Society's Child
The UK's GDP grew by 0.7 percent in Q4 of last year - up from the 0.6 percent originally estimated by the Office for National Statistics (ONS).
The upward revision is partly due to the manufacturing industry performing better than predicted.
The suburban St. Louis cemetery was vandalized late Sunday or early Monday and discovered Monday morning. But by the end of Tuesday, a fundraiser started by Linda Sarsour and Tarek El-Messidi raised over $31,000 to repair it, surpassing its goal of $20,000.
The damages to the cemetery came following heightened concerns over hate crimes in the US. There have already been 12 reported bomb threats to Jewish community centers and late last month, a mosque in Texas was burned down.
"This man is by his own admission a member of a violent street gang and he was released back into the community," said Thomas Decker, field office director for the US Immigration and Customs Enforcement unit in New York. "Honoring a detainer request is not about politics, it is about keeping New York citizens safe."
Estivan Rafael Marques Velasquez, an admitted member of the notorious MS-13 gang, was released from Rikers Island on Feb. 16 after serving time for disorderly conduct.
ICE officials had requested last May that Velasquez — who was ordered removed by an immigration judge in November 2015 — be turned over to them when he was done serving his sentence, but no one at ICE was alerted to his release.
The suspect, 22, is alleged to have been furious after believing he had been asked to pay one yuan too much for his dinner. He complained to the restaurant owner, 42, and a deadly fight broke out.
During the fight, the younger man is reported to have seized a kitchen knife from within the restaurant and used it to decapitate the proprietor. He is then said to have thrown his rival's head into a nearby rubbish bin.
The victim is reportedly a single father who divorced five years ago and now takes sole charge of his 13-year-old son in Wuhan, Hubei province.
Police arrived at the scene shortly after and arrested the 22-year-old, reported to be from the bordering province of Sichuan. Photos show him in custody handcuffed to a table, seemingly calm.

Sen. Joan Huffman is co-sponsoring a bill that would institute some of the most stringent anti-campus rape rules in the country.
"I love my school, but I've been extraordinarily disappointed," said Baylor alumnus Kirk Watson, a Democratic senator from Austin. "I actually think there is a real feeling that we need to address sexual assault.
"It's a bear in the room."Watson filed five bills Tuesday that aim to increase and encourage reporting and lessen rates of sexual violence, harassment and stalking on college campuses. But he's also the co-sponsor of a proposal that would require school employees — and even some students — to report assaults or else face criminal penalties.
"We've got to be serious about this," Watson said. "Students have a right to be safe."
In May 2016, Utah Governor Gary Herbert (R) signed the "Protecting Unborn Children Amendment" law, which requires physicians to administer anesthesia or analgesic, a painkiller, to women having an abortion after 20 weeks' gestation. These painkillers are not intended to aid the pregnant women, but only to "eliminate or alleviate organic pain to the unborn child."
According to Planned Parenthood, there are only two licensed abortion clinics in the entire state, both of which are located in Salt Lake City. However, only one of those clinics performs the elective procedure.
Dr. Leah Torres, one of the handful of physicians who performs elective abortions at the clinic, said she has been trying to comply with the law, but she doesn't know how to administer fetal anesthesia.
"I have no idea of what fetal anesthesia means," Torres told the Standard Examiner last April. "Does that mean if I give my patient a Motrin I've now administered an analgesic to the fetus? I'm calling the governor, every day... I want to know how not to break the law."
Governor Gary Herbert (R) told the Associated Press that physicians should direct their questions about the law to the attorney general's office.
LD50, in Dalston, east London, is facing calls to shut down over an exhibition and a series of talks hosted by the far right or so-called 'alt-right' movement, which is known for its vehement anti-liberal stance, often favoring white supremacist views.
Last summer, the gallery, run by Lucia Diego, held a 'neoreaction conference' featuring speakers including Peter Brimelow, Brett Stevens and Iben Thranholm. 'Neoreaction' is a 'philosophy' which rejects democracy, is anti-egalitarian and embraces autocratic rule.
Young offenders institutions (YOI), which imprison 15- to 18-year-olds, are allegedly using solitary confinement, which can cause mental health issues for inmates, according to the Independent.
Prison inspection reports found that teenagers are self-harming as a result of the distress caused by recurring and prolonged isolation.
Solitary confinement could be infringing British law and Article 16 of the UN Convention Against Torture, under which governments must prevent prison officials from carrying out "acts of cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment."
Yet at hundreds of campuses across the country, administrators encourage students to report one another, or their professors, for speech protected by the First Amendment, or even mere political disagreements. The so-called "Bias Response Teams" reviewing these (often anonymous) reports typically include police officers, student conduct administrators and public relations staff who scrutinize the speech of activists and academics.
This sounds like the stuff of Orwell, although even he might have found the name "Bias Response Team" to be over-the-top.














Comment: Of course most 'experts' were screaming that Britain would burst into flames on a 'Brexit' vote - it was just more of the same-old propaganda. So, the fact that the world hasn't ended shouldn't shock anyone. Nancy Curtin, Chief Investment Officer at Close Brothers Asset management, has claimed that it has largely been a weak pound that has helped Britain maintain its current course: The weak pound has helped British corporations who get their earnings abroad. As Financial Times reports,