Society's Child
Four passengers were on board the plane, which took off from Yemen's capital Sanaa on Tuesday and headed south to Djibouti, a small African nation across the Aden Gulf from Yemen. It was forced to fly north instead and land in the Saudi city of Jizan, following Saudi-led coalition interceptors. The Saudis intervened after the plane changed course and approached an area, where Saudi troops were operating, coalition spokesman Colonel Turki Al-Maliki told reporters.
"Coalition forces communicated with the aircraft on the international distress frequency... but the crew did not respond," Al-Maliki said, according to AFP. "Commands were given to redirect the aircraft away from the operations zone but to no avail. The aircraft was forced to land in Jizan."
He accused the plane's crew of violating coalition airspace and endangering passengers.
The International Committee of the Red Cross said the plane had made "an unscheduled stop" in Jizan "due to technical issues."

Zymere Perkins (left) was bludgeoned to death on Sept. 26, 2016 and Jaden Jordan died on Dec. 4, 2016 after being in a coma and left with a fractured skull.
The Independent Budget Office (IBO) said Tuesday that reports of investigations of child abuse, and Family Court hearings have also gone up after the two widely-publicized abuse cases.
Perkins was bludgeoned to death with a broomstick allegedly by his mom's boyfriend on Sept. 26 and Jordan died on Dec. 4, 2016 from injuries he allegedly suffered at the hands of his mother's abusive boyfriend days after he had been beaten into a coma and left with a fractured skull.
The number of child abuse reports rose by 20 percent, from 19,980 in fiscal 2016 to 23,981 in fiscal 2017, although the number of cases increased by only 7 percent.
"Maybe I should start driving to school, because I don't think I feel safe as a BART commuter anymore. But then again, I'm a woman of color. Am I safe anywhere? My car? On campus? At an event? Walking my dogs?" @keani_yafreak tweeted.
The most recent attack, on Sunday night, left 18-year-old Nia Wilson dead, and her sister, Latifa, seriously injured when a madman attacked them with a knife at the MacArthur Bay Area Rapid Transit station, according to BART officials.
"It was probably one of the most vicious attacks that I've seen," BART Police Chief Carlos Rojas said during a Monday press conference.
I've never liked talking about the future. The Q&A sessions always end up more like parlor games, where I'm asked to opine on the latest technology buzzwords as if they were ticker symbols for potential investments: blockchain, 3D printing, CRISPR. The audiences are rarely interested in learning about these technologies or their potential impacts beyond the binary choice of whether or not to invest in them. But money talks, so I took the gig.
After I arrived, I was ushered into what I thought was the green room. But instead of being wired with a microphone or taken to a stage, I just sat there at a plain round table as my audience was brought to me: five super-wealthy guys - yes, all men - from the upper echelon of the hedge fund world. After a bit of small talk, I realized they had no interest in the information I had prepared about the future of technology. They had come with questions of their own.
They started out innocuously enough. Ethereum or bitcoin? Is quantum computing a real thing? Slowly but surely, however, they edged into their real topics of concern.

Potential homebuyers exit an open house in Redondo Beach, California.
Sales fell 1.1 percent compared with May, but the average change from May to June, going back to 1988, is a 6 percent gain.
The weakness was especially apparent in sales of newly built homes, which were 47 percent below the June average. Part of that is that builders are putting up fewer homes, so there is simply less to sell.
Comment: See also:
- Tapped out? Colorado eviction courts overwhelmed amid unfolding housing crisis
- San Francisco fines landlord millions for providing cheap housing to low-income, disabled veterans
- Exposing the "Trailer Trash" myth: A stagnant economy and unaffordable housing
- Even Google employees can't afford housing in San Francisco
- How the Federal Reserve is setting up Trump for a housing crisis, recession, and a stock market crash
Imam Mundhir Abdallah, who preaches in the Copenhagen neighbourhood of Norrebro at the Masjid Al-Faruq mosque, which media have linked to radical Islam, is accused of citing a hadith or koranic narrative calling for Muslims to rise up against Jews.
"Judgement Day will not come until the Muslims fight the Jews and kill them," Abdallah said in a Facebook and YouTube video post in March.
"These are serious statements and I think it's right for the court to now have an opportunity to assess the case," public prosecutor Eva Ronne said in a statement.
This is the first time the prosecution has raised such charges under a criminal code introduced January 1 2017 on religious preaching.
Comment: Although it is not directly related to the issue of anti-semitism, we recommend Pierre Lescaudron's insightful article Immigration, Crime and Propaganda, which deals with the 'clash of civilizations' currently promoted in Europe.
The Young Turks, Uygur's popular progressive media outlet, has been consistently running programming to keep its audience in line with the CNN/CIA Russia narrative, up to and including criticizing Donald Trump for being insufficiently hawkish and aggressive toward Moscow. Since TYT's audience spans across the spectrum from actual leftists to casual MSNBC viewers, this behavior often gets pushback from the anti-imperialist left, eventually culminating in public tantrums in which Cenk and his underlings proclaim that it is possible to advance progressive agendas while still fanning the flames of Russia hysteria.
When they do this, they are lying. It is not possible to play along with the "Russia! Russia!" frenzy while still advancing progressive agendas. Know how I know? Because they don't. We're more than halfway done with 2018, and all anyone's still talking about is Russia. It dominates the national conversation and sucks all oxygen out of the room for discussions of Medicare for All, tuition-free college, a living wage, social safety nets, or literally any issues of economic injustice, as well as police brutality, military expansionism, the corruption and election meddling that went on and continues to go on in Democratic primaries, mass surveillance and other important progressive issues.
Comment: Russiagate - a convenient way for Dems to bash on Trump and rally support for their base (who also seems to have gone insane). In the meanwhile, they carry on doing as they've always done - advancing their neocon agendas and screwing over the public.See also: Walter Peretto: "No matter who is in the White House, the foreign policy goals of the elites remain the same"
More than half of homeless families across England are in work but soaring rent and a lack of social housing is pushing more households into temporary accommodation, a charity has warned.
Data obtained by Shelter shows that more than 33,000 families in temporary accommodation are holding down a job despite having nowhere stable to live - a figure that has increased by 73 per cent since 2013, when it was 19,000 families.
One single mother, Mary Smith, who works full-time in a shoe shop, told The Independent she and her three sons had been stuck in a "vicious cycle" of unstable temporary accommodation for two years after being evicted from their private rented property. They have been unable to afford to rent somewhere else.
They are among thousands of working households in low-paid, part-time or contract jobs that are no longer able to afford rents and are therefore being forced into poor and overcrowded temporary accommodation, according to Shelter.
Comment: The UK government continues its failed program of crushing austerity all the while waging illegal wars abroad and keeping the corrupt casino banking system afloat with the public purse:
- Shameless: UK MPs to get another pay rise taking the total to £11,000 in just 3 years#
- UK: Fifth of workers still earning below 'real' living wage
- "Slow burn": Low pay and record debt signal apocalypse for Britain's retailers as economic downturn continues
- 'Pale and listless, impossible to teach, staff paying for basic necessities': Documentary Children of Austerity exposes reality of life in Britain
- Despite "shiny new buildings" children in Northern England face poverty, bad schools and a lack of opportunities

People sign a makeshift memorial on Danforth Avenue to honor and remember the victims of Sunday night’s mass shooting on 24 July in Toronto, Canada.
As residents grapple with the latest attack to hit the city in recent months, some are asking whether it was becoming less safe
Detectives in Canada are still seeking a motive for a mass shooting which left three dead - including the gunman - and injured more than a dozen others, as residents of Toronto grapple with the latest in a string of violent incidents to hit Canada's biggest city in recent months.
Federal officials said on Tuesday that there was no terror link to Sunday's attack in which the lone gunman opened fire along a bustling avenue in the city, seemingly shooting at random at pedestrians and into shops and restaurants.
"At this time, there is no national security nexus to the investigation," said a spokesperson for the Ministry of Public Safety.
Comment: What's happening in Toronto is indicative of what's happening allover the world at the moment, as violent attacks on the public are becoming the norm, rather than the exception. It's understandable that residents of Toronto, who have always prided themselves on the safety of their city, are becoming more concerned. But it's unlikely the measures suggested above will have much, if any, noticeable effect. The world is burning, and this is just one of the symptoms.
See also:
- Toronto shooter identified as Faisal Hussain, 29, with history of mental illness
- Toronto mass shooting: Two people killed, multiple injured
- Two dead and 12 hurt in Toronto as gunman opens fire in street before being killed in shootout with police
- Toronto's van attack was not because of 'toxic masculinity'
- Van collides with group of pedestrians in Toronto, 9 killed and 16 injured (UPDATES)
- Toronto cops ruthlessly beat innocent teenager, causing traumatic brain injury, then release him
- Toronto police investigating murder of billionaire couple as "targeted double homicide"
- 1 injured, manhunt ongoing after stabbing incident at Toronto shopping mall
After piecing together the timeline of the tragic events that culminated in a hostage situation at Trader Joe's in the Silver Lake district, Los Angeles Police Chief Michel Moore said he was "sorry to report" that the loss of life was attributed to a round fired by an officer. The manager hit by a stray bullet was named as 27-year-old Melyda Corado. The gunman confronting the police at the scene was identified as Gene Atkins.
"We've now determined through our forensic investigation that one of the officers' rounds struck Ms. Corado as she was exiting the market and was in close proximity to Atkins," Moore said during a media conference, noting that the victim died from the "through-and-through wound to her left arm that then moved into her body."












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