Society's Child
The obituary, published in Minnesota's Redwood Falls Gazette, has been shared more than 36,000 times online and tells the life story of 80-year-old Kathleen Dehmlow. From her birth in 1938 in Wabasso, Minnesota, the five-paragraph piece remembers her marriage in 1957; the birth her two children, Gina and Jay; her 1962 pregnancy by her husband's brother Lyle; and her decision to "abandon her children" and move to California.
"She passed away on May 31, 2018, in Springfield and will now face judgement. She will not be missed by Gina and Jay, and they understand that this world is a better place without her," the obituary closes.
Although the overall number of sexually transmitted infections (STI) has fallen by 0.3 percent since 2016, the number of gonorrhea cases has seen a 22-percent spike to 44,676, the highest since 1949, new figures from Public Health England (PHE) reveal.
The incidence of syphilis, which can be life-threatening and cause severe damage to the brain, heart and nervous system, increased by 20 percent from 5,955 in 2016 to 7,137 to 2017.
Gwenda Hughes, head of the STI department at PHE, said: "Sexually transmitted infections pose serious consequences to health. It is likely to be a result of condomless sex. We've got these apps and they enable people to find partners much more quickly."
Hughes warned that STIs pose grave risks for both current and future partners. "The impact of STIs can be considerable, with some causing infertility, pelvic inflammatory disease and harm to unborn babies.
A recent incident at a Toronto high school demonstrates the depravity of the pro-Israel lobby. It also illustrates their use of Canadian cultural and "diversity" initiatives to promote a country that declares itself to be the exact opposite of diverse.
Amidst the recent slaughter of nonviolent protesters in Gaza, a half-century illegal occupation of the West Bank and weekly bombings in Syria, an Israeli flag marked with "Jewish Heritage Month" was hoisted in the main foyer of Forest Hill Collegiate Institute. After a couple days the flag created by Israeli nationalist students was moved - possibly due to complaints from other students - to a less prominent location where Jewish Heritage Month events were taking place. In response B'nai Brith, Hasbara Fellowships, Simon Wiesenthal Centre for Holocaust Studies and Centre for Israel and Jewish Affairs (CIJA) all claimed persecution. "Discrimination has absolutely no place in our schools", noted a CIJA spokesperson with regards to moving the Israeli flag to a less prominent location in the school. For their part, the Wiesenthal Center said our "objective is to ensure that TDSB [Toronto District School Board] adheres to its own values of equity and inclusivity for all students" while B'nai Brith's press release decried the "Jewish students who have had their heritage denigrated." That group then published a story titled "Forest Hill Collegiate Has History of Alienating Jewish Students, Former Pupil Says."
Comment: Unfortunately the Zionist lobby has its claws as deep into Canadian politics as it does into the U.S. Money talks regardless of country.
- Off the deep end: Canada's foreign minister stresses strong support for Israel
- Canada and Israel - Evil partners in racial and humanitarian crimes
- Show your love to Israel: Canada passes anti-boycott motion dictating freedom of speech
- Canada criminalizes criticism of Israel: Analyst
- Gilad Atzmon: Israeli lobby a 'threat' to Western politics
Just before 4am this morning, the front door of the Jamia Masjid Abu Huraira - also known as Beeston Central Mosque - on Hardy Street was deliberately set alight using what is thought to have been flammable liquid. Fire crews managed to contain the blaze before it spread.
At around the same time, a fire was reported at the nearby Guru Nanak Nishkam Sewak Jatha, a Sikh gurdwara on Lady Pit Lane. The front door was alight and damage was caused to the door and a pillar.
Detective Inspector Richard Holmes, of Leeds District CID, said: "We are treating both these incidents as linked given the closeness of the locations and the similar times that they have occurred.
Comment: Senseless violence and vandalism appear to be on the rise around the deteriorating Western world:
- French meat restaurant smashed-up in night attack by 'vegan terrorists'
- Muslim activists raise $57k to restore vandalized Jewish cemetery
- Monument to Nazi massacre victims desecrated in Ukraine - a target for vandalism for decades

The picture taken on June 5, 2018, shows a poster erected on a street in the West Bank city of al-Khalil (Hebron) next to a portrait of Palestinian President Mahmud Abbas (R), denouncing a friendly football match between Argentina and Israel.
A senior source at Argentina's Football Federation, who was speaking on condition of anonymity, told The Associated Press on Tuesday that the game had been called off.
In an interview with the ESPN sports channel, Argentinean striker Gonzalo Higuain confirmed the cancellation, saying, "They've finally done the right thing."
Additionally, the Israeli embassy in Buenos Aires said in a statement that it "regrets to communicate the suspension of the match" due to "threats and provocations" against Argentinean striker Lionel Messi.
The Palestinian Football Association (FA) had earlier called on Arab and Muslim sports fans to burn photos and T-shirts of Messi if he attended the friendly match.
Comment: Israel's treatment of the Palestinians should not go without consequences. While they may never see a day in court, one can hope more countries will demonstrate that Israel will be shunned and isolated by the international community if they continue down that road.
Anchor Ami Kaufman wonders: "All Arabs?". Seaman responds, "It's part of the culture".
Kaufman: "Isn't that a little bit stereotypical?"
Gideon Levy pointed out that if anyone were to speak about Jews that way, they would be called an anti-Semite. Ruthi Blum qualified that "when you dare to say it about Muslims, you're called an Islamophobe."
Yazd, Iran - As I looked at the two hundred or so young cadets sitting on the floor of the prayer hall, all I could think of were my two boys, Eitan and Doron, who are about the same age as they. The previous day I visited the families of Iranian martyrs, boys who fell during the protracted war between Iran and Iraq. And while giving one's life in the service of one's country is often seen as a great honor, I do not share that feeling at all. So all I could say as I began my remarks was that, seeing how they are about the same age as my own boys, I wish for them and their families that they will not be martyrs but return home safe as soon as their service was over.
The Revolutionary Guard base in Yazd is right off the main road. I was informed the night before that I was to deliver a 7:30 a.m. lecture but no details were provided. That morning, as we were driving, I was told that I would need to leave my camera and phone behind because we were entering a military base. Then they told me that I would be speaking in front of cadets of the famed Iranian Revolutionary Guards, known in Iran as the "Sebah." I entered the prayer hall, accompanied by a translator and several reporters who escorted me throughout the trip, and we were greeted and led to a seat with a microphone. About 10 rows of young men seated 20-across were on the floor with their legs crossed and another hundred or so people in civilian clothes who were seated along the walls of the large hall.
Comment: Though Miko Peled speaks for many who see the pathological Israeli mindset for what it is, and works to address it, there are all too few with his knowledge, experience and fortitude to come out and say and do what he is.
Listen to the Behind the Headlines interview with Mr. Peled for more: Behind the Headlines: Israel massacres Palestinians (again) - Interview with Miko Peled
Russia's president shared his thoughts on the special relationship with China's leader in an exclusive interview with the China Media Group.
It wouldn't work as a piece of fiction, no one would believe it. Yet this is where the political left has led their angry mob, or their angry mob has led the political left. It's an irrelevant "chicken and egg" scenario, because however they got there, that is where they are now.
I couldn't care less what causes liberals to clutch their collective pearls, especially since they've done it so much in the past 2 years their fingers seem to have fused to them like a fat guy who grew into his couch. My problem comes when they insist their will, their reaction to a seemingly endless stream of "outrages," must be addressed by everyone else.
As reported by The Washington Times, the recent school shooting at Parkland, Fla., was the last straw for scores of parents. The paper noted that "the phones started ringing at the Texas Home School Coalition, and they haven't stopped yet."
The Times added:
The Lubbock-based organization has been swamped with inquiries for months from parents seeking safer options for their kids in the aftermath of this year's deadly school massacres, first in Parkland and then in Santa Fe, Texas.
"When the Parkland shooting happened, our phone calls and emails exploded," said coalition president Tim Lambert. "In the last couple of months, our numbers have doubled. We're dealing with probably between 1,200 and 1,400 calls and emails per month, and prior to that it was 600 to 700."














Comment: The rise in STIs is cultural and behavioral in nature. No amount of correct condom usage and sexual health services can correct the dearth of moral grounding that led to this problem in the first place.
It's time to admit that the sexual revolution was a catastrophic failure