Society's Child
The video shows the Embraer 190 jet with 103 on board trying to take off in a rainstorm at Durango airport, failing to achieve altitude, and crashing back down, several hundred yards beyond the runway, all in a matter of seconds.
During the two-minute clip, a scream can be heard in the background, even before the plane has finished its takeoff, and after the camera juts following the crash, there are loud calls to God, and more urgent instructions of "Open the Door!"
The seemingly alarming number of missing persons cases has sparked widespread panic on social media and a flood of conspiracy theories as the search intensifies for Mollie Tibbetts, who was last seen July 19.
"40 people have gone missing in Iowa in 10 days. 40. People. How is this possible ?!!!!!!!!!!!?!" posted one person on Facebook, adding: "keep tabs on your friends and family, be aware of everything and everyone around you."
Added Heather Loshaw in a local Facebook group: "WTH is going on here?? Be careful out there please."
"Don't think it can't happen to you," warned Shannon Kelly on Twitter, in a post that was shared thousands of times. "It's happening across rural and urban Iowa."
The Iowa Department of Public Safety has received many calls about the missing persons statistics since Tibbetts' disappearance, the Argus Leader reported.
"We take reports of hate content seriously and review any podcast episode or song that is flagged by our community," the company said in a statement late Wednesday.
"Spotify can confirm it has removed specific episodes of 'The Alex Jones Show' podcast for violating our hate content policy," it said.
Most "Infowars" Spotify content from Jones, an Austin, Texas-based radio host and conspiracy theorist, appears to still be available.
Comment: Facebook has also banned Jones for 30 days stating his posts are 'bullying, hate speech'.
FBI agents handling the engineer's case say it is the first time they have seen a suspect using this method of encryption, "uncommon even among trained computer professionals," to cover his tracks.
The complaint alleges the man employed "elaborate and sophisticated means" to obtain General Electric files relating to turbine technologies, and that Zheng used "steganography to hide data files belonging to GE into an innocuous looking digital picture of a sunset" before sending this image, containing 40 coded files, to his Hotmail address. The image was allegedly accompanied with a rather obvious reminder to himself - "nice view to keep" - as the subject line.
"We had lost control of the narrative," admitted Cristina Mittermeier, the photographer of the polar bear. Mittermeier explained the climate change deception in a piece titled "Starving-Polar-Bear Photographer Recalls What Went Wrong" for the magazine's August issue.
Mittermeier conceded that the images of the bony, emaciated polar bear were meant to sound an alarm about climate change, though she complains that people took the image "literally."
A Capitol Police spokesperson said in a release that officers made the discovery during "routine parking enforcement" along the 300 block of New Jersey Avenue. Authorities did not find any evidence showing a link to terrorism.
Shortly after 9 a.m., officers received consent to search the car and discovered a weapon, ammunition and other items, Capitol Police said. The owner was arrested and charges are pending.
For the better part of two decades, longtime late-night radio personality Art Bell was his own producer, engineer and host of his show, "Coast to Coast AM." He later launched his own satellite radio program from his Pahrump home after retiring from full-time hosting duties in 2003.
On the airwaves, Bell captivated listeners with his fascination for the unexplained, such as UFOs, alien abductions and crop circles. He died Friday at his home at the age of 72.
Comment: Coast to Coast AM was an institution and Art Bell will surely be missed.
Here's a rather famous clip from Coast to Coast AM from 1997:
Update: August 1, 2018
The Las Vegas Review Journal reports that Art Bell died of an accidental drug overdose:
The coroner's office determined he had four prescription medications in his system: the opioid oxycodone, the analgesic hydrocodone, diazepam, often marketed as Valium, and carisoprodol, a muscle-relaxant. Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and hypertension contributed to his death, the coroner's office said.
The Justice Department on August 1 alleged that the men are associated with the hacking group FIN7 and that they were arrested earlier this year in Europe.
The suspects, Fedir Hladyr, 33, Dmytro Fedorov, 44, and Andriy Kolpakov, 30, were arrested between January and June, said the Justice Department, which accused them of being members of a "sophisticated international cybercrime group" called FIN7.
It added that Hladyr was arrested in Dresden, Germany, and is being held in Seattle, Washington, ahead of trial.
Fedorov was arrested in Bielsko-Biala, Poland, while Kopakov is being detained in Spain, both pending extradition procedures initiated by the United States.
The teenager, who has become a symbol of Palestinian resistance and was even called the Palestinian Joan of Arc, was released from prison on Sunday after serving eight months for confronting IDF soldiers.
"I hope nobody ever goes through what I went through. But I'm glad I ended up there for my beliefs," the 17-year-old activist told RT Arabic. "And I'm ready to go to prison a hundred more times if it serves the good of my country."
South African President Cyril Ramaphosa announced on Tuesday that the ruling African National Congress (ANC) would formally introduce an amendment into the parliament that would legalize the redistribution of land, most of which has been owned by the country's white minority since the 1600s.
Ramaphosa cited the overwhelming support the controversial proposal received at public hearings, arguing that the expropriations would "unlock economic growth" and "bring more land in South Africa to full use."
Bennie Van Zyl, the general manager of the Agricultural Union of South Africa (TAU SA), believes the result would be the exact opposite.
Comment:
- South African president pledges to seize white farmers land without compensation and redistribute to black citizens
- 'Severe infringement on human rights': South Africa parliament paves way to seize white farmers' land
- South African land grab from white farmers: Correcting injustice or perpetuating racism?
- Top officials in Australia call for emergency visas for white farmers facing violent attacks in South Africa
- Russia welcomes first 50 South African farming families















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