Society's ChildS


Vader

Hero Ahed Tamimi, Palestinian teenage girl who slapped Israeli soldier, to face charges for 'aggravated assault'

Ahed Tamimi Palestinian teenager girl Israeli prison
© REUTERS/Ammar AwadPalestinian teen Ahed Tamimi enters a military courtroom escorted by Israeli Prison Service personnel at Ofer Prison near the West Bank city of Ramallah, December 28, 2017.
Ofer Prison, West Bank - A 16-year-old Palestinian girl who slapped an Israeli officer two weeks ago will face assault charges in an Israeli military court, prosecutors said on Thursday.

The Dec. 15 incident in the occupied West Bank was captured on video and posted on the Internet, drawing attention on both sides of the Israeli-Palestinian divide.

Palestinians hailed the teenager, Ahed Tamimi, as a hero. Israelis debated whether the officer, who along with another soldier was also kicked by her, had done the right thing by opting not to strike back.


Comment: Except they did strike. On this video of the incident, at 00:13 you can see he slaps at her before she starts slapping at him.


But more importantly, this incident took place after they shot her cousin in the face and shot smoke bombs through the windows of her house. Evidently, she was not the aggressor.


Comment: The more the Israelis seek to 'exact a price' from Ahed Tamimi, the more they will make a heroine of her.

Ahed Tamimi Brave tweet Twitter
© Twitter
For more context on this story, see: The IDF vs The Teenage Girl: Palestinian Activist Ahed Tamimi Arrested For Slapping Soldiers Who Shot Boy


Bizarro Earth

#Metoo and consent ideology comes to class by teaching preschoolers about sexual harrassment

kindergarten in Sweden
© CC BY 2.0 / Niklas Hellerstedt / Lillekärrskolan, Gothenburg
Following the #Metoo anti-harassment campaign, which united tens of thousands of women speaking out against rape and sexism, a Swedish city has launched an educational program that enlightens kindergarteners about sexual abuse, an experiment that Swedish Education Minister would like to roll out nationwide.

The sexual enlightenment happens in the form of a theater performance, organized by teachers Lisa Jisei and Gustav Deticek Svensson, which is repeated several times a week. By their own admission, the performance is aimed to give the kids the courage to say 'stop' if they get unsolicited attention from fellow toddlers.

Family

Ten things that foreigners find confusing about Russians

russians
© AP
There are many things that foreigners find shocking and astounding about Russia and the Russian people. It is an open secret that foreigners think of Russians as those who do not like to smile much, whereas the Russians find the habit of smiling on every occasion quite bizarre. There are other things in the Russian culture that one may find it very hard to explain to foreigners.

Russians always drink tea

It was generally believed that people consume largest amounts of tea in England, but those times have long gone by. Today, tea enjoys great popularity in Russia. In Russia, people drink tea all the time: they drink tea with any dish (and sometimes even pills), a guest would always be offered a cup of tea, they drink tea both on hot summer days and freezing winter days. Tea is a drink that connects people in Russia, and one does not have to be thirsty to have some tea, and if you're offered a cup of tea you simply can't refuse. At the same time, teatime usually implies some sweet snacks on the table: they can be chocolate sweets, some pretzels, waffles, biscuits, jam and anything else sweet.

Russians treat themselves at home, avoid hospitals

Any adult Russian person is an expert in the field of health and medicine, and they do not need a doctor to arrange their own treatment. A sick Russian person knows all about his or her symptoms to diagnose the disease. Afterwards, A Russian "patient" chooses between folk remedies or some pills that they decide to take for themselves. Going to the doctor's on a regular basis is something unreasonably whimsical for an average Russian.

Russians do not shake hands or kiss "over the doorstep"

Both people have to stand on one side of the door to either shake hands or kiss, and they cannot do it otherwise: this is a bad omen.

Comment: On the whole, they don't all seem that strange and perhaps even a bit more pragmatic. See also: Why Russians don't smile?


Ambulance

Bus plows into public transport stop in Moscow and injures 3 people

According to recent information, three people have been injured

Moscow bus
© Sergey Bobylev/TASS
Three people were injured as a bus plowed into a public transport stop in Moscow, the Main Moscow Department of the Russian Emergencies Ministry said.

"According to recent information, three people have been injured, while two have been successfully resuscitated," a source in the city's law enforcement agencies said.

Comment: Moscow bus plunges into pedestrian underpass - 5 killed


Cow Skull

Attack of the 'white spaces': San Diego professors claim that farmers' markets cause 'environmental gentrification'

farmers' market
Two San Diego State University (SDSU) professors recently criticized farmers' markets for being "white spaces" that contribute to the oppression of minorities.

Pascale Joassart-Marcelli and Fernando J Bosco, two geography professors at SDSU, criticized the "whiteness of farmers' markets" in a chapter for Just Green Enough, a new anthology published by Routledge in December.

The anthology, which features contributions from a variety of professors, aims to highlight the harms of "environmental gentrification," a process in which "environmental improvements lead to...the displacement of long-term residents."

Farmers' markets are one such environmental improvement that can lead to gentrification, Bosco and Joassart-Marcelli argue, saying farmers' markets are "exclusionary" since locals may not be able to "afford the food and/or feel excluded from these new spaces."

Heart - Black

With no warning Palestinian teen is shot in the head by Israel Defense Forces soldier

Palestinian teen
© Alex LevaAnas Dahloul, at the site where Masri was shot. Since the incident, Salfit’s young people have been burning tires and throwing rocks at a different location.
There was no stone throwing, no demonstration,. The teens were a few dozen meters from the fence when they suddenly heard shooting. Israeli soldiers shot three shots, with no warning, no shots in the air...

The bullet entered from the back of his neck and exited through the eye socket, shattering his head and face. A single bullet fired by an Israel Defense Forces soldier lurking in ambush with his buddies in the shade of olive trees. The soldier sees the person approaching the fence, unarmed, not endangering anyone, a slim teenager, dozens of meters away - but still shoots him in the head with live ammunition, wounding him seriously, destroying his life and that of his family, probably for all time. At first the IDF claimed that the soldier had thwarted a knifing attack, and later that the teen had "put his hand in his pocket in a suspicious way."

In the end, it turned out that Hamed al-Masri hadn't done anything wrong at all.

Masri, a 15-year-old 10th-grader from a poor family in Salfit, a West Bank town east of Petah Tikva, collapsed on the rocks, his face covered in blood. As his friends ran for their lives, a soldier went over to him and, with his foot, turned the teen over. The soldier saw there was nothing in the boy's hands.

Comment: See also:


Piggy Bank

American enslavement: The top ten states where people are overloaded with debt

Map American indebtedness by state
Americans have racked up almost $13 trillion in personal debt for things like mortgages, car notes and student loans. $13 trillion is an enormous pile of money, but here's the kicker. That's significantly better than the run-up to the Great Recession. Still, it's hard to imagine what that looks like across the country. So, we created a new map to figure out exactly what's going on.

GOBankingRates recently conducted a survey in which they asked Americans how much debt they had. This included things like a mortgage, credit card debt, student loans, car notes and medical bills-basically every major category of debt. They broke the respondents down by state to calculate an average total debt load, which we then mapped across the country. As one can see, people living in states colored dark red and pink have higher debt burdens (as much as $500k) compared to light and dark blue, where the debt load is less than $50k.

Comment: See also:


Mr. Potato

"Biology professor" swallows the trans koolaid, says chromosomes don't determine sex

  • A biology professor from San Jose State University recently argued in several tweets that "chromosomes don't determine sex."
  • The tweets were written in response to Texas State Representative Briscoe Cain, who had tweeted a picture of the XX and XY chromosomes as reminder of "how many genders there are."
  • briscoe cain
    A San Jose State University biology professor recently accused a Texas state legislator of being "bigoted" for tweeting that there are only two genders.

    "In case you forgot how many genders there are," Republican State Representative Briscoe Cain tweeted on December 21, attaching a picture of the XX and XY chromosomes.

    Describing herself as a geneticist, Rachael French replied to the tweet with an extended harangue in which she impugned Cain's motives and derided his understanding of biology.

    "Hey geneticist here. You've disingenuously and for bigoted purposes oversimplified a complex phenomenon," she wrote. "A few notes: 1) Sex and gender aren't the same thing. 2) Chromosomes don't determine sex."
    briscoe cain

    Comment: The only reason gender and sex aren't the same thing is because postmodernists say they're not. From the Webster's Dictionary of 1828:
    GEN'DER, noun ... 2. A sex, male or female. ...



    Chart Pie

    Pew's 17 top findings from 2017: Trump, polarization, Muslims, immigration, colleges, media

    pew ideological divide usa
    © PEW
    Pew Research Center studies a wide array of topics both in the U.S. and around the world, and every year we are struck by particular findings. Sometimes they mark a new milestone in public opinion; other times a sudden about-face. From an increase in Americans living without a spouse or partner to the impact of Donald Trump's presidency, here are 17 findings that stood out to us in 2017:

    1 Partisan divides dwarf demographic differences on key political values. The average gap between the views of Republicans and Republican-leaning independents and Democrats and Democratic-leaning independents across 10 political values has increased from 15 percentage points in 1994 to 36 points today. Two decades ago, the average partisan differences on these items were only slightly wider than differences by religious attendance or educational attainment, and about as wide as differences across racial lines. Today, the partisan gaps far exceed differences across other key demographics.
    pew poll

    Eye 2

    Brazil: Charred body of homeless gay black man found in Sao Paulo

    Sao Paulo Brazil Brasil
    © ReutersThe center of Sao Paulo in Brazil, a country where the murder rate of LGBTI people has now surpassed one per day.


    Friends of the "friendly, considerate" victim said that he often sold dishcloths at the handicraft market in Sao Paolo's Vera Cruz neighborhood.


    The charred body of a homeless gay Black man has been found in an abandoned parking lot in Sao Paulo, Brazil, as the murder rate of LGBTI people in the country exceeds one per day for the first time.

    Known simply as Alexandre, the victim was sleeping in a shed-like structure when it was set ablaze.

    Firefighters and the Emergency Mobile Care Service, SAMU, were dispatched to the Jardim Marina neighborhood, where they discovered the burnt corpse. Friends of the victim said that he often sold dishcloths at the handicraft market in Vera Cruz neighborhood, according to Revista Forum.