Society's Child
The documents filed Wednesday night in a Utah court say 39-year-old William Clyde Allen III confessed to investigators after his arrest at his house in the small city of Logan, north of Salt Lake City.
The documents filed to justify Allen's arrest did not state a motive.
State investigators working with the FBI say the envelopes were mailed last week to the president, FBI Director Christopher Wray, Defense Secretary Jim Mattis and the Navy's top officer, Adm. John Richardson. The letters were intercepted and police say all four tested positive for ricin.
No attorney has been listed for Allen.
Kent State University decided to cancel the show entirely instead of recasting it and replaced it with a production of the Children of Eden, which is expected to be less problematic.
Eric van Baars, the director of the university's School of Theatre and Dance said the decision to cancel was "in response to our community members' voices and the national dialogue regarding the desire for authenticity on our stages". Van Baars told Fox News that in order to be "current and culturally engaged," the school was trying to support the progression of "conscious casting" in theatre.
The GoFundMe campaign for Kavanaugh was set up by John Hawkins, the founder of the Right Wing News website, who called Kavanaugh a "good man who has been treated very, very badly." The page has raised more than $531,000 in just eight days and is still accepting donations.
The Faith Matters counter-extremism network, quoted in the Independent, warned Choudary is a part of a "dance of hate where the only ones to profit have been the extremists."
This gobbledegook was presented as an academic journal, was peer-reviewed and published in Cogent Social Sciences. The only problem was that it was a hoax. A big, beautiful brilliant hoax carried out by two academics - Peter Boghossian and James Lindsay - who had immersed themselves in the academic BS of their time. In that paper they successfully punked an academic scene which (in the humanities at least) allows the most insane and untrue claims to be presented as truth, so long as they are suffused in fashionable grievances and coated in a form of academic vocabulary which is an insult to academic inquiry and an offence against language.
Comment: Academia has signed its own death warrant with its descent into ideological nonsense. The warning from the author above comes far too late (and likely never would have been listened to anyway) - academic "studies" are already a complete laughing stock. There is so little respect for these institutions at this point, outside of their bubble, no one takes them seriously.
See also:
- The Grievance Studies Scandal: Five Academics Respond to The Implications of Hoax Papers Published in Postmodernist Journals
- Academic journal duped by author of viral 'dog rape culture' article
- 'The Conceptual Penis as a Social Construct': Hoax gender studies paper accepted by a peer-reviewed academic journal
- Is academic journal publishing headed for a day of reckoning?

Pastors from Nevada pray with Donald Trump during a visit to Las Vegas in October 2016. Plenty of moviegoers in Lynchburg, Virginia, heaped praise on the movie.
This is the theme of The Trump Prophecy, a movie telling the story of Mark Taylor, a former fireman from Orlando forced to retire after suffering from PTSD, which premiered on Tuesday.
Between graphic nightmares featuring demonic monsters and hellish flames, Taylor received a message from God in April 2011, while he was surfing television channels.
As he clicked to an interview with Trump, Taylor heard God say: "You are hearing the voice of the next president."
And so it came to pass, although it took another five years and a national prayer campaign. Taylor duly wrote a book, The Trump Prophecies: The Astonishing True Story of the Man Who Saw Tomorrow ... and What He Says Is Coming Next, on which the movie is based.
The belief that Trump's election was God's divine will is shared by others. Franklin Graham, the prominent conservative evangelical, said last year that Trump's victory was the result of divine intervention. "I could sense going across the country that God was going to do something this year. And I believe that at this election, God showed up," he told the Washington Post.
Comment: One man's angel is another's demon. Trump appears to have been crowned king of the political divide - there's no middle ground, he is either adored or loathed. The trailer for the film:
In a letter seen by BBC News, they say the tie-up "will significantly damage the credibility of PHE".
On Tuesday, government alcohol adviser, Sir Ian Gilmore, resigned over the agency's decision to work with Drinkaware on a new campaign.
Comment: Did it really take "experts" to tell us that taking advice from an agency with a glaring conflict of interest is a bad idea? If PHE is really so concerned with reducing the harm alcohol has on the public, why wouldn't they get funding from an agency whose bottom line doesn't depend on people drinking more?
See also:
- Major N.I.H. drinking health study shut down: Tainted by funding appeals to the alcohol industry
- Why is the most hazardous drug still legal?
- British men show resistance to alcohol health warnings
- The debate rages: Latest research contends no amount of alcohol is safe
- Scientists reveal those who drink alcohol occasionally have lower risk of dying early than those who abstain

Defense Department personnel wearing protective suits screen mail as it arrives at the Pentagon
Envelopes addressed to Defense Secretary James Mattis and Chief of Naval Operations Admiral John Richardson tested positive for ricin contamination at the Pentagon mailroom on Monday. The Secret Service said on Tuesday that another suspicious letter was addressed to President Donald Trump, though they did not initially say it contained ricin.
The suspect was identified as William Clyde Allen III, Reuters reported citing federal law enforcement. It was earlier reported he's a US Navy veteran.
A ministry statement issued on October 2 said that one of the patients had so far tested positive for anthrax.
The statement says the form of anthrax was not pulmonary, meaning that only the skin of the patient was affected, making it possible to cure with antibiotics.
The tests also revealed anthrax spores in meat from the slaughtered animal and at the site where it was killed in the village of Minyaylivka in the Odesa region.
Their village has been under 15-day quarantine since September 30, during which all livestock and residents of the village will be thoroughly checked by medical and sanitary experts.
Florence County Sheriff's Deputy Chief Glenn Kirby confirmed three of his deputies were among the injured, as well as four officers of the city police department. One of the injured officers has died, Florence County Coroner Keith von Lutcken, told WBTW-TV.
The active shooter emergency was declared just before 5 pm local time, and the authorities reported the capture of the suspect about an hour later. The nearby West Florence High School was locked down as a precaution.













Comment: One's acting ability is irrelevant in the new world of "conscious casting". Now the criteria for getting a part is based on whether an actor's gender identity, race, socio-economic status, place of birth, astrological sign, and favorite color matches the character being portrayed. See also: LGBT activists shame Scarlett Johansson into pulling out of trans role, now film will likely never get made