Society's Child
Officer Christopher Ferguson was called out publicly after surveillance footage was released from a car crash in which he slammed his police cruiser into another car, sending the elderly couple occupying the vehicle flying out onto the street.
James Cryer, 69, and his wife Rena, 78, miraculously survived the gruesome incident. Yet even though Ferguson was driving at least 26 mph over the legal limit, he faced no charges. An investigation conducted by the Tennessee Highway Patrol placed the blame on both drivers-claiming that while Ferguson was exceeding the speed limit, Cryer also "failed to yield" to oncoming traffic.
Even with an investigator claiming that "If the officer had been driving the posted speed limit...the collision would have been avoided," District Attorney General Bryant Dunaway told WSMV News that he had no regrets about declining to charge the officer.
"My concerns and expectations are that the coming weeks will show that markets, government bonds and Italy's economy could be so drastically impacted that they would serve as a signal to voters not to vote for populists on the right and left," Oettinger told DW in an exclusive interview.
Although the EU Commissioner was swift to apologize, saying he "did not mean to be disrespectful", his apology did not seem to quell or reassure those fuming on social media.
Thank you for telling Italians the truth about EU system," an Italian man wrote, saying he was grateful to the Commissioner for having honestly unveiled the EU agenda and their plans for Italy. "Some of us took 7 years to enlighten half the minds you and Mattarella enlightened in 5 minutes."
Many on Twitter blasted Oettinger for threatening Italian voters. They claimed they would not allow anyone, whether it's Germany or the EU to dictate who they should or should not vote for.
Stables, then aged 20, was arrested by armed police as he made what prosecutors described as a final reconnaissance visit last summer to the New Empire pub in his home town of Barrow-in-Furness, Cumbria.
Following his arrest on June 23, 2017, police discovered the machete, as well as an axe and knives that he kept at his home. Stables had revealed his intent on social media posts to far-right pages. He said he was "going to war" and wanted to "slaughter every single one of the gay b******s." Officers were tipped off about the impending attack by another member of one of Stable's far-right groups.
Laguna Beach Sergeant Jim Cota said on Twitter that the cop car was unmanned at the time of the impact, while the Tesla driver sustained minor injuries. The crash happened soon after 11am Tuesday on Laguna Canyon Road. Cota told the LA Times the "police car is totalled."
The driver told police the car was operating on autopilot at the time of the crash. Tesla's autopilot system uses sensors, cameras, and radar to study the vehicle's surroundings and carry out automatic functions which include emergency braking. The company describes it as being a "driver assistance system."
The man, who sustained a gunshot wound, was found in his own apartment by his wife, who called the emergency services, the police said.
The police believe his journalistic activities are the main motive behind the killing, but will investigate other versions as well, Kiev police chief Andrey Krischenko told Interfax-Ukraine news agency.

A protester shows a fake marijuana leaf during a march for the legalization of marijuana in Mexico City.
A U.N. agency on Monday called for legalizing drugs in Latin America to reduce the human cost of prohibition.
Alicia Barcena, a Mexican who heads the Santiago-based Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC), the United Nations' regional arm, told a Latin America forum in Paris the time had come to explore a new strategy.
"I'm going to be very provocative. Who would drug legalization be good for? Latin America and the Caribbean, for God's sake. Because the illegality is what's killing people," she said, according to Reuters. "It's time to seriously consider legalizing drugs."
Comment: However, legalization in Latin America won't do much to stem the violence, since it will still be illegal in the countries the cartels export to. And it will be business as usual.
Farrakhan went on to claim that white men had squandered the time God gave them to rule, alleging that they had chosen not to rule with righteousness, truth, justice, or fairness.
Comment: So "end" white men (or their "rule" presumably) but keep Trump because he's working towards this goal? It would be nice if Farrakhan could be a little more specific and a little less bombastic lest he sound like a SJW. But remove the controversial bombast and what's left of the fiery Farrakhan?
See: 'Mr. Trump is destroying every enemy that was an enemy of our rise' - Louis Farrakhan
Last week, The Guardian published a huge piece on the 2018 World Cup host nation, "revealing" the "darkest sides" of Russia - from nationalist football hooligans and poorly designed stadiums to nostalgic feelings for the good old Soviet times.
The Times' Moscow correspondent Tom Parfitt, in turn, wrote a piece on how the "Russians hide 'ugly' villages" for the World Cup, citing the case of the Glebovsky village near Moscow. He noted that the government had constructed a fence in front of broken-backed buildings near the French team's training base in order to divert attention from poverty.
Parfitt even used the expression "Potemkin village," alluding to an 18th-century nobleman, Grigory Potemkin, who is believed to have set up fake portable villages to impress Catherine the Great and conceal embarrassing sights and abject poverty in the country from visitors.
Comment: In other words, go ahead, go to Russia but be afraid... very afraid. They are all out to get you and you'd be better off staying at home. We all know how dangerous those Ruskies are with their ugly cities! See also:
- BBC fake news: Evil Russians planning post-World Cup 'warfare through the internet', no evidence provided
- Britain's parliament and media prepare for the World Cup by scaring the hell out of fans
- Russia 2018 World Cup already at almost 1.7mn tickets sold

The Gaza "Freedom Boat" in port in Gaza, before attempting to break Israel's naval blockade. May 29, 2018.
Israeli gunships intercepted a Palestinian boat attempting to break Israel's naval siege of the Gaza Strip Tuesday afternoon. The attempt to break the blockade comes two weeks after Israeli soldiers killed at least 60 Palestinian protesters and wounded thousands of others at the Gaza-Israel separation barrier on Gaza's eastern boundary.
The boat was headed to Limassol, Cyprus, and was part of a small flotilla comprised of three boats in total. The two other boats turned back and did not breach the naval blockade line enforced by the IDF. The IDF does not allow Palestinians to venture more than nine miles off the coast of the Gaza Strip.
Comment: Still in doubt about whether Gaza is the largest open air prison on the planet?
RT adds:
[...]Correction: The IDF didn't kill dozens and injured over a thousand. Fom a previous RT report,
The action was probably more symbolic than practical in nature, aimed at showcasing the effect that the Israeli blockade has on the life in Gaza Strip 11 years after being imposed. Three other events under the same name, which involved ships trying to reach the Palestinian territories despite the blockade, were thwarted in the past by the IDF.
The first case in 2010 ended in a controversial raid by Israeli commandos on six ships, in which 10 activists were killed. The Tuesday attempt was far less dramatic. The IDF intercepted the two passenger boats some six to seven nautical miles off the coast and seized the larger of them, arresting 12 people on board, journalist Hind Khoudary reported from the scene. The captain of the second boat was ordered to return and complied.
The IDF said they would tow the boat to a military port in the city of Ashdod to process the detained people. The Israelis said people requiring medical assistance among the passengers would receive it. Organizers say the blockade-breaking attempt was part of the ongoing Great March of Return campaign that began at the end of March and became a major controversy due to the scale of violence it is associated with.
IDF soldiers killed dozens of people protesting near the border fence and injured over a thousand, saying their use of lethal force was justified by the threat posed by the protesters. The Palestinians were burning tires, sending incendiary kites over the fence and throwing rocks at the Israeli troops.
A second attempt to break through the Gaza naval blockade is expected later this year. Another Freedom Flotilla set sail from Copenhagen last week.
As of May 21, a total of 112 people have been killed, including 13 children and two journalists, and more than 13,000 people have been injured, according to the Palestinian Ministry of Health.And now this:
Here comes hell again: Israel launches air strikes on Gaza after "barrage of mortar shells" fired at Israel; Netanyahu says retaliation imminent
Banks in Cyprus now require Russian customers to confirm earnings and tax payments, to produce bank statements for the past year, as well as estate documents, title deeds of business ownership, and a detailed description of their enterprise, according to financial writer Elena Tofanyuk, as quoted by Russian daily Business FM. Previously, Russian clientele were required to produce only a passport and utility bills.
Cypriot banks offer their Russian customers a choice: either to close their accounts or to transfer their funds to Russian Commercial Bank, a subsidiary of Russian state-run lender VTB, the reporter said, citing interviewees who have bank accounts in the country.
Comment: As with other anti-Russia sanctions, this will ultimately hurt the aggressor country as the customers have little choice but to instead hold the cash in Russian banks, it also makes Cyprus look like a risky place to invest in:
- Putin extends capital amnesty to Russian businesses for reporting foreign profits
- Sanctions backfire: Russia and Iran sign $2.5B deal, as U.S. legislates itself out of a lucrative market
- Further US sanctions on Russia would be illegal, ineffective and hurt West more
- Anti-Russian sanctions led to increased efficiency, lowering of debt and boon for manufacturing in the country
- US tries more sanctions: Russia can survive without using the SWIFT banking payment system but can the EU?













Comment: Also see: Kiev bans Russian media, jails RIA Novosti journalist for 'high treason'