Society's Child
Pollsters recently posed this exact question to Americans and found that more than a third of all of us would snitch on our neighbor. Within that, a strong plurality of Democrats said they would call the cops, while a minority of Republicans said the same. The poll also found that liberals and younger Americans were far more likely to report their neighbors than conservatives and older Americans.
What were the numbers?
A poll from JustTheNews.com conducted by Scott Rasmussen asked adults this question: "Suppose that, in violation of stay-at-home rules, your neighbor had 15-20 people at their home. Would you report them to the police?"
Speaking to Law & Crime, Eva Murry, 26, claims that she was sexually harassed by Biden at First State Gridiron Dinner & Show in 2008, a swanky political roast for Delaware press and politicians similar to the White House Correspondents Dinner.
Murry is the niece of former Republican Senate candidate Christine O'Donnell, who was running for senate against Biden at the time and had occasionally went to political events for school credit. She was in Middle School at the time.
I'm old enough to remember when David Icke was a television sports presenter. For the past thirty-five years or so he's been putting his ideas out on how he thinks the world operates - and it's fair to say he has caused plenty of controversy. Some people laughed at him, some agreed with him, some were indifferent. No one campaigned for him to be banned.
Recently though, that's changed. Icke has been accused of "preaching hate" and of peddling "unsubstantiated conspiracy theories." And now he's charged with promoting "toxic" and "dangerous misinformation" about Covid-19.
Writing in the Observer on April 25, Nick Cohen berated social media platforms for not banning Icke.
Two defectors serving in South Korea's parliament issued public apologies on Monday after insisting the North Korean ruler was dead or close to it. The apologies came on the heels of heavy rebukes from the South's ruling Democratic Party, as well as calls for the defectors to be punished for spreading false rumors.
Over the course of Kim's three-week absence from public duties, the Western media rumor mill churned thinly sourced 'news' from a South Korean clickbait outlet about alleged heart surgery into shock headlines carrying some variant of "Kim is dead, and war is imminent!" The leader rained on the media's parade, though, by showing his face on state TV on Saturday at a ribbon-cutting ceremony for a fertilizer plant. While the defectors who helped fuel the frenzy have publicly displayed some contrition, the Western outlets that amplified their claims have done nothing of the sort. Indeed, some have even tried to double down, claiming a "mysterious" mark on Kim's wrist is proof he was hospitalized.
A financial disclosure statement filed in late April by Tymoshenko, who now serves as an MP in Ukraine's Verkhovna Rada, says she received a whopping 148 million hryvnias ($5.5 million) as part of a pre-trial settlement in a case filed over her persecution at the hands of the Ukrainian authorities back in 2011-2014.
Yet, Tymoshenko's declaration doesn't disclose anything about the lawsuit, besides the name of an American law firm, Reid Collins & Tsai LLP, as the source of the tranche. The legal company's website mentions nothing about any cases related to the former Ukrainian prime minister.
But Harvard Magazine has now upped the ante, going far beyond an insatiable desire for mere money. The May-June 2020 edition of the magazine calls for the abolition of the family. Not in those words exactly, of course, given the bad odor the phrase has acquired: "the abolition of the family" is "arguably the most infamous demand of The Communist Manifesto," written by Marx and Engels. But totalitarianism by any other name still destroys the family, and this appears to be the intention of the article.
Written by Erin O'Donnell, and appearing on the Harvard-linked website of Harvard Law Professor Elizabeth Bartholet, the article, titled, "The Risks of Homeschooling," announces, with great alarm, that "a rapidly increasing number of American families are opting out of sending their children to school, choosing instead to educate them at home. Homeschooled kids now account for roughly 3 percent to 4 percent of school-age children in the United States, a number equivalent to those attending charter schools, and larger than the number currently in parochial schools."

A Star Wars themed restaurant was the setting of a bizarre and violent scene on May 4 as police arrived with guns drawn on a woman who was serving food in a stormtrooper costume.
The waitress at Coco Vanilla Galactic Cantina in Lethbridge was participating in May the Fourth celebrations and serving customers in the parking lot and dancing for her patrons. He costume featured a replica Star Wars blaster.
Moments later, she was tackled by police after they surrounded her with guns drawn.
"Apparently a couple of people had called 911 and said that there was somebody with a gun on 13 Street North," Brad Whalen, the restaurant's owner, told CTV. "A number of police officers had shown up to our business with guns drawn on our employee."
Unconfirmed reports suggest the attempted attack was launched by Israeli forces targeting a research center located in the al-Safira Defense complex near Aleppo.
Video footage posted to social media reportedly shows the air defense system responding to the May 4 event.
A map published by Aurora Intel shows the reported "area of interest" following the reporting of three significant explosions heard in Aleppo.
Universal Credit benefits are paid to people in work as well as those who have lost their jobs.
Coffey said that overall, the volume of welfare claims had been six times bigger than pre-coronavirus during that period, and that in one particular week the increase had been tenfold.
Comment: The numbers will likely soar even higher once the lockdown is 'eased' and people who were 'furloughed' are forced to finally face the reality that their job no longer exists because the economy, dealt the final death blow by the lockdown, can no longer support it. Those who begged the government for the lockdown, believing the media hysteria over a pandemic that never was, are likely to be quite disgruntled, indeed.
The UK's benefit system has been exposed by endless scandals in the last decade for failing to deliver what it is funded by the taxpayer to do, all the while, aided by shady MPs, it deflected blame on to the people who depend on it. In the past much of the British public were quick to scorn those who found themselves on welfare however with those numbers rising the true nature of the system will be revealed to a great many more and they will begin to see the true nature of what is a callous and corrupt system.
- UK gov buries secret report on soaring reliance on foodbanks and welfare system
- UK benefit claimant sanctioned for not finding a job during lockdown, amidst soaring mass unemployment
- UK: Man declared 'fit for work' by Jobcentre dies on way home from assessment
- NewsReal #26: Globalization vs Nationalism - The Hidden Causes of The Yellow Vest Protests in France
- NewsReal: Yellow Vest Protests, Brexit Farce - Revolutionary Climate in Western Europe?
I have been very fond of this proverb since childhood when my parents shipped me off for my summer holidays to stay with my Ukrainian grandparents on their farm. There, over a period of three long months, I became friends with a local boy who introduced me to a game that all the kids in our village played.
The objective was simple: to dig a hole, conceal it with leaves, branches, and other debris and then guide your chosen target into it — typically a girl you fancied or, better still, a competitor for her attentions. Whoever said chivalry is dead has never been deliberately walked into a hole by the boy of her dreams.














Comment: Geezus! Seems Canada isn't immune to police insanity. This woman very likely 'didn't comply with police directions' because she didn't understand how they were directing them toward her! The owner is right: these police officers didn't act with a lick of sense.