Society's Child
The Russian president made the remarks during a session with journalists from leading world media outlets on Friday, replying to a question by Clive Marshall, the head of UK's Press Association Group. Putin reiterated that despite Britain's initial claim that Russia used a military-grade chemical weapon dubbed Novichok to attack former double agent Sergey Skripal and his daughter, the actual effect of the toxin seems far from lethal.
"I am no expert in military-grade chemical weapons, but as far as I understand if one is deployed the victims are killed on the spot and practically instantaneously. Thank God nothing like that happened,"he said.

Palestinian sympathizer: Support for Israel is dwindling among America's 'Millennial Generation'
If the world sneezes, it's because a millennial threw pepper in your face, apparently.
Needless to say, Millennials have received a bad rap. Negative articles and social media memes about them serve as clickbait for blogs and magazines. When it comes to page views and advertising dollars, bashing Millennials is the gift that keeps on giving.
But while the media is busy disparaging twenty-somethings, like a disgruntled old-timer guarding his porch on a wooden rocking chair, it's Millennials who hold the key to Palestinian liberation and human rights.
A study carried out by the Brand Israel Group, a group of former advertising professionals who promote Israel to American audiences, shows that while Israel enjoys a broad base of support among the US public, it's rapidly losing support among Millennials.
"Shared values are the bedrock of our relationship, and young Americans do not believe Israel shares our values," says Fern Oppenheim, one of the group's co-founders. "That's a huge issue. We have to have a narrative about the heart and soul and humanity of the Israelis."
Comment: The tide is turning and Israel is being seen for what it is.
The new route between Tel Aviv and Edinburgh run by Israir, is due to start on 13 June. But the Scottish Palestine Solidarity Campaign (SPSC) is calling for the airline's authorisation to be suspended because most Palestinians are banned from using Ben Gurion Airport in Tel Aviv.
The SPSC says this is discriminatory on grounds of "national origin" adding that Palestinians studying, working or living in Scotland, will be barred from the route.
Scots married to Palestinians are also barred from traveling to Israel via Ben Gurion Airport even though UK citizens are normally permitted entry to Israel without visas.
Any Palestinians from the West Bank and Gaza must fly from Scotland to Jordan and enter the West Bank via an Israeli-controlled checkpoint, where people can be kept waiting for up to 12 hours. The only Palestinians who can use Ben Gurion Airport are those resident in Israel with Israeli citizenship.
Comment: Why? Because they can. Israel wants other nations to follow their dictates. If another nation complies, it enlarges the perimeter by which Palestinians are forced to abide.
"This trip will carry the hopes and dreams of the Palestinian people for freedom," Salah Abdul-Ati, a member of a Palestinian committee tasked with breaking the siege, told a press conference in the Gaza City on Sunday.
He said the first ship will set sail on Tuesday morning, with a number of injured Gazans and patients aboard.
He, however, did not specify the first stop of the ship.
According to Abdul-Ati, Israeli forces twice attacked boats and ships seeking to break the Israeli siege on Gaza in the past two weeks.
He called on the Ramallah-based Palestinian Authority to lift "penalties on the Gaza people to boost their steadfastness and ease the humanitarian crisis caused by the blockade". He also appealed to the international community to pressure Israel to lift the blockade on the Gaza Strip and on international NGOs to provide protection to anti-siege ships.
Comment: The 'breaking of the blockade' is risky and it hasn't worked before.
See also: Israeli airstrike hits Gaza City port boat prepping to meet aid flotilla

Knives are too sharp, the judge said - pictured are knives that have been seized by police
Last week in his valedictory address, retiring Luton Crown Court Judge Nic Madge spoke of his concern that carrying a knife had become routine in some circles and called on the Government to ban the sale of large pointed kitchen knives.
Latest figures show stabbing deaths among teenagers and young adults have reached the highest level for eight years, and knife crime overall rose 22 per cent in 2017.
In the past two months, he said, there have been 77 knife-related incidents in Bedfordshire, including three killings.

rChinese State Councilor and Foreign Minister Wang Yi meets Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif at Diaoyutai state guesthouse in Beijing, China, May 13, 2018.
As Iran tries to gain assurances from China that it will remain in the deal, the US Department of Commerce has banned American firms from selling parts to ZTE, one of China's largest IT companies, for seven years and fined the company $1.1 billion for violating sanctions against Iran and North Korea. The need to have American parts for the company's production line has brought it to near bankruptcy. Now, US President Donald Trump is suddenly moving to reach a solution to ZTE's fate. The parallel timing of these events highlights the complicated position Iran is faced with to win China's support.
Comment: The US may hold sway over China now, but the future isn't looking too bright for the American economy so it won't be long till they're released of their death grip. Whether the European powers will continue subservient remains to be seen, and they certainly have a lot to lose if they do, but they have been making motions towards multilateral decision making:
Conflict with Iran - What You're Not Being Told
US And Israel Holding Global Economy Hostage in Showdown With Iran
Iran in The Crosshairs as The Empire Enters Its Mad Dog Days
Pentagon pledges to continue belligerent operations in South China Sea
Also check out SOTT radio's:
- Behind the Headlines: The Art of The Iran no-Deal: Trump, Israel, And The End of The Atlantic Alliance
- Behind the Headlines: Atlantic Trade War? How Trump Breaking Iran Deal Could Dismantle US Empire

A Palestinian Bedouin boy holds a Palestinian flag during a protest against Jewish settlements in Susya village south of the West Bank city of Hebron
According to local news sources, the Israeli High Court of Justice has approved a planned demolition of an entire West Bank Bedouin village, including the village's school made out of tires.
The Israeli authorities who sanctioned the demolition Thursday have not set a timeframe for the demolition at Khan al-Ahmar village of Jordan Valley, located nearly 15 kilometers to the east of Jerusalem so the order can be implemented at any moment, the Palestine News Network has reported.
"Active Shooter" is billed as a "SWAT simulator', and will be released on Steam, an online games marketplace. Players can assume the role of the shooter himself, or play as an elite SWAT team member tasked with neutralizing him. As the shooter, the game keeps a running count of how many cops and civilians players have killed.
In one scene shown in the game's trailer, the shooter throws a hand grenade into an auditorium, a scene reminiscent of the 1999 Columbine High School shooting, in which Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold killed 15 students.
To the parents of the 17 children murdered at Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, the game crosses a line.
Yesterday, 200 people rallied outside the Ruane Judicial Center in Salem, MA to protest Feeley's decision regarding convicted drug dealer Manuel Soto-Vittini. The rally, organized by local radio talk show host Jeff Kuhner, came a week after Massachusetts representative Jim Lyons filed a resolution to impeach Judge Feeley. For Rep. Lyons, Judge Feeley's ruling on Soto-Vittini was the last straw.
Manuel Soto-Vittini was arrested in June 2015 after police found 40 bags of heroin hidden in various departments in his car. According to Salem Police, Soto-Vittini was not a small time crook. He was a central figure in the Salem drug trade. This drug trade led to 21 deaths in Salem directly from opioids like heroin in 2017. That number pales in comparison to the 2,016 who died from opioid overdoses bought by addicts purchased from criminals such as Soto-Vittini through out last year.
The deceased businessman headed Dassault Groupe, a France-based group of companies established in 1929 that he inherited from his father, Marcel Dassault. The conglomerate unites aerospace, software and media businesses that his family controls.











Comment: See also : Alive and well: Yulia Skripal says 'returning to Russia is the long-term goal' in her first interview since attack