Society's Child
Israeli authorities on Tuesday admitted that their plan to relocate African asylum seekers has collapsed, adding that there is no opportunity to deport Africans from the country.
The forced removal of the asylum seekers - mostly men from Eritrea and Sudan - "is no longer on the agenda," the Israeli government said in a written statement but added that it will keep looking for options to deport people voluntarily.
"Israel's immigration officials will continue to refer to infiltrators to the 'voluntary departure' office allowing them to move to a third country, but without conditioning the renewal of their legal status of their willingness to leave to a third country," the authorities stated.
She is the first NHS doctor to publicly voice fears about the damage being done by the huge increase in young people receiving irreversible medical treatments after declaring themselves transgender.
Comment:
- Sex change hormones put kids at risk of infertility, heart disease, baldness, doctor warns
- I'm a pediatrician. How transgender ideology has infiltrated my field and produced large-scale child abuse
- Camille Paglia: Transgender propagandists committing child abuse against gender-confused children
"As soon as Germany becomes an F-35 nation, cooperation on all combat aircraft issues with France is dead," Dirk Hoke, the CEO of Airbus Defense and Space at Airbus Group, told Welt am Sonntag newspaper.
"Europe needs to define its sovereignty more clearly and state that we need to remain independent in defense and space," Hoke said, referring to the joint Franco-German project to develop a fifth-generation fighter, according to the newspaper.
Comment: Judging by their performance, Germany would probably prefer jets that work:
- Internal report reveals USAF may be forced into massive reduction of planned F-35 fleet
- New Pentagon report reveals that half of F-35 fleet grounded by tech problems
- Fundamental failure: Military admits F-35 fighter doesn't work but says it's too late stop $400B program
- Germany and Italy won't take part if West attacks Syria
Statistics reveal that women with family backgrounds in Iran, Lebanon, Iraq and Pakistan are among those who receive the most terminations. Only women from the former Yugoslavia, some of whom come from areas with predominantly Muslim populations, received more, Danish newspaper Kristeligt Dagblad report.
Kassem Rachid, imam and president of the Arab Association in the city of Aabenraa, told the newspaper that he was surprised that that such a large proportion of women from countries with predominantly Muslim populations choose to have abortions.
The Palestinian Ministry of Health reported that 18-year-old Tahrir Mahmoud Wahba, who was deaf, died on Monday morning.
The teenager was shot with live ammunition by Israeli forces during protests on Friday April 13th in the southern Gaza Strip district of Khan Younis, near the al-Awdeh refugee camp.
Late Sunday night, the ministry reported that a Palestinian "youth," identified as Abdullah Muhammad al-Shamali, succumbed to wounds he sustained last Friday.
Al-Shamali was a resident of the southern Gaza Strip city of Rafah. According to the Ministry of Health, the deaths of Wahba and al-Shamali brought the total death toll in Gaza since the "Great March of Return" began on March 30, to 41 Palestinians, including at least three minors and a journalist.

MSNBC's Joy Reid interacts with the students surrounding the stage at Washington University, site of the second presidential debate between Republican candidate Donald Trump and Democrat Hillary Clinton.
The weekend host apologized last year for a number of homophobic blog posts she wrote from 2007 to 2009 about Florida Governor Charlie Crist, who was married to a woman at the time. Among other homophobic comments, Reid called Crist "Miss Charlie" and suggested he was "ogling male waiters" on his honeymoon.
But this week the story became more sinister. The Twitter user who initially discovered Reid's homophobic postings has now unearthed some articles which also appear to have come from her old blog, and sound far worse.
Jamie Maz found the old articles through the Wayback Machine - an online archive that stores old content even after it has been deleted - of Reid's blog as it had been.
Mediaite has reported some of the highlights, including comments about how "most straight people cringe at the sight of two men kissing" and about how finding gay sex "gross" is just "intrinsic" to being straight.
The alleged attack and the subsequent airstrikes by the US, UK and France have been dominating the Western news agenda for several weeks now.
On April 7, several media outlets reported that the Syrian army had used chlorine in Douma, killing up to 70 people and injuring hundreds. Footage showing the aftermath of the "attack" appeared on social media, showing men and women shouting, rushing and hosing down adults and children inside a hospital building.
The video has been acquired and shown by most Western news media under the tagline "Children are treated after a suspected chemical attack in rebel-held Douma, Syria" or similar headlines.
The most recent incident left a man badly bruised. It was captured on camera and now police are searching for the attacker. Police are keeping watch at the scene of the latest attack on Rutland Road near Schenectady Avenue. Many Jewish leaders say this is happening too frequently to be a coincidence, CBS2's Janelle Burrell reported.
"People are very, very nervous about what is going on," said Assemblyman Dov Hikind.
Jewish leaders including Hikind told Burrell they believe the recent attacks in Brooklyn aren't isolated. "They're not anomalies?" Burrell asked. "No, not at all. In between these two incidents, there are so many others. Many of them don't get reported," Hikind said.
A new report by the Pew Charitable Trusts shows that the problem is getting out of hand. In 2016, the most recent full year for which data are available, states were more than $1.4 trillion in the red. Pension debt has increased for 15 straight years, and shows no signs of abating.
Indeed, as Reason blogger Eric Boehm notes, "The really scary part is that pension debt keeps increasing despite the fact that taxpayers' contributions to state-level pension plans have doubled as a share of state revenue in the past decade."
Worse still, as performance lags expectations, desperate pension fund managers have gone in for increasingly risky investments - meaning that workers' pensions might not be as safe as they think.
The Pew report is blunt:
"Many state retirement systems are on an unsustainable course, coming up short on their investment targets and having failed to set aside enough money to fund the pension promises made to public employees."
According to Khaled al-Nadhri, a leading health official, the majority of the 20 dead were women and children. The crowd had gathered in a tent for the wedding in the district of Bani Qayis, reports the Independent. Hospital chief Mohammed al-Sawmali says 46 people who were injured in the attack, including the groom, were brought to the local al-Jomhouri hospital to receive treatment.
Many on Twitter have questioned why there has not been any response from the UK government to the latest reports of civilian deaths in Yemen, orchestrated by Saudi Arabia. Andrew Smith of Campaign Against Arms Trade (CAAT) notes the Saudis have bought "£4.6 billion [US$6.4 billion] worth of arms" from the UK since March 2015. The UK government has been quick to criticize other reported attacks on civilians, including those in Syria.
Comment: For more on this airstrike, see also: Upwards of 50 killed in Saudi-led air strikes on Yemeni wedding














Comment: Previously: