In The Mailbox: 05.30.18
Posted on | May 30, 2018 | Comments Off on In The Mailbox: 05.30.18
— compiled by Wombat-socho
OVER THE TRANSOM
Ninety Miles From Tyranny: The 90 Miles Mystery Box, Episode #271
First Street Journal: Christine Emba, The Washington Post, And Identity Politics
EBL: Sometimes You Need Some Cultural Appropriation
Twitchy: Ben Rhodes Manages To Make Obama Sound Even More Inusfferably Arrogant
Louder With Crowder: Sarah Sanders Blasts The Media For Roseanne Hypocrisy
RIPPED FROM THE HEADLINES
Adam Piggott: Moving House
American Power: Rep. Linda Sanchez Takes The Heat, also, Roseanne Cancelled After Stupid Tweets
American Thinker: Haven’t The Obamas Made Enough Money?
Animal Magnetism: Animal’s Hump Day News
BattleSwarm: Twitter Suspends @GayPatriot For Pointing Out That Bradley Manning Is A Traitor
CDR Salamander: Dog Soup & Dragons – Is Venezuela The Next Place For Maritime Piracy?
Da Tech Guy: If Only Roseanne Had Hit The Appearance Of Sarah Palin Or Sarah Sanders Instead Of Valerie Jarrett
Don Surber: The Party Of Trump
Dustbury: So Far Away
The Geller Report: EU Unveils Plan To Punish Patriotic Eastern European Nations, also, Iranian Freedom Fighter Amil Imani – Pamela Geller Among “The Bravest Americans I Know”
Hogewash: Zooming In On The Tarantula Nebula, also, Team Kimberlin Post Of The Day
Joe For America: NYT Posts Pro-Conservative Op-Ed, Promotes Gay Adoption
JustOneMinute: The Maltese Phantom – Good One
Legal Insurrection: Trump – Where Is My Apology From Disney CEO? also, Tom Steyer Thinks His Effort To Impeach Trump Is Like the Civil Rights Movement
Power Line: More Evidence Of Mueller’s Overreach, also, Bureaucracy All The Way Down
Shark Tank: Senator Nelson Forgets Obama Was “Ripping Families Apart” In 2014
Shot In The Dark: The Part Big Left Missed…
STUMP: Taxing Tuesday – The IRS Sends A Shot Across The Bow, also, Wisconsin Wednesday
The Jawa Report: Captions For Fatwa, also, Ultimate Droning
The Political Hat: San Diego County’s War On…Popcorn
This Ain’t Hell: Asshat Charged With Defacing Mural Honoring Veterans, also, 379th AEW Bomber Hits Taliban Drug Facilities
Victory Girls: Back To Eden Bakery – Woke When Closed
Volokh Conspiracy: With “Friends” Like These
Weasel Zippers: Seven Men Accused Of Molesting Girls At California Water Park, also, Watch RNC’s First MS-13 Ad Starring Nancy Pelosi – It’s Brutal
Mark Steyn: Most People Want To Be Like Most People, also, Mac Attack
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Satanic Transgender SJW Wants to Control ‘Open Source’ Code Community
Posted on | May 30, 2018 | 1 Comment
Corey Dale “Coraline Ada” Ehmke is a software developer. At a 2013 conference, “Ehmke was among a group of people who announced the creation of a community for LGBT technologists called LGBTech. During this announcement, she also came out publicly as transgender.”
Ehmke has become a notorious SJW (“social justice warrior”) and habitually accuses his/“her” critics of “transphobia” and “misogyny.” One of the things that SJWs seek to prohibit as “hate speech,” for example, is the practice of “dead-naming,” i.e., referring to transgender people by their birth names. In many cases, however, this prohibition is intended to enable deception, particularly in terms of concealing possible important information about a person’s past. Convicted sex offenders may use a transgender identity in an attempt to conceal their criminal record.
In the case of Corey/“Coraline” Ehmke, however, perhaps his/“her” involvement in the occult is what he/“she” is trying to hide. Under the pseudonym “Corey Bantik,” Ehmke has spent 20 years promoting himself/”herself“ as a practitioner of “Egyptian Ritual Magick”:
The Reverend Doctor Corey Bantik has been actively pursuing his esoteric studies for almost twenty years. His earliest experiments involved what he called “natural magick”, but his interest soon turned to the study and practice of western esoteric traditions and ceremonial magick. He began the study of Qabala in 1989, investigating traditional Judaic sources as well as the more readily available European interpretations. Rev. Bantik founded and led a small Golden Dawn study group in the mountains of Virginia, and for several years thereafter immersed himself in the works of Aleister Crowley, A. E. Waite, Eliphas Levi and Kenneth Grant.
In the early 1990s, Rev. Bantik became an active member of the small but tight-knit community of online occultists that interacted through the alt.magick Usenet groups and IRC channels like #thelema. This is the community that pioneered such concepts as real-time multi-user virtual ritual spaces and later went on to create Nutmeg, the organization of occultists, mystics, and persons of “alternative spiritualities” organized to explore the community-building potential of the then-new Internet. Rev. Bantik served on the Board of Directors of Nutmeg for several years and helped coordinate the annual gathering of its members from across the world.
The historic association between the satanic Crowley and the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn is well-known. The reference by Ehmke/“Bantik” to creating “a small Golden Dawn study group in the mountains of Virginia” evidently refers to Ehmke’s time as a student at Radford University, where he dropped out after his freshman year.
Ehmke is a psychiatric basket case, on medication for “bipolar depression and anxiety.” However, his/“her” mental illness has not prevented Ehmke from trying to tell other people what they are allowed to think:
Ehmke is known for the creation of the “Contributor Covenant,” a list of behavioural rules intended to govern the behaviour of coders working on open source projects. Among the behaviours banned by the covenant are “insulting/derogatory comments,” “public or private harassment,” and “other conduct which could reasonably be considered inappropriate in a professional setting.”
Crucially, contributors to open source projects — who are typically unpaid, freely volunteering their time and skills to improve open source software — are expected to follow the code within open-source communities and everywhere else on the web.
For example, if a coder makes an “insulting/derogatory comment” on Twitter that’s entirely unconnected to their coding work, they are still liable to be kicked out of their open source project if the project is governed by the Contributor Code. It’s a recipe for policing the behaviour of the entire open source community across the whole of the world wide web.
In other words, if you have an opinion that someone else deems “inappropriate” or “derogatory,” you can be banned from a project, even if the subject never comes up in the context of the project. You once said something “inappropriate” on Twitter? Banned!
To understand how this works, consider the so-called “Opalgate” case. Opal is a type of software and one its main developers is Elia Schito, who happens to be a Catholic living in Italy. In June 2015, Schito was talking on Twitter about plans by the Italian government to introduce lessons on “gender” to school students as a young as age 4. When he was criticized about this, Schito said these “gender teachings are purely ideological and detached from reality.” This discussion continued, and Schito said that “not accepting reality is the problem” with transgender ideology.
This caused Ehmke to write a complaint on the open-source site GitHub: “Transphobic maintainer should be removed from project.”
Keep in mind, Ehmke has never contributed anything to the development of this particular software, and Schito had never said anything to or about Ehmke, nor had Schito’s opinion on transgenderism been expressed within the Opal development project. Rather, as a father of two children living in Italy, Schito was complaining about the school curriculum there. Yet for some reason, Ehmke decided to stick his/“her” nose into the Opal development project and demand that Schito be “removed”!
This 2015 episode made Ehmke notorious among coders, but astonishingly, GitHub hired Ehmke a year later as senior engineer for their “Community and Safety” project. Guess how that went? Not well. Ehmke was assigned to a team of fellow diversity-quota token hires:
I was impressed by the social justice tone of some of the questions that I was asked in the non-technical interviews, and by the fact that the majority of people that I met with were women. A week later, I had a very generous offer in hand, which I happily accepted. My team was 5 women and one man: two of us trans, three women of color.
One of Ehmke’s ideas was suggesting “the implementation of a survey of GitHub users . . . that would shed light on participation in open source by otherwise uncounted marginalized people”:
One day a notification came to me that a repo for the open source developer survey had been created and that the survey questions were in progress. My director followed up with me to make sure that I was aware of the survey and asked me to review the questions. I worked my way through, and stopped short at one particular question: “What is your gender?” The multiple-choice options were “Male”, “Female”, and “Transgender”. I was very disappointed at this 101 mistake, and sadly opened an issue referencing the question. The body of my issue read:
“‘Transgender’ is not a gender. Transgender people may be male, female, gender queer, non-binary… If you want to know if a survey respondent is transgender, you need to explicitly ask that question.”
I left some other minor feedback on other questions, and resumed my regular work. The next day I got an urgent request for a call with my manager. She told me that the data scientist who had written the survey questions was very upset and had gone to her manager to complain about me. I asked my manager what had happened to upset her and was told that it was the feedback I provided on the gender question. . . . I was forbidden to interact any further with the author of the survey.
Hmmm. Being “forbidden to interact any further” with a co-worker? Keep in mind that, in the seven years prior to being hired at GitHub, Ehmke had worked for six different employers. Not exactly a stable work history, which suggests there is some underlying problem with Ehmke, who nevertheless claimed he/“she” was praised by his/“her” boss for “consistently shipping more code than anyone else on the team.” Then in April 2017, Ehmke got a bad annual performance review:
My overall review was a “Does Not Meet Expectations.” I was shocked and upset. A bad review out of the blue was not something that I had experienced before. I thought I had good rapport with my manager, and that if there was a problem that we would have been addressing it at our weekly meetings. In my mind this was a serious management failure, but there was apparently nothing I could do about it.
The same day that I had this review, I got some devastating personal news. I have bipolar depression and was already in a bad place mentally, so I found myself feeling crushed and hopeless. In an attempt to deal with things I ended up taking a dangerously high dose of my anti-anxiety medication. When I reached out to my therapist for help, she recommended that I go to the emergency room. This was the start of an eight day ordeal involving involuntary commitment to a mental health facility.
Being shipped to the looney bin for eight days of involuntary commitment after a bad performance review didn’t improve Ehmke’s career prospects at GitHub and he/“she” was fired in May 2017.
This high-profile failure has not stopped Ehmke from pursuing his/“her” crusade to impose speech codes on the open-source community. Recently, he/“she” published the “Post-Meritocracy Manifesto,” claiming that the idea of hiring and promoting people on the basis of merit “has consistently shown itself to mainly benefit those with privilege, to the exclusion of underrepresented people in technology”:
It is time that we as an industry abandon the notion that merit is something that can be measured, can be pursued on equal terms by every individual, and can ever be distributed fairly.
The word for this is insane.
While the speed and efficiency with which someone does their job may not be a measurement of their intrinsic value as a human being, this is the only reason they’re getting paid: Do your job, and do it well.
Quantitative measurements of performance are not always possible, but members of an engineering team know who’s pulling their weight on the team, and if somebody on the team is not getting the job done, the manager will lose respect if he doesn’t either (a) work to help improve the failing member’s performance, or (b) fire them. It’s that simple.
Imposing quotas on hiring to make “diversity” and “inclusion” more important than merit will predictably produce problems in the workplace. If one of your token hires can’t get the job done, what happens? Well, the former senior engineer Coraline Ada Ehmke couldn’t cope, and had a nervous breakdown, and got fired — then went out and publicly trashed his/“her” former employer. Which is typical, really.
Isn’t it apparent why imposing speech codes and imposing hiring quotas are related phenomena? The former is part of enforcing the latter, by protecting the beneficiaries of “inclusion” from criticism. If your company hires transgender people as part of a “diversity” initiative, and one of these quota hires isn’t productive, you’re likely to be accused of transphobia if you criticize them. Similarly, if a man doesn’t get along with a female co-worker, his complaints about her may be considered proof that he is a “sexist.” And speech codes have the effect of prohibiting any critical discussion of “diversity” policies, as such. James Damore was fired from Google and denounced as a misogynist for trying to explain the problems caused by Google’s “diversity” regime.
Remember what Elia Schito said about transgenderism? If “not accepting reality is the problem,” does it make sense to impose workplace rules designed to protect the feelings of delusional people?
It is painful to watch Coraline Ada Ehmke explain his/“her” delusion:
This is a script, a rote recitation of a cult belief system.
The online transgender cult promotes “dysphoria” as the universal explanation for personal unhappiness of people like Corey/“Coraline” Ehmke, who are “really bad” at the performance of normal human social behavior. When Ehmke says he was “socialized to conform to male gender norms,” what does this even mean? It is true, of course, that the behavioral patterns called “gender” are to a great extent a matter of performance, and that some people find this more difficult than others. For example, athletic prowess is highly valued in males, and one suspects that young Corey Ehmke did not excel at baseball or basketball.
However, people who are incapable of achieving an ideal — e.g., the “Alpha male” as championship athlete — are usually able to console themselves by compensatory success in other areas of life. How much of human achievement can be attributed to the pursuit of such compensatory rewards? Ancient Greece celebrated athletic ability and military prowess, but not every man was naturally suited for such feats, and so they instead achieved fame as philosophers, poets, sculptors, etc.
Alas, despite our reliance on technology, our society does not heap praise upon the average computer geek. The nerds who have a natural aptitude for code are seldom athletic champions or beauty pageant winners. One of the most popular TV comedies of recent years, The Big Bang Theory, is premised on making fun of the stereotypical traits of scientific geniuses who are, to put it mildly, not exactly Alpha males. What gives rise to transgenderism, in many cases, is the false belief that those who, like Ehmke, are “really bad” at the performative aspects of “gender” can best achieve happiness by attempting to perform the opposite gender. And the online transgender cult encourages this delusion:
Critics of the transgender movement have described a phenomenon they call “rapid onset gender dysphoria,” in which young people develop a sudden belief that they were “born in the wrong body” and insist on seeking gender “transition” following a few weeks or months of intense immersion in the online transgender community. A remarkable increase in the number of adolescents calling themselves “non-binary” or “genderqueer” — labels unheard of a few years ago, but popularized via websites like Tumblr — further demonstrates how online communities are influencing the sexual attitudes and behaviors of young people.
Feminists and other critics accuse transgender activists of using online communities to promote a “cult” mentality among teenagers.
One of the scripts frequently heard from transgender activists is that the only alternative to “transition” is suicide, and it is therefore not surprising that Corey/“Coraline” opened his/“her” 30-minute lecture on transgenderism with an anecdote about his/“her” suicidal feelings:
Ehmke delivers this startling confession in a bland monotone voice — it’s really disturbing to watch the way he/“she” says this on video — and it is not the least bit surprising to learn that, when he/“she” got a negative work review five years later, a suicidal crisis was the result. What happens when someone becomes convinced that “transition” is the solution to their unhappiness, and then discovers it doesn’t solve anything?
This is where Ehmke’s decades-long involvement in the occult is relevant. Creating a fictional online persona as the Reverend Doctor Corey Bantik, and presenting himself as an expert in “Egyptian Ritual Magick” could be seen as Ehmke’s effort to obtain social power, a high status that the college dropout did not enjoy in real life. Being “an active member of the small but tight-knit community of online occultists” in Usenet groups like alt.magick offered compensatory rewards for Ehmke’s low social status in real life. “The Reverend Doctor Corey Bantik” could presume to lecture the credulous believers in “magick,” and demand deference to his authority, exercising dominance over others in a way that was not available to him as a young computer geek working an obscure job.
And what is Ehmke’s “Contributor Covenant,” after all, except an instrument to exercise authority over others? Ehmke’s sadistic desire to punish people he/“she” doesn’t like (e.g., the popular Opal developer Elia Schito) is the essence of his/“her” SJW crusade to impose politically correct speech codes on the open-source software community.
A craving for power — to obtain authority over others — is typical of sociopathic personalities, whose frustration at their low-status condition in normal life inspires them with a desire to destroy the existing social order. SJWs denounce society as “unjust” because they are not on top of the social hierarchy. Their resentment of the success, happiness and popularity enjoyed by others is what motivates their pursuit of what they call “social justice,” but which in fact is personal revenge.
Corey Dale “Coraline Ada” Ehmke is a warped personality, afflicted with a spiritual deformity that manifests as psychiatric pathology. It would be a dangerous error to allow this sick individual to dictate policy to others. Eric Raymond has explained why hackers must oppose SJWs:
The SJWs talk ‘diversity’ but like all totalitarians they measure success only by total ideological surrender — repeating their duckspeak, denouncing others for insufficent political correctness, loving Big Brother. . . .
We must cast these would-be totalitarians out — refuse to admit them on any level except by evaluating on pure technical merit whatever code patches they submit. We must refuse to let them judge us, and learn to recognize their thought-stopping jargon and kafkatraps as a clue that there is no point in arguing with them and the only sane course is to disengage. We can’t fix what’s broken about the SJWs; we can, and must, refuse to let them break us.
Selah.
RECENTLY:
- May 26: Soros Foundation Spends Millions Annually to Support Transgender Agenda
- May 17: Synthetic ‘Community’: Social Media and Rapid-Onset Gender Dysphoria
- May 10: The Rocky Horror Family Show
- May 7: Notorious Transgender Activist Compares Feminist Critics to Drug Addicts
- May 5: Transgender Supremacy: Understanding the Ideology of a Totalitarian Menace
- May 3: ‘Big Brother’ Gets a Sex-Change
- EBL (18)
- A View From The Beach (8)
- Proof Positive (7)
In The Mailbox: 05.29.18
Posted on | May 29, 2018 | Comments Off on In The Mailbox: 05.29.18
— compiled by Wombat-socho
OVER THE TRANSOM
First Street Journal: Watergate 2.0 – Implausible Deniability
EBL: Roseanne’s Show Cancelled Over Planet of The Apes Comment
Twitchy: Root Writer Decries Roseanne’s Racism, Feels No Shame Over Ben Carson Tweet
Louder With Crowder: David Hogg’s Publix Die-In Backfires On The Left
RIPPED FROM THE HEADLINES
Adam Piggott: Friday Hawt Chicks & Links – The HOT NEW TREND! Edition
American Power: Jean Twenge, iGen, also, Sherry Turkle, Alone Together
American Thinker: Barack Obama’s “World As It Should Be”
Animal Magnetism: Remember, also, Goodbye Blue Tuesday
BattleSwarm: Iowahawk Sticks It To Harvey Weinstein, also, Eurocrats 1, Italian Voters 0
CDR Salamander: Fullbore Friday, also, In Memory Of Neighbors Unknown
Da Tech Guy: Our Veteran Groups Are Dying, also, CNN Sure Can Pick ‘Em
Don Surber: Roseanne Gets The Last Laugh On Disney, also, Worse Than Watergate
Dustbury: Strange Search Engine Queries, also, Way Down At The Low End
Fred On Everything: Affirmative Action & The American Mind, If Any
The Geller Report: Gang of Muslim Migrant Kids Attack Park Goers In Lewiston, Maine, also, Jihad In Belgium – Two Police Officers & Pedestrian Shot In Liege
Hogewash: The Heart of The Crab, also, Team Kimberlin Post Of The Day
Joe For America: What Has Chelsea Clinton Ever Accomplished?, also, Portland Bar – No White Customers For Happy Hour, Please
JustOneMinute: Dying In Darkness, UK Edition
Legal Insurrection: Ramadan Fasting Triggers Migrant Riot In Dresden, also, North Korea Sends Top Aide To U.S. To Salvage Summit
Michelle Malkin: Memorial Day 2018 – Remember The Fallen
Power Line: Bruce Bawer – The Tommy Robinson Affair, also, Socialism’s Victory Tour
Shark Tank: Pam Bondi Backs Javier Manjarres For Congress, also, Trump Calls Out Rahm Emanuel After Bloody Memorial Day Weekend In Chicago
Shot In The Dark: Ghouls Just Want To Have Fun, also, Ed Driscoll Asks…
STUMP: Mornings With Meep, also, Memory Monday
The Political Hat: School’s Anti-Bulllying Scheme – Smile, Or Else
This Ain’t Hell: Manning Tweets Suicide Note, also, Missing Guardsman Eddison Hermond Found
Victory Girls: MO Governor Greitens Resigns Over Affair, Campaign Finances
Volokh Conspiracy: The Case Against Deporting Immigrants Convicted Of Crimes
Weasel Zippers: Sources Say FBI Agents Afraid To Testify, Think Congress Won’t Protect Them, also, Maxine Waters Says Americans Too Dumb To Understand Threat Of Trump
Mark Steyn: Dial RM For ReMake, also, “Tommy This, An’ Tommy That…An’ Tommy Go Away”
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Mentally Ill Maryland Democrat Senate Candidate Makes Suicide Threat
Posted on | May 29, 2018 | 1 Comment
Earlier this month, the Associated Press did a feature interview with the notorious traitor formerly known as Bradley Manning:
Chelsea Manning is no longer living as a transgender woman in a male military prison, serving the lengthiest sentence ever for revealing U.S. government secrets. She’s free to grow out her hair, travel the world, and spend time with whomever she likes.
But a year since former President Barack Obama commuted Manning’s 35-year sentence, America’s most famous convicted leaker isn’t taking an extended vacation. Far from it: The Oklahoma native has decided to make an unlikely bid for the U.S. Senate in her adopted state of Maryland.
Manning, 30, filed to run in January and has been registered to vote in Maryland since August. She lives in North Bethesda, not far from where she stayed with an aunt while awaiting trial. Her aim is to unseat Sen. Ben Cardin, a 74-year-old Maryland Democrat who is seeking his third Senate term and previously served 10 terms in the U.S. House. . . .
“The rise of authoritarianism is encroaching in every aspect of life, whether it’s government or corporate or technological,” Manning told The Associated Press during an interview at her home in an upscale apartment tower. . . .
She says she doesn’t, in fact, even consider herself a Democrat, but is motivated by a desire to shake up establishment Democrats who are “caving in” to President Donald Trump’s administration.
Manning dramatically made news again on Sunday:
Far-left political commentator, convicted intelligence leaker, and senate candidate Chelsea Manning threatened to commit suicide on Sunday, posting a suicide note and a picture of a rooftop ledge, before being reported to be safe.
“Im sorry – i tried – im sorry i let you all down – im not really cut out for this world – i tried adapting to this world out here but i failed you,” declared Manning in one Twitter post. “I couldn’t do this anymore – i can take people i dont know hating me but not my own friends – i tried and im sorry about my failure.”
Manning then posted a picture of a rooftop ledge, along with the caption, “im sorry.” . . .
Twitter users immediately commented on the threat, attempting to stop Manning from taking further action. . . .
Following the concerned replies, the tweets were deleted, and another post was made on Manning’s account, reading, “chelsea is safe. she is on the phone with friends, thanks everyone for your concern and please give her some space.”
Having failed to serve honorably in the military, and also having failed at masculinity, now add failing to commit suicide to Manning’s shameful record. All in all, a perfect candidate for Democrats.
The SJW candidate in the Democrat Senate primary in Maryland just threatened suicide — an apt metaphor for the existential crisis of Democrats in 2018. https://t.co/7zsBOvfk9R
— The Patriarch Tree (@PatriarchTree) May 29, 2018
Rule 5 Sunday: Eponymous Shorts
Posted on | May 27, 2018 | 2 Comments
— compiled by Wombat-socho
One of the things that made The Dukes of Hazzard worth watching was Catherine Bach playing the role of Daisy Duke, most often seen wearing the cutoff denim shorts that came to be named for the character. For very understandable reasons, Daisy Dukes have remained quite popular with young ladies, as we see in this week’s appetizer.

Continuing a legacy of awesome.
Leading off this week (as he does every week) is Ninety Miles From Tyranny with Hot Pick Of The Late Night, The 90 Miles Mystery Box Episode #256, Morning Mistress, and Girls With Guns. At Animal Magnetism, it’s Rule Five Oncological Friday and the Saturday Gingermageddon.
EBL’s heifer collection this week includes Anne Hathaway, World Turtle Day, Milana Yayntrub, Alexandra Daddario, Come Fly With Me, Legs, Westworld‘s Akane No Mai, WW2 Women Vets, Nurses & Doughnut Dollies From Korea & Vietnam, Love Or War, Women Who Fought & Died In Afghanistan & Iraq, and Jerusalem & Tel Aviv Ad.
A View From The Beach brings us Mom’s Girl – Jaime Pressly, RIP: Clint Walker, #HimToo! Morgan Freeman Accused of Sexual Harassment, Follies in Affirmative Action, Liberal Civility on Parade, Baby Got Back!, Reasons #5932 – #5934 That Trump Was Elected, Regrets, They’ve Had a Few, An Old Mystery Solved?, Parts is Parts, Silly Hats from the Royal Wedding and Crazy People are Dangerous to Themselves and Others.
Proof Positive’s Friday Night Babe is Alison Sudol, his Vintage Babe is Patti Chandler, and Sex in Advertising is covered by Victoria’s Secret. At Dustbury, Sort Of French Week with Najat Vallaud-Belkacem and Jain.
Thanks to everyone for all the luscious linkagery!
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Amazon Fashion – Jewelry For Women
The Value of Silence
Posted on | May 27, 2018 | Comments Off on The Value of Silence
So, this happened, and this happened, and this happened.
In 2011, there was a party at the Right Online conference in Minneapolis. Glad-handing my way around the party — I’m the King of Schmooze — I encountered a handsome young man who wrote for a conservative site and, as is my habit with young people, inquired how soon he would be getting married. Some conservatives seem to believe “traditional family values” is a matter of electing Republicans and passing legislation, but I consider active personal encouragement to be more effective.
Whenever I’m at a social gathering and meet young couples, I ask them, “When’s the wedding?” Or I’ll say something like, “You two look so good together, y’all need to get married and have a dozen babies! There’s not enough beauty in the world, you know.” Sometimes I’ll go into a little riff about my Victory Through Breeding™ agenda — liberals are aborting themselves into extinction, you see, so all conservatives have to do is have lots of babies and we’ll control the future. This is expressed humorously, as a sort of conversational ice-breaker, although the subject of demographics is something that I can also discuss seriously.
The future belongs to those who show up for it, as Mark Steyn has remarked, and young conservatives ought to think about this subject. You can ask such of my young friends as Vinnie Vernuccio and his wife Katie how consistently I pursue my program of active personal encouragement. It is good to vote pro-life, or to protest against abortion, but what’s the point of activism if pro-life people aren’t actually having babies?
So there I was at the Right Online party in 2011, doing my usual thing, cheerfully complimenting this handsome young man on his good looks, and telling him he ought to get himself a wife and make a bunch of good-looking conservative babies. He didn’t seem to find this amusing.
It’s OK — not everybody appreciates my Schmooze King routine. My extreme extroversion and my style of breaking the ice by deliberate breaches of decorum is often misunderstood, and I’ve learned to live with the fact that some people get offended by the glad-handing stranger with the habit of saying crazy things to people he’s just met.
Am I thoughtless? Rude? Inconsiderate? Well, you can tiptoe your way through life trying to avoid being “controversial” or “offensive,” and that’s fine, but it’s just not the way I am. All my life, I’ve been a joker and a clown and, while I can put on a façade of seriousness when the occasion calls for it, my natural tendency is to be humorous. So when my opening joke fell flat with the handsome young writer at that party in Minneapolis in 2011, I played it off with another joke which also fell flat.
Seeing that he was not amused and that my ice-breaking efforts were futile, I cheerfully bid him adieu and circulated around to meet and greet other party-goers. (Like the shark who constantly swims to keep water flowing through his gills, the Schmooze King must always circulate.) Because it’s not unusual for my extroverted style to rub people the wrong way, I considered that encounter just another clumsy social blunder on my part, and did not at that time realize how clumsy it was.
“Oh, that explains it,” I said, four years later, when he came out.
But my public reaction to his coming out? Nothing. Silence.
Which is the best policy, in such cases.
Being a conservative in the post-Obergefell era requires greater discretion on this subject than was hitherto necessary. A concern for the preservation of liberty means that we must be prepared to defend unpopular opinions against the tyranny of those who would demand that everyone approve of homosexuality, and who would silence all voices of disapproval as “hate speech.” In the face of a #Resistance that includes all the major social-media operations, which can suppress or demonetize conservative content, we must be careful how we express ourselves online. Furthermore, to maintain coalition solidarity, we ought not to pick fights with our friends whose labor on behalf of the conservative cause is valuable even though (a) we don’t agree with them on everything, and/or (b) we personally dislike them.
Success in politics requires about teamwork and, in a two-party system, we must build coalitions on the broadest possible basis. Richard Viguerie has often spoken of the “three-legged stool” — economic issues, foreign policy issues and social issues — around which the Reagan-era conservative movement was organized. More generally, I would argue, conservatism is not an ideology. While the history of conservatism as a movement and philosophy has been traced by Russell Kirk and others, the real unifying theme of that history is opposition to liberalism. Because American liberalism is a mutant creature, constantly evolving and shifting its beliefs, its opponents cannot succeed by a static defense.
A dynamic conservative movement is not unprincipled. “We the People” are defending constitutional liberty against its enemies, and this requires constant vigilance against new threats. Conservatives did not invent the fictitious claims by which a Supreme Court majority turned the Fourteenth Amendment into a pretext for same-sex marriage, and therefore we are not responsible for the consequences of Obergefell. However, we must deal with these consequences as they occur.
What I’ve called The Compulsory Approval Doctrine is one of these consequences. It would appear that, in the wake of the Lawrence (2003), Windsor (2013) and Obergefell (2015) decisions, many “social justice” types believe that Americans are required to approve of homosexuality. By this logic, disagreement over public policy becomes “harassment” and disapproval is considered synonymous with “hate.”
Well, I am an American, and you can’t tell me what I’m allowed to think. The monsters who have attacked Christian florists and bakers for refusing to provide services for same-sex ceremonies — seeking to use the force of law to compel such participation — are enemies of liberty.
If you are not a baker or a florist, you may imagine that the monsters will never come for you. Yet the use of “gay rights” as a litmus test is, I suspect, likely to be expanded in the future under the aegis of “inclusion” and “diversity,” so that personnel policy will be used to compel at least tacit approval of homosexuality as a condition of employment.
What are we to do? How should we conduct ourselves, now that Pandora’s Box has been opened? Rod Dreher (whom I have criticized quite sharply in the past) has outlined The Benedict Option — a sort of neo-monastic enclave strategy to preserve Christian culture in the new Dark Ages that seem to be approaching us. Dreher’s pessimistic assessment is looking increasingly like pragmatic realism, but as a great man once advised, “Never take counsel of your fears.” Amid chaos and uncertainty, we must remain calm and plan for victory, no matter how dim the prospects may seem, or how long the war may endure.
Americans love our First Amendment right to free speech, but in the present climate, we ought to also cherish our Fifth Amendment rights. You cannot be compelled to testify against yourself, and if you have the right to your own opinion, this doesn’t mean that others have a right to interrogate you, or to demand that you take sides in a controversy.
Because I’m an old man who has a long history of expressing outrageous opinions, I am somewhat inoculated against such pressures, but I have occasionally advised young people to be more cautious: No need to burn any bridges for yourself by loudly voicing unpopular truths.
Politics in the age of online social media offers many opportunities, but we also incur many risks in an environment where we are constantly being invited to take sides, to join a mob, to endorse some kind of hashtag crusade and express solidarity with one or another “cause.” Young people should be judicious in such matters, and carefully consider the potential ramifications of their online activity.
Here we have an excellent example: When others rush to congratulate someone on an occasion that you do not consider cause for congratulations, you are under no obligation to express your objections. While you are free to state your disapproval of homosexuality, and to offer arguments in defense of your opinion, there are occasions when silence is the more effective response — and certainly the most courteous.
We need not discuss, here and now. how disappointed I am when conservatives decline to participate in my Victory Through Breeding™ program. Nor do I wish to argue whether the handsome young man could have feasibly been expected to be a successful participant in this program. However, it should be obvious that I do not consider his homosexuality a cause for congratulations, but rather a misfortune.
You don’t have to agree with me. Lots of people disagree with me.
Nearly 66 million Americans voted for Hillary Clinton. I don’t have time to argue with all of them, nor am I prone to argue with #NeverTrump Republicans or “alt-right” Jew-haters. As one of my college professors liked to say: “The dogs may bark, but the caravan rolls on.”
FMJRA 2.0: Before They Make Me Run
Posted on | May 26, 2018 | 1 Comment
— compiled by Wombat-socho
Rule 5 Sunday: Hockey Girls
Animal Magnetism
Ninety Miles From Tyranny
A View From The Beach
Proof Positive
EBL
The Parental Trump
A View From The Beach
EBL
‘The Climate Industrial Complex’
EBL
FMJRA 2.0: It’s Only Rock & Roll
The Pirate’s Cove
A View From The Beach
EBL
Internal Civil War Raging (Not Raging)?
A View From the Beach
EBL
The FBI Spy in the Trump Campaign and the Mueller Cover-Up Operation
A View From The Beach
EBL
In The Mailbox: 05.21.18
Proof Positive
EBL
‘The Object of Power Is Power’
EBL
In The Mailbox: 05.22.18
Proof Positive
EBL
Why Don’t ‘Incels’ Go Gay? (And Other Thoughts on ‘Toxic Masculinity’)
The Political Hat
EBL
Halfway Through Destroying The Village To “Save” It, The Second Thoughts Kick In
EBL
In The Mailbox: 05.23.18
Proof Positive
EBL
Memorial Day Weekend in Chicago
The Ordinary Citizen
Clapper & the Invisible Spies of Happiness
A View From The Beach
Proof Positive
Latest #MeToo Target: Morgan Freeman
A View From The Beach
EBL
In The Mailbox: 05.24.18
Proof Positive
EBL
Friday Fiction: 100 Word Challenge
EBL
Feminism’s African Abortion Agenda
EBL
In The Mailbox: 05.25.18
A View From The Beach
Proof Positive
EBL
Top linkers this week:
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Soros Foundation Spends Millions Annually to Support Transgender Agenda
Posted on | May 26, 2018 | 2 Comments
Left-wing billionaire George Soros is funding transgender activism through his Open Society Foundation (OSF), according to a new report by a British academic who found that OSF has made more than $6 million in grants to transgender organizations since 2011. University of Oxford sociology Professor Michael Biggs wrote in his report:
How much has OSF spent to promote the transgender movement? In 2011–13, it spent $3.19 million, which made it the top funder, followed by Stryker’s Arcus Foundation and Pritzker’s Tawani Foundation (Funders for LBTQ Issues 2015). OSF’s current database includes grants worth $3.07 million for 2016–17 (searching for keywords “trans” and “transgender”). The largest recipients in this current tranche are the International Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Trans and Intersex Association ($642,000), Global Action for Trans Equality ($500,000), and Transgender Europe ($500,000).
Professor Biggs showed how the Soros money helps fund propoaganda that exaggerates the problem of violence against transgender people:
As we saw, OSF gave $500,000 to Transgender Europe in the past two years. Transgender Europe also received $1,072,000 from the Arcus Foundation from 2010 to 2017 (Arcus Foundation 2018). The organization’s projects include the Transgender Day of Remembrance, which is underpinned by a comprehensive database of victims throughout the world, Trans Murder Monitoring. This database counted 325 trans victims of violence in year from October 2016 to September 2017 (TMM 2017). The great majority of these occurred in Central and South America. There were only three in Western Europe, and thankfully none in the United Kingdom. Surprisingly, perhaps, the Transgender Day of Remembrance was widely observed in Britain in November 2017. In many universities, for example, candles were lit for each of the victims, the transgender flag was raised, speakers were invited, and services held. Searching university websites (the domain .ac.uk), we find over 2,800 webpages containing the phrase “Transgender Day of Remembrance”.
While no transgender person was murdered in the United Kingdom in 2017, 138 women were killed by men, including murders where a man was the principal suspect (Smith 2018). These data were compiled by Karen Ingala Smith, who receives no funding for this work. She started recording such deaths in 2009, under the rubric of Counting Dead Women. This was developed into the Femicide Census, with minimal funding and pro-bono support by two legal firms (Femicide Census 2016). Despite the diligent research over many years, this has left barely a trace in British universities. The equivalent search on their websites yields fewer than a hundred webpages containing the phrases “Femicide Census” or “Counting Dead Women”.
To sum up, more than a hundred women are murdered each year in the United Kingdom at the hands of males, but no day has been set aside to commemorate their deaths. Transgender murders are exceedingly rare—eight in the past decade (Trans Crime UK 2017; Evening Standard 2018)—and yet they have an institutionalized day of remembrance. Even if we consider the homicide rate rather than the number of homicides, Nicola Williams demonstrates that transgender people are no more likely to become victims than are women (Fairplay for Women 2017).
Click here to read the rest of Professor Biggs’ report.
Because Soros has been “vilified by right-wingers,” Professor Biggs notes, “those of us who are liberal or progressive tend to react instinctively by dismissing any scrutiny of Soros out of hand.” However, he says, this unwillingness to examine Soros’ agenda is “unjustified,” as illustrated by the influence gained by Soros-funded transgender activists.
RECENTLY:
- May 17: Synthetic ‘Community’: Social Media and Rapid-Onset Gender Dysphoria
- May 10: The Rocky Horror Family Show
- May 7: Notorious Transgender Activist Compares Feminist Critics to Drug Addicts
- May 5: Transgender Supremacy: Understanding the Ideology of a Totalitarian Menace
- May 3: ‘Big Brother’ Gets a Sex-Change
« go back — keep looking »
