Society's Child
Unveiling the plan ahead of the Conservative's annual party conference in Birmingham, May said the Festival of Great Britain and Northern Ireland would work towards strengthening "our precious union," with a nationwide program of events to take place in 2022, once the full effects of the UK crashing out of the EU begin to be felt.
The festival will echo that of the Victorian era, the Great Exhibition of 1851, and will take place 70 years after the 1951 Festival of Britain which was organized by the post-war Labour government.
"Just as millions of Britons celebrated their nation's great achievements in 1951, we want to showcase what makes our country great today," May said upon the announcement.

Israeli policemen scuffle with Palestinians in the Bedouin village of Khan al-Ahmar near Jericho in the occupied West Bank in July 2018.
Last week, Israel Civil Administration ordered the inhabitants of Khan al-Ahmar either to evacuate their village voluntarily or to face demolition and forced displacement by the occupying state. This move by Israel is considered to have an agenda of cutting East Jerusalem from West Bank and expanding Israel's illegal settlements, a move which saw condemnation from the international community as well as the Palestinian leadership with President of Palestine Mahmoud Abbas condemning the action during his speech at the 73rd UNGA session.
Palestinian officials and activists say the mobilization is to stop Israeli forces from demolishing the village after the Monday deadline passes. Palestinians will be joined by foreign diplomats, mostly from European Union member states who have been called to witness the event at the village.
Comment: There is method in Israel's madness and cruelty.
- In razing Khan al-Ahmar, Israel will destroy any illusions of a peace process
- Destruction of Bedouin village approved by Israeli court - despite protest by US Congress and EU
- Israel's Khan Al-Ahmar demolition was in the plan for 40 years
[The razing of Khan al-Ahmar] would put the final piece in place for Israel to build a substantial bloc of new settler homes to sever the West Bank in two. Those same settlements would also seal off West Bank Palestinians from East Jerusalem, the expected capital of a future Palestinian state, making a mockery of any peace agreement.
Deputy Chief Justice Raymond Zondo declared cannabis prohibition for use by adults in private as "unconstitutional and therefore invalid."
However, many South African government departments, including the ministries of health and justice oppose the law, claiming "objective proof of the harmful effects of cannabis," locally known as "Dagga."
"It will not be a criminal offence for an adult person to use or be in possession of cannabis in private for his or her personal consumption." - Raymond Zondo, Deputy Chief JusticeAlthough South African marijuana activists such as Jeremy Acton, the head of the Dagga party, believe that the ruling should have extended into the public carrying of cannabis, activists were heard chanting "weed are free now" as the South African Constitutional Court gave its ruling.
The church plans to appeal the verdict but the girl, who is now 21-years-old, considers the ruling a powerful victory. Her attorney, Neil Smith, told reporters:
Hopefully that message is loud enough that this will cause the organization to change its priorities in a way that they will begin prioritizing the safety of children so that other children aren't abused in the future.Churches, church leaders, counselors, doctors, teachers and others are considered, in most states, "mandatory reporters" and are required by law to inform authorities when and if child abuse of any kind is suspected. Smith's case against the church contended the church not only failed to report but encouraged other mandatory reporters not to file a police report, and as a result, severely injured his client. The jury agreed, leveling a massive settlement against the church for protecting a pedophile.
The attack happened shortly before 1am in the early hours of Sunday morning in a carriage traveling on the network's Central Line between Mile End and Bethnal Green stations.
Witnesses to the incident claim the victim was "stabbed in the face" following an argument with another passenger, who fled the scene after the attack
Pictures surfacing on social media show the victim with a blood-soaked sweatshirt seemingly looking at his injuries on his phone. Another image shows newspapers used to mop up blood that had gathered on the floor of the carriage.
Comment: See also:
- London crime wave: Theft, burglary, rape, violent crime and homicide skyrocket
- "Something going on": London rape cases rise 20% in London and is expected to continue rising
- London's scourge of violence continues as man murdered, 5 others injured in spate of knife attacks
- UK: 2 children among 10 injured in Manchester after pellet gun shot into crowd at carnival after party
The present does not own the monopoly on ugly scenes in Congress - the McCarthy interviews are on tape, after all. Nor do either of the parties - from Kenneth Starr's ultimately futile humiliation of Bill Clinton, to their intransigence during Obama's two terms, Republicans largely set the tone for the partisanship that reigns today.
But make no mistake about it: in the age of a hysterical and agenda-driven news media, and a social media that amplifies its worst aspects, the Kavanaugh and Ford testimonies marked a new low. And it is the Democrats that have guided the process into a high-stakes wrestling match in a toxic swamp.
On Thursday, WHO published their monthly report on health access for Palestinians in the occupied territories, showing that 18% of the denied applications were for orthopedics and 14% for neurosurgery patients.
Several Palestinian patients have died while waiting for an Israeli permit to get life-saving treatment that is not available in Gaza.
"In total, 301 refugees (112 women and 141 children), 10 vehicles and 100 heads of cattle have passed via the Abu al-Duhur CP [checkpoint] to Aleppo province from the Idlib de-escalation zone," the statement reads.
It is noted that medical care was provided to 175 Syrians, including 81 children.
Earlier in September, Russian President Vladimir Putin and his Turkish counterpart Recep Tayyip Erdogan signed an agreement aimed at setting up a 9-12 mile demilitarized zone in Idlib province along the contact line of the armed opposition and the government forces by October 15.
Comment: See also:
- Damascus satisfied with situation in Idlib - Syrian FM
- Lavrov: Russia to create humanitarian corridors in Idlib, prevent civilian casualties
- Erdogan: Working with Russia 'really important' to prevent Idlib 'massacre
- 'Lavrov: Russia and Turkey have 'full political understanding' over Idlib
- Russian FM: Turkish drones & extra troops to patrol Idlib after making deal with Moscow
- Turkey now controls the fate of Syrian jihadists in Idlib

"Early Days" Statue depicts a Native American at the feet of a Spanish cowboy and Catholic missionary in San Francisco.
Those who gathered at the removal last week didn't celebrate with fire torches. They only prayed, sang hymns, and looked on morosely at the empty platform. That's what happens when civic institutions, in this case the city arts commissions, finally see a people as worthy of protection.
"I feel like it is a win. I feel good about it. [But] there is still a lot of work to be done," Desirae Harp, a Mishewal Ona*tsáTis (Wappo) and Diné (Navajo) tribe member told me.
Erected in the aftermath of the California mission era, the Early Days statue depicts a Native American on his back, defeated, a Catholic priest above him pointing to the heavens, and an anglicized vaquero bestriding the scene in triumph. The statue is part of the Pioneer Monument celebrating the state's origins. Native Americans saw it as dehumanizing art but no one had managed to convince politicians to take it down. It wasn't until gender- and racially-diverse city boards, as well as backlash against Eurocentric depictions of dominance, that change came.
The news, first published in the Russian media, was confirmed by Germany's Federal Ministry of Transport and Digital Infrastructure. The train will go from Germany to the Russian exclave city of Kaliningrad and then onwards to St. Petersburg, the ministry has confirmed in a letter to RT.













Comment: See also:
- UK retailers requesting rent reductions, shutting stores and laying off staff as economy tanks
- UK in crisis: Children in poverty surges by 100,000 in a year - totalling a staggering 4.1 million
- 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
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