Society's Child
The ten-day event, dubbed the lychee and dog meat festival by residents, has become a lightning rod for dog lovers, who every year confront those who buy, sell and eat canines.
In recent years, animal rights activists have raided slaughterhouses and intercepted truckloads of dogs in efforts to limit the number of animals killed.
The most prominent, which has attracted over 15,000 comments on Instagram alone, features a group of Brazilian men surrounding a single Russian woman, as she joins with a seemingly joyous chant whose words are actually "Buceta rosa" ("pink p*ssy").
People on the internet have identified the men. One, policeman Eduardo Nunes, is now facing an internal investigation, while another, a former local sports official, Diego Valenca Jatoba, has lost his legal job. Authorities have also annulled their FAN IDs, meaning they will not be allowed into stadiums.
Comment: Meanwhile other fans hit the headlines for cleaning their areas following the match:
And some UK 'fans' are being charged for performing Nazi salutes:
Felice Varini glued dizzying rings made of thin aluminium strips across the historic stones of Carcassonne Castle - France's second-most visited tourist site after the Eiffel Tower.
The massive hilltop citadel in the Languedoc-Roussillon region now resembles a giant target at a shooting range - and not everyone is pleased.
Comment: Art is no longer created to inspire contemplation about something higher than oneself but is merely a celebration of the corrupted ego of the perpetrator:
- Eradicating beauty: The destruction of art
- Post-nihilism, a template for where we are heading
- Demented Slovenian 'artist' who breast-fed dog and fertilized one of her eggs with a dog cell wins award
- Sick Modern 'Art' Depicting Bestiality Installed Near Paris Louvre
- How Postmodernism left art empty and meaningless
- Feminist menstruation 'art' provokes tension in Stockholm metro
How pupils at La Gautrais rediscovered games, dance and the art of conversation
It's breaktime at a middle school in rural Brittany, and huddles of teenagers are chatting in the playground. Two 15-year-olds sit reading novels, while others kick footballs or play chase. One boy does some press-ups.
The hum of conversation and flurry of movement contrasts with most other French secondary schools, where playgrounds can be eerily silent as pupils stare at their mobile phones. In La Gautrais, no one looks at Instagram, Snapchat or YouTube. Here mobile phones have been banned. Few seem to miss them.
Comment: It's encouraging that there seem to be at least some schools that are aware of the problems media devices can cause for children and are taking steps to try to mitigate the issues. The kids at these schools likely don't know how lucky they are that they're avoiding the host of issues overuse of mobile technology would be doing to their growing brains. It's also encouraging to note that taking the phones away was not greeted with hostility from the students - maybe it's not too late for this generation.
See also:
- Mobile device ban in French schools to start next school year
- Mobile phone use poses cancer risk says French study
- Mobile phones to be banned in French primary schools to limit health risks

Prime Minister May bows to Prince William at last year's Pride of Britain awards
What more could you want for your birthday? Rather than kicking back with a beer and the World Cup, Prince William, who turns 36 today, is spending it on royal duties with none other than Prime Minister Theresa May.
Comment: And our personal favourite:
No offence to the Swastika.
Considering the rapidly deteriorating state of the UK these days, which Theresa May and the Royals are overseeing, this image encapsulates much of what's wrong with the country's ruling class. As they lose themselves in archaic fantasy, much of the UK slips below the poverty line, and they barely keep the country afloat by selling arms to genocidal regimes like Israel and Saudi Arabia:
- Holding a royal wedding amid Britain's third-world level 21% poverty rate is a provocation
- The British monarchy has turned the country into a historical theme park which conceals a very dark past
- Despite "shiny new buildings" children in Northern England face poverty, bad schools and a lack of opportunities
- UK government to raid 90 year old charity fund to pay off 0.6% of national debt as economy continues to burn
- Windsor council leader calls on police to clear the streets of homeless people before royal wedding

Israeli soldiers walk past tanks near the border with Syria in the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights
Thousands of Syrian residents of the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights are expected to boycott the first municipal elections imposed by Israel on the area, rejecting what they call the 'Israelization' of the territory.
Following a decision handed down by Israel's supreme court last year to hold, for the first time ever, municipal elections in October 2018 for the occupied Golan's 26,000 Syrian residents, local religious leaders and village elders are calling for a full rejection of the elections, calling it a "red line."
"With regards to the Golan Heights families, we are Syrian Arabs living under Israeli occupation and there is no possible way for us to accept these elections imposed on us," Abu Wadih, an elder from Majdal Shams, told Al Jazeera.
"Security troops found, today, 167 bodies of Islamic State members, including foreign and Arab leaders, who were killed by their leaders during the liberation battles of Mosul city," Cap. Amir Wathiq, of Nineveh police, told BasNews.
The bodies, according to Wathiq, "was found in al-Gazira region in Hatra, southwest of Mosul."

This photo shows an Israeli spying device found by the Lebanese Hezbollah fighters on the outskirts of Barouk village, southwestern Lebanon, on August 13, 2017
A security source, speaking on condition of anonymity, told English-language the Daily Star newspaper that the devices were discovered on the outskirts of Kfarchouba village, located 130 kilometers south of the capital Beirut, on Friday.
On January 10, Lebanese troops uncovered an Israeli spying device near Zawtar al-Gharbiyeh (Western Zawtar) town, which lies just north of the Litani River.

Palestinians carry a protester injured by Israeli forces at the Gaza border on June 22, 2018
Friday's demonstration saw 206 cases of injury and gas asphyxiation, the Palestinian Health Ministry's spokesman wrote on Twitter. Of those injuries, 44 were live bullet wounds.
The "World Wealth Report 2018," issued by the consulting firm Capgemini, revealed that the combined wealth of the world's millionaires rose for the sixth consecutive year in 2017 to reach $70.2 trillion. It is on target to surpass $100 trillion by 2025.
Capgemini defines a high net wealth individual (HNWI) as someone with assets above $1 million, excluding his or her primary residence, collectibles, consumables and consumer durables. This defines a wealthy elite that owns more than $1 million in stocks, bonds, real estate or other investments.











Comment: The poor doggies! We can see eating them if you're starving, but seems rather heartless to be feasting on man's best friend for nothing more than a questionable idea of tradition or helping one to deal with warm weather (also questionable).
It looks like South Korea is doing the right thing. From RT: