>
Massie Introduces Bill to Get US Out of NATO
Somali Flag Raised Over Vermont School District
"Kill Babies, Superman"? New CHILDREN'S Book Calls Abortion a "Superpower"
Gold Warning Issued as New Monetary System Takes Hold
This tiny dev board is packed with features for ambitious makers
Scientists Discover Gel to Regrow Tooth Enamel
Vitamin C and Dandelion Root Killing Cancer Cells -- as Former CDC Director Calls for COVID-19...
Galactic Brain: US firm plans space-based data centers, power grid to challenge China
A microbial cleanup for glyphosate just earned a patent. Here's why that matters
Japan Breaks Internet Speed Record with 5 Million Times Faster Data Transfer
Advanced Propulsion Resources Part 1 of 2
PulsarFusion a forward-thinking UK aerospace company, is pushing the boundaries of space travel...
Dinky little laser box throws big-screen entertainment from inches away
'World's first' sodium-ion flashlight shines bright even at -40 ºF

"We are raising the Somali flag this week in honor of our Somali youth and families in Winooski and Vermont," the Winooski School District posted on Facebook. "On Monday, we will be gathering to celebrate together and to learn more about our civil rights."
Backlash
Apparently, some Winooski residents weren't thrilled at a foreign nation's flag flying over their taxpayer-funded school district, where some nine percent of students are Somalis.
"Vermont Schools Sent Violent Messages After Raising Somali Flag," was Newsweek's spin on the story. It claimed the district had to take down its website and disconnect office phones due to the "racist and violent messages" it received.
In answer to protests, the district posted a follow-up on social media: "First, we want to assure our community that the United States flag remains in its proper place at the highest point, in full accordance with the U.S. flag code." Three flag poles stand outside its headquarters. The tallest flies the U.S. flag, and the Vermont flag is unfurled on one of the other two. The Somali flag takes third billing for a week.
Vermont State Police spokesman Adam Silverman told the outlet that there appeared to be a "coordinated national campaign" against the district, but after reviewing more than 200 messages, investigators "had not identified any credible threats of violence."
Trump's Comments
According to reports, the flag-raising was the district's answer to comments President Donald Trump recently made about illegal Somali immigrants in Democratic U.S. Representative Ilhan Omar's district in Minnesota. "They contribute nothing. I don't want them in our country, I'll be honest with you," he said in a Cabinet meeting. "We're going to go the wrong way if we keep taking in garbage into our country."
Clutching his pearls, district Superintendent Wilmer Chavarria called the president's comments "almost marching orders for a large part of the U.S. population to go and harass our community."
Biased Reporting
Of so-called negative messages, Newsweek offered only one. Benny Johnson posted on X: "I've got a suggestion for ICE's next stop." Not quite violently bloodthirsty, was he?
The report failed to include rational sentiments such as this one from X: "I am not paying property taxes to honor a nation that gets the mainstay of its funding from piracy on the high seas."