Society's Child
On Friday, the official Twitter account for the Metropolitan Police's LGBT+ advisers published a pro-LGBT pride message, which featured a rainbow flag with extra colour stripes to represent transgender and black people.
"We stand with Black, Asian & Minority Ethnic #LGBT+ people & Queer People of Colour in the fight against racism," read the post.
"We are part of the @LGBTpoliceuk #intersectionality working group to amplify their voices within @metpoliceuk & across our communities."
Though the post received 67 likes, Met Police received hundreds of complaints, with many Brits pointing out that there is currently a knife and machete crime problem in the capital city.

Dr Aruna Khilanani, who is a psychiatrist and psychoanalyst, delivered the talk virtually to Yale University medical students and faculty back in April.
Dr Aruna Khilanani, who runs her own practice in Manhattan, delivered the talk virtually to medical students and faculty back in April after being invited by Yale School of Medicine's Child Study Center.
Audio of her 50-minute lecture was published on journalist Bari Weiss' Substack blog on Friday.
Comment: Sounds like a mentally stable academic that Yale would be proud to represent. Blatant racism is the new political correctness.
See also:
- Biden DOJ drops discrimination suit against Yale - Asian Americans now second-class citizens
- The Justice Department accused Yale University of discriminating against Asian American and white applicants
- Woke Yale stops teaching 'problematic' European art canon, proving we no longer deserve the classics
- Diversity, inclusion and anti-excellence: A former dean of the Yale Law School sounds a warning
- PC totalitarianism? Yale student says she's collecting dirt on 'ambitious white boys'
- More Yale freshmen identify as LGBTQ than conservative
- Yale University being investigated by Department of Education, accused of 'toxic environment against men'
I will be 84 next month — even though I have smoked since I was sixteen. I started with five Woodbines and now I smoke Davidoff magnums which I have to get from Germany.
I recently told my doctor I smoke twenty a day, then about ten in the evenings — and I try and keep it down to five during the night. I also told him that I have had three doctors in the last fifty years. Each of them recommended I give up. But each of them has now died; the last one only a year older than me. My new doctor laughed and said nothing. He has a good sense of humour.
My father was a very keen anti-smoker, but he died at 75 because he ate too many chocolate biscuits. He was a diabetic who would walk up the street to buy a packet of chocolate biscuits and then eat them all in the park. This caused him to go into comas, which he did once too often and died of a heart attack in the hospital. He knew that going into a coma damages your heart, but he was a lot more worried about the smokers.
I knew this was completely irrational, but I also knew that he wasn't alone. One of the reasons I moved to Normandy was because there are many people in England like him who are now trying to ban smoking. All of them are humourless bossy boots.
"We are deeply concerned by the blocking of Twitter in Nigeria. Access to the free and #OpenInternet is an essential human right in modern society. We will work to restore access for all those in Nigeria who rely on Twitter to communicate and connect with the world. #KeepitOn," tweeted Twitter Public Policy's account.
Of course, it's widely known by now that Twitter isn't new to the game of banning standing heads of state. Twitter banned former President Donald Trump before he stepped down in January from office. Fellow social media giant Facebook followed suit with the ban and decided it would take effect for the next two years.
Republican congressional candidate Lavern Spicer replied pointedly:
"I am deeply concerned by the suspending of President Donald Trump on Twitter. Access to the free and #OpenInternet is an essential human right in modern society, even if you disagree with their politics."

FILE - In this Saturday, May 8, 2021, file photo, a woman chases a chicken as others sit and wait to receive foodstuffs such as wheat, yellow split peas and vegetable oil at a food distribution operated by the Relief Society of Tigray in the town of Agula, in the Tigray region of northern Ethiopia. The U.N. humanitarian chief warned Friday, June 4, 2021, that famine is imminent in Ethiopia's embattled Tigray region and the country's north and there is a risk that hundreds of thousands of people or more will die.
Mark Lowcock said the economy has been destroyed along with businesses, crops and farms and there are no banking or telecommunications services.
"We are hearing of starvation-related deaths already," he said in a statement Friday.
"People need to wake up," Lowcock said. "The international community needs to really step up, including through the provision of money."
The protest is sprawled out on Harbor Blvd. in Anaheim early Friday morning, near a line of thousands of Disneyland attendees waiting to enter the park on the pedestrian entrance to the park. With posters designed to look like comic books, with the pun "Marvel at the Facts," the protesters claim that the safety measures were flouted in the lead-up to its approval in the United States.
One sign reads, "Rushed COVID-19 vaccines bypassed critical safety steps," while another claims that the Food and Drug Administration has not approved the vaccine. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have repeatedly repudiated any claims that the approval process for the vaccine was rushed, noting that vaccines "were evaluated in tens of thousands of participants in clinical trials" and met multiple "rigorous scientific standards" in order to receive emergency use authorization (EUA) by the FDA.
The Palm Beach Sheriff's Office said in a news release that Felix Cabrera was jailed without bail on a first-degree murder charge following the Friday morning shooting at the Sugar Cane Growers Cooperative in Belle Glade.
Jail records did not list an attorney for Cabrera. The victim's name was not released by the sheriff's department. He was a 67-year-old man from nearby Martin County.
Authorities say Cabrera sought to work one additional year for financial reasons but was turned down. That's when he allegedly pulled out a handgun and shot the boss several times, killing him.
The cooperative is comprised of 44 different sugar cane farms that operate on about 70,000 acres (28,327 hectares) in the Everglades Agricultural Area near Lake Okeechobee.
APD will no longer respond in-person to 911 calls involving certain incidents where suspect information is not available; harassing phone calls that don't include threats to life, unless they are related to stalking or domestic violence; identity theft and other scams, and trespassing reports that don't involve pressing charges, among other incidents, the department said in a Wednesday announcement.
A full list of the calls to which officers will no longer respond can be found in the department's Facebook post.
APD's staffing numbers have decreased by 84 officers since the start of 2020, the department said. According to the Police Executive Research Forum, APD boasted 238 sworn officers as of 2019.
The department is instead asking victims of any of the crimes listed to file a police report through the "Police to Citizen" online reporting tool. They can also call (828) 252-1110 and request that an officer respond when one becomes available, although the department warns that they might experience a "significant" response delay.
Ed Husain, professor at the Walsh School of Foreign Service in Georgetown University, visited mosques across Britain, speaking to businesses owners, imams and locals about life in predominantly Muslim neighbourhoods. He used his on-the-ground research to write a book, Among The Mosques: A Journey Across Muslim Britain, which is set for release next week.
The Muslim author grew up in a Bangladeshi family in London and was radicalised in his youth before renouncing extremism. According to the professor, integration issues in the UK continue to persist.
Comment:
- New UKIP leader Bolton says Britain is being 'buried by Islam'
- Manchester Muslims demand local don't walk their dogs in public because it is 'impure'
- These misguided Muslim 'Sharia squads' are playing right into the EDL's hands
Muslim imams to form first national council for more progressive British Islam
Peter Palese, who runs a lab named in his honor at New York's Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, was among 27 scientists who signed an influential statement in February 2020 blasting suggestions that Covid-19 may have leaked from China's Wuhan Institute of Virology. "We stand together to strongly condemn conspiracy theories suggesting that Covid-19 does not have a natural origin," the lab-leak deniers said in their statement, which was published in The Lancet, a prestigious British medical journal.
Comment:
- The virus "looks engineered", Dr Fauci was told by a leading scientist, before both of them actively suppressed the lab leak theory
- The Lab-leak theory: Inside the battle to uncover COVID-19's origins
- Inquiry into Covid-19 lab leak won't bring out the truth, it will deepen the deception
- Ex-CDC director Redfield says he received death threats from fellow scientists over COVID-19 theory
- Forbes caught in blatant censoring act; scrubs article highlighting COVID-19's lab origins
- Even 'democracy dies in darkness' WaPo is forced to walk back "debunked conspiracy theory" Wuhan Lab leak reporting













Comment: Virtue signalling all in the name of 'equality'. See also: Virtue signal: More than 400 businesses back LGBTQ rights act