much of the plane's fuselage, stripping the airliner down to its metal frame. Sukhoi said the craft completely burned out.

You can see the footage here.
Footage from inside crash-landed Superjet-100 showing raging inferno emerges:
Filmed by a passenger sitting next to the window looking almost straight into the fire, the extremely distressing footage shows how the plane's blazing engine bursts into an all-out inferno. Screams of women and children can be heard in the background.

The video seems to have been filmed after the ill-fated jet had returned to Moscow's Sheremetyevo airport for its fiery crash-landing, but before the airliner was evacuated.


Investigators reported Sunday night that out of the plane's 78 passengers, only 37 survived. Another seven were reported injured earlier on Sunday. Russian President Vladimir Putin has expressed his condolences, and ordered the authorities to conduct a thorough investigation of the incident.
Leaked CCTV footage shows the plane bouncing on apporach, hitting the tarmac and rupturing the undercarriage before bursting into flames:
The footage of the crash-landing was captured by an airport security video camera and uploaded to Telegram channel Baza. It shows the aircraft attempting to land at speed, but then bouncing off the runway. Another touchdown attempt is made seconds later, but the plane's undercarriage apparently collapses, smashing its engines and triggering a massive fireball.


Of 78 only 41 people died in the crash.
At least six of the 37 people rescued were rushed to a hospital. Three are now in intensive care after suffering burns and smoke inhalation injuries, health minister Veronika Skvortsova said, in a brief press statement.

The fire engulfed the aircraft's tail within moments. 78 people were on board the aircraft, including 73 passengers and five crew members. Now the investigators say an "updated" toll shows only 37 of those on board have survived.

Earlier, the Russian Investigative Committee confirmed the deaths of 13 people, including two children.
Experts speculate over the possible causes of the crash:
Electrical fire, lightning, or criminal act? Aviation experts on likely cause of Russian plane crash

As investigators tackle the questions about the Sukhoi Superjet 100 that crash-landed in Moscow's Sheremetyevo Airport with the loss of 41 lives, two aviation experts told RT that certain possibilities can't be ruled out.

"It's plausible but unlikely," aviation safety assessor Jacques Astre told RT. Although thunderstorms had been reported in the area earlier on Sunday, "Airplanes are designed to withstand lightning strikes," he explained. "Sometimes there is damage, but it's very minor and not to the extent that it could cause the loss of the aircraft."

Astre reckons it's "very likely" that the fire began with an electrical fault. That view is shared by Sultan Hali, a former senior officer with the Pakistani Air Force and a veteran aviator.

"The usual culprit is electronic cables short-circuiting, so this could very well be an electronic fire caused by that," he told RT. Hali added that an electrical fire is one of "the most horrifying" things that a pilot can experience, as it can bring down communications capability.

"If you have lost total communication then you are on your own," he added.

Before declaring a mayday emergency, the Sukhoi's crew had declared a radio failure, before circling Moscow and landing hard back at Sheremetyevo.

Astre suggested that the enormous fireball could have been a result of the hard landing, as it was reported the plane hit the ground three times before staying down. "Viewing the video, it appears to me from the flames and the smoke, that maybe the plane landed hard, compromising the fuel tanks."

Hali added that a jet's undercarriage would not normally collapse had it not been already weakened by "severe" fire. The retired aviator added that, with little yet known about the incident, "the possibility, however faint it may be, of criminal activity cannot be ruled out."


Both experts, who were speaking before the full extent of the tragedy was announced, gave kudos to the fire crews and emergency personnel who attended the scene. They also paid tribute to the Aeroflot crew who managed to keep their cool and evacuate many of the plane's 78 passengers. "This was a very serious emergency and everybody's training kicked in at the right time," Astre said.
Horrifying footage from inside the inferno emerges:
Terrifying footage shot inside the Sukhoi-100 shows its wings burning as the plane travels fast on the landing strip at Moscow's Sheremetyevo airport. Sparks are also seen from the jet's window.

A man's voice is heard calling for calm. In the end of the video somebody commands to get up and go to the exit.

An emergency on board forced the Aeroflot flight SU 1492, en route from Moscow to the Russian northern city of Murmansk, turn back to Sheremetyevo.


A passenger recalls the event:
'Scared to death'

People were scared to death on board the Sukhoi Superjet 100 during its emergency landing, one of the passengers who survived the tragedy said. Forty-one people died after the plane crash-landed and caught fire.

"The flight came back. We had a rough landing. We almost lost consciousness from fear. The plane was bouncing like a grasshopper and started burning already on the ground," Petr Egorov told Komsomolskaya Pravda.

Several videos that emerged from inside the plane show the plane's wings engulfed in flames as it rolls fast on the runway. People heard on the video are shouting in panic.

"This plane was landing engulfed in a terrible fire. Firefighters were quickly on the scene but I couldn't see it evacuated from where I was in the terminal," a witness to the tragedy, observing the unfolding calamity from the ground, said.

People rushed to get off the plane via emergency slides as the rear of the plane was engulfed in flames and a thick plume of black smoke rose. It took people around 55 seconds to get off the aircraft, RT correspondent, Igor Zhdanov noted, reporting from the airport. He also managed to speak to one of the witnesses of the crash landing, who was observing the incident from another plane on the runway.

"We sat near the window. I just turned my head and all of a sudden I saw a burning flame with a huge plume of black smoke. Firefighters arrived at the scene within two minutes. They started fighting the fire," the witness said.

"They did not show signs of panic. As the plane was too close to the people waiting on the runway, we did not know it was landing. It looked like it was just 50 meters from the nearest aircraft," he added.



At least 41 people out of 78 people onboard Aeroflot flight SU 1492 died in the tragedy, authorities confirmed, noting that six out of 37 survivors were rushed to a hospital. Officials have yet to confirm the cause of the incident. It's been reported that the connection between the plane and ground control was lost. One of the theories about the accident is that lighting hit the plane.
More details of the event:
Fiery Sukhoi Superjet-100 crash-landing: How it happened

An Aeroflot passenger aircraft caught fire while crash-landing at Moscow's Sheremetyevo airport, after an onboard emergency. Forty-one people have died in the tragedy. RT recaps how the tragic events unfolded.
  • The aircraft involved in the incident was built in 2017
  • The plane underwent its most recent maintenance in April.
  • Aeroflot flight SU1492 took off from the Sheremetyevo airport on schedule at 17:50 local time (14:50 GMT).
  • The flight was bound for the northern Russian city of Murmansk
  • The aircraft had 78 people on board, 73 passengers and five crew members.
  • The plane was in the air for some 28 minutes when there was an emergency alert.
  • The pilots alerted the airport about their decision to turn back and land and then lost radio contact with air traffic control.
  • The jet managed to land at the second attempt around 18:30 local time (15:30 GMT).
  • The aircraft bounced off the runway and hit the ground hard; the tail of the plane burst into flames.
  • While already on the runway, the plane made a sudden sharp turn and came to a stop not far from other planes waiting for takeoff.
  • Firefighters arrived at the crash scene in about two minutes.
  • People were leaving the plane through emergency exits in its forward section, as the tail was burning. The evacuation took 55 seconds.
  • The fire was extinguished within an hour.
  • Forty passengers and a crew member died in the tragedy.
  • Several people were hospitalized with smoke inhalation injuries and burns. Three were admitted to intensive care upon arriving in hospitals.
  • An investigation led by the minister of transport has been launched.
The captain comments on the event:
Captain of ill-fated Superjet says 'landing speed was normal', fire broke out after touchdown

An Aeroflot captain who piloted the Superjet 100 in Moscow has revealed harrowing details of the accident, saying he had to crash-land with full tanks, which possibly led to the jet catching fire right after its bumpy touchdown.

There was "a bright flash and a bang" moments before the pilots began an immediate descent into Moscow's Sheremetyevo Airport, Denis Evdokimov, a captain on the ill-fated Aeroflot flight, told Telegram channel Baza. To make matters worse, communication with the ground failed "because of a lightning strike."

The failure left the crew with no option but to perform a manual landing. They finally managed to establish radio contact and "could only say a couple of words" to the air traffic control, who guided them back to the runway, Edvokimov recalled.

While attempting to land, the jet struck the runway several times, probably damaging the fuel tanks and causing a fire to ignite in the rear of the fuselage. But the captain failed to explain why the touchdown was so hard, only saying that "we had caught fire upon landing."

The crew didn't seem to have any trouble during descent, he said. "The speed wasn't high, it was normal. [We acted] according to the flight manual." However, the jet's weight was much greater than required because of its full tanks, making it extremely challenging to safely land a 45-ton airliner on a runway, the pilot said.

He and his first officer followed a protocol on landing an overweight plane, but it could be the bumpy touchdown that ignited fire on board, Evdokimov suggested.

The plane was flying to Murmansk, a city in the north of Russia, carrying 78 passengers and five crew members. Shortly after take-off, the pilots declared an emergency and turned back. The Flightradar24 tracking service showed that the jet circled twice around Moscow before it hit the runway after spending less than half an hour in the air.

The plane was evacuated immediately after coming to a complete stop, with surviving passengers having to escape on emergency exit slides as the engines were engulfed by flames. A total of 41 people on board died in the crash-landing. The 37 survivors comprised 33 passengers and four members of the crew.



Aeroflot, Russia's flag carrier and one of the oldest airlines in the world, currently flies 50 Sukhoi-built Superjets. The planes usually service short- and medium-haul destinations within Russia and abroad.
A stewardess reports her experience:
'I grabbed passengers by the collar and kicked them out': Stewardess recalls evacuation horror

Passengers rushed to exit the ill-fated Superjet 100 while it was still speeding, and some reported that cabin windows were melting, a stewardess recalled after the fiery crash-landing claimed over 40 lives in Moscow.

Lightning struck the plane 10 minutes after take-off, Tatyana Kasatkina revealed in an interview to local media just hours after she survived the emergency landing. "There was strong hail, a noise was heard outside, then a bang occurred," she said, adding that a flash and black smoke could be seen.

The pilot announced that the plane was returning to the airport right away, she said, but indicated that communication was severely impaired. The plane's light signaling was also out of order.

Kasatkina said passengers were gripped by panic as they began to jump off their seats while the plane was still traveling at high speed.
I saw a woman talking on the phone saying, "We're on fire, we're going down" as she was standing in the aisle.
Panic intensified as the plane stopped, but there was no fire inside the cabin, the stewardess said. Some passengers noticed the cabin windows were melting, she recalled.

As the evacuation started, she had to kick people off the plane in order to keep them moving.
When the plane stopped, the evacuation began right away. I did not see [the passengers] anymore, I was just kicking them out the door, so that they didn't get jammed ... Just was grabbing each one by the collar.
A total of 41 people died in the tragedy including steward Maxim Moiseev, officials have confirmed. Moiseev died as he was trying to open the rear door of the aircraft to speed up the evacuation as fire engulfed the back of the plane, a source told TASS news agency.

The Aeroflot flight SU 1492, which was traveling from Moscow to the northern Russian city of Murmansk, suffered a crash-landing on Sunday evening shortly after take-off. Leaked CCTV footage suggests the aircraft bounced off the runway and then hit it at full force as its engines burst into flames.
See also:


Dominoes

Pipeline bottlenecks cost Canadian producers $20 billion

Burning money
© Reuters / Thomas Mukoya
Alberta's oil industry has faced persistent pipeline problems, costing Canadian producers a whopping $20 billion in lost earnings.

Canada has plenty of oil, and demand is high, but the Canadian oil industry has nevertheless taken a major hit this year thanks to its persisting pipeline bottleneck. The Albertan oil industry has long been plagued by insufficient pipeline volumes but has not been able to fix the issue with any semblance of efficiency thanks to major bureaucratic and litigation-based delays on building new infrastructure like the long-delayed Trans Mountain pipeline expansion project.

With pipeline capacity maxed out, Canadian oil producers have run out of storage space, leading to a major glut in oil reserves with nowhere to go. This has forced Canada to sell their oil at a major discount. In fact, a new study released this week by conservative think tank the Fraser Institute calculates that Canadian oil producers missed out on a whopping $20.62 billion more than they earned this year thanks to their severely depressed prices. Compared to the West Texas Intermediate benchmark, in the last year Canadian heavy crude traded, on average, at a discount of $26.50 a barrel. This is a huge dive from the five-year preceding, when Canadian heavy crude traded at an average of just $11.90 a barrel less than West Texas Intermediate.

The pipeline capacity deficit has negatively impacted the Canadian economy in a number of ways. "Canada's lack of adequate pipeline capacity has imposed a number of costly constraints on the country's energy sector including overdependence on the US market and reliance on more costly modes of energy transportation," states the Fraser Research Bulletin. "In 2018, these factors, coupled with the maintenance downtime at refineries in the US Midwest, resulted in significant depressed prices for Canadian heavy crude (Western Canada Select) relative to US crude (West Texas Intermediate) and other international benchmarks."

Camcorder

Miami-Dade officer charged with misconduct after lying about false arrest

Miami arrest
© Miami-Dade PoliceAlejandro Giraldo, a Miami-Dade police officer, arrests Dyma Loving.
A Miami-Dade police officer was charged this week for forcefully arresting a woman, and then allegedly making false statements about what happened, in an incident that sparked outrage after video of the incident went viral.

Police bodycam footage and a cell phone video recorded by the woman's friend showed the officer, Alejandro Giraldo, pushing Dyma Loving against a fence before grabbing her by the neck and pulling her to the ground.

Giraldo had been responding to a 911 call made by Loving's friend, Adrianna Green, to report that a neighbor had threatened them with a shotgun. An internal police investigation later found there was no basis for arresting Loving.

Giraldo was arrested on Thursday and charged with official misconduct, a felony, for allegedly making false statements in official reports. He was also charged with battery.

Attention

Venezuela: Seven military officials killed in helicopter crash

military helicopter
© WikipediaEurocopter AS 532AC Cougar of the Bolivarian Military Aviation of Venezuela
A Venezuelan military helicopter has crashed, killing all seven people on board. The deceased include three captains, two majors and two lieutenant-colonels.

The Cougar Siglas helicopter was flying from Caracas to San Carlos, in the state of Cojedes. The helicopter crashed shortly after leaving the Venezuelan capital in a wooded area of the Caracas municipality of El Hatillo.


Arrow Down

Bill and Killary's speaking tour is a flop - tickets going for as little as $14

Bill and Hillary
© Reuters/Stephen YangHillary Clinton and former President Bill Clinton at their speaking event in New York in April.
Demand for tickets to Bill and Hillary Clinton's speaking tour has been so sluggish that organizers have had to slash prices to get bums on seats. It's almost as if they're a spent political force that no one wants to listen to.

You may not have heard, but the the former president and the twice-failed presidential candidate have been touring North America speaking to audiences about their careers and "where we go from here."

The promotional material for 'An Evening With The Clintons' promises "a one-of-a-kind conversation with two individuals who have helped shape our world and had a front seat to some of the most important moments in modern history."

However, it seems that the public doesn't have much interest in hearing what the Clintons have to say. Mercifully, Sunday's event in Las Vegas is the final show before the tour finally wraps up.

Ambulance

Mentally ill woman forced to give birth alone in jail cell while deputies did nothing

jail cell
© Miami
A jailed and pregnant mentally ill woman was forced to deliver her child alone in an "isolation cell" last month as corrections officers ignored her cries for help, Broward County's public defender charged on Friday.

In a letter to Broward Sheriff Gregory Tony, Public Defender Howard Finkelstein wrote that North Broward Bureau jail inmate Tammy Jackson began complaining to staffers of contractions at 3:16 a.m. on April 10. By 10 a.m., he said she was lying in her cell by herself holding her newborn daughter.

"She was forced to deliver her baby alone," Finkelstein wrote in a two-page letter that also demanded a review of detention policies.

The Broward Sheriff's Office says it learned of the incident two days later and immediately launched an internal affairs investigation.

In an email, BSO spokeswoman Gina Carter said "a Well Path medical team, including a physician and two nurses, attended to the mother and child. Child Protective Investigations Section was notified, and the baby was placed with an appropriate caregiver."

Attention

Persecution of Christians approaching genocide levels, Christianity at risk of disappearing in some areas, according to report for UK Foreign Office

Sri Lanka
© STRINGER/GETTY IMAGESSri Lankan officials inspect St. Sebastian's Church in Negombo, north of Colombo, after multiple explosions targeting churches and hotels across Sri Lanka on April 21, 2019.
A new report says that the persecution of Christians across the world is fast becoming genocide and that the faith will soon disappear in some areas of the world, even in locations where its presence dates back to antiquity.

The crisis was made apparent recently by the Sri Lanka attacks on Easter, when Islamic extremists targeted three churches and three hotels in Colombo in a series of bombings. The attacks killed 253 people and injured hundreds more.

The British government commissioned Bishop of Truro Philip Mounstephen to lead a review of persecution of Christians and to recommend how the U.K. Foreign Office should respond to it. That review has now published an interim report detailing its findings so far.

"Evidence shows not only the geographic spread of anti-Christian persecution, but also its increasing severity," the report states. "In some regions, the level and nature of persecution is arguably coming close to meeting the international definition of genocide, according to that adopted by the UN."

The review found that eradicating Christians and other minorities through violence was the explicit objective of extremist groups in Syria, Iraq, Egypt, northeast Nigeria and the Philippines.