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Thursday, May 28, 2026

Links - 28th May 2026 (3 - Cancel Culture)

Mark Johnson: TDSB goes out of its way to cancel Canadian history - "In its childish effort to delete historical names from its schools, the Toronto District School Board (TDSB) appears to have violated its own bylaws. In February, TDSB trustees voted to rename three schools named after Sir John A. Macdonald, Henry Dundas and Egerton Ryerson. Their decision was outrageous on many grounds, one of which is that it may be in violation of the bylaw requirement that financial and budgeting information be publicly presented. Equally bad, after I reached out to TDSB trustees asking for them to comment on this apparent violation, they clammed up and have stayed silent for over a month... In addition to the bylaw breaches, the school board admitted that it did not consult a single historian as part of its renaming review. Otherwise, it would have had more accurate portraits of these men than the marred ones recently painted by ideologues. How can the TDSB determine and judge 19th-century events without the benefit of historical research? Simple: it was a sham all along, nothing more than the righteous application of a 21st-century woke purity test. It’s time to speak out. Save Our History has been formed to do just that. We’re a newly created, non-partisan, grassroots movement dedicated to preserving and celebrating our rich Canadian history by protecting the historical names of our schools. And there is much to celebrate. Save Our History works in concert with other groups such as the Canadian Institute for Historical Education , a group of notable historians who are setting the record straight and countering the false narratives that took root several years ago... All three men were ahead of their times. Were they perfect men? No. Were they great men? Yes. Should they be honoured? Yes. Sadly, the TDSB doesn’t plan to stop at these three schools. It made known its intention to rename other schools, as well. Nor is this only a Toronto issue. At least 10 other Ontario schools are named after Macdonald in various cities. Will their school boards also be divisively deleting his name from their schools? Our schools are falling apart. Precious money is needed to carry out urgent repairs, which is surely a more pressing need and appropriate use of scarce resources than name changes. Our kids deserve better schools and, equally importantly, to be proud of Canada... At a time when our country’s very existence is threatened by U.S. President Donald Trump, this is the worst possible time to give him added ammunition to question the validity of our country. If the Toronto school board were truly interested in correcting the mistakes of the past, it would start with its own. But it is likely too far gone and too far captured by revisionists to admit that renaming schools was a mistake."

Chanel Pfahl 🇨🇦 on X - "Well, I imagine someone at my new job must have found me on X/Facebook. Everything was going fine until I was abruptly fired today because "I’m not the right fit." That’s what I get for advocating for schools that are free of indoctrination, equality, free speech, etc: the inability to support myself with even a basic minimum wage job. How wonderful.
To be clear, I never once brought up my political views at work. I was competent and professional. Never given a warning about anything."

wanye on X - "For me what set the Damore case apart isn’t that he was the victim of an online mob — that was pretty routine by that point — but the way so many people, including executives at Google and many in the media, went out of their way to insist that what he had said was beyond the pale. That was era in which I had come to expect silence on these issues from people I knew to be otherwise reasonable, but the over-the-top condemnations from people who absolutely knew better were just too much to stomach."
Conor Friedersdorf on X - "What set the Damore case apart for me was that Google asked its employees to think about a matter of concern, as if they valued their input, then punished one employee for responding bc he was supposed to understand, as most did, that they did not in fact want earnest input
You can love or hate or be neutral on the substance of what Damore said and think, regardless, that employers shouldn't fire people for expressing their earnest views on matters that the employer *urged employees to grapple with*"
Lawyer Dog on X - ""When we said 'grapple' we obviously meant 'reach our predetermined conclusions' ... and the fact that you are psychologically different enough from us to not intuit this is reason enough to fire you.""

Harj Taggar on X - "Had a lot of fun going on the Social Radars! It's my first time talking publicly about customers threatening to boycott and employees threatening to quit because I didn't ban James Damore from using Triplebyte to find a new job after being fired by Google in 2017. Feels like a fever dream now."
Kelsey Piper on X - "Yeah, all right, let's talk about James Damore. It's been eight years, and I really doubt Harj (who was my boss at the time) is the only person for whom it was a formative experience.  For those of you who have no recollection of any of this, either because you are wisely an offline person or because you got outraged for five minutes and then forgot all about it, James Damore was a Google software engineer who wrote a memo arguing that, while diversity and inclusion were good goals, bias was not the main reason there weren't more women in tech, and differences in personality between men and women probably explained a lot of it.   There was a lot in the memo that felt like a distraction to me, or where I had a nitpick, but fundamentally it was not only basically correct (women are less likely than men to become software engineers, and this is not only because of bias), but also Damore was saying this for the sake of having a more productive conversation about how to get more women into tech, a goal that everyone around him was fervently espousing. The memo has a painful-in-hindsight quality of earnestness: "you want more women in tech, and I think you're mistaken about how to get there! if I show you some published psychology research we can actually design better means to your goal!".  Anyway. The internet was outraged. He got fired from Google. And he applied to the tech hiring startup I worked at, Triplebyte, which offered background-blind screening to anyone who wanted to be a software engineer. We really believed in the mission, at Triplebyte. I think I ended up kind of badly calibrated about how earnest to expect people to be everywhere else. We found people working as janitors and line cooks and homemakers who could code, and we got them 6 figure jobs, and we were proud of it. James Damore did very well on our tests. I got assigned to write him a profile for our companies.   And then people freaked out. A lot of them had the impression that he would create a hostile environment for any woman he worked with, and thought that trying to help him get a new job was tantamount to endorsing everything in his wildly controversial memo. I didn't even like the memo that much, but I was kind of horrified, because - it's one thing to get fired for talking about politics at work in a way that causes a massive national firestorm. I kind of expect that we would all get fired for that. But it is another thing entirely to get effectively blacklisted from your industry, to have people decide on the basis of your political opinions that we shouldn't even put you up on the platform and let companies decide individually whether to schedule interviews. Tech jobs were not that hard to come by in 2017 if you were really good at your job, and Damore was. Firing isn't that threatening to software engineers. Blacklisting is terrifying.  I'd been at Triplebyte for like six months at this point, it was my first job after graduation, and I was honestly way out of my lane, but I made a pretty big fuss internally. (It helped that I suspected a lot of people agreed with me but I was a woman and it was safer for me to say it.) I said that we were not in the business of deciding who had good politics, that we shared this country with many people who profoundly disagreed with each other, that companies could assess for themselves if he worked respectfully with female engineers, and that we should put him on the site and let them decide. We did. And then Harj was immediately contacted by recruiters from companies we worked with that were horrified that we had. They felt that by not banning him from our platform we were endorsing his memo, that we were showing values not in line with their priorities. Harj talks about this more in the linked podcast.  James Damore was egregiously wronged. To my knowledge he's a good software engineer with extremely reasonable, approximately accurate opinions about the reasons there were fewer women in software engineering, which he shared in good faith, and a lot of people who should've known better really did try to drive him out of the industry for it. It was wrong. If it is done to people on the basis of any other political opinion it is also wrong then. We need, as a society, the ability to live with disagreement, to dislike each other without trying to destroy each other, to find common ground instead of finding heretics; I believed that at Peak Woke and I believe it now."

Ro Khanna on X - "Are you going to tell him to apologize for saying "Normalize Indian hate" before this rehire? Just asking for the sake of both of our kids."
Thread by @JDVance on Thread Reader App – Thread Reader App - "For the sake of both of our kids? Grow up.  Racist trolls on the internet, while offensive, don't threaten my kids. You know what does? A culture that denies grace to people who make mistakes. A culture that encourages congressmen to act like whiny children.
I cannot overstate how much I loathe this emotional blackmail pretending to be concern.  My kids, god willing, will be risk takers. They won't think constantly about whether a flippant comment or a wrong viewpoint will follow them around for the rest of their lives.  They will tell stupid jokes. They will develop views that they later think are wrong or even gross. I made mistakes as a kid, and thank God I grew up in a culture that encouraged me to grow and learn and feel remorse when I screwed up and offer grace when others did. I don't worry about my kids making mistakes, or developing views they later regret. I don't even worry that much about trolls on the internet. You know what I do worry about, Ro?  That they'll grow up to be a US Congressmen who engages in emotional blackmail over a kid's social media posts.  You disgust me."

Philip Roth is not for cancelling - "‘That is no country for old men’, wrote WB Yeats. Were he still alive, the novelist Philip Roth might have said the same thing of today’s land of the woke.  Roth died in 2018. But his reputation has come under increasing assault ever since by those seeking his posthumous cancellation. His identitarian critics have been attacking him for his personal life in general, and his supposed misogyny in particular.   The latest occasion for attacking Roth arrived in the shape of Blake Bailey’s new book, Philip Roth: The Biography. It contains details of Roth’s affairs, his use of prostitutes and what many are interpreting as his poor treatment of women. It seems that the quality of Roth’s writing is less important to those now trying to trash his reputation than the extent to which his personal life may have violated #MeToo sensibilities...   For Elison, writers are to be judged for their politics and personal life, not the quality of their work. When she writes she is sorry she ever read his books, she is effectively saying that reading Roth is wrong. And that his work should be cancelled. ‘We’re living in an age when we are tearing down statues’, she continues, and Roth’s must fall...   Admittedly, amid so much puritanism today, Roth’s work certainly looks out of place. Take his masterpiece, Sabbath’s Theater. It tells the story of a depraved and outrageous anti-hero called Mickey Sabbath, who refuses to play the role assigned to him of an old man facing his sexual demise. It should be a grotesque caricature of a dirty old man. But such is the intensity of Roth’s narrative art that Sabbath’s story is turned into something deeply human and moving... I don’t think Roth will be lost. Long after #MeToo has become a footnote in the history of Western narcissism, people will still be experiencing that unique buzz that comes from reading this most vital of novelists."

Philosophy vs the culture wars - "all sides in the culture war seem to miss Mill’s central insight: that freedom – of speech, of action, of ways of living – is as much a question of atmosphere as it is of legality.   Benn’s grasp of this fundamental insight allows him to identify correctly the problem of conformity: that it stunts individuals and societies and leads to a pervasive, crippling sense that one is always walking on eggshells. It is also precisely what is wrong with Twitter’s ban of Donald Trump or the shutdown of Parler. Such acts are within the letter of the legal definition of ‘free-speech rights’, but are wholly at odds with the atmosphere of free discussion. In short, Benn understands that it is the atmosphere of the culture wars that is inhibiting and restricting people."

In the midst of ‘cancel culture,’ universities create ways to encourage uncomfortable debate - The Globe and Mail - "Rhonda McEwen, president of Victoria University in the University of Toronto, said she started to notice a change in students a few years ago. She recalled a moment when students were calling for a classmate to be “cancelled” or in some way sanctioned for his views. They told her his opinions were hurtful and made them feel unsafe.  “I told the students ‘I’m not cancelling anybody. He’s a student here like you are. You don’t have to agree with him, and I don’t have to agree with him, but that doesn’t mean you can’t find a way to talk to each other,’ ” Dr. McEwan said.  “The goal of university is to push your thinking to places it hasn’t been before.” In Dr. McEwen’s view, debate and disagreement should be central to the student’s experience of higher education. But recent undergraduate cohorts haven’t seemed as comfortable with that notion and struggle to mount a public counterargument when they encounter views they dislike, she said.  “They don’t know how. They have no tools or skills or experience,” Dr. McEwen said. At Victoria University, administrators established a workshop on difficult conversations, where students are invited to a weekly lunch seminar to tackle controversial topics such as religion, gender identity or the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.  Madelyn Bardell, a third-year student in ethics, society and law, said she was drawn to the seminars out of a desire to wrestle with big, difficult topics.  “A lot of times we’re talking about something I don’t have a strong position on or I’m not sure about,” she said. “It’s a chance for me to work through my own thoughts.” Normally an expert introduces the topic and then facilitates a discussion. Lunch is served, which helps build a sense of connection between the students, even when they disagree, said Kelley Castle, the dean of students at Victoria University.  The rules are slightly different than in a classroom setting, where implicit good behaviour or notions of civility can keep people from talking frankly, the dean said.  “The only rule is that we have to be respectful of one another, so there are no ad hominem attacks, and there can be no ‘you’re stupids.’ It has to be genuinely trying to hear the best argument of your opposition,” she said. “It’s really an exercise in deep listening.”... A study published in the Canadian Journal of Educational and Social Studies this year found roughly half of student respondents at schools across Canada reported self-censoring their views in discussions with professors or classmates.  Between 39 and 46 per cent of respondents said they were somewhat or very reluctant to express their views on topics such as politics, religion and sexual identity. And roughly a third of students said they were somewhat or extremely concerned about the repercussions for expressing themselves (the sample wasn’t representative, however, as it skewed more heavily female and to students in the humanities and social sciences).  The responses indicate “a concerning lack of comfort of viewpoint expression on sensitive topics within Canadian university classrooms,” the authors of the paper concluded. Surveys in the U.S. have found similar results, including one at Harvard, which found only a third of the graduating class in 2024 felt comfortable expressing their views on controversial topics, The Harvard Crimson reported. At the University of British Columbia’s Okanagan campus, philosophy professor Renaud-Philippe Garner and political scientist Brad Epperly had a sense that students didn’t seem as willing to talk openly as they once did. In response they developed a new course they called “Dangerous Ideas.”  Prof. Garner said there are several potential explanations for the shift, such as the impact of smartphones or the pandemic on student development. There could also be a sense that there are “right” or “wrong” positions on certain topics and a fear that misaligning could result in social sanction. Whatever it is, he believes it’s different than it was when he was a student.  “This is precisely the time in their lives where they should be allowed to toy with ideas, to ask hard questions and this shouldn’t result in ostracism or punishment,” Prof. Garner said."

Self-censorship has become the safest form of expression - The Globe and Mail - "she found a pair of sandals made of embroidered Chinese fabric and fell in love with them.  But that summer, I noticed she never wore them. When I asked why, she said: “I just feel like there’s a chance I’ll offend someone.”  And in that moment, I understood that my daughter was coming of age in a world radically different from the one I grew up in. A world where even a pair of shoes could feel politically charged. Where self-censorship has become the safest form of self-expression... I’ve spent my career making films about difficult subjects: Ebola outbreaks, human trafficking, the black market in human organs. None of it prepared me for a university campus.  Within a day of arriving at Evergreen, a student informed me – not in anger, almost as a friendly heads-up – that I was a white supremacist. I am a Jewish woman whose mother survived Auschwitz, so “white supremacist” is not generally how I think about myself. They explained, patiently, that it wasn’t about intent. It was about the system I benefited from by virtue of being white. My intentions were irrelevant. My identity was everything. That was the start of a nearly 10-year journey. What I witnessed, on campuses across North America and Britain, was a gradual shift. The pursuit of social justice hadn’t replaced the pursuit of truth exactly. But it had taken the front seat and, in some cases, hardened into ideology. And a generation was being taught, in ways large and small, that disagreement is harm.  Universities were once defined by their commitment to exactly the opposite principle... At the University of Ottawa, a yoga class was cancelled because the instructor was white and that was seen as cultural appropriation. At the University of Guelph, a student union apologized for including Lou Reed’s Walk on the Wild Side on a playlist because it was deemed transphobic. More quietly, students and professors told me they had abandoned certain lines of inquiry altogether, fearing professional or social consequences.  Words I thought I understood had been quietly redefined. White supremacy no longer referred to neo-Nazis. It referred to things like being on time, setting agendas, and believing in objectivity. Safe space no longer meant protection from physical harm. It meant protection from ideas that challenged your world view. A documentary organization I was involved with arranged an anti-oppression training session. We were shown a pyramid that started with non-inclusive language and microaggressions (eg., asking someone “Where are you from?”) at the base and ended with genocide at the top. The language of campus identity politics had also found its way into Canadian film funding applications. One asked whether I was pansexual, asexual or questioning. No box to check for “married for 30 years so it’s not quite what it used to be!”  I know that identity matters, but I don’t need anyone to “do the work” to understand me – a term I heard constantly as I navigated through the world of academia. I don’t want to inhibit anyone from saying what they believe, from making a clumsy joke, from asking me questions even if they’re a little awkward. Because if every conversation is a minefield, and the slightest misstep results in banishment, it isn’t a conversation. And when honest questions get reframed as instruments of oppression, something essential is lost: the ability to disagree.  The people who pay the real price are educators and the students who deserve better. Carole Hooven, a Harvard evolutionary biologist, stated on television that biological sex is binary – a position within her scientific expertise. She also made clear that gender is on a spectrum and that she was talking about biology, not identity. Within hours, her department’s diversity committee accused her of transphobia. Graduate students refused to work with her so she couldn’t teach her course. She eventually negotiated a retirement and later told me she thought about suicide.  Erec Smith is a Black professor of rhetoric who disagreed, in writing, with a colleague’s argument that teaching standard English to students of colour was an act of white supremacy. He was called a white supremacist by white colleagues. He described what followed as a degradation ceremony, public humiliation designed to silence him and warn others. These are not right-wing provocateurs. They are educators who asked questions outside an increasingly narrow consensus and paid for it with their careers, their reputations and – in some cases – their mental health. Diversity, Equity and Inclusion initiatives were founded with genuinely good intentions: to open doors that had long been closed to women, people of colour, and other marginalized groups. That work mattered and still does. But in some institutions, DEI evolved from a support structure into an enforcement mechanism, less concerned with expanding opportunity than with policing thought. When the goal shifts from inclusion to ideological conformity, the institution loses something essential, including the ability to serve the very people it claims to protect.  What’s alarming is not that some students shouted down speakers. Students have always been passionate. What is alarming is what the institutions did next: capitulating, apologizing and sometimes building bureaucracies that enforced one set of beliefs as the precondition for employment. The professors who stay silent don’t make the news. They just quietly change what they teach, what they research, what they say in meetings... The tools of suppression do not stay in the hands of the people who build them. That is the lesson campuses failed to learn.  Universities exist to teach people how to think, not what to think. When we tell a generation that disagreement is violence, that discomfort is harm, that the correct response to an idea you find threatening is to make sure nobody else hears it, we don’t protect them. We weaken them... fear is no foundation for a democracy.  Because once we decide that some ideas are too dangerous to hear, we have already conceded the argument to the people who would silence us."

John Boyne: Here’s what happened when they tried to cancel me - "Literary scandals are a little like orgies: great fun for everyone involved but rather distasteful to anyone watching from the outside. I found myself at the centre of one such bacchanal over the last week when the Polari Prize, a set of awards given to LGBT authors, published their longlist and Earth, the second of my Elements quartet, was nominated.  Strangely enough, I didn’t even know until three days later when I received a phone call informing me that a transwoman judge for the First Novel Prize had stepped down in protest at my inclusion. Shortly afterwards, most of the 12 writers longlisted for that award issued statements following the jurist out the door. Social media, always a bastion of common sense and reasoned debate, erupted in outrage that I was being considered for the prize at all. I wasn’t, of course, my book was, but such a distinction is generally lost on the Twitterati. Throughout it all, I remained silent, issuing only a single statement in which, hoping to appease my critics, I invited the judges to release Earth from any further consideration should those who left, return. I did this because I know I would have loved to have been on such a list when my first book was published a quarter century ago and didn’t want them to be deprived of the excitement of their moment or sacrifice the positive effects it could have on their careers.  Within the publishing industry, I think it would be fair to say that I’m known for my unswerving support of new novelists, which is why my post box is filled every week with book proofs of debuts... My olive branch was rejected, however, and a petition begun to have me exiled to Elba, which supposedly garnered 821 signatures. For a time, I called it the Loch Ness Monster of petitions – everyone had heard of it, but no one had actually seen it – but then, at last, I managed to procure a copy and realised why it had never, in fact, seen the light of day. To be polite, it lacked a certain name recognition factor.  At that point, I rather lost interest in the entire business. My statement where I referred to feeling that I “didn’t want to go on” was widely misinterpreted. It did not mean that I was suicidal – for heaven’s sake, it’s not that important – it merely meant that I considered putting my pen down and doing something else with my life. With a backlist of 24 books published in 60 languages, happily I’m not exactly on the breadline, so lying on Bondi Beach sipping piña coladas with my boyfriend for the decades to come did not seem unappealing in that moment. But the truth is, I love writing too much, and have too large and loyal a readership, to walk away. The whole brouhaha ended on Monday when the Polari Prize abandoned this year’s award entirely, an interesting example of self-cancellation, to focus instead on “increasing representation of trans and gender non-conforming judges on the panels”. I don’t doubt that the founders and organisers have been put under just as much pressure over the last week as I have but this statement worries me.  It suggests that gays and lesbians who do not conform to a specific gender ideology will be rooted out and excluded from future consideration, the court effectively stacked against them in this obsessive need to amplify the voices of trans people, a strange fixation considering one would get less amplification at a Metallica concert. Winning a prize isn’t of major importance to me, although, of course, it would have been nice. I’m halfway through a career that’s exceeded all my expectations, but it’s worth considering how this new emphasis might damage younger LGB writers and their right to both hold and express perfectly valid, entirely legal opinions on any subject.  What saddens me most, however, is that from its dramatic opening to its disappointing conclusion, no one from the Polari Prize ever had the decency to contact me. Had they done so, perhaps a happier resolution might have been found. I don’t feel any antipathy towards the debut writers who withdrew their titles. Indeed, I had a very polite and respectful email exchange with one on Friday evening, where we explained our positions and, I think, parted amicably. That said, as someone who’s been part of this industry for 33 years and pretty much seen it all, I do think they should reflect on how they would like to be treated should their names ever be maligned, their characters misrepresented, or their words twisted out of all context. If the scolds ever come for them, I hope they receive the same support I did from other writers and the global publishing world. Honestly, my phone hasn’t been this hot since I was last on Tinder.  They might also ask themselves whether they want to be known for their books or for the cartoon characters others will create in their likeness. After all, should they ever publish another book, and should that book be nominated for an award, do they really want the judges to consider anything other than the beauty of their writing, the brilliance of their storytelling, and the power of their ideas?  For the record, there was never a possibility that I would withdraw. To have done so would have endorsed a mob mentality, ensuring that, going forward, all writers who made the list would be vetted by their colleagues for wrongthink...  I couldn’t be a party to that; it would have been the death of ideas, a loss brought about by the raging tantrums of people who, I suspect, have not read anything with more than 280 characters for many years. We operate in the books world. We’re supposed to believe in free speech and freedom of thought. We’re meant to treat each other with respect, not look for ways to tear each other down. To value the written word and not denigrate, insult and push people to a point where those who are emotionally vulnerable might not survive their attacks. Most of us have the maturity to understand that, but it’s clear that some, particularly those at the start of their careers, still have to learn it.  It’s the difference between playing the part of a decent person on social media and actually being one in real life."

Explaining the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict: Palestine as Waqf

James Lindsay

Some of you might have noticed that there have been repeated attempts to create a "two-state solution" in Eretz Israel (or "Palestine" if you want) and that it never works. The primary reason it never works is that the "Palestinian" side of it and its terror groups reject it.
 
The reason they reject it can be found in the 1988 Hamas Charter explicitly, which declares that they recognize the entire region as having been set aside as Islamic Waqf since the seventh century. This is a doctrine within Islam and Sharia and, as you should expect, the Muslim Brotherhood and its derivatives take it extremely strictly and literally.
 
The doctrine of waqf is probably 98% of the reason why the Middle East is the way that it is with regard to the (modern) state of Israel, but almost nobody ever actually seems to recognize this.
 
The doctrine of Waqf is roughly an Islamic land trust, although the "owner" of that land is taken literally to be Allah once it has been declared waqf. Since Allah "owns" it, it is fully "Dar al-Islam" (land of Islam) in a fully irrevocable, permanent, and inalienable way. No one can have any ownership of the land, but certain Muslims in good standing can hold stewardship of it. No one else can. It cannot be sold. It cannot be traded. It doesn't matter if it is conquered by a thousand armies. The land is viewed under Sharia as inalienably Islamic and belonging to Allah.
 
The doctrine sees land under waqf as having been subdued or purified under Islamic doctrine. The land has been returned to its pristine state, in some sense. It is therefore regarded as an unholy defilement for anyone to make any claim upon the land, no matter how legitimate, old, or under any circumstances. To sell the land as a Muslim steward, especially to a Jew, is to incur a fatwa against you and your family (a capital offense). To occupy the land is the same.
 
People who believe this in the way the Muslim Brotherhood, Hamas, Hezbollah, Al Qaeda, ISIS, ISIL, etc., believe it, believe these things literally. They believe they have a holy obligation to murder anyone involved in what they see as a desecration of Allah's pristine Dar al-Islam land, and they act upon it. There is no possibility of compromise, partition, sharing, or any other such thing with people who believe this doctrine in this way. None. Ever. Under any circumstances.
 
Hamas, the Muslim Brotherhood, etc., believe that in the late 7th century when the Muslim Caliph conquered all of Syria-Palaestina ("Palestine") and declared it waqf (specifically in part so Jews could never return), that was final and irrevocable. The case is closed. There can never be so much as a serious discussion of any change.
 
Therefore, when the Allies, particularly British and French forces, conquered the Ottomans in 1917 and issued the Balfour Declaration, effectively taking control of the land as conquered territory under their management ("British Mandate Palestine" and "French Mandate Syria"), they had absolutely no legal standing to do so under Sharia, from the Islamist perspective. They could conquer people but not Allah or his irrevocable claim on the land.
 
When the League of Nations ratified the Mandates in the following years, the same. When the United Nations attempted to issue a partition in 1947, the same. When Israel declared independence in 1948, the same. When the Arab armies attacked and lost the next day, this did nothing to strengthen their case for legal occupation of the land. When a million attempted partition and two-state solutions were proposed only to be rejected by the Arab Palestinians every time, this is ultimately why. Almost all the rest is window dressing and taqiyyah. The issue is seeing the land as Islamic Waqf under Sharia, to which the Muslim Islamists have submitted.
 
The Muslim Brotherhood (thus Hamas, etc.) doctrine on submission is that you fully accept all of this as I have stated it or you are not a real Muslim at all. You are apostate, and your life is in danger, if not forfeit, unless you will change your ways, perhaps under duress. Do you understand? Either you think this way, or the MB and its affiliate terror organizations do not recognize you as a Muslim to begin with, so your opinion is as irrelevant and moot as a Westerner, a Christian, an infidel, or a Jew.
 
If you are taking the "Palestinian" side in these conflicts or see Israel as intrinsically the aggressor, provocateur, problem, etc., in the region, you are implicitly endorsing the Sharia and the doctrine of waqf that is the overwhelming primary reason for those beliefs. Full stop. You're supporting a view only intelligible under Sharia. Waqf, the idea of Allah owning land in religious trust, is a uniquely Sharia doctrine. It does not exist anywhere else.
 
Israel obtained nearly all the land in Eretz Israel legally. The Allied Forces (that's us, fam) beat the Central Powers in WWI, including the Ottoman Empire, and took the entire region from them. All international law recognized it, including the League of Nations and later United Nations, and no serious challenge to that legal reality was ever made. Zionists bought land there, often from Ottoman landlords, and slowly moved in. Almost all immigration was legal with the only illegal immigration being during WWII when the British limited legal immigration in order to appease the Mufti. When Britain withdrew in 1947, the United Nations suggested the partition, and only the Arabs rejected it. Under every system of law that might apply except Sharia, the people we recognize as Israelis today moved in legally. It was not "settler occupation" except under Sharia.
 
We are not under any obligation to recognize Sharia, or, therefore, waqf. We do not need to care what they believe about ownership of that land under their religious-political doctrine, especially since they try to hide the ball behind displacement, Arab nationalism, and some claimed right to self-determination (which they lost in wars that they always started, with the exception of WWI, which the Central Powers including the Ottomans started).
 
The fig leaf they hide waqf behind here is this claim to self-determining pan-Arab nationalism, but what it actually means to have self-determination is to be able to determine the land is irrevocably theirs under Sharia because of waqf.
 
If you don't recognize Sharia as legitimately binding international law, then you don't recognize the "Palestinian's" claim on the land of Eretz Israel, including Judea or Samaria (the "West Bank"), or Gaza for that matter (which was held by the Egyptians).
 
Thank you for your attention to this matter!

Links - 28th May 2026 (2 - Being Black in the US)

End Wokeness on X - "Black American moves to Kenya. Villagers tell her: "We want whites here, not folks like you. Also, you bald and childless. You're not woman.""
Damn colonalism!

"Black Fatigue" Goes Viral: Everyone Including Blacks Is Tired Of Ghetto Behavior - "The progressive ideal is largely to blame for the monstrous creation that is ghetto culture.  The idea that racial narcissism among blacks should not only be tolerated but celebrated has led to a surge in open animosity for societal rules and standards within the US.  Far more than any other group, the black community makes up the largest share of physical crime according to their percentage of the population. This includes robbery, aggravated assault, and homicides.  For example, black Americans make up only 13% of the population but commit around 52% of all homicides according to FBI statistics.  The recent case of Karmelo Anthony comes to mind, a black teen who admitted to stabbing a white teen and killing him because the white teen allegedly "pushed him" (which he argues was a threat that made deadly force justifiable).   The concept of "disrespect" as an offense that justifies murder is only one problem.  There is an identifiable trend of theatrical sociopathy within the black community that goes far beyond the norm.  The prevailing theory is that this is predominantly cultural - Black Americans have the highest rate of single parent households in the country (50% of black homes compared to 20% of white homes in 2023). Most of these households are run by single mothers.  Single mother homes are a notorious indicator of future criminality among juveniles. Then there is the problem of racial victim culture; the false idea that black Americans are being "oppressed" in the US by a systemic conspiracy of white patriarchs.  In reality, white Americans have been exponentially tolerant and have provided special privileges for blacks (affirmative action and DEI), largely because progressive society demands that reparations be made for slavery 150 years ago and segregation 60 years ago.  The form of those reparations has more or less been white guilt and a quiet passiveness in the face of increasing antagonism.     Leftists claim white people should take it because historically they deserve it.  Ignore the fact that every culture on Earth had institutional slavery and all the slaves sent to the Americas were purchased from African tribes that enslaved other African tribes.   However, it appears that the black community's precious supply of white guilt has finally run out and people are fed up.  The term "Black Fatigue" has gone viral this week on social media, sparking a much needed conversation among not just whites, but also blacks and other minorities.  The catalyst blamed for the trend is the now widely known "Shiloh Hendrix Incident" which has led to public support and an uproar among progressives who demand the woman be prosecuted for dropping an N-bomb. Perhaps white Americans finally speaking up instead of remaining silent is what was needed all along.  The fear has not been so much about black reprisal, but reprisal from the leftist mob, which until recently had weaponized cancel culture to destroy the lives of anyone speaking outside of prescribed leftist opinions. The following clips illustrate Black Fatigue in the most symbolic way possible:  An arrogant desire to destroy what other groups build, no matter how meaningless and petty the situation might be.  Never helping, never cooperating, never trying to make things better. And an egotistical need to display power over other groups (especially white people) by sabotaging them even though they have done nothing wrong and want to be left alone. Oversensitive reactions to every perceived slight, creating a psychology of persecution that leads blacks to lash out over everything.  These are habits not limited to individuals, but habits of the culture as a whole.  Black fatigue is leading to a dangerous place and it's clear that at least some in the community see what is happening and they're trying to mitigate the damage.  Historically speaking, the next stage would be mass anger and retaliation for such behaviors.   Hopefully it won't come to that.  If ghetto culture is abandoned and calmer minds prevail then it's likely most racial strife within the US today will disappear as quickly as it gestated.  But this would require that a large portion of black Americans accept the reality that they are not victims and that they are causing the problem.  How likely is it that this will happen given decades of woke indoctrination that says white people are always the  source of every conflict and trespass?"

Lavern Spicer 🇺🇸 on X - "Racists love black culture but think they hate black culture.  You love eating fried chicken? Thats us.  You love rap music? That’s us.  You love Elvis Presley? That came from us.  You love samurai’s? That’s us.  You love the pyramids? That’s us.  You love the lightbulb? That’s us.  Don’t play in my face like that please."

Christopher F. Rufo ⚔️ on X - "The libs are outraged at Curtin Yarvin's proposal for "turning Black men into wards of state-sanctioned churches," but a version of this system already exists in America's ghettos: it's called Great Society liberalism, with an assist from probation officers, family courts, child-support laws, and social service nonprofits.   "It's basically slavery!" Why yes, libs, I have been making this argument for years. Thank you for catching up."

Meme - "You know Spider-Man, The 13% statistic isn't accurate. It's mainly Men, so it should really be 6/32"

Meme - Kyrie Servin @RubbaBandDakRula: "As a black man your woman should be able to ask you for 1 thousand dollars at any given moment, and you should have it for her. Bottom line. It's time for men to be men again"

Meme - Joelle Nemecek @JoelleNemecek: "Black people especially black women are on a lengthy vacation and we mean it. We are done and I think white people realize they are now going to have to do the work. The playing in our face and then voting Trump was the last straw. Have at it. We're not heavy lifting anymore"
What's with all the narcissism?

Noah Carl on X - "Interestingly, IQ can only explain about a third of the black–white homicide gap. Black Americans commit homicide at much higher rates than you'd expect from their average IQ."
Wilfred Reilly on X - "Correct. The West Africans are almost certainly fudging data at least somewhat here, but the reported US-Black homicide rate is 10x the official estimate for Ghana, and at least twice ANY est. I have seen for that far poorer country. The other variables relevant here are what smart non-hereditarians mean by "culture and systems.""
I'm A Horse Thief on X - "Ghanaians have spent the last few centuries removing and discouraging the worst among them. Like any normal society does. The US has spent at least the last few decades forgiving, funding, enabling and even motivating the worst black people."
Clearly this is due to racism, anti-blackness, and the unique legacy of slavery

Meme - Black woman: "Using the N word could potentially cost you your life in 2025. Stop using it if you are not black or brown enough to be considered black."
Isn't it a hate crime to perpetuate the racist stereotype that black people are violent?

Meme - *Predator Handshake*
"The only thing that all men in the world agree on.
NOT WANTING TO RAISE BLACK CHILDREN
BLACK MEN. WHITE MEN"

Meme - Garbage Human: "A minor detail that is missing here is that he "defended himself" by shooting a 9 year old girl in the face."
Black News: "Georgia Black Teen Sentenced to 70 Years in Prison For Defending Himself at Walmart"

Meme - End Wokeness: "Twerking in front of kids. At a funeral. By the open casket."

I,Hypocrite on X - ""When I say logic is anti-black, I mean the very rules of logic were written from an imperialistic point of view. So to think freely, we need to rebuild reason itself from the ground up.""
Is this black woman saying black people are irrational?

Stories and Data - "For every black person killed by the police, there is at least one white person (usually many) killed in a similar way...   At a gut level, it is hard for most people to feel the same level of outrage when the cops kill a white person. Perhaps that is as it should be. After all, for most of American history, it was white suffering that provoked more outrage. But I would submit that if this new “anti-racist” bias is justified—if we now have a moral obligation to care more about certain lives than others based on skin color, or based on racial-historical bloodguilt—then everything that I thought I knew about basic morality, and everything that the world’s philosophical and religious traditions have been saying about common humanity, revenge, and forgiveness since antiquity, should be thrown out the window.  You might agree that the police kill plenty of unarmed white people, but object that they are more likely to kill unarmed black people, relative to their share of the population. That’s where the data comes in. The objection is true as far as it goes; but it’s also misleading. To demonstrate the existence of a racial bias, it’s not enough to cite the fact that black people comprise 14 percent of the population but about 35 percent of unarmed Americans shot dead by police. (By that logic, you could prove that police shootings were extremely sexist by pointing out that men comprise 50 percent of the population but 93 percent of unarmed Americans shot by cops.)   Instead, you must do what all good social scientists do: control for confounding variables to isolate the effect that one variable has upon another (in this case, the effect of a suspect’s race on a cop’s decision to pull the trigger). At least four careful studies have done this—one by Harvard economist Roland Fryer, one by a group of public-health researchers, one by economist Sendhil Mullainathan, and one by David Johnson, et al. None of these studies has found a racial bias in deadly shootings.  if not for the dissemination of this falsehood, social relations between blacks and whites would be less tense, trust in police would be higher, and businesses all across America might have been spared the looting and destruction that we have seen in recent weeks.   But isn’t this the price of progress? Isn’t there a long tradition of using violence to throw off the shackles of white supremacy, going back to the Haitian revolution and the American Civil War? Didn’t the urban riots of the late 1960s wake Americans up to the fact that racism did not end with the Civil Rights Act of 1965?  To start, any analogy to slave rebellions or justified revolutions can be dismissed immediately. Taking up arms directly against those enslaving you is one thing. Looting clothing stores or destroying grocery stores is something else entirely... As for the riots of the late 1960s, progressives should not praise them for shocking Americans into action without also noting that they helped elect Richard Nixon president, which progressives certainly did not intend; that they directly decreased the wealth of inner-city black homeowners; and that they scared capital away from inner cities for decades, worsening the very conditions of poverty and unemployment that the rioters were supposedly protesting.  What’s more, the case for violence rests on the false notion that without it, little progress can be made. Recent history tells a different story. In 2018, the NYPD killed five people, down from 93 people in 1971. Since 2001, the national incarceration rate for black men ages 18-29 has gone down by more than half. Put simply, we know progress through normal democratic means is possible because we have already done it... as long as we have a non-zero rate of deadly shootings (a virtual certainty), and as long as some shootings are filmed and go viral (also a virtual certainty), then we may live in perpetual fear of urban unrest for the foreseeable future.   The only way out of this conundrum, it seems to me, is for millions of Americans on the left to realize that deadly police shootings happen to blacks and whites alike. As long as a critical mass of people view this as a race issue, they will see every new video of a black person being killed as yet another injustice in a long chain dating back to the Middle Passage. That sentiment, when it is felt deeply and earnestly, will reliably produce large protests and destructive riots.  The political Right has a role to play as well. For too long, “All Lives Matter” has been a slogan used only as a clapback to Black Lives Matter. What it should have been, and still could be, is a true movement to reduce the number of Americans shot by the police on a race-neutral basis"
I didn't know there were so many studies showing no racial bias in US police shootings. Given how well this replicates and that it goes against prevailing orthodoxy, we should have a very high level of confidence in the results

Family Instability Fuels Rising Nihilism Among Young Men - "Observing how young males act in social groups, the cultural anthropologists Ruth Borker and Daniel Maltz have written: “Nondominant boys are rarely excluded from play but are made to feel the inferiority of their status positions in no uncertain terms. And since hierarchies fluctuate, every boy gets his chance to be victimized and must learn to take it.” For us, it sure worked that way.   As psychologist Joyce F. Benenson observes, boys, especially neglected boys, often band together to cause trouble. “Male groups are formed initially because male peers are so drawn to one another, and away from everyone else,” she writes. “They may fight, they usually compete . . . . Even boys with behavioral problems, who cannot follow any adult authority’s directions, group together, through graffiti writing, skateboarding, or gang fights.”... Our disappointment with adults led us to believe that rules weren’t actually legitimate. They were invented by adults to keep us from having fun. Why should we listen?  This lack of trust has become ingrained in many young people. They first learn not to trust adults, and then learn not to trust anyone. Last year, Pew reported that young Americans are more skeptical of other people and of key institutions than older Americans are...   Fewer young people have real friends, compared with older generations. Without trust, social relationships become harder to establish...   Likely related to the dearth of social relationships, suicides among young people—men are particularly afflicted—have spiked... a Department of Defense study found that “after controlling for differences in age and sex between these populations, suicide rates in the military were roughly equivalent to the U.S. population rates.”...   Many pundits and commentators focus on economic deprivation or sociocultural factors—above all, racism—to explain the recent wave of urban anger, triggered by Floyd’s awful death. But the data show that American society has fewer people in poverty and less bigotry compared with decades past; and police use of force is far less pervasive than it was during higher-crime periods. What has been getting far worse, however, is family life. Stable families have been in free fall over the last few decades. In 1960, the out-of-wedlock birthrate in the U.S. was 3 percent. In 2000, it was about 30 percent. Today, it is 40 percent. (This figure obscures class divisions: for college graduates, only one out of ten children is born out of wedlock. For those with only a high school diploma, six out of ten are born to unmarried parents.)   The lack of stable families has contributed to the widespread mistrust of others and lack of social relationships among young people. It has, I believe, given rise to a sense of nihilism even in an era of relative material abundance, which has characterized some of the violent upheavals"

A Gene Robinson on X - "Every time I hear someone call a well-spoken, well-dressed, employed Black man a “white supremacist,” I’m reminded of how far the fall has been.   Before 1960, Black men were the sharpest, most dignified, best-dressed individuals in America.   Bar none.  The dignity was unmatched… the discipline undeniable… the excellence unquestioned.  And now? A generation trained to believe that speaking clear English is “acting white,” that reading is betrayal, that building a business is selling out, and that being a man of order, structure, and purpose makes you the enemy.  That isn’t culture… that’s conditioning.  It didn’t come from God.  It didn’t come from science.  It came from the democrat political machine that needed Black men weak, aimless, and chaotic… because order would break their control.  What makes it heartbreaking is the irony.   The same woman screaming that entrepreneurship is “white supremacy” is wearing artificial hair that doesn’t grow from her own scalp… a style imported, manufactured, and marketed by industries that have drained billions out of Black neighborhoods. She borrows the identity of other cultures while accusing Black men of betraying their own.  That isn’t empowerment… it’s confusion engineered on purpose.  Here is the fact: a Black man who speaks clearly, works hard, builds, leads, marries, fathers, and carries himself like a king is not the problem. He is the standard that Hell itself is trying to erase.  And they attack him because he exposes what they refuse to confront… that excellence is still possible… that discipline still works… that God’s order still produces strength… and that dignity will always outshine dysfunction.  Let the critics howl. Their rebellion is loud because their fruit is rotten.  But the truth stands in silence… dressed well… working hard… speaking with clarity… and refusing to bow. @TheOfficerTatum  @Cjpearson  @larryelder    #SilentMajoritySpeaks #AStoneGroove"

Meme - "Somthing every black household gotta have inside, or you ain't black! *Maruchan Ramen Noodle Soup Chicken Flavor* *Flamin' Hot Crunchy Cheetos* *Grape Soda* *Lawry's Seasoned Salt* *Cockroaches* DISCONNECTION NOTICE"

Annette Albright on X - "When I ask why Black children today are less educated than they were in the 1950s, 60s, and 70s, and the only response is “systemic racism” and “White people,” that tells me you are not prepared for an honest, accountable conversation about public education in Black communities.  Today, we have Black superintendents, Black administrators, Black educators, Black school board members, Black board chairs, and co-chairs — especially in predominantly Black school districts. Leadership is no longer the barrier it once was. Yet the outcomes continue to decline.  Take LeBron James’ I Promise School, for example. The school is free and offers extensive wraparound services for both students and parents. However, it has been widely criticized for low proficiency levels and failing state test scores. If resources alone were the solution, this school would be a national academic model.  A solid education is the foundation for productive adulthood. Until we are willing to confront hard truths without deflection, excuses, or emotional shields, our children will continue paying the price.  @EDSecMcMahon"
Clearly, the problem is not enough money
Clearly black voters have internalised white supremacy

Meme - Magills: "Blacks supported the Grand Wizard of the KKK over more than they do Pete Buttigieg."
"David Duke, the former Grand Wizard of the Ku Klux Klan who recently announced he's running for US Senate, has the support of 14% of black voters in his home state of Louisiana, according to a poll from the University of New Orleans Survey Research Center."
Zachary Donnini: "One of the stronger Black crosstabs for Buttigieg that I've seen in polling recently, per @YalePolling."
"4% WITH BLACK VOTERS"

Brian Krassenstein on X - "Yesterday, my nine-year-old son asked me why Black people seem kinder than white people. I paused, not because I disagreed, but because I didn’t want to overwrite his lived experience with an adult lecture. So I asked him if that was something he’d noticed himself. He nodded. “Yeah. They just are.”"
Alden Whitfeld on X - "From Farris (2006):
- Black students are more likely to be bullies while white students are more likely to be victims of bullying.
- Black on white bullying is 64% more common than white on black bullying.
- Race differences in bullying is not explained by parental socioeconomic status.
- Lastly, black students who bully are more popular among their peers while no relationship was found for white students.
Link to paper: https://cdr.lib.unc.edu/concern/disser"
Thread by @AldenWhitfeld on Thread Reader App – Thread Reader App - "Similar results from the U.K. as well:  x.com/cremieuxrecuei…  Increasing the share of non-whites increases bullying victimization for both white and black students:  x.com/cremieuxrecuei…"

Larry Elder on X - "I hereby apologize to and seek forgiveness from the Los Angeles Times, the rest of the left wing media and the Democrat party for the sin of being a proud no-excuse American;   For being raised by two hard working, God fearing parents who grew up in the Jim Crow south, who cared about education, who taught my brothers and me that we were the product of our choices and who convinced us that we are not victims.  I apologize that my mother told me, “No one can make you feel inferior without your permission.”  I also hereby apologize that my father told me the following:  Hard work wins;  You get out of life what you put into it;  You cannot control the outcome, but you are 100% in control of the effort;  Before complaining, ask yourself, “What could I have done to change the outcome?”;  And, finally, my father said, “Bad things happen. How you respond to those bad things will tell your mother and me if we raised a man."  So, please forgive me for learning, believing and living pursuant to those lessons.   My New Year’s resolution? I shall start thinking of myself as a victim.   Now, then, are we good?
Sincerely,
The Black Face of White Supremacy"
Mike Lee on X - "There’s a word that describes those who tell someone they can’t have and express their own opinions based on their race—and then mock them when they do. The word is *racist*"

Elmo on X - "Elmo knows that it's important to be kind, just like Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. ❤️"
Kangmin Lee | 이강민 on X - "MLK Jr engaged in gay orgies, cheated on his wife multiple times, and laughed as he watched a woman get raped"

songs that changed history on X - "this is america by childish gambino."
Venom Rach ☧ on X - "This video is interesting because its showing black people killing each other and destroying things while they do a retarded dance like its a bushfire ritual but somehow this is about white people being racist."

How Black Mothers Prepare Their Children for School - The Atlantic - "In observing her own family and others, Black has noticed a pattern: Behaviors that many black parents might consider annoying but developmentally appropriate, such as an ill-timed joke or talking back to an adult, are treated by school staff as cause for suspension. From there, students are pushed out of classrooms, lose learning time, and can end up in the school-to-prison pipeline. “It’s a totally different environment, a totally different culture,” Black said when we spoke in July 2018... Glaring, making noise, and violating the school dress code can all lead to suspension"
When you admit that black culture is dysfunctional

Lucky Teter on X - "Remember the video of the 67 year old vet, affectionately nicknamed Epic Beard Man, beating the piss out of a black thug on an Oakland bus in 2010.  Listen to the black women encourage him to attack the white guy.  "Beat his white ass!"  Then their tune quickly changes once the white guy lights up the black aggressor.  "Bring the amber lamps" indeed."

Meme - Bart Simpson: "She got $100k for using the N word"
Homer Simpson: "No, she got $100k hecause you tried to KILL her for using the N word"
On Shiloh Hendrix

Blaming Jews vs Blaming Marxists

OCRed from an image:

The reason I say that blaming the Marxists is much more plausible and reasonable than blaming the Jews is that if the death of the modern West was a murder the Marxists are so obviously guilty. Let me use this examples. The Marxists have:

1)A plan to commit the murder. Look to Yuri Bezmonov, Saul Alinsky and Gramsci to name a few who all openly said they were engaging in Marxist cultural subversion to destroy Western civilization.
2)The gun. That being the Marxist control of the major bureaucratic institutions such as academia, news media, Hollywood, government, schools etc ...
3)Witnesses. Generations of conservative thinkers who predicted this would happen in advanced such as James Burnham, Thomas Sowell, Buchanan etc ..
4)A track record of cultural murders in practically every continent including China, Russia, Cuba and for softer Socialist variants the European continent.
5)Confession. The Leftists involved openly say that they're Marxists, cite Marx as an author as say their goal is the death of Western civilization.

If this was a legal case it wouid be the most airtight one of all time. This was not done mostly by Jews with Marxist takeovers occuring in places like Latam, Africa or East Asia that have none. Statistically the death of the West was mostly done by White people, often women or Calvinist descendents.

Why You Can't Argue with the New Left

From 2016:

Why You Can't Argue with the New Left

Conservative British philosopher Roger Scruton’s most recent book, Fools, Frauds and Firebrands: Thinkers of the New Left,2 critiques academics who did their scribbling in the twentieth century, creating what became known as the New Left. Most of the intellectuals profiled by Scruton are continental Europeans whose names are unfamiliar to most Americans today. Although few of us are conversant with the likes of Theodoro Adorno, Gyorgy Lukacs, and Slavoj Zizek, reading about them makes one realize how much of an imprint they have left on contemporary college campuses and even on the approach to politics taken by Barack Obama.

A major theme of Fools is that the New Left evolved a set of intellectual tactical moves against their opponents. These included creating a false left-right spectrum, delegitimizing other points of view, indicting capitalism and tradition for all wrongs while being vague about alternatives, and using Newspeak to present authoritarianism as a defense of freedom and human rights.

Scruton sees the left-right spectrum as part of the attempt to romanticize the support for communism. In the left-right framework that the New Left employs, the far right is represented by fascism and Nazism, the most heinous ideologies in history. Conservatism is less extreme, but it also falls on the evil side of the spectrum. As you move to the left, you become better. Communism is the ideal, but it has yet to be realized. For the New Left, totalitarian repression under communism is an unfortunate accident, not at all equivalent to the repression that is intrinsic to fascism. On the left-right spectrum, communism is the opposite of fascism.

Scruton notes that the French communists, who bragged about their resistance to fascism, only joined the anti-Nazi cause in June of 1941, when Germany attacked the Soviet Union. In contrast, when Hitler conquered France in 1940,

… the communists were in some measure responsible for the erosion of the will to fight the Nazis, being under indirect orders from Hitler during the crucial months of France’s defeat. (It was thanks to the PCF that the munitions factories went on strike when Hitler—then the beneficiary of the Nazi-Soviet pact—marched on France.)

Another tactic Scruton attributes to the New Left is delegitimization.

Once identified as right-wing you are beyond the pale of argument; your views are irrelevant, your character discredited, your presence in the world a mistake. You are not an opponent to be argued with, but a disease to be shunned.

Thus, in Jurgen Habermas’ call for democratic deliberation,

… the dialogues that Habermas now advocates, in the wake of 9/11, are noticeable for the voices they exclude: no nationalists, no social conservatives, no pre-modernists or fervent free-marketeers will be invited to the table, when the postmodern future of mankind is plotted in the Habermasian bunker. And by excluding so much of ordinary humanity from his chatter-house, Habermas avoids the real questions that confront us, recommending that we discuss them only to avoid discussing them. That, I suspect, is what the new Europe is all about.

For the New Left, existing institutions serve no useful purpose. They only allow the strong to dominate the weak. The term “capitalism” is used to indicate such a system of domination.

Two accusations against our political inheritance have been lodged in the brains that I have examined in this book: first, that ‘capitalist’ society is founded on power and domination; second, that ‘capitalism’ means ‘commodification’; the reduction of people to things, and the fetishizing of things as agents.

The writers of the New Left are never specific about what will replace capitalism. Instead, they view it as obvious that tearing down existing institutions will be sufficient to bring about utopia. Because the capitalist system is the source of all evil, once you destroy it, only good will remain.

This approach gives the New Left the ability on offense to attribute every imperfection in society to existing institutions, especially markets. On defense, the New Left itself offers no program with specifics that might be attacked.

Finally, the New Left has appropriated terms like freedom and democracy while taking positions that are hostile to both. This is the tactic of Newspeak. For example, John Kenneth Galbraith and other critics of capitalism treat the cornucopia of consumer goods as a tool of capitalist oppression, with our desire for products artificially manipulated by advertising.

This story turns the proof of our freedom—namely, that we can obtain what we want—into the proof of our enslavement, since our wants are not really ours.

Newspeak in the field of legislation makes a mockery of the rule of law.

There is nothing to prevent the radical legislator from passing laws that fly in the face of justice, by granting privileges, confiscating assets and extinguishing deserts in the interests of some personal or political agenda. One sign of this is the adoption of ‘social justice’ as the goal of law, rather than natural justice as a procedural constraint. For [Friedrich] Hayek, by contrast, the goal of common law is not social engineering but justice in the proper sense of the term, namely the punishment or rectification of unjust actions.

Scruton exposes the Newspeak treatment of labor freedom under capitalism by the New Left.

… are we not tired, by now, of this tautologous condemnation of the free economy, which defines that which can be purchased as a thing and then says that the man who sells his labour, in becoming a thing, ceases to be a person? At any rate, we should recognize that, of all the mendacious defences offered for slavery, this is by far the most pernicious. For what is unpurchased labour, if not the labour of a slave?

To recapitulate, the New Left uses these approaches to advance its ideology:

  • providing a misleading left-right spectrum to frame viewpoints
  • demonizing opponents as unworthy to participate in public debate
  • associating existing institutions with evil outcomes while providing few specifics about how those institutions ought to be replaced
  • using Newspeak to characterize freedom as slavery

Where this leads, Scruton suggests, is an intellectual form of totalitarianism, unable to tolerate dissent or to engage with those who might disagree. In discussing Antonio Gramsci, Scruton writes,

Thus to the realist who asks how, in this society of the future, conflicts are to be accommodated or resolved, Gramsci has no reply. The communist shares with the fascist an overriding contempt for opposition. The purpose of politics is not to live with opposition, but to remove it—to achieve the condition in which opposition no longer exists.

In his concluding chapter, Scruton writes,

Almost all the thinkers I have discussed in this book have adopted the same annihilating approach to their opponents as leftist parties in power. For the opponent is the class enemy. Should he put his head above the parapet in the culture wars he is not to be argued with, for he cannot utter truth… Such an enemy is not to be the object of negotiation or compromise. Only after his final elimination from the social order will the truth be perceivable.

This seems to explain one of the more troubling stories of 2015, which was the widespread assault of free speech on American college campuses. Also, it may explain why President Obama has seemed to govern more by unilateral executive action than by negotiation with Congress. As obscure and seemingly outdated many of the New Left writers discussed in Fools seem to be, the tendencies that Scruton identified make his critiques seem quite relevant to the contemporary scene. 

 

 

 

 


Links - 28th May 2026 (1 - Star Wars)

Mark Hamill ‘clears up’ Star Wars misconception after criticising divisive film : r/StarWars - "Seems like the only misconception he’s clearing up is that he does not have a dislike for Johnson himself. Seems pretty clear from his comments he still doesn’t like the direction that Luke was taken in."

Mark Hamill Reveals His Biggest Regret From the 'Star Wars' Sequel Trilogy - ""Well, in the sequel trilogies, Harrison Ford. Cause I only had two cameos, and the middle one we never.. Aren't we gonna have a moment where all three of us get together and raise the roof? It'll only take 30 seconds," he explained.  "And J.J. (Abrams) said, 'Well, Mark, it's not Luke's story anymore,' and I said, 'Star Wars wasn't Obi-Wan's story, but Alec Guinness had a crucial.. You know. Anyway, nobody listens to me," he added."
Sequel trilogy lovers will still claim he loves it

Star Wars Holocron on X - "Mark Hamill says that he finds it “funny that people miss the irony that [Luke Skywalker] died from an overdose of the Force.”  “I mean, who knew that was even a thing? Don’t you think if there was even a marginal chance that using the Force could be lethal, Obi-Wan would’ve said ‘Use the Force in moderation, Luke?’ Or Yoda would’ve said ‘Overdo Force projection, you must not?’ Nobody warned me! But obviously, they concluded his story, he died.”  (Source: CBS This Morning)"

Why are "Inhibitor Chips" so divisive in the fandom? : r/StarWars - "I think the biggest problem was that the showrunners wanted to make the Jedi too likeable. In the pre-inhibitor chip stories, the Jedi were terrible commanders. They weren't military officers, they weren't war strategists, they weren't even particularly likeable. They were basically just cop monks - and they had held dominance for so long that they had become pretty bad at that job, too. Palpatine made them all Generals specifically because they would be awful at leading an army, but would be unequivocally accepted and trusted by the public. It was all part of his game to make sure the entire galaxy was as weak and fragmented as possible when the coup started.  And it worked. A lot of the Clones hated the Jedi because they were terrible commanders with no battlefield experience, who constantly bungled their missions and got troopers killed, and were generally sanctimonious and holier than thou about the whole thing. Even the ones who happened to make decent officers were still complete outsiders to the Clone culture - a culture which also happened to be heavily Mandalorian influenced, further alienating them from their Jedi officers.  But the Clone Wars series wanted the Jedi to be heroes. The showrunners wanted the Republic to look like good guys, when the entire point of the prequel films is that the Republic WEREN'T the good guys anymore. They used to be, but now they were stagnant, complacent, and self-righteous. They were willing to impose the desires of the core worlds at the expense of the rim worlds. They were willing to overlook horrific institutionalized slavery and sentient rights violations as long as it happened out of sight (sound familiar?). The Republic may not have been outright villains, but they were very, very far from heroes.  If the Clone Wars series had been willing to engage with that moral complexity, the inhibitor chip wouldn't have been needed. But it wanted good and evil instead. Pong Krell wasn't enough by himself, he was a straw man caricature. The Republic was BUILT on people who thought like Pong Krell, and on many more people besides who would look at Krell, shrug, and say "Well, he gets results and tells it like it is.""

Meme - Anakin Skywalker: "The Chancellor is not a bad man, Obi-Wan. He befriended me. he's watched out for me ever since I arrived here."
Obi-Wan Kenobi: "That's called grooming. you absolute pancake"

In The Rise of Skywalker (2019), Rey buries Luke and Leia’s lightsabers at the Lars Homestead on Tatooine, even though Luke didn’t like it there, and Leia never set foot there. This is to show that writer/director JJ Abrams is too enamored with the 1977 Star Wars film and nostalgic references. : r/shittymoviedetails

Meme - Star Wars @starwars: "There are more than 20 million sentient species in the Star Wars galaxy, don't choose to be a racist."
"Also Disney *Star Wars The Force Awakens poster erasing Finn in China*"

Mandalorian's Katee Sackhoff Didn't Work for 3 Years, Lost Confidence - "“I lost all of my confidence after ‘Mandalorian,’ all of it. I’ve always played two steps removed from myself, in a sense. It always felt grounded in some part of my belly, of who I was. Bo-Katan is nowhere near who I am as a human being. Her life, what she wants — I didn’t understand her. As much as I understood her, I never felt her in my stomach. I never identified with her. I didn’t know how to find her,” she said, adding, “My style of acting has always just been, ‘Your first instinct is the right instinct. Do that. Play the reality of the situation.’ And I’ve never really played a character.”...  “It broke me. It just broke me,” Sackhoff said. “I started doubting everything about myself. I’m not a strong auditioner on tape, and I was having to put myself on tape. I wasn’t booking anything. And for three years, I basically didn’t work, and it just destroyed my confidence.”  Since then, Sackhoff hired a new manager and acting coach, who told her, “‘My goal is not to teach you how to act. You know how to act. I just need to get you back in your belly. You just need to find your confidence again.'” In 2024, she appeared on an episode of “Law & Order,” plus some voice acting on animated series, and she’s part of the cast of the upcoming “Carrie” series on Prime Video."
Time to go on about "male fragility"
Isn't acting about being someone you aren't?

Meme - "ADAM DRIVER REVEALED THAT DISNEY REJECTED BEN SOLO FILM BECAUSE "THEY DIDN'T SEE HOW BEN SOLO CAN BE ALIVE" MEANWHILE IN STAR WARS BEFORE:
MAUL DIED IN PHANTOM MENACE. BROUGHT BACK IN CLONE WARS
BOBA FETT DIED IN RETURN OF THE JEDI. BROUGHT BACK IN THE THE MANDALORIAN
PALPATINE DIED IN RETURN OF THE JEDI. BROUGHT BACK IN RISE OF SKYWALKER
ASAJJ VENTRESS DIED IN CLONE WARS. BROUGHT BACK IN THE BAD BATCH"

The Mighty Dud Bolt - X: "Bob Iger recounts in his memoir that George Lucas's disappointed reaction to seeing The Force Awakens for the first time was, "There's nothing new." According to Iger, "He wasn't wrong." But Iger says they had to make the film that way, to give the fans what they wanted."

Taika Waititi’s Star Wars exit proves the franchise is a poisoned chalice - "It’s the ultimate Jedi mind trick. Announce a new Star Wars film, generate gigawatts of publicity and then, faster than you can say “these aren’t the droids you’re looking for”, pretend the movie never existed and the whole thing was a figment of the audience’s imagination.  Such has been the apparent strategy of Star Wars’ parent studio, Lucasfilm, which has unveiled a Sith Lord’s ransom in new spinoffs, only to ultimately leave fans spinning in deep space.  The latest Lucasfilm associate to attempt an Obi-Wan Kenobi-style mind wipe is Taika Waititi, who has put his “Untitled Star Wars Film” – its quasi-official name – on the backburner in favour of an adaptation of trigger-happy 2000AD anti-hero Judge Dredd... The news appears to confirm previous rumours that Waiti’s Star Wars feature is spinning its warp drives with no clear release date in sight. That would be quite a u-turn from the far-off morning in May 2020 when Lucasfilm – a subsidiary of the all-powerful Disney – revealed that Waititi would be directing a “fresh and unexpected” take on the galaxy far, far away. Unexpected – or non-existent? With Disney and Lucasfilm, it’s increasingly hard to tell the difference.  We are living through strange times, when Coldplay end marriages rather than soundtrack them, and in which freshly reformed Oasis are the hottest new band in Britain. Even so, how bracing to think that, at the halfway point of 2025, Judge Dredd has more appeal to a successful director than Star Wars – for so long, the last word in bum-on-seats franchises. Like a sort of King Midas in reverse, everything Lucasfilm touches turns to dross. That includes the careers of once-buzzy directors Josh Trank and Colin Trevorrow, who went from the future of cinema to yesterday’s story the moment it was confirmed they were to direct new Star Wars films... [John] Boyega has since expressed his misgivings about the “Sequels” (and pointed out how his character Finn was marginalised as the story went along). Ridley, by contrast, doubled down on the brand when agreeing to front an all-new trilogy about her spiky heroine Rey, to be directed by Pakistani journalist and documentarian Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy, only for that project to follow Waititi’s trajectory into permanent limbo.  Likewise drifting in the void is Rogue Squadron, a supposedly gritty X-Wing movie directed by Wonder Woman’s Patty Jenkins, and a long-cancelled trilogy from Game of Thrones showrunners David Benioff and D B Weiss. They are joined by Last Jedi director Rian Johnson, who decided he’d much prefer making Knives Out whodunnits rather than being abused on social media by Star Wars fans. Why do so many Star Wars films stutter? Assuming it isn’t a curse cooked up by Darth Vader and his fellow Sith Lords, the explanation is probably that the saga is a victim of its own iconic status...  The other issue is the influence of Lucasfilm boss Kathleen Kennedy... Kennedy is passionate about Star Wars – perhaps to a fault. She is certainly not afraid to meddle. Such was the case with 2017’s Han Solo movie, from which comedy improvisational duo (and Lego Movie directors) Lorde and Miller departed – supposedly because their improvised approach didn’t chime with Kennedy’s more straight-laced philosophy. With the pranksters expunged, Kennedy turned to a safe pair of hands, Ron Howard, who delivered what would prove to be the first-ever Star Wars film to post a loss.  “There’s one gatekeeper when it comes to Star Wars, and it’s Kathleen Kennedy,” an insider told Variety several years ago.  “If you rub Kathleen Kennedy the wrong way – in any way – you’re out. You’re done. A lot of these young, new directors want to come in and say, “I want to do this. I want to do that.” A lot of these guys [i.e. Trevorrow] got very rich, very fast and believed a lot of their hype. And they don’t want to play by the rules. They want to do sh–t differently. And Kathleen Kennedy isn’t going to f–k around with that.” But Kennedy’s track record isn’t anything to wave a lightsaber in the air over. She is widely regarded as having damaged the Star Wars brand with subpar TV spinoffs, such as The Acolyte and Ewan McGregor’s Obi-Wan – expensive shows that featured low-budget production and poor writing... Kennedy, meanwhile, is due to step down as head of Lucasfilm before the end of the year. There is the caveat that she is to “continue to produce Star Wars content”. Still, her hand is going to be off the tiller, and there will be a new Star Wars movie coming down the line. After years of disappointment, you might say the saga has a new hope."

Meme - Black Girls Deserve Nice Things: "This Woman Ran the ‘Star Wars’ Universe. Kiri Hart was the Senior Vice President of Development at Lucasfilm for six years where she formed the Lucasfilm Story Group, and oversaw the creative development of all Star Wars content across film, animated television, publishing, gaming, immersive media, and theme parks.  She is currently the executive producer and a creative consultant on Disney and Pixar’s feature film “Soul.”"
Dan Fleming: "And instrumental on the downfall of a 5 billion dollar franchise. Way to go"

How Kathleen Kennedy ruined Star Wars for a generation - "“My love is making movies,” enthused Lucasfilm’s now ex-president Kathleen Kennedy in an interview with Deadline to mark the end of her 14-year tenure at the prow of Star Wars. Really? She could have fooled me, considering she has essentially spent the 2020s making as few of them as humanly possible.  The list of announced then scrapped or dumped-in-limbo projects since the release of 2019’s The Rise of Skywalker is enough to make R2D2’s head twirl, complete with the obligatory whistly bloops and bleeps. Not one, nor two, nor three, but four brand-new trilogies have been proudly announced… then either sheepishly binned, or buried under blankets of ominous silence.  And entirely separately to these mammoth undertakings, golden boys and girls of the directing world were pinched from rival cinematic universes – Kevin Feige, Taika Waititi and Josh Trank from Marvel, and Patty Jenkins from DC – and presented with blank cheques for one-off projects which all subsequently appear to have bounced. At one point, Jenkins’s film was enough of a sure thing to merit an official teaser trailer, in which the Wonder Woman director and fighter pilot’s daughter was seen pulling on a Rebel Alliance flight suit and clambering into the cockpit of an X-Wing, which presumably flew off into the Star Wars equivalent of the Bermuda Triangle.  Anyway, now that some more Star Wars films have finally been made – The Mandalorian and Grogu, spun off from the Disney+ series and coming to cinemas this May, and 2027’s Starfighter, starring Ryan Gosling – Kennedy has clearly decided it’s time to head for pastures new. Those hoping for sober reflection, however, needn’t look for it in her exit interview, which politely picked its way around the past decade’s woes. The most telling moments lay in the juxtapositions. Kennedy lamented how difficult it was to find directors who could “step into this space and still be [themselves]”, then minutes later hinted that some of those who had were a bit too much themselves for their own good. Poor James Mangold and Beau Willimon’s proposed birth-of-the-Jedi desert epic was described as “an incredible script” but also “definitely breaking the mould and it’s on hold” – i.e. dead in the water. That’s why the name-drops of other writers and directors she had tried to woo since 2019 no longer tantalise as they might have before... With the notable exception of Tony Gilroy’s tremendous two series of Andor (the existence of which I still don’t quite understand, given the tide of cancelled projects it somehow emerged from), Star Wars has become the franchise where dreams go to die. No wonder casting Shawn Levy’s Starfighter proved so troublesome, with Mikey Madison, Jesse Plemons, Sarah Snook, Jodie Comer and Greta Lee among the stars to have reportedly turned down key supporting roles... she made no mention of what always sounded like a Kennedy pet project – the sequel centred on Daisy Ridley’s Rey.  Mind you, since that one was announced in 2023, it has shed three high-profile writers – Damon Lindelof, Justin Britt-Gibson and Steven Knight – with its latest being George Nolfi, of Ocean’s Twelve and The Bourne Ultimatum. Little about its now-confirmed director, Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy, a Pakistani-Canadian documentary maker who oversaw a couple of Ms Marvel episodes, says “seasoned studio journeyman and all-around safe pair of hands”. Fans were also left incensed recently when respected auteur Steven Soderbergh revealed that a Ben Solo script he had been working on with Adam Driver had been nixed by the studio... Considering Star Wars’ original appeal was anchored in its fairy-tale simplicity – rural blue-eyed stripling teams up with local wizard and loveable rascal to save the princess and overthrow the evil king – the Kennedy approach felt madly overthought. When Kennedy succeeded George Lucas in 2012 – having previously worked with the Star Wars creator on the Indiana Jones films as a co-founder of Amblin Entertainment – it looked as if she was setting herself up for a late-career victory lap. The mission seemed simple: oversee the production of Disney’s impending “sequel trilogy”, which would tie up Lucas’s own years-in-the-making Skywalker Saga, while turning his brainchild into the sort of IP which – a la Marvel – could be milked from 15 angles at once.  At first, everything was working nicely: her back-to-basics Episode VII: The Force Awakens, became the highest-grossing film ever made, while Gareth Edwards’s Rogue One plugged a narrative gap that had intrigued fans since the release of Lucas’s 1977 original.  But barely a year later, panic was already setting in. Phil Lord and Christopher Miller, the two brilliant pop-art auteurs behind The Lego Movie and the Jump Street comedies, were hired and then fired as directors on a Han Solo-led swashbuckling romp, reportedly because the film they were making just didn’t feel Star Wars-y enough... when the tonally spot-on yet politically provocative Episode VIII: The Last Jedi, was released, the panic bloomed into perpetual corporate meltdown. The Star Wars fanbase, it transpired, was not as uniformly receptive to 2010s US metropolitan progressivism as the Marvel one... The Mandalorian morphed from Star Wars at its most primordial (wind-whipped western and samurai thrills) into mid-tier Star Trek, while the slew of subsequent series all failed to recapture its initial, richly atmospheric magic. The problem was – and perhaps here lies a cautionary tale for the executives at Amazon, whose minds must be boggling at what they might be able to wring from those James Bond rights – Star Wars thrived on its imagination-sparking gaps. In Lucas’s original films, Boba Fett was a tantalisingly enigmatic figure. After seven episodes of his own standalone series, plus multiple walk-ons in other people’s, however, he was just another twerp with a bucket on his head. The prospect of the return of Ewan McGregor as Obi-Wan Kenobi drove attendees at Disney’s D23 convention wild in 2019. But when was the last time you heard fans talk about the drab, meandering result? Gilroy’s Andor presented fans with a grippingly slow-burn drama about the initial sparks of insurrection in 2022, but Dave Filoni’s Ahsoka, released the following year, played like mindless cartoon apocrypha, while 2024’s disastrous The Acolyte ploughed headlong into the political fray Kennedy pointedly abandoned five years previously.  That series ended up being watched almost exclusively by angry YouTubers, who would post snarky takedowns after every episode dropped. With a reported budget of $230m (£172m), the show cost almost $700,000 per minute of screen time: let’s just say the spend is not immediately apparent. Why did it all go so wrong? Because – as Hollywood has started to discover in the past few years, to its cost – the cinematic universe business model is neither endlessly accommodating nor endlessly exploitable. Even the most beloved franchises cinema ever came up with might not survive it. Remember when Star Wars was one of those?"
Marvel is failing too, so

John Nerst on X - "The sequel trilogy is so illustrative of boomer radicalism. It desperately wants to continue being the underdog rebelling against the oppressors that they more or less just ignore that they won in the previous movie and larp on.   If the prequel trilogy was about democracy collapsing, and the OT about rebelling against the Empire, what should the final third be about? How to handle power responsibly, of course. But that would require growing up."

DiscussingFilm on X - "Disney is changing part of ‘STAR WARS: GALAXY’S EDGE’ in Disneyland Park to the original trilogy.
• New props & graphics will be applied to Black Spire Outpost
• Darth Vader, Leia, Luke & Han will be able to meet guests
• John Williams’ score will now play in the park"
The Moonlight Warrior 🌙 on X - "Some may not want to accept it, but Disney is quietly admitting that The Sequel Trilogy was a failure."
This won't stop the cope about what a huge success it is

Meme - Han Solo: "There's no mystical energy field controls my destiny.  It's all a lotta simple tricks and nonsense."
Chewbacca: "Are you shitting me ?! I fought in the Clone Wars alongside Jedi Masters, you moof-milker! I saw Yoda do a backflip and take out Commander Gree like he was some punk!  You're an embarrassment, that's what you are."

Meme - R2D2: "Yo Vader what the f#$k?! Why did you shoot me?"
Vader: "You left me on Mustafar you bastard! I told you to stay with my ship. And what did you do? You leave with ObiWan. I invited you to my wedding you piece of shit! And you leave me to die!"

Meme - "Created an Empire out of scratch
Created jobs for thousands of employees
Hired disabled people for top management positions
Paid the medical bills for his employees
Reduced the unemployment rate in Alderaan to 0%
Never forgot to motivate
Goooooooooooooooood."

Meme - "Star Wars is too diverse and woke now!! I wish it was like 25 years ago! SW
25 years ago: *Plo Koon, Mace Windu, Yoda, Ki-Adi-Mundi, Saesee Tiin, Stass Allie/Adi Gallia, Agen Kolar, Depa Billaba, Even Piell*"
"Kathleen Kennedy bad for woke. It must be really hard for some."
"See, the difference here is, we weren't told any of these characters' sexual orientation (because it simply didn't matter for the story whether Yaddle was a lesbian or Depa Bllaba was bi or lo Koon was asexual) and whenever Samuel L. Jackson was interviewed about his role, he didn't make a whole song and dance about being the first Black Jedi (because, believe it or not, that was just considered to be normal back in 1999), This was natural diversity and George Lucas didn't get off "owning the chuds" and he didn't constantly deflect any and all ciiticism by telling the fans they're incels, bigots, racists, toxic etc."

Meme - "George Lucas: Star Wars is for 12-year-old boys.
*brothel *profanity *torture *drugs *consensual relations *non-consensual relations *paid relations *more drugs
Tony Gilroy: ...and I took that personally."
Left wingers praise Andor because they see iit as a way to self-actualise through cosplaying as a Rebel, but they also mock people who criticise Disney Star Wars because George Lucas said it was for kids. Ironic.

Meme - "In 3 ABY, Empire captain Firmus Piett was asked what it felt like to take human life, "I wouldn't know, I've only ever killed rebels""

Has anyone pointed out how insane it was for Padme's decoy to order the actual Queen to get on her knees and scrub R2D2 with a rag after he's commended for saving the ship? : r/PrequelMemes - "Besides the obvious selling the role, it gives her an excuse to be with the ships crew instead of beside the Queen 24/7"
"The fact that they thought they could pull one over on a Jedi Master still boggles the mind."
"If you assume that Qui-gon knows Padmé is the queen and Padmé knows he knows, their dialogue becomes more nuanced. "The Queen would not approve" "Well the 'queen' is not here, is she?" "Well I don't approve..."  On a side note, in the scene where Padmé meets Anakin for the first time, imagine Anakin as a cocky hormonal teenager instead of a young child. His terrible dialogue suddenly makes sense if you imagine he's trying to hit on her, badly. "Are you an angel?""
"I thought that was the whole point - Qui-gon's intonation even sounds like a wink-wink gesture to the ruse"

Your favorite "nice" thing Vader has done? : r/StarWars - "One of the funniest things is realizing how long it takes him to decide to help Luke.  Anakin really had to think on it."
"Last time he made a snap decision to interrupt a duel it was quite costly for him lol. He learned from that and decided to mentally run through a list of pros and cons before making up this mind this time around :)"
"Not just a duel, but a duel involving the emperor.  Now that i think about it, the scene in RotS really is a dark reflection of the scene in RotJ. Both times he steps in to save someone he sees as family, both times he steps in to save them from someone ostensibly on his own side. Both scenes represent a transition between Vader and Anakin. I'd never really put this together"

MACE WINDU | THE CLONE WARS (2020) – @padawanlost on Tumblr - "'My name is General Mace Windu of the Jedi Order. At this point of the Clone War, I have dismantled and destroyed over 100,000 of you type one battle droids. I'm giving you an opportunity to peacefully lay down your weapons so that you may be reprogrammed to serve a better purpose than spreading the mindless violence and chaos, which you have inflicted upon the galaxy.'"

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