Society's Child
"Today, by 07:30 p.m. [04:30 GMT], 55 Palestinians in the Gaza Strip were injured in clashes with the Israeli army at the eastern borders of the enclave, 29 of them were wounded by live bullets", Ashraf Qidra said.
Earlier, the ministry reported 30 victims.
"Once, at 2 a.m., you searched YouTube for 'Did aliens build Stonehenge?' Ever since, your YouTube recommendations have been a mess: Roswell, wormholes, Illuminati," Mozilla laments in its call for submissions, asking users for their "YouTube regret" so that they might "put pressure on YouTube to do better."
"YouTube's recommendation engine can lead users down bizarre rabbit holes — and they're not always harmless," the company warns. "Sometimes they drive people toward misinformation and extreme viewpoints."
Putting aside the inanity of blaming YouTube for its users' regrettable viewing choices - no one forces a user to click on the platform's "recommended" videos - Mozilla seems confident that there is an army of YouTube users out there who are itching for stricter censorship on the platform. The media establishment, after all, has been screaming for months that YouTube is radicalizing people, and no one wants to be radicalized.
Gone are the old days of relying on a consumer's borrowing history to determine creditworthiness, and instead lenders now look at such bizarre trivia as magazine subscriptions and phone bills to decide how much should be lent to potential borrowers. Banks like Goldman Sachs Group, Ally Financial and Discover are now experimenting with the new metrics.
The changes are seismic for many large banks, who spent the last 10 years targeting only extremely credit-worthy borrowers. But, as we all know too well, when that pool runs out the show must go on by any means possible. And that is how we got to no-doc loans and subprime CDOs just before the last bubble burst.
At stake is a lot of potential money: banks are targeting the estimated 53 million U.S. adults that don't have credit scores and 56 million that have subprime scores. The banks claim that many of these people don't have traditional borrowing backgrounds, often times because they pay in cash or are new to the U.S. That doesn't make them bad debt slaves prospects, however. Quite the opposite.
Comment: And just what history is the author referring to here...
- The subprime U.S. economy disintegrating due to subprime auto, housing, bond and energy debt
- Bank of America's subprime lender Countrywide found guilty of mortgage fraud
- Subprime students: How Wall Street profits from the college loan mess
- Global derivatives are the $1.5 Quadrillion time bomb that might yet 'destroy Western civilization
- Global financial meltdown coming? Clear signs that the great derivatives crisis has now begun
- The derivatives market is a matrix of fraud - here's how it works
Assange, faces up to 170 years in jail if extradited, tried and found guilty of espionage charges laid by the United States government.
Assange, who is an Australian citizen and a member of MEAA Media, has been indicted by the US Justice Department with 18 charges under the Espionage Act for his role in receiving and publishing classified defence documents both on the WikiLeaks website and in collaboration with major publishers including The New York Times, and The Guardian.
Assange is currently an inmate of the Belmarsh Prison in England for unrelated offences, and the US government is expected to begin extradition proceedings next year.
Comment: The bought-and-paid-for media shills for the corprotocracy could not care less about the implications of Assange's persecution - because they arguably do not practice real journalism - and place little to no value on reporting the crimes of their governments.
See also:
- Media remains dead silent as Wikileaks insider explodes myths around Julian Assange
- The totalitarian hand: State responses to the torture of Julian Assange, morally disengaging media, and the consequences for us all
- Hypocrisy much? The Intercept, which built its reputation on Snowden leaks, calls on Democrats to step up attack on Julian Assange
- 'Prepping for his assassination': Correa blasts CNN claim that Assange made embassy into 'command post for meddling
- Eva Bartlett: London's 'media freedom' conference smacks of irony - RT-Sputnik barred, mum on Assange and Vyshinsky
- 'Nothing!' Media refuse to cover Roger Waters concert in support of Julian Assange
- The 'set up' of Julian Assange and why The Guardian and New York Times should be in jail
America hates big pharma and the government. No surprise there. But the pharmaceutical industry is hated slightly more. It ranked last in favorability among Americans, according to a new poll conducted by Gallup. This year marked the lowest net positivity rating (the difference between people who say they like the industry and those who dislike the industry) that the pharmaceutical industry has had since Gallup started polling in 2001. Big Pharma's -31 net positivity rating was so low, only a handful of industries had been ranked lower. Other hated sectors include the federal government, and oil and gas companies
America's distaste for the scandal-plagued pharmaceutical industry isn't without reason. Earlier this year, Congress grilled pharma leaders for the high cost of prescription drugs. An Oklahoma judge recently ordered Johnson & Johnson pay $572 million for its role in the opioid epidemic. Novartis and other major pharma companies stopped developing life-saving medicine for lack of profit. -Middle Town Press

Prison for Non-Violent Opposition to Illegal Immigration: GI activists Clément Galant, Romain Espino, and Damien Lefèvre.
In spring 2018, French GI activists - frustrated by the French government's inability or unwillingness to get the migrant crisis under control and prevent illegal immigration into their country - decided to take matters into their own hands with symbolic but effective nonviolent action.
GI blocked the Col de l'Échelle, an Alpine mountain pass near the border with Italy, through which migrant crossings were known to occur. The activists deployed banners, fences, and even helicopters to prevent the migrants from entering France.
Comment: See also: Also check out SOTT radio's: NewsReal #26: Globalization vs Nationalism - The Hidden Causes of The Yellow Vest Protests in France
The 'Desperate Housewives' star pleaded guilty to paying $15,000 to falsify her daughter Sophia's SAT - a college admissions test - and was sentenced to two weeks in jail, 250 hours of community service, a $30,000 fine and a year of supervised release. Altogether, a slap on the wrist to a Hollywood celebrity.
It did not take long for her case to be contrasted with the fate of Tanya McDowell, a Connecticut woman who falsified a residency document in 2011 to enroll her son in a better school. McDowell ended up getting jailed for five years for first-degree larceny, and would have faced an even longer sentence had she not made a deal with prosecutors.
Comparing the two cases is absolutely apples to apples. That McDowell was later charged with selling drugs to undercover police officers and given a concurrent sentence does not change the severity of her initial punishment - 130 times longer than was meted out to Huffman.
But what if both contenders have a piece of the truth? What if many identity-firsters today are claiming to be victims because they and their societies are victims — only not so much of the abstract "isms" they denounce, but of something else that till now has eluded description?
Let's try a new theory: Our macro-politics have become a mania about identity because our micropolitics are no longer familial. This, above all, is what happened during the decades in which identity politics went from being a phrase in an obscure quasi-radical document to a way of being that has gone on to transform academia, law, media, culture and government.
Deputies said she stole their debit card and took out more than $1,400 to try and pay two different people to kill them.
Alyssa Hatcher is a student at Umatilla High School. Deputies said a tip by another teenager led them to discover her plan to have her parents killed.
"Her of all people, that was very shocking to me," a student said. "She's such a sweet girl. She's very caring."
The American-backed YPG militias have led the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) in the fight against Daesh, but many residents of border towns and villages are suspicious of Turkey's cooperation with the United States because they do not regard the US as a real ally of Turkey due to American support for the Kurdish forces.
Ankara considers the YPG a terrorist group and an offshoot of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), which has been fighting to establish a Kurdish autonomous region in southeast Turkey since the early 1980s.
Locals in the Turkish border towns of Akçaoba, Akçakale, and Ziyaret are in favour of creating a buffer zone but under the control of Turkey without US involvement. They believe that America is playing a double game and is in the region to further its own goals. That's the view of local resident Mahmut Sönmez:
"We want Turkey to control the 'safe zone' because this issue is directly related to our security and the security of our country. We live right on the border, and the presence of YPG here worries us all very much. Our security will be ensured when the YPG units are withdrawn from the border and the Turkish military takes their place. Turkey should create a 'safe zone' as soon as possible, and not follow the United States lead, which deliberately drags out time."















Comment: See also: Gilad Atzmon: The End of Israel