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Fri, 05 Nov 2021
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Civilians cheer as Syria liberates 70% of Eastern Ghouta from terrorists

Ghouta liberation
© Twitter
Liberation of Eastern Ghouta from Islamist extremist occupation, by Syrian Arab Army and allies.
The Syrian Arab Army has retaken70% of the areas controlled by terrorist groups in Eastern Ghouta in Damascus Countryside, the General Command of the Army and Armed Forces said.

The army units are securing the exit of thousands of civilians from Eastern Ghouta who were taken by the terrorist organizations as human shields to carry out their criminal acts against them and the safe citizens in the neighborhoods of Damascus.


Comment: Emotional reunion: Syrian soldier liberates his own mother from East Ghouta terrorists (VIDEO)


Arrow Up

Victims' father who tried to attack disgraced Nassar in court to send donated money to charity groups

Randall Margraves attack Larry Nassar
© Rebecca Cook / Reuters
Eaton County Sheriffs restrain Randall Margraves after he lunged at Larry Nassar.
Randall Margraves, the man who attempted to attack disgraced former US gymnastics team doctor Larry Nassar in a courtroom last month, has sent the money donated to him following the incident to local charity groups.

Margraves, the father of three gymnasts who were sexually assaulted by Nassar, tried to attack the disgraced doctor after his daughters gave victim impact statements in court detailing the abuse they suffered at the hands of the former physician.

Screaming "give me five minutes in a locked room with this demon," Margraves charged at Nassar before being restrained by police officers who immediately escorted him out of the room.

Margraves later apologized to the court for his outburst, saying he was devastated at hearing his daughters' statements and he lost control. "I'm not here to upstage my daughters," he said. "I'm here to help them heal."

Comment: See also: USA Gymnastics pedophile doctor Nassar receives additional 125yr prison sentence on top of his previous 175yr sentence


Dollar

US national debt has now passed the $21 trillion mark

stack of dollars
© Gary Cameron / Reuters
United States one dollar bills are curled and inspected during production at the Bureau of Engraving and Printing in Washington.
About a year ago, US President Donald Trump pledged to eliminate the national debt "over a period of eight years." Treasury data now shows the debt has surpassed the $21 trillion mark this week for the first time in history.

Last month Trump signed a suspension on the federal debt limit, allowing the government to borrow an unlimited amount of money until March 1, 2019.

According to the Treasury data, the national debt was $19.9 trillion when Trump took office on January 20, 2017. The $1.5 trillion tax cut bill and a two-year spending deal passed by the Congress are expected to drive the deficit and debt further upward.

Despite the recent concerns that the US deficit was soaring under the Trump presidency, statistics show the national debt has been surging independent of party politics during this century. Under the previous administration of President Barack Obama, the deficit nearly doubled, rising by about $9 trillion to just under $20 trillion.

Comment: From September 2017: US debt surpasses historical $20 trillion mark


Bomb

Austin, Texas: Two men injured in another blast - Package bomb suspect still at large

ambulance Austin
© Sergio Flores / Reuters
Emergency vehicles block the road after package bomb explosion in Austin, Texas, US, March 12, 2018.
Two men have been taken to the hospital after a blast rocked a neighborhood in Austin, Texas. The police have warned residents to stay away from the area.

Initial reports suggested there had been two explosions, but police have only confirmed one "Bomb Hotshot" call, and county Emergency Medical Service (EMS) say a "critical incident" has left two people injured. The injuries are serious, but not expected to be life-threatening.

"It's obvious that there has been an explosion, and it's obvious that is has caused significant injuries to two people," Austin Police Chief Brian Manley told journalists following the incident.

The area is still a "very active scene right now," Manley added, noting that police have been checking another suspicious item that they discovered in the same area.

"We do have a second item in the area, a backpack, that we are clearing right now to ensure that it is safe," he said.

Officials have not yet said whether they believe the blast is connected to the three explosions that took place in Austin earlier this month.

Sheriff

Police 'retaining an open mind' in Glushkov murder case, appeal for public's help who may have information

UK police
© Simon Dawson / Reuters
A police officer stands on duty outside the home of Nikolai Glushkov in New Malden, on the outskirts of London, Britain, March 17, 2018.
London police have appealed to members of the public who may have information about the murder of Russian businessman Nikolai Glushkov, who was found dead at his New Malden home.

Last week, a post mortem revealed the 68-year-old died from compression to the neck on March 12, leading police to launch a murder investigation Friday. Now, authorities are appealing to the public for help to solve the case.

"In particular they are appealing for anyone who may have seen or heard anything suspicious at or near his home in Clarence Avenue, New Malden on Sunday, 11 March and Monday, 12 March to contact them," read the statement from London's Metropolitan Police.

Info

Russian MoD: Over 73,000 People Left Eastern Ghouta During Humanitarian Pauses

Residents leave Eastern Ghouta
© Sputnik/ Muhamad Maruf
Residents leave the territory of Eastern Ghouta
Over 73,000 civilians have left Damascus suburb of Eastern Ghouta in Syria since the opening of humanitarian corridors, the Russian Defense Ministry's Center for Syrian reconciliation said in a statement.

Over 25,000 people have left Damascus' suburb of Eastern Ghouta through the checkpoint in the settlement of Hammuriyah, spokesman for the Russian Defense Ministry's Center for Syrian reconciliation Maj. Gen. Vladimir Zolotukhin said.

"In refugee camps near Eastern Ghouta bedclothes and food packages are being distributed. Field kitchens have been deployed and hot meals are being distributed to civilians at the checkpoints and in refugee camps," Zolotukhin said.

Comment: See also: Liberation in sight: Bashar Assad photographed in Eastern Ghouta


Handcuffs

Cop exposed for framing 3 innocent men, sending them to decades in jail

Innocent freed after exonerated
Three innocent men have been released from prison after serving a combined total of more than 50 years for crimes they did not commit, and they all have one thing in common-a homicide detective who they blame for their wrongful convictions.

Edwin Chandler spent nine years in prison after he was convicted of shooting and killing store clerk Brenda Whitfield during a robbery in 1993. However, he was exonerated in 2010 after it was determined that another man, who was already serving 20 years on an unrelated assault charge, was responsible for the robbery and the murder.

Chandler sued the city of Louisville and the police department and received $8.5 million in damages. However, the officer who he blames for forcing him to give a false confession faced no repercussions.

Standing before the Metro City Council, Chandler shared his story and called for a new investigation into the actions of former Louisville Police Detective Mark Handy, according to a report from WDRB News.

"I was interrogated by a police officer, Mark Handy," Chandler said. "And in that interrogation, I gave a false confession, and the reason I gave that false confession, primarily, is because I was threatened by Mr. Handy that he would take my sister's children away ... that he would have her locked up."

SOTT Logo S

Jordan Peterson Takes Australia by Storm: Brings Psychological Knowledge and a Message of Hope to the Multitudes

Dr. Jordan Peterson
© Craig Robertson/Toronto Sun
Unless you've been living under a rock for the past year and a half, you've probably heard of Dr. Jordan Peterson, Professor of Psychology at the University of Toronto, Canada. Described as a "rockstar psychologist" by some in the mainstream media, the good professor has been on a whirlwind tour in recent weeks, bringing knowledge to the masses via a series of public lectures and Q&A sessions in support of his new book, 12 Rules For Life: An Antidote to Chaos. With a massive online presence via websites, podcast interviews, social media, videos and discussion groups, Dr. Peterson has attracted even the unwilling attention of the mainstream media due to the sheer force of his reasoning. His now-famous interview with Cathy Newman on the UK's Channel 4 TV expanded his audience into the millions, and forged his reputation both as an intellectual powerhouse and a man of the people who can explain almost impossibly-difficult concepts in straightforward terms.

Among its many virtues, 12 Rules For Life provides specific psychological knowledge to counteract the nihilistic ideologies of "radical Left" thought. Polish psychologist and critic of the Soviet regime Dr. Andrew Lobaczewski describes such ideology as an "oversimplified pattern of ideas, devoid of psychological color and based on easily available data". In other words, intellectually barren, psychologically naive, and supported only by cherry-picked data interpreted at the lowest resolution. At present, these features of the radical Left narratives (feminism, Marxism, postmodernism, identity politics, etc.) are becoming plainly apparent to the general public, thanks in part to the work of Dr. Peterson and others who have been pointing them out.

Cut

Give me liberty: Conservative northern Californians dream of secession

Anderson california secession fundraising
© Kent Nishimura / Los Angeles Times
Candace Smith holds a shotgun and a bottle of whiskey during a fundraising auction last month in Anderson, Calif.
The two young, blond women in figure-flattering ball gowns hoisted whiskey and shotguns.

An auctioneer rattled off bids. Above the stage in the banquet hall hung a green flag for the 51st state of Jefferson, with its pair of Xs called a "double-cross" representing a sense of rural abandonment.

Hundreds of people packed into the Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 9650 hall on this chilly Saturday night, ready to crack open wallets to help fund their dream of carving - out of California's northernmost reaches - a brand new state.

Someone offered $350 for a state of Jefferson belt buckle. Someone else won a lamb, still in its mother's womb, that should be born in time to be butchered for Easter. Outside, vehicles bore bumper stickers supporting President Trump and the 2nd Amendment.

Comment: Hard to blame them - the liberal bureaucracy's control over California has done nothing to benefit the state:


USA

Conservative Parkland student debates Piers Morgan on gun control

Kyle Kashuv
Kyle Kashuv, the conservative Parkland student who considers himself a "very strong Second Amendment supporter," is continuing to take a stand against gun control. Kashuv has met with various members of Congress on both sides of the aisle and has had a number of interviews with prominent media figures where he hopes to garner bipartisan support for the STOP School Violence Act of 2018.

In one of his latest interviews, the high school junior talked to British journalist Piers Morgan, well-known for his anti-gun sentiments, on Good Morning Britain.

Throughout the interview, Kashuv held his own and stood up for the Second Amendment and the right of Americans to bear arms. When Morgan would bring up issues or topics irrelevant to the discussion at hand, Kashuv would bring the debate right back to where it needed to be.

"Do you not feel it's weird that in Florida, for example, you can't buy a beer until you're 21, but you can buy an AR-15 gun?" Piers asked.