Society's Child
Not much is known about her condition or the circumstances of the incident aside from the fact that she was hit by a car while crossing the street and is in the hospital with multiple broken bones.
Law and Crime noted that there is no evidence that Ziv's injuries have anything to do with her role as a witness in the Weinstein trial, but the timing and the fact that Weinstein is notorious for his ruthless intimidation tactics makes the incident suspicious. Weinstein's reputation led many potential witnesses and even journalists to fear for their lives when dealing with his case.
Assange blasts court for preventing communication with lawyers, alleges legal team is being SPIED on

Supporters of Julian Assange (inset) outside Woolwich Crown Court this week.
Amid a prosecution argument about whether or not he stands charged with "political offenses" Assange stood and told the court that "the problem is I cannot participate, I cannot privately communicate with my lawyers."
Judge Vanessa Baraitser responded to the 48-year-old journalist and publisher by saying she would not allow him to address the court: "Mr Assange, generally defendants do not have a voice."
The Australian continued to try and get his point across so the magistrate adjourned the court for five minutes while the defense team held a 'private' meeting.
Comment: see also:
- 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
- Julian Assange 'phoned White House to warn of risk to lives'
- Day 1 of Assange's US extradition hearing: Key facts to know
- The UK, the US, and Assange: A tale of three extraditions
- We're asking one question in Assange's case: Should journalists be punished for exposing war crimes?
- Over 1,000 journalists from across the world unite in defence of Julian Assange
- 'Every journalist should feel a cold, icy hand running down their spine': Assange's extradition case examined in new RT doc
The blowback was swift. "Never thought part of my job would be pleading with a national news network to stop likening the campaign of a jewish presidential candidate whose family was wiped out by the nazis to the third reich," tweeted Sanders's communications director, Mike Casca, "but here we are." By Monday morning, Matthews was facing calls for his head on a platter, with a #FireChrisMatthews hashtag gaining steam on Twitter.

Sinn Féin’s leader, Mary Lou McDonald (centre), and fellow TDs in Dublin to take up their seats in the Dáil.
The prospect of it doing so has produced expressions of horror from its rivals in Fine Gael and Fianna Fáil. The outgoing taoiseach, Leo Varadkar, described Sinn Féin plans to hold post-election rallies as part of a "campaign of intimidation", while in an unprecedented intervention, the Garda commissioner Drew Harris (a former senior officer in the Police Service of Northern Ireland) stated that he agreed with a 2015 security assessment that claimed that the IRA army council still "oversees" the party. Mainstream commentators have echoed these points, stressing that Sinn Féin is unfit for government in Dublin.
Comment: This was responded to by former Sinn Fein leader Gerry Adams in a recent blog post, in which he explained that there's nothing secretive about it: the party has always been open about veterans of its war against British occupation doing campaign work for Sinn Fein, both in Northern Ireland and more recently in the Republic of Ireland. This report is 'the Deep State' providing the establishment parties something with which to shrilly beat Sinn Fein in the media.
A couple of other things to note above: the Dublin establishment is so frightened of Irish nationalism that it recently hired the former top cop of Northern Ireland - thus a British civil servant and naturally of, let's say, 'conflicting loyalties' - to lead the 'independent' Republic's police service! Note also how the current caretaker taoiseach (PM) describes Sinn Fein political rallies as a "campaign of intimidation."
What they're really afraid of, of course, is coming to terms with their own beckoning irrelevance.
This hysteria has several roots. Some evidently dislike the idea of a "northern" party holding power "down here". Others, usually sotto voce, echo the view of the political correspondent John Drennan who once suggested that Sinn Féin supporters existed on a diet of "chips, Dutch Gold and batter burgers" - a nod to the party's supporters being mainly working class.
After describing US intelligence attempts to plant "intrusive and sophisticated" secret surveillance devices in the Ecuadorian Embassy in London where Assange had been living under asylum for seven years, Assange's attorney Edward Fitzgerald told the court according to an explosive Daily Mail report published Tuesday:
"There were conversations about whether there should be more extreme measures contemplated, such as kidnapping or poisoning Julian Assange in the embassy."
Comment: See also:
- UK inexplicably bars WikiLeaks editor from extradition hearing one day after Assange handcuffed 11 times & STRIPPED twice
- Julian Assange 'phoned White House to warn of risk to lives'
- Day 1 of Assange's US extradition hearing: Key facts to know
- The UK, the US, and Assange: A tale of three extraditions
- We're asking one question in Assange's case: Should journalists be punished for exposing war crimes?
- Over 1,000 journalists from across the world unite in defence of Julian Assange
- 'Every journalist should feel a cold, icy hand running down their spine': Assange's extradition case examined in new RT doc

Sen. Bernie Sanders waves to supporters at a campaign rally on February 21st in Las Vegas.
Sanders was quick to see through the gambit. "I'll let you guess about one day before the Nevada caucus," he said. "Why do you think it came out?" He pointed to a Post reporter: "It was The Washington Post? Good friends." The Post, after all, has spent years dumping on Sanders, a fervent critic of the paper's billionaire creep of an owner, Jeff Bezos.
Intelligence officials and pundits have been screeching for years that patriotism demands voters reject the foreign agent Donald Trump and the Russian asset Bernie Sanders, and support a conventional establishment politician. Voters responded by moving toward Trump in national approval surveys and speeding Sanders to the top of the Democratic Party ticket. A more thorough disavowal of official propaganda would be difficult to imagine.
Comment: See also:
- Tucker Carlson: Russia isn't attacking our democratic system - our own ruling class is
- The Big Lie: Senior US Democrats demand Russia sanctions over 2020 election interference
- US Intelligence sources reveal that ALL presidential candidates are Russian agents...except Pete Buttigieg
- US National Security Chief: No evidence of Russia meddling to help Trump
- Trump blames 'Shifty' Adam Schiff for 'Russiagate' Sanders leaks: '2016 all over again for Bernie'
- Russia isn't only behind election hacking! They're also trying to smear US over coronavirus ... according to State Department
- Democrats resurrect 'Russiagate' to go after both Trump and Bernie Sanders, hide their own election trickery
News that Germany isn't raising the alarm due to the 2019-nCoV outbreak in Italy prompted many established media to report on it, with CNN being no exception. The broadcaster's actual report cited a German foreign ministry spokeswoman who said Berlin wasn't issuing a travel warning for Italy at the moment, but their Twitter publication wasn't as accurate.
Now, you have to read carefully to spot the blunder.
"Germany is currently not considering closing the country's borders with Italy due to the coronavirus outbreak, its foreign ministry said," it reads.
Comment: As is the state of American news and the quality of its education. That said, countries around the world are closing their borders due to the coronavirus:
- Coronavirus infections and deaths lead to travel bans in Middle East
- Coronavirus' deadliest day in China, WHO declares international health emergency, countries close borders - UPDATES
- Don't buy China's story: Clues that coronavirus may have leaked from a lab

Locals scuffle with riot police in Karava on the island of Lesbos, Greece, February 25, 2020
Around 500 people attempted to block the unloading of heavy machinery and police reinforcements on the island, which will house a new migrant camp. Locals set fires and brawled with riot cops as police attempted to restore order, according to local media.
Photographs taken at the scene show demonstrators armed with large sticks skirmishing with police. Other photos show protesters fleeing as the police fired tear gas.
Comment: This, after Greek ministers admitted that the mass migration situation is like a ticking time bomb, and numerous riots by refugees at the facilities? Could the EU & IMF backed economic coup be partly to blame for Greece's willingness to follow such dire policies?

Sinn Fein President Mary Lou McDonald addressing a rally at a packed Liberty Hall in Dublin.
Sinn Fein shocked the Irish political establishment in an election earlier this month by securing more votes than any other party for the first time, almost doubling its vote to 24.5% on a vow to fix the country's housing and health systems.
But it has been frozen out of government talks by centre-right rivals, Fianna Fail and Prime Minister Leo Varadkar's Fine Gael, who have both refused to contemplate sharing power due to policy differences and Sinn Fein's history as the political wing of the Irish Republican Army.
The two parties, who have alternated in power for 100 years, on Tuesday held talks about possibly sharing power for the first time.
"They are doing everything they can to keep people who voted for us out of government," Sinn Fein leader Mary Lou McDonald told a packed hall of 500 people, with a couple of hundred more waiting in freezing wind outside. "Sinn Fein wants to be in government and we want to deliver."
'Keep the Home Fires Burning' was the name of a hugely popular Ivor Novello song during the First World War. The British government has just released a 2020 cover version. It's called 'Keep the Home Fires burning so long as it's not coal or wet wood burning in them.' Nowhere near as catchy, is it?
The government is acting, it says, on grounds of public health and in accordance with its 'Clean Air' strategy.
It claims that wet wood (that's wood with a moisture content of at least 20%), and coal, is responsible for 38 percent of PM2.5 pollution in the UK. PM2.5s are particles less than 2.5 micrometers in diameter which, by penetrating deeply into the lung, can cause various diseases. A British Medical Journal research paper found that "positive associations between short term exposure to PM2.5 and risk of hospital admission were found for several prevalent but rarely studied diseases, such as septicemia, fluid and electrolyte disorders."
So, it has to be good, this banning of wet wood and coal fires, doesn't it? Well, not if it plunges even more people into fuel poverty - and prevents people from heating their homes adequately. How many deaths will that cause?
The economic backdrop to the government's announcement, which cannot be ignored, is that according to the latest statistics (from 2017), there are 2.53 million "fuel-poor" households in England, ie 10.9 percent of the total number of households. National Energy Action puts the figure in Britain as a whole at 3.5mn.










Comment: See also: Weinstein found GUILTY of 2 counts sexual assault and 3rd degree rape, acquitted of more serious charges