L'origine de Bert

Get email updates of new posts:        (Delivered by FeedBurner)

Wednesday, January 07, 2026

Links - 7th January 2026 (2 - Ukraine War)

Ukraine has a problem no one is talking about – young women are leaving in droves - "As well as being a brain drain – some of Ukraine’s brightest and best are among those leaving the country – the emigration wave is also a demographic time bomb.  Locked in a costly war of attrition against Russia, there are real concerns over who will rebuild the country once the war is over, if the nation’s youth does not return... Ukraine’s birth rate is falling, and MoES statistics show that the number of pupils starting school has fallen by almost a third nationally since 2021... Tito Boeri, professor of economics at Bocconi University and the co-author of a 2022 study on Ukraine’s labour market says Ukraine’s emigration issue is “very serious”.  “You can reconstruct physical capital – it takes time, but still can be done,” he told The Telegraph. “Reconstructing human capital is way more challenging and may actually not succeed.”"
It's okay. Ukraine will fight Russia to the last man, so the country is not going to survive anyway

China's foreign minister tells EU that Beijing cannot afford Russia to lose in Ukraine, media reports - "China's Foreign Minister Wang Yi reportedly told the EU's top diplomat Kaja Kallas on July 3 that the country cannot afford for Russia to lose the war in Ukraine amid fears the U.S. would shift focus towards Beijing, the South China Morning Post (SCMP) reported...  Russia's war in Ukraine may serve China's strategic needs as focus is deviated away from Beijing's mounting preparation to launch its own possible invasion into Taiwan."
The warmongers would rather Taiwan be successfully invaded than the endless war in Ukraine end

Revealed: how an elite Ukrainian unit blew up the Nord Stream pipelines
So much for blaming the US

Matt Van Swol on X - "Lindsey Graham lives an hour and half away from me. He has YET to visit us in Western North Carolina a single time after Hurricane Helene. He has flown to Ukraine 9 times."

Jeremy Corbyn urges west to stop arming Ukraine - "Starmer said of Stop the War: “At best they are naive, at worst they actively give succour to authoritarian leaders who directly threaten democracies. There is nothing progressive in showing solidarity with the aggressor when our allies need our solidarity and – crucially – our practical assistance now more than ever.”"
From 2022. Only the West can ever be capable of aggression or evil

Meme - Aristophanes @Aristos...: ""Sorry guys the rules say its illegal for me to lose so I donno what to tell ya""
"NOW - Zelensky says Ukraine's constitution makes giving up land "impossible," and should only be discussed at a trilateral meeting; if Russia "refuses," more sanctions "must" be imposed."

'British mothers have to accept that their sons will have to die for Nato' - "Mothers in Britain will soon have to make an inconceivable choice – send their sons to fight against Russian soldiers in Europe, or suffer the end of Nato, Ukraine’s former foreign minister has said.  Dmytro Kuleba issued the warning only a few hours after Kyiv faced what he described as ‘the worst drone assault’ since the start of the invasion."
The warmongers won't hesitate to sacrifice other people's children rather than negotiate for peace

Ukrainians and Russians Are Not One People—But Perhaps Not for the Reasons You Think - "Combining their findings from all questions in all surveyed countries, the WVS team produced an aggregated value map in which Russia and Ukraine appear right next to each other—as the two countries with the most similar value profiles. See the red section labeled “Orthodox Europe” in Figure 1 below."
Of course, the warmongers claim that Russia is not Western at all and that Ukraine is part of Western civilisation

Ukrainian Support for War Effort Collapses - "Most Ukrainians now favor ending the war with Russia through negotiations, as support for fighting until victory has dropped sharply since the early days of the conflict.. More than three years into the war, Ukrainians’ support for continuing to fight until victory has hit a new low. In Gallup’s most recent poll of Ukraine — conducted in early July — 69% say they favor a negotiated end to the war as soon as possible, compared with 24% who support continuing to fight until victory."
The warmongers continue to support a nation of Chamberlains while denouncing others who want peace
If the Russians are really as violent and irrational as the warmongers claim (since they are "Huns" and "barbarians"), what are the odds that they will meet demands to withdraw with no concessions?
Of course, if you want a pointless bloody stalemate to end with a realistic peace settlement this means you have "Putin's cum on [your] face"

Russia — A Schrödingerean Civilization? - "Russia’s Schrödingerean status is deeply rooted in its cultural and historical identity, which oscillates between being part of the West and developing as a civilization of its own. Unlike cultures clearly belonging to the Western civilization, or civilizations that are clearly non-Western, Russia bears attributes of both, creating an ambiguous identity that has fuelled debates for centuries. On the one hand, Russia shares several core attributes of Western civilization: as an Orthodox Christian nation, it is part of the broader Christian world, not unlike the Catholic and Protestant nations of Europe. It also produced world-renowned artistic and scientific achievements that are deeply rooted in European traditions: Dostoevsky, Tolstoy, Tchaikovsky, Malevich, and Nabokov are all integral to Western cultural discourse. Since Peter the Great, it has also undergone successive waves of Westernization, adopting further Western cultural attributes as well as institutional approaches... How the organic debates around this duality can be combined with using it as a geopolitical tool could be seen during the Soviet era, and can again be observed during the Putin era, the two showing surprisingly close analogies. As Huntington points out, as the Soviet Union represented a certain version of Marxism, a fashionable ideology in the West at the day, this twist enabled Russia to turn the tables regarding the discourse. Instead of the debate in Russia between Westernizers and Slavophiles, whether the West is the future of Russia, a debate among Western Marxists emerged regarding whether Russia epitomized the future of the West. After the relatively brief intermezzo of the Yeltsin era, mirroring within Russia the 19th-century debate between Westernizers and Slavophiles, Putin again turned the tables in a very similar way as the Soviets did: while during the Soviet era, Marxism was the fashionable ideological current of the day, Putin embraced the discourse of Western conservatives and nationalists, posing Russia as the model nation for these emerging Western ideologies of our era. By doing so, Putin triggered a debate among today’s Western conservatives, arguably very much akin to that among Western Marxists during the Cold War, again raising the question of whether Russia epitomizes the future of the West. While on the one hand, during the Soviet era, this debate took place among the ranks of the Western Left, now it is taking place within the Western Right. While during the Cold War, it resulted in a split between pro-Soviets, and Soviet-sceptics within the Western Left, we can see signs of a similar split occurring between the pro-Russia and Russia-sceptic wings of the Western Right. While taking an ideological position that would enable it to position itself as epitomizing the future of the West, both the Soviet leadership and Putin pushed the Schrödingerian paradox to the maximum by simultaneously posing as the anti-colonial and anti-imperialist champion of the Third World or the Global South... This duality creates an internal rift within both the Western Right and Left"

Is Russia part of Western Civilization? - "There are historically two schools of thought on the subject. The first, headed by the Marquis de Custine, views Russia as indelibly Asiatic and implacably alien to Europe, shaped in particular by its long rule under the Mongol hordes. In Custine’s telling, the Russian people had “just enough of the gloss of European civilisation to be ‘spoiled as savages’, but not enough to become cultivated men. They were like ‘trained bears who made you long for the wild ones.’” Though modern liberals, progressives (and some conservatives) who buy into anti-Russian rhetoric would never be so gauche and unguarded as to give voice to such racially-tinged sentiments, Custine’s travelogues in fact provide the historical basis and thrust of their thinking... The second school of thought sees Russia as fundamentally European, a source of principles which have been preserved from the upheavals of modernity and can be applied to European life. This was the view of Baron von Haxthausen, whose scholarly sociological work, Studies on the Interior of Russia, is something of a long-form rebuttal to Custine. Though he acknowledged the influence of the Mongols on Russian life, he emphasised in particular the commonality of the grassroots culture of the peasant class with that which could be found in Prussia and what is now eastern Germany. These pictures are further complicated by mediæval school of thought inside Russia which, after the fall of Constantinople to Islam, posited Moscow as the ‘third Rome’ and the new moral centre of European Christendom. Later, two additional rival schools of thinking emerged from Russia: the Westernisers (or zapadniki) and the Slavophils. Ironically, the Westernisers were the ones who most keenly felt Russia to be an alien to Europe – this was something they felt needed to be rectified by adopting liberal social policies, a parliamentary system of government, market reforms... Recent studies of cultural attitudes, like those in the World Values Survey, emphasise that Orthodox countries like Russia tend to share, at least in a moderate form, the sæcular-rationalistic outlook common to the West – but then, so also do non-Western countries like China, Japan and South Korea. The real differences between Russia and the West lie in the fact that survival, social cohesion, economic equality and physical security take precedence over the values of individual self-expression, sexual liberation and tolerance of foreigners that have become normative in the West (particularly Western and Northern Europe). And so we’re led to the view articulated by Saint Ilya Fondaminsky during the middle of the last century. Saint Ilya’s hope was that Russia would indeed disclose a unique synthesis between those two worlds, though his hopes were dimmed by the rise of the Bolsheviks and his subsequent exile from his homeland. But his analysis that Russia contains elements of both Western and Eastern civilisations appears to be correct; any attempt to understand Russia will be distorted by accounting for only one of the two halves."
From 2017. After the invasion, it became acceptable to call them savages again

How Trump and Putin’s Alaska summit unfolded - "Vladimir Putin winced as he realised, at least momentarily, that he was not in control.  No number of Russian agents armed with bulletproof suitcases could shield him from being pelted by the sorts of questions he had managed to avoid since he ordered the invasion of Ukraine.  Sitting next to Donald Trump in front of a blue wall emblazoned with “pursuing peace” ahead of their high-level talks in Alaska, the Russian despot was in unfamiliar territory.  As one reporter shouted, “Mr Putin, will you break your ceasefire?” it was clear he was not in a cocoon of Kremlin mouthpiece Russian media, but surrounded by US journalists determined to hold him to account.  His wry smile evaporated into one of alarm. He looked pleadingly to the left and furrowed his brow.  “Will you commit to not killing any more civilians?” another reporter yelled. Putin put his hands to his mouth and appeared to say something, before the press were swiftly removed... As the two men turned and walked towards a podium that read “Alaska 2025”, a five-ship formation flypast of a B-2 bomber flanked by F-22 Raptor fighters flew above their heads.  The spectacle appeared to take the Russian president by surprise, as he stopped momentarily to get a proper view of the planes overhead... Putin said he wanted the war to end but that he was worried about Kyiv and European capitals “throwing a spanner in the works”.  No details of a ceasefire were provided, but Putin did offer Mr Trump something that he wanted: recognition that the war would not have started if he were president in 2022... In one notable gear change, Mr Trump said the US would be ready to participate in “Article 5-style” security guarantees for Kyiv, referring to Nato’s mutual defence clause.  It is the first time that the president has indicated he would join the Coalition of the Willing of European countries, led by the UK, France and Germany, planning to police any ceasefire agreement.  Putin also tabled a demand for “protections” for the Russian Orthodox Church in Ukraine, which Mr Zelensky banned last year after accusing it of being complicit in Putin’s war.  The move provided the Russian president with an excuse for his invasion, claiming that military action was taken to protect Russian speakers and culture in Ukraine."
The warmongers refuse to acknowledge the Article 5-style offer, of course, since to them anything short of Russia withdrawing to pre-2022 borders is unacceptable

Recognising Palestine is why Starmer and Macron will be ignored on Ukraine - "There is a very good reason why there will be no European representation at the summit due to take place in Alaska between US President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin to discuss ending the Ukraine conflict.  It is simply that, when it comes to the big geopolitical decisions affecting the future security of the continent, today’s generation of European leaders cannot be trusted to make the right call... The notion that Sir Keir Starmer, or any other European leader, might have any useful contribution to make at the Alaska summit is almost risible given their recent conduct on the other pressing security issue of the day: ending the appalling conflict in Gaza.  Since returning to office in January, Trump has made it clear that his two main foreign policy objectives are to end the conflicts in both Ukraine and Gaza. While his efforts regarding Ukraine have so far been stymied by Putin’s lack of interest in a ceasefire, the Trump administration has worked hard to formulate a workable ceasefire proposal for Gaza. Indeed, by early July, Washington was indicating that Israel had broadly accepted the terms of the 60-day ceasefire deal, with the final decision on whether it would go ahead or not left in the hands of Hamas. It was torpedoed after the organisation’s terrorist leadership announced that it would not accept the ceasefire until a Palestinian state had been created and recognised.  A key factor in Hamas’s rejection of the ceasefire deal appears to have been the decision by Starmer, together with French President Emmanuel Macron, to announce their intention to recognise a Palestinian state at next month’s annual UN General Assembly in New York. This is despite the fact that no such Palestinian state actually exists. To add insult to injury, Hamas officials publicly praised the British and French leaders for declaring their intention to recognise a Palestinian state, with the terrorist organisation hailing the decision as “one of the fruits of October 7”.  Not surprisingly, the grandstanding exploits of Starmer and Macron, which were taken more to embarrass Israel than make any positive contribution to the plight of ordinary Palestinians, have not gone down well in Washington. Even Trump remarked that Starmer’s plan to grant recognition meant “rewarding Hamas”. The Trump administration has blamed the collapse of July’s ceasefire talks, and Hamas’s decision to reject the ceasefire terms, directly on Macron’s decision to recognise Palestinian statehood. Talks with Hamas “fell apart on the day Macron made the unilateral decision that he’s going to recognise the Palestinian state,” said US Secretary of State Marco Rubio.  Starmer’s subsequent decision to follow Macron’s lead in planning to recognise Palestine only made matters worse for Washington in terms of arranging a lasting ceasefire in Gaza.  In such circumstances it is hardly surprising that the Trump administration has little appetite for including the likes of Starmer and Macron in key discussions relating to the future of Europe’s security when he meets with Putin in Alaska... To date, Starmer’s most notable contribution to the Ukraine debate has been to float the notion of establishing some form of European security force to protect Ukraine’s borders once a ceasefire takes hold.  Starmer has even talked of deploying “boots on the ground”, although this proposition has been quietly dropped after it was pointed out to the Prime Minister that the parlous state of our Armed Forces meant the UK’s contribution would be minimal. The other big disconnect between Starmer and Trump is that the US leader is playing for far higher stakes than simply ending hostilities in Ukraine. Trump’s primary goal is to forge closer ties with Moscow in a bid to weaken Russia’s strategic partnership with China, a country that Washington regards as posing a far greater threat to America’s long-term security than Russia."

Nato has just surrendered Ukraine to Putin - "After more than three years of attritional war with Russia, Ukraine finds itself lacking the manpower and weaponry to triumph. During their inflammatory Oval Office meeting with Zelensky, Trump warned that Ukraine was “running low on soldiers” and JD Vance, his vice-president, railed against forced conscription on the Ukrainian streets. The Ukrainian president responded to these taunts by reversing his long-standing opposition to mobilising Ukrainians aged 18-24. The up-tick in voluntary new recruits has not solved the problem. Russia’s incremental military triumphs around Pokrovsk were enabled by a shortage of Ukrainian defenders and morale in the Ukrainian army’s ranks is dipping due to frictions between the rank-and-file and senior command over tactics. Combat injuries are afflicting Ukraine’s most experienced servicemen and leaving their rookie replacements vulnerable to Russian human wave attacks... Ukraine’s domestic arms industry cannot develop fast enough to neutralise North Korea’s military assistance to Russia and Europe’s depleted militaries need to supply Ukraine by ordering new weapons from the US. As Russia launches a multi-pronged offensive against Donetsk, Kharkiv and Sumy, Ukraine is unable to meet its urgent war materiel needs."
The author is clearly pro-Ukraine, so maybe those who cheer war with Russia won't dismiss him as a Kremlin stooge. They still are claiming, as they have been for over 3 years, that Russia is losing. The eventual cope will be that the US didn't give Ukraine a blank cheque for military aid

Meme - Caitlin Johnstone @caitoz (Feb 17,2022): "Calling it "Russian" doesn't change the fact that it's Ukrainians who happen to be ethnic Russians firing on other Ukrainians."
Am l a cat? You decide. @CatGrahi7554541: "Just thought I'd leave this here for no reason."
Darth Putin @DarthPutinKGB: "Throughout history, Russia's neighbors have provoked themselves just as our army is massed on their border & at maximum combat readiness."
Caitlin Johnstone @caitoz: "I want you to promise me you'll completely revise your worldview and drastically change your media consumption habits when March gets here and the invasion still hasn't happened."
Tankies strike again!

Meme - Caitlin Johnstone @caitoz (Mar 7, 2022): "You seem to be under the impression that Ukraine has any chance of stopping Putin from taking Kyiv. You can only believe that if you're living in a self-reinforcing echo chamber."
Caitlin Johnstone @caitoz (Jul 19, 2022): "Putin has made no real attempt to take Kyiv. He is however taking larger and larger swaths of the eastern part of the country."

These gamers are now fighting for real in Ukraine’s war against Russia - "Many found their way here via a single Reddit post. “I reached out to the 25th Airborne Brigade and got a phone interview, a background check – then I was told I could come,” says Scott, 19, call sign “Buffalo”, a firefighter from Washington State. If they make it through, many hope to specialise as drone pilots – a critical and rapidly evolving role on Ukraine’s battlefield. In a war increasingly dominated by drones, gaming skills have become a surprisingly valuable asset. “Foreigners tend to have a lot of gaming experience – and we need that,” says Oleg Grabovyy the course co-ordinator, call sign “Hazard”. “The dexterity you get with an Xbox controller is directly transferable to flying drones. The best FPV [first-person view] pilot I ever met was a relentless gamer.”... What is most striking about these recruits is their youth – most are barely out of their teens, with little or no military experience. Yet, they share an idealism and urgency, much of it sparked by a perceived collapse in American support for Ukraine."

Raymond J. de Souza: Those pushing Ukraine to surrender may now be in retreat - "It was last March that Francis called for Ukraine to have “ the courage of the white flag ” and “negotiate before things get worse.” It provoked an incandescent response in Ukraine, including from Ukrainian Catholics. In essence, Pope Francis had the Trump position — things are bad on the battlefield, they may well get worse, so better to surrender now... What Trump has never understood is that Ukraine does not need the “art of the deal” to surrender to Russia. If Zelenskyy wanted to surrender, he could fly to Moscow in one day and not ruin his visit to the Bernini-adorned St. Peter’s by having to look into the eyes of Donald Trump."
Weird. How come all the Ukraine cheerleaders didn't pile on Pope Francis?
Clearly, to the warmongers, as long as Ukraine gives up even an inch of territory, this is as good as total surrender

Meme - George Takei: "Crazy thought, but those 20 million AR-15s now in this country could sure arm a lot of Ukrainians."
Adam Lee Marcus: "You just made the case for every civilian in every country owning an AR-15."

Ben Swann on X - "Total power move. Zelenskyy attempts to meet with Trump at Saint Peter‘s Basilica, but wanted President Macron there as well. Three chairs were set up when Trump arrived. Then he tells Macron to leave and that he’ll meet with Zelenskyy one on one. This is how you end the war,,.cut out those who want to keep it prolonged and deal with Zelenskyy and Putin directly."

Meme - *American flag and MAGA hat* "I love my country and want to protect it"
Crying Soyjak Democrat: "Racist!"
Ukrainian soldier: "I love my country and want to protect it"
Soyjak Democrat: "Yes! We must defend Ukraine's sovereignty and democracy!"
We're still told that left wingers don't hate their countries

Meme - Bad Hombre @joma_gc: "The guy on the left was elected to a second term in a race with six candidates and holds the highest approval rating of any world leader.  The guy on the right canceled elections, banned opposition parties, imprisons and exiles critics, enriched himself by embezzling foreign aid, and killed an American journalist.  Now guess who Democrats call a dictator—and who they praise as a defender of democracy."
*Bukele vs Zelensky*

US Vice President answers Zelenskyy after criticism of his Putin defense - "Commenting on the Ukrainian President's words, Vance said that he has been condemning Russia since 2022, but has also been trying to understand the strategic goals of both sides since then. "That doesn't mean you morally support the Russian cause, or that you support the full-scale invasion, but you do have to try to understand what are their strategic red lines, in the same way that you have to try to understand what the Ukrainians are trying to get out of the conflict," the US Vice President added."
Clearly, to understand and explain means to justify

Bad Vibrations: The Lies Universities Tell Their Students about Sex

From 2020:

Bad Vibrations: The Lies Universities Tell Their Students about Sex

Universities today bombard students with two contradictory messages about sex, effectively encouraging them to carry a dildo in their pocket, while lugging a fainting couch behind them.

On the one hand, universities have returned to a quasi-Victorian concern with the unique fragility and vulnerability of college women in matters of sex. This belief in the frailty of college women flows from a lineage of feminist theory, whose foremost representative is probably Catherine MacKinnon, in which “structures of power” hold down women as inherently unequal partners in sex. These structures, the argument goes, must be reformed to correct historical wrongs, to reward and encourage the right sorts of individuals and activities, while punishing and suppressing the wrong ones.

On the other side of the campus sex ledger is the dildo raffle. At “Sex Week” festivities and other gatherings nationwide, colleges and universities actively promote sexual libertinism. During Sex Weeks, campuses routinely host BDSM demonstrations, and rhapsodise over orgasms, anal sex, sex toys, and more. The University of Wisconsin-La Crosse hosted a teach-in entitled “Clitoral Masturbation and Free Vibrator Giveaway.” It is considered repressed and repressive to criticize this cornucopia of carnal delight.

This hearkens back to other feminists of the 1980s, such as Gayle S. Rubin, who railed against “moral panics” and “erotic stigma” as “the last socially respectable form of prejudice,” functioning “in much the same ways as do ideological systems of racism, ethnocentrism, and religious chauvinism.” This makes the dildo a powerful weapon, a literal spear thrust at the prudish soul of bigotry.

What’s less obvious is that the dildo and fainting couch are part of one and the same campus dialogue. To their credit, campus activists want to banish the bad old days, when universities swept sexual assault under the rug, protecting or even aiding and abetting sexual assault in athletic programs. Accordingly, the Ohio State University puts on seminars about sexual violence and assault right alongside programs on “Kink 101” and “Sex Toys 101.”

Monitoring and coordinating this intellectually incoherent movement are the campus student-conduct offices. Through these budget-busting bureaucracies, universities impose byzantine rules regulating students’ sex lives. The message is: test the outer limits of sexuality! But be aware, a hall monitor is always watching!

Most universities today define sexual assault differently from how it’s specified in law. Colleges now define “sexual assault” so it includes lawful conduct that couldn’t be prosecuted under the criminal law in any state—whether red, blue, or purple. It includes missteps that, in years past, would likely have been considered just messy, “live and learn” encounters between inexperienced (and often inebriated) young people. When pressed, campus administrators justify their new definitions of sexual assault by asserting the right of educational institutions to teach “new values” to the student body. While some judge this an unqualified good, the reality is more complicated.

Certainly, increased awareness of sexual misconduct has made bad behavior less acceptable everywhere, from fraternity parties to boardrooms. And maybe “Sex Weeks” have encouraged more honest discussions among partners—these are no doubt positive developments. If women come away more assertive and more certain about what they want, who could argue with that?

But the redefinition of sexual misconduct, and its enhanced policing by campus administrators, frequently has catastrophic consequences. Students are coming of age in a climate that seeks both to outdo the sexual experimentation of the 1970s and to impose an atmosphere of neo-Victorian surveillance. Campus investigators interrogate inexperienced students not only about whether they had consent for sex, but how they knew they had affirmative consent for each separate act of physical intimacy—each touch, each kiss, each penetration, and each position assumed while performing the latter. The neo-Victorian thus atomizes intimacy into microscopic bits.

Students—particularly those who are socially awkward, sexually inexperienced, or have conditions that impair their understanding of subtle social cues—are routinely punished for conduct they genuinely believed was consensual, but that transgresses new campus rules. This has led to a wave of litigation by students who allege they were wrongly accused: since 2011, more than 600 such lawsuits have been filed.

At the same time, female students—although not exclusively—are advised that encounters they may initially perceive as regrettable but consensual were, in fact, non-consensual “sexual violence.” At Washington & Lee University, for example, the Title IX officer put on a presentation about an article entitled “Is It Possible That There is Something In Between Consensual Sex And Rape… And That It Happens To Almost Every Girl Out There?” In the article itself, the author argues that a large category of legally consensual sex is “rape-ish” (she describes no coercion or violence). Campus sexual misconduct officers take it one step further and redefine regrettable choices—in which women have agency—as acts of “sexual violence” perpetrated against them by another. In these the administration must intervene, discipline, and punish. 

This has important psychological ramifications, explains social psychologist Pamela Paresky: “The ability to make choices is how we know we are free, and no free person gets through life without making choices that in hindsight they would make differently. Knowing the difference between making choices and being forced to do things against our will is essential, not only to learning from our mistakes but maintaining psychological integrity and being truly free.”

The campus courts occasioned by this movement have also led to systemic violations of accused students’ due process rights, undermining the integrity of the whole project. Victims can find their cases overturned either on appeal or by a court when the accused sues the university over procedural violations.

Increasingly, plaintiffs, both women and men, are winning. A woman sued the University of Kentucky when it repeatedly botched her disciplinary proceedings by neglecting the rights of the student she accused. This kind of kangaroo court benefits no one, neither the alleged victim nor the accused. The woman finally took the university to court for its deliberate indifference to her serious complaint of sexual assault, and the court held that “the University bungled the disciplinary hearings so badly, so inexcusably, that it necessitated three appeals and reversals in an attempt to remedy the due process deficiencies.” This, it concluded, “profoundly affected [her] ability to obtain an education.”

We think these problems stem, at least in part, from the impossible tension, under the tutelage of campus officialdom, between the dildo and the fainting couch. The history of campus activism in matters of sex suggests a more sensible solution.

University surveillance of the student body has, in some ways, come full circle. The college administrators dissecting the minutiae of students’ sex lives walk in the footsteps of the 19th century administrators of Victorian universities. At that time, the institutions scarcely expected students to be adults, certainly not in matters of sex. Campus sex was prohibited. Students were also forbidden to marry and expelled if they did.

Deans and faculty were substitute parents—in loco parentis. The earliest surviving handbook of Yale College, from 1887, reflects the assumption that students could not behave as adults. It even admonished them to clean their rooms: “students may be excluded whose rooms have been reported to the Faculty for disorder at any time…” Other rules even forbade them from “sit[ting] on the College fence on Sunday”—an apparent red flag of loutishness.

In parallel with contemporary “cancel culture,” the Victorian university proscribed insulting others. Yet the call to be “woke” would doubtless have befuddled bluebloods in the Gilded Age; likewise, the assertion of a civil right in the recognition of personal pronouns, “micro-aggressions,” and many other academic trends loosely associated with identity politics. But 19th century gentlemanly honor codes placed just as much emphasis on validating students’ subjective feelings as would any present-day identitarian code of conduct.

Yale’s code was meant to make these young gentlemen feel safe on campus: “If a student interferes with the personal liberty of a member of another class, or offers him any indignity or insult, he may be permanently separated from his class.” The cardinal rule could be summarized: ACT LIKE A GENTLEMAN! This became Law Number 1, added to a 1901 revision at Yale: “Students will be held accountable for violations of the ordinary rules of good order and gentlemanly conduct, whether the particular acts are specifically forbidden by the College rules or not.”

Unsurprisingly, the colleges of the Victorian era didn’t have many sex rules. They didn’t have to, because most excluded women, and when such rules initially appeared they were straightforward. The first to address women at Yale appeared in 1923: “Ladies may not be entertained in College dormitories except by the written permission of the Dean.” No phalanx of university administrators was needed to enforce rules like this. Women were simply banned.

Even early coed universities had simple rules. At Brandeis University in the 1950s, socializing between male and female students was limited to a few hours per day in common rooms. University regulations even barred fathers and brothers from women’s dormitories—unless they were helping to carry luggage, in which case their presence was announced by a shout of “Man on the hall!”

These rules changed dramatically as sex desegregation hit the campus. But in loco parentis held on in parietal rules, “parietal” meaning literally a “wall” between the sexes, designed to keep students from having sexual intercourse. Campus rulebooks also quadrupled in girth—though modest beside the tomes handed down by campus “judiciaries” today.

Student activists led the campus co-educational revolution of the 1960s and 1970s to dismantle these regulations. But the movement would be scarcely recognizable to 21st century student demonstrators. Rather than demanding greater regulation, the students of the 60s and 70s bridled against the oversight of their private lives.

At Yale College, Junior Aviam Soifer spearheaded a student committee that pushed for a “Coeducation Week at Yale” in 1968, against Yale’s administration. The students organized the visit of approximately 300 women from women’s colleges to spend a week in the male dormitories of Yale. The presence of 300 female students (as opposed to the numerous working women) was considered so disruptive that the police increased the officers on night patrol. 

When Yale finally admitted its first women’s class in fall 1969, protests quickly erupted over administrative obtuseness. President Kingman Brewster, Jr. announced to students that Yale wouldn’t house women in any buildings with men. Students quickly shouted him down and “deplatformed” him. Fearing for his safety, President Brewster preserved himself by speedily capitulating to student demands. Yale distributed its first female class of 250 among the different residential colleges. Even so, there was a separate entrance for them, “with a guard and parietals” in place. The Yale student handbook still strictly controlled “visiting hours” for women. 

Despite similarities to contemporary student radicalism, however, there were significant differences. Students largely asserted their freedom from campus bureaucrats’ supervision, rather than asking to be protected. They did not demand ever-more complex restrictions to govern their sex lives, nor call for sensitivity training. They were rejecting, flaunting, and breaking the rules—sometimes daring administrators to do anything about it. 

The social upheaval of the late 1960s and 1970s—not to mention the widespread availability of the Pill—transformed sex on campus in ways that became permanent. It’s difficult to imagine any secular American university returning to “open door, one foot on the floor” policies. Yet although premarital sex among students is now the norm, it’s subject to increasingly confusing rules, policed by an ever-expanding campus administration. The pearl-clutching of yesteryear has been replaced by clipboard-clutching bureaucrats. 

Where did these rules come from? 

Surprisingly, they came from a groundswell of student activism. It wasn’t an overreaching federal government that first imposed them, as critics often complain. In 1991, at the prompting of a group called “Womyn of Antioch,” Antioch College in Ohio adopted a sexual misconduct policy that redefined what it meant to consent. According to the Antioch policy, “[t]he person(s) who initiate(s) the sexual activity is responsible for asking for consent,” and “[t]he person(s) who are asked are responsible for verbally responding.” Not only was verbal consent required, but “[e]ach new level of sexual activity requires consent.” Previously, campus policy focused on whether someone said “no.” Antioch focused, by contrast, on whether someone affirmatively said “yes.” The eventual rule had no fewer than 14 elements defining the unambiguous “Yes.”

An eruption of ridicule greeted these new sex rules in the early 1990s. The idea of requiring verbal permission for each step of sexual activity spawned countless jokes. Saturday Night Live even aired a sketch featuring a quiz show at Antioch called, “Is It Date Rape?

Over the years, however, the concept of “affirmative consent,” so widely ridiculed back then, became the norm in college sexual misconduct policies. These policies start from the presumption that sex is non-consensual and must be proven otherwise. They also seem to assume that women have little to no sexual agency, or worse, that women are passive victims. A Title IX training slide from Boston University, for example, cites “poor communication” as something that can render sex non-consensual, and thus turn it into sexual violence. An avalanche of lawsuits has brought to light the conduct that the neo-Victorians now condemn. 

One former Northwestern University student sued after he was expelled over a sexual encounter in which he supposedly used “‘emotional and verbal coercion,’ apparently because [he] requested sex more than once that evening.” Repeating the request was considered sufficient evidence of coercion, not because the man, turned down, then forced his girlfriend to submit (the school found no evidence of force), but because his request itself was unwanted. Behind the expulsion lies an assumption that the young woman, like her Victorian ancestor on the fainting couch, was too fragile to withstand the verbal overture and bereft of the ability to assert her will and say “No.”

In another case discussed by Hanna Stotland in The New York Times, a male student was expelled because—though it was undisputed the young woman consented to sexual intercourse—the man didn’t desist quickly enough when she began to cry. Her alleged emotional trauma alone was enough to condemn him.

Nor is it always women recast as weaker vessels. At Brandeis University, for example, a student, J.C., charged his ex-boyfriend with sexual misconduct for, among other things, “occasionally wak[ing] him up by kissing him” and “look[ing] at his private areas when they were showering together.” Brandeis’s special examiner determined that “J.C. … was not strong-willed or forceful enough” to stand up to these supposed onslaughts and condemned the ex-boyfriend for “serious sexual transgressions.”

If the groundswell of support for these new campus norms came from below, the apparatus that now enforces them did not. In large part owing to federal regulations and guidance, every university has established a “sex bureaucracy,” justified by the federal law of Title IX, dedicated to policing students’ sex lives.

Passed in 1972, Title IX prohibits sex discrimination at federally funded educational institutions. In the 1990s, courts extended Title IX to include an institution’s deliberate indifference to student-on-student sexual assault and harassment. Thereafter, Title IX enforcement was rapidly institutionalized throughout higher education. Between 2013 and 2016, for example, Title IX spending at UC Berkeley rose by at least $2 million. Similarly, Harvard University in 2016 employed 50 full- and part-time Title IX coordinators across its 13 schools.

All of this sends today’s students a message that is, to put it mildly, mixed: you should enthusiastically embrace sexual freedom and experimentation—but make one misstep, even unintentionally, and you will be branded for life as either a sexual predator or trauma victim. This pathologizes the awkward, messy, unavoidably emotional landscape of youthful sexuality.

Obviously, no one wants to return to the days when simply fraternizing with the opposite sex could get you expelled, nor to a time when colleges looked the other way at sexual assault. But the rules of the Victorian university offered one thing that’s now sorely lacking. And that is clarity.

The world of the dildo and fainting couch offers no clarity whatsoever. If administrators genuinely believe that 25% of the female student body will be sexually assaulted, it would be a lot easier to go back to single-sex dorms and strict parietal rules. Yet it seems illogical simultaneously to encourage unbridled sexual experimentation, but only under the strictest guidelines. Staffing universities with the equivalent of hall monitors, who peer into the most granular details of students’ sex lives, seems a failed social experiment.

We think three things would lead to a more practical approach. They all begin with a simple plea—that universities be honest with students.

First, we agree that universities should be free to set rules to safeguard the educational environment. Potentially, this can embrace new values—like the spectacularly successful co-education movement of the 1960s. Maybe it should include a new dialogue about consent today. But universities should stop telling students that rules about affirmative consent define actual crimes of “sexual violence.” At most, universities administer limited civil infractions. They are not prosecuting crimes. Campus definitions of affirmative consent have been uniformly rejected as criminal law standards. While every sexual assault that could be prosecuted as a crime would meet the definition of sexual assault under campus conduct codes, the reverse is not even remotely true. 

If cases really involve sexual violence, they should be addressed by law enforcement. No one wants a world where genuine sexual violence is swept under the rug. But this is what universities do, holding themselves out to students as protectors simply by expelling actual violent offenders—who then return, free and at large, to society. Real criminals of course should go to jail. Yet the sex bureaucrats tell students they are saving them from “sexual violence” and “rape,” implying real crimes, when what they are really doing is punishing students who have violated, not the law, but rather a new set of campus sex norms. Schools also project the message that the Title IX office is a more welcoming place to report “sexual violence” than the criminal justice system. But this sympathetic environment exists—if it does—mostly because the Title IX offices prosecute conduct which isn’t strictly criminal. Universities should be honest about this, too.

Second, they should stop promoting fainting-couch culture. Alleged victims, we’re told, are too traumatized to submit to cross-examination. Really? Women outside the ivory tower didn’t get this memo, nor do witnesses to murder, kidnap victims, or victims of other traumatic crimes. These and similar myths propagate the message that college women are too frail to participate as full adults in civil society, another parallel to the Victorians. Universities should treat college women as strong enough to assert their rights in a free society as equals. 

Universities are free to promote sexual experimentation. But they should be honest that pushing norms and boundaries involves making mistakes. It’s the nature of experimentation that there will inevitably be regrets with something so intimate and personal as sex. This, however, should not be quasi-criminalized.

Finally, although universities should have the authority to enforce their own rules, including sexual misconduct, they should be honest about the fact that the values they seek to instil are neither intuitive nor even widely accepted. Instead, universities act as if they have discovered the importance of “consent” for the first time, a concept long established in criminal and civil law. It’s simply understood very differently beyond the ivory tower.

Schools should develop a nomenclature that reflects this fact. If students violate campus rules, schools may punish them. That doesn’t mean students should be expelled as sex offenders. Of course, if the conduct is a real crime, that’s a different story.

If schools want to radically re-define sexual agency, sexual mores, and consent, that’s their prerogative (within legal limits). Maybe they’ll succeed; maybe they won’t. But they shouldn’t create a generation of neo-sex offenders and neo-trauma victims to give birth to this brave new world.

 

Links - 7th January 2026 (1 - General Wokeness: Hasan Piker, Wikipedia Bias, Juries)

Matt Morse on X - "Hasan Piker with a straight face: “You guys don’t understand, all 37 videos in which I’m advocating for political violence and celebrating terrorism are just taken out of context.”"

Left-wing streamer Hasan Piker defends ‘murder them’ comments in ABC interview - "A controversial left-wing influencer who has come under scrutiny for multiple explicit calls for political violence that have resurfaced in the wake of Charlie Kirk’s assassination has been given a largely friendly interview on the national broadcaster.  Twitch streamer Hasan Piker appeared on the ABC’s flagship current affairs program 730 on Wednesday night to discuss the fallout from last week’s shooting of the prominent conservative activist in Utah.  Host Sarah Ferguson did not ask Piker about “your own rhetoric” until towards the end of the nearly nine-minute interview, citing one example where he called for landlords to be murdered but adding she did not “know the context of these particular statements”... In one viral compilation of Piker’s previous comments, he declares that “left-wingers, liberals, you need to be f**king showing your opponents’ guts on there, you need to be gutting them”.  “You need to be shanking these motherf**kers and letting their f**king intestines writhe on-stage,” he says. “Slice them up. Slice ‘em and f**king dice ’em.”  In another clip, Piker jokes approvingly in front of a crowd about a politician being left threatening letters with his address that stated “I’m going to kill you with my AR15”.  Ranting about landlords, Piker said in separate video, “Kill them. Kill those motherf**kers. Murder those motherf**kers in the street. Let the streets soak in their f**king red capitalist blood, dude... Piker said he was concerned about “political persecution”... Ferguson finally turned to Piker’s own comments about landlords.  “Doesn’t that make you part of the problem with violent discourse?” she asked. Piker claimed the comments were “hyperbolic” and “not meant to be sincere”.  “It’s not a real policy that I would ever advocate for,” he said.”
Everything right wingers say is a "dog whistle" that must be mined for meaning, but left wingers calling for violence doesn't mean anything

Hasan Piker walks back comment about killing Rick Scott following Twitch suspension - "Left-wing political commentator Hasan Piker has walked back remarks urging Republicans to “kill” Sen. Rick Scott, R-Fla., after getting suspended from Twitch, a popular video live-streaming service...   During the stream, Piker insisted that fraud primarily comes from providers, not recipients of government programs.  “They’re not tackling providers; they’re not actually going after false billing. They are trying to cut recipients. [Fraud] is not happening at the point of recipient. If you cared about Medicare fraud or Medicaid fraud, you would kill Rick Scott,” he said... This is Piker’s fifth Twitch suspension... Piker addressed his critics. “Big shout out to the right-wing free speech lovers who took time out of their day screaming about DEI & immigrants, to cry abt [sic] this!” he wrote on X...   Sen. Ed Markey, D-Mass., Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y. and other Democrats have sat down with Piker, who was praised in December by Kamala Harris’ former deputy campaign manager, Rob Flaherty...   Piker, who has a following on Twitch of over 2.8 million, and who previously raised more than $1 million for Palestinian aid, has used his platform with millions of followers to downplay and justify terrorist attacks such as Oct. 7 and 9/11 as acts of resistance in recent years.  During a 2019 livestream, Piker praised the “brave f—ing soldier” who wounded conservative U.S. Rep. Dan Crenshaw, R-Texas, while he was deployed to Afghanistan as a Navy SEAL, asking, “Didn’t he go to war and, like, literally lose his eye because some mujahideen, a brave f—ing soldier, f—ed his eyehole with their d—?”  He went on to say that “America deserved 9/11, I’m saying it,” before later walking it back and saying it was “inappropriate.”"
Proof that right wingers are the ones inciting violence and they need to be banned from social media, and that right wingers who point out left wing glorification of violence are trolls

Collin Rugg on X - "NEW: Streamer Hasan Piker says Communist China is the best example of a country that the United States should learn from and model after.
Konstantin Kisin: Is there a country that has done socialism the way that you like?
Piker: I would say China is probably the closest ... that is probably the closest I would say to an example that we should follow and lessons that we should learn from.
Video: Triggernometry"
Roman Helmet Guy on X - "China is the best example that we could create a totalitarian single-party ethnostate led by a cult of personality dictator who disappears protesters and puts religious minorities in camps and leftists would support it as long as we called it “communist.”"
Kangmin Lee | 이강민 on X - "In China, the government bans depictions of LGBTQ in media, cracks down on LGBTQ advocacy groups, shuts down LGBTQ social media accounts and dating apps, and forbids gays from "marrying" and adopting Is that what Hasan thinks America should learn from and model after? Based!"

yeet on X - "Somebody claiming to be a former college classmate of Hasan is going viral on Destiny’s subreddit for calling out Piker’s past “I went to college w Hasan, here’s what he was really like” The post accuses Piker & his fraternity of various things Includes tweets from former fraternity brothers also throwing accusations of creepy behavior"

Hasan defends China against anti-LGBTQ allegations : r/LivestreamFail - ""Apple removes gay dating apps to comply with government order"
"Yeah but thats Apple"
Did his brain just turn off while reading the headline?"

Drew Pavlou 🇦🇺🇺🇸🇺🇦🇹🇼 on X - "It's so funny that Hasan Piker loves China considering the fact that China under Xi Jinping is basically just a fascist state with communist aesthetics.   China is a Han ethnostate.  It is virtually impossible for foreigners to become citizens - in 2023 there were just 16,500 registered naturalized citizens in a population of 1.4 billion.    The Chinese state is brutal in its treatment of Islam and Muslims. The state controls all mosques and children under 18 legally cannot attend mosques for religious instruction. This is to say nothing of the more than 1 million Uyghurs rounded up in re-education camps and the mass demolition of thousands of mosques in Xinjiang.  They've also basically completely banned Palestine activism. There have been virtually no major pro-Gaza demonstrations in China since 2023. When Chinese leftists brought a Palestine flag to a rock concert in Xi'an, organisers banned all flags the next day.    Ironically the Chinese state also brutally represses socialist activists. In 2018 the Xi regime cracked down on young Chinese Marxists and Maoists who went to Shenzhen to try organise workers. They rounded up and disappeared like fifty people. In the same year Chinese security forces assaulted and hauled away Marxist students at Nanjing University after their school refused to recognize their on-campus Marxist student society.    So on virtually every issue Hasan claims he cares about - socialism, Islam, Palestine, multiculturalism - China is demonstrably so much worse than the West in every single way.     He doesn't care. They have Gucci stores but retain some vague communist aesthetics. Which is funnily enough Hasan's exact politics."
Left wingers just hate the West

Drew Pavlou 🇦🇺🇺🇸🇺🇦🇹🇼 on X - "Hasan Piker: “China is the country that represents everything I love” On his first day he was almost arrested for posing with a Mao meme in Tiananmen Square On his second day he revealed that “random guys” were walking through his hotel room - likely security forces bugging it"

‘I Have Become Full Chinese’: Hasan Piker Professes His Unconditional Love For Communist China - "Hasan Piker, who apparently used a shock collar on his dog and expressed regret that the United States won the Cold War, declared himself “Chinese”... “This is my life now,” Piker said. “I have already become Chinese. In my heart, in my soul, in my mind, in my conscience, I have already become Chinese, okay? We were already white Chinese in this chat, I have become full Chinese.”... Streamers and Reddit posters unearthed multiple instances of Piker apparently using the device or the threat of activating the device to keep his dog Kaya sitting in a more photogenic location during his live streams, which last for hours. Suspicions that Piker was using the device began when the dog yelped during one of Piker’s livestreams as he appeared to reach for something.  “He’s been using a shock collar on a setting so high that his dog F*CKING SCREAMS when he uses it,” Tectone, a fellow streamer, claimed in an Oct. 7 post on X.  Shock collars can cause dogs to suffer from stress and anxiety while also leading them to engage in less desirable behavior and aggression, according to Dogster.com."

Variety on X - "Hasan Piker calls Gal Gadot “a dogsh*t actress” and quips: “She has no business [being at the Oscars] for the crime of what she has done to not only the DC franchise, but really any movie she’s been a part of.” “All jokes aside,” he continued, “Gal Gadot serves an important role in normalizing Israel as not a fascist ethno-state, but instead a place where a lot of beautiful women come from. And those beautiful women happen to serve in the IDF, because there’s also this weird sexualization of the forces as well that takes place, and it plays another role in normalizing Israel and its activities and actions, and whitewashing it.”"
Bonchie on X - "This dude beats his dog, praises communism, and calls for the blood of his political opponents to run in the streets, and Variety is till like, “Yeah, let’s quote him like he’s a normal source to own the Jews.”"

HokutoNoTism (TAL) on X - ""Gal Gadot helps normalize genocide." Hasan gushed over a Chinese influencer that was literally used to cover up the Uyghur genocide."

hasans_old_tweets on X - "A video has resurfaced of Hasan "training" his previous dog named Fish. Hasan pulls Fish by the tail with such force that his dog is lifted off of the ground. "MOTHERFUCKER! COME HERE" "If you run right now, I'll fucking kill you! I'll actually kill you motherfucker""

Thread by @WikiBias2024 on Thread Reader App – Thread Reader App - "Wikipedia editors have deleted the entry on the Muslim Brotherhood's memorandum, which states the plan to “destroy and annihilate Western civilization from within.” A few lines have been moved to the Brotherhood article, which in effect emphasizes charity rather than terrorism.  Wow, shocking!  Bluethricecreamman, the editor who requested the article's deletion, is a pro-Hamas contributor who removed significant content from the “Antisemitic trope” article and redefined the “Zionism” article. He openly supports the annihilation of Israel."

Nemets on X - "Middle era of Wikipedia 2005-2012 exposed a lot of previously censored knowledge. It was large enough to cover a great deal of material, bright libertarians were active editors, & various internet censorship programs were only beginning."
Alaric The Barbarian on X - "Per Mike Benz (and others, but he covers it best), DoD/State Dept/NATO policy toward the Internet until 2014 was max freedom & max accessibility. They pivoted to algo-censorship after losing the Crimean status referendum. Basically all online culture is downstream of this pivot"

Wikipedia Made $184 Million in 2025, Spent $3.4 Million on Hosting - "The cost of actually running wikipedia remains under 2% of their spending. Remainder of funds spent on “Racial Equity”, “Awards & Grants, “Travel Expenses”"
Never donate to Wikipedia

The Wikipedia fundraising scam - "Wikipedia is begging you to please give them money. They have no salespeople, they say, and they need help to "keep Wikipedia online and growing". It turns out this is not really true. The one image summary is this, from Wikipedia user Guy Macon:  At the end of 2023, Wikimedia (again, Wikipedia's parent organization) has a staggering 250 million dollars in assets. Now, some people said these were not really "money in the bank", as I had tweeted. However, Twitter user Zeki Seskir showed that these are actually mostly money in the bank (2023 annual report): Specifically, they have about 175 million in various kinds of stocks, bonds, securities and so on.  Looking again at the table above in the expense column, you might get the impression that it's really really expensive to run a big website (mostly staffed by volunteers). Must require some expensive servers? It does: But server hosting is only 3 million (<5% of their donations)... So what are they spending the other 166 million dollars on? Well, for starters, they give away 24 million to various organizations. Which ones? It's hard to say exactly due to lack of transparency. However, again, Lunduke did the important investigative work, and found that most of the money is managed by the Tides foundation... the money is mainly being channeled behind the scenes into unrelated political advocacy.  Salaries are also a very big money sink, about 100 million dollars in 2023. We can look into the filings to see who's getting what to some extent... Tellingly, we find that Katherine Maher appears again, making a salary of about 800k in 2021. She's been rapidly increasing in salary. From 2016 to 2021 she increased from 307k to 789k.  It gets better. A lot of money is also being given to something called the Knowledge Equity Fund... it's another anti-European (and anti-USA), anti-male, quasi-Marxist organization. This is what your donations to Wikipedia are going to. Wikipedia spends more money on left-wing causes than actually running an encyclopedia, and by a very long-shot. Wikipedia spends less than 5% of its revenue on actual server hosting. It's unclear to what extent the salaries and donations are being spent on efforts to undermine western civilization and the people who built it, but there are some hints courtesy of Twitter user Stakeholder Consultant. One grant was given to something called the "SeRCH Foundation" (not to be confused with the similarly named "SEARCH Foundation", "established in 1990 as a successor organisation of the Communist Party of Australia"). SeRCH uses the money to produce these kinds of videos:... Wikipedia thus works surprisingly similar to most governments. Whenever someone says, maybe, just maybe, it's not wise that people are paying half of their incomes in taxes, someone will bring up the roads, and maybe even the police, or the military defense. While the state does pay for these essential things, most things the state pays for are not such essential things. Rather, the essential things provide cover for the state to keep raising and almost never lowering taxes. This is the same thing Wikipedia does. Most of what Wikipedia (Wikimedia) does is not running an encyclopedia, but every year Wikipedia begs the users for more money, even though it has 100+ dollars in the bank and server hosting is only 3-4 million a year. The money is then redirected in a scammy way to other projects which have nothing to do with running an encyclopedia or promoting open knowledge. In fact, given that many of these are quasi-Marxist organizations, they are detrimental to open knowledge and explicitly advocate against the most knowledge producing people on the planet, European men.  To be clear, I want to say that Wikipedia and its associated projects (Wikidata, Wiktionary, Wikiquote etc.) are awesome projects, showing the great things humanity can do when we work together, even on an unpaid basis. However, like most organizations, it expanded its scope from running and building this great resource into being yet another organization whose aims is to undermine society as we know it.  The only good thing about this issue is that everything Wikipedia has is under a free license, so that anyone else can copy the contents."

NPOV on X - "In 2017 Wikipedia underwent a seismic shift — the so-called “movement strategy” recast it from a neutral encyclopedia into a social justice movement. The goal? Shift Wikipedia toward political influence, aligning it with left-of-center causes, and use it as a tool in the  info-ecosystem. @AshleyRindsberg #Wikipedia"
Ashley Rindsberg on X - "Wikipedia's Movement Strategy—created and led by "the truth is a distraction" Katherine Maher—changed everything about the online encyclopedia. Almost no one knows anything about it."
PSSD Network | Post-SSRI Sexual Dysfunction on X - "Moderators on @Wikipedia tend to have a pro-pharma bias. The entry for the potentially irreversible iatrogenic syndrome Post-SSRI Sexual Dysfunction (PSSD) has been removed multiple times, despite having been mentioned in academic literature since 2006."

John Simpson on X - "What’s the point of an online encyclopaedia if its facts can’t be trusted?"
Emil Kirkegaard on X - "It's funny to see the reversal of opinions about Wikipedia among the journalists. For a decade, it was said to be untrustworthy because anyone can edit it. Of course, anyone can become a journalist and also write anything they want too. Now there's a hostile Wiki and the tables have turned"

Ashley Rindsberg on X - "In 2012, novelist Philip Roth discovered a "serious misstatement" about one of his books on @Wikipedia .    Wikipedia claimed Roth's book "The Human Stain" was inspired by the life of writer Anatole Broyard. Roth said this was "in no way substantiated by fact." He should know: he wrote it.   The "Human Stain"  was actually inspired (Roth said) by his friend Melvin Tumin, a Princeton professor who had died not long before.   Roth wrote:  "I’ve never known, spoken to, or, to my knowledge, been in the company of a single member of Broyard’s family. I did not even know whether he had children....   "I never took a meal with Broyard, never went with him to a bar or a ballgame or a dinner party or a restaurant, never saw him at a party I might have attended back in the sixties when I was living in Manhattan and on rare occasions socialized at a party.   "I never watched a movie or played cards with him or showed up at a single literary event with him as either a participant or a spectator. As far as I know, we did not live anywhere in the vicinity of each other during the ten or so years in the late fifties and the sixties when I was living and writing in New York and he was a book reviewer and cultural critic for the New York Times.   "I never ran into him accidentally in the street...We never bothered to have a serious conversation....I never learned from Broyard who were his friends or his enemies, did not know where or when he had been born and raised, knew nothing about his economic status in childhood or as an adult, knew nothing of his politics or his favorite sports teams or if he had any interest in sports at all."  Roth contacted a Wikipedia official, who  put him in touch with a site admin, hoping to get it rectified, and Roth wrote a letter to the admin (probably by typewriter). The admin responded that he, Philip Roth, "was not a credible source" on Philip Roth—and told him to find a secondary source!   Unbelievably, the Wikipedia article still today contains the claim about Anatole Broyard:  "In the reviews of the book in both the daily and the Sunday New York Times in 2000, Kakutani and Lorrie Moore suggested that the central character of Coleman Silk might have been inspired by Anatole Broyard, a well-known New York literary editor of the Times."   All this sounds unnervingly like a passage from a Philip Roth novel—with a healthy pinch of Kafka. And yet it so perfectly encapsulates the absurdities that lie at the heart of Wikipedia.  "Secondary sources"—i.e. the New York Times and co—are deemed better arbiters of Roth's fictional reality than Roth himself.   The reason is that on anything political, cultural or social, Wikipedia is a wrapper for the mainstream media.  If the media says it's true, it's considered true by Wikipedia.  If the media says it's false, it's considered false by Wikipedia.  Do you trust Wikipedia?  (h/t @lsanger  for bringing my attention to this insane story.)"

The History Of The Chair Is Racist For Wikipedia - YouTube
Wikipedia removing information due to ”its correct but kinda racist” : r/KotakuInAction - "I get this a lot from leftists, if black cultures have not acheived as much as some European or Asian ones, we have to rewrite history so that it looks that way.  You see this with other history as well, that The British Empire outlawed all slave trade, that USA stopped slave trade in the Arabian Peninsula, it would have been great stories of European values of equality before god and law- but its not fitting the leftist worldview of whites = bad, so it has to go."

Thread by @MuseZack on Thread Reader App – Thread Reader App - "I read that big article about the Wikipedia editor from hell and it made me wonder how many of our institutions that depend on volunteer labor to function eventually end up controlled by obsessive, vindictive weirdos, simply because they can outlast everyone else. This is why I've largely stopped arguing with people on social media. Because you're up against people who will just keep going until they feel like they've had the last word, and if you try to match them post for post you realize at some point that you've wasted your life. It occurs to me that I never actually linked the article, so here you go. Draw your own conclusions, pro or con. But if you think I'm gonna argue with you about it...see above."

Thread by @peterrhague on Thread Reader App – Thread Reader App - "This is absolutely damning. I’ve known RationalWiki to be an angry crank site for many years, and I’ve also known that Wikipedia exists to launder the opinions of certain editors, but I hadn’t put the two together.  The fact that journalists read Wikipedia to get up to speed on topics then write about them is a feedback loop that massively amplifies these obsessive fringe voices, and I think it’s played a significant part in dissociating much of the media from the people it supposedly serves and from reality itself.  The pollution of the memetic space is permanent though. I have no idea how we can cleanse our collective corpus of knowledge of the intellectual sewage that @jimmy_wales has dumped into the internet. The Wikipedia project has failed and must somehow be replaced.   The game of Wikipedia editors is to project good faith whilst acting in bad faith. This has been going on for years in an attempt to craft an alternate reality where the liberal fringe of US Democrats are always and permanently right about everything. The only hope I see is in LLMs - an alternative to the vast corpus built up by Wikipedia over 2 decades could be produced relatively quickly, with human proofreading.  But LLMs are, of course, trained on internet text. I would bet Wikipedia is a significant source. So these maniacs have got their biases encoded into the DNA of any AI you might want to use to try and get rid of it. Most of the pushback you get from this is people trying to push crankery in the other direction - Conservapedia, Breitbart etc. - once you’ve started the game of cynically dragging the discourse in your direction, a return to even the aspiration towards neutrality is near impossible.  It’s so depressing not to be able to trust anything. There is no penalty on the internet for being a compulsive ideologue and very little reward for actually caring about truth."

@amuse on X - "CRIME: A Portland jury ruled a slur shouted after a Portland man was stabbed was worse than the knife attack itself, acquitting repeat offender Gary Edwards. Edwards has an extensive criminal record including convictions for prior stabbings and sexual assault. The people of Portland would rather have Edwards on the street than behind bars. Portland’s justice system is beyond repair.  Despite admitting he stabbed Gregory Howard Jr, repeat offender Gary Edwards was acquitted after jurors accepted the claim that a slur spoken after the stabbing caused more harm than the knife. Prosecutors noted Edwards initiated the confrontation & had a long violent history including a 2020 stabbing. The jury disregarded those warnings. Portland’s courts once again elevate political narratives over protecting citizens."

Racial Bias in Mock Juror Decision-Making: A Meta-Analytic Review of Defendant Treatment.
John Rain on X - "Across more than 34 studies on jury behavior, white jurors show virtually no racial bias, whereas black jurors display a strong bias in favor of their own ethnic group. As usual, the people who are most often accused of racism are, by far, the least prone to it."

Will Tanner on X - "Reminder that jury trials in America essentially don't work because black jurors refuse to convict fellow blacks, even if their guilt is obvious, out of in-group preference Multiple murderers who clearly committed the crime have gotten off, in recent years, because black jurors refused to convict them"

NOTED BRITISH JUDGE QUITS AFTER CHARGES OF RACISM IN A BOOK - The New York Times - "Lord Denning, who as Master of the Rolls holds one of the most powerful and influential judicial offices in Britain and is the senior judge of the appellate system, said the controversy that erupted after the publication last week of his latest book, ''What Next in the Law,'' had prompted him to move up his scheduled retirement in July. In his book, which was withdrawn Tuesday, Lord Denning argued that all British citizens were no longer qualified to serve on juries because ''the English are no longer a homogeneous race.'' ''They are white and black, colored and brown,'' the 83-year-old judge wrote. ''Some of them come from countries where bribery and graft are accepted and where stealing is a virtue so long as you are not found out. They no longer share the same code of morals or religious beliefs.'' Among his most controversial passages was the assertion that two leaders of the riots that broke out last summer in the port city of Bristol were not convicted because the defendants used their right to three pre-emptive challenges to determine the nature of the jury, which subsequently split along racial lines. Lord Denning suggested that this practice was increasingly being used to overload juries with blacks who were reluctant to convict those of their own race. The judge recommended that only ''sensible and responsible members of the community should serve on juries.'' Last week, two of the black jurors in the Bristol riot trial threatened libel action if the book was not withdrawn and a public apology issued. Sibghat Kadri, chairman of the Society of Black Lawyers, which called for the judge to retire, said Lord Denning's comments were degrading and ''couched in terms virulent enough to destroy any remaining credibility he may have as an unbiased and impartial interpreter of the law.''"
From 1982

Meme - Hunter Ash @artemisConsort: "In the UK, non-white jurors exhibit a strong bias in favor of non-white defendants and against white defendants. White jurors exhibit a far weaker bias - also in favor of non-white defendants."
"Juror Guilty Votes by Defendant and Juror Ethnicity (n=319)"
"White Defendant Guilty - White Juror 39%, BME Juror 73%
BME Defendant Guilty - White Juror 32%, BME Juror 24%"
Diversity and Fairness in the Jury System: Insights and Findings

Meme - Jonatan Pallesen @jonatanpallesen: "Over 34 studies of jury behavior, 7397 participants, White jurors show essentially 0 racial bias, while Blacks have strong bias in favor of their own race."
"Mitchell, Haw, Pfeifer, and Meissner
Table 1. Moderator Analysis for Verdict Decisions"

Tuesday, January 06, 2026

Alienating people with DEI / DHS Halo Meme


#1 Torture Fan @fleshsimulator: "remember all those times I was like "hey guys slow down with the DEI stuff you're gonna alienate a lot of people if you get too obnoxious with this"

and you all went "get fucked you fascist, the future is black and gay and here to stay!"

This is what I was warning u about lol"


Logan Hall @loganclarkhall: "The Democrats tried to put some freak theater kid in charge of a thought crime censorship division at DHS and now we have our guys sharing mass deportation vaporwave Halo edits

Elections matter!"

Homeland Security @DHSgov: "Finishing this fight. *Halo meme* DESTROY THE FLOOD. JOIN.ICE.GOV"

Links - 6th January 2026 (2 - Migrants: UK - Alaa Abdel Fattah)

Egyptian dissident should be deported from UK, say Tories - "The Conservatives have called for a British-Egyptian activist to be deported and his UK citizenship to be revoked after social media messages emerged of him calling for Zionists to be killed.  Sir Keir Starmer has been criticised for saying he was "delighted" by Alaa Abdel Fattah's arrival in the UK after being freed from prison in Egypt, but it is understood he was unaware of the messages."
Time to jail Tommy Robinson and outlaw Reform to keep Jews safe

British-Egyptian dissident apologises for tweets as Tories push for UK deportation - "Mr Abd El Fattah said he took allegations of antisemitism "very seriously" while arguing some of the posts had been "completely twisted out of their meaning"... A government source said Mr Abd El Fatteh arrived in the country as a British citizen and there were no legal avenues available to block his entry, even if officials had been aware of his previous social media posts.  A 2016 Supreme Court case found that nationality law was incompatible with human rights safeguards because it discriminated against children from mixed unmarried backgrounds.  As a result, in 2019 the then-Conservative government used a 15-minute debate in Parliament to end a requirement for children of one British parent to show they were of "good character", before they could be given nationality.  That political decision, backed by the Labour opposition, paved the way for Mr Abd El Fatteh and others like him to be later registered as British because his mother had been born in London ... In one resurfaced tweet, from 2012, Abd El Fattah appears to say: "I am a racist, I don't like white people". In another, he says he considers "killing any colonialists and specially Zionists heroic, we need to kill more of them".  He is also accused of saying police do not have rights and "we should kill them all"."
Context is only a defence if you push the left wing agenda

British-Egyptian dissident, Alaa Abd El Fattah, who tweeted 'I am a racist, I don't like white people,' says he 'apologises' as Tories push for UK deportation : r/NewsWorthPayingFor - "Lucy Connolly got 31 months in prison for a tweet she had deleted. She was released in August after serving 9 months in prison. Meanwhile Starmer and a bevy of celebrities are championing this guy."
British-Egyptian dissident, Alaa Abd El Fattah, who tweeted 'I am a racist, I don't like white people,' says he 'apologises' as Tories push for UK deportation : r/NewsWorthPayingFor - "Dude is kinda pasty for a guy that doesn’t like white people."
British-Egyptian dissident, Alaa Abd El Fattah, who tweeted 'I am a racist, I don't like white people,' says he 'apologises' as Tories push for UK deportation : r/NewsWorthPayingFor - "These fucking assholes scream about Israel "killing civilians" then in the next breath they turn around and say that killing Israeli civilians is ok because they're "colonialists".  The absolute lowest of the low. The West needs to stop tolerating these people."
"West Stops Tolerating
Bro, it's a fairytale. If you label Palestinian flag - you're automatically right and can call for hate on Israel and white man hate - no one will judge you "because you supports the victims". World is so fucked up"

Meme - Michael Lucci @Michael7ucci: "Do you still have those laws to put people in jail for mean tweets?"
Alaa Abd El Fattah @alaa: "yes, I consider killing any colonialists and specially zionists heroic, we need to kill more of them"
"police are not human they don't have rights, we should just kill them all aslan"
"fuck that, sounds like u need more fear. random shooting of white males should convince them racism costs lives"
"I'll switch to something else, advocting killing police, hating white people, assassination plot against saad el din ibrahim"
"dear international phd student, by the way I'm a racist, I don't like white people so piss off"
"british fooled us and gave us bad land, we then exploited egyptian fala7in to work the land for peanuts"
"so the brilliant british dogs and monkeys really think terrorists will reveal their plans on twitter"
"u telling me british history is not pure BS? do they tell them about how they enslaved a fifth of humanity? massacred millions?"
"to play a jew u have to have a polish accent playing a north african jew just doesn't work it's too complicated for them"
"jewish colonialism of palestine is a recent thing large part of population is recent migrants it is possible to kick them all out"
"all of palestine is occupied, egyptians do not recognize the legitimacy of the state of israel within any borders"
"i must confess i want a drone of me own, promise to only use it to shoot zionist weddings"

Meme - Avi Yemini @OzareliAvi: "Why is Keir Starmer celebrating Alaa Abel El-Fattah, whose violent hatred is all over the internet? And why is the BBC whitewashing his record with a puff piece that omits every one of his extremist posts?"
Alaa Abd El Fattah: "dear zionists please don't ever talk to me, I'm a violent person who advocated the killing of all zionists including civilians, so fuck of"
Alaa Abd El Fattah: "can we get back to killing zionists please? they seem to be more violent when we stick to non violence"
Alaa Abd El Fattah: "also why from time to time I remind ppl that I rejoice when US soldiers are killed, and support killing zionists even civilians"
15 year old tweets made by the person in question are meaningless. But unsubstantiated 33-50 year old school anecdotes about Nigel Farage reveal who he really is

Starmer condemns ‘abhorrent’ posts by ‘extremist’ Egyptian activist he welcomed to UK - "Abd El-Fatteh appeared to call British people “dogs and monkeys”, said killing “Zionists” was “heroic”, denied the Holocaust, praised Osama Bin Laden, declared that “police are not human” and should be killed, and that he “hates” white people."

Robby Starbuck on X - "So releasing a guy who hates White people, who wanted White men shot, who advocated rape for Western women and who hates Jews was one of your top priorities? These are from his X posts. You wanted him back from Egypt that bad? Explain why Keir. Is he your pet or something?"

Sohrab Ahmari on X - "The reason you see me tweeting a lot about this case is that I know a lot about El-Fattah and his family.  My first book was a hopeful boosterish anthology on the Arab Spring (which I now cringe at; in my defense, I was 24).  The research process had me delving deep into the Arab “secular” dissident scene. Especially Egypt’s. I soon saw that El-Fattah and his sisters are extremely violent in their mentality.   It’s not one or two tweets. He tweeted almost nothing except calls to torture, murder, etc. — Jews, Americans, journalists (both local and international), Egyptian police officers, and even their kids and mothers. The sister Mona, as you can see from her orgasmic response to Oct. 7, is cut from the same cloth.  These are dangerous people. I hope there’s some way to at least transition Alaa out of Britain."
JamesHeartfield on X - "Arab Spring was in principle a good thing, but sadly it showed us that there are still, broadly, two alternatives in the Arab world, Muslim Brotherhood and fossilised National liberation movements , neither of them all that good."
Unquiet Possum on X - "In practice nearly all popular revolutions end in disaster. Early in the 1970's I was an idealistic Jeffersonian teenager reading three newspapers a day beside Marx and Mao. By 1981 or so the news had made me a reactionary. Tens of millions killed and no one freer."
Melissa Chen on X - "I fell for the Arab Spring being a freedom movement narrative and once I had to contend with the truth, the last shred of my unreconstituted liberalism evaporated"

Melissa Chen on X - "Sorry but an apology is not going to cut it.   Alaa El-Fattah's words are not merely "hurtful." They are outright MURDEROUS. The number of times he has said that he wanted to kill someone or a group - white people, Jews, gays, etc. - is on record, and it comports with his long history of openly supporting political violence since the Arab Spring in Egypt.   These are not youthful mistakes or "things taken out of context" as he claims. For years, his whole public persona was wrapped up in justifying and promoting violent political action. That's literally WHY he was in jail in Egypt.   He doesn't have the impulse control to hide what he thinks about certain races (he particularly hates whites of English, Dutch and German descent and Zionists), and he's consistently made deep commitments to violent revolution.   This is the person successive British governments campaigned for, granted citizenship to, and treated as a "TOP PRIORITY."   This is why deportation should still be on the table. If someone's track record shows consistent endorsement of violence, especially in a way that could threaten public safety or national security, a half-hearted "sorry" doesn't erase the risk or the damage.   Britain has every right to protect its citizens by revoking his status and sending him back, no matter how much he tries to rewrite his past. Next, the nation must correct the rules that allowed this to happen. Alaa is not British and never deserved citizenship."

Ashley Rindsberg on X - "Compare these two @Wikipedia  entries—"Tommy Robinson" and "Alaa Abd El-Fattah." It's a masterclass in information manipulation.  Two entries. Two British men (in El-Fattah's case, at least nominally). Both subject of UK government action. Yet the entries could not be more different.   The first sentence of the Wikipedia article on Alaa Abd El-Fattah describes him as "an Egyptian-British software developer, blogger, political activist and former political prisoner."   Sounds lovely!  The lead goes on to tell a heart-rending story about the persecution of a valiant freedom fighter. According to Wikipedia, El-Fattah was imprisoned for staging political protests. He protected women at a rally from police violence. He's a blogger, a software developer, an inspired political polemicist. A wonderful son. A father who missed his child. He even won prestigious awards!  The lead makes no mention of the fact that El-Fattah, has incited the murder of Jews, whites, British police officers, and children—including the torture of their mothers. It doesn't mention his Holocaust denial or his homophobia.  Here's just a sample of what El-Fattah has written over the years:
+ “If we can’t kill the police officers, let us find a terrorist cell to kill their children and torture their mothers”
+ "The Islamic Group was right. We must kill all police."
+ "No medicine can reverse God's will. He should subject his anger at [God] for creating those dirty homosexual[s']."
Despite this, the Wikipedia article's all-important lead section makes no mention of El-Fattah's vile hatred of gays or his open support for ISIS. Instead, you get a tiny little sentence at the very bottom of the lead about "controversial" social media posts.   This is what AIs train on and what @Google  feeds to the public.   Indeed, Google actually quotes the first sentence of the Wikipedia article directly in its "Knowledge Panel" about El-Fattah. Ask Google "Who is Alaa Abd El-Fattah?" and the response is word-for-word pulled from Wikipedia: "Egyptian-British software developer, blogger, political activist and former political prisoner."
Now look at the entry on Tommy Robinson. The  very first, defining sentence calls Robinson "a British far-right activist and one of the UK's most prominent anti-Islam campaigners. Robinson has a history of criminal convictions."  Wow—what a difference a political (or religious?) affiliation makes! But don't stop there.   The next paragraph calls Robinson a "fascist," using Wikivoice to assert this as fact, not perspective or opinion.   The rest of the lead is basically a rap sheet beaten into encyclopedia form. It includes not just a litany of convictions but also cites open, ongoing investigations. (So much for Wikipedia's beloved presumption of innocence.)  Robinson's entry has unsubstantiated allegations that he is a Kremlin agent, that he spread Russian disinformation, and that he promulgates COVID conspiracy theories.
The Wikipedia entry is a dossier and hit piece all wrapped up into one neat little informational package. The framing is alarming, the sentiment is overwhelmingly negative.   But for the jihadist who wants people like me (and, probably, you) murdered? It's a lovefest.   This isn't just about Wikipedia. It's how the information ecosystem works—how a politically motivated view of "truth" gets concretized into plain "fact." This is just one example, but there are thousands more like it.  For more Wikipedia investigation, follow @npovmedia ."
Only far right extremists think Wikipedia is biased

Strip ‘extremist’ of citizenship before Egyptians do, Starmer urged - "Britain must strip Alaa Abd el-Fattah of his British citizenship before Cairo removes his Egyptian one, Sir Keir Starmer has been told...  Mr Fattah’s sister had praised the “imagination” of the October 7 attackers and once suggested that acts of violence by Hamas could be justified...   Mohammed Maree, of the Egyptian Centre for Thought and Strategic Studies, said he believed the Egyptian authorities were considering revoking Mr Fattah’s citizenship.  Mr Maree cited growing public anger in the country, which had only intensified since he apologised for his comments in Britain, despite having refused to do so in Egypt.  He said: “I believe that demands to revoke Egyptian citizenship from Alaa Abd el-Fattah are likely to escalate in the coming period, in light of the growing state of anger in Egyptian public opinion.  “Alaa Abdel el-Fattah’s apology, which he was forced into, was motivated by preserving his British citizenship and attempting to weather this wave of pressures demanding the revocation of his British citizenship and his deportation.  “It is an apology he did not dare to offer to Egypt, nor to the army and police officers whom he previously incited to kill, and which is indeed documented.”... Mona Seif, Mr Fattah’s sister, claimed that armed resistance in “occupied” land was “understandable” on the day after Hamas terrorists had killed more than 1,200 Israelis.  Ms Seif, who lives in London, according to her social media profile, also called the October 7 attacks an example of “Palestinian resistance” and suggested that they should not be seen differently from Ukrainian resistance against Russia. On the morning of the attacks, in 2023, Ms Seif shared photographs of Hamas militants flying into Israel by paraglider to her X account, saying they showed a “special kind of imagination”. A day later, she said: “My personal belief – within the occupied, besieged and bombarded by land, armed resistance is understandably one of the main forms of resistance. Beyond the boundaries, only non-violent methods should be endorsed in solidarity.”   On the same day, Ms Seif claimed it was “hypocrisy” to condemn the October 7 attacks while supporting Ukraine’s right to defend itself against the Russian invasion.  In 2011 and 2012, Ms Seif posted the phrase “f--- Israel” in two separate posts attacking the country. On Tuesday, she strongly criticised social media users who had highlighted some of her other historical tweets as well as her brother’s remarks. She wrote: “So now silly bantering between me and friends saying ‘I will kill you’ over silly joking tweets are now circulating to claim I am a violent person! Are you out of your minds?”  Ms Seif, whose public online profiles state that she works as a cancer scientist, said criticism of her brother’s past comments amounted to “rotten political battles”, adding that she wanted the family to “recover in a safe space with our children”... Alex Hearn, the co-director of Labour Against Anti-Semitism, said: “Mona’s apparent celebration of Hamas’s massacre of innocent civilians while it was happening is disgusting. It exposes yet another layer of failings by the British system.  “As a result, an extremist with terrorist supporting family members was embraced by politicians and celebrities alike.”"

Patrick Christys: 'We shouldn't just deport Alaa Abd El-Fattah, we should deport his sister as well' - "she even condemned Amnesty International yes, Amnesty International, for calling on Hamas terrorists to stop their violence... There are also what appear to be quite a lot of threats to kill on her social media. Now she says that it was silly bantering with friends. Do you tweet stuff like that? I'm not sure you do. But just when you thought David Lammy couldn't look any more foolish, whilst he was in opposition, she was holding a sign actually next to him, urging then Foreign Secretary James Cleverly to bring her brother home. Well, he was home, wasn't he, because he was in Egypt. And there's no evidence that he's ever been to Britain before he landed here this year. But this is the thing I find most hilarious. The El-Fattah family have got everything they want and more from the British state. Successive governments have bent over backwards for no apparent reason to give her brother and his sisters British passports, to release him from an Egyptian prison and to promote the family, to help them.  Her brother arrives in Britain. What does his sister Mona do? Well, she appears to call for the release of the Palestine Action hunger strikers immediately.  It's a classic, isn't it? You give these people everything and then they want even more... we need to prepare ourselves for the possibility that some people did actually know how extreme they are, but they ignored it because it didn't suit their narrative."

Labour ministers spark outrage after posing for photos with 'extremist's sister' who denounced calls for Hamas to end violence - "Labour has been met with outrage after images emerged of senior party figures posing with an 'extremist' British-Egyptian's sister who denounced calls for Hamas to end violence against civilians... past tweets have emerged of Ms Seif attacking Amnesty International after they urged both the Israeli Government and Hamas to stop attacks against civilians in the Middle East.  In a post dating back to 2012, she said: "You don't ask an occupied nation to stop their "Resistance" to end violence. SHAME ON YOU!!!" Other posts from 2011 emerged where she threatened to "kill" several people in social media posts. "

The Left-wing Luvvies who lined up to support an Egyptian ‘extremist’ - "Fattah referred to “British dogs and monkeys” and said, among other things, “I f---ing hate white people”, “I am a racist, I don’t like white people” and “I consider killing any colonialists and specially Zionists heroic, we need to kill more of them”"

As an Egyptian, I know this truth: deranged anti-Semitism is normal in the Arab world - "For the past 14 years, my professional life has been dedicated to a single discipline: mitigating risk. In this field, one anticipates the usual obstacles – a scarcity of resources, a failure to grasp the scale of a threat, or a simple deficit in technical know-how. These are the standard hurdles of the trade.  Since relocating to Britain in 2016, however, I have been confronted by a challenge of an entirely different order. It is a cognitive and moral blind spot so profound it has redefined my understanding of risk itself.  In this country, we excel at recognising the peril of anti-Semitism. We meticulously document the alarming rise of the world’s oldest hatred. We convene conferences, host government briefings, and launch parliamentary inquiries to dissect and decry it.  We do everything, in fact, except the one thing that truly matters: applying our vigilance where the threat is most acute and culturally entrenched.  You see, I was born and raised in Egypt. My formative experience with anti-Semitism taught me a harsh lesson that many in today’s West struggle to comprehend: it can be the norm.  It can be not merely the province of a fringe, but the lingua franca of a nation, the subtext of its media, the unspoken foundation of its foreign policy, and a thread woven deep into the fabric of its collective national identity. It can be ambient, pervasive, and normalised to the point of invisibility for those within it. It was true in Europe once, but remains the case in much of the Arab world.  Consequently, since arriving in Britain, my advocacy has been consistent and, I believed, self-evidently sensible: we must direct enhanced resources and tailored strategies to combat anti-Semitism within communities where it is not an aberration but the default setting.  If epidemiologists identify a neighbourhood with a rampant infection, they do not distribute resources evenly across the entire city; they target the outbreak at its source.  Yet, proposing this focused, risk-based approach is penalised in Britain. I have been hounded, attacked, and slandered by an increasingly influential cadre of commentators and activists.  Their core argument, delivered with a patronising smile, is a doctrine of false equivalence: “Every society has its extremists”, they insist. “They do not represent the whole. Egypt, Britain, we’re all the same beneath the skin”.  This is a comforting fiction, and a dangerously naïve one. It dismisses not only my lived experience but a mountain of empirical, indisputable evidence, from state-sponsored media output to educational curricula and the rhetoric of mainstream religious institutions across the Arab world.  It confuses the existence of prejudice in Britain, where it is rightly treated as a social disease to be eradicated, with another country where it is not even recognised as a sin.  This refusal to acknowledge a qualitative difference is not liberalism; it is a form of civilisational suicide. It is the reason, that instead of applying increased scrutiny to cases like that of the Egyptian activist Alaa Abd El-Fattah, he was able to naturalise and become a British citizen.  It explains why, at a time when the BBC diligently investigated historical allegations against Nigel Farage, it platformed Alaa’s sister, Mona Seif, without the most basic due diligence into her social media, which appeared to glorify Hamas’s October 7 atrocities.  This same naivety is why Britain’s political leadership, including the Prime Minister and Foreign Secretary, could repeatedly engage with Alaa’s family and with Alaa himself during his imprisonment in Egypt, yet seemingly fail to detect their documented history of extremist and anti-Semitic sentiments. It is why Britain looks the other way when individuals with such profiles incite virulent hatred.  This approach privileges a feel-good narrative of universal sameness over the uncomfortable truth. It leaves the most toxic strains of hatred to fester unchallenged, while we pat ourselves on the back for condemning their milder cousins in our own backyard."

The more celebrity supporters a cause attracts, the more likely it is to be terrible - "Just as no one shouts “Is there a doctor of humanities on the plane?” when a passenger takes ill, no one trying to achieve peace in the Middle East or bring democracy to Burma or end drought in the Zambezi basin has ever banged a table and yelled: “Dammit, we need a Bafta winner and we need one now.”  It’s not just that actors and musicians believe themselves well-placed to opine on global affairs, it’s the deference shown to their semi-researched and vibes-based perspectives by lawmakers and the news media. Parliament is on the brink of nodding through assisted suicide – and a recklessly ill-designed version at that – partly because the Prime Minister promised former television presenter Dame Esther Rantzen he would make time for MPs to consider it.  Far from keeping it under wraps that British doctors could soon be doling out killer drugs to vulnerable patients as a favour to the PM’s celebrity pal, Keir Starmer has boasted about keeping his word to the That’s Life! presenter, who is suffering from terminal lung cancer. .  Dame Esther deserves our sympathy but she should not be able to hijack the legislative process simply because she once had a hit television series. That she enjoys such influence is not the result of a surfeit of empathy among decision-makers and opinion-formers. It is because she is echoing the priorities and preferences of the progressive establishment that her outsized involvement in the legislative process is framed in sympathetic terms.   Celebrity interventions are deemed legitimate only if they are considered progressive by the political and media class. This is why any public figure who emotes inarticulately about transwomen being women, typically accompanied by an expletive or two by way of reasoned argument, can expect to be written up as “brave” and “compassionate” – while an essay from JK Rowling dispassionately explaining why women’s sex-based rights must be upheld will invariably be reported as “divisive” or “insensitive”.  In fact, to demonstrate the absurdity of allowing celebrity political witterings to influence public policy, you need only flip the ideological tables. It’s probably safe to assume Starmer will not be promising Christopher Biggins Parliamentary time to debate his recent call to restore the death penalty. Nor should he... In the 2004 satirical movie Team America: World Police, the Janeane Garofolo puppet explains: “As actors, it is our responsibility to read the newspapers and then say what we read on television like it’s our own opinion.” This is about right.   Most actors, even very good ones, aren’t about to be confused for Bertrand Russell, and their political analysis is typically midwit The Rest is Politics slop. There could almost be a rule in this: the more celebrity supporters a cause attracts the likelier it is to be a terrible idea"

Former No 10 aide says case of Egyptian activist welcomed to UK became a 'running joke' in Whitehall - "The case of an alleged Egyptian extremist who was welcomed to Britain by Sir Keir Starmer became a “running joke” among Downing Street advisers, a former No 10 aide has revealed.  Paul Ovenden said the case of Alaa Abd el-Fattah was “a totem of the ceaseless sapping of time and energy by people obsessed with fringe issues” and demonstrated “the sheer weirdness of how Whitehall spends its time”... Mr Ovenden said the case demonstrated how Britain had become beholden to what he called the “Stakeholder State”, which he appeared to blame for Labour’s missteps in government.  The former adviser, who was a close ally of Morgan McSweeney, Sir Keir’s chief of staff, said it amounted to a “complex coalition of campaign groups, regulators, litigators, trade bodies and well-networked organisations”.  “The Stakeholder State ferments between the NGO [non-governmental organisation] and the campaign group, the celebrity letter-writing campaign and the activist lawyers,” he said.  “It is given voice by political podcasts where everyone violently agrees. It is canonised through a corrupted honours system.” His intervention comes after Sir Keir used his New Year’s message to say he shared voters’ “frustration about the pace of change” since Labour was elected.  Soon after entering No 10, the Prime Minister said “too many people in Whitehall are comfortable in the tepid bath of managed decline”. Mr Ovenden’s criticisms of Whitehall echo those made by Dominic Cummings when he was chief of staff to Boris Johnson.  The former adviser accused Whitehall of blocking attempts by ministers to build new homes and infrastructure, and said Sir Keir has to take it on if he is to have any hope of reviving the Government’s fortunes.  “If you want to imagine a typical scene in the Stakeholder State, it is a government elected on a promise to build an entire generation of housing and infrastructure in just five years spending time and money lobbying itself to water down those commitments through its own quangos,” he wrote. Mr Ovenden, who resigned last year after messages from 2017 emerged in which he repeated sexualised jokes about Diane Abbott, also appeared to criticise government policy on welfare, the economy and net zero.  “We don’t have to keep picking the pockets of the productive parts of our economy in order to fund inflation-busting pension increases for millionaires or an unsustainable welfare system,” he wrote.  “We don’t have to strangle small businesses at birth with regulatory burdens.  “We don’t have to fatten the pockets of wind-turbine operators by paying them not to produce energy. We don’t have to import anti-Semitic Islamists who wish us harm.  “And we certainly don’t have to treat British citizenship as a scrap of paper. On all this and more, we can simply choose not to.”"

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...

Latest posts (which you might not see on this page)

powered by Blogger | WordPress by Newwpthemes