GOV/MIL Leftists Call For New "Secret Police" Force To Spy On Trump Supporters (AN ABSOLUTELY MUST-READ THREAD)

marsh

On TB every waking moment

WTH? Postal Service is Running a “Covert Operations Program” That Tracks and Collects Americans’ Social Media Posts

By Cristina Laila
Published April 21, 2021 at 5:38pm
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Why is the US government using the postal service to monitor what Americans post on social media?

The law enforcement arm of the US Postal Service is secretly monitoring and collecting Americans’ social media posts, according to documents obtained by Yahoo News.

The spying program is known as iCOP, or Internet Covert Operations Program and involves goons trolling through social media sites to look for “inflammatory” posts – and then sharing the information with other government agencies.

Last we checked, “inflammatory” language was covered by the First Amendment.

“iCOP analysts are currently monitoring these social media channels for any potential threats stemming from the scheduled protests and will disseminate intelligence updates as needed,” the bulletin says.

The bulletin mentioned the “Stop the Steal” rally and included screenshots from an alleged member of the Proud Boys, but iCOP conceded that none of the posts contained anything threatening.

The bulletin didn’t mention anything about Antifa or BLM terrorists.
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Post Office Redacted by Yahoo News

Yahoo reported:
“Analysts with the United States Postal Inspection Service (USPIS) Internet Covert Operations Program (iCOP) monitored significant activity regarding planned protests occurring internationally and domestically on March 20, 2021,” says the March 16 government bulletin, marked as “law enforcement sensitive” and distributed through the Department of Homeland Security’s fusion centers.
“Locations and times have been identified for these protests, which are being distributed online across multiple social media platforms, to include right-wing leaning Parler and Telegram accounts.”

When contacted by Yahoo News, civil liberties experts expressed alarm at the post office’s surveillance program. “It’s a mystery,” said University of Chicago law professor Geoffrey Stone, whom President Barack Obama appointed to review the National Security Agency’s bulk data collection in the wake of the Edward Snowden leaks. “I don’t understand why the government would go to the Postal Service for examining the internet for security issues.”
“This seems a little bizarre,” agreed Rachel Levinson-Waldman, deputy director of the Brennan Center for Justice’s liberty and national security program. “Based on the very minimal information that’s available online, it appears that [iCOP] is meant to root out misuse of the postal system by online actors, which doesn’t seem to encompass what’s going on here. It’s not at all clear why their mandate would include monitoring of social media that’s unrelated to use of the postal system.”
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment

BREAKING EXCLUSIVE: We Discovered Where the Post Office Likely Got Their List of Conservatives to Spy On

By Joe Hoft
Published April 21, 2021 at 7:49pm
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Today it was reported that the US Postal Inspection Service was spying on conservatives in America. We believe we discovered where they got their list of conservatives to spy on.


Today we found out that the US Postal Service is spying on Americans who just happen to be conservative.
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We noted that the law enforcement arm of the US Postal Service, the US Postal Inspection Service (USPIS), is secretly monitoring and collecting Americans’ social media posts, according to documents obtained by Yahoo News.

The spying program is known as iCOP, or Internet Covert Operations Program, and involves goons trolling through social media sites to look for “inflammatory” posts – and then sharing the information with other government agencies.
Last we checked, “inflammatory” language was covered by the First Amendment.

We also noted that the Post Office is spying on groups like the ‘Proud Boys’ but there was no mention of any liberal domestic terrorists like Black Lives Matter and Antifa in the information provided.

From the information we have, we can easily deduce that the USPIS is targeting and spying on conservatives and not radical violent, and destructive liberals.

But how would they identify Americans who are conservative? Those God and country-loving Americans who believe in freedom and don’t agree with communism, how could the USPIS build their list?


We believe that maybe the USPIS didn’t build a list of conservatives to spy on, they stole it.

Last year, only days before the Republican Convention, the Deep State Democrat lovers in the government, this time from the Postal Service, decided to arrest four American patriots. Their charges were they were building a wall on their own to help protect the country because the Democrats were blocking every effort by President Trump to build a wall on the border at that time. The USPIS accused these Americans of absconding donations for their own pleasure. At the time and still today these charges look targeted and timed to embarrass President Trump before the 2020 Republican Convention.

No doubt the Postal Service Deep State actors targeted Bannon for his ties with the President but why target war hero Kolfage? It didn’t make sense. What really was shocking was the way they arrested Kolfage.

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As we reported at that time, fifteen (15) members from the New York United States Postal Inspection Service (USPIS) showed up on Brian Kolfage’s doorstep to arrest him on August 20, 2020. It took 15 USPIS officers to arrest a triple amputee war hero in a wheelchair at home with his wife and two children!

They dragged him to a car and forced him to pull himself into it. They didn’t allow him to grab his prosthetic legs or provide a vehicle that would allow him to use his wheelchair. In the rain in front of his wife and two young children, Kolfage carried himself to the car and pulled himself into it.

The USPIS officers scoured his house and took information from his computers including the list of all the individuals (mostly conservative) who donated to the We Build the Wall project. This list included millions of conservatives.

Of course, the USPIS claims this was necessary for their case. But what are the odds that they took this list of conservative names and are now spying on those same individuals who gave to the We Build the Wall project? The prize of their BS case was the list. The actors were secondary.

All we have currently is circumstantial evidence this is the case – that the USPIS stole the names of conservative donors from Brian Kolfage to target and abuse and spy on. We do know the USPIS is spying and we do know they are targeting conservatives. This is a very, very big deal. It now appears the USPIS officials are the real criminals.
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment

BREAKING EXCLUSIVE: More on the Postal Service Spying on Americans – The USPIS Included “Lists of Donors and/or Potential Donors’ In Warrants to Arrest ‘We Build The Wall’ Leaders

By Joe Hoft
Published April 22, 2021 at 10:53am
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The US Postal Inspection Service (USPIS) intentionally included in their warrants to arrest the ‘We Build the Wall’ leaders, “lists of donors and/or potential donors” upon arrest.

We believe this data was likely used by the UPSIS recently to spy on conservatives.


We reported yesterday that the Inspection Arm of the US Postal Service has been spying on Americans per a report out at Yahoo.com:
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Then last night we reported that we believed we knew where the inventory of conservatives came from that the USPIS was spying on:

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Today we have additional evidence to support our theory that the USPIS is using the ‘We Build the Wall’ inventory of donors for their inventory of individuals to spy on.

First of all, in the warrant issued and used by the USPIS when they arrested the ‘We Build the Wall’ leaders, the USPIS specifically included, among other items, “lists of donors and/or potential donors“. We have reviewed the search warrant and can confirm this was included. This evidence is clear – that they were aware of the donor list and wanted to get their hands on it before their agents departed New York on their journey to Florida to arrest war hero Brian Kolfage.

When the 15 USPIS employees exited their vehicles to arrest Brian Kolfage, for example, they may have been more interested in the data he maintained on his computers than on the man they came to arrest. Also, when the warrant says “and/or other potential donors”, that likely includes all the data they could find. They took it all.

We reached out to Brian Kolfage and he shared this:
The SDNY/USPIS knew that I had one of the largest donor data lists in the nation. They were monitoring my emails and saw everything we discussed related to these lists. The data I have goes back 15+ years of every single conservative donor and even some Democrats. The data shows who they are, where they live, their email, occupation, how much they have given and how often. This was the holy grail for them to have so that they could target people with ease.
The Justice Department’s Southern District of New York (SDNY) and the USPIS knew what they were after when the 15 officers pulled up to Kolfage’s house last year. They knew what they were after when they arrested Steve Bannon and the others who on their own initiative built a portion of the Southern Border’s wall.

The question is, did they then use this information to spy on Americans?

Since our USPIS and the SDNY are involved, and the FBI cannot be trusted to perform an adequate investigation, will any politicians get their hands dirty and dig into this outrageous violation of good Americans’ rights?

(More on website)
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment

Rules for White People Posted at George Floyd Square in Minneapolis

By Kristinn Taylor
Published April 22, 2021 at 1:00pm

Activists controlling the autonomous zone at George Floyd Square at East 38th Street and Chicago Avenue in Minneapolis have posted notices at the entrance with instructions for visitors that include a section on rules for white people entering the “sacred space” where Floyd died while resisting arrest on May 25 last year. Officer Derek Chauvin was convicted on Tuesday in Floyd’s death on counts of unintentional second-degree murder, third-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter.

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The posted rules “For White people in particular”:
Decenter yourself and come to listen, learn, mourn, and witness. Remember you are here to support, not to be supported.
Be mindful of whether your volume, pace, and movements are supporting or undermining your efforts to decenter yourself.

Seek to contribute to the energy of the space, rather than drain it. Bring your own process to other white folks so that you will not harm BIPOC.
Consider if you want or need to take photos and post them. Do not take photos of people without their consent.

If you witness white folks doing problematic things, speak up with compassion to take the burden of off (sic) Black folks and our siblings of color whenever appropriate. Seek to engage rather than escalate, so that it can be a learning moment rather than a disruption.
Photos of the signs were posted by reporters including Matt Finn of Fox News (image seen above) and Jorge Ventura with the Daily Caller.

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Well, at least they used a capital W for White people (but only once).
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment

China Behind Another Cyber Attack in the US – Hacked Into US Computers and Networks Accessing Systems Remotely

By Joe Hoft
Published April 21, 2021 at 8:31pm
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The Communist Chinese regime is behind another hack attack on the US.
This time they are using a vehicle that many individuals and companies use to remotely connect to the Internet.


NBC reported today:
China is behind a newly discovered series of hacks against key targets in the U.S. government, private companies and the country’s critical infrastructure, cybersecurity firm Mandiant said Wednesday.

The hack works by breaking into Pulse Secure, a program that businesses often use to let workers remotely connect to their offices. The company announced Tuesday how users can check to see if they were affected but said the software update to prevent the risk to users won’t go out until May.
The campaign is the third distinct and severe cyberespionage operation against the U.S. made public in recent months, stressing an already strained cybersecurity workforce. The U.S. government accused Russia in January of hacking nine government agencies via SolarWinds, a Texas software company widely used by American businesses and government agencies. In March, Microsoft blamed China for starting a free-for-all where scores of different hackers broke into organizations around the world through the Microsoft Exchange email program.

This news doesn’t come as a shock because the Biden gang reported that their concerns are not with China or Antifa but rather with conservatives in the United States:
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The unfortunate thing is the Biden gang is not mentioning any ramifications for China-related to their release of COVID-19 (the China coronavirus) so this will probably also go without any ramifications from the Biden gang.

And, along with the fake news media, they will pretend like this never happened.
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment

Religious Leaders Hold Home Depot Hostage Unless Company Meets Demands Over Election Reform

THURSDAY, APR 22, 2021 - 02:40 PM
Authored by Karen Townsend via Hot Air (emphasis ours),

The largest company headquartered in Georgia, Home Depot, is being told that if it fails to publicly denounce the state’s voting law reform legislation, it will be boycotted. This isn’t coming from Black Lives Matter, per se. The corporation is being held hostage by religious leaders who demand specific talking points be delivered … or else.

(AP Photo/Chuck Burton, File)

Corporations, especially those headquartered in Georgia, have come out against the legislation signed by Governor Kemp. Republicans describe the bill as one that addresses election integrity while Democrats call it a voter suppression law – “Jim Crow 2.0”. Coca-Cola and Delta were among the first to make a point to virtue-signal after the governor signed the bill, only to be exposed as taking part in the process and giving input into the legislation. Both were fine with the law until the governor signed it and grievance activists did their thing. Coke soon discovered that not all of its consumers think that companies should be making policy – that ‘s the job of lawmakers- and now it is trying to clean up the mess it made for itself.

Churches have increasingly played a part in American politics and this is an escalation of that trend. Evangelical churches have shown support for conservative and Republican candidates while black churches get out the vote for Democrats. This threat of bringing a large-scale boycott over state legislation is a hostile action against the corporation. It’s political theatre. Groups like Black Voters Matter, the New Georgia Project Action Fund (Stacey Abrams), and the Georgia NAACP are pressuring companies to publicly voice their opposition and the religious leaders are doing the bidding of these politically active groups.

When SB 241 and HB 531 were working through the legislative process, the groups put pressure on Republican lawmakers and the governor to abandon the voting reform legislation. They also demanded that donations to any lawmakers supporting the legislation be stopped. The Georgia Chamber of Commerce tried to remain bipartisan while still voicing support for voting rights but then caved and expressed “concern and opposition” to some provisions. At the time, several large Georgia companies were targeted by activists, including Aflac, Coca-Cola, Delta Airlines, Home Depot, Southern Company and UPS.
The Georgia Chamber of Commerce previously reiterated the importance of voting rights without voicing opposition against any specific legislation. In a new statement to CNBC, the Georgia Chamber said it has “expressed concern and opposition to provisions found in both HB 531 and SB 241 that restrict or diminish voter access” and “continues to engage in a bipartisan manner with leaders of the General Assembly on bills that would impact voting rights in our state.”
Office Depot came out at the time and supported the Chamber’s statement. The Election Integrity Act of 2021, originally known as Georgia Senate Bill 202, is a Georgia law overhauling elections in the state that was signed into effect by the governor and we know what happened. Office Depot has not delivered for the activists as they demand so now the company faces boycott drama. The religious leaders are taking up where the activist groups left off.
African Methodist Episcopal Bishop Reginald Jackson said the company has remained “silent and indifferent” to his efforts to rally opposition to the new state law pushed by Republicans, as well as to similar efforts elsewhere.
We just don’t think we ought to let their indifference stand,” Jackson said.
The leader of all his denomination’s churches in Georgia, Jackson had a meeting last week with other Georgia-based executives to urge them to oppose the voting law, but said he’s had no contact with Home Depot, despite repeated efforts to reach the company.
Faith leaders at first were hesitant to jump into the boycott game. Now the political atmosphere has changed and they are being vocal. Jackson focused on pressuring Coca-Cola first. After that company went along to get along, before it realized its error, Jackson moved his focus onto other companies.
“We believe that corporations have a corporate responsibility to their customers, who are Black, white and brown, on the issue of voting,” Jackson said. “It doesn’t make any sense at all to keep giving dollars and buying products from people that do not support you.”
He said faith leaders may call for boycotts of other companies in the future.
So, here we are with Home Depot in the spotlight. There are four specific demands leveled at Home Depot in order to avoid further action from the activists.
Rev. Lee May, the lead pastor of Transforming Faith Church, said the coalition is “fluid in this boycott” but has four specifics requests of Home Depot: To speak out publicly and specifically against SB 202; to speak out against any other restrictive voting provisions under consideration in other states; to support federal legislation that expands voter access and “also restricts the ability to suppress the vote;” and to support any efforts, including investing in litigation, to stop SB 202 and other bills like it.

Home Depot, we’re calling on you. I’m speaking to you right now. … We’re ready to have a conversation with you. You haven’t been ready up to now, but our arms are wide open. We are people of faith. People of grace, and we’re ready to have this conversation, but we’re very clear those four things that we want to see accomplished,” May said.

The Rev. Timothy McDonald III, senior pastor of the First Iconium Baptist Church, warned this was just the beginning.
“It’s up to you whether or not, Home Depot, this boycott escalates to phase two, phase three, phase four,” McDonald said. “We’re not on your property — today. We’re not blocking your driveways — today. We’re not inside your store protesting — today. This is just phase one.”
That sounds a lot like incitement, doesn’t it? Governor Kemp is speaking out, he has had enough. He held a press conference to deliver his comments.
“First, the left came for baseball, and now they are coming for Georgia jobs,” Kemp said, referring to MLB’s decision to move this year’s All-Star Game from Atlanta over the new laws. “This boycott of Home Depot – one of Georgia’s largest employers – puts partisan politics ahead of people’s paychecks.”

“The Georgians hardest hit by this destructive decision are the hourly workers just trying to make ends meet during a global pandemic. I stand with Home Depot, and I stand with nearly 30,000 Georgians who work at the 90 Home Depot stores and 15 distribution centers across the Peach State. I will not apologize for supporting both Georgia jobs and election integrity,” he added.
“This insanity needs to stop. The people that are pushing this, that are profiting off of it, like Stacey Abrams and others, are now trying to have it both ways,” Kemp said. “There is a political agenda here, and it all leads back to Washington, D.C.”
The governor is right. The activists are in it to federalize elections, not to look out for Georgians, who will lose jobs over these partisan actions. The law signed by Kemp increases voting rights, it doesn’t limit them.
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment

Over 1 In 3 Americans Rejecting Coca-Cola After Georgia Voter Integrity Interference.

Over one third of Americans say they are less likely to drink Coca-Cola following the company’s interference in the debate surrounding voter integrity laws passed in the state of Georgia.

Rasmussen conducted the poll between April 15 and 18, 2021.

Respondents were asked several questions, including, “Is it a good idea or a bad idea for corporations to become involved in political controversies?”

Overall, 62 percent of respondents said that it was a “bad idea,” with only 20 percent saying it was a “good idea,” and 17 percent saying they were “Not sure.”

When asked if they had ever boycotted a company over “political issues,” 52 percent of those polled said “No,” while 41 percent replied “Yes.”

The third and last question on the survey asked: “After the Georgia legislature enacted a new election law requiring voter ID, Coca-Cola was one of the companies that publicly condemned the law. Does that make you more or less likely to purchase Coca-Cola products?”

Over a third of the respondents – 37 percent – said that they were “Less likely” to purchase Coca-Cola products due to the company’s interference.

A fourth – 25 percent – said that they were “More likely” to purchase Coca-Cola, while 30 percent said it “does not make much difference” and eight percent were unsure.
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment

Senate Democrats Vote to Allow Asian Racial Discrimination in Higher Education
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WASHINGTON, DC - JANUARY 27: U.S. Minority Leader Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-NY) speaks to members of the media during a break of the Senate impeachment trial against President Donald Trump at the U.S. Capitol January 27, 2020 in Washington, DC. The defense team will continue its arguments on day six …
Alex Wong/Getty Images
WENDELL HUSEBO22 Apr 202128

Senate Democrats have voted down an amendment to forbid Asian racial discrimination in higher education by a vote of 49-48.

The amendment, proposed by Sens. Ted Cruz (R-TX) and John Kennedy (R-LA), did not meet the needed 60 vote yea threshold to pass.

The amendment states:

Notwithstanding any other provision of law, no institution of higher education (as defined in section 102 of the Higher Education Act of 1965 (20 U.S.C. 1002)) may receive any Federal funding if the institution has a policy in place or engages in a practice that discriminates against Asian Americans in recruitment, applicant review, or admissions.

Kennedy said of the amendment’s failure, “In an unbelievably cynical move, Senate Democrats blocked efforts to stop discrimination against Asian Americans in higher education, where racial bias has become all too common.”

“This amendment would bar funds from institutions that discriminate against Asian American students,” Kennedy continued.

“Despite their calls to end racism, it is clear Democrats are only paying lip service to fighting discrimination against Asian Americans and will allow targeted discrimination against them to continue at America’s universities and colleges,” the Louisiana senator concluded.

The amendment was proposed to the Senate anti-Asian hate crimes bill, which passed the Senate by a vote of 99-1 with Sen. Josh Hawley (R-MO) voting no. The legislation will now go to President Joe Biden’s desk to sign.

Cruz said of the bill on April 16, it “is not designed to do anything to prevent or punish actual crimes.”

According to Axios, The bill will train law enforcement to better identify anti-Asian racism and appoint an official in the Justice Department to review and expedite COVID-19-related hate crime reports, among other measures.”
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment

An exclusive report from inside the military's "extremism stand down"
Insurrectile Dysfunction

Domestic extremists are literally everywhere. Just look in the mirror! Like the body snatchers, they may look normal. They may be polite, pay their taxes, and wear pants in public. But that’s because these millions of bad people are hiding in plain sight. Just like Osama was, until they “discovered” him, living next to a military base.

In 2021, we learned that our terrorists live ON military bases.

After the January 6th fraternity panty raid at the Capitol, the biggest micro-aggression in history, the Department of Defense was so triggered that it held a nationwide “extremism stand down” this spring.

Yeah, you heard me—a panty raid. We’re just lucky no one encountered Nancy Pelosi’s actual panties, people could have been seriously traumatized.

It was all fun and games until a (black) Capitol Keystone Cop killed an unarmed (white) protester. (When you’re on Pelosi’s payroll, they let you do it.)

China is about to invade Taiwan, a Russian invasion of Ukraine is imminent, millions are preparing to flood the southern border, child traffickers are running wild, teenagers are being targeted and driven insane by genderterrorists, and violent BLM anarchists are reducing cities and Foot Lockers to ashes. But forget all that!

Instead, our Department of Indefensible is using its full force to confront the “gravest danger” facing our nation:

Our own soldiers.

I warned you to get out before Biden won.

Inside the Military’s Extremism Standdown

Deep within that massive cement polygon riddled with Trump haters, Raytheon shareholders, Mullah suckups, and pathetic American apologists of every creed, the brass knuckleheads in charge decided to force everyone below them to undergo a full day of re-education this month.

Lucky for me, I had a man on the inside. My source, an officer and a real gentleman, originally joined for the usual reasons. Same reasons some of you joined: patriotic, wanted to serve his country, felt inspired.

The last few years under Obama, things went sideways. In 2016, his superior officer told him that when he got out of the service he wanted to start a fertility clinic, one “that won’t do white babies. I want to breed out white people because they cause all the trouble. I won’t let two white parents have an all-white baby.”

This was said on a base by someone in uniform. Other people who heard just nodded and smiled awkwardly.

During the stand down, my source and the rest of his division were shown a PowerPoint presentation that included a list of extremist “Risk Factors.”

Here is the list, exactly as it appeared in the presentation:

Risk Factors:
  1. Formed by an ideology.
  2. Failure to affiliate with other groups.
  3. Dependencies on the virtual community.
  4. Thwarting of occupations or educational goals.
  5. Failure of sexually intimate pair-bonding.
  6. Changes in thinking and emotions.
  7. Mental disorder.
  8. Creativity and innovation.
  9. History of violence and criminality.

Tag yourself. Are you creative and innovative? Yikes! Were you formed by an ideology, like American exceptionalism or Christianity? Uh oh! (Do ideologies like BLM or Marxism or Antifa count?) Are you dependent on “the virtual community”? I feel seen!

In fact, there are probably millions of people wondering: am I an extremist? A domestic terrorist, perhaps?

Let’s face it: if you’re reading this, you probably are.

Don’t believe me? Check to see if you fit the 2021 profile for domestic extremism by answering these simple questions:
  • Do you stand for the national anthem, even though you know you should kneel?
  • Without evidence, do you falsely insist there are only two genders?
  • Do you wrongly think pregnant women should not serve in combat?
  • Do you insist that not all cops are bastards, or do you even secretly think there should be more police?
  • Do you feel shame and discomfort when judging someone solely by the color of their skin?
  • Did you think Hamilton sucked?*
If you answered YES to these questions before 2020, you were a normal healthy American.

If you answered YES to these questions today, well, I hope you like prison food!

During the all-day stand down, my source reported that the moderator kept saying “this is not based on one event, like the attack on the Capitol” over and over. Except they never once brought up any other “attacks” by “domestic terrorists.” They couldn’t come up with a single other recent example.

Before the small group discussions, they were shown a slide that reassured them that “nothing said here can be reported.” But then someone higher up, described as a “double-masker,” blurted out the truth. “Part of the process of these small group discussions is to see if anyone says anything crazy.”

To help you know exactly who to rat out, they offered some hilarious hypothetical scenarios. One scenario featured “a guy who reads white supremacist websites, owns guns, researches how to make bombs, takes steroids, has a kill list, and takes firearm training.” I think we can safely say that this hypothetical man may be an extremist, sure, but he’s definitely not an incel. With hobbies like that, he’s probably up to his elbows in hypothetical sexually intimate pair-bonding.

War on Terror 2: This Joke’s On You.

Imagine going to work surrounded not by allies and compatriots, but by enemies looking for people just like you to destroy. All—one hundred percent—of my pal’s higher-ups are outspoken liberals. Imagine knowing that as you toil in service for your country, a stray word or inadvertent “like” on a Facebook post could send you straight to a court-martial.

My friend owns a gun or two, didn’t vote for the current commander-in-chief, and thinks there are just two genders. What happens if the DoD’s network of informants finds out?

“It’s absurd,” my source told me. “It’s offensive. We are good people who took an oath to serve our country and we’re being subjected to this nonsense. Am I the suspect here, because I’m the white male?”

I hate to break it to you, but yes, you are. My friend tells me his current service obligation is over in a few months, and he plans to get out and not look back.

In other words, the extremist stand down is working. It is working perfectly. It is driving competent, patriotic men out of the armed forces right when we need them the most. This is by design.

Ask yourself: why would the Democrats want to purge the military of, let’s face it, the sons and daughters of Deplorables in favor of a weaker, more obedient army of enthusiastic informers who can’t wait to exceed their quota of captured “extremists”?

Ask yourself this question as you lie in bed at night, and prepare accordingly.

*(Admission: I never saw Hamilton, or ever heard a single note, but it still quite obviously sucks.)
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment

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'Megaphones for the Far Left': Growing Number of Conservatives Ditch Mainstream Media Platforms

04-21-2021


Video on website 4:52 min

We may no longer see Donald Trump in front of cameras or feel the impact of his late-night tweets, but his infamous label of 'fake news' lives on as much as ever before.
"This is a news media that will look you in the face and say that they are a news media but they're nothing of the sort any longer," says Brent Bozell, founder of the Media Research Center. "They are unquestionably the megaphones for the far left in America today."

When Trump departed, he left a gift of inflated exposure and better ratings to several conservative media outlets including Newsmax and One America News. Meanwhile, Fox News only got lumps of coal from the outgoing president saying that at times they've become 'fake news,' too.
While Fox remains the major conservative voice, things have changed since the events of January 6, especially when it comes to staying away from so-called flame-throwers like U.S. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene. CBN News asked her what her experience has been with Fox News post-January 6.
Well, if you notice, I'm one of the most conservative members of Congress and I'm never invited to be on Fox News," Greene said. "Everyone knows that Fox News changed drastically after the election. Republicans all over the country constantly talk about how Fox has changed, and they don't see it the same as they used to."

The congresswoman from Georgia seems to be part of a growing distrust of the media. A recent poll shows that of those who voted for President Trump, 92% of them see the media today as just a part of the Democrat Party. Another poll shows since January 6, that feeling among Republicans has increased even more, up roughly seven percent.
Washington Post Media Reporter Paul Farhi says the Trump faithful have totally tuned out the mainstream media over issues such as coverage of election integrity issues during the 2020 election. "In some ways, it's hard to argue with the faithful and the beliefs of the faithful," Farhi says. "The facts don't seem to really matter and the evidence doesn't seem to matter…and here's why they're not covering; it's difficult to cover something that is not there."

So where do 'Trump Conservatives' go? Some are looking to alternative outlets, which have refused to back away from charges about a rigged election. At first, social media served to get around the mainstream influence, although with Twitter and Facebook leading the censorship charge, it's becoming trickier. Options to fully speak out have become limited.
"Obviously Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, there are a lot of social media outlets that have proven to suppress the voices of conservatives," says Lara Trump, former senior advisor to the 2020 Trump Campaign.
"I think we have all felt, well, gosh, wouldn't it be nice if there was a platform available that would allow us to say what we want? Oh my gosh, the First Amendment! Imagine that! Our freedom of speech not being stifled," she said.

That could change very soon as the former president, among others, prepares to take on social media by launching his own version.

"He wants a space where everyone can feel welcomed, where people don't feel like the fact-checkers are going to be all over them even though these things are factual oftentimes." Lara Trump says. "So I think it'll be really exciting to see sort of this next phase for my father-in-law."

The next phase will be fought primarily online as a battle against big tech censorship.

"There's a lot of fear out there," says Fox Nation host Tomi Lahren. "If we can't talk to each other, and we can't express our opinions, how are we ever going to mount a great challenge for the midterms or take back the White House? It's a very helpless feeling."

Lahren and other conservatives say the key will be multi-tasking: staying engaged on Twitter and other platforms despite big tech's roving eye, while also looking for new viable conservative alternatives in this new media landscape.

"A lot of folks I know are boycotting Twitter, they don't want to be on it and that's understandable," Lahren says. "But for me, I'm not going to give up an inch of a place that I still have a voice so I'm going to keep talking for as long as I can until they de-platform me. The same thing goes with Facebook and Instagram…unfortunately, it's kind of the best option we have right now, to just keep it up for as long as we can until we no longer have a voice on those platforms. And then we're going to have to get creative."

That is a reality millions of conservatives and voters live in today.

 

marsh

On TB every waking moment

Concerned Texas Parents Slam School For Divisive Materials And Forced Masked Photo-Ops

By The Scoop
Published April 22, 2021 at 2:27pm
1200-X-675-MISC-THUMBNAIL-72.jpg


View: https://youtu.be/B5jmu-qxEgU
5:52 min

Concerned Texas parents slammed their school in a board meeting on Tuesday, over its divisive learning materials and how their child was forced to wear a mask that wasn’t theirs, for a photo-op!

The videos were posted to Facebook taking place at Rockwall Independent School District in Texas and one veteran father wanted to address the issues with teaching the ‘Lucy Calkins’ curriculum, which is being used to teach children in grades K-6.

The veteran father, William Marcus Chinn, read a quote from a book being taught in school and called out how he is not inferior to anyone.

“There was a book about Wilma Rudolph and let pull it up for you right quick. It says, and I quote, ‘Wilma also noticed how hard her own mother worked as a maid and a cook. There’s nothing- there’s something not right about this Wilma thought. White folks got all the luxury and we black folks got all the dirty work.

Wilma became determined to do something other than serve white people.” Mr. Chinn quoted.

Let me tell you something. I don’t believe, I don’t subscribe to white supremacy, because if I subscribe to white supremacy, that means I have to subscribe to black inferiority. And I am a four-time Iraqi freedom veteran. I am not inferior to anyone, period. And I’ll be damned if I teach my children that they are inferior to anyone,” he continued.

“You get out of this world what you put into it, and there’s no magical man pulling strings, holding my fate or my kids fate who are half black fate in their hands. Because of whatever agenda, this isn’t a this isn’t a black or white issue.

Conservative, liberal. This isn’t right. Why would we put in our kids heads that they can’t do something or they are at a disadvantage just because of the way they were born? It makes no sense. And so I beg of you, please look into the Lucy Calkins curriculum,” the veteran concluded.

Chinn’s wife Codi also stood up to speak at the board meeting to share how her daughter was forced to wear a mask for a safari hunt even though she did not bring a mask herself to school.

“Why was my daughter forced to wear a mask that was not even hers on a safari hunt day? Why? That doesn’t make sense. The only thing that does make sense is that that particular day y’all had or not y’all I don’t know whose job it is to know these things or to make these decisions. Someone had photographers there because they were going to post pictures of my kid and everybody else’s doing this safari hunt for the school website,” the mother asked.

So for a photo op, my daughter had to wear a mask that I was told she would not have to wear. I have had different members, candidates that are running for school board pull me to the side and want to know why masks are important to me. Why will I not vote a certain way simply because of a mask? Because there’s so many issues. And they’re right. There are so many issues. But I didn’t get up here over those issues. I didn’t go march and walk door to door, knocking on doors, putting up flyers and posters. I did not go advocate for candidates for anything other than these masks because it is about our freedom, it is about our right as parents to decide what it is that our children are doing in school,” the mother continued.

And I am my child’s advocate, but who’s my advocate? That’s supposed to be [the school board], but it can’t be y’all because one, two, three, I saw at the candidate forum with no masks on in a room full of three hundred. Yeah. You will go and sit on this board and tell my baby that she has to wear a mask at 5 for a safari hunt? I’m not going to call those names out, but you know who you are that we’re parading around in that room with no plexiglass, no social distancing and not a one with masks. And some of you did have masks, but your kids didn’t. So it’s OK for you to decide if it’s okay for your child, but it’s not OK for me.

That’s not OK with any of us. And I may not be able to force you into representing me or any of the other people in Rockwall ISD. But today I practice my constitutional right to have my voice heard at the polls. I’ll tell you what my vote was for both to put members on the board that are going to outnumber those of you that are forcing us to do this for our children. And it’s also to replace the one member on the board that’s running for reelection that also voted to keep the masks. Remove the masks. We don’t want them. We don’t need them. And our kids are suffering,” Chinn concluded.
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment

Beware of Dems' Proposed Domestic Terrorism Law
Betsy McCaughey
Betsy McCaughey

|Posted: Apr 21, 2021 10:01 AM

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.

Beware of Dems' Proposed Domestic Terrorism Law

Source: AP Photo/Susan Walsh

Top congressional Democrats including Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer are pushing new laws to stamp out "domestic terrorism." But they're targeting only right-wing organizations. If rioters are looting and setting fires for a leftist cause, that's OK.

President Joe Biden's newly appointed attorney general, Merrick Garland, labels the Jan. 6 U.S. Capitol invasion as "domestic terror," but refuses to apply the same term to the left-wing rioters who attacked the Portland federal courthouse last summer.

The Democrats' efforts to label only right-leaning groups as domestic terrorists is un-American. The First Amendment guarantees that we can join any political group we like, as long as we don't commit a crime.

If protesters attack a courthouse, assault cops or loot stores, there are enough laws on the books to punish them. And offenders should get the same treatment, whether they identify with antifa or the Proud Boys.

Tell that to Schumer. He introduced a Senate resolution calling on the FBI and intelligence community to examine the leadership and membership of right-wing groups and "prioritize the investigation and prosecution of such groups."

Schumer's proposal is dangerous. Belonging to an ideological group -- far left or far right -- isn't a crime in the U.S. You can be a Nazi, a Marxist, a member of the Proud Boys or any other despicable movement. The FBI's job is to investigate violent crimes, not ideology. It doesn't designate certain groups as domestic terrorists, though Schumer's resolution is suggesting they do that.

Schumer also promises to fast-track the proposed Domestic Terrorism Prevention Act of 2021, a bill that calls for law enforcement "monitoring" of right-wing groups. You could become a target by interacting with such a group, even if you don't commit a crime.

The same bill would stiffen penalties for lawbreakers motivated by political beliefs the authorities don't approve of. Picture jails filled with right-wing protesters serving long sentences when Democrats are in power and vice-versa. Welcome to Putin-ville.

In the past, the U.S. has dealt effectively with extremist violence. In the 1970s, lefties from the Animal Liberation Front attacked animal testing facilities. The Symbionese Liberation Army committed murders and robbed banks. The individuals who committed the crimes were punished, but the federal government didn't designate the groups as terrorists or criminalize belonging to them.

Now, Democrats claim a right-wing threat justifies drastic action. The Washington Post says "domestic terrorism incidents have soared to new highs in the United States, driven chiefly by white supremacist, anti-Muslim and anti-government extremists on the far right."

That's untrue. The Washington Post cites a report from the highly woke Center for Strategic and International Studies, which recorded 73 "far-right" violent incidents with two resulting deaths in 2020, compared with 25 leftist incidents with one resulting death. The numbers are minuscule, and the comparison between left and right incidents is meaningless because CSIS didn't count many of the violent events during last year's nationwide unrest after George Floyd's death.

During that riots, as many as 700 law enforcement officials were injured and property damage reached $2 billion. That shows leftist protesters, often acting with impunity, are a major threat.

Tell that to Garland.

In May 2020, as rioters were attacking public buildings in Portland and Minneapolis, Garland's predecessor, William Barr, deplored the attacks as "domestic terrorism" and named left-wing groups such as antifa.

But in a Senate hearing this February, Garland refused to call burning the Portland courthouse domestic terrorism. People are more likely to call something terrorism when they disagree with the ideology of the perpetrators.

Therein lies the danger. Even the ACLU and some Democratic lawmakers oppose a domestic terrorism law.

It's not needed to keep the peace. What's needed is a clear message that if protesters resort to looting, assaulting police or destroying public buildings, then they'll be punished, no matter how just their cause.

That's the opposite of California Democratic Rep. Maxine Waters' message to Minneapolis protesters early Sunday, when she urged them to be "more confrontational." Yet, in Congress, she's exhorting federal investigators to shut down right-wing protesters.

Waters' hypocrisy shows how dangerous a domestic terrorism law would be.
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment

Biden administration presses ahead with critical race theory that some see as 'racist'

"Montana will not stand for anti-American indoctrination that turns our schools into training grounds for fringe political activism and violence," said a spokesperson for Montana Attorney General Austin Knudsen.

By Greg Piper
Updated: April 23, 2021 - 10:30am

The Biden administration's proposal to fund education programs informed by critical race theory (CRT) likely violates civil rights laws and federalism principles, according to an academic group.

The right-leaning National Association of Scholars (NAS) isn't just critical of the wisdom of the proposed rule, which would prioritize federal funding for history and civics programs that "incorporate culturally and linguistically responsive learning environments."

It's calling on state attorneys general to go to court to block the Department of Education proposal, which is accepting public comments through May 19.

The proposal favorably mentions Boston University professor Ibram Kendi, the foremost popularizer of "anti-racism," and the New York Times' 1619 Project, which is also a school curriculum offered through the Pulitzer Center.

NAS policy director Teresa Manning, a former law professor who unsuccessfully sued her university for viewpoint discrimination, predicted that AGs from West Virginia, Arkansas, Indiana, Mississippi, Montana and Texas would get involved.

These six Republicans fired a shot across the bow of the Biden administration in its first week, triggered by the president's unprecedented flood of executive orders. They promised to challenge unconstitutional laws, overbroad agency actions and violations of the Administrative Procedure Act.

Montana Attorney General Austin Knudsen "is looking closely at how the Biden administration's proposed rule could create a race-based 'hostile environment' in Montana schools in violation of state and federal law," a spokesperson told Just the News.

He is "concerned about its basis in Critical Race Theory — a racist ideology that directly contradicts the founding principles of our nation," the statement continued. "Montana will not stand for anti-American indoctrination that turns our schools into training grounds for fringe political activism and violence."

A spokesperson for Indiana Attorney General Todd Rokita said their office was "evaluating the proposed priorities and their implications" but hadn't committed to intervening.

A statement from Arkansas Attorney General Leslie Rutledge's office said she is "a leader in pushing back against the Biden Administration's federal overreach and will continue to monitor unconstitutional actions made by the Administration." Other AGs didn't respond to queries.

Even though the "proposed priorities" just set conditions for a grant program, "states cannot afford to simply ignore" the creation of a de facto "industry standard" for civics and history education, Manning told Just the News.

"On the contrary, they need to treat this cancer before it metastasizes!" she wrote in an email. Her group launched a Civics Alliance last month with civil rights veteran Bob Woodson, Brown University economist Glenn Loury and others.

Other critics are calling on state legislatures to push back. Stanley Kurtz, senior fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center, wrote model legislation backed by NAS that would ban what he calls "action civics" and CRT training for K-12 teachers.

It is "urgently necessary" for states to approve bans in K-12 curricula as well, he wrote in National Review. Otherwise "it will be almost impossible to resist the carrots and sticks soon to be deployed" by the administration.

Like Race to the Top, 'few red-state politicians will have the guts' to reject federal money

The federal proposal justifies the new funding priority based on the COVID-19 pandemic, which had a "disproportionate impact on communities of color," as well as "the ongoing national reckoning with systemic racism."

The teaching and learning of history should include "the consequences of slavery, and the significant contributions of Black Americans to our society," as reflected in the 1619 Project and Smithsonian's National Museum of African American History and Culture.

It's good that schools nationwide are "working to incorporate anti-racist practices into teaching and learning," such as those advocated by Kendi. The proposal quotes his claim that "racist policies are the cause of racial inequities."

Applicants for grant money must show how their projects consider "systemic marginalization, biases, inequities, and discriminatory policy and practice in American history" and incorporate "racially, ethnically, culturally, and linguistically diverse perspectives." Conspicuously, political diversity is left out.

Education Week said the grant program was given only $5.3 million this fiscal year. But Kurtz argued in National Review that the proposed priorities would influence the bipartisan Civics Secures Democracy Act, introduced last month, which would authorize $1 billion over six years for civics education grants.

He compared it to the Obama administration's Race to the Top program, which incentivized "nearly every state" to adopt "abysmal" Common Core standards. "Few red-state politicians will have the guts to stand up" to the media for rejecting federal money for civics and history.

Manning's analysis for NAS said the priorities "would cement radically racist instruction into the nation's schools" that is likely to create a "hostile environment" by race under Title VI. "NAS plans to encourage state attorneys general and other high-level legal officials to challenge" the grants for promoting "state sponsored discrimination."

The six AGs who signed the Jan. 27 warning letter to President Biden are "especially vigilant" about his actions of "questionable legality," she told Just the News. The proposed priorities also "may encroach on standards set by the states," providing more opportunities for legal challenges.

Not applying for the grants is not enough, Manning argued, because states that opt out will be hemmed in by a "brick wall" of new education standards.

"No one in an industry can simply ignore something that might become the industry standard because everyone is expected, eventually, to meet the industry standard" — in this case, heavily influenced by federal money, she said.

Voters don't want progressive activism in the classroom
Multiple critics compared the proposed priorities to a new Illinois rule that mandates "culturally responsive teaching and leading standards for all Illinois educators," an early draft of which required teachers to promote "progressive viewpoints and perspectives."

The right-leaning American Council of Trustees and Alumni (ACTA) commissioned a survey that found Illinoisans reject "progressive political activism" in the classroom by more than two to one, including nearly 50% of self-identified Democrats.

The federal proposal is marked by a "deafening silence about such matters as the Founding documents, the Emancipation Proclamation, the World Wars, the Civil Rights Movement," ACTA President Michael Poliakoff wrote in an email.

"Instead, we get a homage" to Kendi and the 1619 Project, "whose tendentious rewriting of American history drew the scathing critique of a broadly nonpartisan group of the nation's leading historians," he wrote. Poliakoff criticized the branding of the proposal as "culturally responsive teaching standards," when it would actually teach students to "view everything through the lens of racial oppression" and worsen societal divisions.

"ACTA is unsure of the legal basis to challenge this rule," he answered when asked about NAS's theories. "But we are certain it is an unseemly intrusion of a particular ideology into public education."

A spokesperson for Woodson, the civil rights veteran and 1776 Unites founder, simply told Just the News that he "opposes government funding for CRT in schools."

Murray Bessette, vice president of education for the Common Sense Society, called the proposed priorities "a kind of antiwisdom" that will accomplish the inverse of their intentions.

"We need to teach American history in all its complexity as a precondition of learning from the mistakes of the past and of doing better," said Bessette, until recently the head of academic programs for the Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation. America is the "successful overcoming" of past injustices by heroes from Abraham Lincoln to John Lewis, "who built the most successful multiethnic country in the history of the world."
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment

Newt Gingrich accuses Biden, Harris of parroting Chinese propaganda on race in America
'The American president and vice president are doing as much damage to the U.S. as any propaganda campaign I can remember,' former House speaker says.

By John Solomon
Updated: April 23, 2021 - 1:06pm

Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich is accusing President Biden and Vice President Harris of conducting a "propaganda campaign" that parrots the same messages about systemic racism in America that Communist China has delivered.

In an interview with Just the News, Gingrich said the messages Biden and Harris gave after the Derek Chauvin trial verdict matched those offered by Chinese diplomats at a contentious meeting in Anchorage, Alaska, with U.S. officials last month.

It was a missed chance, Gingrich said, for Biden to celebrate a jury verdict that showed the American judicial system worked in convicting Chauvin in the death of George Floyd.

"I thought it was an amazing moment; he could have come out, he could have said, the system works," Gingrich said in an interview broadcast Thursday on the John Solomon Reports podcast. "A jury met of 12 good Americans, and they reached what they thought was the right decision. And that is such a strong contrast with Russia, or China or Iran or Venezuela."

"Instead, he and Vice President Harris came out and basically made the day for the Chinese communists, who basically had given the same speech in Anchorage to the American secretary of state," he added. "It was astonishing when you understate the clips from Harris and Biden, run them all around the world. And you don't have to worry about the Chinese propagandists, the American president and vice president are doing as much damage to the U.S. as any propaganda campaign I can remember."

Gingrich said the Biden administration's argument that America suffers from systemic racism that affects its reputation across the world is undercut by the very crisis it is facing at the southern border, where migrants from all over the world are fighting to get into the United States.

"Somehow we're supposed to be told that this is really something that we should be ashamed of," he said. "The other point I would just make is if there's so much systemic racism, how come so many people want to come to America from all around the world? I don't think the average person in El Salvador says, 'You know, I don't think I better go to America because after all, they have all that systemic racism.' I think they think we're nuts."

The former speaker said he believes the Democrats' incessant criticism of the United States and the behavior of the news media is insulting the patriotic instincts of most Americans and can become a powerful issue for Republicans in the 2022 elections.

"They're too deeply committed to a sort of woke version of life," he said of the mainstream news media. "And the very people they have hired are so I think out of touch with reality. ... In the long run, I actually do believe facts matter. And I do believe that the average American, despite every effort of the left to brainwash us, the average American continues to move in the right direction and continues to look at all this stuff, measure it and then figure out themselves what exactly we should be doing. So I'm an optimist. I think in the long run, all of the liberal lies will fail. And in the long run it is the truth that will, in fact, set us free."
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment

Ben Domenech: The Left Doesn’t Understand How Justice Works

APRIL 23, 2021 By Jordan Davidson
Federalist Publisher Ben Domenech said the left doesn’t understand how true justice works.

“Most adults know what [justice] was, and you don’t have to be a judge, a prosecutor, a defense attorney, or police officer to have had to deal it out,” Domenech said while hosting Fox News Primetime on Thursday night. “Anyone who has been a parent has had to dispense with childish ideas of what’s fair and parse between aggrieved parties, work through ideas of right and wrong, make a call on what ought to happen for those who are wronged and often to those who did wrong.”

Justice, Domenech said, is difficult to prioritize when “you or someone you love has been hurt, has been taken, has been wronged,” but reacting poorly is not fair or just. And while philosophers and even poet Seamus Heaney seem to have a good idea of what justice means, Domenech said politicians such as President Joe Biden “give no evidence of understanding the words” solidified throughout history.

“Justice is as old as the ideas that built our society,” Domenech said. “From the Garden of Eden on, God distributed justice and he gave laws by which to live.

Christianity, Judaism, and Islam all trace their understanding of justice back through Abraham. We understand it here in the West as the idea that man has rights: The things that we own, the life that we have, and that we ought to be protected from crime, being hurt or killed, and the decision must be blind because it must not matter if you are poor, rich, young, old, weak, or powerful, a society that is just protects your rights.”

Video Player
FOX video on website 3:50 min

George Floyd’s death, Domenech said, deserved justice, but for some, justice doesn’t seem to be enough.

“We look at a knee on the back of George Floyd, and we feel something is wrong. We want justice for the victim, the families, and yes, for the officer, for all parties,” Domenech explained. “Civilized people like you know that no matter how angry we are, burning down small stores and restaurants, looting and stealing, assaulting random policemen, attacking motorists and children, shooting down elderly men, we know that is not justice. But there are people who embrace all of these things.”

View: https://twitter.com/i/status/1385387171213758465
2:01 min

The reaction from rioters every time there is an injustice, Domenech said, results in “an incredible amount of terrible wrongdoing.”

“On display is how Western justice works and would have been, regardless of the decision the jurors had come to,” he said. “A wrongdoing was identified; the party was held accountable. No amount of money or penance or apologies from that person could undo that wrong, but a jury verdict and a jail sentence are the best justice our flawed human nature allows. Only God can raise the dead.”

Demanding more than justice, Domenech said, goes against every definition of it.
“This is not justice, we heard, because it does not restore George Floyd to us. This might sound strange. The end of this might not be happy because a death still happened, but it is justice as we all understood until recently, as we as a society understand it,” Domenech said. “Unless we collectively prevent all human mistakes and tragedies going forward, we don’t get to call any attempt at restoration justice.”
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment
[COMMENT: Equity is equal outcomes - the drift to mediocrity (vs meritocracy) and the celebration of the death of competition and the rise of the lowest common denominator.]


Virginia Department Of Education Eliminating Accelerated Math Courses In The Name Of Equity
Germany Debates Reopening Schools

(Photo by Alex Grimm/Getty Images)

ASHLEY CARNAHANCONTRIBUTOR
April 22, 20219:30 PM ET

The Virginia Department of Education (VDOE) is seeking to eliminate accelerated math courses prior to 11th grade in the name of equity, according to Fox News.

Loudoun County school board member Ian Serotkin announced Tuesday that the Virginia Mathematics Pathways Initiative (VMPI), which seeks to “revamp the K-12 math curriculum statewide over the next few years,” is looking to “eliminate ALL math acceleration prior to 11th grade.”

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“That is not an exaggeration, nor does there appear to be any discretion in how local districts implement this. All 6th graders will take Foundational Concepts 6. All 7th graders will take Foundational Concepts 7. All 10th graders will take Essential Concepts 10. Only in 11th and 12th grade is there any opportunity for choice in higher math courses,” Loudin wrote.

The VDOE website states several new goals for the initiative, including to “mprove equity in mathematics learning opportunities,” “[e]mpower students to be active participants in a quantitative world,” according to Fox News.

A Loudon parent told Fox News on Thursday the changes to accelerated learning would “lower standards for all students in the name of equity.”

“These changes will have a profound impact on students who excel in STEM-related curriculum, weakening our country’s ability to compete in a global marketplace for years to come,” the parent said.

VDOE spokesperson Charles Pyle told Fox News the VMPI would “support increased differentiated learning opportunities within a heterogeneous learning environment.”

Pyle did not reply with an immediate answer about concerns that students would potentially be held back if the new VMPI model was implemented, Fox News reported.
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment

Defending Our Common Anglo-Saxon Political Traditions
The two main components of an America First immigration policy are economic contribution and cultural compatibility. And there’s nothing racist about saying so.

By Albert Turkington
Albert-Turkington-copy-160x160.jpg

April 22, 2021

In February, I wrote the bulk of an early draft of a policy document meant for distribution among congressional staffers. The goal was to help pitch a new congressional caucus—the America First Caucus—to carry on President Trump’s legacy in Washington, D.C. without him. When writing it, it seemed like a fairly conventional platform—outlining positions that are broadly shared among Trump supporters. Little did I know that two months later, my words would ignite a firestorm dominating Capitol Hill coverage for days after the draft was leaked to the media by a disreputable congressional staffer.

In the words of Michael Knowles, the platform I wrote, “acknowledges Anglo-Saxon political tradition, hates ugly buildings.” I had simply pointed out that immigrants to this country should respect our national heritage and that federal architecture should look more like the Capitol and less like the Department of Labor building. Bizarrely, this was portrayed by media elites as a national scandal—a sign that elements within the Republican Party were somehow sympathetic to white supremacy.

What makes the faux scandal even more ridiculous is my own background. I am mixed-race Chinese by ethnicity and lived an international cosmopolitan lifestyle before settling in Wisconsin. It is not in spite of my background, but because of it, that I have come to appreciate the American Anglo-Saxon tradition, and I was proud to defend it in the unfinished America First statement of principles.

Impediments to National Greatness
The North Star of any nation with leaders possessing any sense of duty is naturally that which is beneficial to the people they swore to serve and protect. A properly accountable government must always see public policy through such a prism. Those who denigrate policies that put the nation’s citizens first cannot be trusted. They’ve shown time and again they are will to sell out the country.

Republicans who feigned incredulity over my words venerating American values are not speaking out because they fear the document represents nativism, fascism, white supremacy, or whatever term they want to toss about. They oppose the principles undergirding a 21st-century America First movement because those principles stand opposed to lawmakers who would displace American workers with unfettered immigration, unsound trade policies, and incoherent foreign wars. They opposed those principles militantly when Trump rode down the escalator in 2015, and they oppose them even more ferociously now.

Whether it be trade deals that have eviscerated America’s manufacturing base, or immigration policy that has flooded the country with tens of millions of unskilled workers, our leaders have shown that they would let this country burn if they could still rule over the ashes. Their policies are immensely unpopular with the American public, which is why they will not allow the debate to proceed, and instead engage in this kind of hateful labeling. Both Republicans and Democrats will shut down this debate, and politicians you think are like-minded too often fold under the pressure.

The media, academia, and innumerable special interests increasingly have nothing constructive to contribute to the policy discussion. All they seek to do is tear down anything and everything that has been so painstakingly built by better men and women than they, without any alternative to replace the smoldering pile of rubble they’ve left in their wake.

America, First and Foremost
The two main components of an America First immigration policy are economic contribution and cultural compatibility. Ensuring that any immigrant will be a net contributor to the public purse as well as to the community in which he or she settles is taken for granted in any non-Western country—to the point where it is not worthy of mention. The fact that half of households in the United States headed by legal immigrants are on some form of government assistance is something that would bewilder leaders of other nations. Such a policy can only be acceptable in countries that has lost its collective mind.

Strong, serious nations take measures to ensure that those who enter their countries are a tailwind to their collective economic sails rather than a headwind. We are constantly reminded of the smattering of star immigrants who have gone on to found multibillion-dollar companies and created thousands of jobs for Americans in the tech sector, as though they are some sort of implicit justification for permanent demographic change. While these immigrants do contribute to the economy, they do not necessarily contribute to the culture—unless they assimilate and appreciate the Anglo-Saxon and Western traditions that allow them to prosper.

There is simply no economically or morally justifiable reason why immigration policy in America, which is a public policy like any other, should not seek to benefit the people of this country first and foremost. This ethos also extends to the issue of cultural compatibility. If we were to only take in highly skilled immigrants but did nothing to determine how well they would fit into the mainstream of American society, the long-term cultural disruption of such an untactful policy would far outweigh any monetary benefit these immigrants would bring.

Ask any Australian or New Zealander how it feels to be priced out of their own real estate market by rich and highly skilled millionaires from mainland China.

One thing that must be made clear about cultural compatibility is that recognizing the need for it in no way, shape, or form, is a statement about any implied superiority or inferiority of individuals or group of individuals. Take this as an example: an Englishman and Italian immigrate to North America and settle anywhere outside the greater New York City area. Which of these two immigrants will have an easier time adjusting to his new surroundings? The Englishman, obviously. Does this mean that Italians are inferior to the English? Clearly not. All this means is that the cultural proximity of 99 percent of North America to Britain, especially when compared to Italy, predisposes the Englishman toward quicker assimilation into the American mainstream.

Now, take these same two individuals and put them in Argentina instead. Who will find it easier to assimilate? This time, it would be the Italian who will feel more at ease. Again, does this mean that Italians as a group are superior to the English, or does it simply mean that the heavy Italian influence already present in Argentina, all the way down to their unique dialect of Spanish, makes that country more likely to feel familiar to the Italian rather than the Englishman without any inherent or implied superiority or inferiority?

In the context of the United States we would expect, all other things being equal, those from the rest of the Anglosphere to have an easier time assimilating into American society than people who hail from other parts of the world. The solution is not to accuse Americans of racism and xenophobia because of this, but for people to find their own place in the world where they fit in best. That is all an America First immigration policy calls for.

Let this be clear: America is indeed unique in the world in terms of how much more readily we can absorb people from many parts of the world. This is largely due to two reasons. For one, we are a relatively young nation and do not yet have norms and customs as calcified as those of older nation-states, at least not yet. Secondly, Anglo culture—the very thing globalists want to denigrate and discredit—gives the Anglosphere, and America in particular, what is called a low-context culture. This means that there is extraordinarily little reading between the lines and trying to figure out what the other person is implying because individuals typically spell things out without leaving much ambiguity.

These two factors do indeed mean that America has been more successful at taking in people from more distant cultures than other countries have been. We could do it without risking immediate social implosion, but this system cannot be expected to perform miracles.

After more than half a century of reckless immigration policy that has favored roughly a dozen countries through the family reunification clause instead of focusing on skills or compatibility, it is high time America drastically reduced the absolute number of immigrants she takes in every year and reorient that number toward those who would enhance our economic prosperity as well as strengthen our communities and our culture. Virtually every single non-Western country rightfully takes care of their own without any implied ill will to those from elsewhere. America would do well to do the same, for the sake of her own people.

A Nationalist Ideology for a Cohesive Culture
Enduring multiculturalism gave me the perspective needed to develop a healthy nationalism. I am part of an exceedingly small minority of people who were born and raised in Malaysia by a Western father and local Chinese mother. I grew up in Georgetown on the island of Penang. Penang Island is one of two places in Southeast Asia, the other being Singapore, to have a Chinese majority.

Georgetown is quite different from most of the rest of Malaysia in this regard and became so as a direct result of past waves of mass immigration from China as well as India during the British colonial period. As a result of this, while Malay is the official language of Malaysia and used in most textbooks, I only speak it as a third language after English and Mandarin.

The Chinese and Indian communities formed so quickly that no assimilation was possible between them and the native Malay majority. To this day, generations of Malaysian Chinese grow up in their households speaking their native dialect, speak Mandarin Chinese in school, and graduate high school knowing barely enough Malay to get themselves through a government office. Indeed, my grandmother, who immigrated to Malaysia when she was four, needs my mother or one of my aunts to get her through these ordeals. The various communities in Malaysia, as much as they would prefer otherwise, exist amid each other very tenuously as they share almost nothing in common. They speak different languages, profess different religions, and even have vastly different value systems by which they raise their children.

All of this has meant that it only takes the slightest provocation for tensions to flare up and then reach the boiling point. A race riot in 1969 over political disagreements resulted in hundreds dead and 18 months of martial law. As much as I miss the familiarity of my hometown, with the variety of delicious and affordable street food for which it is so famous, I do not wish to live in such a volatile place and migrated to America nearly seven years ago. I wanted to escape the kind of social tension that comes from reckless and untactful immigration policy. And now I want to do what I can to prevent it from taking hold in my adopted country.

Truth is, for most of the world’s people, cultural differences still register powerfully in their daily lives. Any country’s leaders who ignore this reality are fools. It is the responsibility of any prudent immigration policy to ensure that these primeval attitudes are not given room to fester—for such tensions only take away from a society’s ability to build a better future. An age-old obligation of newcomers to America has been to dispense of their past loyalties and allegiances and cleave themselves to America fully and unreservedly.

Abandoning that duty would transform America into just the sort of country so many people are trying to escape.

One of my fondest memories growing up was moving to a house that had an older set of encyclopedias and reading the nearly 100-page long entry for America. The heroic stories of the colonists and the pioneers who settled this land and built a country from nothing made me fall in love with this country. I understand through my lived experience that the vast majority of countries do not share these traditions, and we must guard jealously the cultural gifts the Anglos of yesteryear have bestowed upon us. I am eternally grateful for the opportunity given to me when I was able to immigrate to a country that I had no part in building, but nonetheless, I am able to enjoy. And as long as I am breathing, I will do all I can to defend it.
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment

Parents Organize to Push Back Against Critical Race Theory

April 22, 2021 12:57, Last Updated: April 22, 2021 19:49
By Petr Svab

A growing number of American parents are getting together to find ways to block the spread of the quasi-Marxist critical race theory (CRT) in schools where they send their children.

They see the doctrine as a culprit in creating a toxic environment and exacerbating problems it claims to ameliorate. School officials have been responding with denials or silence.

CRT has been spreading throughout academia, entertainment, government, schools, and corporations. It redefines America’s history as a struggle between “oppressors” (white people) and the “oppressed” (everybody else), similarly to Marxism’s reduction of human history to a struggle between the “bourgeoisie” and the “proletariat.” It labels institutions that emerged in majority-white societies as “systemically” or “structurally” racist.

CRT’s entry into schools went largely unnoticed by parents due to its being dressed up as “equity,” “anti-racist,” or “culturally responsive” initiatives. It has spawned an industry of speakers, trainers, and consultants who get paid to diagnose an organization as “systemically racist,” prescribe CRT-based initiatives as the remedy, and then to help implement it over the years to come.

The existence of “systemic racism” is usually claimed based on disparate outcomes for different groups, such as lower average test scores or more detentions for black students.

Scholars have pointed out that the argument is specious.

“Every system you could possibly think of produces some kind of racial or sexual or class discrepancy,” said Wilfred Reilly, an associate professor of political science at Kentucky State University who specializes in empirically testing political claims. “And this allows the radicals to be radicals eternally, and to claim that everything is racist.”

Once parents learn what CRT is, they often disagree.

One group that attracted media attention is the Parents Against Critical Theory (PACT) in Loudon County, Virginia.

Local parents began to organize in June 2020, asking for the reopening of schools that had been shuttered in response to the CCP (Chinese Communist Party) virus pandemic. However, it was the remote learning the district put in place that allowed parents to learn more about what their children are being taught, which raised some red flags.

“We’re seeing what our kids are learning and our goal changes from opening schools to ‘Oh my gosh. What are we sending our children back to?’” one parent, who asked to remain anonymous because of concern about reprisals, told The Epoch Times.

“Basically, they’re categorizing children by race to determine the quality of education each will have, which is absolutely unacceptable,” she added.
She said her children won’t be returning to that school.

Loudoun County Public Schools spokesman Wayde Byard denied that the schools are determining the quality, level, or resources for education based on skin color.
“Our goal is to ensure equity based on this definition as outlined by the Virginia Department of Education: Education Equity is achieved when we eliminate the predictability of student outcomes based on race, gender, zip code, ability, socioeconomic status or languages spoken at home,” he told The Epoch Times via email.

“As a school division, we are committed to ensuring the success of every student here in LCPS.”

One parent was shocked to hear her daughter ask her whether she was a member of the Ku Klux Klan (KKK). Apparently, the child heard about it in class, but came away with a confused picture of what the KKK is. The parent had to explain that membership in such an organization is a bad thing. The child had no idea that the organization was started by Democrats more than a century ago and barely exists today, according to the parent.

Byard said the district “does not comment on anecdotal stories such as these” and that information about it, both on the student and the teacher side, would be confidential.

One teacher told a class that students can go protest and be excused from school as long as they are at least 14 years old and get parental consent, the mother learned from her child.

The school denied it, she said, but she wasn’t convinced.

“I’m going to believe my daughter probably over anything that they say,” she said.

A video posted online shows a teacher during a virtual class pushing a student to pay attention to racial differences, accusing the student of “being intentionally coy” by refusing.

Byard said the video is “an edited clip of a much-longer lesson and may not accurately reflect the context in which this discussion was held.”

Another student was told he’d be marked absent from a pre-class session when he refused to talk about his “values.” He told his mother he was worried he’d be bullied and questioned if he disclosed his beliefs, she told The Epoch Times. His mother ultimately negotiated an arrangement where her son wouldn’t be required to engage in the pre-class activities.

“We’ve been banging on drums for about nine or 10 months now, and parents are finally coming around to see what is going on here,” PACT founder Scott Mineo told The Epoch Times.

The district has responded by denying that CRT is used in its schools.

“No particular philosophy or theory is being used to indoctrinate students or staff,” Byard said.

He acknowledged the district has adopted a “culturally responsive framework,” which the parents say is CRT under another name.

“They are flat-out lying to the community,” Mineo said.

The framework document quotes Loudon County Public Schools Superintendent Eric Williams as saying: “LCPS calls for all students, staff, families, and other members of our community to engage in the disruption and dismantling of white supremacy, systemic racism, and hateful language and actions based on race, religion, country of origin, gender identity, sexual orientation, and/or ability.”

The parents argue the outcome of this is the exact opposite.

“They’re forcing this doctrine that won’t result in less racism. It’ll result in a toxic environment,” one parent said.

While the movement against CRT started locally, the response has been national.

“The messages, the prayers, the thanks, the donations are actually coming from all across the country,” he said.

Similar initiatives have been forming in recent months, such as Parents Defending Education, founded earlier this year by Civil Liberties advocate Nicole Neily.

“In recent years activists have targeted public, private, and charter schools across the country with a campaign to impose toxic new curriculums and to force our kids into divisive identity groups based on race, ethnicity, religion, and gender,” its website says, urging parents to join in to “stop the madness in our schools.”

One teacher and one parent from two elite schools in New York City recently objected to CRT being used there, while Florida is working on a civics curriculum that will explicitly exclude CRT, according to Gov. Ron DeSantis.

There has been action on the other side of the issue as well. Some parents, teachers, and school officials in Loudon County have formed a group that discussed how to make a list of the non-compliant parents, “infiltrate” their ranks, and even solicit “hackers who can either shut down their websites or redirect them to pro-CRT” webpages, The Daily Wire reported.

PACT’s GoFundMe page was shut down by the crowdfunding platform, although the group has already formed a new one on GiveSendGo, raising about $13,000.
The pushback has prompted the parents to “double down,” Mineo said.

It may be off-putting for parents to try to find their way through the jargon-filled world of CRT ideologues, he acknowledged, but his point is to oppose CRT practice, rather than theory.

“What matters is how it’s manifesting itself and who is responsible,” he said.
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment

Rutgers Students Now Receive ‘Trigger Warnings’ for Greek and Roman Literature and History

By Cassandra Fairbanks
Published April 23, 2021 at 3:25pm
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Students at Rutgers University-Camden are now being infantilized with “trigger warnings” on Greek and Roman literature and history classes.


Associate professor Evan Jewell, the weirdo behind the trigger warnings, told Rutgers-Camden News Now that he believes that students need to be warned about historic material that might upset their delicate sensibilities.
“People have rightfully come to a more critical stance against continuing attitudes of racism and misogyny,” he said. “So how do we teach an ancient society where misogyny, sexual assault, and harassment were the norm and built into the classic texts that we read?”
While Jewell acknowledges that people argue this won’t prepare the young minds for the real world, he does not really care.

“There are debates whether taking such an approach doesn’t prepare them for the real world,” he said. “Conversely, some argue that, if someone has had a traumatic assault, the discussion might trigger this experience. I think it’s better to prepare the students than to surprise them.”

As an example, Jewell recounted to the website “an incident where a student had equated homosexuality with pederasty – a romantic relationship between an adult male and younger male – that was socially acceptable in ancient Greece.”

Jewell said that this line of thought “has been used against people in the LGBT community for centuries; to accuse them of pedophilia, to marginalize them, and to exclude them from the community.”

Campus Reform spoke to a Rutgers student who believes that trigger warnings at the university reveal young Americans’ fragility.
“One of the most important jobs of any university, including Rutgers, is to prepare its students for life. It neglects this job when professors beat around the bush when it comes to pertinent issues in today’s society in order to ensure that their students are completely comfortable,” the student remarked.
“However, some topics, like rape and abuse, for example, should be discussed with sensitivity especially because it is such a traumatic experience that some students may have dealt with,” he added. “Otherwise, professors that feel the need to either use trigger warnings or completely dismiss a certain topic not only exposes but encourages our generation’s fragility and over-sensitivity. I believe this could point to a decrease in academic standards at Rutgers because, rather than preparing students for reality, it teaches that it’s okay to ignore a problem or topic if it makes you uncomfortable.”
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment

Americans Do Not Want the Woke Racism Our Schools Are Peddling
BY REALCLEARWIRE
APRIL 23, 2021 AT 1:23PM

By Samuel J. Abrams for RealClearPolicy
In the past few weeks, it has become apparent that the extreme progressive impulses infecting higher education in the United States have moved from ;campus quads and dormitories into our nation’s middle and high schools and even into our kindergartens.

In New York City alone, the uptown Dalton School ;has seen an uprising and departure of numerous high-level staff over questions of curriculum and social justice. Downtown, a Grace Church School teacher published an open letter explaining that the school’s new “anti-racist” ideology induces shame in white students for being oppressors; he has witnessed the harmful impact that these ideas have had on children including silencing inquiry such that “children are afraid to challenge the repressive ideology that rules our school.”

Most recently, a Brearley School parent penned an open letter to the entire community of parents explaining he was pulling his daughter from the school because of its “obsession with race” and the fact that the school abandoned its principle of teaching how to think for teaching what to think.

In response, Brearley doubled-down on its position and argued that this letter was both offensive and harmful; it was nothing of the sort.

While these letters have undoubtedly impacted their writers, these public statements show that the wave of progressive, woke, critical-race theory influenced “anti-racist” dogma that has penetrated our K-12 schools is finally being called out for what is it: racist, reductionist, anti-intellectual, and dangerous.

And, I wanted to add some more fuel to those leading this important pushback: despite the impression that an illiberal, totalitarian movement has seized the world of education, new data shows that majorities of citizens want viewpoint diversity in our K-12 world, they want our schools to give their students an education based on skills, facts, and history and they do not approve of these divisive and racist ideas which masquerade as progressive and inclusive values.

Thanks to new data from the ;American Council of Trustees and Alumni (ACTA), it becomes immediately apparent that the woke ideas in the K-12 universe do not have the wide support of the public.

ACTA surveyed a large number of ;Illinois residents — a microcosm of the American experience possessing not only a diverse citizenry, but large and small cities along with rural areas — about their attitudes toward these anti-racist ideas and support for woke and equitable thinking is not widely accepted at all.

Consider the following: Respondents were asked if K-12 teachers should work to expose students to a variety of perspectives about the country’s founding and history, and to equip them to think critically about its successes and failures OR if K-12 teachers should embrace progressive viewpoints and perspectives when teaching U.S. history, to encourage students to advocate for social justice causes.

Almost two-thirds (62%) believed that it was more important to expose students to a variety of perspectives, compared to just 23% who preferred that teachers embrace progressive viewpoints and perspectives; 15% were not sure where they stood.

There are racial differences present in the data, but it is important to note that no racial group wanted to prioritize social justice concerns over a real diversity of views. 69% of white respondents opted to expose students to a variety of perspectives over a narrow progressive worldview.

The number in support of a multiplicity of views dropped to 44% among Black respondents but this 44% is the plurality among Blacks for just 29% of Black respondents want the progressive idea and another 27% were unsure.

Similarly, 51% of Hispanic or Latino identifiers selected viewpoint diversity with a third (33%) wanting a narrower view and 15% unsure.

Collectively, the data reveals that there are understandable differences in racial outlook, but the overtly woke attitudes and approaches being taken by K-12 schools are completely out of step with reality for pluralities of all racial groups and the nation as a whole reject this social justice approach.
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment

MLB Survey Asks Fans if They’re Republicans or Democrats
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AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast
JACOB BLISS23 Apr 20212,085

Major League Baseball (MLB) is now questioning fans about political affiliation in their new post-game survey about the ballpark experience.

MLB is under new scrutiny as a new survey shows fans are being about political affiliation in a ballpark experience in a post-game survey. In a report from National Review, MLB claims the questions asked regarding political affiliations are “part of the extensive fan surveys MLB is conducting this year around the ballpark experience.”

The league claims the surveys are for are to try trying to “gain knowledge about fan perceptions, preferences, and behaviors during the COVID-19 pandemic.” Of course, according to a recent poll done by Morning Consult, it was found, their favorability levels have completely collapsed within the Republican base.

For pro-sport Republicans, rating collapsed 35 percent, down from 47 percent to 12 percent in only a month. The poll showed the MLB used to have the “highest net favorability rating among Republicans of the four major sports leagues before the All-Star Game decision,” Morning Consult noted.

This happened as MLB earlier this month announced they would be moving their 2021 season All-Star game from Georgia to Colorado in the wake of Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp (R) signing voter integrity laws into place. They received blowback from Democrats spreading misinformation about the new laws, which resulted in the MLB giving in to political pressure and announced they would be moving their 2021 season All-Star game from Georgia to Colorado. A report found that the economic impact on Georgia’s businesses from the move could be between $37 million and $190 million.

According to the report, MLB officials are arguing that moving the game from Georgia and their cratering favorability numbers are not two in the same. Though the league also claims the question regarding attendees’ political affiliation starting during the 2020 postseason.

Their post-game survey is drawing some scrutiny from the Republicans for why the league is asking these questions. According to the report, MLB claims “the results of the surveys – which are sent via email – aren’t tied to any individual accounts” but are intending to “be used to determine broad trends” within the fans.

In a prepared statement, the MLB said:
“The research has shown that a person’s self-identified political affiliation often impacts their views about the pandemic, and therefore respondents’ views regarding returning to the ballpark. … Since we are in the midst of the pandemic, this is valuable information for our clubs to understand the views of their fans about attending games.”
The league claimed this is the third year surveys are being sent to fans asking about their experience but claims that “the league added a new set of questions about fan comfort about returning to the ballpark in the pandemic.” In a screenshot obtained by National Review, after a recent Washington Nationals game, their survey asked questions regarding the pandemic, like how the safety protocols for coronavirus were implemented and what percentage of the fans obeyed the mask requirements. The survey “also includes the political affiliation question.”

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“Taking the survey and answering that question are completely voluntary,” the MLB said according to the report, adding, fans were given the option in the survey to use a “Third Party, Independent, ‘I’d prefer not to say,’ or skip the question – or the survey – altogether.”

Additionally, a poll found an overwhelming majority (67 percent) agreed MLB relocation from Atlanta was driven by “politics and publicity.” In comparison, 33 percent said it was driven by a “genuine concern for voters in Georgia.” More findings showed, voters who are familiar with the Georgia voting law, the survey found, 52 percent support the Georgia voter integrity bill. Moreover, 71 percent of respondents said they were “more supportive” of the law after hearing what was in the bill.
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment

The State-Corporate Convergence In Our State Of Emergency

FRIDAY, APR 23, 2021 - 11:00 PM
Authored by Michael Rectenwald via The Mises Institute,

Perhaps the most pressing matter today for advocates of freedom is the prospect of the Left completing the institution of a totalitarian state. There is no other way to read the multiprong approach and the political maneuverings that political operatives are taking to rule under “Biden.” I put “Biden” in quotation marks here because the current president of the United States is not a singular person named Joe Biden. It is a central executive committee consisting of party rulers and advisers, plus corporate-state apparatuses.

Make no mistake, the power grab that the Left is undertaking poses the most grievous threat to liberty in recent history, regardless of its effects on the Republican Party.



The signals could not be any clearer. In addition to the swath of executive orders, clearly composed by executive committee members and aimed at either ingratiating and expanding the Democratic Party’s base or extending federal power, the Democrats have initiated a growing body of laws which would, if passed, ensure uniparty rule for the foreseeable future.

These include especially H.R. 1, or the For the People’s Act, passed by the House. Should it pass the Senate (with the eradication of the filibuster), H.R.-1 would grossly favor Democratic candidates in federal elections. Notwithstanding the expansion of the Democratic base through various means, including overriding existing voter ID laws in many states and mandating that all states allow mail-in ballots without IDs, it would further centralize federal election oversight and, according to the Institute for Free Speech, “[e]xpand the universe of regulated online political speech (by Americans) beyond paid advertising to include, apparently, communications on groups’ or individuals’ own websites and e-mail messages.”

The legislative maneuverings include the ‘‘Judiciary Act of 2021,’’ which would simply expand the Supreme Court to twelve members plus the chief justice. This move, which would amount to adding four Democrat-approved justices, would essentially effect a legislative takeover of the Supreme Court, as the Democratic-controlled Supreme Court would increasingly “legislate from the bench” and likewise expand the power of the Democratic-controlled legislative and executive branches beyond official perimeters. The odds of its passage, as is, are slim, but the overture is indicative of an attempted power grab not seen since FDR.

But the most conspicuous sign of the nearing consolidation of totalitarian government is the effective merger of corporate and state functionaries, with corporations and other organizations acting as appendages of the government and enforcing corporate-state desiderata. The indications of this merger are so many and sundry that any exhaustive recounting of them would entail a book-length treatment.

But take, for example, the calls by Congressperson Maxine Watters (D-CA) that “protestors” “get more confrontational” if the Derrick Chauvin verdict is unacceptable. Given the widespread rioting since George Floyd’s death, Watters’s language is a call to nationwide insurrection. Yet this language meets the approval of the corporate-government-media complex, despite the Left’s insistence that Trump had done just that before the Capitol breach. Libertarians should take note of the double standard not as a sign of the continued diminishment of the Republican Party but of a doublespeak characteristic of totalitarian regimes.

The most conspicuous example of a corporate-state merger is the extension of governmental power to corporations and other organizations with the covid crisis response measures, which have now exceeded lockdowns and masking to include the issuance of vaccine passports that corporations and other organizations may enforce or are already enforcing. The best hope for resisting these totalitarian measures is a refusal on the part of state and local governments to allow such corporate implementations of governmental dicta.

The old saw that “these are private companies” does not hold water, because clearly these corporate bodies have been enrolled as state apparatuses. Operation Warp Speed was rolled out by the federal government and has enlisted private organizations—first and foremost Big Pharma—to execute it. The state has enabled Big Pharma to profit enormously by instituting a state-of-emergency regime which in the US makes non-FDA-approved vaccines legal. On the other hand, Big Pharma—along with the World Health Organization, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases—legitimizes the state-of-emergency regime, which in turn augments state power.

The enrollment of corporations in the scheme to vaccinate the population and to require such vaccinations for social participation should not be considered in terms of the prerogatives of private organizations but as part of the incursions of the state into private industry. What we are witnessing, and should be resisting, is a merger into a corporate-government complex, wherein government can bypass the legislative branch and enforce unpopular mandates by colluding with corporations and other organizations to make “policy.”

Perhaps the most egregious element of this corporate-state stranglehold on the population is the participation of Big Digital and the mainstream media.

Big Digital conglomerates eliminate media outlets and voices that challenge the official covid narrative, including information about lockdowns, masking, and vaccinations, although the official narrative has not only changed willy-nilly but also has been proven factually wrong, as well as socially devastating. Big Digital and the media serve both the state and Big Pharma by eliminating oppositional views regarding the lockdowns, masks, and vaccines, and by pushing fear-inducing propaganda about the virus and its ever-proliferating variants.

As I have written in Google Archipelago, Big Digital must be considered an agent of a leftist authoritarian state—as a “governmentality” or state apparatus functioning on behalf and as part of the state itself. “Governmentality” is a term that should become well known in the coming days and weeks. I adopted the term from Michel Foucault and have emended it to refer to corporations and other nonstate actors who actively undertake state functions. These actors will be doing this in droves with vaccine passports, which will vastly augment state power under a state-corporate alliance.

Similarly, other major corporations perform state-sanctioned roles by echoing and enforcing state-approved ideologies, policies, and politics: indoctrinating employees, issuing woke advertisements, policing the opinions of workers, firing dissidents, and soon demanding vaccine passports from employees and customers.

The overall tendency, then, is toward corporate-state monopolization over all aspects of life, with increasing control by approved principals over information and opinion, economic production, and the political sphere. As the consolidation accelerates, the broad global state will require the elimination of noncompliant, disaffected, and “untrustworthy” economic and political actors. In the United States, with the elimination of political opposition, the tendency is toward uniparty rule, and with it, the merging of the party and state into a singular organ.
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment

'Canceled People': Online database of victims of the new McCarthyism nears 200 listings

Skilled manual laborer's side project draws praise from independent-minded black and feminist thinkers.

By Greg Piper
Updated: April 24, 2021 - 1:48pm

When political data scientist David Shor got fired for sharing research that found peaceful protests were more politically effective than violent protests, a skilled manual laborer in the Mountain West had an idea: Why not create a database of so-called cancelations?

Over the next several months he started researching documented instances of cancel culture across the world and soliciting submissions. His project, CanceledPeople.org (and .com), is approaching 200 listings from the U.S., Canada, U.K., Germany, France, Indonesia and Australia.

The website got a boost of attention earlier this month when Christina Hoff Sommers, the American Enterprise Institute scholar and "Factual Feminist" YouTube host, tweeted about the "well-sourced database" of cancelations.

In an interview with Just the News, the creator pulled back the veil on the project. (He declined to identify himself, except for his geography and field of work, but he did provide screenshots of account records verifying his ownership and operation of the site.)

"Canceled People is not part of a larger organization," he wrote in an email last week. "It's really just a part-time project of mine, with my girlfriend helping out occasionally." Neither is an academic, as might be guessed from the project's research protocols, which lay out the rules for adding and removing people from public view.

The tweet by Sommers triggered 75 submissions, which each take 20-30 minutes to review, the creator said.

"Usually it's fairly clear whether or not they belong there, but some cases are tough," he said. "It would be good to have a panel of experts to discuss and vote on those cases.”

The website's About page says its purpose is "to better understand cancel culture itself as a phenomenon," including how it's affecting "societal norms around free speech that enable democracy to function and flourish." CanceledPeople.org is intended as a resource especially for researchers to "explore and draw their own conclusions."

'Window of acceptable speech seemed to have narrowed drastically overnight'

Before submitting examples of cancelations, users are instructed to read CanceledPeople.org's definition.

Victims must have faced "a coordinated effort to shame them and destroy their reputation," especially targeting their personal or professional relationships.

The cancelation must have succeeded: They were demoted, forced to resign or lost a job, or suffered lost professional or financial opportunities, as a result of "reasonable expression" that was not illegal. Exceptions include Holocaust denial and racial slurs intended to "wound."

Each listing includes a victim's name, position, organization, action against them, date and country, as well as a few sentences describing the incident and a source, typically a news article. Race-related expression appears to be the most common reason for cancelation.

The most recent entry is Kieran Bhattacharya, a University of Virginia medical student who says he was suspended in 2018 for disagreeing with the concept of microaggressions. A federal judge allowed his First Amendment lawsuit to continue last month.

Several listings involve high-profile media figures such as former NBC anchor Megyn Kelly, former New York magazine columnist Andrew Sullivan and former Bon Appetit editor Adam Rapaport. Many are academics, such as the University of Pennsylvania's Amy Wax, UCLA's Gordon Klein and Nobel laureate Tim Hunt of University College London.

But others are far from any spotlight. A U.K. welder was fired for flying a "White Lives Matter" banner at a soccer game. A Michigan teacher said he was fired for pro-Donald Trump tweets, including that schools "must reopen" regardless of COVID-19.

A few incidents go far beyond cancelation. A teacher was "beheaded" for showing students caricatures of the Prophet Muhammad from French satirical publication Charlie Hebdo. The governor of Jakarta was imprisoned for two years following manipulated video of his remarks about the Koran.

CanceledPeople.org's creator told Just the News that he was alarmed by people getting fired or publicly shamed for comments "perceived as critical of the Black Lives Matter organization or movement" after George Floyd's death in Minneapolis.

"The window of acceptable speech seemed to have narrowed drastically overnight," he said. Loaded terms like "racist" and "white supremacy" were applied to "anything that didn't reaffirm a single narrative." For example, Shor, the data scientist, simply noted that President Nixon got elected in part due to "violence following the assassination of MLK."

At the same time last June, media organizations were denying cancel culture even existed. The creator decided to compile a database to show the real-world results of cancel culture and track whether the phenomenon "was getting better or worse over time."

The domains were registered July 9, and the creator launched the website July 28 after writing about 20 entries himself. At that point he contacted some academics and public figures who had expressed concerns about cancel culture, drawing tweets from two black professors — Glenn Loury at Brown University and Wilfred Reilly at Kentucky State University.

"The fact that only black academics were initially willing to promote" the website could be coincidental, the creator said, but he theorized that non-blacks were afraid to "advocate for free speech" after Floyd's death.

Some listings available to 'select researchers only'

The release notes for the website claim it received a flood of submissions the day it launched and had roughly doubled in listings in the first 10 days. It also explained common reasons why submissions were rejected, such as insufficient "legitimate" reporting. The notes page hasn't been updated since August.

The database's rules for inclusion and removal were not informed by the practices of institutional review boards, which scrutinize academic research proposals, the creator told Just the News.

"We do not want to inadvertently doxx someone or create a database that causes more harm than good by drawing attention to an episode in someone's life that they do not want to be easily found online," the About page says.

It only adds those whose cancelations have drawn "significant publicity" or who have already "demonstrated some desire to tell their story." For other incidents, its moderators will reach out to the canceled party for consent.

Victims can remove themselves from public view — but not the database itself — by contacting the moderators, who will keep them visible to "select researchers only."

About two-thirds of entries at this point have come from submissions, the creator said. He added the rest after learning about them from podcasts, such as those by Megyn Kelly, conservative pundit Ben Shapiro and black writer Coleman Hughes, who appeared on Forbes' most recent 30 Under 30 list.

He's not sure how much time to spend on the database because "site traffic fluctuates a lot." A donation page lays out what the creator would do with more money, including adding more entries, "graphical analysis," better design and "secure archive" of sources.
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment

CEOs answer the call of the woke by pivoting to 'stakeholder' capitalism

America's corporate leaders are tailoring their success metrics to match political agendas of activist progressive shareholders.

Updated: April 24, 2021 - 4:00pm

The age of the woke activist shareholder is upon us, and CEOs have been altering the metrics by which they judge their companies' success to fit the goals of agenda-pushing shareholders, as well as their own political preferences, according to Scott Shepard, deputy director of the Free Enterprise Project, a conservative-leaning shareholder activism program.

CEOs of megacorporations — including Bank of America, Deloitte, and BlackRock — are "pushing a set of metrics to judge how well stakeholder capitalism is going," said Shepard, a fellow at the National Center for Public Policy Research.

"And they've written those metrics to make sure that they all require left-wing, and only left-wing, movement."

Corporations going "woke" — a trend that surged into wide public view recently with the overt embrace by many corporate leaders of Democratic opposition to GOP election reform plans — are driven by two sources, in Shepard's analysis.

First, there are the activists, who buy shares in corporations with the sole aim of filing proposals that further their progressive political agenda. Second, there are the CEOs who tailor their measurable standards of corporate success to match goals of "global sustainability" and environmental, social, and corporate governance (ESG) instead of bottom lines and fiduciary responsibilities to shareholders. They claim these goals are more globally-oriented, and beneficial to "stakeholders," as opposed to "shareholders," to whom corporations have historically answered.

One corporate leader in the forefront the leftward realignment of big business is Bank of America CEO Brian Moynihan. "The context in which businesses now operate has been transformed by climate change, nature loss, social unrest around inclusion and working conditions, COVID-19 and changing expectations of the role of corporations," Moynihan wrote in a September 2020 white paper entitled Measuring Stakeholder Capitalism Towards Common Metrics and Consistent Reporting of Sustainable Value Creation. "Further, the global pandemic has exacerbated underlying and longstanding failures regarding equality and access to economic opportunities.

To continue to thrive, companies need to build their resilience and enhance their licence [sic] to operate, through greater commitment to long-term, sustainable value creation that embraces the wider demands of people and planet."

Prepared in collaboration with the CEOs of the Big 4 accounting firms — Deloitte, Ernst and Young, KPMG and PwC — and published under the aegis of the World Economic Forum (best known for its annual Davos conclaves of the international political and business elite) — the paper details a list of "core metrics" that companies are "encouraged to begin reporting on," including categories like racial and sex diversity and including carbon emissions, and the "ratio of the annual total compensation of the CEO to the median of the annual total compensation of all its employees, except the CEO."

Absent from the report's recommendations are any metrics measuring viewpoint diversity or any language to discourage companies from discriminating in order to achieve certain numerical diversity and inclusion metrics.

On the activist end of things, the 2021 Proxy Preview, a report for socially progressive foundations, religious organizations, pension funds, and other tax-exempt entites, describes the ESG proposals that have been filed ahead of this year's shareholder meetings.

"Covid-19, the contested U.S. election, the racial justice uprising, and climate change disasters continue to take a toll on the global psyche and require fundamental systemic transformation," writes Andrew Behar, the publisher of the report. "Shareholders, as always, reflect the zeitgeist in their proposals. What I see in 2021 is an authentic, empowered, and self-aware movement emerging from the chaos, putting us on a trajectory toward a regenerative economy and civil society based on justice and sustainability. Investors feel the momentum, as do company executives; shareholders are escalating with new tactics, tired of talk and demanding action at a scale appropriate to the risk ... Investors in passive index funds can see that they are blindly complicit as they profit from society's destruction; becoming aware of their power to align their investing with their values."'

The report advocates that all corporations embrace a "net-zero, Paris-aligned, climate transition plan and report progress annually" and employ an "antiracist stance" immediately.

Shepard says that "zeroing out carbon production and emissions" at most of these companies would mean "rapidly increasing costs across the board and rapidly increasing energy costs that would cripple Middle America while allowing CEOs like Brian Moynihan to continue flying around the world without any constraints."

Even proposals that fail to win a majority vote during proxy season may signal momentum on a particular ESG issue and signal to leadership that pressure is mounting. Sometimes a company may even hold a negotiation on a proposal before it is brought to a vote. These negotiations are productive when CEOs and leftist activist groups are aligned on their political ends, as is the case with corporate heads like Brian Moynihan, Larry Fink of BlackRock, Delta CEO Ed Bastion, and others.

The ultimate goal of the groups behind the Proxy Preview report, including a nonprofit called Shareholder Commons, is to transform American companies into public benefit corporations. Recently, Shareholder Commons generated a set of proposals suggesting that companies — including BlackRock, Alphabet (Google), Amazon, and Caterpillar — legally reform themselves in order to prioritize the interests of their "stakeholders" instead of their shareholders, even when that could mean "surrendering total financial return at an individual company."
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment

Follow The Fear
Cathcart-Portrait-2020-48x48.jpg

April 24, 2021
By Jim Cathcart

Today’s dominant societal trend appears to be “Be afraid, be very afraid, and restrict your life accordingly.”

If you want people to give you control over them then you need to assure that they are so afraid that they will suspend rational thought in order to be saved by you. Convince them that they don’t know enough to make their own decisions.

Show them how vulnerable they are without your protection. Then put restrictions in place to give you ongoing control over them. That’s what’s going on in our country today.

In order to control people, you need them to agree to being controlled and it’s even better if you make them think that they are controlling themselves and that, regardless of criticism they may receive, they are justified in doing what you want. You must demonize any voices to the contrary. If a news source or trusted person disagrees, then you must destroy their credibility and make it cool to reject them, like Obama did with Fox News while he was president. That caused people to dismiss anything that was reported by Fox, without even considering it.

Control by Force
Control by force gains “agreement” by making the punishment more fearsome than compliance would be. As long as you hold the whip and they fear it, you get to stay in charge. But, if they decide that the whipping is worth the fight for freedom, then you have a major problem. Your threat no longer generates compliance. When oppressed people rise up despite their fears, a revolution is imminent.

Nature gets this
Weaker animals of all types, including humans, look for weaknesses that they can exploit when confronting a greater adversary. If you’re a wildebeest being dragged into the water by a crocodile, then you fight to stay on dry land where you have a small advantage. If you are a small child being bullied, then you attempt to stay in a public place where the abuse cannot be concealed and where others might step in to help.

The same is true for predators, you look for the weakest spot and attack that. If your first attack doesn’t prevail, then you seek to injure your prey repeatedly until you have dominance. Wolves isolate the weakest elk and then bite its legs so that it cannot flee. They don’t do a head-on confrontation with their prey.

Also true in politics
If your party isn’t in control, then you isolate and target weaknesses in order to regain power. Once you are in power, assuming you are power-hungry, then you change the rules so that you can stay in power. This is blatantly going on in the USA today.

Democrats have all the major seats of power, but rather than serving the people, they seem committed to changing the rules and fueling our fears most of all. That’s their strategy for staying in power indefinitely. And it is working.

One major reason that it is working is because they control the media. When the news sources become opinion-makers and propaganda tools, then the populace sees no reason to resist you. Just show them a series of images and interviews that have conclusions already drawn and soon everyone assumes it’s the truth and the only right way to see things. Example: George Floyd’s death and martyrdom.

George Floyd was wrongly killed by Derek Chauvin.
We saw it on camera and heard the verdicts of guilt. His death was not justified and should not have happened. There’s no disagreement with that.

Now let’s look at who George Floyd was. He was imprisoned 9 times for a variety of crimes. His criminal behavior was sustained for decades. He had not been a good guy at any measurable point. He broke into a woman’s home and held a gun to her pregnant stomach. He carjacked a woman’s vehicle and then told the judge, “I needed the car, and she was wrong to resist me.” His father sat in the courtroom shaking his head in shame upon hearing this. But you won’t hear this on the news. In fact, if you watched the CBS special report on the Chauvin trial verdict, you saw a very different message. They implied that Floyd was an oppressed soul who was trying to get his life together again. No evidence supports that.

Again, his death was tragic, and he should not have been abused as he was. But that doesn’t justify making him a martyr who has a plaza named after him, legislation dedicated in his name, and national leaders, including the president and vice president mourning his death publicly while ignoring the deaths of others including police.

Fuel the Fear during key moments
This slick CBS news feature had clearly been prepackaged awaiting the outcome.

I’m sure much sensational footage was edited out because of the 3 guilty verdicts. But the program pre-empted regular prime time programs and featured dramatic replays of the knee-on-the-neck video and then doubled down on fearmongering by showing the Rodney King beating from decades ago. The message, repeated and reinforced by interviewing the families of King and Floyd, was: “Racism and dangerous cops are systemic in society and we need even more support of the angry mobs in order to change the system. We need more government regulations and agencies, more required diversity education programs and funding to assure that racism is rooted out at the thought level!” And now they are threatening to riot again if the sentencing doesn’t please them.

Granted, this was international news, because the media had made it so. Other murder trials go on day to day without so much as a public mention. But this one was special because it had gotten thousands of postings worldwide. Why? Because it served the leftist message that racism is systemic, and more controls are needed. If they can’t make you afraid then they can’t get you to agree to more rules, agencies, and controls.

OK, let’s switch bogeymen to another big one, Covid 19.
This shut down has been the most effective global fear inducement since the Black Plague! Masks are required worldwide, people are hiding in their homes, terrified of normal human contact. School kids are terrified, teachers are refusing to return to class, stores are shut down, 6 foot spacing is required everywhere and they tell us “follow the science.” But science doesn’t recommend these actions. In fact, the 6-foot spacing was a tactic used in the 1918 Flu epidemic that had no basis in research. Many doctors today are saying 3 feet is plenty or just don’t touch.

When you enter a retail store the staff looks at you as a threat, not as a friend.
They yell out, “Wear a mask please!” People are taught to shame others who don’t wear masks and accuse them of assault. It really does cause us to stay afraid, but where is the science that says this is effective? It doesn’t exist.

Actually Follow The Science
Note the following science-based report published this past week on a variety of sites.

The following excerpt is from a report authored by JD Rucker and published in the “From NOQ Report” (News, Opinions, Quotes) by JD Rucker April 17, 2021 in Big Tech, Healthcare, News, Science

April 17, 2021
Stanford study quietly published at NIH.gov proves face masks are absolutely worthless against Covid

Did you hear about the peer-reviewed study done by Stanford University that demonstrates beyond a reasonable doubt that face masks have absolutely zero chance of preventing the spread of Covid-19? … It was posted on the National Center for Biotechnological Information government website. The NCBI is a branch of the National Institute for Health, … features a peer-reviewed study by Stanford University’s Baruch Vainshelboim. In it, he cited 67 scholars, doctors, scientists, and other studies to support his conclusions.

According to the current knowledge, the virus SARS-CoV-2 has a diameter of 60 nm to 140 nm [nanometers (billionth of a meter)] [16], [17], while medical and non-medical facemasks’ thread diameter ranges from 55 µm to 440 µm [micrometers (one millionth of a meter), which is more than 1000 times larger [25]. Due to the difference in sizes between SARS-CoV-2 diameter and facemasks thread diameter (the virus is 1000 times smaller), SARS-CoV-2 can easily pass through any facemask.

Conclusion
The existing scientific evidences challenge the safety and efficacy of wearing facemask as preventive intervention for COVID-19. The data suggest that both medical and non-medical facemasks are ineffective to block human-to-human transmission of viral and infectious disease such SARS-CoV-2 and COVID-19, supporting against the usage of facemasks. Wearing facemasks has been demonstrated to have substantial adverse physiological and psychological effects.

These include hypoxia, hypercapnia, shortness of breath, increased acidity and toxicity, activation of fear and stress response, rise in stress hormones, immunosuppression, fatigue, headaches, decline in cognitive performance, predisposition for viral and infectious illnesses, chronic stress, anxiety and depression. Long-term consequences of wearing facemask can cause health deterioration, developing and progression of chronic diseases and premature death. Governments, policy makers and health organizations should utilize prosper and scientific evidence-based approach with respect to wearing facemasks, when the latter is considered as preventive intervention for public health.

Here is the link to the full article: Study quietly published at NIH.gov proves face masks are absolutely worthless against Covid [Updated]

Also published in Gateway Pundit on April 19. Stanford Study Results: Facemasks are Ineffective to Block Transmission of COVID-19 and Actually Can Cause Health Deterioration and Premature Death

So, we are back to the main issue, Fear.
What are you afraid of? Covid19, BLM riots, being called a “racist”, or maybe disapproval by others who haven’t taken time to think things through? It doesn’t matter what you fear, what’s important to the leftists is the fact that you fear.

Fear is the goal. As long as you believe they will save you if you just obey, then they are in control and your future no longer belongs to you.

Courage is being afraid and still taking bold action despite your fear. Take time to think and be courageous. Be courageous, be very courageous, and expand your life accordingly.
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment

Leo Terrell: The far-left ‘has declared war on white Americans and police officers’
April 24, 2021 | Ashley Hill |

Democrats appeared to become more radical in their intolerance campaign against white people and cops this week.

At least two prominent black leaders spoke out about the Democrats’ apparent disdain for white people and cops, likely to the dismay of Rep. Maxine Waters, who recently urged protesters to “get more confrontational.”

The intolerance for white people and cops in general seems to have been a growing trend over the past year but Democrats really showed their true colors by condemning a police officer this week who many argue made the right move as he was forced to make a split-second decision to shoot a knife-wielding teenage girl to prevent her from stabbing another girl to death in Columbus, Ohio.

Civil rights attorney Leo Terrell reacted to the campaign against white people on Fox News’ “Hannity” on Friday.

“That white sign you made reference to, that sign is very, very insulting. And basically the extreme left has declared war on white Americans and white police officers,” he said, referring to a sign posted earlier this week in George Floyd square in Minneapolis.

(Video: Fox News) 2:05 min

The sign featured special instructions for white people, including instructions to “decenter yourself and come to listen, learn, mourn, and witness. Remember you are here to support, not be supported.”

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“They talk about racism. I’m a civil rights attorney. I know what systemic racism is. It does not exist in Chicago, and Los Angeles, and Baltimore,” he told host Sean Hannity.

He added, “it’s very simple, it’s all about power.”

“What you are describing is what has been going on in Democratic cities for years. They only play the white officer card against black. There is a disconnect,” he said.

According to conservative activist Candace Owens, who was also a guest on the Fox News show, the Democrats are “name calling.” She explained that they perpetuate the BLM and race lie and avoid the truth. According to Owens, if they really cared about black people, they would talk about black on black crime. She noted that 95% of black homicides are perpetrated by black people.

Lebron James, who lives in a multi-million dollar Bel-Air mansion in a primarily white neighborhood tweeted a threat doxxing the cop from the Columbus shooting to his almost 50 million followers and said, “YOU’RE NEXT.”

President Trump, who has ironically been banned from Twitter for “inciting violence,” also released a statement condemning the hate this week and calling out the Los Angeles Lakers star.

“LeBron James should focus on basketball rather than presiding over the destruction of the NBA, which has just recorded the lowest television RATINGS, by far, in the long and distinguished history of the League. His RACIST rants are divisive, nasty, insulting, and demeaning. He may be a great basketball player, but he is doing nothing to bring our Country together!” Trump said.
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment

School Principal Privately Admits What 'Anti-racist' Curriculum Is Doing to White Kids
Leah Barkoukis
Leah Barkoukis


Posted: Apr 24, 2021 6:30 AM


School Principal Privately Admits What 'Anti-racist' Curriculum Is Doing to White Kids

Source: AP Photo/NBC Virginia Sherwood

The head of an elite private school in New York City privately admitted to a teacher that the institution is “demonizing white people for being born."

The call between math teacher Paul Rossi, who was later relieved of his duties after publicly criticizing the school’s anti-racist orthodoxy, and George Davidson, head of Grace Church School, took place on March 2. The two discussed wokeness at the school and how it’s affecting white students.

"Let me ask you something, George, because I think there's something very different about having a single experience where you make sense of it, right, and having a teacher, an authority figure, talk to you endlessly, every year, telling you, that because you have whiteness you are associated with evils, all these different evils," Rossi says to him. “These are moral evils, it's not the same as taking like a physical thing, because it doesn't affect your moral value. That's the problem.”

“The fact is that I'm agreeing with you that there has been a demonization that we need to get our hands around, in the way in which people are doing this understanding,” Davidson responds.

“So you agree that we're demonizing kids,” Rossi answers.

“We're demonizing ki—" Davison starts to say before cutting himself off, adding, “We're demonizing white people, for being born.”

“And are some of our students white people?” Rossi asks.

“Yes,” Davidson replies.

“Okay, so we're demonizing white kids,” Rossi says. “Why don't you just say it?”

"We are using language that makes them feel less than, for nothing that they are personally responsible for," Davidson responds.

The conversation was posted online by the civil rights organization Foundation Against Intolerance & Racism. FAIR is supporting Rossi, who was “relieved of his teaching duties” for his public criticism of the school on former New York Times editor Bari Weiss's Substack.

View: https://twitter.com/i/status/1384481622326603779
1:12 min
View: https://twitter.com/i/status/1384481681399156739
1:23 min
View: https://twitter.com/i/status/1384481725770870784
.52 min

On Monday, Rossi responded to the head of school's letter about him to his colleagues.

"Grace's public story — the story it is telling to the press and to its own community — has been very different from what you have told me. In light of your statement that my essay 'contains glaring omissions and inaccuracies,' and in support of those who will inevitably be scared into silence by seeing the price I am now paying for speaking up, I am compelled to share what you have told me in our previous conversations."

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According to the Daily Mail, a former parent at the school claimed students spend one week per month learning Critical Race Theory.
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment

These Key Similarities Between Lenin’s Red Terror and America’s Woke Culture Reveal Left’s Blueprint For Complete Takeover

April 24, 2021 (5h ago)

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Thursday marked the 151st birthday of the most successful revolutionary of all time, Vladimir Lenin. With only a tiny cabal of diehard followers, Lenin seized control of the world’s largest country and inaugurated a reign of darkness and terror that lasted seventy years.

There are many lessons to draw from the blood-soaked life of Lenin. But one of the most important is this takeaway for the terrifying “woke” moment America is living through right now. Things are not going to naturally get better. Things will not organically “calm down.” Until there is a fundamental reset of America’s treasonous leadership class, today’s unthinkable witch hunt is merely a prelude of an even darker globalist terror to come. Cancel culture is the prelude to the rape, torture, and murder of the American people by a resentful underclass goaded on by a parasitic globalist ruling class.

The Bolsheviks were indisputably more murderous than today’s left (if only because they lived in a more violent age), but even they had to ramp up how much terror they engaged in.

At the beginning of their rule, in fact, the Bolsheviks were even willing to run a fair election. Just days after the October Revolution, they held the preplanned elections for Russia’s Constituent Assembly, anticipating an easy win. To their surprise, they were easily defeated by the Socialist Revolutionaries. And so, like any good leftists, they simply nullified the election and dissolved the Constituent Assembly. Since it was 100 years ago and the Bolsheviks were well-armed, it was enough to simply announce that the Constituent Assembly was closed. Today, they might concoct a more elaborate narrative, perhaps that the Socialist Revolutionaries engaged in “collusion” with a foreign power.

Once they had taken power, the Bolsheviks didn’t immediately launch Stalin-style mass purges. Instead, the Bolsheviks started off in a way modern Americans would find disturbingly familiar: By legitimizing criminal anarchy and co-opting the justice system.

In their earliest days, the Bolsheviks framed their political abuses as a “war on privilege.” In a tactic eerily reminiscent of 2020’s riots, the Bolsheviks of 1918 encouraged a decentralized campaign by the masses to plunder and crush class enemies.
In January 1918, at a meeting of party agitators on their way to the provinces, Lenin explained that the plunder of bourgeois property was to be encouraged as a form of social justice by revenge. It was a question of ‘looting the looters’. Under this slogan, which the Bolsheviks soon made their own, there was an orgy of robbery and violence in the next few months. Gorky described it as a mass pogrom. Armed gangs robbed the propertied — and then robbed each other. Swindlers, thieves and bandits grew rich, as law and order finally vanished. [Figes, A People’s Tragedy, p. 525-526]
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment

The Courage of Our Convictions
How to fight critical race theory
Christopher F. Rufo
April 22, 2021

Critical race theory is fast becoming America’s new institutional orthodoxy. Yet most Americans have never heard of it—and of those who have, many don’t understand it. This must change. We need to know what it is so we can know how to fight it.

To explain critical race theory, it helps to begin with a brief history of Marxism.

Originally, the Marxist Left built its political program on the theory of class conflict. Karl Marx believed that the primary characteristic of industrial societies was the imbalance of power between capitalists and workers. The solution to that imbalance, according to Marx, was revolution: the workers would eventually gain consciousness of their plight, seize the means of production, overthrow the capitalist class, and usher in a new socialist society.

During the twentieth century, a number of regimes underwent Marxist-style revolutions, and each ended in disaster. Socialist governments in the Soviet Union, China, Cambodia, Cuba, and elsewhere racked up a body count of nearly 100 million people. They are remembered for gulags, show trials, executions, and mass starvations. In practice, Marx’s ideas unleashed man’s darkest brutalities.

By the mid-1960s, Marxist intellectuals in the West had begun to acknowledge these failures. They recoiled at revelations of Soviet atrocities and came to realize that workers’ revolutions would never occur in Western Europe or the United States, which had large middle classes and rapidly improving standards of living.

Americans in particular had never developed a sense of class consciousness or class division. Most Americans believed in the American dream—the idea that they could transcend their origins through education, hard work, and good citizenship.

But rather than abandon their political project, Marxist scholars in the West simply adapted their revolutionary theory to the social and racial unrest of the 1960s. Abandoning Marx’s economic dialectic of capitalists and workers, they substituted race for class and sought to create a revolutionary coalition of the dispossessed based on racial and ethnic categories.

Fortunately, the early proponents of this revolutionary coalition in the U.S. lost out in the 1960s to the civil rights movement, which sought instead the fulfillment of the American promise of freedom and equality under the law.

Americans preferred the idea of improving their country to that of overthrowing it. Martin Luther King Jr.’s vision, President Lyndon Johnson’s pursuit of the Great Society, and the restoration of law and order promised by President Richard Nixon in his 1968 campaign defined the post-1960s American political consensus.

But the radical Left has proved resilient and enduring—which is where critical race theory comes in.

Critical race theory is an academic discipline, formulated in the 1990s and built on the intellectual framework of identity-based Marxism. Relegated for many years to universities and obscure academic journals, it has increasingly become the default ideology in our public institutions over the past decade. It has been injected into government agencies, public school systems, teacher training programs, and corporate human-resources departments, in the form of diversity-training programs, human-resources modules, public-policy frameworks, and school curricula.

Its supporters deploy a series of euphemisms to describe critical race theory, including “equity,” “social justice,” “diversity and inclusion,” and “culturally responsive teaching.” Critical race theorists, masters of language construction, realize that “neo-Marxism” would be a hard sell. Equity, on the other hand, sounds non-threatening and is easily confused with the American principle of equality. But the distinction is vast and important. Indeed, critical race theorists explicitly reject equality—the principle proclaimed in the Declaration of Independence, defended in the Civil War, and codified into law with the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments, the Civil Rights Act of 1964, and the Voting Rights Act of 1965. To them, equality represents “mere nondiscrimination” and provides “camouflage” for white supremacy, patriarchy, and oppression.

In contrast to equality, equity as defined and promoted by critical race theorists is little more than reformulated Marxism. In the name of equity, UCLA law professor and critical race theorist Cheryl Harris has proposed suspending private property rights, seizing land and wealth, and redistributing them along racial lines. Critical race guru Ibram X. Kendi, who directs the Center for Antiracist Research at Boston University, has proposed the creation of a federal Department of Antiracism. This department would be independent of (i.e., unaccountable to) the elected branches of government, and would have the power to nullify, veto, or abolish any law at any level of government and curtail the speech of political leaders and others deemed insufficiently “antiracist.”

One practical result of the creation of such a department would be the overthrow of capitalism, since, according to Kendi, “In order to truly be antiracist, you also have to truly be anti-capitalist.” In other words, identity is the means; Marxism is the end.

An equity-based form of government would mean the end not only of private property but also of individual rights, equality under the law, federalism, and freedom of speech. These would be replaced by race-based redistribution of wealth, group-based rights, active discrimination, and omnipotent bureaucratic authority. Historically, the accusation of “anti-Americanism” has been overused. But in this case, it’s not a matter of interpretation: critical race theory prescribes a revolutionary program that would overturn the principles of the Declaration and destroy the remaining structure of the Constitution.

What does critical race theory look like in practice? Last year, I authored a series of reports focused on critical race theory in the federal government. The FBI was holding workshops on intersectionality theory. The Department of Homeland Security was telling white employees that they were committing “microinequities” and had been “socialized into oppressor roles.” The Treasury Department held a training session telling staff members that “virtually all white people contribute to racism” and that they must convert “everyone in the federal government” to the ideology of “antiracism.” And the Sandia National Laboratories, which designs America’s nuclear arsenal, sent white male executives to a three-day reeducation camp, where they were told that “white male culture” was analogous to the “KKK,” “white supremacists,” and “mass killings.” The executives were then forced to renounce their “white male privilege” and to write letters of apology to fictitious women and people of color.

This year, I produced another series of reports focused on critical race theory in education. In Cupertino, California, an elementary school forced first-graders to deconstruct their racial and sexual identities and rank themselves according to their “power and privilege.” In Springfield, Missouri, a middle school forced teachers to locate themselves on an “oppression matrix,” based on the idea that straight, white, English-speaking, Christian males are members of the oppressor class and must atone for their privilege and “covert white supremacy.” In Philadelphia, an elementary school forced fifth-graders to celebrate “Black communism” and simulate a Black Power rally to free 1960s radical Angela Davis from prison, where she had once been held on charges of murder. And in Seattle, the school district told white teachers that they are guilty of “spirit murder” against black children and must “bankrupt [their] privilege in acknowledgement of [their] thieved inheritance.”

I’m just one investigative journalist, but I’ve developed a database of more than 1,000 of these stories. When I say that critical race theory is becoming the operating ideology of our public institutions, I am not exaggerating—from the universities to bureaucracies to K-12 school systems, critical race theory has permeated the collective intelligence and decision-making process of American government, with no sign of slowing down.

This is a revolutionary change. When originally established, these government institutions were presented as neutral, technocratic, and oriented toward broadly held perceptions of the public good. Today, under the increasing sway of critical race theory and related ideologies, they are being turned against the American people. This isn’t limited to the permanent bureaucracy in Washington, D.C., but is true as well of institutions in the states—even red states. It is spreading to county public health departments, small midwestern school districts, and more.

This ideology will not stop until it has devoured all of our institutions.

So far, attempts to halt the encroachment of critical race theory have been ineffective. There are a number of reasons for this.

First, too many Americans have developed an acute fear of speaking up about social and political issues, especially those involving race. According to a recent Gallup poll, 77 percent of conservatives are afraid to share their political beliefs publicly. Worried about getting mobbed on social media, fired from their jobs, or worse, they remain quiet, largely ceding the public debate to those pushing these anti-American ideologies. Consequently, the institutions themselves become monocultures: dogmatic, suspicious, and hostile to a diversity of opinion.

Conservatives in both the federal government and public school systems have told me that their “equity and inclusion” departments serve as political offices, searching for and stamping out any dissent from the official orthodoxy.
Second, critical race theorists have constructed their argument like a mousetrap.

Disagreement with their program becomes irrefutable evidence of a dissenter’s “white fragility,” “unconscious bias,” or “internalized white supremacy.” I’ve seen this projection of false consciousness on their opponents play out dozens of times in my reporting. Diversity trainers will make an outrageous claim—such as “all whites are intrinsically oppressors” or “white teachers are guilty of spirit murdering black children”—and then, when confronted with disagreement, adopt a patronizing tone and explain that participants who feel “defensiveness” or “anger” are reacting out of guilt and shame. Dissenters are instructed to remain silent, “lean into the discomfort,” and accept their “complicity in white supremacy.”

Third, Americans across the political spectrum have failed to separate the premise of critical race theory from its conclusion. Its premise—that American history includes slavery and other injustices, and that we should examine and learn from that history—is undeniable. But its revolutionary conclusion—that America was founded on and defined by racism and that our founding principles, our Constitution, and our way of life should be overthrown—does not rightly, much less necessarily, follow.

Fourth and finally, the writers and activists who have had the courage to speak out against critical race theory have tended to address it on the theoretical level, pointing out the theory’s logical contradictions and dishonest account of history.

These criticisms are worthy and good, but they move the debate into the academic realm—friendly terrain for proponents of critical race theory. They fail to force defenders of this revolutionary ideology to defend the practical consequences of their ideas in the realm of politics.

No longer simply an academic matter, critical race theory has become a tool of political power. To borrow a phrase from the Marxist theoretician Antonio Gramsci, it is fast achieving cultural hegemony in America’s public institutions. It is driving the vast machinery of the state and society. If we want to succeed in opposing it, we must address it politically at every level.

Critical race theorists must be confronted with and forced to speak to the facts.

Do they support public schools separating first-graders into groups of “oppressors” and “oppressed”? Do they support mandatory curricula teaching that “all white people play a part in perpetuating systemic racism”? Do they support public schools instructing white parents to become “white traitors” and advocate for “white abolition”? Do they want those who work in government to be required to undergo this kind of reeducation? How about managers and workers in corporate America? How about the men and women in our military? How about every one of us?

There are three parts to a successful strategy to defeat the forces of critical race theory: governmental action, grassroots mobilization, and an appeal to principle.

We already see examples of governmental action. Last year, one of my reports led President Trump to issue an executive order banning critical race theory–based training programs in the federal government. President Biden rescinded this order on his first day in office, but it provides a model for governors and municipal leaders to follow. This year, several state legislatures have introduced bills to achieve the same goal: preventing public institutions from conducting programs that stereotype, scapegoat, or demean people on the basis of race.

And I have organized a coalition of attorneys to file lawsuits against schools and government agencies that impose critical race theory–based programs on grounds of the First Amendment (which protects citizens from compelled speech), the Fourteenth Amendment (which provides equal protection under the law), and the Civil Rights Act of 1964 (which prohibits public institutions from discriminating on the basis of race).

On the grassroots level, a multiracial and bipartisan coalition is emerging to fight critical race theory. Parents are mobilizing against racially divisive curricula in public schools and employees are increasingly speaking out against Orwellian reeducation in the workplace. When they see what is happening, Americans are naturally outraged that critical race theory promotes three ideas—race essentialism, collective guilt, and neo-segregation—that violate the basic principles of equality and justice. Anecdotally, many Chinese-Americans have told me that, having survived the Cultural Revolution in their former country, they refuse to let the same thing happen here.

In terms of principles, we need to employ our own moral language rather than allow ourselves to be confined by the categories of critical race theory. For example, we often find ourselves debating “diversity.” Diversity as most of us understand it is generally good, all things being equal, but it is of secondary value. We should be talking about and aiming at excellence, a common standard that challenges people of all backgrounds to achieve their potential. On the scale of desirable ends, excellence beats diversity every time.

Similarly, in addition to pointing out the dishonesty of the historical narrative on which critical race theory is predicated, we must promote the true story of America—a story that is honest about injustices in American history, but that places them in the context of our nation’s high ideals and the progress we have made toward realizing them. Genuine American history is rich with stories of achievements and sacrifices that will move the hearts of Americans, in stark contrast to the grim and pessimistic narrative pressed by critical race theorists.

Above all, we must have courage, the fundamental virtue required in our time: courage to stand and speak the truth, courage to withstand epithets, courage to face the mob, and courage to shrug off the scorn of elites. When enough of us overcome the fear that currently prevents so many from speaking out, the hold of critical race theory will begin to slip. And courage begets courage. It’s easy to stop a lone dissenter; it’s much harder to stop 10, 20, 100, 1,000, 1 million, or more who stand up together for the principles of America. Truth and justice are on our side. If we can muster the courage, we will win.
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment

Newsweek Op-Ed Blasts Left — ‘Anti-Americanism is the New Patriotism’
203
Former Trump advisor Matthew Brodsky. Screenshot via YouTube.
Screenshot via YouTube
JOSHUA KLEIN23 Apr 2021213

In a Newsweek essay published Thursday, Matthew Brodsky, former adviser to the Trump administration’s Middle East peace team, blasted the left, claiming it seeks to banish all dissent, and specifically criticized recent calls for the canceling of Fox News host Tucker Carlson.

The essay, titled “When Everything is Racist There’s No Room for Reason,” begins by describing today’s progressives as demanding a “profound remaking of the country.”

“In their regressive Orwellian worldview, anti-Americanism is the new patriotism,” Brodsky (pictured) writes. “In their version of American democracy, big tech thought police substitute for the real police now being defunded in communities across America.”

Instead of a “free corporate media” presenting “multiple sides” on issues and allowing for “an open exchange of ideas on opinion pages,” Brodsky claims that today’s media has given way to “mob- and media-approved narratives” while calling to “silence and banish all dissent to the outer rim.”

According to Brodsky, who is also a Senior Fellow at the Gold Institute for International Strategy, this leads to “the Left’s distortion of any discussion about the relationship between the issues of border security, immigration, and voter integrity.”

Quoting Fox News host Tucker Carlson, who stated that Democrats intend to “change the population of the country ” in order to “win and maintain power,” Brodsky claims that Democrats seek open borders, limitless immigrations and “blanket” amnesty for illegal aliens, in order to broaden the Democratic voter base.

“Democrats’ own words have made Carlson’s point obvious for some time,” writes Brodsky, pointing to New York Times articles and statements of Democrat politicians, including Julian Castro and then-candidate Kamala Harris.

Another example, cited by Brodsky, of Democrats “demanding policies that benefit them electorally,” were the calls for Washington, DC and Puerto Rico to be recognized as independent states.

“Apparently, when they dug a little deeper, they discovered that Puerto Rico might be too competitive as a state in elections, unlike D.C. which would be a solid blue state,” he said. “While the House recently passed legislation for D.C. statehood, Democratic talk of Puerto Rican statehood has all but vanished.”

Addressing the “firestorm” set off by Carlson’s recent comments on immigration which led to “hysterical” calls for his dismissal, Brodsky writes that “the force of these calls can only gain purchase if they cast the issue as one of racism, rather than ‘a voting rights question,’ as Carlson explained.”

Brodsky then takes aim at the left’s use of “systemic racism” to shut down any debate.

“For the Left, the connective tissue that runs through every issue is the noxious claim of ‘systemic racism,’” he says. “It takes on many forms, such as critical race theory, intersectionality, and the accusation that everything is a relic of the Jim Crow era.”

“There is no debate or defense because the accusation is designed to skip the trial and move straight to sentencing,” he continues. “If it’s a symbol it is torn down. If it’s a person they are deplatformed, silenced, fired, and doxed by the Twitterati. If it’s a business or corporation it will be listed in The New York Times.”

Calling it “no surprise” that the “usual woke mob” called to cancel Carlson, Brodsky expresses more surprise by similar calls from the Anti-Defamation League (ADL), which he describes as “an organization that should have a solid handle on what racism is.”

Deciding to “insert itself in the middle of a legitimate debate about immigration,” Brodsky writes that the ADL “forcefully came down in favor of cancel culture” by sending a letter which referred to Carlson’s monologue as a “full-on embrace” and “open-ended endorsement” of white supremacist ideology while demanding Carlson’s dismissal.

“This letter marks the ADL’s unfortunate transformation into just another arm of the ever-expanding progressive Left,” Brodsky writes. “After all, the ADL and the progressive wing it parrots aren’t merely trying to cancel Tucker Carlson. Their goal is to quash the debate on immigration entirely.”

Brodsky adds that there is “nothing anti-Semitic or racist about pointing out how Democrats have focused on welcoming legal or illegal immigrants from countries that they believe will be ideological allies, and not from countries that tend to be more conservative.”

He then explains that the real source of racism stems from the Democrats.
“Despite the progressive attempt to label all points of disagreement as racist,” Brodsky says, “a much stronger example of racism comes from those who refuse to see people as individuals and instead only as members of racial, ethnic, and religious voting blocs.”

Calling antisemitism “a real and growing threat,” Brodsky claims that “the elected officials who most consistently attempt to brandish their anti-Semitism and anti-Zionism through legislation and as a part of their political platform are Democrats, who are being led by their progressive wing.”

Brodsky also claims that “paranoia, instability, and fear is the well from which racism springs,” while describing the left’s “perpetual expansion of political power” as a “poison pill for the American political body.”

Calling for a “real debate” over immigration and voting rights, Brodsky concludes that “panning everything as racist and silencing dissenting voices, at a time when too few politicians demonstrate courage, seems about as far away as one can get from what America’s Founders intended.”
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment

Why is Everything Liberal?
Cardinal Preferences Explain Why All Institutions are Woke

In a democracy, every vote is supposed to be equal. If about half the country supports one side and half the country supports another, you may expect major institutions to either be equally divided, or to try to stay politically neutral.

This is not what we find. If it takes a position on the hot button social issues around which our politics revolve, almost every major institution in America that is not explicitly conservative leans left. In a country where Republicans get around half the votes or something close to that in every election, why should this be the case?

This post started as an investigation into Woke Capital, one of the most important developments in the last decade or so of American politics. Although big business pressuring politicians is not new (the NFL moved the Super Bowl from Arizona over MLK day), the scope of the issues on which corporations feel the need to weigh in is certainly expanding, now including LGBT issues, abortion laws, voting rights, kneeling during the national anthem, and gun control.

Conservatives have taken notice. JD Vance appears ready to run for Senate, and it seems like opposing corporate power is going to be a major part of his political identity. Josh Hawley regularly introduces bills to harm this or that industry, often based on some position it has taken that he doesn’t like. We shouldn’t exaggerate the realignment too much; last time Republicans had control of government, their major legislative achievement was a corporate tax cut.

Nonetheless, regardless of whether politicians are serious about doing something about Woke Capital, the phenomenon is interesting in and of itself for what it tells us about the nature of institutions in American society, and where our culture and politics are going.

As I started to research the topic, however, I realized there wasn’t much to explain. Asking why corporations are woke is like asking why Hispanics tend to have two arms, or why the Houston Rockets have increased their number of 3-point shots taken over the last few decades. All humans tend to have two arms, and all NBA teams shoot more 3-pointers than in the past, so focusing on one subset of the population that has the same characteristics as all others in the group misses the point.

I think one reason Woke Capital is getting so much attention is because we expect business to be more right-leaning, and corporations throwing in with the party of more taxes and regulation strikes us as odd. We are used to schools, non-profits, mainline religions, etc. taking liberal positions and feel like business should be different. But business is just being assimilated into a larger trend.

Corporations are woke, meaning left wing on social issues relative to the general population, because institutions are woke. So the question becomes why are institutions woke?

Ordinal Versus Cardinal Utility
While all votes count equally on Election Day, at all other times some citizens matter a lot more than others. For example, let’s say I vote Republican every two years, but otherwise go on with my life and rarely ever think about politics. You, on the other hand, not only vote Democrat, but give money to campaigns, write your Congressman when major legislation comes up, wear pink hats, and march in the streets or write emails to institutions when you’re outraged about something.

Through the lens of ordinal utility, in which people simply rank what they want to happen, we are about equal. I prefer Republicans to Democrats, while you have the opposite preference. But when we think in terms of cardinal utility – in layman’s terms, how bad people want something to happen – it’s no contest. You are going to be much more influential than me. Most people are relatively indifferent to politics and see it as a small part of their lives, yet a small percentage of the population takes it very seriously and makes it part of its identity. Those people will tend to punch above their weight in influence, and institutions will be more responsive to them.

Elections are a measure of ordinal preferences. As long as you care enough to vote, it doesn’t matter how much you care about the election outcome, as everyone’s voice is the same. But for everything else – who speaks up in a board meeting about whether a corporation should take a political position, who protests against a company taking a position one side or the other finds offensive, etc. – cardinal utility maters a lot. Only a small minority of the public ever bothers to try to influence a corporation, school, or non-profit to reflect certain values, whether from the inside or out.

In an evenly divided country, if one side simply cares more, it’s going to exert a disproportionate influence on all institutions, and be more likely to see its preferences enacted in the time between elections when most people aren’t paying much attention.

Accounting for Cardinal Utility
In simple terms, the theory presented here says liberals win because they care about politics more. Is there any way we can verify this is indeed the case?
Here are two graphs that have been getting a lot of attention



Image

What jumps out to me in these figures is not only how left leaning large institutions are, but how the same is true for most professions. Whether you are looking by institution or by individuals, there are more donations to Biden than Trump. Yet Republicans get close to half the votes! Where are the Trump supporters? What these graphs reveal is a larger story, in which more people give to liberal causes and candidates than to conservative ones, even if Americans are about equally divided in which party they support (and no, this isn’t the result of liberals being wealthier, the connections between income and ideology or party are pretty weak). Here are some graphs from late October showing Biden having more individual donors than Trump in every battleground state.



According to The Washington Post: “The Democratic nominee and his associated committees have received donations from nearly 5.9 million people, while Trump has seen donations from 3.7 million donors, according to The Washington Post’s analysis of data from the Federal Election Commission between Jan. 1, 2020, and Oct. 14, 2020.”

Assuming practically nobody donated to both Trump and Biden, which seems a pretty safe bet, as of late October, 9.6 million Americans donated to a presidential campaign, compared to 161 million who voted. In other words, 49.1% of all Americans cast a ballot in 2020, compared to 2.9% who cared enough to actually give money to one side or the other. This doesn’t include money donated to Super PACs, etc., nor does it take into account people who may have donated in the final weeks of the campaign or to a third party, but even if you did account for these things it wouldn’t change the larger story.

So while Biden beat Trump in the popular vote by 51%-47% (+4), in the donor game, Biden beat Trump by 61-39% (+22%). It is therefore unsurprising that Biden got more donors than Trump across most professions, and in almost every large institution.

This pattern doesn’t appear to be unique to 2020. In 2016, Hillary Clinton outraised Trump 2-1, including both the campaigns and Super PACs although Trump did beat Hillary in number of small donors as defined by those making contributions of $200 or less.

In the 2012 election, Obama raised $234 million from small individual contributors, compared to $80 million for Romney, while also winning among large contributors.



Part 1 of 2
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment
Part 2 of 2

To put Biden’s donor advantage in context, in the 2020 election Biden beat Trump in the solidly blue state of Illinois by 17%. Biden’s 22% advantage over Trump among donors across the entire country is greater than his advantage among all voters in Illinois. In California, Biden won by about 29%, meaning as a class donors are closer to reflecting that famously liberal state than they are to being representative of the country as a whole (none of this is meant as a commentary on whether fundraising actually matters in presidential election outcomes, I’m simply using donors to each side and how much they donate as a way to get at the issue of cardinal utility).

In addition to money, another way to measure cardinal utility is to look at protests. I tend not to trust media or academic estimates for exact numbers, since these things are hard to measure and their political biases mean that they may exaggerate the number who show up for liberal causes and do the opposite for conservatives. Nonetheless, even with that caveat, I don’t think anyone would deny that the women’s march, BLM, and Occupy Wall Street have drawn many more people than rallies for the Tea Party and Trump.

In September 2009, at the height of the Tea Party movement, conservatives held the “Taxpayer March on Washington,” which drew something like 60,000-70,000 people, leading one newspaper to call it “the largest conservative protest ever to storm the Capitol.” Since that time, the annual anti-abortion March for Life rally in Washington has drawn massive crowds, with estimates for some years ranging widely from low six figures to mid-to-high six figures. March for Life is not to be confused with “March for Our Lives,” a pro-gun control rally that activists claim saw 800,000 people turn out in 2018. All these events were dwarfed by the Women’s March in opposition to Trump, which drew by one estimate “between 3,267,134 and 5,246,670 people in the United States (our best guess is 4,157,894).

That translates into 1 percent to 1.6 percent of the U.S. population of 318,900,000 people (our best guess is 1.3 percent).” Even if the two left-wing academics who did this research are letting their bias infuse their work, there is no question that protesting is generally a left-wing activity, as conservatives themselves realize.

People who engage in protesting care more about politics than people who donate money, and people who donate money care more than people who simply vote. Imagine a pyramid with voters at the bottom and full-time activists on top, and as you move up the pyramid it gets much narrower and more left-wing. Multiple strands of evidence indicate this would basically be an accurate representation of society.

Another line of evidence showing that the left simply cares more about politics comes from Noah Carl, who has put together data showing liberals are in their personal lives more intolerant of conservatives than vice versa across numerous dimensions in the US and the UK. Those on the left are more likely to block someone on social media over their views, be upset if their child marries someone from the other side, and find it hard to be friends with or date someone they disagree with politically. Here are two graphs demonstrating the general point.







Not letting politics interfere with personal relationships is a sign that politics isn’t all that important to you.

A final way to understand cardinal utility is to consider the media and academia.

Generally, these are professions that have absolutely terrible career prospects, and they draw people with high IQs who could expect to be making a lot more money doing something else. But for those who make it in these fields, individuals get to have an influence in society that is disproportionate to their status as measured by income. Of course, the media makes it harder to be a right-wing activist through doxxing, etc., and so that might explain to some extent why the right is less politically active, though I doubt this is a large part of the story given how relatively little appetite there apparently is among conservatives even for right-wing activism in favor of positions and views that don’t tend to get one cancelled (i.e., donating to Mitt Romney in 2012).

Eric Kaufmann wrote a report for CSPI highlighting anti-conservative discrimination in academia. While he is surely right that this exists, his data make clear that even absent discrimination liberals would still dominate the profession. He finds that in the US and the UK, there’s a ratio of about 10:1 to 15:1 for left-wing to right-wing PhD students, and smaller but still substantial gaps among Master’s students.



It is important to highlight just what an irrational decision going into academia is for a person who wants to maximize their lifetime earnings. Graduate school takes something like 6 years, during which you’re making something like a minimum wage salary as a college graduate. This is all in the hopes of getting a postdoc, perhaps bouncing around low paying jobs for a few years, until the point where you finally find permanent employment at around 30 at the earliest.

Even then you often don’t make as much money as a Walmart manager. And those are the successful cases!

People go into academia and journalism for generally idealistic reasons. Some conservatives might be turned away from these professions for political reasons, which poses a “chicken or egg” problem. In my experience though, a smart young person going into journalism is probably better off going into conservative media than they are liberal media, which is already saturated with people with elite degrees who cannot find stable employment. There’s a great deal of demand for conservative journalism among the general public, but few competent conservatives who want to be journalists given what the profession pays relative to what else smart people can be doing. Thus conservative media tends to see the rise of completely incompetent outlets like OANN, which posts fake COVID cures when it’s not arguing the whole thing is fake.

Democracy and Political Ideology
There’s a great irony here. Conservatives tend to be more skeptical of pure democracy, and believe in individuals coming together and forming civil society organizations away from government. Yet conservatives are extremely bad at gaining or maintaining control of institutions relative to liberals. It’s not because they are poorer or the party of the working class – again, I can’t stress enough how little economics predicts people’s political preferences – but because they are the party of those who simply care less about the future of their country.

Debates over voting rights make the opposite assumption, as conservatives tend to want more restrictions on voting, and liberals fewer, with National Review explicitly arguing against a purer form of democracy. Conservatives may be right that liberals are less likely to care enough to do basic things like bring a photo ID and correctly fill out a ballot. If this is true, Republicans are the party of people who care enough to vote when doing so is made slightly more difficult but not enough to do anything else, while Democrats are the party of both the most active and least active citizens. Yet while being the “care only enough to vote” party might be adequate for winning elections, the future belongs to those at the tail end of the distribution who really want to change the world.

The discussion here makes it hard to suggest reforms for conservatives. Do you want to give government more power over corporations? None of the regulators will be on your side. Leave corporations alone? Then you leave power to Woke Capital, though it must to a certain extent be disciplined and limited by the preferences of consumers. Start your own institutions? Good luck staffing them with competent people for normal NGO or media salaries, and if you’re not careful they’ll be captured by your enemies anyway, hence Conquest’s Second Law. And the media will be there every step of the way to declare any of your attempts at taking power to be pure fascism, and brush aside any resistance to your schemes as righteous anger, up to and including rioting and acts of violence.

There’s a way to interpret the data discussed above that is more flattering to conservatives than presenting them as the ideology of people who don’t care.

Those who identify on the right are happier, less mentally ill, and more likely to start families. Perhaps political activism is often a sign of a less well-adjusted mind or the result of seeking to fill an empty void in one’s personal life.

Conservatives may tell themselves that they are the normal people party, too satisfied and content to expend much time or energy on changing the world. But in the end, the world they live in will ultimately reflect the preferences and values of their enemies.

From this perspective we might want to consider this passage from Scott Alexander, who writes the following in his review of a biography of Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

The normal course of politics is various coalitions of elites and populace, each drawing from their own power bases. A normal political party, like a normal anything else, has elite leaders, analysts, propagandists, and managers, plus populace foot soldiers. Then there's an election, and sometimes our elites get in, and sometimes your elites get in, but getting a political party that's against the elites is really hard and usually the sort of thing that gets claimed rather than accomplished, because elites naturally rise to the top of everything.

But sometimes political parties can run on an explicitly anti-elite platform. In theory this sounds good - nobody wants to be elitist. In practice, this gets really nasty quickly. Democracy is a pure numbers game, so it's hard for the elites to control - the populace can genuinely seize the reins of a democracy if it really wants. But if that happens, the government will be arrayed against every other institution in the nation. Elites naturally rise to the top of everything - media, academia, culture - so all of those institutions will hate the new government and be hated by it in turn. Since all natural organic processes favor elites, if the government wants to win, it will have to destroy everything natural and organic - for example, shut down the regular media and replace it with a government-controlled media run by its supporters.

When elites use the government to promote elite culture, this usually looks like giving grants to the most promising up-and-coming artists recommended by the art schools themselves, and having the local art critics praise their taste and acumen. When the populace uses the government to promote popular culture against elite culture, this usually looks like some hamfisted attempt to designate some kind of "official" style based on what popular stereotypes think is "real art from back in the day when art was good", which every art school and art critic attacks as clueless Philistinism. Every artist in the country will make groundbreaking exciting new art criticizing the government's poor judgment, while the government desperately looks for a few technicians willing to take their money and make, I don't know, pretty landscape paintings or big neoclassical buildings.

The important point is that elite government can govern with a light touch, because everything naturally tends towards what they want and they just need to shepherd it along. But popular/anti-elite government has a strong tendency toward dictatorship, because it won't get what it wants without crushing every normal organic process. Thus the stereotype of the "right-wing strongman", who gets busy with the crushing.

So the idea of "right-wing populism" might invoke this general concept of somebody who, because they have made themselves the champion of the populace against the elites, will probably end up incentivized to crush all the organic processes of civil society, and yoke culture and academia to the will of government in a heavy-handed manner.

To put it in a different way, to steelman the populist position, democracy does not reflect the will of the citizenry, it reflects the will of an activist class, which is not representative of the general population. Populists, in order to bring institutions more in line with what the majority of the people want, need to rely on a more centralized and heavy-handed government. The strongman is liberation from elites, who aren’t the best citizens, but those with the most desire to control people’s lives, often to enforce their idiosyncratic belief system on the rest of the public, and also a liberation from having to become like elites in order to fight them, so conservatives don’t have to give up on things like hobbies and starting families and devote their lives to activism.

I’m not suggesting this is the path conservatives should take; they might feel that a stronger, more centralized and powerful government is too contrary to their own ideals. In that case, however, they’ll have to reconcile themselves to continue to lose the culture into the foreseeable future, at least until they are able to inspire a critical mass to do more than just vote its preferences.
 
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marsh

On TB every waking moment

Regular Americans Are Not Going to Fall for the Left's Cynical Politics of Racial Division
Neil  Patel
Neil Patel

Posted: Apr 23, 2021 12:01 AM

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.

Regular Americans Are Not Going to Fall for the Left's Cynical Politics of Racial Division

Source: AP Photo/Adrian Kraus

The left and the right have been battling it out for months over who can freak out average Americans the most. Regular Americans were definitely not impressed by the photos of team QAnon in capes and horn helmets posing in the U.S. Capitol. Normal Americans may be mad at Washington, but they love our country and don't want to see national monuments turned into a freak party.

People had the same reaction when angry left-wing rioters defaced war monuments to our nation's heroes in Washington last summer.

The question for leading Republicans and Democrats is who has the strength to pull away from the whack-job parts of their respective bases and capture the American voter who, at this point, is just searching for the least-crazy solution.

This week, the Democrats seem to have ceded that voter back to the Republicans.

It shouldn't be a newsflash, but we need the police. The whole "defund" idea is crazy. It also shouldn't have to be said that the majority of police are honorable, hardworking people trying to do a really hard job, which includes putting their lives on the line for relatively low compensation. We owe them a debt of gratitude. And if our political leaders treat the police too unfairly, they may just drive some of these honorable police officers out of the business altogether.

People have noticed the scorn the left holds for police. It hurt Democrats at the ballot box this past election, and it will hurt them more this next election. None of this is to say that there are no problems in American policing or that we have no racist police. There are problems; there are racist police; and there are legitimate reforms worth debating. The left's proposed solutions, however, are reflective of an anti-police mindset. That may work for the patrons of antifa bars in Portland, Oregon, but it won't fly nationally, even in 2021.

It especially won't fly in Black and Hispanic communities, which tend to have higher crime rates. When Minneapolis cut its police force last year, many citizens of minority neighborhoods complained. They know the value of an effective police presence. Democrats with private security who live in safe neighborhoods can pitch nutty "defund the police" ideas all they want without bearing the consequences. In fact, commentary like this from the left is driving some of these voters into the arms of a Republican Party that is still too inept and too devoid of leadership to devise a policy that would take advantage of this dynamic.

This week, the tragic shooting of 16-year-old Ma'Khia Bryant by a Columbus, Ohio, police officer became the latest racial controversy. Similar to the George Floyd tragedy, the facts of this case were on film and available for anyone to analyze. While the Floyd video left viewers feeling anger at the officer (now convicted), the video in the Columbus case left the opposite impression. Contrary to the initial news reports, the shooting victim was not unarmed; she was not only armed but also attempting to stab another young girl as the officer approached. We may find out more, but from the video alone, there is at least a strong case this officer acted out of necessity.

The insanity of the American left was on full display in the wake of the Bryant video. National news outlets like The Washington Post and The New York Times put out headlines and tweets, even after the bodycam video, that failed to mention Bryant was armed with a knife and lunging at another young girl when shot. National celebrities such as Lebron James attacked the police officer personally even after the knife video was made public. There's a huge difference between a story about a police officer shooting an unarmed Black girl and a story about a police officer shooting someone about to stab an unarmed Black girl with a large knife. Crazy does not begin to describe the sort of attitude that would ignore that.

Race is the single most sensitive issue in our country. Neighborhoods have burned; businesses have been looted; and people have been killed in race riots. The police officer in question is a real person, not some cable news character. His life is now in danger, largely because the media and celebrities have mischaracterized his actions by omitting key facts. Purposely withholding facts that could help diffuse a racial situation is beyond radical, but many public figures are doing it.

It's hard to understand why news organizations and celebrities would want to stoke racial unrest so much that they would twist the facts to do it. There aren't many explanations for that sort of behavior. Ratings are down post-Trump, so maybe they can't resist sensationalizing the story as much as possible. That would be a pretty cynical perspective. A dominant theory on the right is that stoking racial division is the left's only hope for building a majority political coalition. That's even more cynical, but the actions this week don't lead to many other viable theories.

America is still pretty evenly divided along political lines, but Democrats hold the power in Washington. President Joe Biden indicated a strong understanding of this during his inaugural call for national unity. Yet he -- or his staff -- seems to be doing everything possible to push away from that unity agenda. Voters will decide, starting in two years, if this push to the hard left is what they want. I wouldn't bet on that.
 

Ractivist

Pride comes before the fall.....Pride month ended.
[COMMENT: Equity is equal outcomes - the drift to mediocrity (vs meritocracy) and the celebration of the death of competition and the rise of the lowest common denominator.]


Virginia Department Of Education Eliminating Accelerated Math Courses In The Name Of Equity
Germany Debates Reopening Schools

(Photo by Alex Grimm/Getty Images)

ASHLEY CARNAHANCONTRIBUTOR
April 22, 20219:30 PM ET

The Virginia Department of Education (VDOE) is seeking to eliminate accelerated math courses prior to 11th grade in the name of equity, according to Fox News.

Loudoun County school board member Ian Serotkin announced Tuesday that the Virginia Mathematics Pathways Initiative (VMPI), which seeks to “revamp the K-12 math curriculum statewide over the next few years,” is looking to “eliminate ALL math acceleration prior to 11th grade.”

View attachment 263123

“That is not an exaggeration, nor does there appear to be any discretion in how local districts implement this. All 6th graders will take Foundational Concepts 6. All 7th graders will take Foundational Concepts 7. All 10th graders will take Essential Concepts 10. Only in 11th and 12th grade is there any opportunity for choice in higher math courses,” Loudin wrote.

The VDOE website states several new goals for the initiative, including to “mprove equity in mathematics learning opportunities,” “[e]mpower students to be active participants in a quantitative world,” according to Fox News.

A Loudon parent told Fox News on Thursday the changes to accelerated learning would “lower standards for all students in the name of equity.”

“These changes will have a profound impact on students who excel in STEM-related curriculum, weakening our country’s ability to compete in a global marketplace for years to come,” the parent said.

VDOE spokesperson Charles Pyle told Fox News the VMPI would “support increased differentiated learning opportunities within a heterogeneous learning environment.”

Pyle did not reply with an immediate answer about concerns that students would potentially be held back if the new VMPI model was implemented, Fox News reported.
Algebra, geometry, calculus........ wife was a math major. The only world she dominates me in. That and bowling, big ten champ, Midwest champ, top twenty four in the nation in her day. Bowled with her once, beat her.....never rolled a ball with her again. Didn't take a math major to figure that one out.
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment

12 Myths Fueling Government Overreach In Times Of Crisis

SUNDAY, APR 25, 2021 - 11:10 AM
Authored by Robert Higgs via The Mises Institute,

Congress and the president have adopted many critically important policies in great haste during brief periods of perceived national emergency. During the first “hundred days” of the Franklin D. Roosevelt administration in the spring of 1933, for example, the government abandoned the gold standard, enacted a system of wide-ranging controls, taxes, and subsidies in agriculture, and set in motion a plan to cartelize the nation’s manufacturing industries. In 2001, the USA PATRIOT Act was enacted in a rush even though no member of Congress had read it in its entirety. Since September 2008, the government and the Federal Reserve System have implemented a rapid-fire series of bailouts, loans, “stimulus” spending programs and partial or complete takeover of big banks and other large firms, acting at each step in great haste.

Any government policymaking on an important matter entails serious risks, but crisis policymaking stands apart from the more deliberate process in which new legislation is usually enacted or new regulatory measures are usually put into effect. Because formal institutional changes—however hastily they might have been made—have a strong tendency to become entrenched, remaining in effect for many years and sometimes for many decades, crisis policymaking has played an important part in generating long-term growth of government through a ratchet effect in which “temporary” emergency measures have expanded the government’s size, scope, or power.


It therefore behooves us to recognize the typical presumptions that give crisis policymaking its potency.

The twelve propositions given here express some of the ideas that are advanced or assumed again and again in connection with episodes of quick, fear-driven policymaking—events whose long-term consequences are often counterproductive.

1. Nothing like the present situation has ever happened before. If the existing crisis were seen as simply the latest incident in a series of similar crises, policy makers and the public would be more inclined to relax, appreciating that such rough seas have been navigated successfully in the past and will be navigated successfully on this occasion, too. Fears would be relieved.

Exaggerated doomsday scenarios would be dismissed as overwrought and implausible. Such relaxation, however, would ill serve the sponsors of extraordinary government measures, regardless of their motives for seeking adoption of these measures. Fear is a great motivator, so the proponents of expanded government action have an incentive to represent the current situation as unprecedented and therefore as uniquely menacing unless the government intervenes forcefully to save the day.

2. Unless the government intervenes, the situation will get worse and worse. Crisis always presents some sort of worsening of something: the economy’s output has fallen; prices have risen greatly; the country has been attacked by foreigners. If such untoward developments were seen as having occurred in a one-off manner, then people might be content to stick with the institutional status quo. If, however, people project the recent changes forward, imagining that adverse events will continue to occur and possibly to gather strength as they continue, then they will object to a “do nothing” response, reasoning that “something must be done” lest the course of events eventuate in an utterly ruinous situation. To speed a huge, complex, “anti-terrorism” bill through Congress in 2001, George W. Bush invoked the specter of another terrorist attack. Barack Obama, Invoking the specter of economic collapse, rushed through Congress early in 2009 the huge Economic Recovery and Reinvestment Act before any legislator had digested it. In a February 5, 2009, op-ed in the Washington Post, he wrote, “If nothing is done … our nation will sink deeper into a crisis that, at some point, we may not be able to reverse.”1 At a February 9 press conference, he said “[A] failure to act will only deepen this crisis,” and “could turn a crisis into a catastrophe.”

3. Today is all-important; we must act immediately. In his first inaugural address, Franklin D. Roosevelt declared, “This nation asks for action, and action now.” He then proceeded directly to speak of the most terrifying problem of the day, mass unemployment. "Our greatest primary task is the put people to work … It can be accomplished in part by direct recruiting by the Government itself, treating the task as we would treat the emergency of a war, but at the same time, through this employment, accomplishing greatly needed projects to stimulate and reorganize the use of our national resources." In any event, "The people want direct, vigorous action."

Similarly, not long after taking office, Barack Obama similarly declared, not long after taking office, “The situation is getting worse. We have to act and act now to break the momentum of this recession.” “Doing nothing is not an option,” he said in Elkhart, Indiana on February 9. “The situation we face could not be more serious,” and “we can’t afford to wait.” In the February 5 op-ed, listing a series of objectives he claimed the pending legislation would achieve, he began four successive paragraphs with the words “now is the time to…”6

4. Government officials know or can quickly discover how to remedy the problem. All government policies adopted to meet a crisis presume that the government knows how to effect the rescue it seeks. The government officials may sometimes admit, as in the early new deal, that is does not know exactly how to proceed, yet it maintains that “doing something” is better than doing nothing. Roosevelt maintained that the government ought to try something and, if that measure failed, then try something else. Thus, ignorant flailing about— on the assumption that “doing something” has no costs, adverse effects, or untoward long-term consequences—has been touted as a virtue, and indeed many members of the public, no more expert than the government itself have agreed that the government must “try something.”

5. We may safely rely on the establishment and on its insiders for expertise in this crisis. As a common first step in reacting to a crisis, the government often assembles a council of experts or some such group of wise men and women.

These experts are invariable drawn from the government itself and from groups with whom the government maintains cozy relations. The experts frequently include those who had responsibility for carrying out the government policies that contributed to the occurrence of the crisis in the first place. Thus, no matter how ill fated monetary policy may have been, the government will call on the secretary of the Treasury and the head of the Federal Reserve System to decide, perhaps along with others, what should be done next. In this constructed circle, the range of possible future actions the government might take is almost always no wider than the range of actions taken in the past. Hence, the “experts” are subject to repeating the same errors time and again.

6. We may trust the government to act responsibly and effectively on the basis of the expertise they command. The public looks to government officials and their assembled “wise men” to act in the public interest and to organize their actions in an effective manner. If the policy makers lack the requisite knowledge, then such trust is bound to be misplaced, because no matter how responsibly the policy makers may try to be, they simply don’t know what they are doing. If they do have the requisite expertise, however, they may still fail to act on it because of their political, ideological, or personal interests and connections.

The public tends to think of crises as akin to mechanical problems—the car’s engine is not running; policy makers need to give it a “jump start.” Crises, however, are rarely so simple. More often, they involve far-reaching relationships among many individuals, groups, and nations, and the lack of productive coordination that the crisis represents can seldom be restored by simple policy actions such as “the government ought to double its spending and rely on borrowed funds to cover its budget deficit. Complex political, social, and economic breakdowns rarely take a form subject to easy treatment activist policymakers (though many of them can take care of themselves if only policymakers stand aside from them.)

7. The clear benefits of quick government action may be assumed to outweigh its costs and its actual or potential negative consequences. Crisis decision making is not characterized by careful attempts to justify actions on a benefit-cost basis. If the situation is dire, policy makers and many members of the public simply assume that a policy with positive net benefits may be adopted.

Little basis exists for this assumption. Even in a crisis, the government may take many actions whose costs and risks greatly outweigh any benefit they may bring.

The potential is great for focuses on benefits that are immediate and visible while disregarding costs that are delayed and less easily perceived. Thus, policymakers are likely to plunge almost blindly ahead where more calculating angels fear to tread.

8. Fact finding, deliberation, study, and debate are too time-consuming and must be forgone in favor of immediate action. In April 1932, a year before the momentous explosion of New Deal measures after Roosevelt took office, Felix Frankfurter complained in a letter to Walter Lippmann that “one measure after another has been … hurriedly concocted…. They have been denominated emergency efforts, and any plea for deliberation, for detailed discussion, for exploration of alternatives has been regarded as obstructive or doctrinaire or both.” The events of the spring 1933 congressional session raised all of these attributes by an order of magnitude.

President Obama likewise recently declared that enough debate had occurred on the massive “stimulus” package even though it had been rushed through both houses of Congress, neither of which had paused to hold hearings on it. “We can’t posture and bicker. Endless delay and paralysis in Washington in the face of this crisis will only bring deepening disaster.”

9. Existing structures and incumbent firms must be preserved; new structures and firms are unthinkable. Existing office holders, bureaucrats, firm managers, and owners have a decisive political advantage over possible alternative occupants of their positions (“new entrants”). Hence, the overriding theme in any crisis is that current politicians and capitalists must be preserved—propped up, bailed out, subsidized, whatever it takes to save them and their present organizations.

In truth, however, the best way to deal with some crises is by getting rid of the persons and organizations that helped to bring them on. Bankruptcy, for examples, is not the end of the world, but simply the end of existing stockholders. If a company still possesses valuable assets, they will be transferred to new and presumably more competent managers.

10. If a policy is not getting the results its proponents promised, more money should be poured into it until it finally “works.” This presumption receives application to government policies in general, not simply to crisis policies in particular, but it gains force during a national emergency, when getting results as regarded as especially imperative.

By the time Barack Obama became president, the U.S. Treasury and the Fed had made commitments for trillions of dollars in loans, capital infusions, loan guarantees, and other purposes. Yet, the economy continued to sink. The president and his senior advisers did not conclude that these measures had failed, but only that they had been too timid. Thus, President Obama told reporters that after Japan’s bust in the early 1990s, the Japanese government “did not act boldly or swiftly enough,” even though it spent trillions of dollars on construction projects. Likewise, Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner concluded from his study of the Japanese stagnations that “spending must come in quick, massive doses, and be continued until recovery takes firm root.”

11. We must not be deterred by the accumulation of public debt; there is no practical limit to the amount the government may safely borrow. Political office holders prefer to finance their spending by borrowing rather than taxing, if possible. That way, the public does not feel so dispossessed and therefore is less inclined to oppose the spending programs. In a national emergency, the office holders’ preference for deficit finance comes ever more boldly to the fore, and throughout history governments have tended to borrow heavily to pay for major wars. With the dawning of the Age of Keynes, deficit financing during recessions acquired an ostensible intellectual rationale, magnifying whatever inclinations the politicians already possessed. At present, the public debt is rising at an unprecedented rate, yet few people raise serious objections to the government’s spending program on this ground. Virtually everyone who matters politically is content to rely on what I call “vulgar Keynesianism”—or at least pretend to do so.

12. The occasion demands that policymakers put aside partisan or strictly political maneuvering and act entirely in the general public interest, and we can expect them to do act accordingly. After Woodrow Wilson had sought and gained a congressional declaration of war in 1917, he declared that “politics is adjourned.” By this expression, he sought to convey the idea that he would henceforth abstain from the usual partisan maneuvering and devote himself to prosecution of the war in the most effective way and that, he hoped, others would do the same. Whether his announcement of the adjournment was sincere or merely attempt to point those who disagreed with his war policies as partisan obstructionists, we do not know. We do know, however, that partisan political actions did not cease on either side.

In a similar way, President Obama recently declared, “We are in one of those periods in American history where we don’t have Republicans or Democratic problems, we have American problems. My commitment as the incoming president is going to be to reach out across the aisle to both chambers to listen and not just talk, to not just try to dictate but try to create a partnership …

[W]e’re … not going to get bogged down by old-style politics on either side.” A month later he reiterated this idea, denouncing “the same old partisan gridlock that stands in the way of action while our economy continues to slide.” And promising “We can place good ideas ahead of old ideological battles, and a sense of purpose above the same narrow partisanship.” Even as he made this declaration, however, partisan maneuvering continued as usual on both sides in Congress.

Politics cannot be put aside. Politics is what politicians and political interest groups do. Partisanship is inevitable as political actors who seek conflicting ends struggle for maximum control of the government.
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment

"Biden Is An Idiot" - Fmr Police Officer Blasts Democrats For "Riding The Wave Of Dead Black People"

SUNDAY, APR 25, 2021 - 08:01 AM

Former Arizona police officer-turned conservative political commentator Brandon Tatum unloaded on President Biden and the press for politicizing the Derek Chauvin trial, and insists that so-called 'systemic racism' is simply manufactured by politicians and the media to earn votes and make money.


"I think we're living in the twilight zone," Tatum said of the Chauvin trial. "This conviction, in my personal opinion, did nothing for our country. People are living a lie. I mean this is one police officer, one person in the community, they found him guilty, this was the swiftest justice I've ever seen in my life. The day after the film came out he was arrested. He was tried. 10 hours of deliberation, he was convicted. I'm not really sure why people are acting like this is monumental.

"Also, he did not get a fair trial in my personal opinion. There was a lot of obstruction that happened. They paid the family out $27 million before the jury could be selected. I mean, they're going to have a case in appeal. I don't know why people are celebrating and I don't know why this is such a big focal point other than - people are making money off of the pain of people in our country."

The BBC host then asked Tatum if he was upset over this "landmark" case?

"This is not a landmark case, this is a political agenda," Tatum shot back. They're pushing laws in our country. Policing in America is not inherently racist. We don't live in a racist country. This was an interaction between a police officer that I thought did the wrong thing, and a black man who was on drugs high, resisting arrest, and ended up being killed by that police officer. That's as simple as it can be. The President of the United States got out and made a fool of himself trying to promote racism in a simple police encounter that the officer got convicted on.

"So you reject President Biden's comment about systemic racism and it being a stain on the whole nation?" the host replied.

"Yes, President Biden is an idiot in my personal opinion, and he's just talkin' because he's a politician. Systemic racism - I mean if you look at Joe Biden himself, he spoke at a Klu Klux Klan-member's funeral and did the eulogy of Robert Byrd ... We don't have a problem with racism in our country, we have a problem with people not following the law. We also have a problem with politicians making up things so they can get re-elected. And that's exactly what has been happening. That's why you never see anything change. They're lying to us.

The host then tried using woke racial statistics, arguing: "So the rate of people being killed by police - the rate is higher amongst black people than amongst the rest of the population. How do you account for that if that isn't a systemic racism problem?"

Tatum shut that down with force, replying: "First of all that's not true, twice as many white people are killed by police every year. Twice as many white people are killed unarmed by police every year - you just don't see it. There's a gentleman named Tony Timpa. I bet nobody has any idea who Tony Timpa is.

Tony Timpa was murdered in the same fashion as George Floyd was killed, but because he was white, we don't hear about it and nobody cares about it. Nobody's talking about police reform when he was suffocated and killed.

But they only talk about it because George Floyd is black.

"Black people commit over half of violent crimes in this country, and only make up 13 percent of the population. They commit over half of the murders in this country, but only make up 13 percent of the population - and we can agree that 13 percent of the population aren't the criminals. There's only a small fraction of the black community that's doing this. So that explains why police are in the black communities more, and that explains why black people are incarcerated more. They are making up lies saying that it has anything to do with racism.

"Do you understand that there's black police officers too that patrol many of these majority-black cities? Are they racist? No, that's not the case. They're just making things up in my personal opinion, and they're riding a wave of dead black people in order to make money and get political leverage."
Watch

View: https://youtu.be/tN6wNpsPEso
4:33 min
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment

Jim Bovard: The Feds Are Coming For Libertarians

SATURDAY, APR 24, 2021 - 07:20 PM
Authored by Jim Bovard via The Libertarian Institute,

On the day that Joe Biden was inaugurated as president, former CIA chief John Brennan announced on television that federal intelligence agencies "are moving in laser-like fashion to try to uncover as much as they can about" various suspect groups, specifically mentioning libertarians.'

Libertarians are in the federal crosshairs. Six or seven years ago, there was a lot of prattle about how "the libertarian moment has arrived." I always knew that was hokum. Since then, there has been a huge increase in hostility to libertarians in Washington DC and elsewhere around the country.




Many libertarians assume they have nothing to fear because they are not engaged in seeking to violently overthrow the government. But the feds will be able to find many other pretexts to target peaceful citizens with supposedly subversive ideas. Federal law already defines "domestic terrorism" far more broadly than most people realize. As the Oregonian recently noted, "Cases categorized as domestic terrorism include allegations of…knowingly entering or remaining in any restricted [government] building or grounds…civil disorders and making threatening communications." FBI chief Christopher Wray told a Senate Committee that the FBI has 2,000 ongoing domestic terrorism investigations.

Wray recognizes the terrorist peril as the ticket to a bigger budget: "We need more agents; we need more analysts."

The Biden administration is itching for a broad new domestic terrorism law to enable even more crackdowns. Libertarians need to recognize how that definition of terrorism has already mushroomed. Capitol Police acting chief Yogananda Pittman, testifying to Congress, described the January 6 clash at the Capitol as "a terrorist attack by tens of thousands of insurrectionists." Apparently, anyone who tromped from Trump’s raging speech to the Capitol that day was a terrorist, or at least an "insurrectionist" (“terrorist” spelled with more letters?).

After the clash at the Capitol on January 6, the de facto definition of terrorism seems to be "anything that frightens politicians." Will we find out too late that the new de facto definition of "domestic terrorist" is "individuals who distrust the feds and own two guns and more than 100 bullets"?

Another codeword for who the feds will target is "extremists." The Washington Post in January portrayed "domestic extremists" as "a disease that seems to have taken hold in the nation’s nervous system." Last fall, FBI boss Wray told Congress that among the "underlying drivers for domestic violent extremism" are "perceptions of government or law enforcement overreach." Libertarians are practically defined by their perception of government as overreaching. After the January 6 clash, Wray portrayed more busts as proof of FBI triumphs: "The more of the arrests that you see, well, that’s obviously good news for everybody that we’re arresting people who need to be arrested."

View: https://twitter.com/i/status/1352095243022323718
1:33 min

In the coming years, the feds may treat libertarians like Muslims were treated after 9/11. Any new crackdown on terrorism will turn into a numbers game in which justice and fair play don’t have a snowball’s chance in hell. Between 2001 and 2006, federal prosecutors charged 10 times as many people in terrorism investigations as they convicted on terrorism-related charges. President Bush declared in 2005 that "federal terrorism investigations have resulted in charges against more than 400 suspects, and more than half of those charged have been convicted." But only 39 people were convicted on crimes tied to terrorism or national security, a Washington Post analysis found.

Entrapment opened the floodgates to federal terrorism indictments. Trevor Aaronson, author of The Terror Factory: Inside the FBI’s Manufactured War on Terrorism, estimated that only about 1 percent of the 500 people charged with international terrorism offenses in the decade after 9/11 were bona fide threats.

Thirty times as many were induced by the FBI to behave in ways that prompted their arrest. In 2006, the FBI fabricated a terror scheme by the Liberty City Seven, where an informant encouraged a bunch of dimwits in Florida to babble about blowing up government buildings. That group was so knuckle-headed that they asked the FBI informant for military uniforms and wanted to conduct a parade.

Few Americans recognize how badly the legal playing field is tilted against them.

When FBI agents knock on their doors, many Americans won’t hesitate to open up because they assume "those who have nothing to hide have nothing to fear."

But the FBI is exploiting a sweeping law that criminalizes casual comments. Federal agents have the right to lie to you and to put you in prison if you lie to them. Any citizen who makes even a single-word ("no" or "yes") false utterance to a federal agent faces up to five years in prison and a $250,000 fine.

It gets worse. You don’t have to actually lie. FBI agents can fabricate the sentences they use to hang you. Unlike most law enforcement agencies, the FBI rarely videotapes interviews, thereby permitting agents to create the narrative or "facts" which then can be used to charge individuals with false statements.

Instead of a transcript, an FBI agent writes up a memo a day or two later asserting what you said. FBI agents have been taught that subjects of FBI investigations "have forfeited their right to the truth," which helps explain the vast increase in federal entrapment operations.

If the FBI shows up at your door, they might have already accessed every email and text message you sent in recent years. They may have vacuumed all your social media activity—those private Facebook messages you sent—HA! They may have also accessed all your credit card and other financial data. And the FBI may have already interrogated other people to squeeze out accusations against you that they can throw in your face. Then they launch into a game of 20 questions—with a federal indictment awaiting if they claim you answered untruthfully.

Politicians in Washington don’t see such abuses as a problem; instead, they are a grand opportunity to smite people who don’t kowtow. It wasn’t that long ago—in the final 15 years of J. Edgar Hoover’s reign—that the FBI became America’s thought police. The FBI’s COINTELPRO program conducted thousands of covert operations to incite street warfare between violent groups, to get people fired, to portray innocent people as government informants, to destroy marriages with poison pen letters, and to cripple or destroy leftist, black, white racist, and anti-war organizations. A 1976 Senate report warned, "The American people need to be assured that never again will a federal agency be permitted to conduct a secret war against those citizens it considers threats to the established order."

But legal and administrative restrictions on the FBI evaporated in the post 9/11 panic, resulting in pervasive abuses of Americans’ rights.

The FBI now operates with near-total impunity. The same is true of many state and local police departments who may be hungering for new federal subsidies to crackdown on the extremist peril.

How might this play out in the daily lives of people guilty of entertaining libertarian ideas? Consider Duncan Lemp, a 21-year-old Maryland man who was shot to death in a predawn raid in March 2021 after police smashed in his bedroom window and tossed flash bang grenades into his bedroom.

Lemp was active on Twitter and liked several tweets by Libertarian presidential candidate John McAfee. Lemp’s last tweet declared, "The Constitution is dead." Two months later, so was Lemp.

The Montgomery County, Maryland government later admitted that Lemp was targeted in part because was "anti-government" and "anti-police". Plus, Lemp was outspoken about his support of the Second Amendment and posted photos of himself with guns on Instagram. Police saw one such photo and concluded that Lemp possessed a semi-automatic rifle that was illegal to own in Maryland. After they killed him and searched the Lemp home, they realized they had mis-identified the firearm—it was legal. But police, prosecutors, and local politicians treated that like a harmless paperwork error: nobody cared about the wrongful killing of Duncan Lemp.

The police case against Lemp also came from accusations from one or more confidential informants. Lemp trusted people who betrayed him to the police, allegedly with false accusations according to Lemp family lawyer, Rene Sandler. A month after Lemp was killed, activists held a protest at Montgomery County Police headquarters. I attended that event as a journalist (the ol’ press pass flopping around my neck) and was chagrined to see how the event went down.

Guys in Hawaii-style "Boogaloo" shirts were using bullhorns to scream profanities at cops and were pointlessly blocking a road. One of the most prominent organizers told attendees to bring firearms to the event, despite Maryland law prohibiting firearms at protests. He told people on Facebook to show up with their guns anyhow and just walk around, pretending not to be part of the demonstration. That guy was full of bluster but never showed up for the protest himself. Almost 10% of the 30 protesters were arrested for firearms or other offenses. I later heard that one of the guys suspected of being a police informant against Lemp was at that rally pretending to demand justice for Lemp.

In the coming months and years, many libertarians could be indicted not for violent acts against the government but for unwise or reckless words uttered in proximity to government informants. If you don’t know someone like the back of your hand, then you better be damn careful what you say around them. And even if you know a person well, that doesn’t oblige you to join them in a leap off a legal cliff. Simply because someone spouts anti-government zeal doesn’t make them more trustworthy than a congressman. Claire Wolfe, the author of 101 Things to Do Until the Revolution, wrote an excellent guide to recognizing government informants which she made available for free online.

Simple prudence can suffice to avoid many tripwires. If some new acquaintance wants to provide you a pipe bomb to help "make a statement," he probably isn’t a real friend. There was a saying among antiwar activists in the 1960s and 1970s that the person who most fervently advocates violence is likely the undercover government agent. Activists should also recognize the likelihood that they could be surveilled online or in person. Parler was supposed to be a secure alternative to other online venues but millions of its messages were leaked earlier this year.

The answer is not to shut up and sure as hell not to cease fighting for your rights and liberties. Friends of freedom need to continue valiantly and peacefully championing their ideas. At some point, more Americans will finally recognize the folly of permitting politicians and government agents to capture vast unchecked power over everyone else. In the meantime, prudent libertarians will avoid writing anything in an email that they don’t want to hear read out loud in federal court.
 

Griz3752

Retired, practising Curmudgeon
It looks like I'm late.

As of today, 1740 hrs, there are 25 pages of posts to read and what looks like a bushel and a half of new acronyms to absorb.

Guess I better get started because, if they're coming for right wing leaning Libertarians, I'm on the list .......
 
Last edited:

marsh

On TB every waking moment

Black intellectuals raise money for working-class whites falsely tarred as racists

Civil rights activist Bob Woodson scolds peers who "pursued strategies to enrich themselves" instead of lift up vulnerable people.
Image
Janitor mopping

Janitor mopping
Fairfax Media/Getty Images

By Greg Piper
Updated: April 24, 2021 - 11:08pm

When the factories closed, many blue-collar workers got jobs in the hallowed halls of higher education, one of the few remaining workplaces that would offer them benefits packages.

The problem? Now they had to put up with the heightened sensitivities of college students and bureaucrats, according to Robert Woodson, the civil rights veteran and anti-poverty activist.

The Woodson Center founder told Just the News he was already concerned about the "level of intimidation that exists among working-class white people" when Smith College branded a cafeteria worker and janitor as racist on the word of an "elite black student."

But the summer 2018 incident at the elite women's college, whose "eating while black" narrative was recently contradicted by a New York Times investigation, pushed Woodson over the edge.

Last month his center's 1776 Unites project brought together more than 40 black intellectuals, calling on Smith College to make amends with the falsely accused service workers and halt its "forced" and "accusatory" anti-bias training.

Signatories included Columbia University linguist John McWhorter, Brown University economist Glenn Loury and syndicated columnist Clarence Page, who appeared in Woodson's recent panel discussion on desegregating poverty.

With the help of Smith whistleblower Jodi Shaw, an administrative staffer who quit in protest of the college's allegedly hostile environment for whites, Woodson's coalition has helped raise about $14,000 for the two employees, Jackie Blair and David Patenaude.

Woodson and Shaw each donated $1,000 to each worker, and "Hillbilly Elegy" author J.D. Vance — another participant in Woodson's panel discussion — promoted the fundraisers as well.

The Smith incident reinforced the 84-year-old's longstanding disillusionment with the civil rights movement, he said in a phone interview.

"A lot of the people who suffered and sacrificed didn't benefit from the change" 50 years ago, while a few activists ran for office, spent trillions on poverty programs and "pursued strategies to enrich themselves."

Woodson highlighted Rep. Maxine Waters' pricey Los Angeles home, Rev. Al Sharpton's private jet and Black Lives Matter co-founder Patrisse Cullors' real-estate binge. "A rich Marxist!" he chuckled, referring to Cullors' declared political identity.

The volley against Smith College is not the first in a planned campaign to highlight class discrimination at elite institutions, however, Woodson clarified.

Because Smith is "really representative of a problem that is countrywide," it made sense to speak out in this case to show that "not all black people are victim-oriented."

A spokesperson for Smith told Inside Higher Ed that "some are trying to leverage this incident to promote their own assault on diversity and equity initiatives."

'I'm watching this being perverted by social justice warriors'
Student Oumou Kanoute's public accusations against Blair and Patenaude — whom she wrongly identified as the janitor who reported her unexplained presence in a shuttered dorm lounge — first fell apart in an external investigation commissioned by the college that found no discrimination toward Kanoute.

Smith President Kathleen McCartney still claimed the college could not "rule out the potential role of implicit racial bias," even though Blair and the unidentified janitor had followed its own protocols.

She didn't publicly apologize to the employees, whose identities and photos were now in the news, and service workers were soon forced to undergo anti-bias training. The training left Patenaude more sure of "money privilege" than "white privilege," he told the Times. Woodson called such training the "height of snobbishness."

"I've led demonstrations, went to jail in pursuit of justice for all, and I'm watching this being perverted by social justice warriors" such as Kanoute, he told Just the News.

"She is making false claims of racism, and then has a rant on Facebook trying to make herself a racial martyr at the expense of hard-working blue-collar people," Woodson said.

Kanoute did not respond to Just the News queries to Columbia University's School of Social Work, where she's a research assistant intern, or the ACLU of Massachusetts, whose racial justice director Rahsaan Hall spoke on her behalf to the New York Times. Kanoute deleted or hid her Facebook page, where she shared favorable coverage of the incident, sometime after Thursday night when Just the News viewed it.

The March 22 letter to President McCartney from 1776 Unites, which released an African-American history curriculum last fall, tore into the college for immediately assuming that its food and janitorial workers were "guilty of the vile sin of racism."

It forced them to "publicly 'cleanse' themselves through a series of humiliating exercises in order to keep their jobs," and when the external investigation cleared the two workers, "merely doubled down on the shaming of its most vulnerable employees."

Signatories who participated in the civil rights movement were "fighting for equal treatment under the law," the letter said. "We didn't march so that Americans of any race could be presumed guilty and punished for false accusations while the elite institution that employed them cowered in fear of a social media mob."

They challenged President McCartney to provide the "evidence" she cited as the basis for Smith's anti-bias training. Woodson told Just the News that McCartney's "very cavalier" response simply referred back to the report that cleared the service workers.

The college just wanted to "purchase innocence at the expense of these workers," who now face a dilemma, Woodson said: Do they apply the rules when a black student commits a violation? "That's a hell of a place to put people in."

He's not sure yet whether the pushback against Smith will convince other mistreated service workers to come forward, but his group is hearing "rumors."

Whom has diversity training helped 'except for the people doing the training'?
Going forward, 1776 Unites will continue highlighting the harm of what Woodson called "race grievance training," which he considers an impediment to upward mobility.

"It always benefits those at the top" to generalize about race, he said, citing Delta among corporations that have started using racial quotas that primarily benefit well-off blacks. "What does that have to do with working-class black people?"

Woodson is just as critical of diversity and inclusion bureaucracies in higher education. Its advocates are "hard-pressed to say where is the proof" that the training has "improved the life of anybody except for the people doing the training."

Though Blair remains a Smith employee, she is raising money for legal expenses related to possible action against the college, as well as for therapy and medical bills related to her lupus, which was exacerbated by the false accusation.

She told visitors to her GiveSendGo page this week that the crowdfunding site's payment processor had deactivated her account as a "high risk for disputes," and directed them to her PayPal account.

Patenaude left the college because the publicity spurred by Kanoute worsened his anxiety disorder so badly that he couldn't work. His GoFundMe page says he's now on permanent disability, though Smith told Inside Higher Ed he's still employed.
 
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