Society's Child
Muradov told TASS that "Crimea is Russia's second most visited region for tourism and recreation after the Krasnodar Region."
Despite Western sanctions targeting the Black Sea peninsula (due to its reunification with Russia), Crimea is becoming increasingly popular with foreign tourists, Muradov said. This includes travelers from the United States and Europe, he added.

A semi-automatic pistol and magazines are among a cache of weapons seized by the Hong Kong police on Dec 8, 2019.
Hong Kong police have carried out raids early on Sunday, as the city braces for another wave of protests against the local and Beijing government. In wake of the searches, officers found an Austrian-made Glock pistol and four magazines, three of which were loaded with a total of 105 live rounds.
Glock is particularly valued by police and security forces worldwide for its simplicity, versatility and firepower. Its customized versions are also one of the best-selling firearms on the civilian market.
Comment: It's obvious by now that many of the 'pro-democracy' protesters are more intent on creating havoc than inspiring positive changes in government - in fact their actions will almost guarantee an eventual crackdown from the Chinese who have shown remarkable restraint.
- Hong Kong unmasked: The real reasons & instigators behind anti-Beijing riots
- Why are Ukrainian neo-Nazis joining the Hong Kong protests?
- Watch as Hong Kong protester nearly kills 53 year old man with drain cover as he attempts to dismantle barricade
- Video shows Hong Kong rioters SET MAN ON FIRE for not backing anti-China protests
- Hong Kong demonstrators savagely beat woman with a metal rod
- Watch anti-govt protesters fight with Beijing supporters in Hong Kong mall - Overall tourism down 40%

If De La Rue’s worst-case scenario were to play out, it would mark the end of a more-than-200-year run for the company and force the 140 countries it does business with to look to other commercial printers.
De La Rue, which has printed banknotes for the Bank of England since 1860, and also prints currency for 140 other countries, last week issued a warning that there was "significant doubt" about its future.
It is the largest commercial printer in the world, produces passports for 40 countries, and has designed 36 percent of all banknote denominations in circulation, according to investment research company Edison Group.
However, there is remarkably little evidence that transgender Americans are killed at an unusually high rate. According to an exhaustive database kept by the HRC, there were 29 recorded murders of trans individuals in the most violent recent year on record (2017), a fraction of the 17,294 murders committed that year. In fact, the transgender murder rate is far lower than the murder rates for African Americans, poor Americans of all races, and "men" in general. Further, most murders of trans persons are same-race domestic or personal disputes, not hate crimes.
In the Times article, authors Rick Rojas and Vanessa Swales open their piece by noting that in 2019 "at least 18 trans persons" have been murdered "in a wave of violence that the American Medical Association has declared an epidemic." According to the article, trans people — in particular trans women — have been shot, beaten, found dead in lakes, and even "burned beyond recognition." Further, the situation seems to be getting worse: the Times journalists note that "many" say hostility toward trans people has intensified "as a rise in visibility has stirred animosity, and motivated people to attack." Transgender Memphis woman Kayla Gore is quoted saying that the apparent rise in anti-transgender crime has pushed her and others toward increased personal vigilance: "[An attack] is always at the forefront of our minds, when we're leaving work, going to work, going to school." ABC News's account contains similar language, with the authors stating: "For transgender women of color, every day is a fight for survival."
According to the website Observatory on Intolerance and Discrimination Against Christians in Europe, Roar Fløttum was approached by the men when one of them asked him to come with them to pray for a friend who had injured his foot. Instead, they took him to a nearby backyard where the men allegedly pushed him down a cellar staircase, beat him, robbed him and threatened to kill him if he did not convert to Islam.
"They told me to give them my bank card and certificate, codes, mobile, and Apple ID. They held me hostage there for an hour as they withdrew from the card," Fløttum told Norway Today. They made about 10,000 kroner (a little more than $1,000 in US dollars). While they kept me there, they threatened me and said they would kill me if I did not convert to Islam."
"They wanted me to say a few words in Arabic," he continued. "I was scared and actually thought they were going to kill me because they said they had a knife and didn't want witnesses."
Even though they threatened his life if he contacted the authorities, Fløttum immediately went to the police to report the attack.
The street preacher also told the website that he was feeling well after having an examination in a local hospital.
Comment: More recent news from Norway:
- Extreme Nanny State: Norway thinks it's proper to remove your child for not liking fish balls
- Pakistan summons Norway's ambassador amid outcry over Koran burning at rally in Kristiansand
- Norway: Anti-Islam rally turns violent over Koran burning
- Oslo, Norway: Police open fire as ambulance ramming suspect flees the scene

Any sane country should study the pathological case of Sweden, both in terms of culture and actual laws/policies, and take heed. Let it not happen to you!
Maher Turkie, originally from Lebanon, and a reformed convict in Sweden, said about the country that it will "soon resemble Syria and won't be any difference." If some think it too great an exaggeration, then a better example would be Mexico - second deadliest conflict zone in 2016 after Syria [and mind you, in Syria we had an entire dismemberment operation sponsored by powerful geopolitical actors]. According to the International Institute for Strategic Studies, the former conflict has received little attention. In Mexico, 23,000 people died in the fight against drug cartels in 2016. In other, smaller Central American countries battling the same foe, including Honduras, El Salvador, and Guatemala, another 16,000 were killed.
Comment: More on Sweden's crime problem and immigration policies:
- Sorry Sweden, those hand grenade attacks are not an 'image' problem
- Malmo, Sweden hit by grenade blasts; 4th attack in under a week, 30th this year
- Former CEO of Scania warns that Sweden is headed for civil war
- Big-brain move: Sweden beckons more migrants to come and receive free benefits
- Swedish police suggest organized crime is behind wave of car-burnings as number of Stockholm 'no-go areas' grow
- Sweden sees 'massive' increase in deadly shootings over recent years

The main gate at Naval Air Station Pensacola is seen on Navy Boulevard in Pensacola, Florida, U.S. March 16, 2016. Picture taken March 16, 2016.
The shooter was identified as Mohammed Alshamrani, a Saudi national and member of the country's air force who was in the U.S. for flight training, law enforcement officials familiar with the investigation told ABC News. Investigators are trying to determine whether the shooting was terror-related, the officials said.
Authorities responded to reports of a shooting at Naval Air Station Pensacola at 6:51 a.m. on Friday, officials said. ATF and FBI also responded to the scene.
The shooting took place at one of the classroom buildings on the base, officials said. Officers with the Escambia County Sheriff's Office arrived on the scene and fatally shot the suspect after exchanging gunfire.
Three people, including the shooter, were pronounced dead on scene, police said. One victim was taken to the hospital and died from injuries.
Eight others injured in the shooting were transported to Baptist Hospital, police said. The condition of those victims has not been released.
Comment: Alshamrani allegedly left a manifesto online before the attack, at least according to "SITE Intelligence Group":
SITE, a private organization that monitors and tracks extremist groups' online presence, published the text of the manifesto on Friday. While officials have yet to name the attacker, he was confirmed to be a Saudi military officer stationed at the naval air station for training. Posted on Twitter shortly before the gunman carried out the shooting, the manifesto attacked what it calls an American "war of attrition" waged on Muslims around the world, citing the US drone war and the Guantanamo Bay prison in Cuba, where a number of terrorism suspects face indefinite detention.Either guys like this don't realize that saying things like this will only have the result of increasing the American establishment's resolve in the Middle East; or they know that's exactly what will happen, and that's why they write such things. Funny how the results of such manifestos align so well with the goals of the people behind SITE Intelligence...
"I'm not against you for just being American, I don't hate you because your freedoms," the post begins. "I hate you because every day you [support] funding and committing crimes not only against Muslims but also humanity," the manifesto, attributed to the attacker, read.
The document also takes aim at Washington's unmatched defense spending which, the author argues, only provides "Americans a false sense of security," warning that they won't be "safe" until US troops withdraw from "our lands."
...
The manifesto was released just as the New York Times reported that six Saudi nationals had been detained for questioning at the Pensacola naval base, some of which reportedly filmed the officer's shooting rampage, which injured eight in addition to the fatalities.
See also: UPDATE (DEC 8)
Alshamrani reportedly hosted a dinner party in the week before the shooting where he played mass shooting videos for his guests:
A U.S. official on December 7 also told AP that the Saudi hosted a dinner party earlier in the week in which he and three others watched videos of mass shootings.RT adds the following detail:
Federal investigators have not disclosed any motive behind the attack, which occurred on December 6 when the Saudi national is said to have opened fire with a handgun inside a classroom at the Naval Air Station Pensacola.
U.S. Defense Secretary Mark Esper said on December 7 that he was not ready to call it an act of terrorism.
Labeling an act by a Saudi national could be a sensitive topic. Sunni Muslim Saudi Arabia is closely allied with the United States, and Washington relies on Riyadh to be a counter to Shi'ite-led regional rival Iran.
...
One of the three students who attended the dinner party videotaped outside the building while the shooting was taking place, a U.S. official told AP on condition of anonymity.
Two other Saudi students watched from a car, the official said. All three are being questioned by investigators.
...
Officials said they have so far found no indications Alshamrani had links to international terrorist groups.
At least ten Saudi military students were being held at Naval Air Station Pensacola and several more were "unaccounted for" after the Friday shooting that left at least three dead and eight injured, an anonymous US official told AP on Saturday.The FBI confirmed the shooter's identity:
"The NAS Pensacola shooter is identified as Saudi national Mohammed Alshamrani," the FBI field office in Jacksonville said in a statement on Twitter, accompanying it with a photo of the attacker that has been widely circulated on social media.UPDATE (DEC 8) - #2
The US Navy also released the names of three sailors whose lives were claimed by the gunman as he went on a shooting rampage inside a classroom. All three victims were students of the Naval Aviation Schools Command.
The Navy said that the victims, identified as Ensign Joshua Kaleb Watson, 23, Airman Mohammed Sameh Haitham, 19, and Airman Apprentice Cameron Scott Walters, 21, attempted to neutralize the shooter, noting that "if not for their actions, and the actions of the Naval Security Force that were the first responders on the scene, this incident could have been much worse.""When confronted, they didn't run from danger; they ran towards it and saved lives."The FBI, which has been leading the investigation into the incident, said earlier that its Joint Task Force was involved in the process, but fell short of labeling the carnage a terrorist attack. "The shooter's motivation is still being determined," the FBI said on Saturday.
The FBI is now treating the shooting as an act of terrorism:

Frank Ordonez, taken hostage after his UPS delivery truck was carjacked by robbers and ultimately killed during a police shootout in South Florida.
At least 19 officers from five different agencies fired over 200 rounds at the robbers in the intense gun battle on Thursday, after a failed jewelry store holdup led police on a chase spanning several counties in South Florida.
Family members of one of the shootout victims, Frank Ordonez - who was taken hostage when the two thieves commandeered his UPS delivery truck to escape arrest - have been among the most vocal critics of the heavy-handed police response, which saw officers using cars stuck in traffic as cover from gunfire.
Comment: More from ZeroHedge:
As we reported earlier, four people have been confirmed dead, including the robbers and the UPS driver, since identified as 27-year-old Frank Ordonez, who unluckily had been taken hostage on a day he was reportedly filling in for another driver. Some of his own family members are blaming the "trigger happy" Florida police for killing him in their overeagerness to stop the criminals.
An investigation is underway which will also focus on the other innocent bystander that died — an unidentified person shot while trapped at the intersection in one of the many surrounding vehicles.
"In addition to the UPS driver - who was on his knees - the innocent bystander was shot while sitting in a car waiting at the stop light in the intersection," CBS4 News in Miami reporter Jim DeFede has confirmed.
"The number of shots fired by the officers is not currently known but my source said it could exceed 200 rounds," he reported. The deceased bystander had been "inside an idle car at the scene."
DeFede concluded that though police were facing a "chaotic situation" it remains that "innocent people are dead" and "questions need to be asked".
A number of online commentators noted the dramatic scene of police immediately rushing into stalled traffic on foot and emptying their weapons in return fire appeared something more from a Hollywood action movie.
Viral video shows the UPS truck stopped amid heavy traffic with bystanders in their vehicles on either side. But the police response is now under criticism given that instead of hanging back and waiting for fewer civilians to be in the line of fire, or even establishing contact through a police negotiator, officers rushed the UPS truck in a blaze of bullets.
Police had the other option of backing off the easily identifiable and trackable large brown UPS truck in order to engage with it in a more open area.
It is as yet unclear whether a police bullet or one of the robbers actually killed Ordonez. But what is clear from overhead video is that some among the responding officers actually hid behind vehicles with bystanders and families in them, who were trying to flee as gunfire rang out.
Though in the initial press conference in the immediate aftermath the issue wasn't raised, national media is beginning to acknowledge the growing public outrage. NPR reports:Former [U.S. Department] Department of Housing and Urban Development official Brandon Friedman described the shootout as "appalling." He said the department should be held accountable for "choosing to assault the vehicle in the middle of stopped rush hour traffic" and using occupied vehicles as "human shields."From one of the overhead news chopper videos, one panicked blue SUV is seen attempting to ram its way out of being in the direct line of fire, between the suspects shooting at police and the police themselves.
A family member who set up a GoFundMe page on behalf of the UPS driver victim Frank Ordonez's children and for funeral expenses, which has raised nearly 100,000 in 24 hours, had this to say:"They [the robbers] kidnapped my brother and took him on a high speed chase, when they came to a stop he was gunned down like a criminal by the Florida police, he didn't deserve to die the way he did..."The former State Department of Housing and Urban Development official also had this to say of the botched police response: "Here are a few things that those in charge of this disaster should be held accountable for" —Astoundingly, about a half-dozen police are seen crouching behind and shadowing the vehicle for protection despite what appears to be bystanders inside trying to get away.
- Choosing to assault the vehicle
- Choosing to assault the vehicle in the middle of stopped rush hour traffic
- Using civilian cars with people *in them* as human shields
It is unknown at this point which among the vehicles had an innocent passenger shot and killed, or if it had been a police bullet or gunfire from the robbers inside the UPS truck.
The FBI is currently assisting an investigation into the incident, which involved officers from five different responding departments and agencies, most reportedly from Miami-Dade police department.

(L) FILE PHOTO: Max Blumenthal; (R) FILE PHOTO: Activists opposed to US-intervention in Venezuela occupy the country's embassy in Washington, DC.
Blumenthal was detained for nearly two days after police raided his Washington, DC office in October. The month-old warrant for his arrest listed the journalist as "armed and dangerous," and police carrying out the warrant reportedly threatened to kick down his door.The government's case was based solely on an unsubstantiated claim made by a right-wing Venezuelan opposition activist, Naylet Pacheco, who alleged that Blumenthal and a friend had assaulted her during a protest at the Venezuelan embassy in Washington.

This photo, released by West Virginia state officials Thursday, depicts most of a training class of roughly 30 correctional officers giving the Nazi salute.
Department of Military Affairs and Public Safety Director Jeff Sandy sent a letter to all employees Wednesday describing the photo as "distasteful, hurtful, disturbing, highly insensitive, and completely inappropriate."
The photo, on state letterhead, shows almost all of Basic Training Class No. 18 displaying the Nazi salute. Text above the photo reads: "HAIL BYRD!"









Comment: In addition to tourism, since reunification with Russia, Crimea has become very attractive to investors and the people are enjoying a fast-growing economy.