Society's Child
Professor Sir Michael Marmot, a leading expert on public health, said the widening gap between the rich and poor is to blame.
His 172-page report said life expectancy in England has barely improved in the last decade - the first time in more than 100 years it has failed to significantly increase for a 10-year period.
And for those in the poorest areas it has actually declined - by almost a year for women living in the North East.
A questioner challenged Khalidi as to whether he was faithful to the historian's duty of "objectivity." He replied, "The fact is there is a hegemonic narrative about Israel and Palestine, which takes the Western, pro-Zionist perspective. Eighty percent of what is said about the issue in the U.S. sticks to the hegemonic narrative. It's not my job to repeat that narrative. Besides, historians, in fact, usually advance an argument or thesis. They don't just say, 'On the one hand or on the other hand.' "

Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders speaks with RT’s late anchor Ed Schultz for an exclusive interview in 2016.
A clip of the Democratic presidential hopeful's wife Jane Sanders complaining on RT America about the unfairness of closed primaries - in which only registered Democrats can vote for the party's nominee - was trending on Wednesday morning, boosted by smug blue-checks crowing some variation on "I told you so."

Activists protested outside the Virginia jail holding whistleblower Chelsea Manning on Wednesday
For nearly a year, former US Army intelligence analyst Chelsea Manning has been detained in Federal Detention Center Alexandria. Manning is not charged with a crime, but rather, she is being held in contempt of a federal grand jury for refusing to answer questions about her relationship with Assange. The whistleblower insists she answered their questions during her 2013 trial for having stolen classified US government documents and given them to WikiLeaks to publish, and that asking them again is an attempt to entrap her.

(L) VPK-39272 Volk armored vehicle/ Vitaly V. Kuzmin; (R) Night Wolves President Alexander Zaldostanov (aka, the Surgeon)
Arzamas Machine-building Plant (AMZ) wants to call their latest armored car 'Wolf,' but they've hit a surprising road bump: the 'Night Wolves' have had the trademark for the word since 2000. Their leader, Aleksandr 'Surgeon' Zaldostanov, has personally owned it for 13 years now. So now, the Russian manufacturer has taken 'Surgeon' to intellectual property court, claiming he isn't using the trademark.
AMZ has been supplying Russia with its top-of-the-line Tigr armored car (or 'tiger' in Russian) for nearly fifteen years now. The Tigr protects its crew from gunfire, shrapnel from nearby grenades and artillery, and even mines. But time doesn't stand still, and AMZ has been working on an upgrade for its 'tiger': the Volk (or 'wolf' in Russian). The Volk is faster, better armored, and more powerful than the Tigr, and, unlike its predecessor, it's modular: the army can quickly convert it into an armored truck or an APC, if necessary. The new version is just about ready, but AMZ can't sell a vehicle called 'Volk' because the trademark belongs Zaldostanov.

A medic moves a patient in a ward dedicated to people infected with the coronavirus at Forqani Hospital in Qom, the most affected region in Iran, on February 26.
Health Ministry spokesman Kianoush Jahanpour said on February 27 that the number of deaths linked to the coronavirus outbreak in Iran has increased by seven to 26 over the past 24 hours -- the highest death toll outside of China, where the disease emerged in December.
A total of 245 people had tested positive for the virus -- an increase of 106 on the previous day, Jahanpour told a news conference, adding that the large number of new cases came from more labs now testing for the virus.
Comment: That brings the death rate to just over 10%, still 5x more than it should be, given stats from China. That suggests there could be over 1000 cases, not the 245 so far confirmed.
More than 82,000 people in about 40 countries have been infected with the new coronavirus, mainly in China. COVID-19, the respiratory disease caused by the virus, has killed more than 2,700 people globally.
The Middle Eastern country has become the main hot spot of the virus in the region, where more than 350 cases have now been reported. Many of those cases have been linked to travelers who had gone to the Islamic republic for religious visits.
As governments ramped up measures to battle a looming global pandemic, Iranian authorities announced domestic travel restrictions for people with confirmed or suspected infections, and placed curbs on access to major Shi'ite pilgrimage sites.
In affected areas, school closures will be extended for three days, and universities for another week starting from February 29, Health Minister Saeed Namaki told a news conference.
State TV later reported Friday Prayers in Tehran had been called off, and semiofficial news agencies quoted officials as saying the prayers would also be canceled in other cities.
Comment: Masoumeh Ebtekar, Iranian vice president for women and family affairs, has contracted the virus, as has Mojtaba Zonnour, head of Iran's Parliamentary Security and Foreign Relations Commission. Germany's health minister says his country is facing the beginning of an epidemic (there are 18 confirmed cases):
Spahn claimed earlier that "detection and containment" efforts in Europe were working to hold back the spread of the virus, but an explosion of cases in northern Italy and at least 13 other European countries have forced him to reevaluate the situation. At his last press conference on Tuesday, Spahn admitted "it could get worse before it gets better."Italy saw its death toll rise to 14, with 528 total cases (100 more than the previous day). Foreign Minister Luigi Di Maio, however, says that the "infodemic" is more damaging to the country than the virus:
Tracking the 'infection chains' - noting the previous travel and social encounters of the infected - is vital to understanding the spread of the illness. Thus far, the majority of patients in Germany were found to have recently traveled from Italy or China, or had contact with travelers.
"The infection chains are partially no longer trackable, and that is a new thing," Spahn said on Tuesday. "Large numbers of people have had contact with the patients, and that is a big change to the 16 patients we had until now where the chain could be traced back to the origin in China."
"The epidemic of misleading information will do more damage to Italy than the risk of the virus epidemic itself," Di Maio told reporters Thursday. "We have gone from an epidemic risk to an 'infodemic' one."The first American case of local transmission turned up in California (the individual had no known contact through travel of exposure to someone already infected). But in China, deaths are declining (29 new deaths reported today, lower than previous daily figures). One Chinese city is offering over $1k rewards for self-reporting symptoms in order to help stop the spread of the virus.
The spread of "misleading" reports damages not only the fragile economy of the country — that has seen three recessions in just over a decade — but also the reputation of its scientific community, the minister added.
Italian scientists are "addressing the situation brilliantly," while the media scare blows the situation out of proportion, he argued. So far, the outbreak affects only 0.089 percent of the country's population, including infected and quarantined, the official explained.
"Without wanting to play things down, there are just over 10 towns and cities involved in Italy at the moment," Di Maio said. "If our children go to school in most cases it means that foreigners can come here as tourists and investors."
See also:
- A top-tier Chinese virology lab is unable to quell the coronavirus conspiracy theories around it
- Coronavirus spreading in Iran, Bahrain locks down schools, Tokyo Olympics may be cancelled
The Greek government plans to build new camps for refugees in response to overcrowding on Lesbos and four neighboring islands, Samos, Chios, Leros and Kos. Local residents were enraged with the news and used stones, sticks and fire to express their anger. The Greek police used tear gas and rubber bullets against the demonstrators on Wednesday night as rioting entered its third consecutive night.
The protesters targeted several locations, including a military camp near Pagani village on Lesbos, where police officers sent to Lesbos are housed.
The prosecution in the Assange extradition trial has falsely alleged that WikiLeaks recklessly published unredacted files in 2011 which endangered people's lives. In reality the Pentagon admitted that no one was harmed as a result of the leaks during the Manning trial, and the unredacted files were actually published elsewhere as the result of a Guardian journalist recklessly included a real password in a book about WikiLeaks.
A key government witness during the Chelsea Manning trial, Brig. Gen. Robert Carr, testified under oath that no one was hurt by them. Additionally, the Defense Secretary at the time, Robert M Gates, said that the leaks were "awkward" and "embarrassing" but the consequences for US foreign policy were "fairly modest". It was also leaked at the time that insiders were saying the damage was limited and "containable", and they were exaggerating the damage in an attempt to get Manning punished more severely.
Comment: Luke Harding is almost certainly British intelligence. Leigh probably is too, although he's now 'retired'. Unfortunately Julian didn't know who he was getting involved with when he first partnered with The Guardian...
Haaretz, 27 Feb 2012See also:
The WikiLeaks press statement also mentions "private intelligence staff who align themselves closely with U.S. government policies and channel tips to the Mossad - including through an information mule in the Israeli newspaper Haaretz, Yossi Melman, who conspired with Guardian journalist David Leigh to secretly, and in violation of WikiLeaks' contract with the Guardian, move WikiLeaks U.S. diplomatic cables to Israel."
- Julian Assange 'phoned White House to warn of risk to lives'
- We're asking one question in Assange's case: Should journalists be punished for exposing war crimes?
- Craig Murray: Your man in the public gallery - Assange hearing Day 2
- On Trump's betrayal of Julian Assange
- Assange blasts court for preventing communication with lawyers, alleges legal team is being SPIED on
- US plotted to assassinate Julian Assange, WikiLeaks attorney tells London court
- UK inexplicably bars WikiLeaks editor from extradition hearing one day after Assange handcuffed 11 times & STRIPPED twice
- Day 1 of Assange's US extradition hearing: Key facts to know
He said, "More than 3,800 Iranians have been killed and 12,500 others have been injured in the fight with drug traffickers."
In relevant remarks in January, Secretary-General of Iran's Drug Control Headquarters Brigadier General Eskandar Momeni lashed out at the US and the NATO, two main occupiers of Afghanistan, for encouraging and facilitating poppy cultivation and drug production in the poor country.
Speaking at the annual meeting of counter-narcotics police chiefs of the Law Enforcement Force, Momeni said US forces occupying Afghanistan no doubt facilitates the cultivation of illicit narcotics in that country. The highest rate of drug seizures in the history of Iran and the world belongs to this year [of the local calendar from March 2019 to March 2020], which shows an 18% increase compared to last year, he said.
— Investigative journalist Annette Fuentes
Just when you thought the government couldn't get any more tone-deaf about civil liberties and the growing need to protect "we the people" against an overreaching, overbearing police state, the Trump Administration ushers in even more strident zero tolerance policies that treat children like suspects and criminals, greater numbers of school cops, and all the trappings of a prison complex (unsurmountable fences, entrapment areas, no windows or trees, etc.).
The fallout has been what you'd expect, with the nation's young people treated like hardened criminals: handcuffed, arrested, tasered, tackled and taught the painful lesson that the Constitution (especially the Fourth Amendment) doesn't mean much in the American police state.
For example, in Florida, a cop assigned to River Ridge High School as a school resource officer, threatened to shoot a student attempting to leave school for a morning orthodontist appointment.
In Pennsylvania, school officials called in the cops after a 6-year-old with Down syndrome pointed a finger gun at her teacher.











Comment: The Guardian writes: See also: