Society's ChildS


Airplane

Pilot, co-pilot killed after Air Canada passenger jet hits fire truck at New York's LaGuardia airport

plane collide fire truck la guardia
© ReutersEmergency crews working around an Air Canada Express jet that hit a fire truck at New York's La Guardia Airport on March 22.
An Air Canada Express jet collided with a fire truck while landing at New York's LaGuardia airport late on March 22, killing both pilots, injuring dozens and closing the facility, the authorities said.

The Air Canada Express CRJ-900 plane, operated by its partner Jazz Aviation, was carrying 72 passengers and four crew members and had departed from Montreal, said Jazz, which is owned by Chorus Aviation. Jazz and the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey confirmed that the pilot and first officer were killed.

The crash comes as US aviation faces chronic shortages of air traffic controllers and a separate shortfall of Transportation Security Administration (TSA) officers due to a partial government shutdown that has led to delays, long security lines and heightened safety concerns across airports nationwide.

Stock Up

Insider trading: Half a BILLION dollars were bet on oil minutes before Trump climbdown

stock trader display trump oil prices announcement
© Brendan McDermid/REUTERSA trader on the floor at the New York Stock Exchange on Monday. The American S&P 500 stock index rose and oil prices fell below $100 a barrel
Some 6,200 oil futures contracts changed hands before president announced energy strikes ceasefire, raising concerns about insider knowledge

Half a billion dollars worth of bets on the oil market were placed 15 minutes before Donald Trump said the US had held "productive" talks with Iran and announced a ceasefire on energy strikes.

Some 6,200 oil futures contracts - valued at a reported $580m (£433.9m) - changed hands between 6.49am and 6.50am EST (10.49am and 10.50am GMT) on Monday.

A quarter of an hour later, the US president announced "very good and productive conversations regarding a complete and total resolution of our hostilities in the Middle East" on Truth Social, which caused oil prices to tumble.

Stop

Half a Million Balsa Trees Illegally Logged in Amazon Rainforest Every Year to Feed Global Wind Turbine Demand

Balsa Trees Illegally Logged
Over half a million balsa hardwood trees are being illegally logged in the Amazon rainforest every year to feed the massive demand for wind turbines in many parts of the world. Balsa is a lightweight but strong wood that is commonly used in the core of giant turbine blades. It can make up around 7% of the blade and each set of three can use up to 40 trees.

This discovery is a genuine shock and follows an exclusive investigation by the Daily Sceptic. It adds to the huge ecological toll that the 'green' wind turbines are taking on the natural environment. These inefficient, unreliable, unsightly monsters require a large footprint on land and sea, kill millions of bats, decimate raptor populations, sweep the air of quadrillions of insects and alter local ecology on both land and sea. Nobody would install one in a free market, so they require vast financial subsidies to produce expensive electricity.

Arrow Down

Mamdani's tax fantasy is already failing somewhere else

urban decay blight massassachusetts
A house in Hyde Park, Boston, Massassachusetts
If the rich are not paying enough, the definition of rich quietly expands until it includes whoever is still around.

Last week I wrote that Zohran Mamdani is a fucking moron has proposed a new estate tax that is not really aimed at billionaires but at ordinary New Yorkers whose so called wealth is largely tied up in the homes they spent decades paying off.

That argument may have sounded abstract to some readers, like a warning about unintended consequences that might or might not materialize. But we do not have to speculate about how these kinds of burdensome taxation policies play out. Other than the Laffer Curve, which exists for a reason and has existed for 50 years now, we have another real world example, and it is happening in a state that shares many of New York's political instincts and fiscal habits.

Heart - Black

Swedish court denies appeal of parents seeking custody of their OWN CHILDREN in religious freedom case

Daniel and Bianca Samson children seized sweden religous freedom
© Alliance Defending Freedom InternationalDaniel and Bianca Samson's two daughters, Sara and Tiana, were seized by the Swedish government on allegations of "religious extremism" after the eldest daughter made a false report at school, that she later retracted, about an argument over not being allowed to wear makeup or have a cell phone.
Swedish authorities labeled Samson family religious extremists for frequent church attendance

In Sweden, a Christian couple is going through a nightmare that captures the growing bias and targeting of religious families in Europe. Daniel and Bianca Samson have been fighting to regain custody of their daughters since 2022 after the government cited their regular church attendance and faith as warranting their removal.

The parents, with the help of the Alliance Defending Freedom International, were delivered another blow after the European Court of Human Rights refusedto accept their appeal as "inadmissible."

This saga began when their eldest daughter had a fight with her parents over being denied a smartphone and makeup. She contacted police and made a false report of abuse.

However, Sara, quickly retracted the allegation and police found no evidence of abuse. Nevertheless, the state took both girls — aged 10 and 11 at the time — and refused to allow them to return home.

Comment: Fox reports on the Catch-22 the parents are caught in:
The girls have pleaded to be reunited with their parents and have suffered worsening mental and physical health, according to ADF International. Their parents reported that both girls attempted suicide while in state care.

The parents have completed state-mandated parenting courses and were later deemed fit to parent, according to the legal group, but they still have not been reunited with their daughters. They have also allegedly sought to move the girls into foster care in their home country of Romania, but have been denied.

The European Court of Human Rights "deemed the case inadmissible on the grounds of failure to exhaust legal remedies in Sweden," ADF International said, despite the Swedish Supreme Court refusing to hear the family's case in 2025.

"We love our children. We trusted Sweden to protect them — and when the truth emerged, we expected our daughters to come home," Daniel Samson said in a statement. "Yet they remain away from us, and their mental health continues to deteriorate."

ADF International told Premier Christian News that social services in Hässleholm are now moving to permanently sever the family's ties and place the girls for adoption.

"We deeply regret the Court's decision to reject this case, considering that this family has been torn apart for over three years despite a full investigation that cleared Mr. and Mrs. Samson of any abuse and the fact that the Social Services certified their capacity and fitness for parenting after they successfully completed an official training," said Guillermo A. Morales Sancho, legal counsel for ADF International. "Families should be free to live according to their convictions without fear of losing their children to the state."



Bacon n Eggs

Countdown begins: Former central bank advisor warns food-price shock could hit "within 6 to 9 months"

woman shopping, grocery store
© SolStock via Getty Images
Alexandra Prokopenko, a fellow at the Carnegie Russia Eurasia Center and a former advisor at the Bank of Russia, warned on X that the near-shutdown of the Strait of Hormuz has triggered an energy shock that risks morphing into a "slower, more consequential story": fertilizers.

"A near-shutdown of the Strait of Hormuz is triggering a supply shock that will show up in food prices 6-9 months from now," Prokopenko wrote on X, adding, "Putin's gains here may be more long-term than simply lining his pockets with petrodollars."

For weeks, we have cited institutional desks warning about the emerging fertilizer shock, which is expected to ripple across the world's food supply chain.

Comment: "Whoever has ears, let them hear." - Matthew 13:9


Star of David

UK Court hears that the BBC (Israel) "imposed restrictions" on its journalists during coverage of the Gaza war

reporters lawsuit BBC censored reporting israel
The five claimants with their lawyers on their way to the court over BBC's censorship of their reportage in Gaza.
UK court hears "evidence of BBC misleading the public" during the Gaza war

A British court has heard evidence that the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) "misled" its audience during the Israeli war on the Gaza Strip.

The evidence was presented as part of documents in a case being heard by a UK employment tribunal, in which five journalists of Arab origin accuse the BBC of discrimination and of unfairly dismissing four of them for refusing what they described as racist and discriminatory practices within BBC Arabic service.

The five complainants are Ahmed Rouaba, of Algerian origin; Dima Odeh, of Syrian origin; Nahed Najar, of Palestinian origin; and Mohamed El-Ashiry and Amer Sultan, both of Egyptian origin. The claimants are represented in the case by John Barnes from Albertson Solicitors. This is the first case of its kind brought by this number of journalists from the Arabic of the BBC Service of World Service against the long-standing news corporation.

Sheriff

ICE Agents deploy to airports as Dems keep DHS shutdown going

tsa agents not paid long lines airports
© Charly Triballeau/AFP/Getty ImagesSevere airport congestion at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport on March 23, 2026 due to a shortage of TSA agents.
Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents have deployed to several airports as Senate Democrats continue to withhold funding from the Department of Homeland Security (DHS).

ICE was deployed Saturday to assist Transportation Security Administration (TSA) officers amid a nationwide airport crisis, as the partial government shutdown left TSA officers without pay and suspended their "nonessential privileges and courtesies," according to DHS. President Donald Trump had threatened in a Saturday Truth Social post to deploy ICE agents to airports if the "Radical Left Democrats" failed to agree on a funding bill — hours after a fifth vote to end the shutdown failed 47-37.

Comment: CNN summarizes to date:
- ICE deploys to airports: Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents have been deployed to 14 airports today to help during the Department of Homeland Security shutdown. The Transportation Security Administration has faced growing callouts from officers who have gone without pay since DHS funding lapsed in February.

- Growing travel woes: Travelers have been dealing with worsening airport wait times, with George Bush Intercontinental Airport in Houston warning flyers it could take more than four hours to get through. LaGuardia Airport in New York was reopened this afternoon after a fatal collision between an Air Canada plane and a fire truck. Track wait times at major airports here.

- No end to shutdown in sight: There are few signs lawmakers will reach an agreement to fund DHS, which includes TSA, ahead of a scheduled holiday break. President Donald Trump last night rejected a potential off-ramp to end the shutdown, sources told CNN, as he's told Republicans to "only settle" if they can pass a federal elections overhaul bill.



Attention

Crude Harvest: Food security beyond oil and nano-tech quick fixes

Petroleum Industry
© Off-GuardianPetroleum industry impact, agriculture market, crude oil spill, currency symbol, wheat harvest, resource dependency.
The myth of the 'Green Revolution' is finally evaporating in the heat of the Persian Gulf. The near-total closure of the Strait of Hormuz in March 2026 has impacted the Indian agrarian landscape.

As 16 million barrels of oil and massive LNG shipments stall daily, India's domestic urea production has plummeted. It is now clearer than ever that industrial agriculture is a sub-branch of the petroleum industry.

Having spent decades forcing farmers into dependency on West Asian gas for synthetic nitrogen, the state now watches as global urea prices spike by 20% in a week. This validates what Norman J Church warned in 2005: that vast amounts of oil and gas are the hidden raw materials of every stage of food production — from planting and irrigation to the very construction of the trucks and roads that facilitate the industry.

The industrial food supply is basically a system of fossil-fuel conversion.

With the just-in-time supply chain for granular urea broken by war, the Indian government has accelerated the push for Nano Urea. Developed by IFFCO (Indian Farmers Fertiliser Cooperative) as a central pillar of Aatmanirbhar Bharat (Self-Reliant India), this liquid fertiliser, sold in 500 ml bottles containing nitrogen at the nanoscale (20-50 nanometres), is marketed as a miracle of self-reliance.

The claim that a single 500 ml bottle replaces a 45 kg bag of urea is the ultimate 'technological fix'. But this 'fix' is an optical illusion. A bag of granular urea builds a nutritional reservoir in the soil, but the 500ml Nano Urea is a foliar spray that merely stimulates the plant's leaves (like a caffeine shot). This forces crops to mine the soil's remaining internal reserves to stay green while the earth beneath them is hollowed out.

Soil-based fertility (like compost or legumes) is a permanent asset. A foliar spray is a just-in-time commodity that must be purchased every season. Nano Urea represents a transition from a commodity-based dependency to a proprietary one. Unlike soil and compost, Nano Urea is a controlled, patented substance. It is the Trojan horse of the current crisis, used to maintain chemical dependency while rebranding it as high-tech efficiency.

The February launch of Bharat-VISTAAR — the AI-powered 'voice of authority' personified as the chatbot 'Bharati' — aims to provide real-time, multilingual advisory to 140 million farmers. By integrating with the AgriStack ID system, the state is creating a digital panopticon for farmers.

Ambulance

Two pilots dead, 41 people hospitalized after Air Canada plane hits fire truck when landing at LaGuardia, causing airport closure

laguardia crash
© REUTERS
An Air Canada passenger plane smashed into a rescue truck at New York's LaGuardia Airport late Sunday — killing two pilots and hospitalizing 41 others in the horrific crash that obliterated the front of the jet and forced the major travel hub to close for most of Monday.

The Bombardier CRJ-900 jet landing from Montreal with 72 passengers and four crew members was landing shortly before midnight when it smashed into the truck responding to an unrelated emergency.

Audio caught an air traffic controller frantically trying to avoid the deadly smash, repeatedly crying out, "Stop, stop, stop, stop!"

He was later heard admitting, "I messed up."