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Bacon n Eggs

April grocery prices jumped the most in 46 years

masked grocery shopping
Not since 1974 have grocery store prices surged 2.6 percent in just one month. That just happened in April, according to new data released by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics on Tuesday, as CNBC reported.

Prices Americans paid for eggs, meat, cereal and milk all went higher in April as people flocked to grocery stores to stock up on food amid government lockdowns designed to slow the spread of Covid-19, according to CNBC.

The largest increases were for meat and eggs. Consumers paid 4.3 percent more in April for meats, poultry, fish and eggs, 1.5 percent more for fruits and vegetables, and 2.9 percent more for cereals and bakery products, as well as nonalcoholic beverages, the Labor Department said, as The Washington Post reported.

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Quenelle

Facebook's dangerously fake "fact checking"

coronavirus epoch times
I've been drawing attention to the increasingly aggressive efforts by political and corporate interests to control the information you get on the news and online. I have often spoken of disingenuous "fact checking" efforts conducted by conflicted third parties who are actually trying to shape public opinion and control the information the public can access.

One chilling example comes in the form of Facebook's fake "science fact checks." The social media company has improperly been censoring and flagging material as "false."

A recent example is a popular documentary by Epoch Times about the possible link between Covid-19 and a research lab in Wuhan, China.

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Pistol

Manhunt in Moscow after GUN BATTLE with KALASHNIKOV rifles & pistols erupts in broad daylight

gun battle moscow
Deafening volleys of gunfire startled residents of a sleepy residential area in south Moscow, on Sunday. They witnessed video-game-like scenes of men firing AK-47s and other guns in broad daylight below their windows.

Police have yet to comment on what prompted the violence, but several sources speculate that it was related to a conflict within the lucrative funeral business in the Russian capital.

Witnesses told reporters that it initially looked like a road rage incident. One car refused to let another pass on the narrow road, with the drivers and passengers getting out and starting to argue. The row then moved to the parking lot, where it escalated and shots were fired.

X

Ohio judge deems state's coronavirus lockdown illegal

Amy Acton
© AP Photo/Tony Dejak
An Ohio judge deemed the state's lockdown in response to the Chinese coronavirus illegal, and stated that the state's top health director "acted in an impermissibly arbitrary, unreasonable, and oppressive manner."

Lake County Common Pleas Judge Eugene Lucci ruled that Amy Acton, the director of the Ohio Department of Health, is prohibited from punishing nonessential businesses that defy Ohio's orders to stay closed in response to the Chinese coronavirus pandemic, Cleveland 19 News reported.

The report added that the Lake County General Health District, police officers, prosecutors, and the Ohio Attorney General are also prohibited from punishing so-called "nonessential" businesses, as the companies already operate in compliance with standard safety regulations.

Moreover, Lucci declared that Acton "has acted in an impermissibly arbitrary, unreasonable, and oppressive manner," reported the Columbus Dispatch.

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People 2

'Relapses are through the roof, overdoses are through the roof': How the pandemic Is upping substance abuse

alcoholism
You take rehab.com — our website traffic is up 382 percent in the past 30 days with people looking for treatment for either substance abuse or mental health.'

This is a "pandemic within a pandemic," according to addiction expert Tim Ryan, who's watched the coronavirus outbreak exacerbate the preexistent opioid and mental health crises with devastating effect. Ryan, the star of A&E's 2017 "Dope Man" special, is the founder of "A Man In Recovery Foundation," which partners with Rehab.com. A former heroin addict, his mission is to assist others struggling with substance abuse.

In a Friday interview, Ryan explained how the stresses of isolation and financial trouble brought on by the pandemic are worsening addiction, both by pushing new users to abuse substances and making it more difficult for recovering addicts to stay sober. Rehab facilities are struggling to cope with the challenges of a viral outbreak, according to Ryan, who also said alcohol and fentanyl abuse seem to be especially prevalent as the nation stays home.

"What's happening is people need purpose, they need connection, they need fellowship," he told me. "Now they're all alone."

Ryan also shared compelling advice for concerned loved ones and anyone personally struggling to stay sober during this painful and unusual time. A transcript of our conversation, lightly edited for clarity, is below.

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Bullseye

16,000 Belgian doctors think schools should open, 'children are victims of the lockdown, not coronavirus'

scool
© Pixabay
Over 10,000 doctors have signed an open letter calling on all children to return to school and be allowed to play without following social-distancing rules.

"Children are at risk of becoming the main victims of the corona measures, while they themselves are the least at risk," a collective of 16,000 doctors wrote, Het Nieuwsblad reports.

Confinement and social-distancing rules are disproportionate to the risk that the virus poses to children, Dr Livia De Picker, one of the signatories, told the outlet.

"The obligation to keep their distance is the big problem, both in and outside education, while the rule is not proportional to the risk of infection that children have," De Picker said, adding that enforcement of the rules by staff caused unnecessary stress and fears in kids.

Comment: It just goes to show how warped people's understanding of this contrived crisis is when - in complete contradiction to the doctors mentioned above, but going off their governments official 'expert' guidance - schools in the UK are proposing to do this to their children:




Arrow Up

US crackdown on drug cartels shows boom of busts

DEA agent
© Stan Honda/AFP via Getty Images
The Trump administration announced a counternarcotics operation in early April, choking off the drug supply chain flowing from Latin America, and now law enforcement officials are choking off drug cartels' cash flow in the U.S.

"It's really around April, where we started saying, 'Hey, we're having a lot more success in this area,'" New York Drug Enforcement Administration special agent in charge Ray Donovan told NBC News.

"With all the stores and shops closed down here, they don't have that as one of the means to quickly launder money."

With businesses shutdown in the major coastal cities where drug trade had boomed, laundering money through other business transactions have been made more difficult for the smugglers, leaving piles of cash easier for law enforcement to home in on, officials told NBC News.

Arrow Up

Professor falsely accused of rape wins $1.2 million in defamation case

Francesco Parisi

This law professor was falsely accused of rape in 2017, but has now won a defamation suit after the accuser's case proved false.
A University of Minnesota Law School professor, Francesco Parisi, has won a nearly $1.2 million defamation case against a woman who had falsely accused him of rape.

In his blistering ruling on Tuesday, Hennepin County Judge Daniel Moreno wrote that Parisi's former lover, Morgan Wright, had pursued an "untruthful narrative crusade," and her "accusations were false, and made with malice."

It is believed to be the largest defamation judgement in Minnesota. The vast majority of the judgement, $814,514 is for economic losses, as well as reputational and emotional damages. Only $100,000 was for punitive damages.

Parisi walked out of jail three years ago, his life in shambles.


Fire

Massive fires erupt at iconic Fisherman's Wharf in San Francisco

Fisherman's Wharf fire
A four alarm fire erupted on San Francisco's iconic Fisherman's Wharf early Saturday morning, CBS San Francisco reports. The blaze started at a warehouse that contained a large fish processing operation on Pier 45.

More than 100 firefighters responded to towering flames around 4 a.m. local time. Flames began to spread underneath the pier, and the structure began to collapse. Firefighters took a defensive approach, shutting down streets around the waterfront neighborhood.

CBS San Francisco reports the fire could be seen for miles, and a large plume of smoke covered much of the Bay.

San Francisco Fire spokesman Jonathan Baxter reported around 6:30 a.m. local time that the fire was "still active and four-alarm status," according to the department's public updates.


People 2

Maryland boardwalk 'packed' for Memorial Day weekend after reopening two weeks ago

Maryland boardwalk
In Ocean City, Maryland, the lifeguards were in the stands for the first time this season, the sun was out and if you were lucky enough, you could catch a wave.

For Chris Sexton from Baltimore, it was heaven.

"Hallelujah! I would think there would not be that many people, but it was more than I expected," he said.

His family enjoyed the ease of this Memorial Day weekend trip.

"We got here really quick. No traffic. We went right through," Amber Sexton said.