Society's Child
The Neo-liberal state is crumbling and Macron is going be the sacrificial lamb. At this stage he will be lucky to last two months. His clumsy handling of the Notre Dame blaze has outraged and enraged more sections of the French population. Indeed throughout the five months of protest, and despite the wall to wall media propaganda, opinion polls consistently show continued and unwavering sympathy and support of the Gilets Jaunes.
In the sharp light of spring it is clear that Macron's winter strategy: the Great National Debate, has achieved nothing for the government and more tellingly perhaps, has further revealed Macron's own incapacity to either change himself or shift course. As one anonymous French state official reportedly said: 'Mitterrand gave them an extra week's holiday, but Macron can't manage anything'. He simply seems unable in any form to communicate with either the Gilets or the people of France. His constant speeches, with their casual insults and lack of empathy, remain one of the best recruitment tools the Gilets possess.
Since then, while the word has retained much of its original spirit in China and other Asian nations, in other parts of the world but particularly in Europe, the United States and the so-called "white (British) Commonwealth", the word has taken on many negative connotations. For China, globalism is contrasted with economic insularity, competing nationalist and extremist geopolitical narratives and geo-economic caution. By contrast, in the west, globalism has become something of a catch all which can mean neo-liberal economics, so-called Cultural Marxist sociological programmes, elitism, so-called reverse racism and at more extreme levels it has become a code word for either a "vast Jewish conspiracy", "vast global Illuminati" conspiracy or the "New World Order" as first articulated by US President George H.W. Bush in the early 1990s.
While everyone has the right to define categorically broad terms in the manner of their choosing, in reality insofar as geopolitical policy is concerned, today's world has but two competing forms of globalism: A Chinese win-win model versus the western neo-liberal, zero-sum model.

Police stand guard as Haitians gather in front of the US Embassy in Port-au-Prince in January 18, 2018 Police stand guard as Haitians gather in front of the US Embassy in Port-au-Prince January 18, 2018
In a travel alert, the US State Department said that gunfire had come from the "rear entrance to the embassy" in Port-au-Prince. It said the staff had taken shelter inside the embassy.
"If you are traveling to the embassy, find a safe area to shelter," it wrote on Twitter.
State Department officials did not immediately have further details on the incident, including whether it was ongoing.
Haiti, one of the world's poorest countries, witnessed widespread riots in February when thousands of people took to the streets demanding better living conditions. Haiti's President Jovenel Moise earlier this month appointed a new prime minister to tackle mounting problems, including insecurity in the capital.
Comment: It would be much better for Haiti if the US would just pack up and leave. However, the Empire would hardly give up such a strategic bit of real estate, positioned right next to Cuba and Venezuela, and filled with resource goodies.
- Business as Government: Capitalizing on Disaster in Post-Earthquake Haiti
- Former Haitian president of Senate exposes the Clinton Foundation: 'Clinton tried to bribe me!'
- Wikileaks blew the Clintons' 'Haiti Scam' wide open
- The US has no regrets for turning Haiti into a 'shithole'
- US Needs Sh*thole Countries, Not the Other Way Around
For example, let's talk about what is going on in Los Angeles. No city on the west coast has a bigger problem with homelessness than L.A. does, and many in the homeless population enjoy camping out on the beautiful beaches in the L.A. area at night.
But of course many of the elite that paid millions of dollars for beachfront property are not too thrilled about this. Sex Pistols frontman Johnny Rotten was a key symbol of anti-establishment rebellion in the 1970s, but now he is freaking out because homeless people are making life very difficult for him and his wife in Venice Beach, and what he recently told Newsweek's Paula Froelich is making headlines all over the nation...
He told her the homeless situation in his swanky LA neighborhood is so bad that thieves are tearing the bars from the windows of his multimillion-dollar home, lobbing bricks, setting up unsightly tent cities and littering the beach with syringes.
"A couple of weeks ago I had a problem," the former punk prince opined. "They came over the gate and put their tent inside, right in front of the front door. It's like . . . the audacity. And if you complain, what are you? Oh, one of the establishment elite? No, I'm a bloke that's worked hard for his money and I expect to be able to use my own front door."
As he argued that humans hurt the environment, he concluded that it would be better for Earth for more people to "not have kids, die and stay dead."
A primary school in the UK has been embroiled in controversy over its plan to slaughter two young pigs in an effort to educate children about where meat comes from.
Reportedly, pupils at the Farsley Farfield Primary school near the English city of Leeds have been helping to feed and raise the small group of pigs in a makeshift farmyard on the school's premises in preparation for the slaughter.
The school's headteacher, Peter Harris, has written in defence of the project in a blog on Farfield's website, saying that: "through keeping the pigs, the children will learn more about the provenance of their food and issues around animal welfare. We will be investing in information boards for outside the enclosure. The pigs will not be pets and will only be with us for nine months. The pigs will have a life twice as long as modern commercially-reared breeds and will have a truly free-range life."
Comment: Kudos to this headteacher for what, these days, in the hystericized West, is considered an act of bravery:
- Teaching Kids to Ruin Their Health: America's First All-Vegan School Cafeteria
- The Meat-Guilt Industry: The Quest For The Perfect Veggie Burger Can't Remove The Taste of Lies
- Plant-Based Profits: The Corporate Interests Behind the Push Towards Veganism
- The Long, Hard Road Back to Sanity: Escaping the Vegan Cult and the "Why I'm No Longer Vegan" Phenomenon
- Burying The Vegetarian Hypothesis
- The Truth Perspective: The Strange Contagion: How Viral Thoughts and Emotions Secretly Control Us
- The Truth Perspective: Herd Behavior: What Gustav Le Bon's Classic Book Can Teach Us About 'The Crowd'

It was the first attack on a church in Burkina Faso since the jihadist violence began
Sunday's raid took place in the small northern town of Silgadji near Djibo, the capital of Soum province.
"Unidentified armed individuals have attacked the Protestant church in Silgadji, killing four members of the congregation and the main pastor," a security source told AFP.
"At least two other people are missing," the source added.
It was the first attack on a church since jihadist violence erupted in Burkina Faso in 2015.

A Yellow Vest with a fake eye injury worn to protest police brutality at demonstrations, February 2, 2019
Called "the mutilated for the edification of others," the collective aims to accurately calculate the number of people who have been injured nationally by police during Yellow Vest protests. It also called for an end to the use of the non-lethal weapons deployed by French police - namely tear gas canisters and Flash Balls - and a large national demonstration is scheduled in Paris on May 26.
Comment: Why are Western leaders not taking Macron to task for his heavy-handedness? Is it because they fear that if the government doesn't put down the rebellion it will spread to their own countries?
- Prominent Yellow Vest activist shot in the head by French police - Becomes 18th protester to lose an eye
- 'It was his right to protest, now he has no livelihood' - Father of Yellow Vest whose hand was blown off speaks out
- RT France reporter shot in the face during police crackdown on Yellow Vest protesters in Paris
- 11 Deaths, Limbs Blown Off, And Lengthy Prison Sentences - Human Toll of The Yellow Vest Insurrection Mounts
- Serious injuries inflicted on Yellow Vest protestors are unprecedented, say French ER doctors
- Eye injuries epidemic at Yellow Vest protests: French ophthalmologists demand Macron ban rubber bullets
- Yellow Vest protesters who have lost eyes, limbs demand justice from Macron
- 23 Weeks And Counting: Major Turnout For Yellow Vest Protest in Paris - Hundreds Arrested & Injured by Police
- Yellow Vests reject Macron's 'rubbish' tax cuts, protest across France for 24th straight week
"Ecuador doesn't have its own currency," John Shipton explained.
"It uses the United States dollar... You can't get an IMF loan unless the United States approves it - upon agreement to remove Julian from the Embassy."
Speaking with 60 Minutes reporter Tara Brown, Shipton was eager to defend his son following his very public arrest and eviction from the Ecuadorian embassy in London just two weeks ago.
Comment: The 60 Minutes segment in full. Try not to be nauseated by smirking interviewer Tara Brown when faced with a father's pain, or the outrageous claim from the warmonger Senator Jim Molan that exposing war crimes is endangering "sources and methods".
Earlier in the day, the Justice Ministry and All Ceylon Jamiyyathul Ulama, religious body representing country's Muslim clerics, discussed draft legislation to ban the burqa in Sri Lanka.
The move comes amid an acute emergency situation in the country, following a series of deadly blasts on Easter Sunday that left 359 people killed and 520 injured nationwide.












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