Society's Child
(In the cover picture above, a young Rachel Chandler is reportedly on one of Jeffrey Epstein's flights with former President Bill Clinton.)
A girl by the name of Rachel Chandler is suspected of being a witness to Jeffrey Epstein's crimes on his "Orgy Island" with this sick friends. The young lady may have devastating information that has been handed over to the government.
Israeli newspaper Yedioth Ahronoth reported that the petition will argue that the sale of the property was based on bribery and the church figures who signed the deal were corrupt, immediately fleeing the country after signing the deal.
Last month the Supreme Court ruled that the church had failed to provide sufficient evidence that the deal was made fraudulently.
Commenting on the sale of the property, spokesman for the Greek Orthodox Church, Issa Musleh, told AFP that the sale was only made possible by forged documents.
The sale, which took place in 2004, triggered widespread Palestinian anger and led to the 2005 dismissal of Patriarch Irineos I.
"The settlers want to take over our heritage," Musleh stressed.

The 2017 TV drama about the scandal, Three Girls. The abuse of young girls by Rochdale sex gangs is one of the great scandals of our time
To me, however, the two sisters at the heart of the Rochdale scandal are like my surrogate children.
Amber and Ruby [not their real names] are both grown-up now, with children of their own, but I know they still don't feel safe. This week, Amber told me that one of her abusers works in a takeaway close to her home in Rochdale. Her worst fright, though, came last year, when she allowed her daughter to play outside a friend's house with some other children.
Later, after saying goodbye to her friend, Amber turned and found one of her abusers in front of her, staring at her little girl. Smirking, he walked calmly to his car and drove away.
Oh, he knew who Amber was, all right. He was also fully aware that he'd escaped justice — like so many of his mates, who'd also raped or sexually abused the sisters. They, too, still freely walk the streets of Rochdale. So why weren't they prosecuted?
As the former police officer who was once at the centre of the Rochdale sex‑gang investigation — and as the whistleblower who exposed its appalling flaws — I believe I know the answer. It's politics.
Politics appear to drive too many policing decisions. Indeed, my own view is that if you're promoted to superintendent or above, you can freely let go of your conscience, it seems, and move smoothly up the ladder. But judge for yourselves. This is the story of what happened to Amber and Ruby . . . and to the paedophiles who preyed on them and so many others.
Comment: Maggie Oliver reveals how the authorities attempted to avoid prosecuting Asian paedophiles in the last part of the series here. Apparently nothing has changed in Rochdale - she believe the gangs are still operating:
According to a company statement, the fuel has been supplied under a contract between TVEL (a Rosatom subsidiary), the China Nuclear Energy Industry Corporation, and the China Institute of Atomic Energy.
CEFR is used for research purposes, though it also operates within a 20MW power unit, supplying electricity to the grid. It is classified by the International Atomic Energy Agency as the only fast power reactor in the world outside of Russia.
Comment: While some countries pursue nuclear power which is be more likely to provide an adequate, reliable supply of energy in the future, others, particularly those brainwashed by environmentalism in the West, are investing their future in unreliable and inefficient 'green' energy which will be incapable of meeting rising demand:
- The Green New Deal has its roots in the genocidal goals of the Club of Rome and 1001 Trust
- Russia develops fuel for nuclear power generation that produces no radioactive waste
- "Mass death": Greenpeace co-founder calls Ocasio-Cortez "pompous little twit" for Green New Deal
- Chernobyl has become a refuge for wildlife 33 years after the nuclear accident

FILE PHOTO. An Iraqi flag painted on a bullet-ridden wall of a maternity hospital after an air strike by the US military in Baghdad's Sadr City.
"These wars were unjust, illegal, immoral, should never have happened," Will Griffin, who is now an anti-war activist and organizer, told RT. He said that would be true regardless of any poll.
America's growing disillusionment with endless military deployments on foreign soil was highlighted in a Pew Research Center report on Wednesday. The polling agency said 64 percent of veterans in the US thought the war in Iraq was not worth fighting. The same answer was given about Afghanistan, the longest war in America's history, by 58 percent of those polled.
Comment: And those mentioned above are only the more obvious US war crimes: Starvation sanctions are worse than overt warfare
See also:
- Navy SEAL described as "reckless murderer" by own platoon found not guilty of war crimes
- Reporter Quits NBC Citing Network's Support for Endless War
- War crimes: US airstrikes destroy Syrian hospital and schools
The shooting occurred about 4 a.m. local time outside the US Immigration and Customs Enforcement's Northwest Detention Center, where the man attempted to set the building and parked cars on fire, according to police spokeswoman Loretta Cool.
Authorities did not immediately identify the man who was armed with a rifle, saying in a statement the "medical examiner will release the identity of the victim when it is appropriate."
Comment: The Seattle Times reports further:
A protest outside the federal immigration detention center in Tacoma last year drew headlines when a 68-year-old man wrapped his arms around a police officer's throat and shoulders in an apparent attempt to free another protester.
When police got the man into handcuffs, they found a collapsible baton and knife in his pocket, leading to criminal charges.
Early Saturday morning, that man, Willem Van Spronsen of Vashon Island, returned to the Northwest Detention Center, the holding facility for the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, this time armed with a rifle and incendiary devices, according to Tacoma police.
Police said Van Spronsen tossed lit objects at vehicles and buildings, causing one car fire, and unsuccessfully tried to ignite a propane tank.
Officers were called by an ICE employee who saw the rifle. Soon after they arrived, officers reported "shots fired," said Tacoma police spokeswoman Loretta Cool, although it is unclear who fired first or if Van Spronsen fired at all. The Pierce County Medical Examiner's Office classified his death as a homicide.
The four responding officers all opened fire and then took cover, uninjured. After medical aid arrived, officers found Van Spronsen dead. He had multiple gunshot wounds, according to the Pierce County Medical Examiner's office.
Deb Bartley, a friend of Van Spronsen's for about 20 years, described him as an anarchist and anti-fascist, and she believes his attack on the detention center was intended to provoke a fatal conflict.
"He was ready to end it," Bartley said. "I think this was a suicide. But then he was able to kind of do it in a way that spoke to his political beliefs ... I know he went down there knowing he was going to die."
She and other friends of Van Spronsen got letters in the mail "just saying goodbye." He also wrote what she referred to as a manifesto, which she declined to discuss in detail but predicted would be taken by authorities.
Van Spronsen had worked as a self-employed carpenter and contractor, according to court documents. He was also a folk singer, playing shows on Vashon Island and around the Seattle area.
The 2018 protest involved about 160 people outside the detention center. About 40 people blocked a police car that had arrived, prompting the officer to call in backup; about 25 officers responded.
In court documents, Van Spronsen was accused of lunging at a police officer's neck to help free a 17-year-old protester who was being detained. Van Spronsen refused to comply with officers' orders, and as he was led through a crowd of protesters, police said he tried to pass the baton to another protester. Van Spronsen was punched in the face at least once during the altercation. Nine other people were arrested as well.
He ultimately pleaded guilty in Pierce County Superior Court to one count of obstructing an officer, a gross misdemeanor, and received a one-year deferred sentence in October, according to court documents, which labeled him indigent.
ICE spokeswoman Tanya Roman confirmed the shooting incident and said no ICE employees were hurt nor involved. She referred questions to Tacoma police. The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives' Seattle division said it will be supporting the investigation.

The buildings of Rockefeller Center are seen from the 44th floor of a building on 6th Avenue on December 6, 2017 in New York City.
Street lights were reported knocked out on Columbus Ave. on the Upper West Side, and a power outage was also reported in Rockefeller Center around 7 p.m.
"We are responding to extensive outages on the west side of Manhattan," said Con Ed spokesman Michael Clendenin.
"It's equipment issues, and we are working to restore customers," Clendenin said.
More than 42,000 Con Ed customers had lost electricity by around 8 p.m. Clendenin didn't know how long the power might be out.
Comment: That's too coincidental.
This is probably more 'experimentation' by the 'reality-creators'.
Twitter checks in:
According to media reports, the user experience (UX) design features a brand new ringtone and notification panel, a cleaner interface for the camera, more animation and faster speed. Users can also add widgets and personalize the locked screen. Citing industry experts (most likely of Chinese origin), the Global Times reported that "it is possible for Huawei to build a sustainable smartphone ecosystem on the HongMeng OS and reshape the current market dominated by Android and Apple's iOS", although the new system is primarily designed for industrial automation and applications in the Internet of Things (IoT).
Commissioned last year, the 265-page report examined 18 cases of congenital deformities since 2007 in four different regions across the country, studying whether they were linked by a common cause, such as environmental pollution, toxic drug exposure, or genetic damage.
"Scientific studies screening, questionnaires and local environment testing have been conducted by Sante Publique France which has not identified an obvious cause," the public health body, which had been asked repeatedly about the case by RT, said in its summary.
Comment: See also:
- "Economic interests"? France delays report on mystery cases of babies born without arms
- Pesticides? France launches another probe after more birth defects cases revealed
- Bizarre' cluster of severe birth defects haunts health experts
- Roundup and Birth Defects: Is the public being kept in the dark?
- Birth defects and brain damage: The lingering effects of pesticide use













Comment: