Society's Child
"I will not be cowed or bullied by these people, but you can't escape the fact that those close to me are worried," Sadiq Khan told The Times.
He explained further: "It can't be right that one of the consequences of me being the mayor of London and a Muslim in public life is that I have police protection."
The latest person to fall victim to this trend is Sergey Dorenko, who suddenly died on Thursday while out on a motorcycle ride.
"Anti-Putin journalist dies in mysterious motorbike accident days after criticizing Russian authorities over fatal plane crash," the Daily Mail chose to headline its report on Dorenko's death.
The usual Russiagaters were quick to chip in with anger and disbelief. Bill Browder, the internationally famous anti-Putin crusader, called Dorenko "one of Russia's most outspoken independent journalists and critics of the Putin regime."
Comment: If the usual suspects really cared for the safety of journalists it'd be the assassinations and injustices in Ukraine that they'd be drawing attention to:
- Western media silent on illegal detention of Russian journalist Kirill Vyshinsky, imprisoned without fair trial in Ukraine
- Veteran Austrian journalist reporting on corruption in Ukraine fears for his life
- Another Russian journalist has been murdered in Ukraine
What's more, the survey found that students going into college as freshmen felt more prepared for a career than graduating seniors leaving with a degree.
The LendEDU-College Pulse survey found that 36 percent of seniors don't feel prepared for their career, compared to 20 percent of freshmen, noting as students "move through college and get closer to graduating, they lose confidence in their career outlook."
The survey, conducted between December and mid-March, asked 7,749 college students: "Do you think that college is sufficiently preparing you for your future career?"
Interior Ministry spokesman Nasrat Raimi said Mangal was shot dead in Kabul's 8th district early on May 11 as she was waiting for a car.
Witnesses to the shooting near Kabul's Karte Naw market told RFE/RL that two men appeared on a motorcycle and fired four shots into the air to disperse passersby. They then fired two shots that hit Mangal in the chest.
Mangal's relatives confirmed that she had been waiting for a ride to take her to her job as a cultural adviser to the Wolesi Jirga, the lower chamber of Afghanistan's parliament.
The gunmen then fled the scene.
The Real Time host hit out at what he saw as a litany of tiresome, futile complaints from Democrats, ranging from the ongoing bickering about Donald Trump's unreleased tax returns to the Mueller report's disappointing-to-Dems findings.
"I feel like we're in a permanent state of constitutional crisis," Maher said, before telling Democrats: "Either do something or stop talking about it because I think you are just making yourselves look weak. You are making yourself look like people who talk and talk and don't do anything."
A week after the lowest turnout since the movement began as a protest against a planned fuel tax hike in November, the Yellow Vests, who are now protesting President Emmanuel Macron's broader reform agenda and supposed indifference towards the fate of the ordinary French people, once again took to the streets of the French cities.
Nantes and Lyon saw some major demonstrations on Saturday, as thousands of people joined the rallies organized by the protest movement in both cities.
In Lyon, 2,500 people hit the streets while in Nantes the police put the turnout at 2,200, according to the French media.
Aseel, who works with the World Health Organization, was driving their car, while Ameer, a musician, sat in the passenger seat. It was routine for the couple when driving outside Ramallah: Baidoun, a Jerusalem ID holder, had to drive her "yellow-plated" Israeli vehicle, as her husband, a West Bank ID holder, is not legally allowed to do so.
Due to Malhees and Wisam's West Bank IDs, they are also not allowed to travel through Jerusalem to Bethlehem - a trip that takes about half the traveling time as driving through the winding, single-lane highways of the West Bank.
It was inconvenient, yes, but like thousands of others they had done it countless times before.
So when the group approached the Israeli military "container" checkpoint separating the northern and southern West Bank, they followed the routine, and slowly approached the through lane, guarded by several soldiers.
"They waved at me to stop my car, probably because it was yellow license plates," Baidoun told Mondoweiss. She said it was a regular occurrence when she drove in her car; it was nothing out of the ordinary. "They signaled for me to go to a different lane, away from the Palestinian cars. So we took the other lane and stopped," Baidoun said.
The army liberated the villages of al-Jamaziya, Bab al-Taqa and Mustariha in the northwestern part of Hama Province, it said.
Earlier on Saturday, Syrian army crossed the southern administrative border of Idlib and established control over the villages of Arima and Midan Ghazal, following clashes with Nusra terrorists.
Over the past week, terrorists have increased the number of attacks on settlements in the north of the province of Hama, in Aleppo and in mountainous Latakia.
Militant groups are making unsuccessful attempts to attack the positions of the Syrian army. The Syrian government forces and the air force, in turn, have intensified strikes against terrorists in Idlib, attacking warehouses, firing positions and advanced observation posts of the Nusra Front.
Facebook kicked Watson off its platform on May 2 - along with conservative commentator Laura Loomer, Infowars founder Alex Jones, and black nationalist leader Louis Farrakhan. The group was accused of spreading "hateful" content, although no warnings or concrete reasons were provided for their seemingly arbitrary bans.
Watson, who runs a YouTube channel that boasts more than 1.5 million subscribers, has become a well-known but polarizing commentator on culture and politics. A long-time Infowars contributor, Watson now has his own outlet, Summit News.
Although he's been labeled as an "alt-right" conspiracy theorist, Watson insists that he's been smeared - and de-platformed - simply because he holds contrarian views.
The heart-wrenching footage captured a brown bear trying to hold its balance on a rocky cliff while being hit by stones. Eventually, the animal falls down into a mountain stream as cheering voices are heard in the background.
The incident occurred in the Kargil district of the northern Jammu and Kashmir state. The bear climbed up the cliff striving to escape from the local residents who chased him all the way from the nearby village, local media report. As the bear was running away he got trapped in barbed wire but managed to free himself, a separate video suggests.
The gruesome footage quickly went viral and sparked outrage among social media users. "This is truly barbaric," one person wrote while another one dubbed the scene as "cruelty at its best."
Comment: Here is another video after the bear reached the bottom of the cliff:















Comment: London Mayor Sadiq Khan tweets against 'hate speech' and 'Islamophobia'