Society's ChildS


Handcuffs

Germany: Bosnian arrested for Paris attacks in 2015

Paris Attacks
© UnknownParis Attacks, 2015
A Bosnian man wanted in connection with the 2015 Paris attacks has been arrested in Germany, federal police and prosecutors in the eastern city of Dresden said in a joint statement on June 27.

The November 2015 attacks by Islamic extremists killed 130 people, including 90 at the Bataclan theater.

The 39-year-old suspect, whom German authorities did not identify, was wanted on a European arrest warrant by Belgium, where many of the Paris attackers came from.

"There is a European arrest warrant issued by the Belgian authorities against the accused on suspicion of abetting a terrorist organization linked to the terror attacks, including on the Bataclan concert hall, on November 13, 2015 in Paris," the statement said, without giving further details.

The man, who was put before a German judge last week on the basis of the European arrest warrant, was ordered held in custody pending possible extradition by a court in the eastern town of Merseburg.

Comment: See also:


Attention

The modern problem of human slavery

Nepalese 'Slave'
© Jonas Gratzer/Getty ImagesMore than 70 percent of enslaved people today are women and girls—such as this woman from Nepal, who was sold by her parents as a child.
While in Accra, Ghana, in 2001, I befriended a young woman at a nightclub. I was flabbergasted that Fola (a pseudonym) was taking a keen interest in me. When we left the club and strolled along the beach, I noticed a few men were following us. I could tell she was a bit frightened, and when I asked her about it, she began to cry. When she propositioned me a few minutes later, I knew something was wrong. I gave her an extra cellphone that I had, and my number, telling her she could always call to talk. The next afternoon she told me her story: She and all of the women in the club that night had been prostituted, controlled by a Nigerian syndicate that trafficked women, guns, and narcotics.

Fola and the other women at that club aren't alone. Forced labor, forced marriage, and forced sex work are rife around the world, often right under our noses in unrecognized forms. Yet when I ask the anthropology students in my classes when slavery ended, most say something like "with the 13th Amendment" or "at the end of the Civil War." Only a handful realize that modern slavery is everywhere.

Researchers estimate there are at least 40 million people enslaved today. This is by no means a problem isolated to the developing world. In the 1990s, my friend and activist Alice Jay was kidnapped at the age of 11 in Western Michigan by the Mexican Mafia. She was trafficked for more than 15 years throughout the United States and is now a heroic survivor running her own nongovernmental organization called Sister Survivors in Detroit.

I am a cultural anthropologist who studies and lives in both the United States and the West African country of Togo. Even I have been strikingly naïve about this situation. Growing up near Flint, Michigan, I saw massage parlors, strip clubs, and cheap motels everywhere. In hindsight, I now wonder if these places were populated by people who were trafficked, perhaps even some children, coerced into exploitation. In Togo, many of the things I first considered to be a normal part of life-the children married before the age of 15, the hundreds of children working daily on fishing boats, and the dozens of poor girls who head to market each day for a 12-hour stint of haggling-I now consider to be manifestations of slavery.

No Entry

Why did YouTube competitor Vimeo also ban Project Veritas' Google expose?

vimeo
© Global Look Press / ZUMAPRESS.com / Jaap Arriens
Video hosting platform Vimeo - whose CEO contributed to the 2016 Clinton campaign - has completely banned Project Veritas over a viral video of a surreptitiously recorded Google employee admitting that the search giant is training its algorithms to to avoid the "next Trump situation," raising questions of 2020 election meddling.


Comment: Bitchute is still brave enough to carry the Project Veritas video:


More from RT:
Vimeo had deleted the account of right-wing media transparency group Project Veritas just days after they published reports accusing Google of bias against conservatives and President Donald Trump.

The group's founder, James O'Keefe, pointed out that the incident with Vimeo happened several days after YouTube took down a video of their latest investigation, in which YouTube's owner, Google, was accused of harboring bias against conservatives and President Trump.
They keep citing 'privacy violations.' Being embarrassed by legitimate investigative journalism is not a 'privacy violation.'
Project Veritas is known for releasing internal documents and undercover videos they say expose liberal, left-wing bias in the media and tech companies.

Earlier this week, the group shared a video in which a senior Google executive talked about the company's prospects of "preventing the next Trump situation." The group also leaked an email which allegedly shows that a member of Google's transparency and ethics team referred to well-known conservative pundits as "Nazis."



Snakes in Suits

Cocaine elite: Traces of party drug found throughout British Houses of Parliament

cocaine parliament
High Tories
Traces of cocaine have reportedly been found in multiple locations throughout the Houses of Parliament.

Swabs which turned blue when they come into contact with cocaine were used in a number of areas across the Parliamentary Estate, mainly toilets outside various offices and bars, which are accessible to Parliamentary passholders, including journalists, guests of MPs, and visitors attending Parliamentary events.

The news comes in the final throes of the Tory leadership race, which saw Michael Gove admit he had snorted cocaine in the past, Rory Stewart say he had once smoked opium in Iran, and Jeremy Hunt confess he'd consumed a cannabis lassi while in India. We also got the baffling revelation that Boris Johnson like to make models of buses out of wine boxes for fun. Different strokes, I guess.

Comment: They may as well have a good time while they're leading society into the pits.


Bullseye

Tulsi Gabbard's sister blasts NBC for giving Warren too much airtime during Democratic debate

dem debate
Tulsi Gabbard's sister blasted MSNBC during Wednesday night's Democratic debate, claiming the cable network was giving Elizabeth Warren too much speaking time on the stage.

"It's clear who MSNBC wants to be president: Elizabeth Warren," read a tweet from Gabbard's account signed "V (Tulsi's sister). "They're giving her more time than all the other candidates combined. They aren't giving any time to Tulsi at all."

Gabbard, a Hawaii congresswoman, was critical of President Trump's hawkish policy against Iran.

Warren (D-Mass.) is considered one of the front runners in the packed race.

Through the first commercial break, Warren was allowed 5 minutes and 32 seconds of speaking time, according to The New York Times.

Gabbard, in contrast, received just less than 2 minutes to talk.

Chart Bar

Drudge poll shock: Tulsi Gabbard runaway winner of first Democratic debate

tulsi gabbard democratic debate
The Drudge Report political website posted a surprising instant poll showing that its visitors believed Rep. Tulsi Gabbard of Hawaii was the overwhelming victor of the first Democratic presidential debate, polling at almost 35% with 12,314 votes.

Her closest competitor was Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts, who was polling at just under 13.5% and 4,791 votes. Julián Castro of Texas and Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey were polling the lowest with less than 5% each.

Comment: Anti-war? Check. Unjustified smears by the press? Check. Anti-SJW identity politics? Check.

From these seats, Gabbard looks like the only logical choice for a democratic candidate. It remains to be seen if she's allowed to move forward.

See also: Internet pundit Moon of Alabama weighs in:
The mainstream media seem to judge the Democratic primary debate last night quite differently than the general public.

Quartz cites multiple polls which show that Tulsi Gabbard won the debate:
[T]wo candidates seemed to pique a lot of interest among US voters, at least when judged by who Americans searched for on Google: New Jersey senator Cory Booker and Hawaii Congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard.

A poll by the right-leaning Drudge Report also found Gabbard to be the breakout of the debate with 38% of the vote, well ahead of Massachusetts senator Elizabeth Warren in second place. Gabbard also topped polls by local news sites including NJ.com and the Washington Examiner.
Now contrast that with the mainstream media.

The Washington Post discusses winners and losers of the debate and puts Gabbard in the second category:
Gabbard was lost for much of the debate. That may not have been her fault - she wasn't asked many questions - ....
Duh!

The New York Times main piece about the debate mentions Gabbard only once - in paragraph 32 of the 45 paragraphs long piece. It does not reveal anything about her actual political position:
There was little discussion of foreign policy until near the end of the debate when two little-known House lawmakers, Tulsi Gabbard of Hawaii and Tim Ryan of Ohio, clashed over how aggressively to target the Taliban.
The New York Times also has some 'experts' discussing winners and losers. Gabbard is only mentioned at the very end, and by a Republican pollster, as a potential candidate for Secretary of Defense.

CNN also discusses winners and losers. Gabbard is not mentioned at all.

NBC News ranks the candidates' performance. It puts Gabbard on place 8 and inserts a snide:
Rep. Tulsi Gabbard, D-Hawaii: Seized an opportunity to highlight her military experience in Afghanistan and her signature anti-intervention foreign policy views, without being tainted by her past sympathetic comments on Syrian dictator Bashar al-Assad.
Most of the above media have long avoided to mention Gabbard and to discuss her political positions. It is quite evident that the mainstream media do not like her anti-regime-change views and are afraid of even writing about them.



Snowflake

Leaked Google 'microagressions newsletter' exposes blizzard of triggered snowflakes

hillary supporter election night cry
© NBC
For about three years, Google employees have been anonymously reporting dramatic tales of workplace triggerings in an internal newsletter called "Yes, At Google" or YAG.

For a bit of context, the median Google employee is 30 years old, while 90% of political donations made by employees of parent Alphabet are to Democrats, according to GovPredict. In short, the same demographic which has adjusted so well to the Trump presidency is - surprise, very sensitive.

Described as a "curated monthly newsletter of anonymized incidents of micro-aggressions & micro-corrections," the YAG newsletter was launched in 2016 as an employee's pet-project, and has exploded into a full blown production with an editorial board absorbed by the company's "Respect@" program.

Comment: Other than the poor deaf employee who had a legitimate point about her boorish supervisor, and the nonsense of demanding that disabled people forgo a tool that makes their life easier because 'the planet', this is a collection of grievances that is comical. Google's work environment has become a hotbed of SJW lunacy.


Red Flag

How the Navy tapped a jailed sex offender to be a department head

Lt. j.g. Michael D. McNeil
© Clay County Sheriff's OfficeLt. j.g. Michael D. McNeil
Lt. j.g. Michael Douglas McNeil recently joined dozens of other junior surface warfare officers in getting selected to be a future department head.

The list of those eligible for the afloat position was released Friday by Navy Personnel Command. But whether news of this career milestone reached the 31-year-old in federal prison remains unknown.

McNeil is currently serving a bid for trying to arrange sex with a 12-year-old deaf girl and is locked up until 2027 at a low-security facility in Texarkana, Texas.

Fire

French prosecutors make ludicrous claim that burning cigarette or electrical fault could have started Notre Dame fire

Notre-Dame cathedral
© AFP Photo/Geoffroy VAN DER HASSELT
A poorly stubbed-out cigarette or an electrical fault could have started the devastating fire that ripped through Paris' Notre-Dame cathedral in April, French prosecutors said Wednesday, while ruling out any criminal intent.

The statement by prosecutors, which also said an investigation was being opened into possible negligence, was the first official evaluation of the causes of the April 15 fire at the world heritage landmark that shocked France and the world.

But well over two months after the fire, it still offered no concrete conclusions over what caused one of the most catastrophic fires involving a cultural monument in the history of Paris.

French investigators were examining many hypotheses "including a malfunctioning of the electrical system or a fire which started with a badly stubbed-out cigarette", said a statement.

Airplane

Cocaine elite: 39kg of yayo found in Brazilian president's 'backup' plane on its way to G20 summit in Japan

cocain eplane spain brazil bolsonaro
Let's fly real high
A crew member from a Brazilian military plane used to arrange travel for the president was arrested in Spain with a bagful of cocaine in his luggage. The Brazilian leader said the man was not from "his team."

The Air Force service member was arrested by Spain's Civil Guard on Tuesday at Seville airport, where the plane stopped before flying to Osaka for the upcoming G20 summit. According to El Pais, the illegal cargo was found inside a bag of Sergeant Manoel Silva Rodrigues, during a mandatory check. Spanish customs authorities discovered 37 packages of cocaine each weighing over a kilo, or about 39kg in total, which the Brazilian reportedly didn't even bother to properly hide before trying to enter the country.


Comment: That sounds like it was for personal possession. As in, the president's entourage...


The failed smuggler was arrested while the rest of the crew left for Japan the same afternoon. The aircraft will be used as a backup plane for President Jair Bolsonaro after the end of the G20 summit.

Spanish law enforcement is now trying to establish the intended destination of the narcotics. The Brazilian Defense Ministry pledged to cooperate with the investigation.

The Brazilian president denounced the arrested person. "Although not related to my team, yesterday's episode in Spain is unacceptable," he tweeted, adding that an attempt to use government transport for drug trafficking was "disrespect to our country."

Comment: Should 'diplomatic privileges' not have covered this? It would be interesting to know what prompted them to check the plane.