Society's Child
"We should know the aim of all this frenzy. If anybody tells me that the aim is to completely eradicate coronavirus, I will tell them that this is insane. It is impossible. What matters now is adjustment and resumption of normal life," Milanović told the press in his office.
The story with coronavirus will be over the moment we have more vaccinated people than those who are not vaccinated, he said.
Emal Akhmadi lost 10 family members, including his two-year-old daughter Malika and brother Zemari, on August 29, when a US Reaper drone destroyed a car in a busy neighborhood not far from Kabul's Hamid Karzai International Airport.
The Pentagon initially claimed the airstrike had killed a terrorist - only to admit two weeks later that it had targeted the wrong person. The surviving relatives, meanwhile, are still shaken by the tragedy.
Comment: See also:
- Afghan killed by drone praised by co-workers in US aid group
- Senator rips top diplomat after he admits he doesn't know if US drone strike killed Afghan aid worker or ISIS-K terrorist
- Drone pilot and whistleblower to RT: Going from 'video game sniper' to remote killer withers away who you are
- NYT throws Biden under bus, exposes US drone strike as war crime - family murdered, not ISIS
- 'They attacked us and killed our children': Grieving Afghan fathers demand fair investigation of US drone strike in Kabul
Majorities support mask and vaccine mandates advocated by the Biden administration, as the coronavirus pandemic remains a top concern, according to the latest Fox News poll.
Three-quarters of registered voters are "extremely" or "very" concerned about the pandemic (74 percent), a 5-point increase from August when 69 percent were worried. The shift comes mainly from Republicans (+14) and men (+8).
Comment: Well that's disappointing. One would have thought that conservatives would be less hysterical about the pandemic propaganda. Apparently the programming is working.
See also:
- Objective:Health - In The News: Covid Vaccines Don't Work
- Whopping 70 percent of unvaccinated Americans would quit their job if vaccines are mandated
- Gaslighting: ACLU says the state forcing people to take vaccines is a 'victory for civil liberties'
- The Science Is Clear - The Case Against Mandating Vaccines: One Executive's POV
- mRNA "Vaccines", Eugenics & the Push for Transhumanism
- A tool of control: How health officials weaponize language to manage public perception of COVID vaccines
"We are not against education of girls, but we are still working on mechanisms of how their school attendance can be possible," Taliban spokesperson Zabiullah Mujahid told Germany's Der Spiegel magazine.
Mujahid said that a safe environment and transportation must be guaranteed for female students before they are allowed back in classrooms. He said legal scholars must prepare a report on how to set up a secure environment for girls and women in education and employment.
Comment: As noted above, the country has just come out of a war that lasted nearly two decades, it's going to take a little more time for them to get their act together. Moreover, there is still the very real threat that the West and its allies will try to cause havoc, even if they've 'officially' left:
- Pepe Escobar: Blowback: The Taliban target US intel's shadow army
- Afghanistan: Security barriers being removed, females attending university but some in government positions told to stay home for now

Items confiscated by the police from Student Politicism’s community space and warehouse.
The three members of Student Politicism, including convenor Wong Yat-chin and secretary general Chan Chi-sum, were arrested early Monday. They are also alleged to have incited hatred against Hong Kong's government by urging people not to use the LeaveHomeSafe Covid tracking app and by other means.
Comment: This kind of behaviour wouldn't be tolerated by any Western government, and the situation is very real in Hong Kong where foreign interests have been caught attempting to subvert the country:
- How Neocon money is funding the Hong Kong protests
- Hong Kong billionaire and newspaper tycoon Jimmy Lai gets 12 months in prison for role in anti-Beijing protests
- Chinese state media label George Soros a "global economic terrorist"
- Reuters poll: Hong Kongers 'support protester demands' but only a minority wants independence from China
Protesters wearing high-vis construction clothing smashed windows, chanted "We are union!" and "F**k the jab," and threw projectiles at the Construction, Forestry, Maritime, Mining and Energy Union (CFMEU) headquarters. Union officials attempted to barricade the doors and used a fire extinguisher to spray demonstrators from inside.
Comment: Spraying them with a fire extinguisher surely didn't help calm matters.
Others tried to diffuse the situation, waving their hands in the air and shouting for those engaged in the violence to stop, but to no avail.
Melbourne riot police eventually turned up to the scene and approached protesters in formation carrying shields, batons, and guns.
Comment: Note that construction workers across much of the locked down planet were considered 'essential' and so worked throughout this government declared 'deadly pandemic'. Is it any wonder they're are furious that, suddenly, they now must suffer an injection, that they managed quite fine without for the last 18 months and if they don't they'll lose their jobs? It's also likely they're well aware of the endless reports of injection injury, and deaths, as well as the suffocating police state they're living under. It seems the pathocrats in Australia may be pushing people to their limit.
Signs have been mounting that the U.S. military may have targeted the wrong man in the Aug. 29 strike in Kabul, with devastating consequences, killing seven children and two other adults from his family. The Pentagon says it is further investigating the strike, but it has no way to do so on the ground in Afghanistan after the Taliban takeover, severely limiting its ability to gather evidence.
Accounts from the family, documents from colleagues seen by The Associated Press, and the scene at the family home — where Zemerai Ahmadi's car was struck by a Hellfire missile just as he pulled into the driveway — all seem to sharply contradict the accounts by the U.S. military. Instead, they paint the picture of a family that had worked for Americans and were trying to gain visas to the United States, fearing for their lives under the Taliban.
At the home, the mangled, incinerated Toyota Corolla remains in the driveway. But there are no signs of large secondary blasts the Pentagon said were caused by explosives hidden in the car trunk. In the tightly cramped, walled compound, the house is undamaged except for broken glass, even a badly built wooden balcony remains in place. A brick wall immediately adjacent to the car stands intact. Trees and foliage close to the car are not burned or torn.
The family wants the United States to hear their side of the story and see the facts on the ground.
Comment: Tucker doesn't mince words on this tragic and avoidable tragedy:
See also:
- 'They attacked us and killed our children': Grieving Afghan fathers demand fair investigation of US drone strike in Kabul
- 'Righteous' drone strike in Kabul killed 'at least one' ISIS-K terrorist, Pentagon says amid reports of seven dead children
- US defends strike that Afghan family says killed innocents
- US drone strike in Kabul reportedly killed 10 civilians
Insulation supplier Tasman Insulation, owned by Fletcher Building, told clients that its Christchurch warehouse was out of Pink Batts, and it was unable to get any more from Auckland, where the factory was unable to operate.
"At this point we envisage we will not be able to supply our product anywhere in New Zealand or take orders until Auckland's restrictions reduce to level three."It continued to try and seek government approval to resume manufacturing or distribution but "at this stage we have low confidence we will be able to achieve this". The situation meant there was only "extremely limited stock" in Auckland either, a Fletcher Building spokesperson said.
The Building Industry Federation and others have expressed alarm that the Government will not give building suppliers an exemption to transport goods out of Auckland. BIF claims around 90 per cent of building suppliers are imported or made in Auckland and that building sites around the rest of the country could run out in days.
Comment: 'Out of Stock!' UK factories hard put to fulfill requests:
British manufacturers reported the worst stock shortages on record, caused in large part by a post-lockdown lack of components for the electronics industry and in plastics, according to a survey published on Monday.
The Confederation of British Industry's index for stock adequacy fell to the lowest since the survey began in 1977, sinking to -14 from July's -11, the third record low in as many months.
The survey also showed expectations for output price growth over the next three months remained close to June's nearly 30-year high, something the Bank of England will note after it said this month that it planned modest tightening of monetary policy.
The CBI's index for industrial output growth in the three months to August slipped from a record high in July, easing back to +22 from +37. But orders edged up to +18 from +17. Economists polled by Reuters had expected a reading of +16 for orders.
Alpesh Paleja, a CBI economist, said:"Manufacturing activity remained strong this month, with total order books remaining firm and most sub-sectors reporting rising output. However, early signs from the data suggest that growth in activity may have peaked."The slowing of output growth was largely caused by the motor vehicles sub-sector which has been hit hard by a shortage of chips.
Cornell University has aggressively pushed its students to get vaccinated, announcing a vaccine mandate for the 2021-22 academic year in April and frequently denying religious and medical exemptions.
As a result, 95 percent of the campus population, both students and faculty, is vaccinated.
Despite this, Cornell University has more than five times the amount of confirmed positive cases during its first week of this academic year than it did during its first week of the 2020-21 academic year, according to the Cornell COVID dashboard.
By the numbers, during the first week of school that ran from Aug. 27 to Sept. 2 of this academic year, Cornell reported 322 positive COVID-19 cases. In comparison, during the first week of school last year, which ran from Sept. 3 through Sept. 9 of 2020, Cornell reported 59 positive COVID-19 cases.
That is 263 more cases, or more than five times the amount of positive cases, when comparing the first week of school.
Comment: How peer pressure and persuasion works:

Heritage High School in Newport News, Virginia was the site of a multiple shooting September 20, 2021
Newport News police reported a shooting at Heritage just before noon local time on Monday. There were initially multiple reports of wounded and even killed, citing radio traffic from the site.
A male and a female, both 17, were shot after "some kind of altercation" in the school cafeteria, Police Chief Steve Drew told reporters. The male was struck in the head, and a female in the lower leg. Two more people were hospitalized, one with a sprained or broken arm and another for breathing issues due to asthma.
Comment: Newport News local station WSET updates the story:
One person is in custody after a shooting inside Heritage High School in Newport News, Virginia Monday morning. The person in custody is a juvenile male, according to Newport News Police.
Officers were called to the school around 11:38 a.m. for a report of a shooting inside. Officials said the scene was chaotic, but students knew to shelter in place.
Four or five people were taken to the hospital with injuries, police said, two of them with non-life-threatening gunshot wounds. A 17-year-old boy was shot in the face and a 17-year-old girl was shot in the lower leg. police officials said. Two other people were transported for breathing issues and for a sprained or broken arm. Another person may have taken themselves to the hospital.
Some evidence was recovered from the scene, but police officials wouldn't go into details. The investigation is ongoing and police are working with the FBI and Virginia State Police.
Chief Drew said they do believe the suspect knew the victims.













Comment: Bravo. If only more leaders would take the same attitude, we wouldn't be in the state we're currently in.