Society's Child
Spotify told Ad Age Friday it will stop accepting political advertising in early 2020 across its ad-supported tier, which boasts 141 million users. The company is also suspending campaign ads on its original and exclusive podcasts, which include Amy Schumer Presents and The Joe Budden Podcast.
Spotify cited a lack of resources needed to vet the content of political ads.
While there were "multiple survivors," 12 people were killed and dozens injured in the crash, many critically. Medics say 66 people were taken to the hospital after the crash, and a dozen of them are in grave condition.
Rescue personnel and medics continue to work at the scene in search of survivors.

Anti-government protesters break a window at the entrance of a metro station, in Hong Kong, China
"Judging from the situation in the past months, continued negative growth is unavoidable," Financial Secretary Paul Chan Mo-po said on Sunday.
While the official economic results will be released only early next year, Chan could already cite some gloomy statistics. The city's retail sales plunged 26 percent in October, while its once booming tourist sector lost 50 percent of vacationers during the Christmas holidays. Tourist numbers have been dramatically collapsing since the beginning of the unrest, with earlier reports saying that Hong Kong-based companies were deprived of more than 2.5 million visitors.
An explosive device was activated near a guest platform as troops marched in the southern Yemeni town of Al-Dhalea on Sunday, local security forces said.
At least nine people were reported to have been killed and 30 have been injured, according to Sky News Arabia citing local sources. No group has claimed credit for the attack so far.
Additional officers in full riot gear have been deployed in the Seelampur district in northeast Delhi, particularly around the historic Jama Masjid - the largest mosque in the city and one of the largest in India - where massive protests and riots broke out last Friday. Drones have been dispatched to monitor the area from above.
"In view of Friday prayers, we have deployed appropriate forces in the region," Deputy Commissioner for Police Prakash Surya told ANI.
"Around 15 companies of paramilitary forces have been deployed. Police personnel are also deployed in sensitive areas."
The officers are monitoring social media and using loudspeakers to urge people to maintain order on the streets.
Comment: Two Europeans who joined the previous protests were asked to leave the country. Their visas don't allow participation in organized protests.
After a video of a police officer telling protesters to "go to Pakistan" went viral, the Indian minister for minorities has called for disciplinary measures to be taken:
Union Minister for Minorities Mukhtar Abbas Naqvi said that "immediate action should be taken against the police officer" if the allegations are true. He stressed that the government would respond if police or officials were found to have carried out "atrocities on the people."
In a video that went viral on social media and was shared by local news outlets, a senior police officer in Meerut, Uttar Pradesh confronts a group of Muslims rallying against the Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA).
"If you don't want to live here, go to Pakistan," the cop told the group. He also threatened to "throw them all in jail" and "destroy them," according to translations provided by Indian media.
He later told reporters that some young men were hurling stones at police and shouting pro-Pakistan slogans during the protest. "I asked them if they love Pakistan so much, then they should go there."
Meerut Additional Director General (ADG) Prashant Kumar defended the incendiary comments, claiming the policeman was trying to control a protest that was turning violent. "The officer only asked them to stop pelting stones and [said] they can go there [Pakistan] if they wanted to," Kumar said.
Meerut has been the scene of violent clashes amid nationwide unrest over the CAA. Five people died there last week, and relatives reportedly claim they were shot dead by police.
Officers denied killing anyone, saying they opened fire only to control the crowd. They also suggested that violent armed protesters might be responsible for the deaths, as their shots went astray. Police released CCTV footage purportedly showing demonstrators with firearms.
The attack was captured on several CCTV cameras, as well as apparently filmed by the arsonists themselves. At least three masked individuals took part in the attack - they drove to the comedy group's office in Rio de Janeiro early on Tuesday and threw three firebombs at its lobby.
The blaze, however, was promptly contained by a security guard.
Comment: The global wave of anti-Semitic attacks continues...

Police work the scene of the stabbings that took place inside the home of a rabbi in Monsey, New York, on Saturday
The assault in Monsey, N.Y. -- by a machete-wielding suspect who drove away but whom authorities believe was the man they apprehended later -- continued a string of incidents in recent weeks that have included beatings of Jewish people on the streets of New York City and a massacre at a kosher grocery store in nearby Jersey City, N.J.
Comment: They believe it's the same guy? Well, it either is or it isn't...
Five people were wounded at what public records say was the home of Rabbi Chaim Rottenberg, who leads a nearby synagogue. Soon after the attack, video posted on social media showed emergency responders frantically transporting victims on gurneys to waiting ambulances.
Comment: No one should ever be attacked because of their faith, especially while peacefully celebrating a religious holiday. The recent epidemic of "anti-semitic attacks" makes us wonder, however, what's really going on. Cui bono?
In an Op-ed today in The Jerusalem Post, titled Inconvenient antisemitism: The daily attacks on Jews in New York, Seth Frantzman ends with:
The result is a multi-layered cake of excuses and fear at confronting a wider range of perpetrators of antisemitism in New York. If violent antisemitism that sees Jews controlling the police and being responsible for slavery and white supremacy, is growing in the African American community in America then confronting it requires asking a minority community that is also a victim to be self-critical. In the US there tends to be pass for minority groups who are homophobic or racist. Society can only confront one kind of racism. This is largely because those driving the agenda of confronting racism either have blinders on regarding all forms of racism and antisemitism or are unaware of it because they don't conduct surveys and polls regarding the prevalence of antisemitism in places like Brooklyn. When the perpetrators and victims do not fit a convenient model, it is easier to just excuse the attacks or see them as random. Unfortunately, in the US these attacks are not random, and there is rising violent antisemitism coming from a broad spectrum of communities, including white supremacists and from African Americans. Confronting it requires the same broad spectrum to step up the struggle.Does it sound like some Jewish people are vying for THE minority position among all minorities?
UPDATE 21:00 CET
Governor Cuomo has called the attack "an act of domestic terrorism" fueled by intolerance:
"This is intolerance meets ignorance meets illegality," Cuomo told reporters on Sunday, calling the attack the 13th incidence of anti-Semitism in recent weeks. "This is violence spurred by hate, it is mass violence, and I consider it an act of domestic terrorism."An eyewitness describes what he saw go down at the rabbi's house:
Police have arrested the alleged perpetrator, though his possible terrorist motives are unknown. The man was arrested without struggle in Harlem shortly after midnight.
The attack took place during the Jewish holiday of Hanukkah, as Rabbi Rottenberg was hosting around 100 people in his home for the lighting of the candle marking the seventh night of the holiday. The rabbi's home is located in Rockland County, which has the highest per-capita population of Jews of any US county.
The New York Police Department's counterterrorism unit said it is "closely monitoring" the incident. Prior to the attack, Mayor Bill de Blasio announced that the NYPD would step up patrols in Jewish neighborhoods of New York City, citing a string of recent anti-Semitic attacks.
Witness Aron Kohn described the moment the suspect walked into the Rabbi's residence and began attacking with a knife he described as almost as big as "a broomstick."Again, it's all very vague.
"I saw him walking in by the door. I asked who was coming in in the middle of the night with an umbrella. While I was saying that, he pulled it out from the thing and he started to run into the big room, which was on the left side. And I had thrown tables and chairs, that he should get out of here. And the injured guy, he was bleeding here, bleeding in his hand, all over," Kohn said. "I ran into the other room to save my life. I saw him running this way, so I ran the other way to save my life. He said something but I could not understand what he said. I saw him pull out the knife from the holder, the case."
In France, one small community of Jews in the country's northeast have been targeted dozens of times in the last year. Despite having the full force of the state on their side, authorities there still have ZERO leads...
42 acts of vandalism in 1.5 years: Jewish cemeteries are being systematically desecrated in Alsace, France, but not a SINGLE arrest has been made
The suspect's name and image, by the way:
Update 22:30 CET
The above suspect, Grafton Thomas, is also now, retrospectively, a suspect in a 'stab-a-Jew-and-run' incident in the same town of Monsey, NY, on 20 November this year (that's the earlier incident we comment on above, the one where a cash reward was offered for info).
Comment: Kudos to @robbystarbuck for compiling this list of Trump's accomplishments (and near-accomplishments, and some things that were accomplished on his watch, but which aren't necessarily his doing) during the last three years.
[Note: we have not verified every piece of legislation and statistic listed, but the author invites feedback on mistakes or oversights.]
For the record, we don't see every single one of them as being 'good'. But most of them clearly are, and they add up to a productive, normal, BIPARTISAN first term as president.
Which you wouldn't have a clue about from listening to US and foreign media paint him 'Literally Hitler'...
This latter legislation was directed against all Americans and used to firmly silence criticism of government policies. Under this Act, the government engaged in countless illegal searches and seizures of property and imprisoned tens of thousands of US citizens simply for criticising Wilson's desire for war. The authorities organised gangs to regularly intimidate and beat up citizens, unrelated to the propaganda war on the Germans. Wilson admitted openly that many of his laws and activities were unconstitutional, but often protected himself with claims of national security.
In 1940, under President Franklin Roosevelt, the US created a law known as the Smith Act [3] which made it a crime in the US to "knowingly or willfully advocate, abet, advise, or teach the ... desirability or propriety of overthrowing ... any government in the United States". And for the following decades the government prosecuted thousands of individuals who proposed alternatives to the US system of capitalism, or promoted any form of socialism or attempted to form another political party. The act was exclusively intended to suppress any and all forms of political dissent in the United States. Many people were imprisoned or disappeared simply for publishing or circulating pamphlets or articles that discussed alternative political or economic views.
Comment: See also:
- Martial law masquerading as law and order in the US
- "Homegrown Terrorists": New US draconian laws usher in the New World Order
- Police are monitoring key activists online: Activists warned to watch what they say as social media monitoring becomes 'next big thing in law enforcement'

A French trade union member is seen during protests in Paris, France on December 28, 2019.
This weekend appeared to be particularly heated in Paris, as two different groups of protesters joined efforts in defying the policies of the country's government. Although the protests were calm most of the day as RT's Charlotte Dubenskij reported, violence broke out in some parts of the city.
The protesters tried to erect barricades in the streets, set objects on fire and pelted law enforcement with various objects. The police, in turn, responded with generous usage of tear gas which engulfed the streets with a thick blanket, footage from the scene shows.












Comment: More from RT: See also: Cargo vessel crashes into bollard on Istanbul's Bosphorus
UPDATE: 29th December 18:45CET
RFE/RL reports that authorities are still investigating the cause of the deadly crash: UPDATE 3 Jan 2020
Video has surfaced showing the moment the plane crashed into a building next to the runway: