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Ron Paul reveals hit list of 'fake news' journalists

Mainstream news personalities
© Ron Paul / Twitter
Former congressman Ron Paul revealed a list of "fake news" journalists he claims are responsible for "bogus wars" and lies about Hillary Clinton's chances of winning the election. Journalists from CNN, the New York Times, and the Guardian are included.

"This list contains the culprits who told us that Iraq had weapons of mass destruction and lied us into multiple bogus wars," according to a report on his website, Ron Paul Liberty Report. Paul claims the list is sourced and "holds a lot more water" than a list previously released by Melissa Zimdars, who is described on Paul's website as "a leftist feminist professor."


"These are the news sources that told us 'if you like your doctor, you can keep your doctor,'" he said. "They told us that Hillary Clinton had a 98% of winning the election. They tell us in a never-ending loop that 'The economy is in great shape!'"

Pistol

15 y.o. grandson of Chicago Congressman killed in home invasion following fight over gym shoes

Congressman Danny K. Davis
© Congressman Danny K. Davis / Facebook
In a statement Davis asked how a teenager was in posession of a gun.
The 15-year-old grandson of Congressman Danny Davis was shot dead in his Chicago home, reportedly in a dispute over gym shoes. Two teenagers have been charged with first-degree murder following the fatal incident.

Jovan Wilson, who was a sophomore at Perspectives Charter School, was shot dead in his Englewood home on Friday after a 17-year-old girl and a 16-year-old boy forced their way in, according to NBC5. Wilson was shot in the head by the teenage boy, reportedly after a fight ensued over gym shoes.

Wilson's siblings, aged 16, 14, and 8, as well as his uncle, were in the home when the shooting occurred. His mother is understood to have been out at the time.

His grandfather, Danny Davis, who is now serving his 11th term as the US Representative for Illinois' 7th congressional district, said in a statement, "I grieve for my family, I grieve for the young man that pulled the trigger, I grieve for his family, his parents, his friends, some of whom will never see him again."

Info

Meet leftist assistant professor Melissa Zimdars who wrote 'hit list' of 'fake' news sites

Merrimack College
© Twitter
Merrimack College assistant professor Melissa Zimdars, author of the “fake news” list circulated online.
The mainstream media are going wild circulating a viral list of so-called "fake news" websites - and the list includes established news sites like WND, Breitbart, Red State, the Daily Wire and Project Veritas - but WND has found a leftist, Trump-bashing assistant professor in Massachusetts who specialized in "fat studies" is behind the effort to target and discredit legitimate news organizations.

Meet Merrimack College Assistant Professor Melissa Zimdars, a 30-something self-identified feminist and activist who has expressed great dislike for President-elect Donald Trump and Vice President-elect Mike Pence.

Melissa "Mish" Zimdars is an assistant professor of communication at Merrimack College in Massachusetts

She's only actually held her teaching position at the private college in North Andover, Mass., for 15 months.

Megaphone

There is no specific threat, but FBI issues Thanksgiving terror warning

FBI terror threat
As the holiday bustle picks up, so does law enforcement awareness.

Sources tell CBS News the FBI is alerting police across the country about a potential terrorist attack around Thanksgiving.

It specifically warns of homegrown terrorists. Potential targets? Shopping malls, special events, crowded venues - locations in Washington, D.C. and Virginia described as target-rich zones. ISIS's magazine called New York City's Macy's Parade an excellent target.

And potential tactics could include guns, IEDs, or drones equipped with IEDs.

Comment: Propaganda alert! US officials hype non-specific holiday terror attack warning


Cut

'Hi Mum, I'm broke': Thousands protest education cuts in London

Education protest
© Ruptly
Thousands of students, teachers and university staff took to the streets of the British capital in what they called a national protest against the education bill, which was earlier introduced by Teresa May's government.

The national demonstration, dubbed "United for Education," was organized by the National Union of Students (NUS) and the University and College Union (UCU), an association of lecturers and other staff, who want "free, accessible and quality education" for everyone.

More than 2,500 students and university staff said they are willing to join the rally on the event's Facebook page and another 3,000 signaled that they might be interested in joining the protest.

However, the real number of protesters was significantly higher as the authorities describe it as "thousands" and Malia Bouattia, the president of NUS, put it at 15,000.

People

CDC: Nation's percentage of LGBT is less than supposed

Kissing Gays
© Unknown
The Washington Post reports that a highly definitive study from 2013 has pegged the size of the gay population in the United States at far less than has sometimes been estimated.

The National Health Interview Survey by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which is the federal government's most relied upon estimate of the nation's health and behaviors, found that fewer than 3% of respondents self-identified as gay, lesbian, or bisexual. Only 1.6% of respondents self-identified as gay or lesbian, and even less, 0.7%, self-identified as bisexual.

The estimate of the percentage of bisexuals was lower than the 2008 General Social Survey, which estimated that number at 1.1 percent, while other surveys have intimated that the percentage of bisexuals is the same as gays.

Pistol

4 police killed after helicopter 'shot down' in Rio

helicopter ‘shot down’ in Rio
© Tony Barros / YouTube
Four police officers have died as their helicopter was "downed" in Brazil's Rio de Janeiro amid an ongoing operation, local media report. Videos of the crashed aircraft emerged, with reports saying there was shooting in the area prior to the crash.

Police have confirmed the death of four policemen in the crash, Brazilian news portal G1reported, citing Major Ivan Blaz, media coordinator of the Brazilian Military Police.

BandNews FM reported, an investigation into the causes of the crash will be carried by Aeronautical Accidents Investigation and Prevention Center, a unit of Brazilian Air Force, on Sunday.

Eyewitnesses on Twitter reported continuous shooting and a police presence in the Cidade de Deus (City of God) neighborhood in western Rio de Janeiro, which is a well-known Brazilian slum area often referred to as CDD.

Eye 1

US police spend millions on social media monitoring

US police social media
© guyen Huy Kham / Reuters
A new study has found law enforcement agencies spent $4.75 million on social media monitoring tools between 2013 and 2016 to surveil the public and investigate possible crimes, although this sum is "massively understated," according to researchers.

The Brennan Center for Justice published an analysisof 151 US cities, counties and law enforcement departments that have spent more than $10,000 on software to monitor social media, using public records to compile the list.

The study found the City of Los Angeles, the County of Sacramento, Florida Department of Law Enforcement, Macomb County in Michigan and Texas Department of Public Safety were the biggest users of surveillance, spending about $70,000 each over the past three years.

Magnify

UK journalists slam Russia for spying laws - but keep mum as same laws get passed in UK

big brother spying
© Ben Birchall / Reuters
The greatest invasion of privacy known to the British people is about to come into force, allowing spy agencies to access your cellphone and monitor your internet traffic. But why are British journalists and MPs staying remarkably hush-hush about it?

Has mainstream media been told by London and Washington to steer clear of reporting on new spying legislation in the UK, which even Edward Snowden calls "scary"? It seems that journalists in the UK are struggling somehow to pick up the big story some tech sites have broken, in that the British will soon be spied on via their own telephones - and worse, that all their internet history is to be stored by intelligence services and possibly even be used to blackmail them into cooperating with police and security services.

Incredibly, recently the UK House of Lords provisionally gave the green light to the most draconian spying laws to date, which forces internet providers and hardware firms to make it easier for GCHQ to hack into people's phones and get into their computers to monitor their online habits.

The draft laws were originally introduced into the House of Commons under then-Home Secretary Theresa May in 2015. They are popularly known as the "Snoopers' Charter."

Megaphone

The right to be politically incorrect

U of T Protestor
© Tyler Anderson/National Post
Student protests against Jordan Peterson at the University of Toronto.
A month ago, I posted three videos to my YouTube channel, as a means of speaking out against our culture's politically correct insanity. I specifically objected to Bill C-16, a bill that has now passed second reading in the House of Commons, which adds "gender identity" and "gender expression" to the list of attributes protected by the Canadian Human Rights Act and the Criminal Code, and to similar legislation already in place in Ontario and other provinces.

To say that the videos attracted a lot of attention is to say almost nothing. They produced two demonstrations at the University of Toronto, where I teach psychology, including a free-speech rally where the misbehaviour of social justice warrior counter-demonstrators was caught on cellphone videos that have now been watched by millions of people. They have been the subject of articles written by Canada's most famous journalists. They have been covered extensively by CBC, CTV and TVO, as well as internationally. My story has been making headlines for more than a month, and the furor is not dying down. After writing me two cautionary letters, and then requesting my silence, the University of Toronto has agreed to host a public debate about the issues I raised.

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