Society's Child
The WaPo has sounded the alarm over perhaps the most unlikely Russian stooge yet, putting Netflix on a par with the usual suspects, like RT and the St. Petersburg 'troll factory', as supposed tools of the Moscow propaganda game.
The liberal publication has taken aim at the 2017 Russian mini-series 'Trotsky', currently being streamed on the platform. The eight-episode series, which depicts the life of famous Russian revolutionary Leon Trotsky, was produced to mark the centenary of the Russian revolution and was initially oriented towards domestic audiences.
The soldiers are the first of the five belonging to the ultra-Orthodox Netzah Yehuda Battalion to admit to beating a father and his teenage son who remain in Israeli custody without charges. While the plea agreement will help them avoid more serious charges of aggravated assault, they will still face six and a half months in prison and a demotion.
Negotiations are ongoing regarding charges against the remaining three soldiers whose detention has been extended until Wednesday. Two of the five are also being charged with obstruction of justice for attempting to collaborate their stories beforehand.
The Israeli soldiers were arrested on January 10, days after allegedly striking their Palestinian prisoners "with slaps, punches and bludgeons while they were handcuffed and blindfolded, causing them serious injuries," the IDF said.
Comment: No doubt Israeli society is for the most part outraged - not that IDF soldiers are engaged in torture, but that they were punished, however lightly. To a large segment of Israeli society - especially among Orthodox groups like the battalion in question - Palestinians are considered to be animals, to be pushed out of Palestine in order for the "redemption of the land" - and utterly destroyed like the Amalekites. It is a major sin to harm an Israeli Jew - to harm a Palestinian, not so much. Often it's a religious requirement.

Cardinal George Pell leaves the County Court in Melbourne, Australia, Tuesday, Feb. 26, 2019. The most senior Catholic cleric ever charged with child sex abuse has been convicted of molesting two choirboys moments after celebrating Mass, dealing a new blow to the Catholic hierarchy's credibility after a year of global revelations of abuse and cover-up.
Cardinal George Pell, Pope Francis' top financial adviser and the Vatican's economy minister, bowed his head but then regained his composure as the 12-member jury delivered unanimous verdicts in the Victoria state County Court on Dec. 11 after more than two days of deliberation.
The court had until Tuesday forbidden publication of any details about the trial.
Pell faces a potential maximum 50-year prison term after a sentencing hearing that begins on Wednesday. He lodged an appeal last week against the convictions.
Comment: The Catholic church has a long way to go cleaning up its mess. Will it even survive?
- Australia's Catholic church uses secrecy and resistance tactics to prevent sexual abuse victims from seeking compensation
- Sick bag: Catholic Church paid $213mn to sex abuse victims in Australia since 1980
- Scathing report from Illinois AG finds more than 500 priests accused of sexual abuse not yet publicly identified by Catholic Church
- Leaked study concludes that German Catholic Church abused thousands of children, rape in every 6th case
- German cardinal admits church destroyed documents on clergy sexual abuse
- 'Catholic mafia' hindered priest probe, special commission of inquiry into child sex abuse hears
- Rebel French priest says bishops punished him for sexual abuse petition
This is a response to "Who Controls the Platform?"-a multi-part Quillette series authored by social-media insiders. Submissions related to this series may be directed to pitch@quillette.com.Progressives who claim that "reality has a liberal bias" may be correct on certain issues. But problems emerge when the facts don't co-operate with the liberal narrative. We saw an example recently, when it emerged that actor Jussie Smollett had been formally charged with making up a hoax hate-crime involving MAGA-hat-wearing men assaulting him with bleach, a noose and racist, homophobic epithets. As Quillette's Andy Ngo noted, Smollett's original claim attracted an outpouring of performative sympathy from an all-star cast of liberal grandees. But when it turned out the attack never happened, most of those same commentators kept mum. A similar pattern played out with the boys from Covington Catholic High School caught on video at the Lincoln Memorial: Too often, observers seize on a fashionable narrative and either reject or ignore evidence that falsifies it-because what counts for them is less about the actual truth of a claim, and more about how much on-brand social-media value is associated with boosting it. Call it doublethink or virtue-signaling. But whatever label you choose, the phenomenon has real effects on public policy-as my own experience shows.
Comment: See also:
- Feminist sues Twitter after getting banned for saying 'men aren't women'
- Writer's Twitter account temporarily suspended after questioning if Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez put her boyfriend on payroll
- It isn't your imagination: Statistics show Twitter treats conservatives more harshly than liberals
- Mother, 38, is arrested in front of her children and locked in a cell for seven hours after misgendering a person on Twitter
- Twitter takes 20 minutes to protect a journalist's feelings, but 48 hours to remove death threats against Covington kids

U.S. soldiers assigned to the 1st Armored Brigade Cavalry Team, 1st Cavalry Division’s, 91st Brigade Engineer Battalion begin loading their vehicles on rail for transport in Karliki, Poland, Nov. 6, 2018.
A police spokeswoman in Zagan, Anna Kublik-Rosciszewska, said the crash took place Sunday afternoon near Trzebien, on the A18 road as the troops were traveling in the direction of Wroclaw on a routine mission.
She said Monday that six of the troops were hospitalized and that two of them were in serious condition. The seventh was treated on the spot.
The troops are with the 21st Theater Sustainment Command, or TSC, based in Karliki, in Zagan region.
Comment: At least from the details so far, the fault appears to lie with the driver and/or the passengers. What's notable is that this is just the most recent in series of crashes and accidents within the US military:
- The US military's run of fatal accidents: Coincidence or crisis?
- Report: Huge spike in US military non-combat plane crash fatalities in 2017

Even before the coronavirus, living standards had flatlined amid wage stagnation and austerity.
A study by the Resolution Foundation thinktank said UK households had experienced flatlining living standards due to a lack of economic and pay growth in the past two years. Average incomes will not rise materially over the next two years either, it said.
The bleak forecast will hit lower-income families harder, according to the report, and child poverty could exceed previous highs reached in the early 1990s. Deprived families will bear the brunt of weak pay and benefit cuts, the report said.
While weak productivity and pay freezes were holding back living standards for most people, government policy was also hitting more deprived groups. The report noted the final year of the benefit freeze, which will reduce working-age household incomes by £1.5bn, will start in April, while the impact of the two-child limit on benefits will grow over the remainder of this parliament.
Comment: The situation in the UK is dire, and government 'austerity' is only making life worse:
- Shameless: UK MPs to get another pay rise taking the total to £11,000 in just 3 years
- UK's poverty wages, extortionate rents and austerity: Homeless families who work soars 73% in 5 years
- UK poverty: Hungry children 'eating from school bins' - head teacher
- Record 60% of Britons in poverty are in working families - study
- Fraud, deception, laundering - Bailed out banks still behaving badly and no one's stopping them
- The government/Poor leadership 35
- Immigration 19
- Healthcare 6
- Race relations/Racism 5
- Unifying the country 4
- Poverty/Hunger/Homelessness 4
- Environment/Pollution 3
- Ethics/Moral/Religious/Family decline 3
- Federal budget deficit/Federal debt 3
- Economy in general 3
Comment: See also:
- The American People Are Coming to Terms With The Fact That Their Government Is A Dictatorship
- Jackboots in the morning: No one will be spared from the American police state nightmare
- John W. Whitehead: What I don't like about post-9/11 America
- Dictator for Life? America already has one!
The suggestion caught people involved in the event's production, where planning begins at least six months in advance, off guard. "Clear History" didn't exist; it was barely an idea. But organizers still scrambled to build its announcement into Zuckerberg's F8 keynote address. They'd already scrapped plans to unveil Portal, a video calling device that Facebook's leadership thought might be seen as too invasive given the company's predicament.
It was a bold public relations play. And for those familiar with the origins of the Clear History announcement, it demonstrated not only Zuckerberg's unilateral power over product direction, but also Facebook's long history of prioritizing optics and convenience over substantive protections for the people who use it. Company sources who spoke to BuzzFeed News characterized Zuckerberg's proposal as "reactionary," a response intended to ease the negative attention on the company following the Cambridge Analytica firestorm. They also said it might explain why the Clear History tool, whose announcement was proposed on the fly by Zuckerberg, is still not available nearly a year after he introduced it on stage at F8.
Comment: While "clear history" sounds like a nice idea, that Facebook would actually delete the information it has already collected is naive. It might be 'deleted' in so far as you might not be able to access it anymore, but their whole model is based on the sale of information. They're not about to start removing their 'inventory' - ever. And that goes pretty much for all big tech.
In his annual letter, Buffet warned of a "megacatastrophe," which he said will cause unprecedented havoc not just to victims but to the financial world as well. "A major catastrophe that will dwarf hurricanes Katrina and Michael will occur - perhaps tomorrow, perhaps many decades from now," the Berkshire Hathaway CEO wrote. "'The Big One' may come from a traditional source, such as a hurricane or earthquake, or it may be a total surprise involving, say, a cyber attack having disastrous consequences beyond anything insurers now contemplate."
Comment: Elites like Buffet are quite often "in the know", but he isn't saying anything that a regular reader of this site doesn't know already.
After all, the transgender man and gay rights activist had received threats after having a banner year in this conservative town.
In the prior six months, he helped open the city's first gay community center, organized the first gay festival and, after 18 years of failed attempts, helped lead a bruising battle for an ordinance that prohibits discrimination against gays.
For his efforts, a local paper named him Citizen of the Year.
Comment: Another ideologically-possessed and pathological activist trying to hoax their way into the greater reaches of victimhood status. These people should be in institutions, not government.
Do not miss: The Jussie Smollett Hate-Crime Hoax is Nothing New in Trump's America












Comment: With every passing accusation, The Washington Post, NY Times, CNN, etc. make it clear that they are in fact hysterical - and aiming to further hystericize and polarize the West against Russia.