Society's Child
There is no shortage of controversy surrounding face masks.
Some people view them as a slight against their freedom and defty government guidance, while others embrace it as a sensible precaution in the battle against Covid-19. Both sides have their merits and, if I'm honest, I've fluctuated between the two.
I certainly don't wanna be reckless with other peoples' well-being, especially the elderly, but I also don't trust Hillary Clinton's long-time pal Dr Anthony Fauci.
Fauci, the Director of the National Institute for Allergy & Infectious Diseases is currently accused of misleading the American public. And, quite frankly, would anyone be surprised if he had?
Greg and Kjersten Offenecker, who own The Nordic Pineapple in St. Johns, said they removed both the Norwegian flag and an American flag posted outside their Civil War-era mansion last week following accusations of promoting racism in the largely conservative Michigan town.
The couple made the move after receiving "at least a dozen hateful emails" and twice as many comments about it, Kjersten Offenbecker told the Lansing State Journal.
"I don't see it because I grew up with the Norwegian flag," she told the newspaper. "To me they are two distinct flags."
The couple, who bought the nearly 9,000-square-foot mansion built in 1861 two years ago, started flying the Norwegian flag shortly after taking over the property. Kjersten Offenbecker said they were still new in town when the owner of a downtown shop relayed to her that someone had mistaken the Norwegian flag as a Confederate one.

But the southern African nation does not have the money and will issue long term bonds and jointly approach international donors with the farmers to raise funding, according to the compensation agreement.
Zimbabwe President Emmerson Mnangagwa.
But the southern African nation does not have the money and will issue long term bonds and jointly approach international donors with the farmers to raise funding, according to the compensation agreement.
Two decades ago Mugabe's government carried out at times violent evictions of 4,500 white farmers and redistributed the land to around 300,000 Black families, arguing it was redressing colonial land imbalances.

A video emerged in May of a 20-year-old man beating an elderly patient in a Detroit nursing home. That elderly man has now died.
Westwood Nursing Center resident Norman Bledsoe was allegedly beaten by his roommate Jaden T. Hayden and the incident was captured on camera. The 75-year-old was left with a broken jaw, four broken fingers and broken ribs.
Bledshoe's death was confirmed on Monday by his nephew Kevin who said his uncle was not eating properly and was depressed after the attack.
Comment: Yet another consequence of sticking positive cases of Covid-19 in nursing homes - exposing the vulnerable elderly to dangerous mentally unstable criminals. As if exposing them unnecessarily to the virus wasn't enough.
For the original story, see:
- Suspect in beating of nursing home resident placed at facility after contracting coronavirus, father says
- Suspect arrested after video surfaces showing violent beating of elderly nursing home patient
- Gov. Cuomo committed one of the worst atrocities by sending thousands of Covid patients to nursing homes full of vulnerable elderly individuals
- Medicare chief blasts Cuomo for deflecting blame onto White House for knowingly sending coronavirus patients to nursing homes
- Cuomo: Nursing homes blamed for following HIS Covid-19 mandate that killed patients - after its removal from website
- Life Care fired staffer who revealed nursing home nightmare to Reuters
- Sent to die: 4,300 Covid-19 patients sent to New York's vulnerable nursing homes under Cuomo directive
Network Rail confirmed that the advertisement had been taken down from Edinburgh Waverley because it breached its policy by promoting a political viewpoint.
A company source told The Times that the words were harmless, but the "context" was likely to cause offence.
Comment: Parody Twitter account Jarvis Dupont has weighed in on the issue:
See also:
- Telling the truth about trans is not 'hate speech': YouTube bans interview with Posie Parker for saying trans women are men
- Feminist sues Twitter after getting banned for saying 'men aren't women'
- Harry Potter books prove UK lockdown hit despite JK Rowling trans rights row
- JK Rowling receives apology from children's site after threatening legal action over claims she 'harmed trans people'
- The trans ideology of less than 1% of the UK population is bullying the other 99%
- A trans woman who is also a parent and teacher says JK Rowling is absolutely right; it's child abuse to push kids towards changing sex
- How LGBT nonprofits and their billionaire patrons are reshaping the world
Mark and Patricia McCloskey made national headlines at the end of June when they confronted a mob of protesters outside of their home on Portland Place, a wealthy private street west of downtown St. Louis.
Photos and videos of the couple holding firearms and in some cases brandishing those firearms at the crowd went globally viral. St. Louis prosecutor Kim Gardner charged the pair on July 20 with "flourishing" their guns in an unlawful manner.
Yet sources in the St. Louis Police Department have told Just the News that video evidence from the altercation indicates that at least one member of the crowd of protesters was armed with a gun during the confrontation.
Comment: See also:
- St. Louis prosecutor's office busted altering evidence; reassembled non-operable McCloskey pistol to classify as lethal
- St. Louis couple who defended home from BLM protesters charged with felony weapons count - UPDATE
- Police RAID house of gun-toting St. Louis lawyer couple and confiscate their AR-15
- Chris Cuomo attacks gun-toting St. Louis couple's self-defense claims without any hint of irony over own altercations
- Police investigating protesters after confrontation with armed St. Louis 'Karen and Ken' homeowners

A worker goes down a construction ladder at the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam in Ethiopia, on 26 December 2019
Speaking to reporters in Moscow, the Ethiopian ambassador said: "Tripartite negotiations are currently taking place under the African Union auspices, and I think that all problems will be resolved very soon. The Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam is not a cause of the conflict. The dam is a valuable facility for the region. It is a source of cooperation, not conflict."
He noted that "Egypt's request for the United Nations Security Council to interfere in the tripartite negotiations is meaningless and useless."
"The dam is a development issue, not a security issue, which is an Ethiopian issue, and a regional issue. It will benefit Africa and Ethiopia. The Security Council does not discuss these issues. The dam does not pose a security threat, and therefore, Ethiopia did not support the Egyptian request from the beginning," he said.
"That Sweden has come down to these levels is very promising," state epidemiologist Anders Tegnell told reporters in Stockholm on Tuesday.
The Health Agency of Sweden says that since hitting a peak in late June, the infection rate has fallen sharply. That's amid an increase in testing over the period. "The curves are going down and the curves for the seriously ill are beginning to approach zero," Tegnell said.
Plumes of black smoke could be seen Wednesday morning rising into the sky beneath a trail of flames on video and images from the site of the derailment, where part of the bridge collapsed.
The National Transportation Safety Board said via Twitter that it would investigate but that it was not traveling to the crash site at this time.The fire reached four alarms, which Tempe Fire Chief Greg Ruiz said was a "very, very large event."
"The focus of the initial operation was to contain the fire and keep it from spreading to additional cars," Ruiz told reporters. "The fire has been knocked down and the crews continue to address any hotspots along the bridge.
"Now, first responders were focused on containing leak of hazardous material from one of the cars, he said.Tempe police Chief Sylvia Moir urged residents via Twitter to stay away from the scene, which she described as very dangerous.
Democrats, so far as I can find, have never denounced the violent mobs, though New York Governor Andrew Cuomo once wagged a finger at George Floyd rioters while simultaneously explaining that it wasn't really their fault because "income inequality" led to violence. Indeed, the only remonstrance issued was over people burning down black-owned businesses - their "own house" as he put it, because burning your own stuff "never makes sense." As denunciations go, it was a rambling nothing-burger. Atlanta's mayor voiced similar disgust with the arsonists and looters.
In fact, mayors, governors, and prosecutors have fallen all over themselves to support the violent mobs in Seattle, New York, St. Louis, Washington, D.C., and, of course, Portland, often conflating the "mostly peaceful" protesters upset with the killing of George Floyd - remember him? - with the ones looting Louis Vuitton, tearing down statues of George Washington, and trying to burn down federal buildings.
Seattle Mayor Jenny Durkan ceded a section of the fancy Capitol Hill neighborhood to the mob. She handed over a police precinct to the mob. Two murders, gunshot wounds, assaults, and rapes took place at her pet mob's little "summer of love" squat. She's never apologized.













Comment: RT reports: See also: