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Tuesday, June 11, 2024

Roman gods & goddesses: everything you wanted to know

Roman gods & goddesses: everything you wanted to know | HistoryExtra

"'Many of the Roman gods did come from the Greeks and many of them came from the Greeks by way of the Etruscans who lived just to the north of Rome, but not all gods by any means and it, whenever we look at books on ancient mythology, I know because I wrote one, it's almost all Greek mythology and then you have a little chapter at the end that says Roman mythology or Roman gods. Which is really probably not the best way to do it because the Romans had a very rich mythology and religion before the Greeks ever came along. 

But yes they did adopt Greek gods and they had no trouble with doing this, there was no contradiction. They had many many gods and they were always willing to take on a few more. If they went to war with somebody, the Sabines or the Oscans or whoever it was, they had a wonderful ritual that they did, where they would go to the gates of the city they were at war with and were besieging, and they would do something called an invocatio where they would invite the gods of that enemy city to come live with them and they would say, oh we will build you a better temple and we will offer richer sacrifices to you. And it was a, it was sincere but it was also a great psychological tool in warfare. 

But most of the time the uh the adoption of the Greek gods or other gods was a slow and gradual process. Occasionally, sometimes the Roman senate said wait a minute, this God is a little bit too wild for us. You know, we need to be careful about this, but most of the time there was no problem and there was no objection at all... 

The Romans were in general a very conservative people and so they were careful but when they uh for example, when they invaded Asia Minor, modern day Turkey they came across a very old cult, a goddess named Cybele who had some worship involved that was pretty wild, including castration and all sorts of strange things. And so the Romans especially the Roman senate said uh no no no no wait a minute we're going to be very careful about this and if we do adopt this new uh rite, which they did, there are certain guidelines that we're going to follow. We're not going to be like those Greeks or those people over there. We're going to do this in a very Roman way. So it was a, it was a gradual process and gods grew in popularity and then they would you know fade away sometimes according to what, with a particular fashion was at the moment...

The Greek gods were much more human… they looked human in artistic representation and they acted human with all of our failings. The Roman gods, there's this wonderful Latin word, numen uh or in in the plural numina, which means forces. Divine forces and so the original Roman gods, were much more of of forces than they were humans. And this element was of course present in in the Greek and other gods that they took in, but the Roman gods were not originally represented by statues at least not very much. They were really thought of as powers in more of a, I guess you could say a primal sort of sense. It was certainly a very well developed theology that the Romans had, but they, they never saw the gods as just humans on a grander scale. They originally at least saw the gods much more as forces of nature, of of procreation, of weather, of war, in much more of a primal sort of sense... 

The Romans they also had a really interesting gods that were household gods that also existed in a way in Greece but not nearly as much. Every Roman house, if you walked into an ancient Roman house you would see by the hearth, by the fireplace which everybody had, the lares and the penates who were these uh little household Gods. There was also a great deal of reverence for the ancestors so that especially in wealthier Roman homes you would see wax masks or representations of the ancestors and it wasn't quite ancestor worship like we see in some religions around the world but it verged on that... 

I think the household guards were central to Roman worship. If you got up in the morning you would say prayer, you might make a little bit of offering of incense or something like that to your Gods, just as religious people today in various faiths will say a prayer in the morning before they go out to begin their day. So the household gods were extremely important and they tended to be much more personal, much more emotional than the gods. It's not that they didn't believe in Jupiter, they did absolutely believe in Jupiter and worshiped him. But somehow if you're in a crowd with hundreds of people sacrificing bulls, that's one thing. But if you're at home saying a prayer to your particular household gods, that is much more intimate... The Romans just like the Greeks were very religious… if you'd stopped a hundred average Romans on the street they would be quite serious about the gods that they worshiped, whether in private or in public...

There were very rarely religious conflicts or wars between people who worshiped this goddess or that goddess, that would have been a very strange notion to the Romans. Because they were absolutely willing to accept, if you had somebody come from Gaul, from modern day France and come down to Rome and say, you know, I  worship this god named X, the Romans would say oh, that's nice. What do you do? And oh that's very much like our god and nobody ever said, you know our god is better or anything like that. They would either welcome that god in or they would simply ignore him. But this is one reason why when Christianity came into the Roman Empire that there was so much trouble. It wasn't a unique situation but Christians said, no, there are no other gods. You know those gods that you worship, the, they either simply don't exist or they are just demonic forces. And the Romans, they couldn't believe that somebody was saying this. How could anybody deny the gods? They called the Christians atheists for this reason. It was a very common label that the Romans gave to the Christians because the Christians were absolutely insistent on monotheism. But for the most part among Romans from all of the Empire, even people coming from outside the Empire, there were people who came into the Roman Empire from what's now India, from Africa, from wherever, there was never conflict when those people wanted to build a temple in Rome. That wasn't a problem for them...

You had Ares who was a God of War who actually was not very popular. If you read Homer's Iliad everybody says we hate Aries, you know, he's just awful. He's full of bloodshed and violence. But Mars in the Roman world was originally an agricultural god. You prayed to Mars for the growth of your crops and it was only over time that Mars became more of a god of of war and so they were very flexible people...

In the Roman Empire, the Cult of the Emperor became more important, and it was much more of a loyalty test. And we know about certain Emperors, you read about Caligula or Nero or or the others who are voted by the Senate to be gods. And we looked at that from a modern perspective and think that's ridiculous, nobody believed they were a god. But, and they probably didn't. But it was a a kind of a loyalty test and so this is why again Christians got into such trouble. The Romans expected everybody to, you know, throw, make a little bit of sacrifice, throw a little bit of grain on the altar for the Emperor. That was just a sign of like in America, saying the Pledge of Allegiance. You know, I I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of America. It's that sort of thing. And you could be as sincere or not sincere about it as you wanted to be. But the the Christians, again they refused to do that and they uh they got in trouble'"

Links - 11th June 2024 (1 - General Wokeness)

Robin DiAngelo's nice racism - "You could be forgiven for thinking Robin DiAngelo’s latest effort, Nice Racism, is a mea culpa. Especially given the subtitle: How progressive white people perpetuate racial harm.  This must be some kind of self-lacerating, super-self-reflective memoir, surely?  After all, DiAngelo certainly seems nice enough... thanks to her obsession with race, which, as a writer and diversity trainer, she’s peddled in boardrooms and in the media, she’s probably done a fair bit to ‘perpetuate racial harm’... race, for DiAngelo, is just as all-determining as it was for say, Arthur de Gobineau, or some other 19th-century scientific racist. It’s just she says ‘systemic’ rather than ‘biological’, ‘structural’ rather than ‘ancestral’.  This really is how DiAngelo sees the world. Always and only through the lens of race. As she boasts in Nice Racism, her racialising worldview is ‘operating continuously, transforming who is in my life, who I connect with, what I see, what I care about, what I talk about, what I read about, what I buy, how I work, what I am willing to feel, what I can bear witness to, what discomfort I can withstand, and what risks I am willing to take’...   DiAngelo’s particular target is actually her target market – namely, progressive white people, who ‘might even call themselves “woke”’. Like a fire-and-brimstone preacher, she is berating the converted, those, that is, who buy her books, and no doubt pay for her training. Think of Nice Racism as drumming up trade.  The basic contention of Nice Racism is this: progressive white people are refusing to acknowledge that they’re still racist... it’s never enough, not for DiAngelo, who has books to market, and diversity-training courses to sell. ‘Never consider your learning finished’, she writes. ‘Continually participate in every racial-justice education forum you can (conferences, workshops, talks).’ Contact details below... It makes for an eye-scratchingly repetitive read... there’s the whole group of progressive white people who remain silent rather than risk speaking over the ‘Black and Indigenous Person of Colour’ addressing them. This, as DiAngelo explains, is a classic case of white silence as violence.  On and on this goes. Progressive white people can’t do right for doing wrong. Even a BIPOC person lecturing a progressive white audience on racism becomes sinister for DiAngelo. ‘I saw a metaphor for colonialism’, she writes. ‘The group was in essence saying, “we’ll observe you and seek to understand you. In doing so, we’ll relax while you work. [And] you’ll provide us with the fruits of your labour”.’ This was a lecture, not indentured labour.   Such passages are at least entertaining in their wilful reduction of absolutely everything to racism. But there’s not enough of them to keep the eyes open. Too much of Nice Racism reads like academic jargon attached to an air compressor. At points you wonder whether DiAngelo wrote it at all, or had some sort of critical-race-theory AI do it for her"

Woke Olympics – Anti-racist Racist Club - "Recently, two viral incidents dominated national discourse. One was the viral video of a Ngee Ann Polytechnic lecturer harassing an interracial couple... PA used a wedding photo of a Malay couple without their permission for a Hari Raya decoration. What many saw as a clear-cut case of privacy infringement quickly spiralled into debates about whether PA’s mistake amounted to racism.  In these two cases, anti-racist and woke activists mindlessly echoed catchy anti-racism slogans online to bulldoze through anyone who disagreed with their diagnosis of the incidents, even attacking reasonable people who were also upset with racism. Minorities themselves were not spared. Lacking self-awareness, being obnoxious and unbearable, these ‘woketivists’ ironically sow more division and conflict than their movement can ever resolve. While others were celebrating and affirming interracial relationships in the face of bigotry, the woketivists were performing mental gymnastics to ‘problematize’ interracial relationships. Despite proclaiming themselves to be anti-racists, they ended up throwing up arguments that accused interracial couples of racism, just like the racist lecturer did... Woketivists claim to represent and stand for the ‘oppressed’ and ‘marginalised’. However, some of the responses to the recent PA incident expose their hypocrisy. As the debate over whether the PA incident amounts to racism raged on, some guilt-stricken Chinese wokes who felt the answer was clear cut even accused other Malays themselves of ‘internalised racism’. Much like Puan Hannah, anyone who doesn’t fit into their narrow view of things can be labelled as racist. Even the victims of racism themselves."
From 2021

Amy Biehl - Wikipedia - "Amy Elizabeth Biehl (April 26, 1967 – August 25, 1993) was a Fulbright Scholar and American graduate of Stanford University and an anti-Apartheid activist in South Africa who was murdered by a black mob shouting anti-white slurs at her in Cape Town... In 1998, all were pardoned by South Africa's Truth and Reconciliation Commission, when they stated that their actions had been politically motivated. Biehl's family supported the release of the men"

Meme - Renson Seow: "When society rewards and panders to those who play the race card*, society shouldn't be surprised if more people then choose to play the race card.
==
Ps: those who think that this accusation has any shred of truth need to compare the probability of the staff wanting to give race-preferential waffles when a sale is a sale, vs this whole thing more likely being just a minor misunderstanding, but given media airtime due to attaching the race card.
(* "playing the race card" being an accusation of racism prior to ruling out more probable causes)" MOTHERSHIP.SG: "Malay woman says PrimaDeli staff 'racist' for saying no more waffles but selling last piece to Chinese man behind her"

Windsor teacher recorded scolding Muslim students over Pride Flag raising absences - "A teacher at a Windsor public school has been caught on tape telling students she was "disgusted" some Muslim students were absent for the school's Pride Flag raising last month.  During a 15-minute recording, which was obtained by the website True North, the teacher is heard asking students how many had come to school the day before for the flag raising before saying, "We as a staff at Northwood were incredibly hurt by the statement you made yesterday."...  "You need to understand how hurt and disappointed we are by your actions and take that home to your parents because they're the ones who made you stay home."  "It was an incredible show of hatred," the teacher tells the class. "It was hatred towards a community of people, and it was incredibly disgusting to have witnessed. I do not want to be a part of this school."  The teacher then tells the class, "The whole staff feels the same way. The board of education feels the exact same way."  Some students in the class object to the teacher's characterization of the incident and are heard defending their religion and their parents' choice to keep them home."
Edmonton teacher berates Muslim students for skipping Pride - "An Edmonton school board says it’s taking action after audio of a teacher berating Muslim students for skipping Pride month events was shared online.  In the recording posted to social media Monday, an unidentified teacher at Londonderry School can be heard telling students who decided to go to the mall that they didn’t respect Pride events.  “‘I’m going to show my opinion by hanging out at the mall,’” the teacher can be heard saying. “But meanwhile all of those kids who are involved… they’re here when we did Ramadan… and they’re showing respect to the class for your religion, right. For your beliefs. It goes two ways.  “If you want to be respected for who you are, if you don’t want to suffer prejudice for your religion, your colour of skin, your whatever, then you better give it back to people who are different than you. That’s how it works. It’s an exchange.”  The teacher goes on to say Pride events in Canada are important especially given the situation in other parts of the world... "You don’t belong here and I mean it.” Edmonton Public Schools says it’s taking action against the teacher but wouldn’t specify what, claiming privacy concerns.  EPSB adds it continues to tout diversity and discussion about inclusion, acceptance and kindness.  In a statement, the National Council of Canadian Muslims called the teacher’s comments deeply Islamophobic, inappropriate and harassing."
Once again, "inclusivity" excludes, and the reality of the slippery slope means a gesture of inclusion has become compulsory
Who is more important to the left? Muslims or LGBTs?

Phil Magness on X - "On a related note to today's discussion, Karl Popper spent a fair bit of time in the 1970s working his way through Adorno & Habermas. His conclusion? Critical theory is a pile of word games and pretentious nonsense."
Popper to Aron: letter on Adorno and Habermas - "I can only say that when I read either Adorno or Habermas, I feel as if lunatics were speaking.  I have translated some of their German sentences into simple German. It turns out to be either trivial or tautological or sheer pretentious nonsense. I completely fail to see why Habermas is reputed to have “talent”. I do not think that he was born less intelligent than other people; but he certainly did not have the good sense to resist the influence of a pretentious, lying, and intelligence destroying University education.  Sociology is in a bad way — even here in England. There seems to be an interesting law: bad and pretentious language drives out good and simple language. And once human language is destroyed, we shall return to the beasts."

Diana S. Fleischman on X - "The Guardian: Why does the racist idea persist that Black people have thicker skin than White people?
Meanwhile: Black people have thicker skin than White people."
Diana S. Fleischman on X - "Correction: Black people have stronger skin barrier strength than White people, more and more compact stratum corneum layers and greater dermal-epidermal junction length. The thickness of the dermis and epidermis are not significantly different."

Cleo on X - "Bonafide female here. While there’s some truth re socialization influencing the interests we develop, “women in stem” has been a celebrated and trending topic for a couple of decades. Girls are actively encouraged to explore the sciences, be the Barbie they want to be, etc. The OP seems to be of the age that would have been actively encouraged to pursue tech interests, and her credentials signal decent intellectual competence.   The discourse here is about a broader curiosity that organically drives independent knowledge seeking and general knowledge retention for which there seems to be a gender delta. It can’t all be socialization."
Linnea Lueken on X - "I like how she ignored your measured (and correct) reply. Also female, also STEM, there was never a moment in my life where I was not actively encouraged by public schools and culture to pursue STEM. The only pushback I ever got was when I indicated an interest in art/writing."

Bachman on X - "39% of Puerto Ricans claim to have a disability"
Clearly this is due to racism and colonialism

Meme - J.D. Haltigan, PhD 🏒👨‍💻 @JDHaltigan: "The image reflects with remarkable clarity the underlying emotional dysregulation, negative emotionality, & antisociality of the activisits. As Searle noted in 1972: "A sizeable  percentage of the revolutionary extremists I have dealt with have been clinically ill; and this is not my lay judgement, but is based on discussions I have had about them with university psychiatrists, and on the medical histories of some of them. In situations of social instability people who are themselves messed up psychologically can attain positions of great prestige and prominence.""
End Wokeness @EndWokeness: "I thought it was satire but turns out this is a real image of LGBTQ activists storming the Utah Capitol to stop HB-257"
"Trans joy is power" *masked activists*

Meme - i/o @eyeslasho: "White liberals refusing to "believe the science" on race differences in intelligence: As a group, they rate blacks as more intelligent than whites.   There's literally no scientific evidence to support this belief. The mean cognitive advantage of US whites over blacks has been firmly established, and is officially accepted by the American Psychological Association."
Meme - i/o @eyeslasho: "But wait, the denial gets even more bizarre: White liberals now also believe that white people are more violent than blacks.
Fact check: In the year in which white liberals expressed this opinion, blacks committed murder at a rate 11 times higher than non-Hispanic whites."

Meme - Left winger: "Love wins"
*happy heterosexual family with 2 kids, church and American flag*
Left winger: *stunned*

Meme - Melissa Chen @MsMelChen: "DiAngelo’s life must be so devoid of joy, a life where smiles are interpreted to be an offensive, deceptive symbol of racism, because such a view just reinforces how much she’s failing to make everyone as miserable as herself."
"STOP SMILING SO MUCH: "I have heard Black people talk about the awkwardness of white people 'over-smiling.' A friend described going to Whole Foods and feeling exhausted by the pressure to validate all of the over-solicitous white people making a point of smiling at her when she just wanted to get her errands done and get home. She understood that the act was meant to convey acceptance and approval, but what it actually conveyed to her was a way for white people to maintain moral integrity in the face of racial anxiety. Over-smiling allows white people to mask an anti-Blackness that is foundational to our very existence as white. Our fleeting benevolence has no relation to how Black people are actually undermined in white spaces. Some Black friends have told me that they prefer open hostility to niceness. They understand open hostility and can protect themselves as needed. But the deception of niceness adds a confusing layer that makes it difficult to decipher trustworthy allyship from disingenuous white liberalism. Niceness masks controversy and suppresses difference."-Robin DiAngelo, Nice Racism: How Progressive White People Perpetuate Racial Harm (2021)"

Meme - wanye @wanyeburkett: "I think increasingly we're going to see debates that go in circles in exactly this way:
* Social trust falls
* People respond in the obvious ways (more individualistic, more insular, less open)
* This causes social trust to fall even more
* Progressives confuse cause and effect"
Ida Bae Wells @nhannahjones: "School choice is the wrong term here because what is the choice for the families who want to stay in the public schools that are now being forced to close because the governor is handing public money to private schools. This hyper-individualism is destroying the democratic fabric of our society."
POLITICO @politico: "School choice programs have been wildly successful under DeSantis. Now public schools might close."

The NYC Mayor’s Race Is a Warning for Progressives - The Atlantic - "just as Stringer was gaining momentum in late April, a former unpaid worker accused him of sexual misconduct. The allegation—despite several clear inconsistencies—caused him to hemorrhage progressive endorsers, many of whom have been vocal advocates for women critics of sexual harassment in the political sphere. A second woman came forward earlier this month to accuse Stringer of “sexual harassment and making unwanted advances” when she worked at a bar he operated nearly 30 years ago. Stringer vehemently denied the first accusation and dismissed the second as part of “a long-ago chapter in my life from the early 1990s” that “was all a bit of a mess.”... One would-be beneficiary of Stringer’s demise, Dianne Morales, was similarly unable to live up to progressive standards... Morales is a nonprofit executive and relative newcomer to electoral politics in the city. She has attracted attention in large part thanks to having the most aggressively progressive platform—and rhetorical style—of anyone in the race. Although the policy section on her campaign site is thinner than those of many rivals, Morales has unabashedly called for defunding the New York Police Department and describes her priorities as “dignity” and “solidarity.” After the first Stringer accuser came forward, Morales responded with lefty buzzwords.  “It’s a really unfortunate moment in this race,” Morales said in an interview. “As a survivor myself, who’s got a femme-led team, many of whom are also survivors, we’ve all been triggered.”  Although progressive language helped Morales at first, she found that same sort of language used against her when her staffers attempted to unionize, following allegations of abusive behavior, long hours, and low pay. Morales, who would be the city’s first Afro-Latina mayor, responded in part by firing four staffers involved with the effort. A Twitter account run by the organizers focused on the race and gender of the people who were ousted.  “Black women were harmed, pass it on,” they wrote.  Morales staffers and volunteers ultimately staged protests against their own candidate. They lit sage and incense outside her office and urged her to donate $1 million from her campaign coffers to mutual-aid groups, a decidedly unrealistic demand that would almost certainly violate city campaign-finance law. On Wednesday, Morales responded by firing more than 50 members of her team, leaving her with a skeleton crew. A campaign that was already a long shot had definitively imploded.  Democratic strategists around the country watched the spectacle of young workers marching on their own office, and some saw it as a clear indicator of the dangers of trying to bring Generation Z into the fold of grueling campaign work. One veteran Democratic operative who has worked on presidential campaigns articulated these fears to me via text message. “It seems like many of these kids would be shocked and upset at just normal boring office jobs and the expectations there. And campaigns are so much harder than that,” wrote the operative, who requested anonymity because of professional concerns.  Morales’s situation raised the possibility that young progressives are unwilling to make the sort of labor commitments necessary to actually elect a progressive."
From 2021. Alleged sexual misconduct is bad and disqualifying, unless it hurts the left wing agenda
Maybe the moral of the story is that left wing ideology doesn't work in the real world

Young people are taught to hate Canada. Mandatory service could fix that - "What significant things do schools celebrate? British Columbia has an entire “inclusive calendar guide” for K-12. The guide is thirty pages long and lists 193 days, months, and seasons to recognize various holidays, heritages, and minority rights. Of those, five commemorate historical figures in Canada: Louis Riel, Queen Victoria, St Jean Baptiste, the Famous Five, and Lincoln Alexander. You read that right. Five. Out of 193. What does get recognized? Sikh holidays number at least a dozen, the LGBTQ+ community gets an entire season plus many days, and every month is someone’s heritage month. It’s a wonder teachers have time to give lessons with all this celebrating. Kids are fed a culture of division from their earliest days. Schools supposedly advocate inclusivity, but what they practice is segregation. Everyone must be labeled, put in a box. You belong to this race, this faith, this sexuality, this victimized group. You are this first, second and third, and then, somewhere along the line, presumably, you are a Canadian. The subtext is, if you don’t have a box, you’re not special. No one’s going to care much about you. No one’s going to give you your day. Just a basic Canadian? What is that, anyway?"

Meme - Carl @HistoryBoomer: "Oh my. Reacher is about a big guy with minimal acting skills who beats bad guys up. That's it! She thinks it's about whiteness? Come on! His Season One partner is black!  And people tell me woke* isn't real. (*obsessively seeing things through the lens of oppression and identity)"
"The White-Power Fantasy of Reacher. By Angelica Jade Bastin, a New York and Vulture critic covering film and pop culture
But swiftly after starting the series I realized there was something more complex about Reacher, a glaringly white fantasy that can’t help but crack under the weight of its conservative values. This isn’t merely hackneyed wallpaper TV; it’s uncanny fiction that exemplifies just how intensely Hollywood has returned to whiteness after years of feigning interest in diversity broadly and Blackness with a particular extricative zeal. Watching Reacher isn’t easygoing; it’s like watching a frightening manifestation of the free-falling American empire on a loop... through any domain. The story avoids the specific, focused, noxious undertow of racism that powered the first season in favor of something more diffused. Which isn’t to say Reacher season two avoids its white fantasy. It remains centered on a surface-level critique of military and governmental malfeasance that in fact argues for the worth of these systems when men like Reacher are given free reign to dole out their idea of justice inside them or for them. In this way, Reacher is the most insidious example of television that fronts as wallpaper TV but is fueled by and fully displays toxic beliefs about power and America. Indeed, my mother found it to be fluffy entertainment, because that’s how it wants to be seen. A trifle whose poison goes down as smooth as expensive whiskey. Blackness may no longer be allowed to have its cool edge in Hollywood, but whiteness still has use for it."
Vulture @vulture: "Have you watched 'Reacher'? Vulture's Angelica Jade Bastin finally gave in to the streaming juggernaut earlier this year, expecting wallpaper TV at its tamest. She found a white-power fantasy instead."

Meme - @joel_chen: "bout to kill a white bitch"
Meme - grandblackknight @grandblackknig1: "It's important to know that if you have white boi children that they are just as worthless as their white piggy dads. The sooner you see them as the enemy and teach them to serve the better for them and society"
Meme - "Critical race theory will provide black folk the manuscript to enslave white people. Can't wait!!!!!!!"
Meme - sap//TYE TYE DAY !! @suckinclits333: "Hope y'all got bail money cuz im finna kill a white bitch"
Meme - Futures toxic nephew @muulidge: "Yea so im about to kill a white bitch today....."
Meme - LAVISH @dimonelavish: "Ima be a cop so I can just kill all white kids , imma purge on they ass"
Meme - Nams @Ndim_Lo_McMag: "Fuck it, kill all white kids!"
Meme - Phozes @mphomontwedi: "I say let's kill all white kids cos they gon end up just like they parents."
Meme - gino @guatetalian: "Lord help me. I am about to choke a white bitch. I just got here cracker. Fall back"
Meme - Kang AOne @A1SinceDayNone: "we should enslave white women, and hold them hostage until the "man" let all our negro sisters go!"
Meme - Abel @ working n splat3 @demifiendz: "Its time to enslave white people"
Meme - gigi @GiGiWthaFijii: "She ain't lie. we needa turn them tables and enslave white people"
Meme - chuck @CRXy0: "Anti white Twitter exists, it's socially acceptable to be openly racist."
Ross D. Futbol @JutsuNoRoss: "That's right. Get fucked white boi"
Damn white supremacy and anti-blackness!

Meme - Kevin Bass PhD MS @kevinnbass: "20% of young professors think it is acceptable to use violence to stop a campus speech  40% to physically block students from attending a speech  60% to shout down a speaker to prevent their speaking  This is the next generation teaching our children at America’s universities"
Indoctrination in university is far right conspiracy theory misinformation

Meme - i/o @eyeslasho: "He's right of course. Intellectuals were never meant to be people with average SAT scores and degrees in Magazine Journalism from third-tier colleges. They were meant to be smart people who aren't seething racists and aren't afraid of debating people."
"The Atlantic. The Crisis of the Intellectuals. Traditional notions of the intellectual were never meant to include people who looked like me or who had a background like mine. By Ibram X. Kendi"

Meme - GnasherJew®גנאשר @GnasherJew: "We are pleased to say that we have received a report from @VictoriaPolice  that @NorCleor  (Khadra A Jama) does not live, & is not temporarily based in Melbourne. Nor was she based there on the 24th of May.  Therefore this note that she claimed was “pinned to her door in Melbourne” is a fake."
KJ @NorCleor: "I recently moved to Melbourne for work and live in a unit in the northern suburbs. I woke up this morning to this letter pinned to my front door. So much for having pleasant neighbours."
"Hey Muslim!  you moved in. We are a lot of Jewish family's live around here. We don't want you here but we can't..."
GnasherJew®גנאשר @GnasherJew: "As soon as we stated we knew the ID of @NorCleor  & would inform @victoriapolice  she protected her tweets.  We strongly believe that the note that was allegedly pinned to her door is inauthentic /  not genuine, but the police should investigate in any case..."

Politicizing Medicine is Dangerous - "Politicizing medicine is dangerous. Tens of thousands of people are dead because vaccines became politicized and people chose political identity over rationality. Yet instead of trying to depoliticize medicine, the AMA has doubled down and is going full woke. The AMA’s Advancing Health Equity: A Guide to Language, Narrative and Concepts is so over the top I thought at first it was satire from the BabylonBee. The guide, for example, recommends that instead of talking about poor health among low-income people that physicians should blame “landowners and large corporations” for “increasingly centralizing political and financial power wielded by a few” and limiting “prospects for good health and well-being for many groups.” Put aside that this is at best tendentious and at worst utterly fallacious and just imagine that you are a landowner or work for a large corporation (that’s most of us!). Would you trust a doctor spouting this rhetoric or might you feel that such a doctor doesn’t have your best interests at heart?... If the AMA really wants to do something for health equity they should stop trying to police language and instead support nurse practitioners, midwives, physician assistants, and other healthcare professionals who want to expand their practices, lobby for more physicians and an end to the absurd residency bottleneck, and support greater hospital competition"
If you raise concerns about the left wing agenda, you are the bad person who is trying to politicise medicine, since all decent human beings agree with the left

Monday, June 10, 2024

Links - 10th June 2024 (2 - Justin Trudeau)

Matthew Lau: $160 billion says Trudeau doesn't buy his own carbon tax pitch - "There is no rhyme or reason to the Trudeau government’s climate spending... a new project costing over $20 million “that will focus on improving gender-responsive and climate-resilient agricultural practices” in Tanzania, to take two examples just from last week. What “gender-responsive and climate-resilient agricultural practices” in Tanzania are the Liberals did not explain. How gender-responsive Tanzanian climate action will benefit Canadian taxpayers who are being made to pay more than $20 million for it, they did not say, either... the Trudeau government committed over $1 million to “Ontario Tender Fruit Growers to develop climate resilient fruit varieties” — though on this occasion without mention of gender responsiveness. Do the Liberals care more about the gender responsiveness of taxpayer-funded climate-resilient agriculture in Tanzania than about the gender responsiveness of taxpayer-funded climate-resilient peaches, pears and apricots in Ontario? A better question: why are taxpayers paying for either of these two programs to begin with? Another Trudeau government climate spending announcement, this one two weeks ago, was for $1 million to reduce the Children’s Hospital of Eastern Ontario’s (CHEO) carbon footprint. Government funding of hospitals is nothing extraordinary but possibly the money could have been put to better use providing actual medical care... Only 24 per cent of patients are admitted to hospital from emergency within the target time of eight hours. The other 76 per cent of patients suffering excessive wait times in emergency may at least be comforted by the knowledge that the Trudeau government is greatly concerned with reducing the hospital’s carbon footprint. The day after the hospital announcement, the Liberals announced two more climate spending initiatives: $1.4 million for 13 electric vehicle chargers in Prince Edward Island and a handout of up to $11 million to Glencore Canada Corporation for battery-powered equipment for a mining project in Ontario...  What he really must have meant is that it demonstrates the Liberal government’s commitment to central planning and wasting taxpayers’ money. Just two months ago, in insisting that his fifth annual carbon tax increase (to $80 per tonne) must go through, Trudeau defended the carbon tax on the grounds that it is better than using “the heavy hand of government through regulations or through subsidies or some other way to pick winners and losers in the economy.” If Trudeau practiced what he preaches, Canadians — of both genders — could have saved a cumulative $160 billion."

Trudeau seems unhinged when it comes to the carbon tax. Trudeau keeps saying Canadians get back more from the carbon tax while Poilievre presents information from the PBO showing they don't. Trudeau then accuses Poilievre of not caring about facts or evidence. : r/Canada_sub
Pierre Poilievre, "Carbon Pricing" on March 19th, 2024 | openparliament.ca

Canadians need more time to digest new capital gains inclusion rules - "Since April 16, tax practitioners have fielded an unending number of questions from people wondering what they should do. Unfortunately, tax practitioners and their clients are planning in the dark. You might think that legislation to change the capital gains inclusion rate should be pretty easy to draft. But you would be incorrect. Details matter... The government is being blatantly misleading as it continues to say that this measure will only affect 0.13 per cent of taxpayers. That’s hogwash and, thankfully, many other experts are pushing back against such a disingenuous statistic."

Trudeau's class war over capital gains taxes not working to plan - "Trudeau is still trying to explain his capital gains tax changes and as they say in politics, if you are explaining then you are losing. Secondly, the explaining has gone so badly, the pushback has been so strong that the tax changes aren’t in the government’s budget implementation bill... It is beyond strange that any government wouldn’t include a major budget promise in the legislation to enact their budget promises, especially one set to take place just over a month from now... From the start, Trudeau and his team have tried to make it seem that these tax changes were only hitting the wealthiest of the wealthy. They were hoping the anger and envy generated by class warfare would have most Canadians saying, “Ya, take more from those guys.”... One of the reasons the capital gains changes aren’t in the legislation is the massive pushback from those who will be hurt, which include an awful lot of middle-class professionals and entrepreneurs. The biggest group leading the charge against these changes, though, is one that the Trudeau government is trying not to go to war with – doctors."

Sorry, Canada, but we can't tax our way to prosperity - "Freeland posed the rhetorical question to a phalanx of journalists, “What kind of Canada do you want to live in?” If her just-delivered budget was anything to go by, Freeland dreams of a Canada in which unequal levels of wealth are resolved by aggressive acts of forced sharing. It is a Canada in which the shrinking remnants of a sclerotic economy are divvied up among select demographic groups and the successful can always be “asked” to pay “just a little more” to inch ever closer but never quite reach their “fair share.” Apparently her vision also never anticipates financial default, even when interest payments outgrow all the other spending priorities of the nation. It is a triumph of theory over practice but ultimately, Freeland’s vision is one of shared misery. My answer to Freeland’s question is rather different. The kind of Canada I want to live in is one that applauds economic growth through the encouragement of entrepreneurship. It’s one that is unhappy with the OECD prediction that we will have the worst economic growth of any OECD nation over the next 35 years and sees that as a challenge to be confronted and overcome. It’s one that understands that shrinking per capita productivity means worsening living standards for everybody. It is also a Canada that recognizes that economic growth and financial stability are what underwrite the costs of the social supports that we expect in a modern developed economy. No country ever taxed its way to prosperity. That is a lesson firmly rooted in reality."

Pierre Trudeau damaged Canada far less than his son - "The elder Trudeau left his premiership under remarkably similar circumstances to those now faced by his son. Pierre faced levels of public revulsion that were virtually unprecedented. Even the pro-Trudeau columnist Tami Nolan greeted his 1984 departure with the prediction that he “would be remembered for all time as the most reviled personally.” Canada in 1984 had a debt load, an international reputation and a military that were in measurably worse shape than when Trudeau started. Most notably, Trudeau faced a revitalized Conservative opposition that would swiftly hand his Liberals one of their most humiliating defeats. But for all the messes left behind by 16 years of Pierre Trudeau, Canada in 1984 lacked many of the most potent national crises that now define his son’s third term...
Houses were actually quite affordable... Immigration was lower than usual (instead of higher than ever)... The military was weakened, but not in utter crisis... The scandals and corruption weren’t quite as brazen... Per-capita GDP still wasn’t too far off the Americans"

Trudeau owes Canadians an apology for his gross mismanagement - "Many Canadians are well aware of the myriad of apologies that Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has delivered throughout his time in office. Some half-hearted apologies were issued for his own behaviour; others have been for the ills and errors of his predecessors, with no explanation of the context in which they lived. I never would have believed I’d say this, but it occurred to me recently that he has one more apology to make — to Canadians. One more heartfelt, tearful apology for his complete mismanagement of our country. And wouldn’t it be fitting if he delivered it and then resigned in shame. That would show courage. Let’s look at his record, beginning by asking ourselves if we’re better off than we were in 2015. At that time, Canadians traded an experienced, able and credible prime minister for a youthful, inexperienced politician with colourful socks promising sunny ways. Four years later, the novelty had worn off and voters handed Trudeau a minority government in 2019. So incredulous and so convinced that Canadians must have made a mistake, he called a needless election two years later in the middle of a global pandemic, which yielded the same result. Desperate to hang onto power, he then entered into an agreement with the NDP, giving the fourth-place party in the House of Commons outsized control over government policy. That disgraceful alliance has harmed all facets of Canadian life, and continues to impede on provincial authority. Trudeau should apologize for his fiscal mismanagement. From the beginning, the prime minister promised “moderate” deficits and that the budget would balance itself. Yet all of his budgets have produced enormous deficits, and our debt has more than doubled. We spend more on interest payments servicing the debt than we do on the entire defence budget. We’ve had the WE Charity scandal and the ArriveCan app debacle that cost taxpayers millions. Since 2015, the size of the public service has increased markedly, yet seems less efficient than ever. Veterans have faced obstacles getting benefits and long delays have been seen at passport offices. Yet these extra bureaucrats did had the time to redesign our passports, erasing our history and ridding them of any reference to our glorious past, our many heroes and our most prized monuments. We deserve an apology for that. Today, almost nine years on, we are faced with an affordability crisis, a housing crisis and increased taxes. The carbon tax has not only increased the price of gas, it is making everything more expensive, while doing little to further reduce the inconsequential 1.5 per cent of the world’s greenhouse gases that Canada produces. Our resource sector is being sacrificed by Trudeau’s obsessive fixation with climate change. The industries that employed thousands, raised our productivity and filled our coffers are due an apology. We have a poorly thought out immigration policy, which has seen unprecedented numbers of refugees and immigrants welcomed to this country without any thought of what those numbers would do to our housing supply, our social services and our already overtaxed health-care system. Those who believed they were coming to a prosperous country to build a better life but are now homeless and unemployed are owed an apology, too. And some are regretting their decision to emigrate. The Canadian Armed Forces are in worse shape today than during what Gen. Rick Hillier, Canada’s former chief of defence staff, called the “decade of darkness” in the 1990s... Trudeau has not lived up to our NATO commitment to spend two per cent of GDP on defence, and has privately stated that he has no intention of meeting it. This basically amounts to a breach of contract. It’s time to apologize to our men and women in uniform, and to our allies in NATO... Due to Trudeau’s view that there’s no business case for Canadian natural gas, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz was rebuffed and had to look elsewhere to replace the gas Germany got from Russia. Canadians of the Jewish faith are dealing with the government’s lack of courage in allowing the promotion of genocide by supporters of Palestine, not snuffing out antisemitism and not standing by Israel. He should apologize for his abhorrent behaviour. Of course, Trudeau repeatedly apologized for his behaviour as a young man when he wore blackface. Yet he refused to apologize over allegations that he groped a female reporter decades ago... He pushed out his former attorney general, Jody Wilson-Raybould, an Indigenous woman who stood by her principles in the SNC-Lavalin affair. Former Treasury Board president Jane Philpott in turn stood by her colleague and resigned from cabinet over Trudeau’s behaviour. And Celina Caesar-Chavanne, disillusioned by what the Liberal party had become under Trudeau’s leadership, also left the fold. An apology from this fake feminist is long overdue. Regardless of your views concerning the Freedom Convoy, it is a fact that the prime minister did not have the courage to meet with the protesters to hear their grievances, then called them fringe radicals and finally invoked a law to have these Canadians treated like terrorists. Today he allows hate speech bellowed by terrorist supporters who march in our streets and threaten and intimidate anyone with a different opinion... is it any surprise that talk of separation in my home province of Quebec is back in the news? Never have Canadians been so divided and so devoid of hope. It is past time for new leadership who will be proud of Canada and its citizens, who will properly manage our country, its resources and its potential. We need leaders who will unite us and make us the proud and prosperous country we once were, and can be once more."

Opinion: Capital gains tax hikes are terrible optics for Canada - "Critics of the capital gains tax hike not only are legion, they’re reputable, credentialled and noteworthy. Kathleen Ross, president of the Canadian Medical Association , says the changes could undermine efforts to recruit and retain physicians and even threaten the stability of the health-care system at a time when Canada is facing a severe doctor shortage. Former Liberal finance minister Bill Morneau argues the changes are antithetical to economic growth, increased productivity and greater investment. Shopify CEO Tobi Lütke believes they will be an innovation killer. Over 2,000 other CEOs, tech managers, entrepreneurs and innovators have express similar concerns, adding their names to an open letter from the Council of Canadian Innovators. Even Tom Mulcair, former leader of the federal NDP, has expressed concern with the capital gains tax hike, indicating it will hit more than just the rich. Yes, Tom Mulcair. We are clearly through the looking-glass now... A post-budget survey by regional innovation hubs MaRS Discovery District, Communitech and Invest Ottawa details how Canada’s top innovators and tech talent are responding to the hike in capital gains taxes. Forty-five per cent of more than 150 startup leaders who responded say they personally are considering relocating outside the country, 23 per cent say they may move their headquarters outside Canada, 60 per cent say the capital gains tax increase will deter investment and innovation and 21.9 per cent say it will harm job creation and talent recruitment. So, as we all focus on the details, arguing the pros and cons of carve-outs and caveats, our own innovators — and the rest of the world — have yet another reason to look elsewhere for places to invest, build companies, create jobs and provide economic opportunity. Details obviously matter, but the narrative matters more. And our current narrative is one of limiting growth, deterring investment and stifling entrepreneurialism. Not a good story."

Ivison: Another warning about Trudeau from yet another former minister - "has anyone been as roundly abused as Justin Trudeau by people who were formerly some of his closest associates and colleagues? Former government whip Andrew Leslie, in his recent interview with National Post, is merely the latest senior Liberal to publicly pour scorn on Trudeau, his cabinet and the cabal of senior advisers around him. He can be added to the list that includes former ministers Bill Morneau, Jody Wilson-Raybould and Jane Philpott in recent books and memoirs. Other former ministers who have left government, such Catherine McKenna and Scott Brison, have hinted at their exasperation, while publicly keeping their own counsel. Can they all be dismissed as disgruntled former employees, or is there merit to the criticisms that the prime minister and his entourage are unprincipled hyper-partisans who care more about spin than substance? A common complaint is that Trudeau makes brazen commitments that he knows he can’t, or won’t, deliver upon. The latest charge from Lt. Gen Leslie is that the prime minister and his cabinet are not serious about defence and have no intention of meeting spending targets because they believe the Americans will always defend Canada. Leslie was involved in drawing up the Liberal defence policy document prior to the 2015 election. He says that this contributed to 2017’s “Strong, Secure, Engaged” policy that had specific timelines for equipment and an annex of 110 or so deliverables that were mostly missed. He said that since 2015, the Liberal government has not spent or has reprofiled, deferred or lapsed around $20 billion that was promised to defence, leaving the army “in a state of despair.” Wilson-Raybould was at the centre of the infamous SNC Lavalin scandal, in which Trudeau was found to have used means that violated the Conflict of Interest Act to exert influence on his attorney general. Wilson-Raybould later resigned from cabinet, was kicked out of the Liberal caucus, won her seat as an Independent and then left politics in 2021. Trudeau said he was merely standing up for the jobs of his fellow Canadians. In her book, Indian in the Cabinet, she said she thought Trudeau would make a good prime minister and create a good team but was proven wrong. “There are lots of pretty words, but there are a lot of promises that have been made that have not been kept. And that leads, of course, to disillusionment and disappointment,” she said in an interview with Reuters in 2021. In her book, she said she was angry that she had believed Trudeau “was an honest and good person, when in truth, he would so casually lie to the public and then think he could get away with it.” Philpott has also written a book — Health for All — which is diplomatic about her exit from the Liberal party, after leaving in solidarity with Wilson-Raybould. But she also notes the demands by Trudeau’s staff to land partisan punches on the opposition. “I don’t think that things turned out the way they were initially described. The hyper-partisanship is so built-in, it just becomes insurmountable,” she wrote. Morneau’s criticisms in his book, Where to From Here, are more explicit and damaging. The former finance minister said policy rationales were often tossed aside in favour of scoring political points. He noted the recommendations of the Department of Finance were disregarded on the emergency wage subsidy during COVID, as Trudeau announced a much more generous program than the one Morneau thought had been agreed upon. “It was one of the worst moments of my political life,” Morneau wrote. Challenges, he said, were not managed on a daily basis at the highest level and Trudeau’s management and interpersonal communication abilities were sorely lacking. “The prime minister had an inability (for) or lack of interest in forging relationships with me, and as far as I could tell, with the rest of his cabinet,” he said. Wilson-Raybould said she was chosen because she was “an Indian in the cabinet” and Morneau agreed that ministers were picked for promotional reasons rather than for what they brought to the table. But that hardly mattered because power resided in the hands of a cabal of advisers around the prime minister who compelled agreement from cabinet ministers, he said. One example of the improvised nature of public policy-making, according to Morneau, was the “baffling” decision to commit to a public dental plan when the pledge to bring in pharmacare remained unfulfilled... the consistency in the accounts of some of the most senior Liberals elected in the sweep of 2015 adds to their credibility. Not all were political rookies who became quickly disenchanted at the grubby compromises of politics. Veterans no longer in the frontlines complain that the Liberal party’s centrist traditions were trashed to allow Trudeau to become Canada’s “first NDP prime minister.”... his has been a government captivated by words, not action. Trudeau has no apparent interest in the banalities of government, including the management of his cabinet or caucus. Ministers — senior ministers — report that they rarely talk about their portfolios with their boss. In the 2018 book, Un selfie avec Justin Trudeau, Jocelyn Coulon, a former adviser to Stéphane Dion, said the relationship between prime minister and his then foreign affairs minister was “glacial” and the only private meeting the two men had was when Dion was fired. “The prime minister is a man incurious about the affairs of the world,” Coulon remarked. It is a situation that is unlikely to have improved as capable ministers were replaced by less able men and women, who, it was made clear, reported not to Parliament but to the issues-management team in the prime minister’s office. Senior bureaucrats say the partnership with cabinet is frayed and the exhaustion palpable. In the wake of the pandemic, there was a near breakdown in the delivery of core services — from passports to immigration visas; from airport security to the flow of travellers across borders. This week, years after the crisis passed, CBC is reporting that Canadians who want a passport still need to wait for three hours for service at a Passport Canada office."

Ford government's auto theft moves aimed at Trudeau, not car thieves - "Kerzner, meanwhile, said the federal government can help Ontario deal with this issue in two important ways. “Number one, there has to be minimum consequences, minimum sentencing for people stealing cars,” Kerzner said. “And the second thing — equally important — is you must step up the inspections of outgoing cargo at the intermodals at the rail yards, and most importantly, at the Port of Montreal.” Cars stolen in Ontario are often shipped out of the country through the Port of Montreal, which spends most of its time screening what comes into the country rather than what goes out. A police operation carried out between last December and this March saw 400 shipping containers inspected at the Port of Montreal and nearly 600 stolen vehicles recovered. Most of the stolen vehicles were from the Toronto area. The federal government knows what the problem is; it just doesn’t want to act. For months, Opposition Leader Pierre Poilievre has been hammering the Trudeau Liberals on the lack of scanners at the Port of Montreal for outgoing traffic. Rather than commit to installing more scanners, they have launched partisan attacks against the Conservatives. Auto theft is a very real issue, costing billions at this point in lost vehicles, lost productivity, insurance claims and more. Investing in the people or technology to stop it is the right move. Putting in stiffer penalties for stealing a car would also go a long way to keeping repeat offenders off the streets."

Opinion: Trudeau’s capital gains tax video misses the point - "the prime minister claims that this tax increase will affect only the “very richest” people in Canada and will generate significant new revenue — $20 billion, according to him — to pay for social programs. But economic research and data on capital gains taxes reveal a different picture. For starters, it simply isn’t true that capital gains taxes only affect the wealthy. Many Canadians who incur capital gains taxes, such as small business owners, may only do so once in their lifetimes. For example, a plumber who makes $90,000 annually may choose to sell his business for $500,000 at retirement. In that year, the plumber’s income is exaggerated because it includes the capital gain rather than only his normal income. In fact, according to a 2021 study published by the Fraser Institute, 38.4 per cent of those who paid capital gains taxes in Canada earned less than $100,000 per year, and 18.3 per cent earned less than $50,000. Yet in his video, Prime Minister Trudeau claims that his capital gains tax hike will affect only the richest “0.13 per cent of Canadians” with an “average income of $1.4 million a year.” But this is a misleading statement. Why? Because it creates a distorted view of who will pay these capital gains taxes. Many Canadians with modest annual incomes own businesses, second homes or stocks and could end up paying these higher taxes following a onetime sale where the appreciation of their asset equals at least $250,000. Moreover, economic research finds that capital taxes remain among the most economically damaging forms of taxation precisely because they reduce the incentive to innovate and invest. By increasing them the government will deter investment in Canada and chase away capital at a time when we badly need it. Business investment, which is crucial to boost living standards and incomes for Canadians, is collapsing in Canada . This tax hike will make a bad economic situation worse. Finally, as noted, in the video the prime minister claims that this tax increase will generate “almost $20 billion in new revenue.” But investors do not incur capital gains taxes until they sell an asset and realize a gain. A higher capital gains tax rate gives them an incentive to hold onto their investments, perhaps until the rate is reduced after a change in government. According to economists, this “ lock-in ” effect can stifle economic activity. The Trudeau government likely bases its “$20 billion” number on an assumption that investors will sell their assets sooner rather than later — perhaps before June 25th, to take advantage of the old inclusion rate before it disappears (although because the government has not revealed exactly how the new rate will apply that seems less likely). Of course, if revenue from the tax hike does turn out to be less than anticipated, the government will incur larger budget deficits than planned and plunge us further into debt."

Canadians’ standard of living is on the decline: Report - "In her 2022 budget, Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland described low productivity and innovation as “the Achilles heel of the Canadian economy.”... The problem, critics say, is that in the Liberals’ 2024 budget released last month, its major themes — higher spending, higher deficits, higher debt and higher capital gains taxes — are all sure-fire ways to reduce business confidence in the economy, discouraging private sector investment aimed at increasing productivity and innovation."

Matthew Lau: Activists look to turn daycares into woke indoctrination camps - "Here is a tale of two recent childcare webinars. One was organized by entrepreneurs who see their daycare centres and the families they serve being bulldozed by the Trudeau government’s national takeover of their sector; the other was held by government-funded activists and aspiring central planners who see the governmentalization of childcare as an opportunity to inject it with their notions of social justice... The consensus view of conference participants, AACE chair Krystal Churcher told me last week, was that the government’s promise of accessible childcare has failed miserably... One person said her centre now has two wait lists: one for families who will never get a spot, and another for families who could get a spot in two to three years. Numerous providers used such phrases as: “huge wait lists,” “wait lists everywhere,” “wait lists packed,” “our wait lists are overwhelming” and “extremely long wait lists.” The Trudeau government has clearly created widespread shortages: access to a wait list is not access to childcare. In addition to the shortages, operators said the government is degrading the quality of childcare by pushing private centres out of the sector and starving them of revenue through price controls... the federal government is “limiting parental choice, forcing families into state-sponsored, regulated childcare.”... it is not clear that forming advisory committees in which race is a criterion for admission is really an “anti-racist” initiative. Second, there is scant evidence that the childcare sector is a hotbed of racism against minorities to begin with: visible minorities are over-represented in the childcare sector compared to the workforce as a whole. Third, there is abundant evidence that free markets and competition, not expanded government control (as advocated by the government-funded activists, who say the Ontario government should “enshrine” the right to government-regulated childcare), is an effective way to reduce racism and other forms of discrimination."

GUNTER: Job stats simply a mirage in Canadian growth - "In the past year, the public sector (federal, provincial and municipal) has added 208,000 new jobs versus just 190,000 in the private sector. In recent decades, private sector employment has usually been four or even five times total public sector employment, 75/25 or even 80/20. It is crucial to maintain that ratio because public-sector employment is not self-sustaining. It’s funded by the taxes generated from private-sector employment and sales. Therefore, our economy cannot sustain itself if the public sector is growing faster than the sector it is dependent on... if even the service sector is insufficient to prop up the economy, imagine how inadequate the public sector is. Yet that is what the Liberals are relying on with their massive spending, while at the same time doing their level best to suppress producing industries. Canada’s statistical growth is a mirage, if it comes from the tax-funded and debt-funded public sector... Despite the billions in the recent Liberal budget, there will simply not be enough jobs to absorb all the newcomers nor enough housing built to lower the price of home buying or renting."

Opinion: Capital gains tax hike is another fulfillment fiasco in the making - "The bigger question is why a government announced major tax changes before figuring out how they will work. The answer seems to be that this is a pattern of modern politics, and certainly a trait of the current federal government. The announcements — talking points and slogans that will grab attention on social media — are policy-makers’ main focus. Implementation is an afterthought and considering advice from the government’s own officials and outside experts a low priority. Consider the recent last-minute walkbacks of the requirement for tax-filers in “bare trust” arrangements like joint bank accounts to file trust returns, and for homeowners to report potential liability for the Underused Housing Tax . These ill-advised initiatives caused tens of thousands of tax-filers months of anxiety, effort and cost before the government, realizing it had an implementation nightmare on its hands, rescinded the requirements at the last minute. Will the same occur with the capital gains tax changes? The early deadline and lack of rules are not the only problems with these proposals. Retroactive taxation of accrued gains — especially after a bout of inflation — sends a terrible signal to savers and investors. The federal government is making its hostility to wealth creation even more obvious."

Trans Iran / Trans sluts at Planet Fitness / Trans grievances vs Female ones


Michael Knowles @michaeljknowles: "New flag just dropped *trans pride flag and Iranian flag mashup*
Khamenei.ir @khamenei_ir: Dear university students in the United States of America, you are standing on the right side of history."


Libs of TikTok @libsoftiktok: "DISGUSTING: Dude acts out his s*xual f*tish in a Planet Fitness and even peeks under bathroom stalls! Planet Fitness seems to attract these p*rverts. What’s stopping this man from entering the women’s bathroom and doing the same thing? Planet Fitness’ policies would allow that. All he would have to do is say he’s a woman."


Hazel Appleyard @HazelAppleyard_: "So you’ve
- F0rced your way into women’s bathrooms
- Stolen awards from women
- Cheated in women’s sports
- Appropriated words like “mother” and “woman” and changed them to include men.
- Reduced women to “birthing people” “uterus owners” and “front holes”
- Treated our children like medical guinea pigs with untested medical interventions
- Attempted to erase single s-x attraction
- Tried to erase s-x in general
and still expect us to accept you or treat you with any kind of respect? Jog on."
"So you’ve
•refused to use my name
•misgendered me
•Ignored my pronouns
•accused me of perversion
•refuse to recognize my existence
•Dehumanized me
•medicalized my identity
•called me a ‘huge problem for a sane world’ .
And you expect me to have a civil 'debate' with you?""

Hot take - you cannot "medicalise" a group that requires regular hormone injections to maintain its identity.

Links - 10th June 2024 (1 - US Media)

Meme - "How many recent mainstream media hoaxes did you fall for?
Russian collusion
The Inflation Reduction Act reduces inflation
Trump called neo-nazis "fine people"
Jussie Smollett
Bubba Wallace garage pull
Hunter Biden's laptop was Russian disinformation
Covington kids
Governor Witmer kidnapping plot
Kavanaugh rape
Trump said drinking bleach would fight COVID
Russia bombed their own pipeline
Trump pee tape
COVID lab leak was a conspiracy theory
Border agents whipped migrants
Trump saved nuclear secrets at Mar-a-Lago
Steele Dossier
Russian bounties on US soldiers in Afghanistan
Muslim travel ban
Andrew Cuomo showed the best COVID leadership
Ghost of Kyiv
Trump built cages for migrant kids
Austere religious scholar
Trump overfed Koi fish in Japan
Build Back Better will pay for itself
Trump tax cuts benefited only the rich
Cloth masks prevent COVID
If you get vaccinated you won't catch COVID
SUV killed parade marchers
Trump used teargas to clear a crowd for a bible photo
Don't Say Gay was in a bill
Putin price hike
Ivermectin is a horse dewormer and not for humans
Mostly peaceful protests
Trump overpowered secret service for wheel of "The Beast"
Officer Sicknick was murdered by protesters
January 6th was an insurrection
Trump mocked a reporter's disability
BYU students hurled racist insults at Duke volleyball player
Rocket that hit Poland was launched by Russia"
I still see left wingers spouting these. Time to ban Fox News and the Daily News for being unreliable and misinformation!

Meme - The New York Times: "As India's prime minister, Narendra Modi, struggles to quell months of protests by farmers, critics and analysts see a pattern of curtailing free speech that they fear is sending India down a dangerous path of intolerance."
The New York Times: "As protests stretch on in Canada and truckers block supply chains with the U.S., some Canadians are asking: Why hasn't Prime Minister Justin Trudeau ordered the authorities to quash the demonstrations?"
Freedom is only for those who push the left wing agenda

Lucas Lynch | Facebook - "Glenn Greenwald has resigned from the Intercept, the publication he co-founded, for - wait for it - being censored by his own editorial board for writing articles critical of Joe Biden.  I'm glad he's come around to the illiberalism of leftist cancel culture, but I don't feel sorry for him here. He has been consumed by a monster of his own creation. It's a fitting act of penance for someone who spent years smearing anyone left of center willing to speak out on these issues.  But I have no doubt now that he's tasted some justice of the mob, he will now be a dedicated fighter for liberalism and free speech again."
From 2020

From millionaires to Muslims, small subgroups of the population seem much larger to many Americans - "Americans overestimate the size of minority groups and underestimate the size of most majority groups"
The media pushing diversity and representation and minority voices cannot be responsible for this. The hoi polloi are just stupid

Thread by @Andercot on Thread Reader App – Thread Reader App - "

Our one-party journalism system suffers no dissent from within. Here are some who do it anyway. ("Left Heretics and the New Media Collective") - "“When I as a Black person look at the Black Lives Matter movement, I have questions,” Max said through a gray face mask. “Like I always question, why does a Black life matter only when a white man takes it.”  The full interview was 2 minutes and 6 seconds long. On June 6, with his job reportedly at risk for posting the video, Fang was forced to issue a public apology... What had Lee Fang done wrong? His colleague at the Intercept, Akela Lacy, accused him of “being racist,” of pushing “narratives about Black on Black crime after repeatedly being asked not to,” and of “using free speech to couch anti-Blackness.” Since June, more than 30,000 people have liked Lacy’s accusation against Fang on Twitter and over 5,000 have retweeted it, including a number of prominent left-wing journalists who endorsed the smear.  Fang arrived at the Intercept with impressive credentials... in the aftermath of Trump’s election, he expressed a number of opinions that made him a controversial figure within the Twitter left cohort: questioning the effectiveness of violence as a tactic to achieve social change, defending the principle that free speech extends to unpopular ideas, and criticizing identity politics and performative ideological militancy. On May 31, a few days before posting the video that got him in trouble, Fang had tweeted: “Seeing so many manipulate the MLK quote that riots are the ‘language of the unheard.’ Read the actual speech. It’s a passionate argument against riots and in support of nonviolence at a time when much of the radical left despised MLK and embraced violence.” This, too, got him in trouble with fellow left-wing journalists whose objection rested on the strange claim that by defending Kingian nonviolence, Fang was somehow in league with the white supremacist forces responsible for murdering the civil rights leader. The pluralist and democratic tradition on the left that Fang was identifying himself with put him at odds with the anti-majoritarian party line that progressive journalists have policed with growing intensity since Trump’s election, leading them to denounce Fang and others who hold similar views as “racists” and “crypto-fascists.” For these journalists, who now dominate the American media class, the “democratic majority” is a vehicle for the dangerous majoritarian mob lurking in the middle of the country plotting to oppress vulnerable minorities. The proper aim of politics, therefore, isn’t to try and convince the undecided—let alone the “deplorables” who disagree with them—but to wield the power of elite institutions to enforce right-think. Yet the idea that a reporter could be tarred as a racist by his colleagues simply for quoting MLK and publishing an interview with a Black protester expressing an opinion that’s not at all uncommon in the Black community did not sit well with everyone. While dozens of high-profile journalists joined in publicly denouncing Fang, his fellow left heretics and hate-magnets Zaid Jilani, Matt Taibbi, and Michael Tracey were among the most prominent in coming to his defense... “The reality,” said Jilani, “is that if you go to any high crime place in America, you’ll meet people who say exactly what that young man said to Lee. You’ll meet people who have the exact same concern, but they don’t view their role as just being part of a political narrative—as if they only exist to serve someone else’s political agenda.” The secret motive driving people in the news business is the fear of standing alone. Most journalists look around to see what the journalists they imagine are important are doing, and they copy that. In today’s online journalism, the natural impulse to be part of the pack gets supercharged by social media algorithms that reward split-second conformity and, voila, you have big outlets independently pushing the same stories at the same time, with the same framing, all without any need for a larger conspiracy... The [1619] project’s ostensible challenge to the establishment hasn’t prevented it from being endorsed by large corporations and entering the official curriculum of public schools and government bureaucracies. What’s left is an image of the American media as a one-party system controlled by an unstable alliance of security state liberals and “woke” progressive identitarians... Some of the bitterest attacks launched by the one-party media system are reserved for the few internal critics that dissent from the party line while remaining on “the left.” The small grouping of left-wing heretics exists more as a social affiliation or moral stance than a coherent political ideology. It includes people like Fang, Taibbi, Jilani, Tracey, Glenn Greenwald, Angela Nagle, Chris Arnade, and the hosts of the What’s Left and Red Scare podcasts. Despite their considerable differences, the outline of a broad, common sensibility is evident in the overlapping cluster of insults directed at these people. They are called racist, obviously, but they are also accused of being vulgar class reductionists, mere contrarians and provocateurs, transphobes, Strasserites, social conservatives, and closet reactionaries. Tracey, Taibbi, Jilani, Fang, and others in their orbit all have political views that put them well to the left of the Biden-Harris ticket. Where they dissent is on core issues of the progressive media consensus like Russian collusion, the value of identity politics, and the legitimacy of rioting and political violence... “I think a lot of this has to do with people within the press believing that Trump was such an extreme threat that they had to change the way they go about their business”... Life outside the one-party media state can be lonely, but it also has rewards—like being able to actually do reporting on stories that the collective has decided to censor. Tracey has spent several years supporting himself as an independent journalist by fundraising online. For the past three months he’s been covering the fallout and damage from the looting and riots that have taken place in hundreds of cities across the country, an assignment that puts him at odds with the chorus of media figures who have minimized the severity of the destruction or justified it on ideological grounds... “I saw a poll recently showing that 85% of Americans think that people rioting and committing arson should be arrested,” Jilani told me toward the end of our conversation. “Yet it would be very hard to go through progressive media and find arguments against just illegal nihilistic violence taking place, like in Portland and Seattle. It’s telling that The New York Times didn’t correct the record on what happened in the anarchist zone in Seattle until two months after it started, and that it was a tech reporter who did it.”... Spectacles like the ritual denunciation of left heretics can help enforce cohesion among journalists and within the larger educated professional class. They provide an effective deterrent for anyone tempted to notice the yawning gap that separates elite moral crusades from the priorities of ordinary Americans."
Black and minority voices only matter when they push the left wing agenda

I Was a Heretic at The New York Times - The Atlantic - "I also sought out expressly conservative views. Ochs was not, of course, calling for publishing just any opinion. An op-ed had to be smart and written in good faith, and not used to settle scores, derive personal benefit, or engineer some desired outcome. It had to be authentic. In other words, our goal was supposed to be journalistic, rather than activist.  This, I learned in my two years at the Times, was not a goal that everyone shared. Being a conservative—or at least being considered one—at the Times was a strange experience. I often found myself asking questions like “Doesn’t all of this talk of ‘voter suppression’ on the left sound similar to charges of ‘voter fraud’ on the right?” only to realize how unwelcome such questions were. By asking, I’d revealed that I wasn’t on the same team as my colleagues, that I didn’t accept as an article of faith the liberal premise that voter suppression was a grave threat to liberal democracy while voter fraud was entirely fake news. Or take the Hunter Biden laptop story: Was it truly “unsubstantiated,” as the paper kept saying? At the time, it had been substantiated, however unusually, by Rudy Giuliani. Many of my colleagues were clearly worried that lending credence to the laptop story could hurt the electoral prospects of Joe Biden and the Democrats. But starting from a place of party politics and assessing how a particular story could affect an election isn’t journalism. Nor is a vague unease with difficult subjects. “The state of Israel makes me very uncomfortable,” a colleague once told me. This was something I was used to hearing from young progressives on college campuses, but not at work. There was a sense that publishing the occasional conservative voice made the paper look centrist. But I soon realized that the conservative voices we published tended to be ones agreeing with the liberal line. It was also clear that right-of-center submissions were treated differently... many of my colleagues didn’t want their name attached to op-eds advancing conservative arguments, and early-to-mid-career staffers would routinely oppose their publication. After senior leaders in the Opinion section realized that these articles were not getting a fair shake, the process evolved. Articles that were potentially “controversial” (read: conservative) were sent directly to the most senior editors on the page, to be scrutinized by the leadership rather than the whole department. The tension between journalistic and activist impulses existed in newsrooms before the spring of 2020. But it deepened after the murder of George Floyd... Edward Wong, wrote in an email to colleagues that he typically chose not to quote Cotton in his own stories because his comments “often represent neither a widely held majority opinion nor a well-thought-out minority opinion.” This message was revealing. A Times reporter saying that he avoids quoting a U.S. senator? What if the senator is saying something important? What sorts of minority opinions met this correspondent’s standards for being well thought-out? In any event, the opinion Cotton was expressing in his op-ed, whatever one thinks of it, had, according to polling cited in the essay, the support of more than half of American voters. It was not a minority opinion... A narrative had emerged on Slack: that I had gone rogue and published the article without any involvement of higher-ups. Of course this was false, but that untruth nevertheless became central to the story. I had followed all the rules, but I had the sinking feeling that not all of my colleagues felt similarly constrained... an editors’ note was appended to the op-ed. The note contains many errors, among them that the editorial process had been “rushed,” that “senior editors were not sufficiently involved,” and that facts in the article weren’t quite right. Never mind, of course, that it wasn’t rushed, that senior editors were deeply involved, and that there were no correctable errors. The note criticized Cotton’s claim that “radicals like antifa are infiltrating protest marches,” alleging that it had “not been substantiated.” But the attorney general was on the record saying that antifa had done just that—a fact the Times eventually confirmed for itself. “A more pathetic collection of 317 words would be difficult to assemble,” Erik Wemple, the media critic of The Washington Post, wrote a few years later about the editor’s note... Sulzberger asked Bennet to resign. “Wow,” Meghan Louttit, who is now a deputy editor in the newsroom, wrote on Slack. “James’s resignation makes me somewhat … Hopeful?” and added that the firing, in her view, represented “a first step.”  But a first step toward what? During an Opinion all-hands meeting, a liberal columnist asked Sulzberger about the precedent that firing Bennet set: Will you stand by me if people around here and on Twitter don’t like one of my columns?  Every now and then, the group that handles security for the Times would check in on me to make sure I was safe. Ever since the paper had named me as the person responsible for publishing Cotton’s op-ed, I had been receiving alarming threats... Maybe I should have seen this all coming. A few months earlier, my former colleague Bari Weiss had predicted that Bennet wouldn’t last long: “He is doing what they claim to want but they don’t want it,” she told me. Once Bennet resigned, a new regime came into Opinion... In the years preceding the Cotton op-ed, the Times had published op-eds by authoritarians including Muammar Qaddafi, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, and Vladimir Putin. The year of the Cotton op-ed, it also published the Chinese Communist Party mouthpiece Regina Ip’s defense of China’s murderous crackdown on prodemocracy protests in Hong Kong, Moustafa Bayoumi’s seeming apologia of cultural and ethnic resentments of Jews, and an article by a leader of the Taliban, Sirajuddin Haqqani. None of those caused an uproar. Last year, the page published an essay by the Hamas-appointed mayor of Gaza City, and few seemed to mind. But whether the paper is willing to publish conservative views on divisive political issues, such as abortion rights and the Second Amendment, remains an open question... On January 6, 2021, few people at The New York Times remarked on the fact that liberals were cheering on the deployment of National Guardsmen to stop rioting at the Capitol Building in Washington, D.C., the very thing Tom Cotton had advocated... One friend contacted my girlfriend of seven years, asking whether she would take a stand against “Adam’s role in promoting fascism.”... As painful as it was in my mid-20s to think that my journalistic career would end as a result of this episode, it’s even more painful to think that newsrooms haven’t learned the right lessons from it... It was clear to me then and it’s clear to me now that the fight over Cotton’s op-ed was never about safety, or the facts, or the editing, or even the argument, but control of the paper and who had it. In the end, all that mattered was that an example had been made."

Richard Hanania on X - "If you mention that you like Chick-fil-A at the NYT orientation for new employees, the HR representative scolds you and then everyone starts snapping their fingers."
Gabriel on X - "my first day at breitbart news the HR team ran an induction for new starters. it began with an icebreaker game — we grabbed a piece of ammunition out of a cowboy hat and had to answer a question. mine was a hollow point so i had to say my favourite sandwich. i considered katz’s pastrami on rye but it seemed a little (((lib))), so i said a hotdog from a cart. the HR woman said “a HALAL cart???” and everyone booed. one of the gay guys called me a “gay retard” and everyone laughed and started chanting “gay retard, gay retard”"
Proof that mainstream media is unbiased

New York Times Bosses Seek to Quash Rebellion in the Newsroom - WSJ - "The New York Times is investigating itself. Over the past several weeks, Charlotte Behrendt, a top Times editor in charge of probing workplace issues in the newsroom, has summoned close to 20 employees for interviews to determine whether staffers leaked confidential information related to Gaza war coverage to another media outlet. It is the latest internal crisis at the Times, where management has been at odds with factions of the newsroom over union negotiations and coverage of sensitive topics like the transgender community and social justice. Reporting about the Gaza war has been a particular flashpoint, especially over an in-depth article that found Hamas weaponized sexual violence in the Oct. 7 attacks on Israel. Some staffers questioned the reporting behind it and alleged that the suffering of Gazans isn’t getting the same attention. Times leaders in March said they stand by the reporting. The internal probe was meant to find out who leaked information related to a planned podcast episode about that article. But its intensity and scope suggests the Times’s leadership, after years of fights with its workforce over a variety of issues involving journalistic integrity, is sending a signal: Enough. “The idea that someone dips into that process in the middle, and finds something that they considered might be interesting or damaging to the story under way, and then provides that to people outside, felt to me and my colleagues like a breakdown in the sort of trust and collaboration that’s necessary in the editorial process,” Executive Editor Joe Kahn said in an interview. “I haven’t seen that happen before.”   The Times is the envy of much of the news-publishing world, with more than 10 million paying subscribers and a growing portfolio of products like cooking and games apps. But while its business hums along, the Times’s culture has been under strain... Newsroom leaders, concerned that some Times journalists are compromising their neutrality and applying ideological purity tests to coverage decisions, are seeking to draw a line... Kahn said he welcomes the normal push and pull of any newsroom—journalists challenging each other’s assumptions and debating whether coverage is fair. But he said opposition to the Hamas sexual-violence article, penned in late December by veteran correspondent Jeffrey Gettleman and two freelancers, crossed a line when confidential Times work-product was allegedly shared outside the newsroom... Stacy Cowley, a business reporter and Times union officer who sat in on a few interviews to represent staffers, said the Times is targeting employees who have been struggling to get the company to listen to their concerns about war-related coverage.  “Instead of taking them seriously, the company is turning around and bullying that group into silence,” she said. The union has filed a grievance alleging that the company was targeting a group of staffers of Arab and Middle Eastern descent. Times leaders said the allegations are false... NewsGuard, an organization that rates credibility of news sites, in February reduced the Times’s score from the maximum of 100 to 87.5, saying it doesn’t have a clear enough delineation between news and opinion... The current dynamics at the Times stretch back to 2020, when a seed of employee activism took root in the aftermath of George Floyd’s killing... Emboldened by their show of strength on Bennet, employees would flex their muscles again on multiple occasions, pushing to oust colleagues they felt had engaged in journalistic or workplace misconduct... some editors and reporters were growing concerned that some Times journalists were letting their personal views dictate which stories to pursue—or not pursue... One thing Powell noticed, he said, was that coverage that challenged popular political and cultural beliefs was being neglected... Management concerns about independence deepened in February of last year when some Times contributors and staff signed an open letter to the Times’s standards editor laying out complaints about transgender coverage... Kahn, who succeeded Baquet as executive editor in June 2022, and Opinion Editor Kathleen Kingsbury said in a letter to staff that they wouldn’t tolerate participation by Times journalists in protests or attacks on colleagues."
When terrorism supporters are upset their attempts to control the narrative aren't as successful as they want

Meme - Marc Bennetts @marcbennetts1: "Tucker Carlson has been in Moscow for the past three days, according to Russia's Mash outlet. He was spotted at the Bolshoi Theatre today."
Adam Kinzinger (Slava Ukraini) @AdamKinzinger: "He a traitor."
Glenn Greenwald @ggreenwald: "That a journalist -- or any American -- becomes a "traitor" by visiting a foreign country we're not at war with, and interviewing its leader, is, in equal parts, demented, stupid and authoritarian. But this McCarthyite jingoism is also fully normalized in liberal discourse."
A.J. Delgado @AJDelgado13: "And... Strangely, it was fine when Barbara Walters interviewed Fidel"
Glenn Greenwald @ggreenwald: "US politicians have always spoken with, and US journalists have interviewed, foreign leaders of all kinds, including the US's adversaries and Russian leaders. But liberal discourse is now a replica of the worst McCarthyite abuses and think it's treason"
Bill Kristol @BillKristol: "I didn't like Jane Fonda going to Hanoi in 1972, and I don't like Tucker Carlson going to Moscow in 2024. But I'm just an unsophisticated old-fashioned Scoop Jackson Democrat/John McCain Republican."
Glenn Greenwald @ggreenwald: "The US was at war with North Vietnam. The US is not at war with Russia, even though the neocons who now dominate and are beloved by the Dem Party wish it were. At least this warmongering maniac honestly describes himself as what he is: a Democrat."

Tucker Carlson claims he's interviewing Vladimir Putin because 'Americans are not informed' about the war in Ukraine - despite 'paying for it in ways they don't understand'
Trying to provide a different perspective and doing the job of a journalist makes you a traitor. Oddly, the left didn't get this excited over Osama bin Laden's letter being published by mainstream media outlets, or when CNN aired an interview with him after 911. Probably all this butthurt shows that in the modern US, the job of journalism is now to push regime propaganda

Strongarm Zed on X - "Remember when the news would try hard to get interviews with Soviet leaders? Or 15 years ago when journalists were having interviews with Iran's Ahmadinejad? Journalism used to be about all sides, and actual reporting, not just our own government talking points."

Scott Adams on X - "Are they worried he'll negotiate a peace deal?"
𝕏 𝕊𝕥𝕖𝕧𝕖 𝕏 on X - "The idea that a journalist shouldn't interview people is certainly a unique idea. There appears to be a significant risk of people understanding what is going on. I'm just sayin..."

Drew Holden on X - "And the media haven’t slowed down on pushing conspiracy theories. It was only a couple months ago that the media leapt, in unison, to claim Israel was responsible for an explosion at a hospital caused by an ally of Hamas."

Megan McArdle on X - "Becoming clear that an entire generation of younger progressives whose political character was formed during the Obama admin take the extra-gentle media treatment he got as the baseline to which any Dem president is entitled. Hence their indignation when we do our jobs."
JoeA64 on X - "It's not media criticism of Biden that's the problem. It's the obsession with "both-sides'ing" and continually downplaying Trump's outrages that's the problem."
Megan McArdle on X - "If you think that the mainstream media have failed to mention that Trump is a barbaric vulgarian with a penchant for fraud and a chronic case of verbal incontinence, I don’t know what to tell you except you should read more of our coverage."

How the cult of Vice came crashing down - "In recent years, Vice has become an object of much ridicule. This was a magazine that cut deals worth millions with the Saudi Arabian government, while simultaneously publishing woke guides on ‘How to shop for jeans as a nonbinary person’ and ‘How to deal with the “ally” in your friend group who’s actually a huge jerk’. Yet once upon a time, Vice was seen as the coolest media organisation on Earth. In London, in the mid 2010s, it was a cult that my entire social circle was desperate to join... To the uninitiated, the cult of Vice might seem as inexplicable as the ‘dancing plague’ of 1518 or the Tanganyika laughter epidemic, but it actually made a lot of sense. Because at the time, Vice was really the only major ‘alternative’ media platform out there for budding journalists and filmmakers to cut their teeth on... Vice was covering cannibal warlords in Liberia and sending reporters to see what it was like to do stand-up comedy on acid. It even had a dedicated drugs correspondent called Hamilton Morris! Vice’s genius strategy was to offer salaries way below industry standard to hungry young journalists and filmmakers. This meant that its offices were packed to the rafters with privileged kids who were happy to pass up a decent pay cheque in exchange for the infinitely more valuable social currency of working there... At its height, Vice was the most contrarian and unconventional publication out there. Much of this is owed to co-founder Gavin McInnes... Such was their cultural cachet that, for a period, Vice sales staff convinced the entire consumer-goods market that they had discovered a Rosetta Stone to translate corporate messaging into youthspeak. Naturally, they charged through the nose for this. Eventually – inevitably – the money took over. Investment flooded in from the likes of Rupert Murdoch’s 21st Century Fox, the Walt Disney Company and private-equity firm TPG Capital. Like many other online media platforms, Vice struggled to turn this into profit. The multiple #MeToo settlements it faced didn’t help either. Amid its financial struggles, it signed a deal with Mohamed Bin Salman’s regime to make films promoting Saudi Arabia. Meanwhile, editors repeatedly blocked stories that might offend the Saudi government. From that moment on, any pretence at edginess just felt like LARPing. No one is going to take the journalistic rigour of your ‘Guide to radical polyamory for Latinx long-Covid sufferers’ all that seriously when one of your biggest funders likes to chop up journalists and put them in suitcases. Perhaps it was this hypocrisy that ultimately turned Gavin McInnes into a right-wing extremist... In 2016, McInnes founded the Proud Boys, a group that describes themselves as ‘Western chauvinists’. When contrarianism runs so deep in your veins that you are ‘just shocking in nature’, the temptation to troll the media establishment must have been irresistible. After all, that is what Vice ultimately became – the very establishment that it once railed against. When the multi-billion dollar corporate machine has become so performatively ‘progressive’, where else is there for the ultimate antagonist to go, other than to become radically regressive?"

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