Society's Child
The Daily Mail tried its hand at being a champion of female emancipation and gender equality, producing a lengthy Russia-bashing piece. The Ruskies are now bad because they demean their brave female fighters, it seems. Their proof? The beauty pageants held for women in uniforms on the occasion of International Women's Day.
Russia's Black Sea Fleet is damned for daring to call female soldiers the "weaker sex." Women from the Airborne Troops were asked to "demonstrate their sewing skills" - a typical Russian propagation of gender stereotypes. And misogynists from the Missile Forces called their pageant 'Makeup Under Camouflage'! And so on and so forth.
Comment: Tucker Carlson is one of the few brave journalists willing to speak out about Julian Assange and the threat his prosecution presents to press freedom. Here he interviews Roger Waters on why Waters has taken up Julian's cause

People wearing protective masks walk past the Colosseum in Rome, Italy, February 25, 2020.
Those hoping to marvel at glorious reminders of the Roman Empire by visiting the Colosseum or walking among the ancient ruins of the Forum in central Rome won't be fulfilling their dreams any time soon. Those seeking to enjoy the masterpieces of the great Renaissance masters in Florence's Uffizi Gallery will have to shelve their plans for the time being, too.
In their latest move to curb the relentless spread of the novel coronavirus officially known as Covid-19, Italian authorities have decided to close all national cultural facilities, including the iconic landmarks that have made the nation famous throughout the world. The measure also spells bad news for local cinema-goers and theater-lovers, since these venues will now be closed too, according to Cultural Minister Dario Franceschini.
The official called it a "necessary and tough choice" as he announced the decision in a Twitter post. He also urged the national TV channels to fill the void left by the abrupt - if temporary - ban on cultural life by broadcasting films, plays and music. All companies managing cultural sites should "make the most" of their websites and social network accounts, the minister suggested.
Comment: Iran experienced another 49 deaths, bringing the total to 194 (over 6,500 cases overall). IranAir has suspended all flights to Europe because of "the restrictions that have been placed on [IranAir] flights by Europe for unclear reasons."
See also:
- Coronavirus: Northern Italy quarantines 16 million people
- Trump called it: HHS estimates coronavirus mortality rate at 0.1%-1%
- Keep it simple and question: Propaganda, technology, and coronavirus
- Danger cruises: Dozens infected with Covid-19 on ANOTHER quarantined ship - this time on Egypt's Nile
- Another Iranian official dies of coronavirus, Italian party leader tests positive, China posts dwindling numbers
A savvy politician like Boris Johnson can still reverse No 10's green strategy, which moved on this week from banning petrol and diesel cars to the revival of onshore wind farms. He must - all the ingredients for another seismic uprising are already simmering.
First is the drift towards disaster at the Treasury. With the Chancellor, Rishi Sunak, reportedly poised to end the freeze on fuel duty for all motorists, voters are referring to zero carbon as "the new austerity".
Workers risk suffering a big shortfall in old age because the money saved for their retirement is not protected.
Former staff will also be affected. Members of the pension fund are among 2,400 stunned staff to have lost their jobs after the airline collapsed.
Their plight contrasts sharply with Flybe's wealthy owners, which include Sir Richard Branson's Virgin Atlantic, 69, and a US hedge fund.
Comment: These days, whatever happens, the banksters win and the rest of us lose:
- Life expectancy for poorest girls in England falls for first time since 1920s
- UK economy faces weakest growth since second world war
- If slowing growth, unsound financial systems and the coronavirus don't trigger a market meltdown, central banks will
Anyone living in Lombardy and 14 other central and northern provinces will need special permission to travel. Milan and Venice are both affected.
Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte also announced the closure of schools, gyms, museums, nightclubs and other venues across the whole country.
Comment: See also:
- Trump called it: HHS estimates coronavirus mortality rate at 0.1%-1%
- Keep it simple and question: Propaganda, technology, and coronavirus
- 'Medical terrorism': Zarif blames US sanctions for widening coronavirus outbreak that killed 145 in Iran, including top officials
- Another Iranian official dies of coronavirus, Italian party leader tests positive, China posts dwindling numbers
- Hotel in China used to quarantine coronavirus victims COLLAPSES trapping dozens under rubble
- "This is surreal, it's like living in a movie" - Inside the Italian Coronavirus lockdown, where the infected are treated like the plague
- Airlines are flying empty 'ghost flights' amid coronavirus fears
- SXSW submits to coronavirus fears: Austin cancels biggest tech, film & music festival for the first time EVER

Screenshot from the video / Loubna Stensaker Goransson and Naouel Aissaoui are debating on a headscarf ban in schools.
The heated exchange between Naouel Aissaoui, a school teacher in the Swedish municipality of Skurup, and local politician Loubna Stensaker Goransson was over a ban on veils in public schools, which Goransson and other council officials enacted in December. The decision angered many educators, and Aissaoui is among those leading the pushback.
"Move away if it annoys you," Aissaoui said during a TV debate after her opponent said she disliked seeing little girls wearing the veil. "This is my country, too."
Comment: See also:
- Tunisia bans veil from government buildings following spate of attacks
- French sportswear company withdraws marketing launch of Islamic running veil
- Promoting diversity? Non-Muslim teacher wears full face veil, reads from Koran in Swiss school
- Poll: 79% of French think Islamic veil opposes their values
- Muslim teen charged after beating his sister with a baseball bat for refusing to wear a veil
- Norway bans full-face Muslim veil in all schools, calls covering an impediment to good communication
I have been writing about the dangers of technology for many years. Not all technology, of course, for the pencil I am writing this with is a technology, and an amazing and underappreciated one. I am referring to the techno-scientific, digital, high-tech sort, the world of computers, cell phones, genetic engineering, biological weapons development, etc. You know, all the stuff that has made our lives better and easier.
Two of the major problems the world faces - world destruction with nuclear weapons and the poisoning of the earth's ecology and atmosphere - are the result of the marriage of science and technique that has given birth to the technological "babies" (Little Boy and Fat Man) that were used by the U.S. to massacre hundreds of thousands of Japanese and now threaten to incinerate everyone, and the chemical and toxic inventions that have despoiled the earth, air, and water and continue to kill people worldwide through America's endless war-making and industrial applications.
"MSNBC used to run this thing: this is who we are. Well, I didn't like who you were this week, and I don't think a lot of people who work there liked this either, and I think this 'cancel culture' is a cancer on progressivism," Maher said on his 'Real Time' program on Friday night when addressing Matthews leaving his long-standing post at MSNBC.
The HBO host said cancel culture is destroying the left because liberals are fighting a "two-front war" while "Republicans only have to fight Democrats."
Matthews' resignation followed a GQ essay in which Laura Bassett accused Matthews of making inappropriate comments to her when she was a guest on his show.
"Make sure you wipe this [makeup] off her face after the show. We don't make her up so some guy at a bar can look at her like this," Bassett claims Matthews said to her in a makeup room before a taping.
Comment: No matter how "left" you are, the second you step out of line they will devour you. See also:
- The main victims of progressive 'cancel culture' are progressives themselves
- Culture Wars: ABC cancels TV show 'Roseanne' after Barr tweets something politically incorrect
- Too Far Left: How Liberals Transformed Into Illiberal Social Justice Warriors
Prince, the former head of Blackwater Worldwide and brother to Education Secretary Betsy DeVos, recruited both ex-British and American spies to help in undercover operations run by Project Veritas, according to the report from The New York Times. Prince's activities were discovered through documents from the discovery process in a legal battle between Veritas and the American Federation of Teachers, the second largest teacher's labor union in the US.
The documents show Prince ran a 2017 operation where a former MI6 officer named Richard Seddon made copies of files and secret recordings at a Michigan office for the teacher's union. Prince also led an operation to infiltrate the 2018 congressional campaign of Democrat Abigail Spanberger. The person planted in the campaign was eventually found out and removed.












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