Society's Child
The former Governor of California was spotted handing out the birds in LA ahead of the holiday on 28 November.
The Austrian-born actor - who achieved super stardom with the Terminator and Predator films - chose Hollenbeck Youth Center as the location for his surprise act of generosity.
German authorities estimate somewhere in the region of 5,000 tractors and 10,000 farmers entered Berlin in a slow-moving convoy, bringing the capital to a relative standstill at certain points. The protesters eventually gathered at Berlin's iconic landmark Brandenburg Gate.
Chancellor Angela Merkel's government made the proposals back in September to curb the use of pesticides and herbicides to better protect the country's insect populations, while also placing limits on the use of fertilizers to protect Germany's groundwater.
Comment: German farmers were also protesting about the same issue on the 22nd October and yet no dialogue seems to have been forthcoming from the government. But it's not just farmers who are expressing their dissatisfaction with the path politics in Germany is taking:
- Merkel slips from top spot as Left Party bigwig Sahra Wagenknecht becomes Germany's most loved politician
- Rightwing populist party AfD makes big gains as Merkel and allies slip but hold power in German state elections
- Alastair Crooke: Germany stalls and Europe craters
Comment: 24 hours later, it's still a raging inferno in Port Neches. Local authorities have ordered about 60,000 people to evacuate the area.
A chemical plant in Port Neches, Texas exploded in the early hours of Wednesday morning, according to eyewitnesses and local media. The evacuation of nearby residents is reportedly already under way.
There have been no reports of injuries but damage to buildings in the vicinity is widespread as the explosion, reportedly at the TPC Group chemical plant, blew out buildings and rocked homes up to 40 miles (64km) away. The explosion was even felt as far away as neighboring Louisiana.
Comment: It appears that major explosions are occurring more frequently in recent times:
- ANOTHER major fire breaks out at chemical plant, this time at a refinery in California
- ANOTHER major fire at a chemical plant in Europe, this time at a waste disposal facility in Linz, Austria
- China chemical plant blast kills 4, injures 6
- Again? Another massive industrial blaze breaks out in France, 100 firefighters deployed near Lyons, France
- Rouen residents rally after chem plant blaze: 'We want to know what we're breathing!'
- Massive explosion at Florida shopping center: 'It just looks like an apocalypse, 'multiple patients'
- Powerful explosion obliterates suburban house in Christchurch, New Zealand - Gas suspected but cause unknown
- Fire 'like a nuclear bomb' rips through Philadelphia refinery
The Birobidzhan diocese in the Jewish Autonomous Region in Siberia said in a statement on November 26 that the rector of the church in the village of Amurzet, whose name was not disclosed, has been sent to pretrial detention.
The statement added that the diocese's bishop had relieved the arrested priest of all church duties and banned him from serving in the clergy while the investigation takes place.
Carlson boldly went where no mainstream TV host had gone before, unpacking the explosive story of April 2018's Douma "chemical weapons attack." While the "attack" was attributed to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad by an altered report from the Organization for the Prevention of Chemical Weapons, two whistleblowers within the group accused it of omitting evidence to craft a misleading narrative - a fact that has never crossed the lips of US media until Monday night.
The polarizing Fox host dismantled the official Western media narrative in a seven-minute segment that included an interview with the Guardian correspondent who personally witnessed the second whistleblower present evidence to the agency.
Worshippers at the Brodskiy Synagogue in central Kyiv found the sculpture in the morning on November 25 vandalized with a large red swastika painted on the body of the monument, which depicts Aleichem standing with a cane in one hand while doffing his hat with the other.
Foreign Minister Vadym Prystayko denounced the act in a tweet as "disgusting, appalling, and in need of prompt investigation. The perpetrator(s) must be brought to justice," he said.
The National Police of Ukraine said in a statement that a probe has been launched into what they called "hooliganism."
Sholem Aleichem, born as Solomon Naumoych Rabynovych in Ukraine in 1859, wrote his works in Yiddish. His most known and popular book was a series of short stories about Tevye the Dairyman, a pious Jewish milkman living in Tsarist Russia, upon which the musical Fiddler on the Roof was based.
It is as if the struggle of truth-tellers like Julian Assange and Chelsea Manning is now a warning to them: that the thugs who dragged Assange out of the Ecuadorian embassy in April may one day come for them.
A common refrain was echoed by the Guardian last week. The extradition of Assange, said the paper, "is not a question of how wise Mr. Assange is, still less how likable. It's not about his character, nor his judgement. It's a matter of press freedom and the public's right to know."
What the Guardian is trying to do is separate Assange from his landmark achievements, which have both profited the Guardian and exposed its own vulnerability, along with its propensity to suck up to rapacious power and smear those who reveal its double standards.
Rare earth metals are used in many devices that people use every day, such as computers, DVDs, rechargeable batteries, cell phones, catalytic converters, magnets, and fluorescent lighting.
Chinese data shows a 10 percent increase in rare earth production compared to last year's level.
China controls at least 85 percent of the world's rare-earth processing capacity. For a long time, the US relied on China for about 80 percent of its rare earths. The escalating trade conflict between the nations has raised concerns about the measures each side could use in their fight, including Beijing's option to restrict exports of rare earths. The measure is considered one of Beijing's nuclear options in its battle with Washington.
Bias training creates workplace tensions where they didn't exist, while also reducing employment opportunities for those it aims to protect. The encouragement of bias reporting on college campuses restricts free speech, encourages hoaxes, and "institutionalizes surveillance." Movie warnings posted by entertainment companies condescend to their viewers, treating them like bigots and racists foaming at the mouth at the prospect of seeing outdated depictions of racial and other stereotypes.
Bias Training
With revenues of approximately of $8 billion per year, the bias training industry is big business. Nevertheless, the enterprise has been considered highly ineffective, even dangerous.
The notion of implicit bias gained currency with the introduction of the Implicit Association Test that supposedly measures the prevalence of "implicit bias." But the test has failed to predict racist or other bigoted behavior. Its predictive failure has led scholars to doubt whether implicit bias can even be measured, let alone be correlated with behavior.
It is little wonder, then, that workplace bias training has produced such miserable results. Bias training has not only exacerbated workplace tensions, it has even reduced the employment opportunities of those it sought to protect. "That's right," remarks Time columnist Joanne Lipman, drawing on studies by Harvard organizational sociology professor Frank Dobbin and others; "companies that introduced diversity training would actually employ more women and black men today if they had never had diversity training at all."
RT's Keiser Report discusses the issue, noting that despite the rising turmoil the US Federal Reserve continues with its money-printing.
"Certainly, we do have a zombie economy thanks to the never-ending parade of free money from the Fed and the growing pile of debt," says Stacy Herbert. She recalls the words of Fed Chair Jerome Powell, who said recently "the debt is growing faster than the economy."















Comment: Look, there's nothing wrong with a big star doing some charity work, handing out turkeys to the less fortunate on Thanksgiving. It's admirable. But the hypocrisy is a little bit blatant here! This is yet more evidence that the elite who preach self-imposed austerity, like going vegan to save the planet have little care for embarking on those selfless tasks themselves. The plebes need to make sacrifices, not the elite.
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