Society's Child
According to a series of publications by Bruxelles2, France Info, Guardian and a number of other media outlets, a number of French and Georgian soldiers that were employed in the UN peacekeeping operation "Sangaris" in Central Africa, are responsible of child sexual abuse.
It should be recalled that an armed conflict between the government of the Central African Republic and Muslim rebels, many of which took part in the civil war of 2004-2007, resulted in the French Defense Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian announcing that France would deploy a thousand soldiers in CAR to carry out a UN peacekeeping mission. On December 9, 2013 the United States decided to take part in this operation, while the Georgian parliament also agreed to send its soldiers to CAR a year later, on February 22, 2014. By June 2014 the number of Georgian Armed Forces in the Central African Republic reached 140 members.
According to the French news agency France Info, French and Georgian soldiers were raping children aged 8 to 15 years in the area near M'Poko airport and were subjecting them to sexual exploitation.
The city of Knurow was hosting a match between two local teams on Saturday - Concordia (Knurów) and Ruch (Radzionkow). During the game, a brawl between the fans descended into the pitch as stones and fires were pelted from the benches.
As the referee stopped the game, around 50 people invaded the stadium, according to TVN24.
Comment: Seems Polish police are taking cues from their American counterparts.
What is unusual is when the individual in question is five years old, and the arrest takes place in an elementary school.
New York state police were called last week to the primary school in Philadelphia, New York, close to the Canadian border, after staff reported that a pupil, Connor Ruiz, was disruptive and uncontrollable. When officers arrived at the premises, they placed the five-year-old boy in handcuffs, carried him out to a patrol car and put his feet into shackles before taking him to a medical center for evaluation.
The child's mother, Chelsea Ruiz, told the local Watertown Daily Times she was shocked and angered by what had happened.
"An officer told me they had to handcuff his wrists and ankles for their safety," she said. "I told him that was ridiculous. How could someone fear for their safety when it comes to a small, five-year-old child?"
Comment: School administrators and police are always quick to excuse their over-the-top responses to unruly children, but it is telling that these extreme responses have been escalating at a time when police in general have been acting like out of control thugs everywhere. It seems no one, not even small children or pets can be protected from the police state mentality.
Handcuffs, leg shackles and tasers: The new face of punishment in US public schools
See below for the relationship between margin debt — money borrowed by retail investors against their stocks and used to buy more stock — where Short has enhanced the visual impact by inverting the margin debt line. As presented here, a downward sloping red line means margin debt is increasing. So when the two lines diverge, that means stock prices and margin debt are both rising.
Comment: Evidence is mounting that economic collapse is just around the corner.
Israel, like America, allows their cops to brutalize anyone with dark skin and the people are fed up

Ethiopian protesters scuffle with Israeli security forces in the city of Tel Aviv, on May 03, 2015, during a demonstration against police brutality and institutionalized discrimination.
Some demonstrators threw stones and glass bottles after attempting to storm the municipality building. According to local media reports, at least 20 policemen and several protesters were injured during the clashes.
Demonstrators were chanting and holding up signs reading, "A violent policeman must be put in prison" and "We demand equal rights".
The event's organizers reportedly put the number of people attending the rally at 10,000. Ethiopian demonstrators blocked major arteries and junctions in central Tel Aviv, vowing to continue rallies until their demands are met.
Comment: Not even second-class, but third-class. Seems the brilliantly repressive tactics of the Israeli and American police forces are eerily similar. Brutalize anyone with dark skin while the rest of the country tolerates it due to cultural racism.
We are used to being among the first to cover cases of police brutality and injustices, only to see the mainstream, corporate media catch on weeks or sometimes months later. But this time something is different. Unlike our early coverage of John Crawford, or Tamir Rice, the story of Sheneque Proctor continues to be ignored by the mainstream media, in spite of the numerous similarities to high profile cases like that of Eric Garner.
A new petition has begun circulating in response to Proctor's death at the hands of police officers. Many have begun referring to Proctor as the "female Eric Garner," not to diminish her unique life, personality and death, but instead to highlight how the media is ignoring the death of an African American woman with asthma in police custody.
The petition demands a federal and state investigation into the death of the 18-year-old, who died in the Bessemer City Jail after she was arrested on November 1st. She was at a Bessemer hotel at a party with friends when police arrived and arrested her for "disorderly conduct," according to her aunt, Tracy Rodda. Early the next morning, Proctor was found dead in her jail cell, after having complained of problems with asthma which police apparently refused to take seriously.
Comment: Please take a moment and sign the petition. Anytime you share a story, sign a petition, or comment expressing yourself you let the universe know where you stand. Every action we take can have an impact, even if it doesn't seem like it.
As the man stands impassively in the street with his arms at his side, an officer walks up to him and, without provocation, sprays his face with pepper spray. As the man attempts to shake it off, not even reaching upwards to his face, the officer then grabs him by his hair and flings him to the ground as fellow officers swarm all over him.
After being dragged to the sidewalk another officer pours water on his face as he lays moaning on the ground, his hands bound behind him.
Leaning against the wall next to the man is a protest sign reading "Amnesty 4 Jailed Youth."
According to the Associated Press, the man was reportedly on the street after the 10PM curfew.
Watch the video below uploaded to YouTube by the Associated Press:
Comment: It's pretty clear that human lives do not matter to police. The brutal use of force and lack of accountability creates fear, anger and feelings of helplessness that lead to compliance among the citizenry - part and parcel to totalitarian police states.
The path to tyranny: The Nazi Gestapo and the US police state
But 'everyone' will resist, refuse and refute that change, leaving precious few people with an accurate picture of the - economic - world. Still, for you it's beneficial to acknowledge that very little of what you read holds much, if any, truth or value. This is true when it comes to politics, geopolitics and economics. That is, the US is not a democracy, it is not the supreme leader of the world, and the American economy is not in recovery.
Declining business investment, a record inventory build and extreme borrowing to hold share prices above water through buybacks, it all together paints a picture of a very unhealthy if not outright dying economy, and certainly not one in which anything at all is recovering. But how are you supposed to know?

An earthquake victim walks past a collapsed temple in Sankhu, on the outskirts of Kathmandu.
A spokesperson from the National Emergency Operations Centre confirmed the death toll on Sunday. The number of injured has climbed to 14,123, with 6,512 of theses currently being treated in hospital.
The death toll will be "much higher," warned Nepal's Finance Minister Ram Sharan Mahat.
"There are still villages where we know that all houses have been destroyed, but haven't yet been able to reach. The aftershocks have not receded and we expect the final casualty numbers to climb much higher," he said.
Earlier, Nepal police spokesman Kamal Singh Bam spoke of 7,056 dead and 14,227 injured.
"We are continuing our search and rescue operations, " Bam said on Saturday.
Nepal's Home Ministry official Laxmi Dhakal added there is little hope of finding any more survivors: "Unless they were caught in an air pocket, there is not much possibility."
About 100 people in neighboring India, China and Bangladesh were also victims of the quake.
This article originally appeared at Mnews. Translated by Tom Winter at Fort Russ.
Nastia Koptyeva's letter to President of the Russian Federation Vladimir Putin
Greetings esteemed Vladimir Vladimirovich!
My name is Nastia and I live in Donetsk. I know that you are a very busy person, but I want to tell you about my life today. Why? Two months ago my Daddy died. He was militia of the Donetsk Republic. He went as a volunteer beginning in July. Momma and I did not see him for seven months, he was always at the front, but end of January he was fatally wounded in the fighting near the airport. Now we are left all alone.
Our house is also not far from the airport. Very often we had to hide in the basement all day long; my school was shelled twice, and now I go to school in another part of town. This year I am finishing the city music school, and I want to go to art school. Many of my friends and classmates left Donetsk already last year, but we are not leaving, not for one day; I was born in Donetsk and I love my home town — momma and I could not leave it, even though it has been frightening under the bombardments. But we have survived, together. Now there is practically no shooting, and it is not so scary when Mama leaves the house on errands. But since papa's funeral it has been so lonely; he always protected us and looked after us, and now he has even given his life, protecting us. I miss him, I miss him a lot. Maybe it seems odd, but I decided to write to you.
When I see you on television, I get the feeling that you can protect all people like me. Please, protect me, my mom, and my town from war. We aren't expecting any help from anywhere. Mom is always saying the main thing, is to hold on until victory. My grandmother in her childhood survived the war against the nazis and she always said that Victory Day was a bigger holiday than Easter. It is sad that my father won't be able to celebrate our victory with us, but we believe in it; we have to win because truth is on our side.
Now my dream is to be in Moscow on the day of the Great Victory, to see with my own eyes how the people are glad at the victory, to see the fireworks. After a year of life under bombardment, I've forgotten what a holiday is; I want my mother to stop crying; I want to see her smile. And I hope there will be more smiles, more and more. I ask, can you help? It will be for us a great and long-awaited joy.
Thank you for everything,
Nastia Koptyeva
Nastia and her mother have no internet, sometimes no water and electricity, and because of the shelling, they often have to take cover in a potato storage pit six feet on a side. Nastia never cries in public, and says her mother is always in tears, and refuses to believe that her husband Pasha is dead, just not in communication because of the war.













Comment: The only way they continue to get away with calling themselves peacekeepers is by systematically covering up the abuses and punishing whistle blowers. And it appears they have been doing just that for some time.