Society's Child
Firefighters and rescue services were scrambled on Monday to respond to a fire that broke out in Koltsovo, a scientific hub several kilometers from Novosibirsk. The situation was quickly upgraded from an ordinary emergency to a major incident as the explosion and fire affected Russia's research center of virology and biotechnology, often referred to as the Vector Institute.
The laboratory is known for having developed vaccines for Ebola and hepatitis, as well as for studying epidemics and genera issues surrounding immunology. During the Cold War, it was thought to be part of now-defunct Soviet biological weapons program, meaning that some of the most dangerous strains - including that of smallpox, Ebola, anthrax and certain plagues - are still being kept inside the Institute's building.
Tens of thousands of General Motors auto workers go on strike for better wages, health care benefits
Tens of thousands of auto workers across the country went on strike Sunday night after negotiations faltered between their union and General Motors.
The strike began at 11:59 p.m. ET., with as many as 50,000 United Auto Workers at dozens of facilities from Michigan to Texas expected to participate.
Union spokesman Brian Rothenberg told The Associated Press on Sunday night that negotiations would resume on Monday morning, even as the strike went forward.
In a letter to members on Saturday night, the union's vice president, Terry Dittes, said that negotiators still hadn't been able to agree on wages, health care benefits, temporary workers, job security and profit sharing.
During a press briefing on Sunday morning, Dittes called the decision to strike a "last resort."
"As for the first terrorist organizations and Al-Qaeda when it operated in Chechnya, and when Al-Khattab, funded by bin Laden, was organizing training camps for terrorists in Chechnya, they didn't just turn a blind eye to that. They watched it in amusement, they even welcomed this. 'They're fighting for their freedom after all,' they said. I mean, you can't call it fighting. Meanwhile, Islamic terrorist, Islamic extremist ideology, in its most monstrous form kept on developing. Nobody hindered that. On the contrary, it was energized."

Entrepreneur Andrew Yang takes the stage for the start of the 2020 Democratic U.S. presidential debate in Houston, Texas, U.S., September 12, 2019.
Yang, a son of immigrants from Taiwan, struck a distinctly different tone from most online warriors when he said he would be "happy to sit down and talk" with Gillis about the ill-fated clip that resurfaced on Friday. The video shows the comedian tearing into Chinatowns and their inhabitants.
"Damn, Chinatown is f**king nuts," Gillis says in the clip, referring to the ability of Chinese immigrants to build up their sprawling enclaves in the blink of an eye and without apparent opposition from the locals. "Let the f**king ch*nks live there."

Purdue Pharma, which is owned by the Sackler family, has filed for bankruptcy in settlement over the toll of opioid addiction.
US drug-maker Purdue Pharma has filed for bankruptcy and announced a $10bn (£8bn) plan to settle thousands of lawsuits that accuse the company's prescription painkiller, OxyContin, of fuelling the deadly opioids crisis.
The company, owned by the billionaire Sackler family, faces more than 2,000 lawsuits, including actions from nearly all US states and many local governments, which allege Purdue falsely promoted OxyContin by downplaying the risk of addiction. The public health crisis claimed the lives of nearly 400,000 people between 1999 and 2017, according to the latest US data.
Comment: There really is no level of justice appropriate for the evil the Sackler family has perpetrated on the US. Could this be the best possible outcome? Probably not, but at least there is some level of accountability and the money may be able to do some good.
See also:
- Pittance: Purdue Pharma offers $10-12 billion to settle opioid lawsuits
- After helping OxyContin maker 'turbocharge' sales, McKinsey cuts ties with Purdue Pharma
- Former Purdue Pharma CEO called opioid addicts 'victimizers' while company counted on addiction for profits
- Oregon sues Purdue Pharma, claims it misrepresented OxyContin risks
- Washington city sues Purdue Pharma, Makers of OxyContin, for flooding their town with opioids
- Court docs reveal Oxycontin exec forecasted a "blizzard of prescriptions" at opioid's launch party in 90s

Denise Rutherford, senior vice-president of corporate affairs for 3M, argued the chemicals pose no human health threats at current levels and have no victims, conflicting with a large body of research and 3M’s own internal documents.
Chemical company executives have denied responsibility for a category of toxic fluorinated chemicals that have contaminated water supplies around the US and are now found in the bodies of nearly all Americans.
Three companies - the 3M Company, the Chemours Company and DuPont - appeared before US lawmakers in a Tuesday hearing reminiscent of those with tobacco companies in the 1990s.
Comment: Massive industrial polluters continue to cause irreparable damage to the populace and the environment and are never held to account. Yet the most innocuous 'pollutant' - carbon - is now considered to be so dangerous it's release into the environment is an inexcusable crime. People are so backward on these issues it will likely never be set right.
See also:
- PFAS blamed for animal deformities and losses to farmers in New South Wales
- Dental flossing and other behaviors linked with higher levels of toxic PFAS in the body
- PFAS chemicals: Hidden studies conducted up to four decades ago found serious health effects
- Major chemical companies have been flouting environmental laws for years; EU watchdog accused of sweeping scandal under the rug
A woman has been arrested for hurling a cup of what she claims was menstrual blood onto unsuspecting lawmakers in the middle of a legislative session on Friday, days after a bill further restricting the state's already strict vaccine exemptions was passed. The Capitol was packed with protesters opposing the new law, several of whom were allowed into the gallery.
"That's for the dead babies," someone shouted as the red liquid cascaded onto the lawmakers below (scroll to minute 43 in the video).

At the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, senior officials knew of gifts from financier Jeffrey Epstein, a convicted sex offender, and sought to ensure those donations remained anonymous, the school’s president, L. Rafael Reif, wrote in a letter to campus.
At MIT, senior officials knew of gifts from Epstein and sought to ensure those donations remained anonymous, the school's president, L. Rafael Reif, wrote in a letter to campus. Reif also said an investigation had turned up a 2012 letter signed by Reif thanking Epstein for a donation.
Harvard officials revealed that the university had accepted about $9 million in donations from Epstein between 1998 and 2007, and announced intentions to redirect some of the unspent money to organizations helping victims of trafficking and sexual assault.
Epstein pleaded guilty in 2008 to two felony offenses, including procuring a person under 18 for prostitution. Epstein was arrested in July on new federal charges of sexually abusing dozens of girls in the early 2000s. In August, he was found dead while in federal custody.
The revelations raised questions from faculty, students and the public about how some of the world's most admired institutions raise money and whether the school's leaders are appropriately transparent about relationships with major donors.

Children as young as 12 who question their gender identity should be offered puberty blockers, according to a transgender group
Teachers were told in a training session led by a trainer for the group Mermaids the hormones give the children 'immense relief' and are 'completely reversible'.
The meeting was held at Newman University in Birmingham last December with around 20 teachers and pastoral staff.
A recording obtained by the Sunday Times was made by an audience member in which the trainer says: 'Puberty blocker medication doesn't make any changes, so [is] completely reversible.
Comment: Not really. Just because you are preventing one process you don't damage another. That damage can't be said to be "completely reversible".
'What it does is put a pause button on the pituitary gland and freezes puberty where it is. Not growth, just puberty. Take the blockers away and biological puberty will recommence.'
The training session is believed to be a blueprint for Mermaid's training in schools nationwide.
The advice have been criticised by an Oxford academic who said it could push children towards early medical intervention.
The Will County Coroner's Office was called to the property by a family attorney after Dr. Ulrich Klopfer died on Sept. 3.
The attorney said the family found what appeared to be fetal remains while going through the doctor's personal property and requested proper removal.
Investigators found and took possession of 2,246 medically preserved fetal remains at the location in unincorporated Will County.
At one time Klopfer had three abortion clinics in Indiana. His license was ultimately suspended three years ago. All throughout, he said he had done nothing wrong.
The family is cooperating with the investigation, officials said. There is no evidence medical procedures were conducted at the property.










Comment: What Kedmi is saying is true, but he happens to leave out the critical role Israel plays in the global terror networks:
- SOTT EXCLUSIVE: Match made in Sheol: Israel working with terrorists in Syria (says UN), Mossad training ISIS (says Putin aide)
- Israeli military and medical equipment found in another terrorist base in Syria
- Fleeing terrorists leave behind US & Israeli weapons, ammo and medicine in southwestern Syria
- Mossad and Moving Companies: Masterminds of Global Terrorism
Also check out SOTT radio's: NewsReal: Israeli-French Deception Downs Russian Spy Plane Off Syria, US Escalates 'Regime Change' Against Iran