Society's Child
Blokhuis said on Thursday that the Netherlands had a long way to go before it had caught up with the US, where smoking rules are much stricter. He is working together with social organisations, centres of expertise and the health sector to reduce smoking and says a ban on smoking on terraces should be part of a national agreement.
But MPs have now called for a debate with the minister and the hospitality industry lobby group Horeca Nederland said Blokhuis is 'taking the nanny state to extremes'.
'A ban on smoking on cafe terraces is going too far in our eyes,' Christian Democrat MP Anne Kuik said in a reaction. 'It is up to cafe owners themselves to decide whether or not to be smoke-free,' Kuik said.

A makeshift migrant camp is cleared away along a canal in Paris, France, May 30, 2018.
Earlier this week, hundreds of migrants were cleared from their makeshift camps along the canals in the French capital, and some of them were moved to a newly-built shelter in Bois de Boulogne park.
The green area is located along the western edge of the wealthy 16th arrondissement of Paris, which hosts the home of former president Nicolas Sarkozy, the Parc des Princes arena of PSG football club as well as the Roland Garros tennis stadium where the French Open is currently underway.
When Lawson walked into the Walmart empty-handed, Walmart loss prevention officer Robert McAuley decided he looked suspicious and watched him on the security cameras. He watched Lawson pick up the clothes and return them at the customer service desk. McAuley immediately detained Lawson, who admitted right away that he had stolen the items, and Lawson was eventually charged with shoplifting and criminal trespass. What came next was a startling encounter with a local criminal justice system heavily influenced by a big box retailer's desire to reduce shoplifting and a prosecutor's penchant for punishing those who are more unlucky than dangerous.
Lawson had at least three outstanding warrants, most of which were related to traffic violations, including a DUI. Lawson's attorneys admitted that Lawson had a drug addiction and sometimes shoplifted to support his habit, but noted that he had never been accused of being a threat to anyone's safety. Because of the outstanding warrants, his bail was set at $2,500 total, and he was immediately taken to jail. On 9 January, a warrant was issued for Lawson that escalated his shoplifting charge to a felony because, according to the arrest affidavit, Lawson was not allowed to be inside Walmart at all. Therefore his return fraud was a burglary - a felony punishable by up to 12 years of prison. His bail was jacked up to $5,000.
Comment: Rising theft is also a commentary on the degrading economic conditions supporting the needs of the middle and lower echelons of US society. What the government spends on incarceration and legal fees per year could go a long way to triage the loss of income to the poor.
"Why aren't they firing no talent Samantha Bee for the horrible language used on her low ratings show?," the president tweeted on Friday. "A total double standard but that's O.K., we are Winning, and will be doing so for a long time to come!"
Bee, who hosts TBS' 'Full Frontal', made her vulgar comments after Ivanka Trump shared an innocuous snap of herself hugging her baby son on Twitter. She had been criticized for posting the photo amid reports that the Office of Refugee Resettlement managed to lose track of 1,500 migrant children in the last three months of 2017.

Boys inspect the wreckage of a car hit by a drone air strike in Yemen last year.
"[The Department of Defense] assesses that there are credible reports of approximately 499 civilians killed and approximately 169 civilians injured during 2017," reads the Pentagon's report to Congress, as per CNN.
The casualty figures include those killed by airstrikes, and take in operations in Syria, Afghanistan and Yemen. The report did not include figures from Somalia or Libya, as there were "no credible reports" of civilian casualties there. The report added that a further 450 reports of civilian casualties from the same period have yet to be examined.
During the first year of the Trump presidency, bombing operations in Iraq, Syria, and Afghanistan were all stepped up. 4,361 bombs were dropped in Afghanistan in 2017, compared to 1,337 in 2016. In Iraq and Syria, 39,577 bombs were released in 2017, up from 30,743 in 2016.
The group of fake cops, which may include at least five other individuals, had been active across Genesee County, near the city of Flint. Among other charges, they are accused of conducting arrests with no authority and of deceiving real first-responders at crime scenes, the Flint Journal reports.
"We believe that on some occasions, they were the first to show up on crime scenes," said Genesee County Prosecutor David Leyton. "On some occasions, the real police would ask them to perform tasks at the scene, not realizing they were imposters."
The group call themselves the Genesee County Fire and EMS Media-Genesee County Task Force Blight Agency and had been involved in the impersonation since at least 2015, according to the report.
The Boeing passenger jet set off from Trinidad's Piarco International Airport early on Tuesday morning. But 10 minutes after take-off local air traffic control received a message from the pilot of Flight 2282, who informed them that a person might be "stuck in our cargo hold."
According to the Trinidad Express, mysterious noises resembling a person screaming sparked the plane's swift turnaround.
Recently-published satellite images show several buildings and barricades have been added to the base during the past three months, as well as heavy military equipment including at least 30 technical vehicles.
According to latest reports, the US military shall hand over the Tanf base to the Syrian forces under the Daraa offensive expected to be launched an moment, in exchange, Russian guarantees that no attacks will be waged by the Syrian Army against the US-backed forces in eastern Syria.

Protesters attend a rally against the Georgian authorities' anti-drug policy following the recent police raids at several local nightclubs near the building of parliament in Tbilisi, Georgia May 12, 2018
Thousands of protestors, who gathered in Tbilisi on Thursday, said they would continue their rally until all their demands, including the government's resignation, are met, and will make a tent camp outside the Georgian parliament if necessary.
The protests are broadcast live by all central TV channels in the country.
The rally, sparked by the killing of two teenagers in Tbilisi on December, 2017, began on Thursday afternoon in front of the Georgian Prosecutor General's office.

The Police Federation were accused of "crying wolf" on knife crime threats by then Home Office head Theresa May
Norman Brennan, who spent 31 years on the force before becoming a media commentator and campaigner against gun and knife crime, was speaking to George Galloway on Talk Radio, when he said the failure to combat the rise in knife crime was "all about money."
Brennan recalled a meeting three years ago where Theresa May attended the Police Federation conference. He said that the then-home secretary accused "everybody within the police service of crying wolf," when it came to cut backs to the service and the warnings of the devastating effect it would have.
Comment: The soaring crime rate is but one manifestation of the corruption and incompetence of the UK government:
- UK government to raid 90 year old charity fund to pay off 0.6% of national debt as economy continues to burn
- London's crime wave: Senior surgeon says hospitals resemble Afghan war zones
- UK in crisis: Children in poverty surges by 100,000 in a year - totalling a staggering 4.1 million
- Life expectancy for poorest girls in England falls for first time since 1920s
- NHS cuts and flu crisis push UK hospitals to the brink - Doctors describe 'third world conditions' and 'system fail'
- Britain unraveling: One-fifth of UK population mired in poverty amid worst decline for children and pensioners in decades
- Homeless dying in streets while UK government hoards £28 million "rough sleeper" fund











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