“Kill Them; Kill Them All”: The War against Police in France

“Kill Them; Kill Them All”: The War against Police in France

On January 25 in Pantin, a suburb of Paris, on February 4 in Carcassonne in the south of France, and on February 13 in Poissy in Yvelines, organized groups of “young people” — according to the established media vocabulary to avoid any ethnic designation — lured police forces into their neighborhoods to ambush them. To the shouts of “Kill them; kill them all”, police patrols were attacked with explosives and pyrotechnic devices used as urban guerrilla weapons. Each time, videos of the attack were broadcast on social networks.

Between March 17 and May 5, 2020, French police were subjected to 79 ambushes, based on statistics from the Ministry of the Interior published by Le Figaro. 

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Lead homicide detective in Barry and Honey Sherman case did not go to crime scene on Old Colony Road for four days

The 911 call from 50 Old Colony Rd. brought police to the home in the Bayview Avenue and Highway 401 area of Toronto. The bodies of billionaires Barry and Honey Sherman had been discovered by a realtor.

Firefighters and paramedics arrived first, then police at 11:54 a.m. — 10 minutes after the 911 call on Friday, Dec. 15, 2017. The suspicious nature of the apparently staged scene — two dead bodies, faces purple indicating they had been dead for a while, discovered in the basement swimming pool room with belts around their necks — prompted uniformed officers to call in homicide, the specialized unit that handles suspicious deaths.

This is a very strange whodunnit.

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Boo Hoo! Jailed ISIS terrorists who turned traitor on Canada fear their children are being judged on the actions of their parents

Boo Hoo! Jailed ISIS terrorists who turned traitor on Canada fear their children are being judged on the actions of their parents

They are four young women you might meet in any average Canadian setting: at a university lecture, in an elevator at work or picking their kids up from school.

But they’re also being held in a detention camp for the families of ISIS militants on the other side of the world. They come from different parts of Canada and the narratives that drew them toward the world of the Islamic State are also different.

What they do have in common, beyond their nationality and the polite friendliness that can come with it, is the fear that their children are now bound to their own fate, facing life in a detention camp in Syria with no sense of a horizon.

Their children should not be considered citizens of Canada.

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Ontario reports 1553 new Covid cases … just a little 3 week lockdown.. we promise

Ontario reports 1553 new Covid cases … just a little 3 week lockdown.. we promise


Strict three-week lockdown needed to stop explosive COVID-19 variant growth, Ontario science table says

TORONTO — A three-week lockdown in certain regions of the province is necessary to blunt the explosive growth of the variants of concern, Ontario’s COVID-19 scientific advisory table says.

Dr. Peter Juni, the scientific director of the advisory table, believes Ontario could see between 2,500 to 5,000 new cases of COVID-19 per day in a few weeks, if the current trends continue. 

It never ends.

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Cars Have Your Location. This Spy Firm Wants to Sell It to the U.S. Military

A surveillance contractor that has previously sold services to the U.S. military is advertising a product that it says can locate the real-time locations of specific cars in nearly any country on Earth. It says it does this by using data collected and sent by the cars and their components themselves, according to a document obtained by Motherboard.

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Three-week lockdown needed to stop explosive COVID-19 variant growth, Ontario science table says

A three-week lockdown in certain regions of the province is necessary to blunt the explosive growth of the variants of concern, Ontario’s COVID-19 scientific advisory table says.

Dr. Peter Juni, the scientific director of the advisory table, believes Ontario could see between 2,500 to 5,000 new cases of COVID-19 per day in a few weeks, if the current trends continue.

Ontario recorded more than 1,500 cases on Wednesday, the highest single-day total since early February, owing in large part to the variants of concern which account for more than half of the new cases.

“What we’re talking about here predominantly is the Golden Horseshoe, the Golden Horseshoe has a major problem, and we need to tackle this,” Juni told CTV News Toronto.

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Sports Illustrated featured a transgender black Asian person for its swimsuit edition and the media can barely contain its excitement

A biological male who identifies as a women is being featured in Sports Illustrated new swimsuit edition.

This individual, “Leyna Bloom,” also has black and Asian heritage, checking so many intersectionality boxes at once that the woke media’s head exploded.

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Continental Breakfast

Sausage Hash Brown Cups

Pastor James Coates to be released from jail as most charges dropped

Pastor James Coates will be released from jail after Alberta Crown prosecutors drop all but one of the charges laid against him, Coates’ lawyers say.

In a statement on Wednesday, the Justice Centre for Constitutional Freedoms (JCCF), who is representing Coates, said the Edmonton-area pastor could be released as early as Friday.

Why a Canadian Law Prohibiting False Statements in the Run-Up to an Election Was Found Unconstitutional

In 2018, Canada revamped a long-existent but rarely used prohibition of fake news in the run-up to an election. According to the Canada Elections Act, making or publishing false statements about political figures’ citizenship, place of birth, education, membership in a group, legal offenses or professional qualifications—if done with the intention of influencing the results of an election—could result in a fine of $50,000 or 5 years of prison.

A few months ago, following a survey of Canadian case law, I wrote here that any legal challenge to this provision was unlikely to have much success. Perhaps I should consider throwing my crystal ball away: On Feb. 19, Ontario’s Superior Court of Justice declared that Section 91(1) of the Canada Elections Act—the section of the law on making or publishing false statements about political figures—infringes on freedom of expression protected by Section 2b) of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedom and was therefore of no force or effect.

Let’s take a look at what happened.

Blocking is Back: Why Internet Blocking is the Next Big Canadian Policy Battle

In early 2018, Bell led a consortium of companies and organizations arguing for the creation of a new website blocking system in Canada. Complete with a new anti-piracy agency and CRTC stamp of approval, the vision was to create a new system to mandate site blocking across ISPs in Canada. Canadians challenged the so-called FairPlay proposal and the CRTC rejected the Bell application on jurisdictional grounds. Since that time, the Canadian courts have been dealing with site blocking requests (the Federal Court of Appeal is soon set to hear arguments on the issue) and the Canadian copyright review conducted by the Standing Committee on Industry, Science and Technology decided against recommending the creation of a new administrative system for site blocking.

New Report Shows Significant Election Irregularities In Many States

Election irregularities in the 2020 presidential election continue to be uncovered through independent analysis. An expert team led by physicist and Mensa John Droz, Jr., has been relentlessly examining election-related data and lawsuits since November, uncovering significant anomalies that warrant further investigation.

Marvel Comics To Introduce LGBTQ Captain America

The character will be introduced in a new limited series entitled “The United States of Captain America” and it will be released at the beginning of Pride Month on June 2, the New York Daily News reported Tuesday.

U.S. spy agencies warn of growing domestic terrorism threat

The agencies who contributed to the report, including the FBI, the Department of Homeland Security and the National Counterterrorism Center, said that domestic extremists who promote white racial superiority have potentially troubling contacts with foreign extremists and that a small number of American extremists have traveled abroad to network with overseas counterparts.


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