Society's Child
A woman who was treated with hormone blockers to reassign her gender as a teenager is taking the NHS to court, saying she "should have been told to wait".
Keira Bell said the care she received for gender dysphoria, a condition where a person experiences distress due to a mismatch between their biological sex and their gender identity, steered her towards medical treatment.
Ms Bell, who used to identify as a boy, was 15 when she went to the Tavistock Centre in London. She said after "roughly three sessions" she started receiving hormone blockers.
Eight years later, and after undergoing surgery, Ms Bell is de-transitioning to return to a woman.
He got what he desired at age 13, starring as big brother Willis Jackson on the class-conscious sitcom "Diff'rent Strokes." which ran from 1978 to 1986. But like most former child actors profiled in the new documentary "Showbiz Kids," premiering Tuesday on HBO, he also got more than he bargained for — and not in a good way.
Following commercial work that included the first Parkay margarine commercial, Bridges landed the "Strokes" gig. But he also had to deal with the consequences of money-stealing team members, a sexually aggressive publicist and systemic racism: "I had a gun pulled on my head when I was 12 — an officer told me that my bike was stolen."
The judge's husband, Mark Anderl, 63, a criminal defense attorney is in critical condition in a hospital.
Judge Salas was recently assigned to a case linked to Jeffrey Epstein.
The Judge was reportedly in her basement at the time of the shooting and unharmed, according to law enforcement officials.
Comment: See also: Deutsche Bank accepts 'improper monitoring' of Epstein bank transactions, settles for $150m fine
UPDATE 20 July 2020
Annnnd, less than 24 hours later, he's gone...
From NBC News:
Obviously, just because the media is saying that this was the suspect doesn't mean that he was the perp who riddled the judge's home.
Suspect in shooting death of federal judge's son is found dead, believed to be attorney
July 20, 2020, 7:20 PM CEST
By Jonathan Dienst, Brian Thompson and Joe Valiquette
The man's body was found in the Sullivan County town of Rockland, near Liberty, which is in the New York Catskills.
Authorities believe an attorney found dead in New York Monday was the shooter who killed a New Jersey federal judge's son and wounded her husband, law enforcement sources with knowledge told NBC New York.
The man's body was found the town of Rockland, in the Catskills. A senior law enforcement official said the FBI and police were investigating whether the man died of self-inflicted gunshot wounds and whether a gun found at the scene was the one used to kill Judge Esther Salas' son and wound her husband.
No other details on the man were immediately available.
Salas' son and husband were shot at their home in New Brunswick around 5 p.m. Sunday. The 20-year-old son later died, while the husband was critically wounded. [...]
The FBI, U.S. Marshals, New Jersey State Police and the New Jersey Office of the Attorney General are all investigating, and the FBI had tweeted it was looking for "one subject" in the shooting. It's not clear what led authorities to the location in Liberty where the suspect was found dead.
And remember, they knocked off 18 witnesses during the Dutroux trial (in tiny Belgium), so they are likely many more bodies to pile up in the Epstein/Maxwell case(s)...
Who's protecting them from this insanity?
Well, at least Ontario's family court is taking a dim view of separated parents who aren't acting in the best interests of their kids. In the latest case, a Toronto mother has won interim sole custody of her child — and $16,500 in legal costs — after a judge issued a scathing ruling against the father for dismissing COVID-19 as a "scamdemic."
Comment: Apparently totalitarian state control is no joke either. If you don't follow the inane, unscientific and farcical rules, you'll have your kids taken away from you. Freedom-loving Canada at its best - always looking for a reason to take your kids away.
See also:
- Canada: Health experts press Ottawa for a more 'balanced approach' to tackling COVID-19 pandemic
- COVID deaths in Canada: A questionable statistic
- Waiting for life in Canada to return to pre-pandemic normal? 'It won't,' says Trudeau
- Canada: Federal government open to new law to fight pandemic misinformation
- Canada: Feds planning laws against COVID-19 misinformation is ultimate irony
- Canada rolls out Big Brother: Trudeau govt. considers using phone location data to identify gatherings of people

Apologies in advance for any mistake I may have made due to my rudimentary knowledge of the Persian language. Bebakhshid.
It makes sense that local media such as Irna.ir track each of these occurrences. However, international media's obsessive attention seems a bit inappropriate.
Digging into IRNA archives - only Irna's archives, because Irna generally offers good media coverage and because I wanted to be consistent in the identification of these events over time - I collected data on major fires and gas explosions which hit Iran in mid May-end July one year ago, in 2019. The intent was precisely to show that these events occur frequently (unfortunately), so that those happening this year are not anomalies.
Excluding fires in green areas such as parks, forests, gardens - which do deserve attention, but for other reasons not addressed here - according to the IRNA archive there were at least 97 fires or explosions between mid May 2019 and the end of July 2019. That is, more than one per day over those 2.5 months. Their seriousness varied a lot and this is why I differentiated fires and explosions in military/nuclear sites (black, only in 2020), in medical centres (a cross - perhaps I should have used a red crescent), in factories/power plants/public places (dark red), and in private residential units (light red). Data show that, just like this year, also in 2019 there were explosions or fires at power plants, factories, hospitals, research centres, vessels, arms depots.
Comparing 2020 with 2019, the only major difference lies in explosions at military or nuclear centres. Those hitting Natanz and Khojir some weeks ago were indeed worth investigating. But, apart from those, it would make little sense for the international media to continue covering obsessively every ordinary explosion taking place in the country, wouldn't it?
In a bizarre video captured in Portland, Oregon on Saturday night, a man who goes by the name of 'Princess' was punched by a Black Lives Matter protester, allegedly for the crime of being flamboyantly gay. Both Princess and his attacker are black.
Once Princess was punched, protesters descended on his attacker and held him as they debated how to mete out justice. Some thought a black man should punch him. Others argued that punching him was a crime, and a white man should take the fall, because oppression, and systemic something or other.
"Let the white man do it," one black woman shouted. A white man did eventually step up to the plate and punch the man, and mob justice was served.
We see this in the current debates over the new social justice movement. The critics of social justice activists sometimes talk as if what's driving the activists is a kind of oversensitivity, as if they're the equivalent of small children having tantrums to get attention. In 2016, for example, an Iowa state legislator introduced the "Suck It up, Buttercup" bill, which would have fined universities offering counseling and "cry rooms" to students upset about the 2016 presidential election. And in 2018 then-US Attorney General Jeff Sessions, in a speech about threats to free speech on college campuses, warned that schools were creating a generation of "sanctimonious, sensitive, supercilious snowflakes."
Comment: Dr. Jordan Peterson has succinctly articulated the situation:
Message to Millennials: How to Change the World - Properly (VIDEO)
Jonathan Haidt had something to say about the Left in his book The Righteous Mind: Why Good People Are Divided by Politics and Religion. The Left have good points regarding the horrific state of the world, but in his view, they are operating with a more limited perception than the average right-wing adherent. Thus, their solutions are simplistic and unlikely to obtain in the long run.
- Scientific explanation for 'libtards'? Conservatives have more complex moral compass than liberals
- Jonathan Haidt interview asks what is underlying the polarization in America?
"It's just outrageous and it's reckless," Morgan said Saturday of Portland Mayor Ted Wheeler's complaints about his agents.
Wheeler has accused the administration of sending in troops as part of a political strategy that ultimately "ratcheted up the tension on our streets."
"The argument that the mere presence of federal officers and agents causes violence, that is outrageous and it's ridiculous, and I believe that most American people do not believe that," Morgan said on "Cavuto Live."
"What's happening right now are absolute criminals. They are willfully organizing, planning and coordinating, and preparing themselves and bringing weapons to these areas with the intent to destroy federal property and harm federal agents and officers. That is criminal and that cannot be justified," he added.

A Portland Police Bureau officer shields his eyes from a flashlight after confronting a crowd in Portland, Oregon, U.S. July 17, 2020.
"Earlier today I directed that staff who are part of federal agency operations are no longer allowed to co-locate with the police bureau's incident command," Wheeler tweeted on Saturday.
Although the Democrat mayor acknowledged that "sharing a space" advanced cooperation between local and federal law enforcement, allowing for clearer communication, he said that "recent actions" by federal officers made them unwelcome on the city grounds.
A group of demonstrators targeted the Portland Police Association office on Saturday night, barricading a nearby street and lighting dumpsters on fire.
Several videos of the incident show protesters outside the breached door of the building.













Comment: Notice Sky News buckles to the "need" for balance" when reporting on children being permitted by their parents to mutilate their bodies.