Society's Child
Press release/guest article
While we all know that billionaires control a substantial amount of the world's wealth - in fact, current projections see the richest 1% controlling 2/3 of it by 2030. But, did you know that when they aren't investing in space shuttles, underground Hyperloops and sprawling tech campuses, the super-rich are looking at a range of mind-blowing methods to increase their lifespan?
Commercial Finance Experts, ABC Finance have been digging into some of the strangest and most extravagant approaches billionaires have turned to in their quest for immortality (or at least get a few more years in than the rest of us).
The raid was announced on Sunday afternoon by Mexico's Attorney General's Office (FGR). The operation was coordinated with the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA). Following an investigation, federal authorities obtained a search warrant from a judge in Nuevo Leon and raided a warehouse in the Ciudad Mitras Industrial Park and a home in the Pedregal La Silla neighborhood.
During the warehouse raid, authorities found a full-scale production laboratory and series of notebooks with formulas allegedly describing the manufacture of fentanyl. Police arrested a chemist identified as Guadalupe "A" on drug production charges.
The fentanyl laboratory is the first of its kind in Nuevo Leon. Authorities have not revealed which criminal organization they believe is linked to the plant.
Editor's Note: Breitbart News traveled to the Mexican States of Tamaulipas, Coahuila, and Nuevo León to recruit citizen journalists willing to risk their lives and expose the cartels silencing their communities. The writers would face certain death at the hands of the various cartels that operate in those areas including the Gulf Cartel and Los Zetas if a pseudonym were not used. Breitbart Texas' Cartel Chronicles are published in both English and in their original Spanish. This article was written by Tony Aranda from Nuevo Leon.
Ignoring warnings from a civil-liberties groupand yours truly, the Republican governor signed provisions into Texas law that use criminal law to enforce the Obama administration's unconstitutional definition of campus sexual harassment.
Their practical effect will be scaring faculty and other university employees into reporting any "sex-based" conduct or speech that may be "unwelcome" to someone at their campus. That includes overheard sex jokes.
SB 212 threatens termination and up to six months in jail for any campus employee who "witnesses or receives information" - that means hearsay - that may count as sexual harassment under this exceedingly broad definition, and fails to report it to the Title IX apparatus.
The police said one more terrorist is believed to be still hiding inside a building in the area. All of them are terrorists of the Pakistan-based Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM), whose chief Masood Azhar is wanted by India.
The security forces launched a search operation based on intelligence inputs that some terrorists could be in the area. The operation soon turned into an encounter after the terrorists opened fired at the forces.
In January of 2018, in a Grade One class at Devonshire Community Public School, part of the Ottawa-Carleton District School Board network, six-year-old N watched a YouTube video as part of her teacher's lesson plan on gender.
N is the kind of child, her mother Pamela told me in a telephone interview, that adores school - or did until the particular morning that prompted this column. The video was entitled, "He, She and They?!? - Gender: Queer Kid Stuff #2." The video contained statements such as, "some people aren't boys or girls," and that there are people who do not "feel like a 'she' or a 'he,'" and therefore might not have a gender. The young teacher, whom I will refer to by her initials, JB, continued to teach gender theory throughout the semester. According to N's feedback to her mother, JB told the children that "there is no such thing as girls and boys," and "girls are not real and boys are not real."
Bill 21 (Loi 21) was passed by a vote of 73-35 in the National Assembly on Sunday. It bars civil servants "in positions of authority" - such as teachers, police, and government lawyers - from wearing religious symbols. This includes Christian crucifixes, Muslim headscarves, Sikh turbans and Jewish yarmulkes, for instance.
Muslim women wearing the full face veil (burqa) will be directly affected by the provision requiring people giving or receiving government services to uncover their faces, for purposes of security or confirming identity.
Lawmakers also approved Bill 9, which imposes new French language and values tests for prospective immigrants intended to "protect Quebec identity."
Veselnitskaya's account was greyed-out on Monday, with the only explanation given that Twitter suspends accounts that violate the rules. Which rules she might have broken was left unsaid.
Sputnik radio host Lee Stranahan seemed convinced Veselnitskaya was banned over her criticism of Bill Browder, an oligarch wanted for tax fraud in Russia and one of the leading advocates of anti-Russian sanctions in the West. The Magnitsky Act of 2012 was named after Browder's accountant.
On Friday, a pair of self-proclaimed (and anonymous) data scientists claimed they had discovered a "bot network" of accounts supporting Veselnitskaya on Twitter.
The Russian law regulating public gatherings has come under criticism from opposition activists who say it's too restrictive and gives the authorities undue leeway to ban protests that it doesn't want to take place. The Tuesday ruling closed a loophole that could be used to deny permission for rallies and demonstrations.
The court was reviewing a complaint by a public activist whose applications for two public gatherings were rejected without consideration in 2018 by the city council of Irkutsk. The city said the organizer failed to explain how he intends to ensure the safety of the participants. The forms only listed the phone numbers of city services that could be called in case of emergency.
During the fall 2018 semester at the University of Minnesota, an Asian-American student stopped by one of the restaurants in the Coffman Memorial Union to pick up a snack.
At the register, a food service worker said something the student didn't understand. When the student said they didn't get it, the woman at the register said she was saying "hello" in Japanese, and asked where the student was from.
"Wisconsin," the student replied.
The cashier laughed and told the student to have a nice day, but the student did not find much humor in the experience. The student reported the cashier to the campus Bias Response and Referral Network, claiming "these type of microaggressions occur too often on campus" and "this implicit bias needs to be addressed."
The bias team then referred the incident to dining services and referred the complaining student to the campus "Ethical Advocate Program" in case they "want to talk further about the experience."
Read more...

A Russian Beriev BE 200 amphibious aircraft performs a demonstration flight on the opening day of the 54th International Paris Air Show at Le Bourget
At Le Bourget Airport in the French capital on Monday, Airbus unveiled a new version of its A321, boasting a range 15 percent farther than its predecessor.
The new A321XLR is a director competitor to the Boeing 737, which its latest generations -- the MAX 8 and MAX 9 -- have been grounded following two fatal plane crashes in Indonesia last October and Ethiopia in March.
"The A321XLR is the next evolutionary step from the A321LR, which responds to market needs for even more range and payload, creating more value for the airlines," the company said in a media release.














Comment: The effects of corruption in the training of educators are now coming home to roost. The teacher was obviously steeped the in 'progressive' ideologies that have infested the university system for nearly two decades. The damage to young minds will become obvious down the road.