Society's Child
Some photos show that there were two half-naked women on the road as Trump's motorcade drove along the Champs Elysees in Paris. The US president was heading to a ceremony marking the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I.
Despite a massive police presence along the route to the Arc de Triomphe, the screaming protester managed to get in Trump's way and came within a few meters of the motorcade. Several officers had to intervene to remove the activist from the road.
The caravan, made up mostly of Hondurans, but also nationals of other Central American countries, is now on the move towards the United States border. Migrants resumed their march north on Saturday morning after spending almost a week in Mexico City.
A Ruptly video shows dozens of people waiting for trains in Mexico subway or boarding heavy trucks or buses somewhere outside the city. Others are seen using cars to continue their journey.
To get there, migrants will have to travel some 1,700 miles (2,735km) to the northwest, a much longer route than to the nearest US border crossing at McAllen, Texas, which many consider to be the safest option.

Screenshot from Michael Avenatti's video showing Fox News host Tucker Carlson trading verbal blows with an alleged Latino gay man at a Virginia County bar
Avenatti has posted a video clip of the incident on Twitter, saying he is investigating "an alleged assault on a gay latino immigrant committed by T.Carlson and/or member of his inner circle" at a Virginia County club in October.
The video starts with the heated argument between Carlson, his entourage and a man seated at the bar already in full swing. "You need to get the f*ck out of here," Carlson can be heard saying repeatedly with the man responding: "I won't do that. I'm not going to get out of here." While Carlson's companions seem agitated, the Fox host himself maintains relative composure throughout the video and is not seen physically assaulting the other man.
After a bit of tense verbal back-and-forth, one of Carlson's support men grabs the alleged Latino immigrant, forcing him to stand up. As the situation escalates, calls can be heard in the background saying "there's no need for violence" and "guys, stop". The video, which is less than a minute long, cuts there.
Comment: It's knives out for Tucker Carlson, one of the few sane voices on Fox News these days. Curious that this comes just after the Antifa assault on Carlson's home, and threats made against him and his family for his alleged 'racism':
- Disgusting: Leading editor at Vox defends Antifa siege of Tucker Carlson - then deletes all tweets
- DC authorities investigating Antifa protest at Tucker Carlson's home as possible hate crime
- 'They were threatening me and my family': Tucker Carlson's home targeted by protesters
To get an idea of what the man is really like, just watch his interview with gay ex-liberal Dave Rubin:
In a truly bizarre turn of events, Thursday evening saw scores of anti-Trump activists taking to the streets in cities across America to protest the firing of Alabama Republican Jeff Sessions from the post of Attorney General, after president Donald Trump compelled his resignation on Wednesday.
Chris Bush provoked outrage online when he said people should fill feeders, normally used by hunters to lure deer, with "pinto beans" and place them around the Texas border with Mexico. The former Bellaire and Westfield Fire Department employee appeared to be suggesting that people crossing the border could then be hunted like game.
Ahead of the centenary of the end of the war, the Lions of the Great War bronze statue, depicting an Indian soldier in Sikh traditional dress, was unveiled in the UK town of Smethwick, Staffordshire on November 4.
Commissioned by the Guru Nanak Gurdwara Smethwick Sikh temple, the 10-foot statue was targeted by vandals less than a week after it was unveiled and days before the nation prepared to mark the 100th anniversary of the 1918 Armistice.
Why, the new thinking went, could the same opioids not be made to work for people grappling with the physical and mental toll of debilitating pain from arthritis, wrecked knees and bodies worn out by physically demanding jobs? As Portenoy saw it, opiates were effective painkillers through most of recorded history and it was only outdated fears about addiction that prevented the drugs still playing that role.
Opioids were languishing from the legacy of an earlier epidemic that prompted President Theodore Roosevelt to appoint the US's first opium commissioner, Dr Hamilton Wright, in 1908. Portenoy wanted to liberate them from this taint. Wright described Americans as "the greatest drug fiends in the world", and opium and morphine as a "national curse". After that the medical profession treated opioid pain relief with what Portenoy and his colleagues regarded as unwarranted fear, stigmatising a valuable medicine.
Comment: See also:
- Opioid crisis about to get worse: As overdose deaths continue to soar, FDA approves new painkiller that's 1,000 times stronger than Morphine
- Because the opioid crisis isn't bad enough, the FDA approves a drug 10x stronger than fentanyl
- The UK is facing its own opioid crisis as fentanyl deaths rise by almost a third in one year
- Opioid addiction may be tied to brain chemical implicated in narcolepsy
- Landmark lawsuit targets billionaire OxyContin family personally for fueling opioid epidemic
- Another shocking opioid statistic - study shows the epidemic is outpacing the resources devoted to it
- Fueling the opioid crisis: Doctors who prescribe the most opioids get paid the most from drug companies
- City of Los Angeles sues Big Pharma for 'reckless and irresponsible business practices' in opioid epidemic
One day after former Marine Ian David Long unloaded on a packed bar in Thousand Oaks, California, Cuomo launched into a passionate gun-control diatribe, lambasting pro-gun politicians and lobbyists like the National Rifle Association for failing to take real steps towards stopping "the damn shooting."
It wasn't long before I discovered that my university's library contained each of her books, including the essay collections Vamps and Tramps and Sex, Art and American Culture. For the final year of my arts degree, (before pursuing my studies in psychology) I spent the bulk of my time at the university reading Paglia in the library. She was like a revelation. Her work was subversive but erudite, and she synthesized insights made in the realm of the arts, ancient history and folk biology - something that no other scholar of the humanities had attempted to do. Thirteen years later, it is an honour to be able to interview Camille Paglia for Quillette.

A 71-year-old woman was attacked on a Boston-area train after asking a fellow passenger to remove her bag so that she could sit down.
According to WBZ-TV, the incident occurred during a recent afternoon commute.
The victim, who would identify herself only as Linda, said that she asked a fellow passenger to remove a pocketbook from an empty seat in order to sit down.
The suspect, 23-year-old Jada Campbell, responded by allegedly calling Linda an "ugly white person" and hitting and tripping her.
"It had been a long week," Linda explained. "I said, 'Excuse me' three times, then I got into her face and asked her to move her bag and she said, 'No, I don't want anyone sitting next to me.'"















Comment: It's not without irony that topless anti-Trump groupies outraged about his 'grab 'em by the p****' assertion about female groupies are now throwing themselves at him.