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Eye 1

Anti-Semitic material found in Pittsburgh synagogue shooting neighborhood

Hanukkah Squirrel Hill Pittsburgh Jewish semite
© Gene J. Puskar, AP
Rabbi Jeffrey Myers leads a gathering in Hanukkah songs after lighting a menorah outside the Tree of Life Synagogue on the first night of Hanukkah on Sunday in the Squirrel Hill neighborhood of Pittsburgh.
Pittsburgh officials are investigating anti-Semitic pamphlets in city neighborhoods - including the area where a mass shooter targeted Jewish people in October, according to a Sunday statement.

Authorities said they are taking the pamphlets seriously and only identified Squirrel Hill, a predominately Jewish neighborhood and home to the Tree of Life Congregation Synagogue.

"Such hate-filled material will not be tolerated in Pittsburgh - not by residents, City officials nor Law Enforcement," the Pittsburgh Public Safety Department said on Twitter.

Microscope 2

Casual xenophobia: Investor slammed on Twitter after saying Russia is "deadly plague"

plague
© Sputnik / Grigory Sysoev
A theatrical performance about a plague epidemic at Moscow's Kolomenskoye Museum Reserve.
Venture capitalist Matthew Ocko has been heavily criticised on Twitter for a tweet which suggested that anything connected to Russia was like a "deadly plague with no cure," and that it was best to "quarantine it."

A number of people who came across the message accused Ocko of, among other things, "genocidal rhetoric."


Comment: Ocko is just another sorry example of people who, lacking their critical faculties, buy into government propaganda and support some of the most insidious ideologies in the process. It's notable that Twitter are quick in banning commentators on such issues as the proven biological differences in gender, as well as a variety of other well founded viewpoints, and yet drones like Ocko, promoting baseless and quite violent messages, seem to get a free pass.

Also check out SOTT radio's:


Gold Seal

The sweet, sweet irony of Jordan Peterson's rise to fame

Jordan Peterson
© Tyler Anderson / National Post
University of Toronto professor and best-selling author Jordan Peterson is seen at his home in Toronto on May 31, 2017.
It's a no-contest, call-off-the-fight race for the ineluctable choice of Canadian book of the year. It has to be 12 Rules for Life

Who doesn't love a good origin story (Book of Genesis, A Brief History of Time, Batman Begins)?

Two years ago, almost to the day, a child was born in the little town of ... Sorry, my mistake, let me start again. It's those damn far-too-early Christmas carols.

Two years ago, almost to the day (Nov. 29, 2017), the University of Toronto's Varsity newspaper carried the bold, not to say ominous, headline: "Hundreds sign open letter to U of T admin calling for Jordan Peterson's termination."

The story underneath bristled with comminations of Peterson's "gross misconduct," his "efforts at agitation ... inflammatory denunciations ... evident connections to white supremacists ... disruptive behaviour." U of T's administration had acknowledged the "danger he posed both to students and faculty" it claimed, and if he didn't comply with "the law, the Ontario Human Rights Code and university policy" (I paraphrase) his academic goose was cooked, his copybook irredeemably blotted, and his career as a professor would soon be as one with the fates of the Norwegian Blue, the great auk, the dodo and (among the unsophisticated) red wine with fish.

Quenelle - Golden

Australia requesting more oversight over Facebook and Google's powers, cite major 'transparency' issues

Google and Facebook carnival float
© Reuters / Ina Fassbender
A carnival float with a papier-mache caricature representing Google and Facebook at a parade in Dusseldorf Germany
Regulators in Australia are proposing 11 measures to fight Facebook and Google's market-stranglehold, transparency issues and controversial social impact.

As criticism mounts against the massive digital platforms over privacy concerns, political bias and snooping on rivals, Canberra is preparing to strike back. The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) is pushing ahead with 11 wide-ranging recommendations aimed at regulating massive tech companies.

That includes the creation of a watchdog tasked with monitoring large digital platforms. The draft report delivered to the government also noted 8 areas it is looking into "for further analysis and assessment."

The 378-page document was released Monday following months of public hearings, discussions with the companies and input from experts.

The proposed monitoring group would be tasked with overseeing how the major digital platforms rank and display news and advertisements, given concerns that the businesses are operating with a lack of transparency.

Comment: Indeed the world is becoming wise to the legal and moral transgressions of Facebook and Google. But given these companies' strong ties to the 'global security' apparatus (among other reasons) - these behemoths will not be regulated or have their Orwellian policies suppressed without a knock-down drag-out fight - with 'the powers that be' in their corner.

See:


Gem

William Blum, renowned author and critic of US foreign policy, dead at 85

William Blum

William Blum (1933 – 2018)
William Blum died in Virginia early this morning on December 9, 2018. He was surrounded by friends and family after falling in his Washington D.C. apartment and sustaining serious wounds 65 days ago. He was 85 years old.

Bill was born March 6, 1933 at Beth Moses Hospital in Brooklyn, N.Y. and became an American author, historian, and critic of United States foreign policy. He worked in a computer-related position at the United States Department of State in the mid-1960s. Initially an anti-communist with dreams of becoming a foreign service officer, he became disillusioned by the Vietnam War.

Blum left the State Department in 1967 and became a founder and editor of the Washington Free Press, the first "alternative" newspaper in the capital. In 1969, he wrote and published an exposé of the CIA in which were revealed the names and addresses of more than 200 CIA employees. He worked as freelance journalist in the United States, Europe and South America. In 1972-1973 Blum worked as a journalist in Chile where he reported on the Allende government's "socialist experiment." Its overthrow in a CIA designed coup instilled in him a personal involvement and an even more heightened interest in what his government was doing in various corners of the world.

Video

John Stossel: Google crosses that creepy line

John Stossel
© SCREENSHOT/YOUTUBE
John Stossel
This morning, Google told me that it would not allow my YouTube video Socialism Leads to Violence to be viewed by young people. It violates "community guidelines," said the company in a computer-generated email. Anti-capitalist bias? Or just an algorithm shielding children from disturbing violence in Venezuela? I don't know.

But a new documentary, The Creepy Line, argues that companies like Google and Facebook lean left and have power they shouldn't have. The title "Creepy Line" refers to a comment by former Google chairman Eric Schmidt, who said when it comes to issues like privacy, Google policy "is to get right up to the creepy line but not cross it."

But, the documentary argues that Google crosses that creepy line every day. Google's power comes from its dominant search engine.

"It is a company that has an agenda," the writer of The Creepy Line, Peter Schweizer, says in my latest video. "Their ability to manipulate the algorithm is something that they've demonstrated," says Schweizer, and last election Google put positive stories about Hillary Clinton higher in Google searches. But that doesn't prove Google bias. It could be because the media lean left, and "unbiased" algorithms rely on links to popular media.

"But, they're not using unbiased algorithms to do things like search for unacceptable content," says psychologist Jordan Peterson in the documentary. "They're built specifically to filter out whatever's bad."

Comment: See the trailer:


The 80 minute documentary can be accessed at the website "The Creepy Line," via Amazon and ITunes.


Arrow Up

Russia overtakes China in Bloomberg's top emerging economies list

Russia horse racing
© Sputnik / Vitaliy Timkiv / File
Horse race in Krasnodar, Russia
Despite years of EU and US sanctions, Russia has secured second place in the Bloomberg rating of emerging economies, behind Malaysia and just ahead of China.

The business news agency ranked 20 developing nations in its scorecard that includes metrics ranging from growth prospects to the state of the current account, sovereign credit ratings and stock and bond valuations. Russia gained 2.36 points on these criteria, while the only country topping it is Malaysia with 2.55. The Asian country has held on to the top spot on the list since the last ratings were published in June thanks to its current-account surplus, relatively stable economic growth outlook and valuations, according to Bloomberg.

Comment: More from Bloomberg:
Turkey has tumbled to bottom of the emerging-market pile, according to a Bloomberg analysis.

Ranked fifth out of 21 nations in a similar study six months ago, the country has slumped on a scorecard that includes metrics ranging from growth prospects to the state of the current account, sovereign credit ratings and stock and bond valuations.

Meanwhile Asia's economies, which have stronger buffers against headwinds like Federal Reserve policy tightening, outshone the rest, with Malaysia holding on to the No. 1 spot.

Key Insights
  • Turkey's economy is forecast to grow 0.8 percent in 2019, down from an estimated 3.5 percent this year, according to a Bloomberg survey of economists. Inflation reached 25.2 percent in October, the highest level since 2003, eroding real yields
  • Malaysia remained at the top of the list, thanks to its current-account surplus, relatively stable economic growth outlook and valuations. Data last week showed inflation came in at 0.6 percent in October from a year earlier, compared with its 10-year government bond yield of about 4.17 percent
  • Four of the top six economies on the scorecard are from Asia, including China, the Philippines and Thailand. China and Thailand are drawing support from current-account surpluses, relatively strong growth and benign inflation. The Philippines' current-account deficit and high inflation rates are partly offset by growth of more than 6 percent
  • "A closer attention is now paid to economic growth outlooks of each emerging economy amid successive rate hikes," said Tsutomu Soma, general manager of the investment trust and fixed-income department at SBI Securities Co. in Tokyo. "Investors are also deciphering how each country is impacted by the U.S.-China trade frictions. They will continue to be more selective with their investments given such circumstances."



Bomb

Millions of Iraqis destitute 1yr after victory over ISIS

mosul destruction iraq
© Reuters / Ari Jalal
Destroyed buildings from previous clashes are seen in Mosul, Iraq, January 10, 2018.
Millions of Iraqis are still struggling to rebuild their lives one year after Baghdad declared victory against Islamic State, a Norwegian NGO has warned, stressing that many Iraqis feel "abandoned" by the international community.


Comment: Compare that with Syrians, who view the Russians as saviors. That's because Russia is actively involved in fixing Syria. The U.S. just destroys countries, then leaves them to rot.


More than 1.8 million Iraqis are currently displaced and an astonishing 8 million require some form of humanitarian aid, the Norwegian Refugee Council (NRC) said in a statement. It followed the first anniversary of Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi's announcement that Iraq had achieved final victory over Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS).

Regrettably, the international community seems less interested in the fate of Iraq now that IS has been pushed out of the country, Tom Peyre-Costa, NRC's Iraq Media coordinator, told RT.

"It is essential that the international community invests as much in the reconstruction and stabilization of the country as they did in the fight against Islamic State," Peyre-Costa said. "It's unacceptable to think that millions can be spent on bombs but not on humanitarian aid and reconstruction."

He added that many of the displaced Iraqis that he's spoken with say they feel "abandoned" by the world. While IS may have lost its foothold in Iraq, the work to restore the war-torn lives of millions of Iraqis is "far from being done," Peyre-Costa noted.


Airplane

Syrian media retract previous reports of air strike on Damascus Airport

Damascus International Airport
© Igor Bubi
Damascus International Airport
Syrian state media outlets including broadcaster Al-Ikhbariya and the SANA news agency issued a report on Sunday claiming that Syrian air defences had repelled an attack near the Damascus international Airport, however, later in the day, quoting local sources, they took back the story, asserting that a strike did not happen.

A source at the Damascus International airport told local media that there had been no attack and that air traffic is operating under normal routine, contrary to earlier reports claiming that a missile strike had been repelled.

Sheriff

Video shows NYPD ripping infant from his mother's arms during social services fracas

NYPD arrest
© Nyashia Ferguson
Police officers arresting a woman in Brooklyn while she was holding her 1-year-old son. A video of the encounter was posted to Facebook.
A video that shows police officers trying to remove a woman's 1-year-old son from her grasp as they arrested her in a Brooklyn food stamp office ignited a fury on social media and prompted calls on Sunday for an explanation from the police.

A Facebook user who uploaded the video said the police had been called on Friday after the woman, identified by the police as Jazmine Headley, 23, sat on the floor of the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program office in Boerum Hill because there were no available chairs.

After a verbal dispute with a security guard, someone called the police, according to Nyashia Ferguson, who posted the video.

It begins with Ms. Headley lying on the floor, cradling her son and yelling, "They're hurting my son! They're hurting my son!"

A female sergeant and three police officers, two of whom appear to be women, surround Ms. Headley and attempt to pull the child away. Then one officer, her back facing the camera, repeatedly yanks the child in an apparent attempt to separate him from his mother.