Society's Child
I mean why in the world would you just tweet, "The Russians killed Epstein. They're in charge of everything now."
Do you know something that we are trying to guess? Or are you a sleuth one step ahead of us?
You did play Detective Bill Ramstead, and Detective McCutcheon in the past two years. You were also a senior NSA official in Mercury Rising, and even the director of the CIA in Mission Impossible.
Officers and London Ambulance Service attended and the male was pronounced dead at the scene.
A Met Police spokesman said: "Police were called at approximately 23:10hrs on Monday, 12 August to reports of a male stabbed in Munster Square, NW1.
Comment: RT is reporting that he was hacked to death with a machete. And that his assailants laughed all the way through it.
Comment: And what did Khan, the utter tw*t, say in response to this latest knifing?
"the numbers don't lie - the correlation between social inequality and violent crime is unarguable."Translation: "It's not their fault! They're POOR! Give them more money and they'll magically be cured of their criminal mindset!"
Demonstrators demanding democracy blocked the departures terminal late on Tuesday local time, preventing any passengers from leaving the airport. Incoming flights were not affected.
One of the travelers arriving from the Chinese mainland was accused of being an undercover police officer and attacked by protesters. Police tried to clear the way for first responders, dressed in orange gear, to reach the injured man. He was taken to an area hospital.
Comment: CCTV reports that HK police have arrested 149 people at the airport in recent days. They apparently don't watch how US and EU police handle protests!
The authorities' strategy is perhaps to give these democrazy fanatics as much rope as possible, but Chinese police are unbelievably restrained.
They're surely going to start cracking heads soon? Then these moronic middle class SJWs will get a real taste of what it's like to live in Western Democracy...
UPDATE 00:30 CET
It looks like Beijing could be making its move...
Thousands of people have participated in several protests in Moscow in recent weeks, rallying against what they believe is the unfair treatment of several opposition candidates, which were barred from running in the upcoming city council election. Some of the demonstrations were unsanctioned and led to scuffles with police, and subsequent arrests.
More than 1,000 people were detained at an unsanctioned protest on July 27. Senator Vyacheslav Markhayev called this development "scary." A police veteran and a member of the Communist Party, he had led an anti-riot unit in the past in the eastern Buryatia region. He also served several tours in Chechnya during an armed conflict there.
Markhayev did not mince his words in criticizing police, whose actions to disperse the rallies prompted allegations of police brutality. Instead of "dialogue" with protesters, the city's authorities "chose to use force, which in many cases was excessive," he said.
Comment: More details on Sosnovskaya's case were reported:
[...] Tatyana Molokanova, a lawyer for Daria Sosnovskaya, told Current Time television on August 13 that her client was hospitalized after complaining of headaches and bruises on the top of her head that she suffered while being arrested at the protest on August 10.Commenting on the whole of the demonstrations, the Kremlin had this to say:
Russian civil rights lawyer Pavel Chikov of the legal-aid group Agora added that Sosnovskaya has been diagnosed with a concussion.
"This diagnosis was made by doctors at Moscow Hospital 67, where she was informed late on August 12," he said. Rallies held each of the past four Saturdays to demand that officials allow independent candidates on the ballot in the upcoming municipal vote have resulted in thousands of arrests and condemnation of the heavy-handed tactics police are using against mostly peaceful protesters.
The police crackdown has been called one of the harshest in recent years against an opposition that has grown more defiant while denouncing Russian President Vladimir Putin's hold on power.
In the Kremlin's first comments on the crackdown, Putin's spokesman Dmitry Peskov on August 13 called the police response "justified" and downplayed the significance of the protests.
[...]
At one point in the video footage, the woman appears to try to kick a police baton lying on the street as one of the officers is trying to pick it up.
The uniformed officer staggers the woman with a punch to her stomach and grabs the baton from the ground before shoving her into the police van seconds later.
The video has added to growing outrage at home and abroad over a decision by officials to block opposition candidates from running in elections for Moscow's city council.
Russia's Interior Ministry said on August 12 that it was setting up an investigation of the incident.
Local media have quoted the National Guard as saying that the officer who punched Sosnovskaya is not a member of the Russian National Guard's units.
It is not clear which law enforcement unit the officers belong to.
Russian officers are rarely disciplined for using excessive and disproportionate force against demonstrators.
On August 11, Chikov offered a reward of 100,000 rubles (about $1,500) for help identifying the officer who punched Sosnovskaya.
Protests happen all over the world, so it's wrong to call the recent demonstrations in Moscow a 'political crisis', the Kremlin's spokesperson said. He insisted that police were right to intervene, preventing riots in the city.
Several protests involving thousands of people have been staged in the Russian capital in recent weeks, demanding that a group of disqualified opposition candidates be allowed to run in the city council election in early September. Some of the rallies were unsanctioned and broken up by riot police.
"We disagree with calling these developments a political crisis," President Vladimir Putin's spokesperson, Dmitry Peskov, told reporters on Tuesday, adding that anti-government rallies are common in many countries, including European states.
"It's not a crisis. We see protests going on all over the world," he said.
Putin did not publicly comment on the protests, but Peskov said the president is well aware of the situation and does not view it as something out of the ordinary. Putin receives reports on the matter, as he does with many other issues in Russia, his spokesperson stated.
Peskov pointed out the difference between the peaceful sanctioned protests and the times when protesters break the law. The official said the police are duty-bound to intervene, preventing attempts to "instigate riots."
"The rough actions by law enforcement are absolutely justified" under such circumstances, Peskov said. Several protesters were detained and charged with fighting police and throwing bottles at them.
At the same time, the breaking up of the unsanctioned protests also prompted allegations of police brutality. In one case, a man's leg was broken while he was being detained. In a separate incident, an officer punched a young woman in the stomach. She filed a report afterwards, and Moscow police launched an internal probe of the incident.
Dmitry Peskov said that applying excessive force against the protesters is "completely unacceptable," and all such allegations must be "duly investigated and then brought to court."

A scene from a trailer for The Hunt.
Now let's imagine for the moment that The Hunt is really the one-sided screed of hate that revels in the gruesome murders that wealthy liberals inflict on hapless "deplorables," as it has been portrayed in fevered editorials across the US conservative media.
So what?
Right-wingers have (often with good cause) complained about media-led censorship, political correctness and hate speech legislation that have straightjacketed public debate, and go against the spirit of the First Amendment, regardless of the legalities they hide behind.
Donald Trump is entitled to his opinion that Hollywood seeks to "inflame and cause chaos" as he tweeted at the weekend, and maybe fictional violence or humor directed at some groups is considered more acceptable than at others, so there is a galling double standard for some.
Fifty-four percent of British adults believe that Johnson should be allowed to stay true to his promise and deliver Brexit in time, by October 31, even if he has to suspend Parliament to complete this herculean task.
The idea of "proroguing" Parliament has been floated as an antidote to what is feared as a disastrous scenario - the UK crashing out of the EU with no deal. Some believe that this is precisely where the UK is heading, with Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn accusing Johnson of plotting an "unprecedented, unconstitutional and anti-democratic abuse of power" by mulling snap elections "days after" the Brexit deadline.
The change of guard at the helm of the Conservative Party appears to have boosted its fraying numbers. The ComRes opinion poll, commissioned by the Daily Telegraph, shows the Tories have gained six points compared to the last poll, and are now leading with 31 percent, as Labour trails with 27 percent, the biggest gap between the two parties so far this year.

Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell (right) with Carol Mack at an event in New York City, 1995.
As part of Epstein's original plea deal, negotiated with Alexander Acosta, the others implicated were also given immunity from prosecution, which is partly why victims like Virginia Roberts Giuffre pursued her and others in civil courts. But Epstein's death has not stopped the current investigation. "We remain committed to standing for you," Geoffrey Berman, U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York, wrote in a statement after Epstein's death, "and our investigation of the conduct charged in the Indictment — which included a conspiracy count — remains ongoing." There were rumors on Monday afternoon that indictments of five people were imminent.
The nature of the relationship between Epstein and Maxwell, the favorite daughter of embezzling press baron Robert Maxwell, who died when he fell or was pushed from his yacht, the Lady Ghislaine, is not well known. Multiple victims claim she was both part of the sex trafficking ring, often bringing girls to Epstein, and a sexual participant. But Epstein told of-age women he courted that Maxwell was a former girlfriend fallen on hard times, and that he had taken it upon himself to maintain her position in society. "Ghislaine floated in and out of the house with the keys, and even though Jeffrey told me they didn't have a sexual relationship, she'd drop under her breath that she was sleeping in his bed from time to time," says an ex-girlfriend. Another woman in Maxwell's orbit says she used to joke about keeping herself rail thin because Epstein liked thin girls. Maxwell, whose father was Jewish, liked to shock. "She said, 'I do it the way Nazis did it with the Jews, the Auschwitz diet. I just don't eat.'"
Comment: No less a monster than Epstein himself, Maxwell needs to go. If only someone manages to find her...
- William Barr has a message for Jeffrey Epstein's co-conspirators
- Jeffrey Epstein is gone, but many more questions remain to be answered
- Mega Group, Maxwells And Mossad: The Spy Story at The Heart of The Jeffrey Epstein Pedo Scandal
- Messages left for Jeffrey Epstein 'suggested his friend might be procuring two 8-year-old girls for the pedophile to sexually abuse' state court docs
The photo, released Thursday on Twitter by the first lady's office, drew backlash from some who thought it reflected a lack of empathy and politicized the shootings.
Tito Anchondo, the uncle of baby Paul Anchondo, told The Associated Press on Friday that Trump "was just there to give his condolences and he was just being a human being." He previously told NPR that he and his brother were Trump supporters.
On Sunday, the Obeid family wanted to arrange a meal in memory of their son, who was killed by Jerusalem District police, to mark the conclusion of the traditional 40 days of mourning. Mohammed Obeid, 21, had worked in the dining room of a company in the city's Har Hotzvim high-tech park. Police officers claimed that he had thrown firecrackers at them near his home, and therefore shot him at close range, killing him.
On the morning of the memorial event, a police intelligence officer phoned Samir Obeid, the bereaved father, to talk about the planned commemoration. According to Obeid, the officer told him that it wasn't a memorial but a demonstration, and warned him not to hold it, whereupon Obeid invited the officer to the meal, saying, "Your intelligence unit is apparently short of money. It's not a protest, but a memorial." In the evening, when the mourners arrived for the meal, which was held outside, they saw police observing them from the hill overlooking the Obeids' house.
None of this surprised anyone in Isawiyah, a Palestinian village at the foot of Mt. Scopus that Israel annexed to Jerusalem following the Six-Day War. During the past two months, many residents, terrified of the police, have been afraid to leave home. Parents are sending their children to stay with relatives to keep them out of trouble; every trip in the car is liable to end with a bizarre but extremely costly traffic ticket; checkpoints are frequently placed at the village's two main entrances; everyone who leaves or enters is scrutinized; and law enforcement operations take place virtually every day.
Comment: Besides the practice that Israeli trainees may be getting by brutalizing these Palestinians in the town of Isawiyah, the Zionist state is also making life so unbearable (and in so many other places in Gaza, the West Bank and other areas as well) so as to "encourage" remaining Palestinians to seek to live elsewhere - thereby facilitating Israel's ultimate plan to enlarge its lands and rid it of those with a natural right to live there.

People watch flame and smoke rising from the site of blasts at an ammunition depot near the town of Achinsk in Krasnoyarsk region, Russia August 5, 2019.
An explosion during a rocket engine test in Russia last week, which claimed five lives and apparently caused small radiation spikes detected in a nearby city, has sent the media rumor mill into overdrive. While Russian officials are reluctant to offer much detail about what was tested, except that some radioactive material was involved, speculation suggests it was Russia's lauded nuclear-powered Burevestnik cruise missile, or Skyfall, as NATO chose to designate it.
Speculation aside, covering this story poses a certain challenge: which picture to take to run with the story. After all, it all happened in the middle of nowhere, and hence no visuals are available. AP opted for a photo of a Russian family looking from a hill at a city as a large glowing mushroom billows into the sky.












Comment: What a lunatic.
Curiously enough, Baldwin's deets were in Epstein's Little Black Book: