Society's Child
According to The Associated Press, hundreds of people had gathered for a vigil in Hazel Dell, an unincorporated area of Vancouver, Wash., where family and friends say Kevin Peterson Jr., 21, was shot Thursday night.
Clark County Sheriff Chuck Atkins said in a statement Friday that a joint city-county narcotics task force was conducting an investigation in the city located about 12 miles north of Portland Thursday evening, which led to the chase of a man into the parking lot of a bank.
According to Atkins, "the man reportedly fired his weapon at the deputies. The deputies returned fire and the subject was tragically killed," adding that a firearm was later recovered at the scene.
While authorities have themselves not yet named the person who was shot Thursday, Kevin Peterson Sr. told The Oregonian/OregonLive that the person was his son, Kevin E. Peterson Jr.
On Friday, as hundreds of people gathered for a vigil, tensions erupted nearby with clashes between left- and right-wing protesters, according to the AP.

Police officers gather outside a shuttered beauty store with graffiti in Philadelphia yesterday.
"We work here and live here," a large sign read on a boarded-up storefront in a devastated area of the City of Brotherly Love, photos show.
"It's been looted already," another store said on its boards, explaining that the Cambridge Beauty Supply store was family-run and had been in the area for 30 years.
Comment: Jim Kenny finally manned up and ordered a curfew, but didn't release the shooting footage until the National Guard was in place
The curfew will be in place until 6am Saturday, and only those who are going to work, seeking medical assistance or dropping off a mail-in ballot will be allowed to leave their homes, the city announced on Twitter. A similar curfew was imposed for Wednesday night, after Black Lives Matter protests escalated into riots that left 53 police officers wounded, dozens of businesses looted and ATMs around the city blown up on Monday and Tuesday.Philadelphia's branch of the BLM organization continued to show its tolerance and inclusiveness by burning down a Vietnamese Baptist church
The protests began after two police officers fatally shot a knife-wielding black man named Walter Wallace Jr. on Monday. Video recorded by a bystander shows the officers backpedaling as the 27-year-old Wallace moves toward them and ignores their commands to drop his knife.
Philadelphia Fraternal Order of Police President John McNesby asked on Wednesday that city officials quickly release all available evidence on the shooting to "support your officers, back your officers, and let's get a handle on this thing." But Mayor Jim Kenney said on Friday that he and the Wallace family agreed to release the bodycam footage and 911 audio of police being called to the scene on November 4 "in the hope that it will provide enough time to ease tensions and release the recordings in a constructive manner."
The second curfew was ordered just as hundreds of Pennsylvania National Guard troops were setting up their positions in the city after being deployed by Governor Tom Wolf earlier this week. Kenney said the troops will be stationed at government buildings and other infrastructure and may be sent to other key areas, such as business areas, as needed. He said their presence is unrelated to Tuesday's election, and the need for their continued deployment will be reviewed on a day-to-day basis.
On Tuesday night the BLM mob torched a Vietnam Baptist Church in Philadelphia — because racism.
Baptist Press reported:The building of Vietnam Baptist Church in Philadelphia was burned Tuesday night (Oct. 27) during the second night of unrest in the city after the police shooting of a Black man Monday (Oct. 26).
Pastor Philip Pham received a call Tuesday night from a church member whose friend had seen the flames and seven fire trucks surrounding the church.
"I have no idea why they attacked our church," Pham said. "They burned it from the roof. They threw flammable chemicals on the roof and [flames] burned through the roof" and down through the rest of the building. He said the facility is a "total loss."
Of primary concern to Pham were three hard drives. Since before purchasing the building in 2005, Vietnam Baptist Church has served as something of a community center each weekday, providing help with immigration paperwork, taxes and even marriage counseling.
A pedicab passenger inexplicably shot a New Orleans police officer in the face in the French Quarter on Friday afternoon, just as revelers began arriving to celebrate Halloween weekend.
The officer was wounded at about 4:25 p.m. while in his patrol vehicle near St. Philip and Royal streets. Other officers took him to a hospital rather than wait for paramedics, and police arrested the alleged gunman within minutes, Police Superintendent Shaun Ferguson said.
Ferguson said the officer was in serious but stable condition after being shot under his left eye. The bullet was lodged in the officer's skull, but the four-year veteran, whose name was not immediately released, was responsive as he walked into the hospital holding his cheek, Ferguson said.

"Irreversible Damage: The Transgender Craze Seducing Our Daughters"
Published in June, Abigail Shrier's Irreversible Damage argues that teachers, therapists and the media are encouraging vulnerable teenage girls to identify as "transgender," and pushing life-changing treatments and surgeries - including puberty-blocking hormones and double mastectomies - on these teens.
Childhood gender dysphoria is a relatively recent phenomenon, but one that has entered the mainstream. At a town-hall event last month, Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden even said there should be "zero discrimination" against children wanting to transition. In this woke climate, Shrier said that she faced immense difficulty in voicing her "commonsense" opposition.
Lil Wayne met with Trump in Miami on Thursday to discuss the president's "Platinum Plan" for investing $500 billion in black communities. The rapper tweeted a picture of himself with the president and praised Trump for taking action to help black Americans.
The Twitter rage mob was inconsolable in response. "Lil Wayne's coon chip activated?" black comedian Jessica Frye tweeted on Thursday night. Another offended observer said, "Uncle Tom's Cabin must be Lil Wayne's favorite book."
Another commenter claimed to be ahead of the crowd in spotting the rapper's tendency to get along with white people: "Everyone is so late to the party that Lil Wayne is a self-hating Uncle Tom dust mite." Writer Bryson Henry called Lil Wayne "a contrarian coon" who is now "full-fledged, just like Mr. (Kanye) West," while comedian Karlous Miller was simply in disbelief that "Lil Wayne did that."
Jacob Nybroe, editor-in-chief of Jyllands-Posten, said his newspaper will not participate in an ad campaign launched by a Danish political party, the New Right, which will feature caricatures of the founder of Islam as a way to "show support for the victims of Islamic violence" and make it clear that Denmark won't "bend when we are threatened with violence, murder, and terror."
The adverts, run in collaboration with the French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo, will include cartoons used by French schoolteacher Samuel Paty in a lesson about freedom of speech. A radicalized Chechen refugee beheaded Paty earlier this month in retaliation for the lesson.
Comment: TheLocal.dk reports:
The anti-immigration party holds four out of the 179 seats in the Danish parliament. On its website, the party launched a fundraiser to "publish advertisements with the drawings of Charlie Hebdo in Danish newspapers."It's notable that, just as France was preparing the enforce another unwanted lockdown on the country, multiple terror attacks suddenly occurred.
In Danish media circles the initiative was greeted with mixed responses. Poul Madsen, editor of tabloid Extrabladet said they would only decide on the advertisements when they saw them and "not before.""We condemn Muslim terrorism and 100 percent support France, the murdered and freedom of speech but always with careful regard to our employees and those especially vulnerable,"Madsen posted on Twitter.© Philip Davali/Ritzau Scanpix
Pernille Vermund from the New Right party at a charity event last year.
Vermund said she was "not at all certain it will be possible" to publish the drawings. "But as a politician my obligation is that the development of society goes towards more freedom of speech not less," she said.
Cartoons depicting the prophet Mohammed were published by Danish daily Jyllands-Posten in 2005, leading to widespread protests and anger among many Muslim communities, to whom depictions of the prophet are forbidden.
The French satirical weekly Charlie Hebdo, like other European newspapers, then republished them in 2006 in defence of freedom of speech. In 2015, the newspaper was the target of a jihadist attack that killed 12 people, among them journalists and cartoonists.
See also:
- Norwegian police 'apologize' for ordering local to take down drawings of Prophet Mohammed he put up in defense of free speech
- Strasbourg Shooting: Everybody Knows Where Terror Comes From
The Stein 2016 Recount Campaign finally crushed an attempted gag order by machine mega-manufacturer Election Systems & Software, they announced on Friday, winning the right to inspect the source code of the machines used in Wisconsin and release her team's conclusions about the accuracy and reliability of the software to the public.
Experts have acknowledged that young children returning to in-person classes after a semester or more of lockdowns and isolation will be playing academic catch-up. However, the literature on education's "New Normal" is noticeably light on the psychological ramifications, especially for the group most severely impacted by these measures: very young children and infants whom the Covid-19 response may have barred from reaching critical developmental milestones. Are these kids to be sacrificed on the altar of the Great Reset?
Comment: See also:
- From 'role models' to sex workers: Lockdown causes child poverty to soar in Kenya
- Suffer, little children: School closings, child abuse, and the COVID19 coup's war on democracy
- Child abuse! Thai schoolchildren sealed in plastic boxes for playtime and lessons
- Charity' accused of child sex abuse coordinating ID2020's pilot program for refugee newborns

Demonstrators in Warsaw protesting against the near total ban on abortions in Poland.
Protests have been held across the country since Poland's constitutional tribunal declared earlier this month that abortions in instances where a foetus is diagnosed with a serious and irreversible birth defect were unconstitutional. Such procedures constitute about 96% of legal abortions in Poland, which already has some of the most restrictive abortion laws in Europe.
On Wednesday, pro-choice activists called a "women's strike" that attracted over 400,000 people to protests in over 400 towns and cities across the central European nation.
Comment: Meanwhile in New York activists have been pushing for abortions to be legally performed under any and all circumstances:
Starting with the signing of New York State's "Reproductive Health Act", many states are now moving towards ensuring that abortion is legal under all conditions, to the full term of pregnancy, even to the point where perfectly viable, birthed babies may be killed after delivery if the mother so desires.See also: Poland's national women's strike sees mass walkouts in opposition to near-total abortion ban
France will head into the new lockdown starting Friday under which citizens can only leave home to go to work, to go to school, for a medical appointment, to give assistance to loved ones, for essential shopping or for physical exercise, as DW reports.
The latest restrictions also include (courtesy of DW):
- Travel between regions is banned
- Bars, restaurants and nonessential businesses will be closed
- Work must be done remotely wherever possible
- Universities and higher education will mostly be taught online
- International borders will be largely closed
- Schools will remain open
- Essential businesses will remain open
- Most public services will remain open
- Factories, farms and construction sites can continue work
- EU borders will remain open
- French citizens can return from overseas
- Retirement homes can accept visits
- Funerals are still possible
Comment: As a result of the measures, protests broke out Paris:
...and in other cities, including Toulouse:
...as well as gridlock in Paris as people tried to leave before the confinement rules kicked in:













Comment: On the ground reporting: