Society's Child
The plan will allow Hunter Biden to forge ahead with his new career as an artist after a career change from a high-paid consultant on international deals, by also shielding him from the identities of those who purchase his pricey works. The deal came about after Biden administration staffers reached out to Hunter's lawyers to forge a plan intended to 'avoid' ethics concerns and let the president's son pursue his new career.
But there are still questions over how the administration and his lawyers will stop individual buyers from reaching out to Hunter or someone revealing how much one of his paintings has been purchased for.
According to a New South Wales government notice on Friday - which was signed by Brad Hazzard, NSW's minister for health and medical research - outdoor "public gatherings," including exercise, are limited to just two people who must stay within 10km of their homes, as Sydney prepares to enter its third week of lockdown.
Those in Greater Sydney must also "carry evidence showing their address and produce the evidence if required to do so by a police officer" if they are at least 18 years old.
Legal restrictions are even tighter for those who are out to get groceries, with only one person per household able to go outside to "obtain food, goods or services once per day."
Comment: How wrong it all is doesn't even approach the black heart of the matter.
See also:
- Government officials use Delta variant COVID scare to put Sydney and its suburbs under lockdown
- Lockdown in New South Wales, Australia fails to prevent spread of Delta Covid variant

The Wellington hospital in New Zealand. The city has 46 children hospitalised with respiratory illnesses.
Comment: The Newspeak that has emerged since the beginning of this manufactured crisis is particularly insidious. Rather than state outright that lockdowns are harming the development of children's immune systems, the issue is rebranded as 'immunity debt'.
Wellington has 46 children currently hospitalised for respiratory illnesses including respiratory syncytial virus, or RSV. A number are infants, and many are on oxygen. Other hospitals are also experiencing a rise in cases that are straining their resources - with some delaying surgeries or converting playrooms into clinical space.
Comment: Are hospitals continuing to struggle because Covid policy has, as it has in the UK, removed a third of beds and has numerous healthy staff isolating?
Comment: Some countries were praising the extremely draconian restrictions in New Zealand as the ideal model for how to manage the relatively harmless coronavirus. With lockdowns suppressing the transmission of viruses of all kinds, coupled with the harm they cause through stress, lack of sunlight, exercise, excessive cleanliness, in addition to the mass, experimental vaccine campaigns, the situation is ripe for a very real pandemic.
- The Inanity of RNA Vaccines For COVID-19
- New Light on the Black Death: The Viral and Cosmic Connection
- UK set to reach herd immunity within days say scientists
Launching a public education and awareness campaign is part of the Liberal government's anti-racism strategy.
That strategy says $3.3 million will be spent on a marketing effort.
Comment: See also:
- Terrorism, Immigration and Racism in Canada: The Backlash has Begun
- Hasn't got a clue Trudeau blames Trump's 'racist' policies for Canada's immigration crisis
- Congratulations, Canada: Now the world is talking about your Prime Minister's "racist" rhetoric
- Critical Race Theory invades classrooms: US public schools are poised to teach students the new 3Rs - 'racism, racism, racism'
- Oxfam under fire for 'divisive' staff survey that rejects 'reverse racism' & calls racism 'power construct' to benefit 'whiteness'
- Ted Cruz: Critical Race Theory 'is every bit as racist as the klansmen in white sheets'
Comment: See also:
- 'Child abuse': Washington Post writer blasted for arguing children should be exposed to 'kink' & BDSM at Pride
- Slay, queen? Pride signs in New York subway suggest death threats to the transphobic
- As long as you're not white & heterosexual, all are welcome on the new Progress Pride paint chart parody of a flag
- Cuomo's daughter's coming-out is another chance for media to evangelize for LGBTQ agenda, cheer on favorite supposed victim class
- Speechless: Nickelodeon cartoon 'Blue's Clues' features LGBTQ pride parade with drag queen & 'trans' animals
- Toying with identity? Lego unveils 'LGBTQIA+' rainbow-themed set designed to 'celebrate everyone'
- Kids of 2 'becoming trans'? Young girls being taught to bind their breasts? The LGBTQ+ crusade is out of control
As four evil paedophiles begin their prison sentences this week having been found guilty of being part of the biggest child abuse ring ever uncovered in Germany, one of the nation's most tireless campaigners has warned that sex abuse of children is at epidemic levels.
Activist Julia von Weiler, from the German branch of global NGO Innocence in Danger, says that the World Health Organisation estimates of a million German children having suffered sexual violence is way too low.
Comment: See also:
- 'Child abuse': Washington Post writer blasted for arguing children should be exposed to 'kink' & BDSM at Pride
- The Finders: CIA ties to child sex cult obscured as coverage goes from sensationalism to silence
- American internet giants still refusing to remove 10,000 posts including child porn & terrorist materials, Russian regulator says
- Mexico report suggests child sex abuse ring at some schools
- California community activist arrested for continuous sexual abuse of child under 10
- Baby rescued from seedy Philippines slum where live child-sex shows were performed for online paedophiles - after arrest of Australian man led cops to the lair
- Alabama state trooper charged in child rape hid checkered FBI past
But inexorably, questions of identity inserted themselves into teacher-student relationships. It became increasingly dangerous for me to question, to challenge, to push — let alone to betray frustration or even anger when a student was conning me or not working to capacity. Year by year, as I met each new cohort of students, I had to calculate how much my own disfavored identity (white, male, heterosexual, middle-class) made it risky for me to push — depending on whether or not a student's identity was (given the political climate of the moment) favored. The job I had been trained to do — help students work with the nuts and bolts of language as writers and readers, as well as help them (in the best of worlds) appreciate the power and beauty of written English — became more and more difficult. Some students considered questioning and criticism racist — and the texts we read and wrote about white. Such thinking expanded, in time, to embrace a variety of identities.
I watched these developments unfold over more than 50 years of teaching — 35 years at a small, inexpensive, public college located downtown in my large American city, and later, almost 20 years at the state university located a few miles across town. The small college had opened in the 60s to serve a lower-middle-class to middle-class area, one that included a large black community. It was part of the laudable spread of such colleges, an initiative begun in California. Our charge was to provide opportunity to first-in-their-family college students — to high school graduates who were not ready for and/or could not afford a private college or the state university.
A letter to Prime Minister Boris Johnson, signed by the Food and Drink Federation and five other organizations, says that a labor crisis has stemmed from a combination of the pandemic and Brexit, the UK's withdrawal from the European Union. It warns that government intervention "is the only way we will be able to avert critical supply chains failing at an unprecedented and unimaginable level."
The head of the Road Haulage Association told The Guardian that the country has a shortage of up to 100,000 long-haul truck drivers. Brexit has made things worse by making it harder for truck drivers from Eastern Europe to enter the country. Processing plants and warehouses are also reporting a hard time finding workers.
As a result, farmers are complaining that they're not getting the daily pickups they need, and supermarkets are starting to see shortages, especially of refrigerated food, a huge market in Britain.
"I think it is going to be like a series of rolling power cuts in that we are going to see shortages, then shelves replenished, and shortages again," said the head of the nation's Cold Chain Federation. "That is going to carry on for as long as demand is unpredictable and labor remains as tight as it is."
FAIR's Alan MacLeod writes that "as of Friday, July 2, there has been literally zero coverage of it in corporate media; not one word in the New York Times, Washington Post, CNN, NBC News, Fox News or NPR."
"A search online for either 'Assange' or 'Thordarson' will elicit zero relevant articles from establishment sources, either US or elsewhere in the Anglosphere, even in tech-focused platforms like the Verge, Wired or Gizmodo," MacLeod adds.
At least 14 rockets were fired against the Ain Al-Asad base on Wednesday, injuring three people, the US-led coalition said.
This is not the first attack against the compound this year: back in May, it was targeted by a drone attack, but neither US nor coalition troops stationed at the base were injured. No group has claimed responsibility for the attack so far.















Comment: What about this doesn't scream scheme?