Society's Child
A cookie-cutter version of this complaint - which is often heard from "sensible" centrists and "old-fashioned" left-wingers - came at the weekend from David Isaac, chair of Britain's Equality and Human Rights Commission.
"We are living in a world that is more divided, there's more individualist thinking in relation to what is happening and less empathy, less hope," Isaac told the Guardian, urging Britons to look beyond "what works for me and my narrow group."

Richard Carranza and Darnisa Amante, a consultant hired by the city Department of Education
A consultant hired by the city Department of Education told administrators at a workshop that "racial equity" means favoring black children regardless of their socio-economic status, sources said.
"If I had a poor white male student and I had a middle-class black boy, I would actually put my equitable strategies and interventions into that middle class black boy because over the course of his lifetime he will have less access and less opportunities than that poor white boy," the consultant, Darnisa Amante, is quoted as saying by those in the room.
The attacker, a man in his 50s who has not yet been identified, crept silently up behind a group of children at the bus stop and slashed randomly at them before fatally stabbing himself in the neck.
Police said an 11-year-old schoolgirl named Hanako Kuribayashi and a 39-year-old parent, identified as government official Satoshi Oyama, died in the attack, which shocked a country where violent crime is rare.
Seventeen more people, mainly young children, were injured, according to authorities who had previously given the schoolgirl's age as 12.
Koji Shimazu of the St. Marianna University School of Medicine, told AFP that one woman in her 40s and three schoolgirls had to undergo surgery for knife wounds to the head and neck.
"It is a very harrowing case. I feel strong anger," Japan's Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said in televised remarks.
Dallas Fire-Rescue were called to the raging inferno at approximately 1:30am local time after the five-storey building was engulfed in flames on Monday night.
A huge column of smoke was seen billowing off the building and firefighters reported that several of the floors collapsed.

Dr. Tarek Loubani, a physician from London, Ont., was treating gunshot wound patients in Gaza when he became one himself.
Dr. Loubani, a Canadian physician, was in Gaza to treat the wounded in the Great March of Return - and to test a new 3-D printed tourniquet - when he was apparently targeted and shot in both legs. He is among at least 17 paramedics injured; one was killed.
On Monday May 14, while treating patients with gunshot wounds in Gaza during the Great March of Return, Canadian physician Tarek Loubani was shot in both legs by Israeli forces. One medic on his team, Musa Abuhassanin, was killed while attempting to providing care Palestinian protesters. Loubani published an account that noted he and the medical staff were wearing "high visibility clothing" and when they approached injured Palestinians, they did so with their hands raised as to show soldiers they were unarmed medical professionals.
After Loubani was wounded, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau called for an investigation and issued a statement, "We are appalled that Dr. Tarek Loubani, a Canadian citizen, is among the wounded - along with so many unarmed people, including civilians, members of the media, first responders, and children."
Comment: Israel's war criminals in their own words: "...we're putting snipers up because we want to preserve the values we were educated by."
The 'quote' was posted by foreign policy expert and TIME magazine contributor Ian Bremmer on Sunday and was quickly picked up by media people and politicians, including Democratic US representative and fervent Trump critic Ted Lieu.
The since-deleted tweet by Bremmer read: "President Donald Trump in Tokyo: 'Kim Jong Un is smarter and would make a better president than Sleepy Joe Biden.'" It was retweeted almost a thousand times before being taken down.
A young white couple have been shot and killed in broad daylight by unknown assailants in South Africa after their car ran out of diesel, in what police suspect was a racist attack.
The double murder of 19-year-old Johanco Fleischman and his girlfriend Jessica Kuhn, 23, took place on Sunday near the town of Benoni in Gauteng Province, about 20 miles (32 kilometres) east of the capital Johannesburg.
Comment: See also:
- A serious crisis: Brutal Attacks on White South African Farmers Soared in 2018
- As South Africa re-elects ANC, the West has to admit post-apartheid SA has failed
- Fresh from election victory, ANC prepares to 'take back' South African economy 'from White capital monopoly'
- South Africa's deterioration worst among nations not at war
- South African President Ramaphosa has genius 'strategy' to halt mass exodus of white workers: 'Tie them to trees'
- South African party leader insists that 'whites should serve blacks'

Placards left by supporters of Julian Assange outside the Ecuadorian Embassy on Aug. 20, 2012 in London, England.
That is why the new U.S. indictment of Julian Assange is so dangerous to liberty in America.
The Trump administration has charged Assange under the Espionage Act for conspiring to leak classified documents. The indictment, released yesterday, focuses on his alleged efforts to encourage former Army intelligence analyst Chelsea Manning to leak classified documents to him and WikiLeaks about a decade ago.
Comment: It is highly unlikely that Assange was working with a foreign intelligence service. Wikileaks have repeatedly said that their source for the DNC emails was not Russian. It's a shame that, despite the Intercept having it right on the Trump-Russia collusion nonsense, still believes in a Russian boogeyman working behind the scenes.
See:
- William Binney: NSA has 32 pages of Seth Rich-Julian Assange communications FOIA request reveals
- Mueller report a study in propaganda regarding WikiLeaks role in fueling Seth Rich 'conspiracy theory'
- Guccifer 2.0: US falsified evidence, denies Russian links
- Independent researcher finds evidence DNC files published by Guccifer 2.0 were copied locally, not remotely hacked
- Ex-British ambassador Craig Murray claims Clinton emails were handed over to him by 'disgusted' Democratic whistleblowers
- Rep. Dana Rohrabacher: Assange has 'physical proof' that Russia did not hack the DNC

A box with basic supplies, which forms part of the pack given to people experiencing an emergency
The Edinburgh Food Project, which operates seven food bank centres across north, west, central and eastern parts of the Scottish capital, said it needed urgent donations of tinned vegetables, cereal, rice, pasta sauce, coffee, juice and biscuits, among other items.
The charity, part of the Trussell Trust Food Bank network, said it only had enough food for this week, and may not be be able to supply people with complete food parcels beyond that point.
Operations manager Bethany Biggar told The Independent donations of food were not sufficient to meet rising demand.
Comment: It's likely that the appeal will be met by generous donations and the crisis will be averted, but nothing has been done to remedy the dire economic situation UK citizens are facing and so it won't be long before similar issues begin to erupt throughout the country:
- UK austerity plunges another 1.5 million below breadline, 3.7 million visiting food banks
- UK's poverty wages, extortionate rents and austerity: Homeless families who work soars 73% in 5 years
- Income stagnation and rising poverty: Millions of UK families earning less than 15 years ago
- Scotland's First Minister Sturgeon: Plans for Scottish #indyref2 to 'avoid worst damage of Brexit'

The entrance to the Phililip Burton Federal Building in San Francisco, where the Monsanto trial took place in March.
The relaxed, confident thirtysomething was in fact an employee of Washington-based FTI Consulting, which has a client list that includes Roundup-maker Monsanto and its parent company Bayer.
Her assignment was to take notes on the legal proceedings that unfolded in San Francisco in March, FTI spokesman Matthew Bashalany told AFP.
Comment: Given the number of documented incidents of Monsanto doctoring research, intimidating those promoting negative opinions, attacking and intimidating farmers, journalists and scientists and engaging in many shady espionage-like tactics, is the above really surprising?
Carey Gillam, a Reuters reporter for 17 years, has written extensively about the behind-the-scenes dealings of Monsanto. See a selection of her reporting here:
- Epic Fail: The EPA is meant to protect us - the Monsanto trials suggest it isn't doing that
- New Monsanto documents expose cozy connection to Reuters reporter Kate Kelland
- One man's suffering exposed Monsanto's secrets to the world
- Landmark lawsuit: Monsanto hid cancer danger of glyphosate for decades
- Monsanto Papers: Leaked docs reveal scientific mischief and regulatory collusion
- New claims against Monsanto in consumer lawsuit over Roundup herbicide










Comment: Video footage of the fire from local news: