Society's Child
Japan's Nikkei 225 and Topix were down six percent in morning trading, while the relatively safe-haven Japanese yen soared to a three-year-high against the US dollar.
South Korea's Kopsi dropped nearly three percent, while Hong Kong's Hang Seng was down 3.6. In mainland China, both the Shanghai and Shenzhen Composite indices fell more than 1.5 percent.
Animal shelter dogs who spend most of their lonely days in indoor cages are finally getting a breath of fresh air.
A California animal shelter and high school cross-country team are joining forces - for the fourth straight year - to take shelter dogs on a daily run.
Often coming from homes where they were neglected, these sheltered dogs have spent most of their lives without adequate exercise, attention or time outdoors.
"You've got a bunch of dogs that are in cages, and want to be outside running, and I've got a group of high school students that love to run," St. Joseph Cross-Country Coach Luis Escobar told CBS News.

Carlos Maza (L) and Jonathan Lavin (R) who was suspended from Twitter for sharing public information about Carlos Maza, who advocates for “eating the rich.”
Twitter has suspended Jonathan Levine, a reporter for the New York Post, following his publication of an article on former Vox video editor and leftist firebrand Carlos Maza, whose family fortune he laid bare.
In the piece, titled "YouTube socialist Carlos Maza slams the wealthy but lived in luxury," Levine uncovered how the social media activist lives: in the lap of luxury while simultaneously condemning others for the sin of being wealthy.
Maza attained infamy last year when he led a campaign to deplatform conservative pundit Steven Crowder from YouTube and other social media networks, and continues to call for the suspensions of his political adversaries on social media.
Comment: Carl Benjamin (aka Sargon of Akkad) has a rather acid take on poor Carlos' situation as a rich marxist wanna-be.

This is an electron microscope image of a lab culture shows novel coronavirus SARS-CoV-2 (orange), emerging from the surface of cells (gray).
Results, which should be available in one to two days, will be shared with local health officials who will notify those who test positive. Via online forms, infected people can answer questions about their movements and contacts, making it easier for health officials to locate others who may need to be tested or quarantined, as well as to track the virus' spread and identify possible hot spots.
The goal is to eventually be able to process thousands of tests a day, said Scott Dowell, leader of coronavirus response at the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. The project is ramping up as quickly as possible, but it's not clear exactly when it will launch, he added. Among other things, software needs to be upgraded to handle the expected crush of requests, and a detailed questionnaire finalized for people who request tests.
"Although there's a lot to be worked out, this has enormous potential to turn the tide of the epidemic," Dowell said.
While Public Health - Seattle & King County has confirmed 71 cases and 15 deaths as of Saturday, modeling by Trevor Bedford, a computational biologist at Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, estimated on Wednesday that the actual number of cases in the Seattle area was about 600. Unchecked, that could theoretically increase to 12,000 cases - and possibly as many as 30,000 - by the end of March, according to projections from Mike Famulare at the Institute for Disease Modeling in Bellevue. But steps to slow transmission can significantly reduce the number of new infections, underscoring the importance of acting quickly to protect people from the virus.
Comment: Is Bill Gates and his cohorts laying the groundwork for a much larger 'plan' for control ala globalist goals and pathocratic thinking?
A definite maybe!

Zachary McCoy used an exercise-tracking app, RunKeeper, to record his rides.
It was from Google's legal investigations support team, writing to let him know that local police had demanded information related to his Google account. The company said it would release the data unless he went to court and tried to block it. He had just seven days.
"I was hit with a really deep fear," McCoy, 30, recalled, even though he couldn't think of anything he'd done wrong. He had an Android phone, which was linked to his Google account, and, like millions of other Americans, he used an assortment of Google products, including Gmail and YouTube. Now police seemingly wanted access to all of it.
"I didn't know what it was about, but I knew the police wanted to get something from me," McCoy said in a recent interview. "I was afraid I was going to get charged with something, I don't know what."
There was one clue.
Comment: 'More data, more profit': Google tracks location, your every move - even when you ask it not to
To prevent Google from saving location data from all of those tools, the company said users can turn off a setting called 'Web and App Activity' - but since this setting is turned on by default, many people don't know about it and assume that when they turn 'Location History' off, it will be off across all of their apps.See also:
Users can delete stored location markers by hand, but each one has to be selected and deleted individually - unless you want to delete all of your stored activity - making it a time-consuming process.
Google does offer a less misleading description of how its location storing works but only in a popup window if you select to 'pause' 'Location History' on your Google account web page, where it states that some location data may still be saved as part of your activity on other Google apps.
- Google apps track Android users with 'clandestine surveillance software
- Google accused of breaching EU laws, tricking users into consenting to be tracked
- Big Brother: Google's Location History is still recording your every move

Across the globe, it’s been discovered that many organized antifa groups have trouble with pedophilia in their ranks.
Antifascist Students Ireland revealed themselves to be a project of Irish conservative student news outlet The Burkean on their Twitter page,
The Burkean's actions directed significant attention towards Ireland's official Antifa organization, Antifascist Ireland, a group that has come under fire in the past for the history of its alleged founding member and leading figurehead, Pat Corcoran — a convicted pedophile.
Corcoran is a former civil servant who worked with the Irish Department of Arts, Heritage, and Gaeltacht. In 2009, he was found to be in possession of over 7,000 images and 21 videos featuring child sexual abuse and torture. He was handed the lenient sentence of 3.5 years suspended — meaning he never served a day in prison. The decision caused outrage amongst Irish commentary writers, one of whom used Corcoran's case as an example of Ireland being a "pedophile's paradise."
Comment: It's no coincidence that these three Antifa "leaders" are also pedophiles. Many social movements (not the least of which is Antifa) attract pathological individuals who seek power over, and at the expense of, others.
Few books have as much insight into this dynamic as Andrew Lobaczewski's Political Ponerology: A Science on the Nature of Evil Adjusted for Political Purposes.

Airplane parts lie on the ground at the scene of an Ethiopian Airlines flight crash near Bishoftu, or Debre Zeit, south of Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, March 11, 2019.
The accident, following the 2018 crash of the same model plane in Indonesia killing 189 people, led to the grounding of Boeing's 737 MAX worldwide, wiped billions off the company's value and sparked hundreds of lawsuits from bereaved families.
The interim report bolstered the findings of Ethiopia's initial assessment, which linked the crash to a Boeing automated system. The interim report's recommendations did not include any proposed measures for Ethiopian authorities or the airline.
It said two sensors recording the plane's angle - known as the "angle of attack'' or AOA - differed in readings by 59 degrees. "Shortly after lift-off, the left and right recorded AOA values deviated. The left AOA values were erroneous and reached 74.5o,'' the report said.
That was followed by the activation of an anti-stall system known as MCAS which repeatedly forced the plane's nose downward because the sensor was saying it was climbing too steeply, it said.
Comment:
- Congress slams 'fundamentally flawed' Boeing 737 MAX & 'grossly insufficient' FAA in scathing report
- Boeing troubles compound over 'misleading' messages to FAA about 737 MAX problems
- Boeing outsourced its 737 MAX software to $9-per-hour engineers to cut costs
- "It will be a crash for sure," said the man who blew the whistle on Boeing's 737Max
The Gainesville Police Department suspected an innocent man was involved in a burglary so naturally they requested that Google give them all of his location data.
Google's legal investigations support team wrote to Zachary McCoy telling him that local police were demanding information related to his Google account. Google replied and said it would release the data unless McCoy went to court and tried to block the request, NBC reported.
The man then searched his case number on the Gainesville Police Department website where he found a one-page report on the burglary of an elderly woman's home ten months earlier on March 29, 2009. Unfortunately for McCoy, the crime occurred less than a mile from the home that he shared with his two roommates.
Caleb Kenyon, McCoy's lawyer, said he was subject of a "geofence warrant." A geofence warrant is essentially a virtual dragnet over crime scenes where police request to sweep up Google location data drawn from users' GPS, Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, and cellular connections from everyone who is near a crime scene.

Rescue teams, security forces examine damaged vehicles at site of the assassination attempt
Hamdok wrote on Twitter he was "safe and in good shape" following Monday's explosion.
"What happened will not stop the path of change, it will be nothing but an additional push in the strong waves of the revolution," added the veteran economist, who became prime minister in August, months after a pro-democracy movement forced the army to remove longtime President Bashar al-Bashir.
Hamdok also shared a photo of himself smiling and seated at his desk, while a TV behind him showed news coverage reporting he had survived.
The Department of Justice announced the charges against Charles K. Edwards and 54-year-old Virginia resident Murali Yamazula Venkata on Friday. The defendants are each accused of wire fraud, conspiracy to commit theft of government property, conspiracy to defraud the United States, aggravated identity theft, and theft of government property. Venkata is additionally accused of destroying records.









Comment: See also: