Society's ChildS


Eagle

The vocabulary of oppression: Israeli 'chutzpah' versus Palestinian 'sumud'

Israeli soldier chokeholds young boy at gunpoint
© AFP/GettyIsraeli soldier chokeholds young boy at gunpoint after clashes between Israeli occupation forces and Palestinian protesters following Nabi Saleh march against illegal Jewish only settlement expansion on their village land. West Bank, Palestine August 28, 2015
In his book "The Joys of Yiddish" (1968), Leo Rosten writes that "the classic definition of chutzpa is, of course, this: Chutzpa is that quality enshrined in a man who, having killed his mother and father, throws himself on the mercy of the court because he is an orphan. A chuzpanik may be defined as the man who shouts "Help! Help!" while beating you up."

Chutzpah is a term in both Yiddish and Hebrew. Whilst in pre-Israel times it may have been a term mostly regarded with negativity, the Zionist settlement in Palestine and the establishment of a Jewish State with borders that became undefined and continuously expanding, came to give this term an aura of actual virtue in the eyes of many Israelis. Chutzpah, in Israeli national terms, would come to be known as a necessary ingredient to get by and grow. Israel's second Prime Minister Moshe Sharett noted this aspect clearly: "I have learned that the state of Israel cannot be ruled in our generation without deceit and adventurism. These are historical facts that cannot be altered. . . In the end, history will justify both the stratagems and deceit and the acts of adventurism". (In Simha Flapan, The Birth of Israel: Myths and Realities and partially at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. )

Israel's Chutzpah at the national level, shouting "help! Help!" whilst beating Palestinians up, could be seen in vivid colors last year, when a video from the weekly Friday protest at Nabi Saleh on 28th August 2015 went viral. In the video, a fully armed and masked Israeli soldier is seen picking out a boy of 12 (minute 2:00) who has a broken arm in a cast, grappling him and pressing him down on a rock, on his broken arm. The boy's sister and mother come to his rescue and, unarmed of course, attempt to rescue the boy from the soldier's hold. This situation was an iconic portrayal of the egregious balance of power, where the boy is inarguably a victim. But no - Minister of Culture and Sport Miri Regev was "shocked to see the video this morning of Palestinians hitting an IDF soldier," adding that, "It cannot be that our soldiers will be sent on missions with their hands tied behind their backs. It's simply a disgrace!.... We must immediately order that a soldier under attack be able to return fire. Period."

Gold Seal

Best of the Web: UN Director-General lays out 17 facts that dispel Western media and government narratives about the refugee crisis

refugees
© ASSOCIATED PRESS
Journalists and politicians are wilfully ignoring the facts about Muslims and migrants, a senior figure in the UN has claimed, leading to a complete misrepresentation of the refugee crisis engulfing Europe.

Michael Møller, Director-General of the United Nations Office at Geneva, argues that contrary to popular belief, the number of refugees relative to Europe's population is tiny, and violence is not the main reason people leave Syria.

And the claim that this is the 'biggest refugee crisis since the Second World War' is completely incorrect, he tells The Huffington Post UK.

Møller, who spent more than 35 years at the UN, including working as Secretary-General Ban Ki Moon's representative, laid out 17 things he believes we have got drastically wrong in our understanding of the crisis.

He said he is "baffled" and angry that the narrative around refugees does not reflect the facts, leading to counterproductive actions like cutting financial aid to countries around Syria, which "obviously" forces people to move on from underfunded camps.

He accused the media of reducing refugee stories to the "lowest common denominator" and politicians of "pandering" to xenophobic views to win elections.

Pills

Elderly man kills his wife as he couldn't afford her medications

pills
© Bogdan Cristel / Reuters
An elderly man fatally shot his sick wife while she slept because he couldn't afford her medication, according to police officials in Florida. His wife had been ill for 15 years.

William Hager was arrested after he called the St. Lucie County Sheriff's Office. He was charged with first-degree murder on Wednesday.

Deputies said that Hager, 86, called 911 to report a verbal dispute on Monday. When an investigator arrived, he led them to a bedroom where the body of his 78-year-old wife, Carolyn Hager, was laying on the bed covered by a blanket with a bullet wound to the head.

Shopping Bag

Venezuela fractured: There is a shortage of everything in the country

venezuela queue
There are large queues to shop in cites and towns across Venezuela. But it is more in hope than expectancy. From toilet paper to beer there is a shortage in the country of everything. That includes food which is sold at subsidised prices. It is an economic meltdown. The people are ready to, "explode" opposition leaders have warned.

"We still have not found a place where we can get rice, pasta, butter, anything so we can give our kids something to eat. I am tired of it. How is it possible that they have us in this situation and they don't give any kind of information regarding the fact there isn't any food for us to take home," explained Caracas resident Maria Hernandez.

"The queues are tremendous, we have never seen this before. I have never seen them the way they are now and the worst thing is that we can't even get our hands on milk for the babies who are having a worse time of it," added another resident Placida Delgado.

The fractured economy and shortage of essentials is linked to oil which accounts for over 90 percent of Venezuela's export revenues. As the prices of crude took a nosedive the country with the world's largest reserves was hit hard.

Comment: The economic collapse and food crisis occurring in Venezuela is a preview of what Americans may be experiencing in the not too distant future.


Dollars

Revenue from marijuana taxes to be used to fund scholarships in Colorado

marijuana
© Fredy Builes / Reuters
Students in Colorado will soon see the benefits of smoking weed, as a new program will fund scholarships with revenue from marijuana taxes for the first time.

The Pueblo Hispanic Education Foundation in Colorado's Pueblo County is offering 25 students $1,000 scholarships, thanks to funds raised from the legal sale of cannabis.

"It's incredible," Beverly Duran, the executive director of the Pueblo Hispanic Education Foundation, told USA Today."Every year we get a nice pool of students... but we can always only award to a small percentage. This for us expands that to extraordinary lengths."

At the end of 2014, voters in Pueblo County approved a tax on local cannabis growing operations to fund scholarships for higher education.

The tax will be phased in over five years, with at least 50 percent of the revenue designated for scholarships. The remainder will go towards public improvement projects and medical marijuana research, according to Reuters.

Black Cat

New York woman arrested for trying to eat friend's face, chest, armpit

Lindie Stewart
© Benzen ReportersLindie Stewart
A woman has been arrested for allegedly trying to eat her friend's face after she took a dangerous cocktail of drugs. Lindie Stewart, 37, is thought to have taken a mixture of cocaine and crystal meth before going on her rampage.

She was arrested at her home in Newark, New York on 8 May. Police had been called to her home to look into a disturbance at around 11.18pm. According to police, Stewart's friend Michael Maricle was found with a bleeding face.

The drug-addled woman was being held down by her friend after she started trying to bite his face.
Her boyfriend Rocky Rouse also arrived at the house after he found out about Stewart's biting rampage. She then tried to take chunks out of Rouse's chest and armpits.

Pills

'Dr. Death': Georgia psychiatrist charged with murder in deaths of patients overdosing on opiate painkillers

Narendra Nagareddy
© Sky News
A Georgia psychiatrist dubbed Dr Death has been charged with murder in the overdose deaths of three patients.

Thirty-six of Dr Narendra Nagareddy's patients died while he was prescribing them painkillers, court documents allege.

Twelve of them died of prescription drug overdoses, post-mortem examinations confirmed.

The doctor could face further charges for at least 30 other deaths, the Henry Herald reports.

Nagareddy - who was arrested in January - allegedly ran a pill mill out of his office in an Atlanta suburb.

In one 11-month period ending in July 2015, he prescribed nearly 500 times the amount of oxycodone prescribed by any other colleague at the Southern Regional Medical Center.

District Attorney Tracy Graham-Lawson said at least 11 of the counts Nagareddy faces include negligence to sign or date prescriptions.

Comment: Landmark case: Pill-mill doctor convicted of murder for over prescribing opioids


Red Flag

Hysteria: School suspends 5yo girl for bringing bubble gun to school

bubble gun
© Jim Young / Reuters
A Colorado school has branded a $5 bubble gun as a "safety concern" and suspended the 5-year old girl who brought it to school under its "zero tolerance" policy. However, the student's mother argues that the move shows no "common sense."

"I apologized right away and said that I am so sorry she did that," the mother identified only as Emma said, according to ABC-affiliate KMGH. "I appreciate that they're trying to keep our kids safe, I really do. But there needs to be some common sense. It blows bubbles."

Emma said she didn't know her daughter had the bubble gun in her backpack when she brought it to Southeast Elementary School; otherwise she would have never permitted it.

The school called the mother after the girl took out the toy in the hallway during indoor recess before the start of the school day.

V

Ex-London mayor wins contest for most offensive Erdogan poem

Former mayor of London Boris Johnson
© Hannah McKay / ReutersFormer mayor of London Boris Johnson
Former London Mayor Boris Johnson has won the "President Erdogan Offensive Poetry competition" held by the Spectator. The flamboyant Brexiteer, a former editor of the magazine, is to be awarded £1,000 for a limerick which alleges that Erdogan had sex with a goat.

Journalist and author Douglas Murray, who came up the idea of the contest, said that although the authors of numerous entries in English, German and Turkish that came from all over the world may feel "robbed" by his decision to give the prize to Johnson's poem, by doing so he is making a "moral point more than a poetic one."

The competition was launched by Murray as a protest against the actions of German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who had given a green light to the criminal prosecution of German comedian Jan Böhmermann for his "defamatory poem" about Erdogan. Böhmermann, if found guilty of breaching a rarely used Section 103 of the German penal code that forbids insulting institutions and representatives of foreign countries, could face up to two years in jail. Merkel's decision to allow the prosecution to go ahead spurred a storm of negative comments, with critics blaming the German leader for giving in to the Turkish president's arbitrary demands and allowing him to violate the principles of free speech on German soil in exchange for agreeing to the EU-Turkey refugee deal.

Eye 2

Turkish journalist who leaked video of secret weapons smuggling trial sentenced to jail and loses custody of her children

Arzu Yıldız
© TwitterArzu Yıldız
Journalist Arzu Yildiz was sentenced to 20 months in jail and lost her parental rights after exposing a video related to a weapons-smuggling scandal denied by the Turkish government, in what her lawyer said was "an act of revenge" by Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

"Nobody can take my children away from me... not even the Sultan himself, let alone the court," Yildiz told Can Erzincan TV, outside the court in the southern city of Mersin.

The journalist's sentence is related to a 2014 incident in which prosecutors uncovered trucks belonging to MIT, Turkey's national security agency, smuggling weapons for rebels across the border to Syria. President Erdogan has insisted that the vehicles were carrying humanitarian aid and accused the prosecutors of "treason and espionage," as well as of being agents of his US-based nemesis Fethullah Gulen.

The prosecutors were arrested and put on trial before a closed court, before being sentenced to prison terms. Yildiz obtained video of the proceedings, however, and posted the prosecutors' testimonies, which contradicted the government's claims, on YouTube. She was later charged with breaching court confidentiality.