Society's ChildS

Dominoes

Gun manufacturer who supported gun control makes hasty retreat after customer backlash

guns
On Friday, Gun manufacturer Daniel Defense posted a message on their company Facebook page saying they support the 'Fix NICS' bill.

After receiving backlash from customers and the Second Amendment community as a whole, the company has since changed their position. Another message was posted to their company Facebook page saying they have rescinded their support for the bill:

Star of David

As Gaza economy 'all but dead' thanks to Israel, 40,000 Palestinians have been arrested for debt in 2017

palestinians in jail
© AFP PHOTO / MAHMUD HAMSPalestinians who are unable to pay off their debts, sit in a cell in a Hamas jail in Gaza City on February 20, 2018
Sameh al-Madhoun's eyes fill with tears as he recalls his fall from successful businessman to prisoner in a Hamas jail in Gaza.

Once the owner of a flourishing car dealership, he is one of more than 40,000 Gazans charged in the last year with failing to keep up debt payments as the economy in the Palestinian enclave collapses.

Madhoun, a 40-year-old father of four, has sold most of his possessions, including his house and some of his cars, in a bid to pay back the $3 million debt that dragged his business into bankruptcy.

"I have paid off half of it until now. I don't know how I will pay off the rest," he told AFP from his jail cell. "I don't own anything else now except these debts."

V

Snowden rips into Trump over new CIA director's torture history

Edward Snowden
© Anadolu Agency/Getty Images
Former National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden blasted the Trump administration on Tuesday for the selection of Gina Haspel to lead the CIA over Haspel's former management of a "black site" prison.

In a series of tweets, the whistleblower, who fled the country after exposing classified information in 2013 about U.S. surveillance programs, attacked Haspel for her role in the 2002 torture of detainees at a secret CIA prison in Thailand.



Attention

Manafort's judge: There's a real chance of 'spending the rest of his life in prison'

Paul Manafort
© Reuters/Brian SnyderManafort arrives for an arraignment at the federal courthouse in Alexandria, VA, March 8, 2018.
Judge Thomas Ellis III, who is presiding over the second prosecution of Paul Manafort, wrote in a new order that the deposed Trump campaign chief may well spend the rest of his life in prison.

Ellis imposed restrictive bond conditions against Manafort in the new order, concluding the severity of his alleged crimes and his considerable assets incentivize him to flee the country.
"Defendant faces the very real possibility of spending the rest of his life in prison," Ellis wrote. "In this regard, he poses a substantial risk of flight and the above-mentioned conditions are the least restrictive conditions that will reasonably assure defendant's appearance at trial."
Manafort faces federal prosecution in two jurisdictions. Special counsel Robert Mueller filed numerous charges against him including eighteen counts of tax fraud, bank fraud, and bank fraud conspiracy at a federal trial court in Alexandria, Va., and twelve counts of money laundering, conspiracy against the United States, and violations of the Foreign Agents Registration Act (FARA) at the federal trial court in Washington, D.C.

Each tax fraud charge carries a maximum sentence of five years and a $250,000 fine. The bank fraud charges carry a 30 year maximum sentence and a one million dollar fine. Though he is not likely to receive the maximum penalties, at 68, Manafort faces the serious prospect of life in prison, even with a reduced sentence.

Comment: Interesting that the judge has already put a judgement out there. New rules?


Attention

CIA operative Khalifa Haftar continues war crimes in Libya, threatens Toubou tribe

Toubou Tribe
© UnknownToubou Tribe, Libya
The Toubou tribe of Libya resides in the deep south of Libya. They are a nomadic dark skinned tribe that has resided in Libya for thousands of years. They are a peaceful tribe and fully enjoyed their land and home under Ghadafi who supported all the nomadic tribes and gave them assistance, freedom and respect.

The Toubou tribes were aware that 2011 was a false flag criminal attack on the sovereign country of Libya and they stood with their Libyan brothers against the invaders. Because of this they have been targeted for genocide by the Zionist NWO cabal, just like the Tawergha dark skinned tribes located in central Libya.

3 Toubou women
© Unknown
In 2011, the Zionists owned media put out the lie that Ghadafi was bringing in mercenaries from Africa to fight the mercenaries brought into Libya by NATO. This was a blatant lie, but this lie was used by the NATO radical Islamic mercenaries as an excuse to destroy dark skinned tribes, their cities, their homes and kill their people. The genocide was horrendous and many mass graves exist today with thousands of black bodies, a war crime beyond imagining that the world turned, and still turns, a blind eye.

Russian Flag

Breaking against stereotype, Russians under Putin are drinking less and living healthier lives

russian skater
© FT montage; AFPSkaters in Moscow's Red Square. More than 36 per cent of the population aged between three and 79 years now practise sports regularly, up from just 22.5 per cent in 2012
Strictly speaking, using dumbbells outside the gym is forbidden. But the gym at the Youth Residential Complex Butovo gets so crowded that some weightlifters spill out into the corridor.

Every weeknight, people from the surrounding high-rises pour into this cramped basement for fitness training or boxing. "We're bursting at the seams," says Sergei Popovkin, manager of the sports centre and a former karate trainer. "When we opened in 1991, we would get 100 people a month. Now it's more than three times that number, plus another 200 for fitness alone."

The sports craze in Butovo, a residential suburb on the southern fringes of Moscow, reflects the enthusiasm for a healthy lifestyle that has gripped millions in Russia. "People really care about their health now - they've stopped drinking vodka and started eating kiwis," says Mr Popovkin.

Ambulance

Indian doctors suspended after video surfaces of patient using his amputated leg as pillow (VIDEO)

amputated leg patient pillow
© Screenshot/ MY INDIAInvestigation launched in India after patient's aputated leg was used as pillow.
Authorities in India's Uttar Pradesh state launched an investigation Sunday after video footage surfaced showing a patient's amputated leg being used as a pillow for the amputee.

The incident, which took place at the Maharani Laxmi Bai Medical College, happened moments after doctors had severed the leg to prevent infection, according to reports. It's unclear who recorded the footage.

Network

The West can kick and scream in false protest, but Crimea is Russian

Crimean people
© Vasiliy Batanov / SputnikCitizens of Sevastopol during a rally held in Nakhimov Square as part of the celebrations of the first anniversary of Crimea's reunification with Russia.
A firestorm of anti-Russia hysteria in the UK is no excuse for peddling a revisionist narrative over the status of Crimea.

Yet just such a revisionist narrative is being peddled by the country's foreign office to mark the fourth anniversary of Crimea's decision, expressed in a democratic referendum on March 16, 2014, to reunite with Russia.

Worse, not only is London peddling a false narrative on the roots and causes of the Ukraine crisis - the wider political context in which the decision of the people of Crimea to reunite with Russia was taken - it asserts that economic sanctions against Moscow must remain until Crimea returns to Ukrainian sovereignty.

Eye 1

Acid attacks becoming a 'serious and growing problem' in London

Derryck John
© Metropolitan Police
Sentencing a teenager for a spree of acid attacks in London that left victims with "life-changing injuries", a judge has warned the violent use of corrosive liquids is a "serious and growing problem" in the UK capital.

At Wood Green Crown Court, Derryck John was sentenced to 10 and a half years in prison for hurling acid at six moped riders in a bid to steal their vehicles within the space of fewer than 90 minutes on July 13th last year.

"These were grave crimes. You attacked members of the public with what appears to have been an acid at the strongest end of the scale of acids," Noel Lucas QC told the 17-year-old, who appeared in court via video link.

Comment: Clearly, what the UK needs is better 'acid control'. That should solve the problem of violence, shouldn't it?


Stock Up

New Jersey preparing to raise taxes on 'almost everything' as it nears financial disaster

US cost of living 2017
Last week we noted that in what was a radical U-turn to what other public pension funds have been doing in recent years - most notably Calpers - the struggling New Jersey public pension system decided that instead of lowering its expected rate of return, it would raise it, from 7% to 7.5%.

The simple reason behind this odd increase in projected returns was an accounting sleight of hand which would allow the state of New Jersey to save some $238 million in pension contributions as a result of the higher discount rate applied to the fund's liabilities. And with a pension funding level of only 37% for the 2015 fiscal year, the worst of any state in the US, New Jersey would gladly take even the most glaring accounting gimmickry that would delay its inevitable death.

Unfortunately, being the not so proud owner of the most distressed and underfunded public pension fund in the US is just the start of New Jersey's monetary woes, and as Bloomberg reports, New Jersey's fiscal situation is so dire that new Governor Phil Murphy has proposed taxing online-room booking, ride-sharing, marijuana, e-cigarettes and Internet transactions along with raising taxes on millionaires and retail sales to fund a record $37.4 billion budget that would boost spending on schools, pensions and mass transit.

The proposal which is 4.2% higher than the current fiscal year's, relies on a tax for the wealthiest that is so unpopular it not only has yet to be approved, but also lacks support from key Democrats in the legislature, let alone Republicans. It also reverses pledges from Murphy's predecessor, Republican Chris Christie, to lower taxes in a state where living costs are already among the nation's highest.