Society's Child
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.
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.
The Los Angeles fire and police departments responded after a shirtless man with no shoes was seen attempting to light a cross on fire at the top of the St. Mary's Catholic Church at 407 South Chicago Street in Boyle Heights on Wednesday evening.
The man climbed up scaffolding to get to the bell tower before apparently causing a small fire at the top of the building, which is more than 130 feet tall.

"Many of the jobs that have been lost during this pandemic crisis will not be recovered," OECD's jobs and income head Stephane Carcillo said.
Of the 22 million jobs lost in 2020 across the OECD, 8 million are workers who are considered unemployed and 14 million are "not actively looking for a job."
"Many of the jobs that have been lost during this pandemic crisis will not be recovered," Stephane Carcillo, head of the OECD's jobs and income division, said Wednesday at a virtual briefing on the data.
Comment: See also: Lockdowns cost 4 times more jobs than 2009 financial crisis, worse than the Great Depression
And check out SOTT radio's: NewsReal: The Terrible Toll of Lockdowns
The producer has published a video refuted VICE's misinformation. (includes sponsor ads)
Comment:
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Here is an update. An interview with one of the defendants ordered by Frye to take the shots backs my argument in my article that the judge's imposing of the probation condition is in practice the exercise of government force to make the defendants take the shots.
I wrote that many defendants who have made up their minds not to take the experimental coronavirus vaccine shots, some of which are not even vaccines under the normal meaning of the term, would keep quiet about their objections and even say "thank you sir" to the judge when the judge pushes the probation condition. Defendants in such a situation will likely fear of the repercussions of countering the judge who holds the power to punish the defendants, harshen their probation conditions, or even send them to prison if they don't just acquiesce.
"I had never seen a brain that was affected by such an extensive and severe thrombosis."The neurosurgeon on duty in San Martino that night was Alessandro d'Andrea, who also called the chief physician to his side at the operating table.
"We decided to have a decompression craniotomy, in which the skull is opened to relieve internal pressure."Zona recounted the experience:
"All venous sinuses were blocked with thrombi, a scenario I have never seen in my many years in this profession. Think of the venous sinus as the river in the middle of a valley where several streams converge. If a dam is built in the middle of the watercourse, the river swells and the tributaries can no longer drain at this point, so that the pressure rises upstream.
"I'm neither a virologist, nor an epidemiologist, nor a coroner, but given the image I saw in the girl's head, it is clear that we are dealing with something that is not normal."
Comment: Devastating incidents like this one forebode the future. As people wake up, the PTB will double down.














Comment: See also: