Society's Child
A similar fence already exists around Lafayette Park and parts of Pennsylvania Avenue in front of the White House for Inauguration Day construction. Such fencing was also used around the White House over the summer following unrest over the death of George Floyd. Those fences ranged from seven feet to more than nine feet high.
The precautions come during one of the most contentious presidential elections in recent memory and concerns over possible unrest in the wake of Tuesday's results.
DC Metro Police Chief Peter Newsham said Thursday there were no "credible threats right now of violence," but said several groups had applied for permits to conduct large demonstrations and the entire police department would be working on Election Day.
Mayor Muriel Bowser said she had not decided whether to use National Guard troops for election-related violence, though some troops remain activated amid the coronavirus pandemic.
Preparations for possible unrest in the nation's capital have extended beyond the White House.
On Monday, the social media giant announced seven news outlets it'll lean on to make proclamations of election outcomes. The list includes ABC News, Associated Press, CNN, CBS News, Decision Desk HQ, Fox News, and NBC News. Twitter will wait for two of those seven outlets to call a race before it allows posts definitively declaring a winner. Twitter said it will label tweets prematurely declaring a winner.
If users attempt to share a tweet that prematurely calls a race, they will receive a notification that reads, "Official sources may not have called the race when this was Tweeted," with a link to "find out more." They also may see a warning that says, "Official sources called this election differently." Additionally, the tweets can be labeled if "1. The account has a US 2020 candidate label (including presidential candidates & campaigns) 2. The account is US-based with more than 100k followers, or 3. They have significant engagement (25k likes or 25k Quote Tweets + Retweets)."
The order, announced Friday, comes as Michigan's Democratic Gov. Gretchen Whitmer and her administration began backtracking on the state's latest reopening plan and tightening COVID-19 restrictions, citing rising hospitalizations and deaths. Other states including New York have implemented similar contact tracing rules, requiring restaurants to record diners' information in the case of an outbreak.
In addition to scaling back the number of people at gatherings at indoor venues from 500 to 50, the order also advised against shouting and screaming at events, claiming that cheering could spread the virus in the air 30 times more than speaking. The newly announced restrictions also emphasized and extended the use of face masks, including on children as young as 2 years old at daycare, school, or "similar indoor settings."
Comment: Shear Lunacy!
A Brooklyn Halloween party with nearly 400 revelers was busted early Saturday for violating social-distancing and large-gathering rules, officials said.
Using surveillance video, the New York City Sheriff's Department watched about 150 people enter a warehouse at 23 Meadow St. in Williamsburg before sending deputies to the scene around 1 a.m.
Inside, they found 387 people dancing — many without masks — live performers, Halloween decorations, a DJ and three walk-up bars, according to a spokesman.
Deputies shut down the bash and issued desk appearance tickets to the party organizer and eight others, including security guards, employees and entertainers.
Comment: Cuomo offers new rules on traveler quarantines, slightly adjusting his requirements for 40 states and territories:
Cuomo is giving travelers a way to shorten their quarantine on arrival to three days from 14: show proof of negative Covid-19 tests before and after coming to the state.
The only exceptions are neighboring New Jersey, Connecticut, and Pennsylvania, because so many commuters to New York City live in those states, but non-essential travel within the region is discouraged.
New Yorkers who are returning home from trips outside the region are subject to the same rules. Those who leave the state for less than 24 hours can skip quarantine as long as they take a test proving they don't have the virus within four days.
In September 2019, JAMA Psychiatry, a peer-reviewed journal of the American Medical Association, published an article entitled 'Association Between Recalled Exposure to Gender Identity Conversion Efforts and Psychological Distress and Suicide Attempts Among Transgender Adults' by psychiatrists Jack Turban and Noor Beckwith, and epidemiologist Sari Reisner. Turban, the article's corresponding author, is a well-known advocate for trans rights and medical treatment of transgender-identifying individuals. This publication concluded that therapy causes harm, and has been used to promote bans on psychotherapy for gender dysphoria worldwide.
Comment:
- I'm a pediatrician. How transgender ideology has infiltrated my field and produced large-scale child abuse
- Madness: Australian psychologists recommend 'transgender' children undergo surgery without parents permission
- Transgender clinics prey on autistic children because they're easy to manipulate, disturbing new research finds
- Camille Paglia: Transgender propagandists committing child abuse against gender-confused children
- Doctors & drugs FOR LIFE: Big Pharma's profit on the transgender craze
- The transgender zealots are trying to destroy truth itself
- Transgenderism: The "desistance myth" is the real myth
Video captured by The Post shows the cops shoving protesters and blocking their path on the sidewalk at West 24th Street and 10th Avenue.
"Stop! Stop pushing me!" one protester shouts as police barricade the street.
A later clip shot by The Post shows protesters hurling insults at cops.
The self-proclaimed "decentralized anarchist collective" CrimethInc has shared a slew of instructionals covering everything from rioter fashion advice, to first aid for protesters, including how to manage common injuries from police weapons and even how best to treat gunshot wounds.
Within the thread are specific posts relating to helmets, gas masks, goggles, how best to deploy leaf blowers and laser pointers, as well as best practices for brandishing shields and umbrellas in the face of tear gas and on-lethal police munitions.
Snowden himself has existed in a legal limbo since 2013: Still a US citizen, but without a passport, and residing in Russia on temporary residence permits. Another possible factor in his application might be the fact that Russian law prohibits the extradition of the country's citizens to foreign countries.
"After years of separation from our parents, my wife and I have no desire to be separated from our son," the former CIA and NSA contractor wrote in a series of tweets on Saturday.
Veteran foreign correspondent and author Robert Fisk has died after becoming unwell at his Dublin home on Friday.
It is understood the journalist was admitted to St Vincent's hospital where he died a short time later. He was 74.
Fisk was one of the most highly regarded and controversial British foreign correspondents of the modern era and was described by the New York Times in 2005 as "probably the most famous foreign correspondent in Britain".
Comment: Robert Fisk will be sadly missed. There are few journalists of his caliber any more.
More praise for the respected journalist:
Taoiseach Micheal Martin said he was "saddened" to hear of Fisk's death. He was a " fearless & independent in his reporting, with a deeply researched understanding of the complexities of Middle Eastern history and politics. He helped many people understand those complexities better," Mr Martin tweeted.
Fine Gael TD and former minister for justice Charlie Flanagan said he was "saddened" to hear the news.
"Didn't always agree with his views but I admired his courage among many great qualities May he rest in everlasting peace," he tweeted.
Vice Admiral Mark Mellett, chief of staff at the Irish Defence Forces, described Fisk as a friend to Ireland and all in the Defence Forces.
Veteran journalist Patrick Cockburn paid tribute to his long time friend, describing Fisk as his best friend and a wonderful person.
Fisk's efforts to find out the truth and to report on what mattered had made him very special, Cockburn told RTÉ radio's Morning Ireland. In a world of Donald Trump and Boris Johnson it was important to have people like Robert Fisk, he said.
The two men met in Belfast in the early 1970s when Fisk was a reporter for the Times and Cockburn was completing his Phd in Queen's University. The two spoke at least once a week and remained in "constant touch".
Broadcaster Pat Kenny paid tribute to Fisk on his Newstalk programme. "On Friday I lost a friend, this programme lost a friend, our listeners lost an independent voice on world affairs and someone who could interpret for us the fractious divisions - both ancient and modern - of the Middle East.
"In the canon of contemporary journalism, Robert Fisk was a giant," he said."He had his distractors, but none among them would impugn his integrity.The BBC's John Simpson said he was "very sad to hear" of Fisk's untimely death. "He'll be greatly missed," he said.
"He put himself in harm's way so many times in the course of a career which took him from Belfast to Beirut, from Afghanistan to Iran. In spite of his analytical criticism of successive Israeli governments, he had many Israeli admirers.
"Others might have gone for a quite life, but not Robert: in an era of facile headlines, he was the opposite."He was the essence of rigour - his news-gathering and fact-checking were object lessons for those who would ever dream of filling his shoes.
"He found a happy working home in Beirut, a cross-roads in the Middle East, which allowed him to get to trouble spots quickly.
"But the place where he found healing from the vicissitudes of journalism on the front line was in Dalkey, where he's had a home for many, many years.
"He said that he'd found his own personal paradise here".
In a tweet, Uzair Hasan Rizvi, journalist with AFP news agency, described Fisk as "one of the best foreign correspondents with an in-depth knowledge of Middle East".
The official Twitter page of Trinity College Dublin, where Fisk had studied, also expressed sadness at the death of the "renowned journalist and author".
Documentary exposing Antifa censored by YouTube & Vimeo... for depicting scenes of EXTREME VIOLENCE?
The documentary, called 'Antifa: Rise of the Black Flags,' was blocked within a few hours on YouTube and Vimeo after being released on Saturday night. The video was taken down for violations of the video-sharing sites' guidelines.
While on YouTube the original version was apparently blocked due to copyright claims, Vimeo reportedly told the video's uploader:
You cannot upload videos that depict extreme violence.
Comment: It seems YouTube and their ilk still haven't figured out the Streisand Effect - the more you censor and ban something, the more people are going to want to watch it. We'll see how many people think of Antifa as "just an idea" once this film gets some traction.
See also:
- Antifa mob assault black free speech activist in San Francisco
- Boomerang: Antifa rioters who targeted Portland cafe 'solidified' his Trump vote - military veteran
- Antifa mayoral candidate praises Joe Biden for saying Antifa is just an idea
- Progress: DC Antifa ringleader Jason Charter charged with assaulting OANN's Jack Posobiec
- Georgia Republican scolds congress for condemning QAnon, not Antifa, for violence
- Antifa and BLM rioters in Seattle launch firecrackers inside Starbucks after smashing storefront
- The conservative trans woman who went undercover with Antifa in Portland
- Finally. Federal affidavit gives details of accused New York rioter's ties to "mythical" Antifa
- Joe Biden falsely claims Antifa is simply 'an idea'
- Americans call for removing FBI Director Christopher Wray after he downplays violent threat of Antifa















Comment: About those choppers: NNSA to conduct aerial radiation measurements over DC