Instagram Generation Confuse Normal Stress And Anxiety With Mental Health Conditions
UK - Social media sites are convincing many children they have an issue when they are just experiencing ‘normal teenage life’. James Dahl's school is helping pupils to identify and navigate emotions alongside tackling issues like so-called toxic masculinity. The Instagram generation are confusing normal stress and anxiety for mental health conditions because increased awareness has led to “over interpretation” and “over pathologisation”, the head of a leading public school has warned. He said that online diagnosis tools on social media sites like Instagram are convincing many children they have an issue when they are just experiencing “the normal undulations of the teenage life cycle”.
Vatican on ‘apparitions and other supernatural phenomena’
VATICAN - The Vatican is set to hold a press conference announcing updated church doctrines on “apparitions and other supernatural phenomena” on Friday. Notice of the press conference, which will be held in the Holy See Press Office at midday (8pm AEST), sparked a wave of tabloid headlines earlier this week inaccurately claiming the Vatican could be making an announcement about “aliens”. Rather, Catholic Church officials will “present the new provisions of the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith for discerning between apparitions and other supernatural phenomena”, the notice states.
News that the Vatican would be holding a press conference on “apparitions” and the supernatural sent a wave of excitement through the UFO community on Wednesday, given long-running conspiracy theories tying the Catholic Church — which operates one of the world’s oldest astronomical observatories — to aliens.
Mr Grusch, an Air Force veteran and former intelligence official, claimed that the Vatican was “certainly” aware of alien existence and that UFO sightings over Italy during Mussolini’s dictatorship were widely known.
Impartial news is 'increasingly becoming an affront' to audiences
UK - BBC boss claims impartial news is 'increasingly becoming an affront' to audiences who feel balanced coverage is 'an attack on their values'. Deborah Turness, chief executive of news and current affairs, says those who spend time in an 'echo chamber' - where they only hear and read views that align with their own beliefs - feel balanced coverage is 'an attack on their values'. Ms Turness, who joined the Corporation in September 2022, added that she is deeply concerned about this issue.
Speaking at the Sir Harry Evans Investigative Journalism Summit in London, she said: 'What worries me most is that what we're seeing - and we're seeing it through Israel and Gaza - is that we are at a stage now where subscription culture meets algorithm. You've got so many people spending so much of their time consuming news which - because of algorithms or subscriptions they've chosen – is channelling [their] echo chamber. It's their point of view.
'But when they actually do come up for air and meet impartial news, they feel that it is an attack on their values. And that's what we've got to really worry about.' She said journalists must 'keep fighting' to show viewers every version of what's happening' and present a 'broad spectrum of facts' so that they can 'make up their own minds'. Ms Turness, a former ITN chief executive, added: 'But that is increasingly becoming an affront to audiences and that is the thing that actually most concerns me.'
Million Texans Without Power
USA - Powerful storms tore through eastern Texas on Thursday evening, decimating transmission towers and plunging over a million residents into darkness. "Severe thunderstorms moving across the Houston metro area have a history of producing damaging winds! This destructive storm will contain wind gusts to 80 MPH! A tornado is possible!" the National Weather Service of Houston wrote on X.
Russia Is About To Overrun Ukraine’s Defenses
UKRAINE - Russia is about to overrun Ukraine’s defenses – why are there no peace negotiations? There are two classic propaganda narratives used by governments when it comes to keeping the public invested in any war campaign that does nothing to advance their national interests:
First, there’s the “commitment” lie, which says that once you step in to support a war effort you then must stay exponentially committed, even if that war effort is exposed as pointless. Anytime the public pulls back from that war in a bid to reconsider what purpose it serves they are ridiculed for potentially “risking lives” and setting the stage for defeat. In other words, you must support the effort blindly. You’re not allowed to examine the conflict rationally, because who wants to be blamed for losing a war?
Second, there’s the “domino effect” lie, which says that if you allow a particular “enemy” to win in one conflict, they will automatically be emboldened to invade other countries until they own the entire planet. It’s the same claim used to trick the American populace into supporting the war in Vietnam and it rarely turns out to be true. In fact, nations that engage in regional wars tend to be so weakened by the fighting that they don’t have the means to move on to another country even if they wanted to.
In the US we heard both of these narratives heading into the recent congressional vote for billions more in monetary and logistical aid to Ukraine. Neocons and Democrats worked together to force the bill through with a percentage of true conservatives fighting to stop it. Those conservatives were attacked relentlessly by the media for “helping the Russians”, but the reality that no one in the mainstream wants to talk about is that Ukraine has already lost the war.
Pelican Island Bridge in Galveston struck by barge
USA - A barge crashed into the Pelican Island Bridge in Galveston, Texas, on Wednesday, causing a section of the bridge, including railroad tracks, to smash down onto the barge, FOX 7 Austin reports. Officials said there were no reports of injuries in the collision that occurred around 10 am. Video from the scene shows debris from the bridge and part of the rail tracks on top of the barge as it rests against the bridge. It wasn't immediately clear what caused the barge to strike the bridge. Pelican Island is north of Galveston and is connected to the city by the bridge, which is the only way people can access the island by land, and officials said the bridge has been shut down to traffic in both directions.
The incident comes about six weeks after the Francis Scott Key Bridge collapsed in Baltimore when a Sri Lanka-bound container ship hit the structure, causing it to fall into Baltimore's harbor, killing six construction workers. The disaster in Baltimore and a spate of recent incidents involving barges has highlighted the vulnerability of bridges to strikes. Just last Thursday, a barge struck the Fort Madison Bridge in Iowa and later sank in the Mississippi River.
In that incident, the US Coast Guard told Fox News Digital that there were 15 barges being moved by a tug boat when one of them got loose and collided with the nearly 100-year-old bridge. Last month, more than two dozen river barges broke loose from their moorings and floated down the Ohio River in Pittsburgh, striking one bridge that had already been preemptively closed and damaging a marina, officials said.
Severe storms kill at least four in Houston
USA - Fast-moving thunderstorms pummeled south-eastern Texas for the second time this month, killing at least four people, blowing out windows in high-rise buildings, downing trees and knocking out power to more than 900,000 homes and businesses in the Houston area. Officials urged residents to keep off roads following Thursday’s storms, as many were impassable and traffic lights were out. The storm system moved through swiftly, but flood watches and warnings remained on Friday for Houston and areas to the east. John Whitmire, the mayor of Houston, said four people died during the severe weather. At least two of the deaths were caused by falling trees and another happened when a crane blew over in strong winds, officials said.
EU issues warning to Israel
EUROPE - The EU has urged Israel to end its military operation in Rafah in southern Gaza “immediately,” warning that a failure to do so would undermine relations with the bloc. The warning comes as Israeli forces in recent days have pressed deeper into the city in pursuit of what they say are four Hamas battalions. The offensive was launched despite international calls to hold off to avoid mass civilian casualties as more than a million people fleeing the Israel-Hamas conflict have sought refuge in Rafah. “The European Union is calling on Israel to refrain from further exacerbating the already dire humanitarian situation in Gaza and reopen the crossing point of Rafah,” the EU’s foreign policy chief, Josep Borrell, said in a statement issued on Wednesday.
“Should Israel continue its military operation in Rafah, it would inevitably put a heavy strain on the EU’s relationship with Israel,” he cautioned. The statement pointed out that the Israeli offensive is further disrupting the distribution of humanitarian aid in Gaza and is leading to “more internal displacement, exposure to famine and human suffering.”
While the EU “recognizes Israel’s right to defend itself,” it must do so in line with international humanitarian law and ensure the safety of civilians, the statement stressed, adding that West Jerusalem is obligated to allow and facilitate unimpeded passage of humanitarian relief for civilians.
China’s Cheap Electric Vehicles ‘Could Be Nightmare’ for American Auto Workers
The Chinese Communist Party’s (CCP) premier automaker, BYD, is selling a $12,000 Electric Vehicle (EV) that “could be a nightmare” for the United States auto industry without an all-out ban or steeper tariffs on such cars made by Chinese companies. A report from the Detroit News, which interviewed several industry insiders, details the impact that BYD’s all-electric Seagull — which sells for just $12,000 in China and about $21,000 in Latin America — may have on American auto workers without fierce trade protections.
Currently, former President Donald Trump’s 25 percent tariffs on China-made cars are the only reason BYD and other Chinese automakers have not flooded the US market with cheap EVs to sell to American consumers. In March, Trump warned that Chinese automakers’ attempt to use Mexico as a backdoor to sell their cars in the US market tariff-free would be “a bloodbath” for American auto workers — vowing to stop any such plans.
While not yet in the US market, BYD is already flourishing around the world. Last year, for instance, the Chinese automaker sold three million vehicles and it counts Thailand and Brazil as its top markets so far this year. Today, China has become the world’s top exporter of cars — surpassing Japan — while BYD has become the world’s biggest seller of EVs, beating US-based Tesla for the top honor.
Wildfires expose fragility of rural infrastructure
CANADA - No internet, no phone: Remote communities suffer total loss of communications after fires damage critical fibre optic cables. Shortly before sunset on Friday, residents of Canada’s Yukon territory discovered their connection to the outside world had vanished. Internet access had gone. Mobile phones showed no signal. Landlines had failed. Chaos quickly set in. Electronic payments couldn’t be processed. In Whitehorse, the capital, most ATMs couldn’t function and the few that did were quickly drained of cash from panicked residents. City officials warned that the ability to call police, ambulance or fire services was non-existent.
A firefighter from an Alaska smoke jumper unit uses a drip torch to set a planned ignition on a wildfire burning near a highway outside Vanderhoof in northern British Columbia, Canada on July 11, 2023. Planned ignitions like this help firefighters remove fuel between a main fire and a control line or guard built by hand, or with heavy equipment.
Across much of Canada’s north-west reaches, a similar spectacle played out after a pair of wildfires damaged two key fibre optic cables. The telecoms company hit by the outage blamed a “perfect storm” of events for the loss. But experts say the total loss of communications was a “cascading disaster” that exposes the broader weaknesses and vulnerabilities of the bare-bones infrastructure of the Canadian north.
US suffers radio blackouts
USA - The sun released another powerful stream of energized particles toward Earth early Tuesday, causing blackouts over the US. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) showed disruptions over all of North America at about 12:51pm ET. The solar flare, classified as an X8.8, was the the strongest to come from this cycle which started in 2017 - NOAA said it was a radio blackout level 3 (R3) on a scale from one to five. The stream launched from a sunspot that has been pummeling our planet for the last few days, which NOAA had said is the size of the spot that caused the worst solar storm in history. The sunspot causing chaos in space is AR 3664, which grew to the size of the one that caused the 1859 Carrington event, which set telegraph stations on fire and cut communications worldwide.
The West’s useful idiots are Hamas’s last hope
ISRAEL - With all the criticism that is being directed at Israel over its conduct of the war in Gaza, one essential fact is constantly overlooked: Hamas, the terrorist group responsible for provoking this conflict in the first place, is on the brink of suffering a catastrophic defeat. When, back in October, Hamas launched the most devastating terrorist attack in Israel’s history, it had around 24 battalions of trained militants. Equipped with hundreds of thousands of weapons, which were predominantly supplied by Iran and included advanced rocket launchers, explosive drones and heavy machine guns, the organisation had developed into a fully fledged terrorist army.
The sophistication of Hamas’s terrorist infrastructure was evident during the early salvoes of its October 7 attack. Drawing on the detailed intelligence Iran’s Revolutionary Guard had compiled on Israel’s military listening posts around the Gaza border, Hamas succeeded in knocking out Israel’s early warning systems, leaving the Israeli military in the dark about the true extent of the tragedy rapidly unfolding on its southern border.
Today, thanks to the unrelenting military campaign undertaken by the Israel Defense Forces (IDF), that terrorist infrastructure lies in tatters. Faced with the very real prospect of annihilation at the hands of the Israelis, it is hardly surprising that the only card Hamas has left is to maintain its propaganda campaign, which has gained traction in Western liberal circles, for an immediate ceasefire, a move which is about its only hope of surviving Israel’s uncompromising offensive. This would explain the movement’s deliberate attempt to embarrass the Israelis by claiming it would accept an immediate ceasefire, even though Hamas leaders knew full well that the terms offered would never be agreed to by the Israelis.
D-Day: Eye-opening responses from children
UK - One in five young people aren’t aware of what D-Day is and its significance. New data from the Commonwealth War Graves Commission found that one in five young Brits "don't know" what the significance is of the historic event. That’s according to shocking new data that has been revealed by Commonwealth War Graves Commission (CWGC) which has pleaded for better education on the topic. The D-Day landings remain the largest invasion by sea in history. Allied forces landed on the beaches of Normandy in occupied France on June 6, 1944 and it marked the beginning of the liberation of Europe from the Nazis during World War 2.
However, young Britons left GB News reporter Jeff Moody shocked by their responses to questions about D-Day. He questioned young people in Devon on the topic. One said: “I know it’s very important, but I don’t remember that much about it." She added: “Is it something to do with the war?” Another young Brit had a go at explaining more. He said: “D-Day, that's the end of World War Two isn’t it?”
Massive La Palma volcano 'much bigger than previously thought'
CANARY ISLANDS - A volcano that last erupted in 2021 and destroyed more than 3,000 properties has magma underneath it much bigger than previously thought. When the Cumbre Vieja volcano, on the Canary Island of La Palma, erupted more than 7,000 people were forced to leave their homes as the lava closed in. It was the first eruption on the island since 1971 and the longest-ever recorded on the island. Now a study has shown that the amount of magma under the volcano - that is also known as ‘Tajogaite’ - has been underestimated. “Our study is important to understand volcanic activity in its geodynamic context better. The last eruption occurred in the Cumbre Vieja volcanic complex on La Palma Island (2021) and had an unexpected magnitude in terms of lava volume, explosivity, and a significant impact on the economy and society of the island.”
AfD Party: ‘Threat to Democracy'
GERMANY - A court in Germany has approved the intelligence monitoring of the Alternative for Germany (AFD) political party on the grounds that it poses a “threat to democracy.” As the party’s popularity continues to rise as Germans rise up against the globalist regime that rules them, particulary over the issue of mass immigration, the government has now found an excuse to monitor them by classifying them as an extremist organization.
Bloomberg reports: The AfD filed a legal challenge to a decision by the BfV agency to classify the party, as well as its youth organization and a now-dissolved radical group within it known as the “Wing,” as suspected extremist cases. Judges in Muenster backed the view of a lower court in Cologne that there was enough evidence of anti-constitutional activity to warrant enhanced monitoring, they said in a statement. The court “is convinced that there is sufficient factual evidence that the AfD is pursuing efforts that are directed against the human dignity of certain groups of people and against the principle of democracy,” according to the ruling.
The extremist designation means that the authorities are allowed to deploy measures like tapping phones or using informants to monitor potential illegal activity. While the court didn’t allow the AfD to appeal, the party said it will challenge that at the Federal Administrative Court in Leipzig. The party were also denied the chance to appeal the ruling, but will be able to appeal at a federal court.
Such moves are inevitably an attempt to try and shut down the party altogether, a proposal which the German government has made no secret of its intention to pursue. “Calls for the AfD to be banned are completely absurd and expose the anti-democratic attitude of those making these demands,” Alice Weidel, co-leader of the party, said at the time.
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The views expressed in this section are not our own, unless specifically stated, but are provided to highlight what may prove to be prophetically relevant material appearing in the media.