Society's Child
The Urbn Leaf center posted a picture of the innovative Girl Scout outside its store in the Mission Bay area of the city Friday. The cheeky post calls on customers to pick up some of the treats when they buy 'GSC,' a type of marijuana product flavoured like Girl Scout Cookies.

Tim Cook, CEO of Apple, Mark Zuckerberg, CEO of Facebook, and Jeff Bezos, CEO of Amazon. Composite
But their growing dominance is giving rise to an insidious trend that we shouldn't so happily accept. Just last week, billionaire philanthropist George Soros gave a speech in Davos, Switzerland, in which he attacked Facebook and Google for "inducing people to give up their autonomy" and driving inequality. He's not wrong. In fact, tech giants are just like the monopolists and robber barons that ruled the American economy a century ago. But, while Standard Oil's monopoly was as obvious as the smoke-belching refineries it controlled, the powers of Facebook, Google, Apple and Amazon are less transparent - if not entirely secret.
An average Facebook user has no way of knowing or appreciating the mountain of data the company has collected on them. And the average Amazon shopper is unlikely know that the site steers customers toward its preferred (and often more expensive) products. America's biggest tech giants have at least as much power as John D. Rockefeller and J.P. Morgan did in the early 20th century; it is just much harder to see.

Prisoners gesture from their cell at HaSharon high-security prison, some 40 kilometres northeast of Tel Aviv, on 23 February 2014.
'Sometimes they feel shame, even though we know that they are our enemy and they do this to break us,' said one former woman prisoner
Bethlehem, West Bank - "I remember he brought his chair closer, opened his legs and sat very close to me. It was something ugly for me. It made me feel that he was trying to attack my body," Khawla al-Azraq said, as she recalled the physical intimidation tactics and sexual harassment used by Israeli interrogators when she was only a teenager.
Decades later, al-Azraq, who is now 54, still shudders at the memory of Israeli interrogators brushing their hands across her legs to sexually intimidate her.
"They would sit in a way to be very close to us, to touch our bodies. I remember it was terrible for me at that age," she said.
Al-Azraq is a member of the Fatah Revolutionary Council. Since the age of 14, she has been arrested by Israeli forces four times for her involvement with Fatah and taking part in protests against the Israeli occupation. When she was only 18, she was sentenced to three years in prison.
"The torture, ill treatment, and degrading treatment start from the first moment of the arrest," said Sahar Francis, director of Addameer, a Palestinian prisoners' rights group.
Comment: Rape, torture and shame used as weapons against those who cannot fight back. It is the ultimate demonstration of cowardice.
According to Tokyo Electric Power Company (Tepco), radiation levels of eight Sieverts per hour (Sv/h) have been discovered within the Fukushima nuclear power plant, which was destroyed after a massive earthquake and a tsunami in March 2011.
Tepco, the company that operated the plant and is now tasked with decommissioning it, reported the discovery after making observations in a reactor containment vessel last month.
Eight Sv/h of radiation, if absorbed at once, mean certain death, even with quick treatment. One Sv/h is likely to cause sickness and 5.5 Sv/h will result in a high chance of developing cancer.
Comment: Fukushima is still an absolute disaster and will continue to pose great health risks to the world at large for many years to come. See also:
- Highest Fukushima Radioactivity since 2011 and its 'Unimaginable' Consequences
- Scientists find 'unexpected' radioactivity in groundwater and sands 100km away from Fukushima power plant
- It looks like the 40-year plan to stop the leakage at Fukushima has already failed
- Oh really? No danger seen from Fukushima 'fingerprint' on US West Coast
~ Phoebe Maltz Bovy, "Checking Privilege Checking," The Atlantic
All societies are evil, sorrowful, inequitable; and so they will always be. So if you really want to help this world, what you will have to teach is how to live in it.
~ Joseph Campbell, Myths to Live By
A couple of years ago, while studying law in western Canada, I took a political science course on environmental issues taught by a renowned professor. Having become alarmed at the lack of legal protections for the environment, I hoped to learn more about the politics behind such flagrant and pervasive oversights.
Unfortunately, the class was a bust. Instead of analyzing political thought and behaviour related to our current ecological crisis, the course taught a strange blend of self-help and pseudoscience. We "learned" that atoms have free will, that the Earth purposefully maintains conditions conducive to life, that modern science is naïvely reductionist and therefore urgently in need of a paradigm shift, and that Francis Bacon was one of the main architects behind the modern disconnect from nature.
Comment: Having to 'check your privilege' because of the privilege you have to be able to say it makes a mockery of the situation and detracts from genuine acts of co-operation. Even more so considering the current climate in higher education where everything is structured around these alt-left ideologies where any minor transgression is immediately used by those indocrinated to bring themselves under the 'victim' label that's so popular these days.
If anything, prefacing what you say with that thought implies that you are better than the other person. It says, "I'm better than you and because you are not so privileged I will 'check my privilege' so that I'm not direspecting you." It's demeaning and disrespectful to the other party and runs counter to creating open dialogue where both people can be free to express their thoughts without entering into some sort of dominance hierarchy where the conversation is a battle to be won rather than a fair exchange of ideas. See also: Post-nihilism, a template for where we are heading
Comment: Social justice warriors have taken over the asylum and essentially run the company. This is the result. See also:
- Damore Lawsuit Exposes Extremist Ideology And Social Intolerance at Google
- Google's internal dirty war over diversity
- James Damore's lawsuit: 19 insane details regarding Google's SJW office environment
The DOE ordered schools to "eliminate" any "gender-based" practices like the dance in a March 2017 policy update unless they serve a "clear" educational purpose.
The PS 65 shindig, set for Feb. 9, was abruptly postponed until next month after the school's PTA realized the dance would run afoul of the rules.
"As we've investigated the case over the last six years, I think he's more of a person of interest now," Corina suggested. "I mean, we now know that he was the last person to be with Natalie before she disappeared."

St Eugene's Cathedral, Francis Street, Derry, County Londonderry, Northern Ireland
Belgrade, Sarajevo, Gaza, Jenin, Soweto, Belfast, and Derry are cities, towns and places where ordinary men and women have forged history neither by choice nor design but as a consequence of circumstances not of their choosing. And with this in mind, on a recent trip to Derry in Ireland I was reminded of something Bertolt Brecht wrote: "Because things are they way they are, things will not stay the way they are."
Comment: Also See:
- The British Empire - A Lesson In State Terrorism
- Irish documentary: 'Collusion' reveals British elite directed terrorist groups in Northern Ireland
- Northern Ireland poll shows majority would support Irish unification in event of 'hard Brexit'
- Modern imperialism on trial and found guilty
- First genetic map of Ireland confirms basis for regional identity, Viking and Breton connections
America's confused position in Afrin, northern Syria, is not the only location in the Middle East where Washington's loyalties are at odds with the reality on the ground. Lebanon, a country once called the 'Switzerland of the Middle East' for its Western pretensions, is now what many call a failed state which is consumed by corruption. And a confused one, for Washington to grapple with.
Lebanon is one of the highest net recipients of US military aid and because of its unique location (bordering Israel) and its dominance by Iranian-backed Hezbollah, that makes it a special case in the eyes of Washington. Indeed, only recently when Israel threatened to attack, it was the US which "pledged" support for the Lebanese Army, which it erroneously believes acts as a "counterweight" to Hezbollah. Is the US misinformed and comically out of touch of the recent developments in Lebanon, or is it simply confused about the realities on the ground?
Comment: Every hand on a gun, every faction in a back pocket. Status quo. Meanwhile, Israel is stirring the pot, picking for a fight.
- Israel's threat to Lebanon: 'Full strength' ground invasion in case of conflict
- Israel, Hezbollah brace for all-out conflict
- Lebanese Army ordered at 'full readiness' at southern border to face Israeli threat













Comment: Thinking outside the cookie box: Girl scout sells cookies outside Oregon pot dispensary