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Car Black

'CBS This Morning' aired faked COVID-19 drive-through testing site line of cars

veritas cbs covid-19
A CBS News crew pulled medical professionals off the floor at the Cherry Medical Center in Grand Rapids, Michigan, to line up in their vehicles so a CBS film crew would have a long line for their COVID-19 coverage.

"Our insider witnessed the whole thing and came to Project Veritas, because he knew we would protect him," said James O'Keefe, the founder and CEO of Project Veritas.

"The insider told us that medical personnel were taken away from treating patients and making the line longer for actual patients wait for the COVID-19 test," he said.

In an interview with the insider, O'Keefe asked the insider: "You're telling me you're a hundred percent certain that CBS News, CBS News Corporation--national, staged a fake event. They faked the news. They faked the reality and broadcasted that to all of their audience last Friday on "CBS This Morning."

The insider said to him: "A hundred percent. Absolutely."


Comment: And that is not even the first time CBS has been caught making fake news to spread fear and panic about Covid-19:


Light Saber

Ohio lawmaker refuses to wear mask because he says it dishonors God

Nino Vitale
© Ann Sanner / AP file
tate Rep. Nino Vitale speaks about his proposal to allow Ohio's churches and pastors to refuse to perform same-sex marriages during a news conference in Columbus on May 11, 2016.
An Ohio state representative says he won't wear a mask because it dishonors God.

"This is the greatest nation on earth founded on Judeo-Christian Principles. One of those principles is that we are all created in the image and likeness of God. That image is seen the most by our face. I will not wear a mask," Rep. Nino Vitale, a Republican, wrote on Facebook. "That's the image of God right there, and I want to see it in my brothers and sisters."

Some of the thoughts Vitale shared in his most recent post on the topic on his campaign Facebook page Tuesday were from a previous video he had posted and a subsequent interview with Newsweek.

"People want to wear masks, they can. But mandating it, that's a whole different story for me," Tuesday's post said. "No one is stopping anybody from wearing a face mask. But quite frankly everyone else's freedom ends at the tip of my nose. You're not going to tell me what to do and there's a lot of people that feel that way."

"If someone is that scared, that they do not want to go out into the public because 100 percent of the people are not wearing masks, then that person should stay home, not tell everyone else what they should be doing," said Vitale, who represents Champaign County and parts of Logan and Shelby counties.

Comment: See also:


Bulb

Serbia to lift state of emergency; two Georgian cities to end lockdown after experiencing tepid pandemic

serbia

Serbia
The global death toll from the coronavirus is more than 247,000 with more than 3.5 million infections confirmed, causing mass disruptions as governments continue to try to slow the spread of the new respiratory illness.

Here's a roundup of COVID-19 developments in RFE/RL's broadcast regions.

Georgia

Two major cities in Georgia, Batumi and Kutaisi, will lift the lockdowns imposed on them in mid-April to slow down the spread of the coronavirus.

Prime Minister Giorgi Gakharia said on May 4 that the restrictions will be lifted the next day, adding that two other major cities in the South Caucasus country, Tbilisi, the capital, and Rustavi, may have their restrictions lifted by the end of the week.

Gakharia explained that lifting the restrictions meant that vehicles will be allowed to enter and exit the cities, though the nationwide curfew between 9 p.m. and 6 a.m. will remain until further notice.

Comment: Serbia and Georgia are not the only countries starting to reopen. Spain is joining their ranks of lifting restrictions allowing restaurants, hair salons, and small shops open back up. Economies can only take so much, and it will only be a short matter of time before we see the consequences of the worldwide lockdown.


Star of David

Amid lockdown, Palestinian village receives demolition orders from Israel

Israeli court order
© AFP
A Palestinian man in the village of Carmel in the southern occupied West Bank district of Hebron carries an Israeli court order outside his home, which is similar to orders posted around the village of Bani Hassan, 15 January 2020
When Ibrahim Issa and his neighbors saw an Israeli military vehicle driving through Qarawat Bani Hassan on Tuesday, they suspected it was just another ordinary patrol through the Palestinian village, which is surrounded by a number of illegal Israeli settlements.

"But then we saw the car stopping at houses and posting things on doors, and we knew something was wrong," Issa told Middle East Eye.

In a matter of hours, authorities from Israel's Civil Administration, the military body that enforces Israeli policy in the occupied West Bank, had posted 22 demolition and stop-work orders on Palestinian properties in the village.

Issa's newly built home was one of 12 houses, seven agricultural rooms, and three internationally funded water collection wells that received an order, under the pretext that they were constructed "illegally" in Area C - the more than 60 percent of the West Bank under full Israeli military control.

Family

They want to make "social distancing" a permanent part of our lives

social distancing
Humans are inherently social creatures, and that is never going to change. Within each one of us there is a fundamental need for connection with others, but now these coronavirus lockdowns have separated us from one another like never before. Thankfully, many states are now starting to end their lockdowns, but unfortunately this is definitely not the end for "social distancing". Just as 9/11 greatly altered our society on a permanent basis, many of our social engineers now intend to make "social distancing" a permanent part of our lives. If they have their way, there will be written or unwritten rules about how close you can get to other people virtually everywhere that you go.

Can you imagine a world where you have to constantly be concerned about walking, standing or sitting too close to someone else?

Already, there is talk of putting physical markings on sidewalks in order to constantly remind all of us not to walk too closely to one another...
Arrows on the ground, and other physical markers to encourage and enforce distance. Imagine sidewalks with scoring every 6 feet so those walking could make sure they're the human equivalent of a few car lengths behind. Or large sculptures deployed to separate people.

Comment: See: Operation COVID-19: Testing the degree of "people's submission" and activating our "paranoia switches"


Car Black

South African man who fed homeless people during lockdown has car torched

Sea Point Good Samaritan
© Armand Hough/African News Agency
Peter Wagenaar
A Sea Point Good Samaritan who ignored opposition from some residents to feed homeless people during the national lockdown is stunned after his car was set alight early on Wednesday.

Peter Wagenaar believes the torching of his Mini Cooper was an escalation of the backlash he had received from the community.

"We feed homeless people and there are a handful of people not happy with it and they have rallied (other) people. Two Fridays ago, the police asked me for my permit. We had a valid permit in place and then last night at about 3.40am I saw my car was set alight and was burnt to the ground," Wagenaar said.

He added that over the past few weeks he had received complaints from residents who were opposed to him feeding the homeless.

"I believe it is someone who is so toxic who wants to deter me. I am at peace. We have 200-300 supporters. There are a handful of people who have been rallying against us," he said.

Stock Down

18 signs we're facing a record economic implosion in 2020

economy
In just six weeks, the entire global economy has completely come apart. All over the world we are seeing numbers fall faster than we ever have before, and the outlook for the rest of the year is exceedingly bleak. Fear of the coronavirus is going to paralyze global trade for the foreseeable future, and the lockdowns in some nations will last for many months to come. Here in the United States, some states are attempting to make an effort to "reopen", but in most instances that will involve "multiple stages". Meanwhile, tens of millions of Americans have already lost their jobs, much of the population has already run through their meager savings, and financial institutions are becoming extremely tight with their money. Even if COVID-19 disappeared tomorrow, our momentum would still take us into an economic depression, but of course this virus isn't going to disappear any time soon. After 9/11 our society evolved into an anti-terror state, and COVID-19 is going to permanently alter our society as well. So anyone that was hoping for a quick "return to normal" can forget it, because "normal" is about to be completely redefined.

The pace at which economic conditions have deteriorated in recent weeks has been absolutely breathtaking, and the numbers just keep getting worse and worse.

Comment: See also:


Attention

Third Russian doctor mysteriously falls from hospital window amid coronavirus panic

Russian medic

Many doctors in Russia have complained about equipment shortages.
A doctor at an ambulance unit in Russia's western Voronezh region is in serious condition after falling from a hospital window following complaints that he was forced to work even after testing positive for COVID-19, the third such case in the country in recent days.

Colleagues of Aleksandr Shulepov and representatives of the regional coronavirus task force said over the weekend that on May 2 Shulepov fell out of a second-floor window at the hospital where he worked and was being treated for the coronavirus in the town of Novaya Usman. He is currently in an emergency ward room with a fractured skull.

Shulepov was hospitalized on April 22 for the virus, but was scheduled to be released after his latest COVID-19 test came back negative.

Attention

Poll: 78 percent of college students want to restrict 'threatening' ideas

college students protest speech
© Getty Images
Student protesters during Ben Shapiro visit to the University of Utah, Sept. 27, 2017
More than three-in-four college students want "safe spaces" on their campuses that are free of "threatening actions, ideas, or conversations," even as a majority support President Trump's threat to withhold taxpayer dollars from universities that restrict speech, according to a new poll.

While 97 percent of college students believe that free speech is an essential pillar of American democracy, a significant majority of students also support policies to restrict specific types of speech on campus. The poll, conducted by Gallup and the Knight Foundation, found that 78 percent of students support "safe spaces" where threatening ideas and conversations would be barred. More than 80 percent favor the establishment of a "free-speech zone" where preapproved protests and the distribution of literature are permitted.

In response to growing concerns about academic freedom on campuses, the Trump administration ordered all federally funded universities to protect free speech on campus. University administrators denounced the move, with the president of Columbia University calling it a "transparent exercise in politics." Most students support the Trump administration's decision, however, with 58 percent of pupils supporting a ban on federal funding for colleges that do not protect free-speech rights.

Comment: The relationship between 'safe spaces' and censorship is now found throughout all of society. It's not limited to various campuses around the United States. It could be said that everyone living in lockdown is confined to the ultimate 'safe space', and we see the mass censorship of dissenting information in turn.


Eye 1

NY AG reportedly probing NBC News over sexual assault claims

Matt Lauer, Andy Lack
© Getty Images
Matt Lauer and Andy Lack in 2013.
NBC News is being probed over numerous claims of sexual assault and discrimination — including allegations of a cover-up by ousted chairman Andy Lack, according to a report Tuesday.

The New York attorney general has been investigating the damning claims about the network for at least six months, DailyMail.com said.

More than a dozen women have been interviewed by officials from a department dubbed "The Weinstein Unit" for its work nailing movie mogul Harvey Weinstein for rape, sources told the site.

Former NBC News anchor Linda Vester confirmed to the site that she is one of the women interviewed about alleged violations at the network.

As well as her accusations against legendary news anchor Tom Brokaw, Vester says investigators were particularly eager on information on Lack, the controversial chairman ousted in a surprise shakeup Monday.

Comment: NBC News chairman Andy Lack steps down in corporate shakeup