Welcome to Sott.net
Thu, 04 Nov 2021
The World for People who Think

Society's Child
Map

Attention

Two dead, four injured in knife and gun attacks in London over NYE

london NYE violence
© MPSHACKNEY
In one of the violent incidents early on New Year's Day, a woman was shot at a nightclub in Hackney
Two people have been stabbed to death and four others hurt in separate attacks in the early hours of the morning in London.

A man died after being stabbed outside a private party in Park Lane, in the West End, at about 05:30 GMT.

Two men, aged 37 and 29, and a woman, aged 29, were also stabbed.

About an hour earlier, a woman was fatally stabbed in Southwark and at around the same time a woman was shot at a nightclub in Hackney.

Comment: New Years Eve saw a spate of seemingly random attacks and outbreaks of violence all over the planet:


Holly

Christmas colors light up a diverse Syria as peace & stability return - and the West barely noticed

christmas syria
© Vanessa Beeley
Christmas celebrations have literally radiated out across Syria and western media was curiously silent in the face of such displays of unity and solidarity among Syria's diverse peoples.

Syrians saw off the year 2018 under a glittering canopy of festive lights and elaborate decorations adorn the streets of many cities, towns and villages throughout much of the country.
christmas syria damascus
© Vanessa Beeley
Damascus Old City, people thronged to the streets to celebrate Christmas 2018.
Izraa, a town in the southern province of Daraa, was liberated from US Coalition client terrorism in July 2018 after the surrender of the armed groups. Residents celebrated Christmas for the first time in seven years and they celebrated in style.

In Damascus, people poured onto the streets of the Old City without fear of a rain of mortars from extremist groups in Eastern Ghouta, an area fully cleansed of armed groups, by the Syrian Arab Army and allies in April 2018. I walked among the thousands of civilians who gathered around the towering Christmas trees and jostled each other to take selfies next to the myriad of Christmas displays that lined the streets.

Newspaper

Crime in Chicago is down but it still tops 550 people murdered in 2018

chicago crime scene
© AFP Photo/Joshua LOTT
Chicago police say data-driven policing has helped drive down the number of murders in the Windy City, but it still posted the highest number of homicides for an American city in 2018.
Fewer people were killed in Chicago for the second year in a row in 2018, police said Monday, as they seek to stem the tide of violence in what is sometimes called the nation's "murder capital."

The country's third most populous city still accounted for more murders than the combined total in Los Angeles and New York, which both have bigger populations.

More than 550 people were killed in the Midwestern city in 2018 as of December 23, mostly as a result of gun violence fueled by gang and turf rivalries, and the illicit drug trade.

But shootings in the Windy City were down almost a third in 2018 as compared to a peak in 2016, and murders were down by 27 percent from two years ago, when they hit 757, according to police data -- a 20-year record.

City police chief Eddie Johnson said data-driven policing and stronger community partnerships had played a significant role in the reduction of violent crime.

Bomb

US Strategic Command brags about dropping bombs in out-of-touch New Year's tweet

B-2 Spirit stealth bomber
© Twitter / US Strategic Command
B-2 Spirit stealth bomber as shown in STRATCOM's New Year video.
The world is ringing-in 2019 with good cheer, but the US Strategic Command (STRATCOM) has a different kind of fireworks in mind. On New Year's Eve, it showed off footage of stealth bombers and big explosions.

STRATCOM's New Year's greetings come in the form of a 40-second video of the B-2 Spirit bomber in flight. The aircraft deploys two GBU-57s - huge bunker buster bombs known as Massive Ordnance Penetrators - which hit a target on the testing grounds.

"Times Square tradition rings in the New Year by dropping the big ball... if ever needed, we are #ready to drop something much, much bigger," STRATCOM tweeted, referring to the traditional celebration in New York City and it's dropping crystal ball.

Attention

Giuliani: Assange shouldn't be prosecuted, no one at WaPo or NYT went to jail for publishing stolen Pentagon Papers

assange
© Global Look / Alberto Pezzali
Rudy Giuliani, a lawyer for President Donald Trump, said Monday that WikiLeaks publisher Julian Assange had done "nothing wrong" and should not go to jail for disseminating stolen information just as major media does.

"Let's take the Pentagon Papers," Giuliani told Fox News. "The Pentagon Papers were stolen property, weren't they? It was in The New York Times and The Washington Post. Nobody went to jail at The New York Times and The Washington Post."

Giuliani said there were "revelations during the Bush administration" such as Abu Ghraib. "All of that is stolen property taken from the government, it's against the law. But once it gets to a media publication, they can publish it," Giuliani said, "for the purpose of informing people."

"You can't put Assange in a different position," he said. "He was a guy who communicated."

Giuliani said, "We may not like what [Assange] communicates, but he was a media facility. He was putting that information out," he said. "Every newspaper and station grabbed it, and published it."

The U.S. government has admitted that it has indicted Assange for publishing classified information, but it is battling in court to keep the details of the indictment secret. As a lawyer and close advisor to Trump, Giuliani could have influence on the president's and the Justice Department's thinking on Assange.

Comment: UN experts demand Assange's unconditional release, having lost last appeal over newly restrictive rules


Rose

Yellow Vests and police trade hugs in New Year's Eve detente

yellow vests

Yellow Vests celebrate the New Year at Champs-Elysees
New Year's Eve became a time for reconciliation for French police and Yellow Vest protesters, who have been clashing with each other for weeks, but this time it's a different story.

Around 250,000 people gathered on the Champs-Elysees on Monday night. Among them were about 200 Yellow Vest protesters who didn't miss the chance to say 'no' to government policies even during the celebrations.

The atmosphere, however, differed from previous rallies. Several videos captured the protesters hugging police in full gear, wishing them all the best on the most magical night of the year. And the officers hugged back, first reluctantly, then more willingly.

Whistle

Cleveland Clinic doctor fired over 6 years of anti-Zionist tweets

Jewish study
© Global Look Press / F.Boillot
A former resident at a hospital in Ohio has been accused of fomenting hatred towards Jews and of whitewashing the Holocaust, after her tweets, in which she compared Israel to Nazi Germany, resurfaced and gained traction online.

Lara Kollab, 27, a recent graduate of the Touro College of Osteopathic Medicine, was recently fired from her position as an Internal Medicine Resident at the Cleveland Clinic, Ohio, after it emerged that she had been fanning anti-Semitic sentiment on Twitter for at least the last six years.

Kollab started her job at the clinic in July 2018 and was fired in September, over a series of spiteful postings that were brought to the attention of her supervisors, Yeshiva World News reported, citing hospital employees.

Four months after Kollab was sacked, the tweets that cost her the job have resurfaced and gone viral.

Car Black

8 injured, 1 critically, as car plows into NYE revelers in downtown Tokyo

car ramming tokyo japan
© REUTERS / Kim Kyung-Hoon
Policemen stand next to a car which rammed pedestrians on New Year day in Tokyo, Japan, January 1, 2019.
A car has rammed pedestrians on a busy Tokyo street that was closed to traffic for New Year festivities. A 21-year-old man initially confessed to a terrorist act but later recanted, leaving investigators puzzled about his motives.

The car, which was driving in a wrong lane, bulldozed into revelers in Japan's capital city as it swerved into a shopping street bustling with people just after midnight, NHK reported.

The ramming is believed to have been intentional, as the street had been closed to traffic due to the New Year celebrations. Hundreds of people were heading to a nearby shrine to pray for good luck in the new year.

Eight people were injured in the incident, including one male university student who was taken to hospital in critical condition. Teenagers and adults in their 50s are among the victims.

Comment: There were also incidents in Thailand, UK, Amsterdam and Germany.


Arrow Down

Reversing the descent of man

man on steps
On virtually every indicator that anyone might want to consider, men in Britain and various other Western states seem to be performing very badly at the moment, both for themselves and for the communities in which they live. Not that this is particularly unusual. Throughout history, men have been inclined towards being social outsiders. Their usefulness to communities varies much more than women's, and depends greatly on the way in which social institutions define and reward their roles. Whereas most cultures seem to recognize this, in the West we have increasingly pretended that it is not the case.

And we are now paying for our mistake.

Many people are asking themselves whether some of the radical social experiments attempted in recent generations are viable in the long term, or should now be ditched. It is not too late to face up to the problem. But we have such an accumulation of policy errors to deal with that we require a thorough re-orientation of public discourse before we can expect any specific measures to have much positive effect. The sort of shift we need encompasses some key elements of the sexual division of labor, grounded in stronger marriage institutions, and linked with a conceptual unscrambling of men's roles, both private and public.

Comment: That's part of the appeal that people like Jordan Peterson have for young men. When so many men have had the purpose and value taken away from them, he provides a way for them to find that which can give their lives meaning and purpose. Things which were self evident in the past but have now withered away because of the postmodernist agenda that has permeated our culture. While the ideas Dench proposes may also have that effect, we're unlikely to see any changes to the destructive policies our governments are so hellbent on pursuing. See also:


Bizarro Earth

UK: 3 injured in knife attack at Manchester Victoria Station, suspect can be heard shouting "long live the caliphate"

victoria station stabbing
Three people, including a police officer, have been stabbed at Manchester Victoria Station in a horrifying attack on New Year's Eve.

The British Transport Police (BTP) officer, a man and a women were knifed at the busy rail station just before 9pm on Monday.

Manchester Victoria was placed on lockdown and all services were suspended as police dealt with the shocking incident. Anti-terror officers are investigating.

Witnesses described hearing "blood curdling" screams as a man wielding a large "kitchen knife" launched his attack in terrifying scenes on a tram platform.

Comment: Also on New Year's Eve: Man with knife makes bomb threat leading to evacuation of Amsterdam's Schiphol Airport

And video from the Manchester attack:

See also: Strasbourg Shooting: Everybody Knows Where Terror Comes From