When you can't live without bananas

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Saturday, December 28, 2024

Links - 28th December 2024 (2 - Climate Change)

Cutting food waste would lower emissions, but so far only one state has done it - "When Massachusetts was weighing whether to block restaurants from dumping food waste into landfills, her restaurant started composting without waiting on a law. Right away, there were challenges: $3,000 a year for bins and pickup. Busy dishwashers could contaminate an entire bag of compostable materials by missing a single butter packet. And customers in the habit of just chucking their leftovers needed signage to get uneaten food into the right place. Masterson's operation figured out those problems, but she knows not everyone will... The difficulty of cutting food waste has spoiled several states’ attempts to ban it, and only one — Massachusetts — has actually succeeded, according to a study this month in the journal Science. Massachusetts did it by building one of the most extensive composting networks in the country, inspecting more often, keeping the rules simple and levying heavy fines on businesses that don’t comply, the study found."
When prices go up, "greedy companies" will be to blame

govt.exe is corrupt on X - "#WATCH: China has over 3k coal-fired power plants and emit more CO2 than the USA, India, Russia, Germany, France and Canada combined. It's pretty dumb to think charging Canadians a carbon tax will do anything other than make them poorer... Unless that's their goal!"

Ginny Roth: Enough with the impractical policies. Canada must embrace climate policy realism - "When it comes to climate change policy in Canada these days, regular Canadians aren’t the only ones, to paraphrase Irving Kristol, getting mugged by reality. Andrew Furey, Bonnie Crombie, Jagmeet Singh, and David Eby—all Liberal and NDP leaders—are running away from the consumer carbon tax as fast as their legs can carry them. These are some of the same leaders who only a few years ago would have sold their souls for a selfie with Greta Thunberg.  Trudeau’s Liberals, governing by a thread, are the only ones who continue to cling to the false premise that when Canadians say they want action on climate change, what they mean is they want to go broke.  So, what changed?  Two things. One, the facts on the ground caught up to the ideas in theory. Not only did the carbon tax keep ratcheting up (by design) just as inflation raged, but global energy markets were disrupted by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, making it even more baffling that Canada couldn’t get our natural gas to tidewater. Not only was the economy sluggish and cost-of-living concerns moving into crisis, but the government was also shoveling taxpayer money out the door to for-profit companies, making inflation worse, all in the name of net zero. And two, Canada’s Conservatives elected a leader who had never really given up on arguing that the problem with the carbon tax was a feature, not a bug, and who takes an almost sick pleasure in tearing apart ill-thought-out theories with inconvenient facts.  As soon as someone was willing to challenge the impractical, expensive theories that carbon emissions respect sovereign borders, that Canadians have an option not to heat their homes in the winter, that nuclear is less important than other green energy just because it’s not trendy, or that arguing against any of the above makes you a climate change denying troglodyte, Canadians gave themselves permission to agree.   Now with the current federal government set for likely defeat and some provinces changing their tune, we have an opportunity to chart a new course. If the last decade’s climate policy was defined by naïveté, the next one should be defined by realism. Not denialism, not head-in-the-sand-ism, just sound, realistic policies founded in evergreen principles.   Speaking of principles, let’s start with federalism and subsidiarity. We know now that the consumer carbon tax is toast. But what of the patchwork of provincial policies that price carbon on the back end to incentivize industry to reduce emissions over time? Some will say the next federal government must meddle in provincial jurisdiction, forcing a legislated backstop as the Trudeau government has done. But this would fly in the face of our constitutional reality and our federalism framework at its most functional. Just as with school food programs, dental care, and childcare, the Liberal government’s sweeping ambition and grand vision have run up against the cold hard reality on the ground... a realist climate policy would spend way more time on the most reliable clean energy we have: hydroelectricity and nuclear power.  Conservatives do talk about nuclear a lot, but that’s because the environmental Left is bafflingly opposed to it. Not only did the current environment minister once notoriously campaign to shut it down, but until recently, the federal government excluded nuclear from green energy financing. A new government should run at hydroelectric dam and nuclear opportunities, tackling rising energy demand and climate policy in one fell swoop. Preparing for the future also means getting serious about adaptation. Governments taken in by climate policy naiveté can be reluctant to focus too much on adapting infrastructure to a new climate reality. Perhaps it feels defeatist. But a realist climate policy would focus less on regulating resource development into submission and more on building resilient infrastructure for the future. Economic growth and prosperity always come with trade-offs. We ought to face them head-on. Ultimately, a wise climate policy will reject that which seems only to cater to appearances. It won’t work back from artificial targets for the purpose of fitting in at global climate conferences but rather will work forward from core principles—fair trade, jurisdictional respect, strong economic growth, reasonable cost of living, and lower carbon emissions over time—and apply them to a hard-nosed analysis of the facts."

The complex climate truth about home-grown tomatoes - "Owen and many like her see their allotments or urban gardens as low-impact, low-carbon contributions to their local community. A place where you can grow your own food, with no need for plastic packaging or planes that bring in produce from abroad. And so she was surprised to see reports of a study published in January 2024 that suggested urban agriculture in the US and Europe is on average six times as polluting, in terms of carbon emissions, as conventional, commercial agriculture... Owen says she found the study "thought-provoking" but it left a sour taste. "It's a bit like David and Goliath," she says. "Why are they picking on the small guys?" She wasn't alone in having that reaction. As news of the study spread, social media was awash with prickly comments from gardeners disgusted at the idea that their much-loved veg patch could be harming the planet... The urban agriculture category did not include vertical farms, which tend to be very energy intensive... The results for conventional agriculture, relying on a huge range of data sources, were conspicuously narrow – everything settled on or around 0.07kg of CO2e per serving. Hawes says that this is actually unsurprising, given the economic pressures on the industry, which force it to be highly efficient... One point made by Owen is that there are many broader benefits of allotment-style gardening. It provides a community hub: "People will get together, they'll have tea and cake." One of the Isle of Dogs plots is maintained by a local school, she says. Another is used by patients in the area with various health issues – they spend time on the allotment as a nature-based intervention designed to improve their wellbeing. A 2024 study analysed the biodiversity impacts of 39 community gardens in Munich and Berlin, in Germany, and found that these gardens were havens for threatened plant species as well as pollinators, especially wild bees."
A lot of people were very upset about this (and of course there was the usual anti-Semitism), because clearly growing tomatoes for 2-3 months in a greenhouse next door uses less energy than growing them under the son far away
The environmentalist (and more broadly left wing) checklist can never be fully ticked off, because life involves tradeoffs
When you see the world in terms of power relations, truth suffers

Meme - "Carbon footprint of homegrown food five times greater than those grown conventionally. The study found individual garden infrastructure responsible for increased levels of CO2"
Chris Rittendale: "Yes, it takes 5 times as much energy for me to transport my food 50 feet from my garden to my fridge than to have it trucked 100's of miles, sitting in industrial walk-in fridges waiting for me buy it in a large commercial store and transported home in my car. Yep, makes sense to me."

The Silent Majority on Climate Change - "If you had a campaign budget to drive government action on climate change in the United States, what would be the most effective way to spend it? In a meeting I was in to discuss that question, someone came up with a striking answer: We should spend it all on the issue of abortion. They argued that the best way to drive government action on climate change is for the Democrats to hold power, and the best issue to campaign on to achieve that outcome is not climate, but abortion.  This type of thinking, even if rarely so crisply formulated, is entrenched in the climate movement. Even the corporate and financial worlds, which have been puffing their own ability to lead the climate effort, increasingly see that we depend on bold government action to tackle greenhouse gas emissions. And they figure that it is much easier to get that action from a government that is conducive to it, which a future Kamala Harris administration would likely be.  But grounding climate action in progressive politics is self-limiting and ultimately self-defeating. Most people in the climate movement would agree that to tackle climate change we need support and action across the economy and society, continually reinforced over time, and therefore over multiple election cycles. It may be true that if we could first elect progressive pro-environment governments all across the democratic world, it would become relatively easy to do what needs to be done. But nobody can seriously expect that to happen. The progressive-only approach is not only unfeasible; it is also unnecessary... large numbers of people on both left and right support tackling climate change. But while their motivations are similar—both left and right want to leave behind a better world for the next generation—the measures they will support in order to achieve this are often different... The left-leaning group are a familiar type. These are people who trust their national government and believe in an egalitarian role for the state to meet basic needs for food, housing, healthcare and education, with society run for the sake of the public rather than special interests. As a broad generalization, the prevailing global narratives on climate change, from organizations like the United Nations and from the climate movement more broadly, seem designed to appeal to this group.  The right-leaning group are less familiar. These people are skeptical about the government’s role in their everyday lives, and generally believe we would be better off with less state involvement. They, too, have strong egalitarian morals, but they look for equality more in shared opportunity than in government intervention. They are optimistic, confident about the future, and believe that the world will be a better place for their children than it was for them. Particularly prevalent in the Global South, they tend to be younger, more urban, actively religious, and socially integrated into their families and communities. These supporters on the right are looking for growth and prosperity, and see sustainability as the way to achieve that, not as a substitute for it. For example, they are twice as likely to agree that we should solve climate change in order to “protect ourselves and put our national interests first.” Unsurprisingly, the prevailing global narratives on climate change do not fit so well with this second group. The tension is most overt in language about climate policies, often heavy on restraint and social justice and light on opportunity and growth... Simple arithmetic, however, shows the importance of appealing to both the left and the right. The left group of climate supporters alone is not the majority in any of the countries we researched... Here are three other vital benefits from winning the right’s support.  The first is continuity. The deep, structural transformations needed in our energy systems, agriculture, transport and industry require investors’ confidence that government commitment will be sustained over multiple election cycles. Cross-party support is critical to achieve this.  The second is global reach. The left group is particularly prevalent in Latin America and some countries in the Global North, but is under-represented in big Asian countries which have high and rising emissions. By contrast, the right group accounts for the majority of people in some of these Asian countries, such as China and India. As the world’s carbon emissions rebalance, with emissions generally decreasing in North America and Europe and rising rapidly in Asia, it will become increasingly important to connect with people in these countries.  The third is technology. The left group, which provides much of the voice of the climate movement today, is strong when talking about the scale of the problem, but is often resistant to the technologies we need to solve it. Many oppose, for example, nuclear energy and genetically-modified foods, both of which are critical for providing fossil-free energy and agriculture at the scale needed across the world. The right tends to be much more accepting of these technologies. Bringing them onside will unlock a broader range of climate solutions."
For the left, the most important thing is to push the left wing agenda

JD Vance Made A Good Point On Joe Rogan's Podcast - "the Republican vice presidential nominee repeatedly criticized environmental groups for what he saw as the hypocrisy of opposing the most efficient and abundant form of carbon-free electricity while also describing planet-heating emissions as an existential threat.  “If you think that carbon is the most significant thing — [that] the sole focus of American civilization should be to reduce the carbon footprint of the world — then you would be investing in nuclear in a big way,” Vance said.  “When you say that, the environmentalists say, ‘Well, you’ve got all these poison rocks to deal with afterwards,’” he added, referring to radioactive waste left behind when a reactor refuels with freshly enriched uranium. “Well, the poison rocks problem is a less significant problem than the carbon problem, if you think we’re all going to go extinct in 100 years. So let’s deal with the most pressing problem.” Nuclear power stations produce relatively miniscule amounts of physical waste per unit of electricity generated, compared to the mountains of toxic ash spewed by coal plants or the unrecyclable wind turbine blades and solar panels now piling up in landfills... Vance also called Russia the “biggest funder of the green energy movement in Europe.” While that claim is almost certainly exaggerated, a 2022 report by the Foundation for Political Innovation, a liberal think tank headquartered in Paris, found Russia’s state-owned Gazprom gas company funded particular environmental nonprofits that promoted the permanent phase-out of nuclear power in countries such as Belgium. Before taking office as the Belgian energy minister in 2020 and setting in motion plans to shut down the country’s nuclear plants, Tinne Van der Straeten, a member of the Green Party, owned 50% of a law firm where Gazprom was a top client. “Why are the Russians funding? It’s not because they care about climate change. It’s because they want the Germans and everybody else to buy Russian natural gas,” Vance said. “They realize that if the Germans and French close down all their coal and nuclear factories, Russia is going to have them by the balls.”... Deriding climate advocates as “carbon obsessives,” he said the lingering hesitance among some activists to support nuclear power showed “they obviously don’t believe their own bullshit, which is why I’m skeptical of what they say.”"
Climate change hysteria is not really about preventing climate change

Greta Thunberg on X - "#UsaElection #USA2024 #StopArmingIsrael #FreePalestine #ClimateJusticeNow"
Frank J. Fleming on X - "I remember being baffled by her when she first appeared on the scene. “Maybe you won’t listen to scientists, but I bet you’ll listen to an off-putting, angry, autistic girl!” “Why… why would you think that?” All of you have ever boosted are so, so dumb."

John Ivison: Even climate groups think Guilbeault’s emissions cap is dumb - "Steven Guilbeault has made clear that he plans to go out with bang, championing a record unsullied by compromise, pragmatism or achievement. The activist environment minister released the draft regulations for a cap on oil and gas emissions on Monday, under the cover of blanket U.S. election reporting. The minister’s rationale is that regulation is needed because profits in the sector have soared. Alberta Premier Danielle Smith said Guilbeault has a “deranged vendetta against Alberta” and promised to fight the cap in court. Guilbeault knows the courts have already ruled that resources are a provincial jurisdiction and, deftly noted that his projections suggest that production will keep rising... it is an instructive microcosm of how the Liberals have doomed themselves: driving on with divisive ideological commitments that defy common sense and leave voters behind. Oil and gas is a sector that generated $209 billion in GDP last year, accounted for one quarter of all Canadian exports and directly employs 182,000 people. That apparently makes it a target in Guilbeault’s book. The government release took aim at business for “targeting new production, rather than decarbonization” and demeaned the industry for having seen a tenfold increase in operating profits since the pandemic. The cap is bitterly opposed by the Alberta government and industry and comes right at the moment when Canada is on the cusp of striking its most significant decarbonization agreement — the Pathways Alliance carbon capture and sequestration project — which requires Ottawa, the province and the major oil producers to co-operate and compromise. Pathways is a consortium of major oil producers who account for 95 per cent of oilsands production. At best, this cap is a distraction; at worst, it is a deliberate attempt by the climate radicals in the Liberal government to scupper what many consider a subsidy to increase production (which the Pathways project would, even as it lowers emissions). By comparison, production is likely to be 10-per-cent lower than it would be without the cap by 2030, while gas production would be around 12-per-cent lower. Less activity will inevitably mean fewer jobs, profits, exports and tax revenues. Instead, the goal should be to maximize all those things, while reducing emissions. The Pathways Alliance could cut Canada’s emissions by around 15 megatonnes a year in its first phase, which is around seven times the annual emission reduction that the government’s own regulations say will be saved by the cap. Proponents see Pathways as transformative, creating a ripple effect in Canada’s decarbonization efforts, ensuring banks are more comfortable with this kind of financing and convincing industry that it can increase production while cutting emissions."

Supermarket boss issues dire warning about soaring grocery prices - "The director of an Aussie supermarket chain has warned food prices will increase if farmers are forced to shoulder the $2.3billion cost of carbon reporting. Drakes Supermarkets boss John-Paul Drake labelled the burden of mandatory carbon reporting on farmers, set to start in 2025, as 'beyond unconscionable'. He highlighted Australia's comparatively low carbon footprint on the global scale in discussing why carbon reporting would be unfair to farmers, who are 'the absolute backbone of our great country'. Instead, Mr Drake proposed that the federal government focus on cutting electricity and water costs rather than creating more costly red tape procedures. Mandatory carbon emissions reporting is set to cost farmers an incredible $2.3billion in its first year, which will likely trickle down to customers in the form of higher grocery prices... Nationals federal leader David Littleproud and the National Farmers' Federation also slammed the reporting, which is set to affect at least 1,800 firms from next year. Livestock South Australia president Joe Keynes has urged the federal government to clarify the carbon emissions reporting regime. He called for authorities to 'map out the whole situation'. 'You can't just go to one point of the supply chain and say: 'They'll fix it all', because it's going to be all of us,' Mr Keynes said. Mr Keynes added the lack of clarification also made it unclear how much, if any, of the cost would be passed down to customers through price increases... Mr Drake's latest comments come after he recently slammed hurried push to be green by the Labor government. 'All of a sudden everyone wants to be so green in such a hurry that they've forgotten about the people actually paying these bills,' he told Sky News last month. 'That's who its affecting most.'"
Time to blame greedy supermarkets for rising food prices

Massachusetts ratepayers to pay extra $512M for transmission line for Canadian hydropower - "Central Maine Power’s parent company, Avangrid, and Canada’s Hydro Quebec teamed up on the project that called for a 145-mile (233-kilometer) power transmission line, mostly following existing corridors. But a new 53-mile (85-kilometer) section had to be carved through the woods to reach the Canadian border, something environmental and conservation groups decried. The project had to overcome multiple hurdles. It won all regulatory approvals, but work was halted after Maine voters rebuked the project in a November 2021 referendum."
Why renewable energy will never work

Stephen McIntyre on X - "I recently observed that Asheville NC floods occurred in a watershed where local opposition had prevented the construction of flood control dams proposed by Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) under their flood control mandate.   It appears that recent floods in Valencia, Spain were related to even more perverse policy: the removal of flood control dams in a river system in which floods had been a historic phenomenon. I don't know the local details, but the chances of "green" policy (rather than "climate change", being the primary contributor to the severity of recent Valencia flooding seem very high to me."
The left can point to disasters caused/worsened by their sabotage as "evidence" of climate change, and push through even more of their agenda

Shell wins appeal against landmark climate ruling to cut emissions - "ADutch court has overturned a landmark ruling ordering fossil fuel giant Shell to significantly cut its carbon emissions, in a blow to climate campaigners. In the original 2021 ruling, hailed as “a monumental victory” for activists, Shell was ordered to cut its carbon emissions by 45 per cent by 2030 – compared to 2019 levels – in line with the Paris climate accords. The legal action – brought in 2019 by seven activist groups, including Greenpeace and Friends of the Earth Netherlands – marked the first time that campaigners had sought to use the courts to force companies to curtail activities contributing to the climate crisis. But as world leaders gather for the UN’s Cop29 climate summit, the Dutch court of appeal annulled the previous verdict, ruling that – despite Shell having a responsibility to cut emissions – it was unable to determine a fitting reduction target for oil and gas companies, based on the available science and data."
Not just do Western countries need to destroy their economies, Western businesses need to destroy themselves

Matthew Lau: How Toronto grooms kids to be climate activists - "This year’s deadline to apply for Toronto’s Youth Climate Action Grants has just passed so the city’s climate bureaucrats are now presumably reading grant applications from school children who want to engage in climate change activism. The program, a partnership between the City of Toronto , the Toronto District School Board and the Toronto Catholic District School Board, invites kids from junior kindergarten to grade 12 to apply for up to $1,000 per project or activity to educate and engage Torontonians on climate actions. The application process begins by encouraging kids to read something called the TDSB Youth Climate Action Guide, which declares as a “climate change fact” that global warming poses “a threat to our economies, our environment and our lives.” It makes recommendations to students on how they can take an “intersectional approach to climate justice” and gives them “ behavioural strategies ” on “how to deal with climate anxiety and grief.” How good a use of public resources is this? Are taxpayers really well served by having municipal and educational bureaucrats use their money to have the public schools churn out more Greta Thunbergs? In true bureaucratic form, the City of Toronto publishes detailed guidelines as to what kinds of climate activism are eligible for funding. Social media campaigns are but paid advertising campaigns in newspapers are not. Food gardens can be funded through this grant, but not pollinator gardens, and if a contractor is hired to build a garden box, no more than 25 per cent of the grant money can be used for this purpose. Field trips are eligible but not the rental of conventionally-powered vehicles or other gas-powered equipment. Project supplies and items like pencils, paper, flyers, and posters are allowed, but not “disposable items” like bottled water. Just what is supposed to happen to project supplies if they are not disposed of after the project is completed the climate activism funding guidelines do not say... Here we imagine the thoughts of the City of Toronto central planners trying to arrange everyone’s commutes. “Thompson, Brown, Wilson, and Lee all live less than 5 (kilometres) from their workplace, but which of them should be the one in four who drives? At 4.8 (kilometres), Lee has the longest commute of the four, so he would cause the most global warming if he drives. But Lee has an electric car , so it might actually be best for the environment if he drives and the other three walk, bicycle, or take transit,” the bureaucrat might think to himself."

Trudeau’s new climate disclosures another investment killer - "According to the Trudeau government’s emissions reduction plan, “putting a price on pollution is widely recognized as the most efficient means to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.” Fair enough, but a reasonable person might wonder why the same politicians who insist a price mechanism (i.e., carbon tax) is the most efficient policy recently announced relatively inefficient measures such as “sustainable investment guidelines” and “mandatory climate disclosures” for large private companies. The government claims that imposing mandatory climate disclosures will “attract more private capital into Canada’s largest corporations and ensure Canadian businesses can continue to effectively compete as the world races towards net-zero.” That is nonsense. How would politicians in Ottawa know better than business-owners how their businesses should attract capital? If making climate disclosures were a good way to help businesses attract capital, businesses that want to attract capital would make such disclosures voluntarily. There would be no need for a government mandate... The government has not yet launched the regulatory process for the climate disclosures, so we don’t know exactly how onerous it will be, but one thing is for sure: the disclosures will be expensive and unnecessary, imposing useless costs without any measurable benefit, further discouraging investment in Canada... This latest announcement should come as no surprise. The Trudeau government has demonstrated consistently that its policies — including higher capital gains taxes and a hostile regulatory environment — are completely at odds with what investors want to see. Corporate head offices are fleeing Canada and business investment has declined significantly since the Trudeau Liberals came to power. Capital per worker in Canada is declining due to weak business investment since 2015, and new capital per worker in 2024 is barely half what it is in the United States. It’s also fair to ask, in the face of these onerous polices, where are the environmental benefits? The government says its climate disclosures are needed for Canada to progress to net-zero emissions and “uphold the Paris climate target of limiting global warming to 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels,” but its net-zero targets are neither feasible nor realistic and the economics literature does not support the 1.5 degrees target. Finally, when announcing the new climate disclosures, Trudeau Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault said they are an important stepping stone to a cleaner economy, which is a “major economic opportunity.” Yet even the Canada Energy Regulator (a federal agency) projects net-zero policies would reduce real GDP per capita, increase inflation of consumer prices and reduce residential space — in other words, reduce living standards."
Once again, left wingers think that greedy companies are more evil than they are greedy

A recent surge in global warming is not detectable yet - "The global mean surface temperature is widely studied to monitor climate change. A current debate centers around whether there has been a recent (post-1970s) surge/acceleration in the warming rate. Here we investigate whether an acceleration in the warming rate is detectable from a statistical perspective. We use changepoint models, which are statistical techniques specifically designed for identifying structural changes in time series. Four global mean surface temperature records over 1850–2023 are scrutinized within. Our results show limited evidence for a warming surge; in most surface temperature time series, no change in the warming rate beyond the 1970s is detected despite the breaking record temperatures observed in 2023. As such, we estimate the minimum changes in the warming trend required for a surge to be detectable. Across all datasets, an increase of at least 55% is needed for a warming surge to be detectable at the present time."
Time to force Communications Earth & Environment to retract this irresponsible article promoting misinformation

The blue cities must be fixed

The blue cities must be fixed

"Donald Trump’s victory last week wasn’t the only important election result. Big cities in California shifted away from so-called “progressive” governance. In San Francisco, progressive champion Aaron Peskin was soundly defeated in the mayoral race, and his vacated seat was won by a moderate. Peskin’s close ally, Dean Preston, was unseated by moderate challenger Bilal Mahmood, and the Board of Supervisors is expected to lose its progressive majority. In Los Angeles progressive district attorney George Gascón lost his reelection bid, while Oakland’s Pamela Price was recalled. This followed a national trend of progressive DAs getting the boot; meanwhile, San Francisco’s moderate DA Brooke Jenkins, who succeeded the notorious Chesa Boudin after the latter was recalled, easily cruised to reelection.

It’s possible to interpret these victories as part of a general revolt against progressive governance in big cities. At the local level that’s a good thing, since that governance has proven remarkably poor. But at the national level, the urban revolt against probably helped usher in another four years of Donald Trump. Although large metros still voted for the Democrats overall, they swung harder towards Trump than any other geographic region...

Josh Barro wrote an insightful post-election post arguing that big cities’ failure to curb urban disorder, fiscal waste, and soaring housing costs drove their inhabitants away from the Democratic party...

It’s important to remember that just a few years ago, the general consensus was that big cities in America were doing really well. In 2017, Will Wilkinson cited the success of American cities as a reason to reject Trump...

Wilkinson’s paean to big cities was the culmination of decades of real success. In the middle of the 20th century, America’s cities had been hollowed out, by a combination of soaring urban crime and the lure of the suburbs. In the 1970s, big metropolises were still losing population. NYC almost went bankrupt.

Starting around the 1980s, though, America experienced an urban revival. Big cities began to gain back some of the population they had lost.

There were a number of reasons for this revival. One was the rise of knowledge industries like tech, finance, and business services, which tend to cluster together in cities. As Enrico Moretti shows in The New Geography of Jobs, human capital tended to cluster in big cities after around 1980 or so; Richard Florida also famously documented this in The Rise of the Creative Class. Here’s some data from Jed Kolko for 2000-2014 that’s pretty representative of the general shift:

A second reason for the revival was immigration — just like a century earlier, immigrants flocked to big cities.

Then in the 1990s, crime plummeted. In 1992, New York city had 2,245 murders. By 2016 it was down to 292.

The combination of the crime drop and the knowledge-industry boom made American cities great places to live, at least for a couple of decades. TV shows like Seinfeld and Friends and Sex and the City and How I Met Your Mother celebrated the lightheartedness of upper-class city life. Urban art and fashion and culture bloomed again, producing the hipster era.

But the renaissance was short-lived. In the 2010s, the urban revival stalled, and the populations of big cities plateaued. The reason was simple: housing. Since the 70s, American cities had developed an entrenched culture of NIMBYism and a thicket of laws like rent control, which prevented cities from building new housing in order to accommodate the influx of population. As a result, rents rose. And since rich people — the same knowledge workers who were powering the urban boom — were better able to afford the rising cost of housing, it was middle-class and working-class people who were pushed out of the cities. New York, San Francisco, and the rest became playgrounds for the affluent.

More progressive cities in blue states consistently built less housing than cities in red states...

As a result, progressive cities became less affordable.

This divide continues to this very day. Blue cities are still building a minuscule amount of housing.

At the same time, many blue cities were spending way beyond their means.

Some of this was due to the chronic problem of city pension obligations, which have grown more severe due to unrealistic assumptions about stock returns, the power of public-sector unions, and simple short-sightedness. But some was because local infrastructure and city services got very, very expensive — witness how New York City pays several times the cost per mile to build a new subway that a French city would pay.

Some of this ballooning cost is due to broken bidding processes and the erosion of state capacity. With their own departments having shrunk, progressive cities have been outsourcing more and more of their core functions to inefficient and often corrupt nonprofits. Recall the infamous case of La Sombrita, the ineffectual sun-shade that the Los Angeles Department of Transportation paid a nonprofit $200,000 to create.

San Francisco, as usual, is the worst offender, with a new nonprofit corruption scandal popping up every month or so.

In the late 2010s, blue cities brought yet another problem on themselves: urban disorder. Crime rates began rising in 2015, fueled by national unrest. But blue cities didn’t respond by cracking down on crime as they did in the 90s and 00s. Progressives in the late 2010s reviled and rejected “stop-and-frisk”, “broken windows policing”, and other tools that blue cities had used to keep order in previous decades. Instead, they elected a bunch of progressive prosecutors, enacted more permissive policies toward public drug use, passed laws that made it hard to use violence against shoplifters, and sometimes even reduced penalties for minor crimes.

The result was entirely predictable. Blue cities became increasingly afflicted by pervasive, low-level urban disorder — drug needles in children’s parks, epidemics of car break-ins, and so on. Female friends of mine in San Francisco started to report being followed for blocks, harassed on the train, or even slapped in the head by street people on their way to work. The housing crunch made the disorder much worse, of course, by exacerbating homelessness.

Then the pandemic and the riots hit, and the trend got turbocharged. Without “eyes on the street” to deter crime, and with police cowed or disgruntled by the protests of summer 2020, progressive cities became increasingly lawless, chaotic zones. Violent crime soared in 2020-21, with waves of attacks on vulnerable populations like Asian elders.2

Nowhere was the chaos more evident than in San Francisco. Although murder rates in SF stayed low, more minor crimes, like car break-ins and theft, skyrocketed.

And the epidemic of public drug use in SF got utterly out of control.

After the pandemic, there was an epidemic of store looting that continued for years, causing many of the stores in the downtown area to close.

The American urban renaissance is now well and truly over. In the 2010s and early 2020s, many progressive cities squandered the massive windfall from the knowledge industry boom. With its seemingly invincible network effects and ever-increasing bounty of tax revenues, that boom seemed to convince progressive cities that they had infinite amounts of fiscal and social surplus to dispose of as they pleased — that they could tolerate crime and disorder, spend infinite money, and neglect the need to build new housing, and that none of this would end up mattering. That turned out to be wrong, and now the bill is coming due.

Reviving blue cities will require a number of big changes. Elections like the recent one in San Francisco will be needed to push out “progressive” leaders who want to continue the failed experiments of the last decade. A sensible policy is going to have combine material abundance with intolerance toward crime and disorder...

But fixing blue cities is going to require more than just waves of voter anger or a laundry list of good policies. It’s going to require a mindset change — a shift in people’s understanding of what a city should be and how it should be run.

The most important thing blue cities need to understand and internalize is that anarchy is not a form of welfare.

Many progressives believe that any actions to curb urban disorder — restrictions on sidewalk tents, making people pay for public transit, arresting people for nonviolent crime, and so on — represent the exclusion of marginalized people from public life. In the absence of a full-service cradle-to-grave welfare state, progressives think they can redistribute urban utility from the rich to the poor by basically letting anyone do anything they want.

But in fact, permissiveness toward the behaviors that create urban disorder destroy more value than they redistribute. When you don’t make people pay for public transit, you scare people off the train, thus causing the train to go bankrupt. Pretty soon neither the rich nor the poor have a train, and everyone is screwed. This is the tragedy of the commons.

Measures to curb disorder therefore represent defense of the commons. When Bay Area trains put in new stronger gates to prevent people from riding the train without paying, crime on the train fell and rider satisfaction increased. Similarly, measures to curb shoplifting — including punishing shoplifters and letting security guards and business owners defend their stores with violence — allow local businesses to keep operating, which means that poor and working-class urban residents have places to shop for their daily needs. And so on.

Second, Josh Barro is absolutely right when he says city services should “focus on benefits to the broad public rather than to the people being paid to provide the services”. In other words, progressive cities need to realize that costs are bad for the city government.

The habit of having cities overpay for everything is another form of highly inefficient redistribution. A bunch of people do get paid out — nonprofits, overstaffed contractors, expensive consultants — but at the end of the day the ballooning costs that result from all these payouts mean that cities don’t actually have the infrastructure or services they need. All too often, progressive cities are operated for the benefit of the people who get the money instead of the people who get the stuff.

That payout-focused behavior is driving cities to bankruptcy while worsening the quality of infrastructure and services alike. Cities need to replace consultants and nonprofits with civil servants, implement stricter oversight of outside contractors, improve their bidding processes, and in general do everything they can to bring down the cost of everything they do and provide better value to the citizenry.

Finally, cities must realize that housing is non-negotiable. Fundamentally, cities are places that people live — if people do not have houses to live in, you don’t actually have a city. Housing is what allows businesses to function, because most people live near to where they work. Housing is what allows retail to function, because it creates a sufficient density of customers. Housing sustains knowledge-industry network effects, by allowing more knowledge workers to live close to each other and exchange ideas. In most states, housing generates more tax revenue for the city as well. And of course, housing reduces homelessness.

Blue cities should therefore do absolutely whatever it takes to get a lot more housing. “Whatever it takes” includes upzoning, deregulation, planning, public housing, and cutting back on policies like rent control. The correct method of building housing is “any and all methods”. That’s what it means for a goal to be non-negotiable.

I loved the blue cities of fifteen years ago. They had already sown the seeds of their own decline, but in the brief moment between the chaos of the 1970s and the foolishness of the 2010s, America’s big blue cities were indeed the glory of the country. They can and should recapture that glory."

 

 

Addendum:

This doesn't stop left wingers from crowing about how successful blue states are and how they support red ones.

Left wingers just blame landlords, speculators and "greed" for housing being unaffordable. Apparently this means that left wingers are greedier than right wingers, since left wing areas have more expensive housing.

This won't stop urbanists from claiming that cities are more efficient than the suburbs and subsidise them, so we should force everyone into cities.

Links - 28th December 2024 (1 [including Kids not Reading])

The Elite College Students Who Can’t Read Books - The Atlantic - "College kids have never read everything they’re assigned, of course, but this feels different. Dames’s students now seem bewildered by the thought of finishing multiple books a semester. His colleagues have noticed the same problem. Many students no longer arrive at college—even at highly selective, elite colleges—prepared to read books. This development puzzled Dames until one day during the fall 2022 semester, when a first-year student came to his office hours to share how challenging she had found the early assignments. Lit Hum often requires students to read a book, sometimes a very long and dense one, in just a week or two. But the student told Dames that, at her public high school, she had never been required to read an entire book. She had been assigned excerpts, poetry, and news articles, but not a single book cover to cover... Twenty years ago, Dames’s classes had no problem engaging in sophisticated discussions of Pride and Prejudice one week and Crime and Punishment the next. Now his students tell him up front that the reading load feels impossible. It’s not just the frenetic pace; they struggle to attend to small details while keeping track of the overall plot. No comprehensive data exist on this trend, but the majority of the 33 professors I spoke with relayed similar experiences... Anthony Grafton, a Princeton historian, said his students arrive on campus with a narrower vocabulary and less understanding of language than they used to have. There are always students who “read insightfully and easily and write beautifully,” he said, “but they are now more exceptions.” Jack Chen, a Chinese-literature professor at the University of Virginia, finds his students “shutting down” when confronted with ideas they don’t understand; they’re less able to persist through a challenging text than they used to be. Daniel Shore, the chair of Georgetown’s English department, told me that his students have trouble staying focused on even a sonnet. Failing to complete a 14-line poem without succumbing to distraction suggests one familiar explanation for the decline in reading aptitude: smartphones... “Being bored has become unnatural.” Reading books, even for pleasure, can’t compete with TikTok, Instagram, YouTube. In 1976, about 40 percent of high-school seniors said they had read at least six books for fun in the previous year, compared with 11.5 percent who hadn’t read any. By 2022, those percentages had flipped. But middle- and high-school kids appear to be encountering fewer and fewer books in the classroom as well... Mike Szkolka, a teacher and an administrator who has spent almost two decades in Boston and New York schools, told me that excerpts have replaced books across grade levels... In a recent EdWeek Research Center survey of about 300 third-to-eighth-grade educators, only 17 percent said they primarily teach whole texts. An additional 49 percent combine whole texts with anthologies and excerpts. But nearly a quarter of respondents said that books are no longer the center of their curricula. One public-high-school teacher in Illinois told me that she used to structure her classes around books but now focuses on skills, such as how to make good decisions. In a unit about leadership, students read parts of Homer’s Odyssey and supplement it with music, articles, and TED Talks. (She assured me that her students read at least two full texts each semester.) An Advanced Placement English Literature teacher in Atlanta told me that the class used to read 14 books each year. Now they’re down to six or seven. Private schools, which produce a disproportionate share of elite college students, seem to have been slower to shift away from reading complete volumes—leading to what Dames describes as a disconcerting reading-skills gap among incoming freshmen. But private schools are not immune to the trend. At the prep school that I graduated from five years ago, I took a Jane Austen course my senior year. I read only a single Austen novel. The issue that Dames and other professors have observed is distinct from the problem at community colleges and nonselective universities, where some students arrive with literacy and comprehension deficits that can leave them unable to complete collegiate courses. High-achieving students at exclusive schools like Columbia can decode words and sentences. But they struggle to muster the attention or ambition required to immerse themselves in a substantial text. Faced with this predicament, many college professors feel they have no choice but to assign less reading and lower their expectations... The American Time Use Survey shows that the overall pool of people who read books for pleasure has shrunk over the past two decades. A couple of professors told me that their students see reading books as akin to listening to vinyl records—something that a small subculture may still enjoy, but that’s mostly a relic of an earlier time... Books can cultivate a sophisticated form of empathy, transporting a reader into the mind of someone who lived hundreds of years ago, or a person who lives in a radically different context from the reader’s own... such benefits require staying with a character through their journey; they cannot be approximated by reading a five- or even 30-page excerpt. According to the neuroscientist Maryanne Wolf, so-called deep reading—sustained immersion in a text—stimulates a number of valuable mental habits, including critical thinking and self-reflection, in ways that skimming or reading in short bursts does not."

Daniel Friedman on X - "Which kids are arriving at Columbia unable to read books? Is it the Asian kids from Stuyvesant and TJ and Boston Latin? Is it the rich white kids from Dalton? Is it the National Merit Finalists? Which kids, specifically?"

eigenrobot on X - "None of these kids should be in college.  It is immoral for colleges to take their money while pretending to teach them, and for professors not to fail them.  Most colleges should be shuttered.  Thank you for making it to the end of this tweet I'm sure it was a struggle."

wanye on X - "This is obvious to a lot of you, but just to make it explicit, the way this ratchet works is that you can buy access to some standard level of education for everybody, but there will always be a smaller group of smarter people who desire and would benefit from secondary education. (We literally used to call high school, “secondary school.”)  Because of selection effects, the people who complete this secondary education will tend to have better life outcomes, which regular people, who are for the most part natural blank statists, will confuse for an effect of the education itself. And so there will be a push to get more people to complete that schooling.   Naturally what happens over time as more people pour into those institutions is that the outcomes for graduates converge on the overall group average.   Many graduates of those now-diluted schools will go on to attend new post-secondary educational institutions, after which they will once again achieve greater life outcomes than average, which will again be interpreted by regular people as an effect of the institution, leading to pushes for greater enrollment, and once again resulting in downward pressure on the average outcome of those matriculated.  Many things are like this and many world views are constructed on this same loose sand, which is the confusion of selection effects for institutional ones.  If one wants to provide free access to all citizens to the materials available on the average college campus on the grounds that the material itself is of value to the median student, then fine, but it is a mistake to appeal to the outcomes of existing students when arguing for greater enrollment.  This, by the way, is why you should not expect future immigrants in a less selective immigration regime to perform as well in this country as have earlier ones. It’s the same basic mistake."
When you mistake a signalling mechanism for a mechanism to add value

Colby Cosh: The time of novels is ending; the age of post-literacy is nearly here - "The people who screech about “screen time” seem to have no idea whatsoever of how much time they themselves spent in childhood watching cartoons, on a screen, passively , to the point of stupefaction... One of the things I learned from lifelong consumption of big, heavy, difficult books is that the novel is a quite recent innovation, and that lively, accomplished, dynamic civilizations existed before anyone was writing novels. Dante and Erasmus and Shakespeare, after all, never heard of nor imagined them. There is some comfort to be taken from this, even if I can’t help being shocked at the thought of a world where Crime and Punishment is an esoteric object of study for a high-IQ remnant, the social equivalent of a cantata, instead of the absorbing popular entertainment it originally was."

Steve McGuire on X - "Professors wondering why students don’t think books are important could start by looking at the essay questions prepared by their admissions offices. St. John’s College asks applicants to write about a great book. None of the Ivies requires applicants to even mention a book."

The Books Briefing: How Gen Z Came to See Books as a Waste of Time - The Atlantic - "Why is this happening? The allure of smartphones and social media came up, and it appears that many middle and high schools are teaching fewer full books. (One student arrived at Columbia having read only poems, excerpts, and news articles in school.) But one possible cause that I nodded to in my article is a change in values, not ability. The problem does not appear to be that “kids these days” are incurious or uninterested in reading. Instead, young people might be responding to a cultural message: Books just aren’t that important. The professors I spoke with didn’t think their students were lazy. If anything, they were shocked at how overscheduled and anxious college kids are today—and they saw that their students’ schedules are crowded with activities that are less about personal development and more relevant to future employment... In 1971, 37 percent of students said that a central objective of their college years was to become well-off financially. Seventy-three percent said they attended college to develop a meaningful philosophy of life. By 2015, those numbers had almost reversed. Eighty-two percent of students said that it was essential for them to use college to become well-off financially, while 47 percent said they wanted to develop a meaningful philosophy of life. Pundits and parents alike have emphasized preprofessional courses and downplayed the importance of humanistic study, Joseph Howley, a classics professor at Columbia, told me. In this environment, spending hours reading a novel may seem unproductive. In some ways, this is a hopeful conclusion: If we’ve shifted what we hold in esteem, then it stands to reason that we could, as a society, shift back. The responsibility doesn’t lie only with Gen Z. Everyone who’s upset about the change has a role to play in reversing it."

Thai netizens fume over Japanese discrimination against foreigners - "Thai netizens are criticising a photo of a sign in Japan posted on social media earlier this week that shows difference in treatment of locals and foreign customers.  The sign of an unnamed establishment in Japan contains wordings in three languages. The first line reads “No vacancy” in English, while the second line is in Chinese, which can be translated as “Too bad the seats are full”.  The last line, written in Japanese in a red, smaller font, can be translated as, “If you can read Japanese, please come inside”.  Many netizens slammed the establishment for discrimination against foreigners, while some reasoned that the owner probably did not speak other languages, so they decided to accept only Japanese-speaking customers... Facebook user “iwshmkmor” on Wednesday proposed an approach to prevent machine translation from cracking the Thai language.  “We should use Thai spoonerism to deter machine-translation,” the post said. “For example, ‘คนไทยเข้าฟรี’ (free entry for Thais), when written in spoonerism will be ‘คนทรีเข้าไฟ’, which google will translate as ‘tree man enters the fire’.”  “This way, no one would accuse Thai establishments of having double standards, and assume that it was a translation error,” he said."

Thai netizens fume over Japanese discrimination against foreigners : r/Thailand - "With signage using thai numerals to hide double pricing I think thai netizens should look to the evil within."
Thai netizens fume over Japanese discrimination against foreigners : r/Thailand - "Lol, now you know how it feels. It's everywhere in Asia, shameless and in your face."
Thai netizens fume over Japanese discrimination against foreigners : r/Thailand - "God, imagine discriminating against foreigners! Thais would never do that 😂🙄😭"

In Henry Kissinger's Worldview, Only the Powerful Mattered - "The more one thinks about the Kissinger alphabet soup, though, the more a pattern emerges. The countries where Kissinger left the most damaging legacies are concentrated in what is often fancied as the global south. As geography goes, this is a nonsensical grab bag that is fiendishly hard to define. In geopolitics, though, it is as easy as pie. What we speak of as the global south simply means what historians, diplomats, and international relations experts have long referred to as the global “periphery.”"

Scientists tagging birds with colored bands and accidentally making the tagged birds more appealing to mates is so funny.... – @ice-block on Tumblr - "Scientists tagging birds with colored bands and accidentally making the tagged birds more appealing to mates is so funny. Imagine being abducted by aliens and they give you a gucci belt"

Meme - "How she looks at you the next morning after you ate her ass"

Meme - *Busty Ugly Asian girl missing teeth* *Horse drawing meme*

https://www.facebook.com/550146023/posts/10160137539701024/Joshua Chiang | Facebook - "Bak Chor mee, hay mee, chicken rice, Kway Chap, prata, nasi lemak, beef rendang, wanton mee, Hokkien mee, bak kut teh, char sioe png, sio bak... Phnom Penh here I come!!!!!"

Meme - Eat meat: *Cheetah, Tiger,, Lion, lean*
Eat vegetables: *Elephant, Pig, Hippo, fat*

Meme - Al Bumin @Langerhans_isle: "Can't we have just one normal party? *Democrats kneeling in Kente cloth* *Republicans praying around Trump*"
i/o @eyeslasho: "It's all I ask. Each party, prayerful in its own way, but praying to different Gods. *AI optical illusion of George Floyd made out of garbage*"

Meme - i/o @eyeslasho: "No matter who you are or what your circumstances may be, no matter the breadth of your knowledge or the level of your education or the endowment of natural gifts that you might enjoy or lack, I am confident that you will never post a tweet as retarded as this one."
Myron Gaines @MyronGainesX: "I'm no fan of Hitler, but you're wrong... Hitler had many Jewish commanders and generals in his military. This whole "Hitler hated the jews" is nonesense. He hated degeneracy and central banking that caused Germany massive debt after It just so happened Jews ran the government, banks, and porn industry when he came into power in all the things he opposed. So he created the Haavara agreement and let them peacefully leave Germany with all their money and possessions in tact. Learn your history before making false claims."

Meme - ">Be me
>Having a good friend who's a total incel, female contact hasn't even had his first kiss
>Playing World of Warplanes with him while we talk on Discord during his birthday
>"I'm so sad anon, I'm alone and I feel like I'll always be"
>idea.webp
>"Give me a sec"
>Download an Al voice changer and putting on a female voice
>Sounds a little fake, but it'll do
>Getting back on the call and telling him it's just going to be roleplaying and he can call me with a femenine version of my name
>Continuing to play as normal, talking about life and even singing happy birthday to him
>I've never heard him happier
>The next day
>Asking him how he's doing
>Telling me that I really made his day and that I'm a good friend
>That night he calls me drunk and through tears admits to me that he jerked off thinking of me as a woman the night before
>Telling my wife about it
>She finds it hilarious and tells me I deserve it"

Meme - "We all dreamed of looking like Leo and Britney when we were teenagers. And now, we finally do *old Leonardo diCaprio and Britney Spears*"

Britney Spears Claims She's 5 Years Old in Birthday Video - Newsweek
"Free Britney"

Meme - "Did you notice? When Hugh passed away, No one said, "He's in a better place now." *Hugh Hefner with Holly Madison, Bridget Marquardt and Kendra Wilkinson*"

Meme - "Marketplace. $175 - 2010 Macbook Pro 13 inch With 250GB HD (With Charger). Works Great"
"Is this still available?"
"Yes"
"Why so cheap? Does it have any issues?"
"Do you want to buy it?"
"I wouldn't be asking if that wasn't the case"
"Should I raise the price"
"Bro I'm just asking if it has any issues"
"The title literally says works great"
"And the pornsite ads say hot single mothers wanna fuck in my area bro somethings don't come as advertised"

Meme - "Ctrl + Alt + Del. Voluptuous Concealment"
Lara Croft: "I'm at the ruins. Damn, men with guns"
"YOU EVER NOTICE HOW NEARLY EVERY ANCIENT RUIN YOU DISCOVER IS ALWAYS BEING DISCOVERED BY SOME BAD GUYS AT THE SAME TIME?"
Lara Croft: "You ever notice how you SHOULD SHUT THE FUCK UP? INDIANA JONES HAD TO DEAL WITH NAZIS. MEN WITH GUNS AREN'T THAT UNCOMMON IN THE ARCHEOLOGICAL FIELD. Now hush up. I'm trying to remain perfectly hidden"
*Guard notices something amiss - her breasts poking out*

Meme - ">one of the smartest men in history
>still buys the top and gets rugpulled
"South Sea Stock December 1718 - December 1721"
"Newton invests a bit. Newton exits happy. Newton's friends get rich. Newton re-enters with a lot. Newton exits broke"
>It's said that Newton, upon reflection of his financial misadventure, ruefully remarked, "I can calculate the movement of stars, but not the madness of men.""

Meme - "Sydney Sweeney is being considered for the role of Black Cat in Spider-Man 4. The resemblance is uncanny *Cleavage*"

Monkeys know who will win the election – primal instincts humans share with them shape voters’ choices - "Monkeys tended to look at the candidates with more masculine facial features – and these were the candidates more likely to win in the real elections. Jaw prominence had a direct relationship with vote share."
This assumes that candidates with more masculine facial features don't win because that correlates with something else meaningful

Thread by @Scientific_Bird on Thread Reader App – Thread Reader App - "New study has released personality profiles of 263 occupations.  Short thread of the occupations that are the most extreme with respect to each of the five personality dimension (I will mention only occupations with a sample of at least 100).
Neuroticism.
High:
- Visual Artists
- Graphic and Multimedia Designers
- Musicians, Singers and Composers
Low:
- Health Services Managers
- Finance Managers
- Information and Communications Technology Services Managers
Extraversion:
High:
- Advertising and Public Relations Managers
- Sales and Marketing Managers
- Human Resource Managers
Low:
- Software Developers
- Electrical and Electronic Equipment Assemblers
- Unspecified Laboratory Technicians/Assistants
Openness:
High:
- Visual Artists
- Psychologists
- University and Higher Education Teachers
Low:
- Crane, Hoist and Related Plant Operators
- Car, Taxi and Van Drivers
- Manufacturing Labourers
Agreeableness:
High:
- Psychologists
- Audiologists and Speech Therapists
- Software Developers
Low:
- Self-employed/Entrepreneurs
- Real Estate Agents and Property Managers
- Sales and Marketing Managers
Conscientiousness:
High:
- Construction Managers
- Finance Managers
- Health Professionals (unspecified)
Low:
- Visual Artists
- Graphic and Multimedia Designers
- Unspecified Editors (text, book etc.)"

Jeffrey Wang on X - "I got into Harvard + almost every college I applied to w/ an essay about studying at McDonalds. Had multiple admissions officers write me handwritten letters complimenting me on it  To any frantic high school senior, the best advice I got was - keep in mind that the admissions officer is some  dude lying on a couch reading your essay at 10pm. Make sure that this person is entertained and thinks that you're an authentic human being.   Godspeed🫡"
Yuan Yi Zhu on X - "It's fascinating that American higher education has decided on autobiographical fiction as a means to apportion one of the world's most valuable resources."

Meme - FuckCars @FuckCarsReddit: "Post your favorite "Desire Paths". These are paths that naturally form as a result of bad planning."
Denver is too damn hig... @DenverDamn: *cars in bike lane*
FuckCars @FuckCarsReddit: "no! not like that!"
Denver is too damn high @Denv...: "result of bad planning!"

Meme - Frank DeScushin @FrankDeScushin: "A Texas cheating scandal led to 200 unqualified teachers in the classroom, at least two of whom were sexual predators.  How the scheme worked:  Prospective teachers worried they couldn't pass Texas' certification test paid the pictured man, Vincent Grayson, $2500 to have someone take the test for them. Grayson then gave 20% to certifying official, Tywana Gilford Mason, to allow the racket, and Nicholas Newton, assistant principal at Booker T. Washington High School, took the test for unqualified candidates.  Grayson pocketed over a million dollars in the scheme.  In New America, noticing a pattern in these scandals where teachers and school administrators collude for fraudulent certification or to change students' grades is often treated as bad as the scandals themselves."
"200 TEACHERS CAUGHT: CHEATING SCANDAL WASHINGTON HIGH. Who's Been Charged: Vincent Grayson, 57: Head boys basketball coach at Booker T. Washington High School in Houston ISD, Grayson is accused of organizing the scheme. Tywana Gilford Mason, 51: Former director and certifying official at the Houston Training and Education Center, Mason allegedly helped conceal the proxy scheme as a test proctor. Nicholas Newton, 35: Assistant principal at Booker T. Washington High School, Newton reportedly acted as a proxy test-taker in the cheating ring. Darian Nikole Wilhite, 22: Proctor at TACTIX, Wilhite is accused of taking bribes to allow proxy testing. LaShonda Roberts, gp: Assistant principal at Yates High School, Roberts is alleged to have recruited nearly 100 teachers to participate in the scheme."

Friday, December 27, 2024

Links - 27th December 2024 (2 - Palestine/Middle East Peace [including Amsterdam/Berlin Attacks])

How the attacks on Israeli football supporters in Amsterdam unfolded - "The attacks on Israeli football supporters in Amsterdam this week followed tensions that began brewing days before between the fans and pro-Palestinian activists and other people in the city, a chronology of events showed. Supporters of Israeli soccer team Maccabi Tel Aviv were targeted for beatings by groups of thugs in the early hours of Friday following a match with Amsterdam's Ajax, the city's mayor Femke Halsema has said. Among dozens of Israeli supporters who were chased and assaulted, five suffered injuries needing hospital treatment, police said. In all, 63 suspects have been arrested and authorities promised an investigation, as politicians within the country and beyond expressed their condemnation. Tension began to build on Wednesday as some of the 3,000 visiting Maccabi supporters had minor altercations with locals including taxi drivers and Ajax supporters in the city centre, police said. A police report said groups of Maccabi supporters burned a Palestinian flag on Dam square, pulled another down from a nearby building and vandalised a taxi. After a call on social media, angry Muslim taxi drivers came together outside a casino where 400 Maccabi supporters were gathered, and police intervened in skirmishes. Some Dutch media have reported that social media videos from Wednesday show the beating of a Muslim taxi driver and youths yelling antisemitic slurs at a Maccabi supporter who was pushed into a canal. Reuters was unable to verify those descriptions of the scenes. On the day of the game, Maccabi supporters were filmed chanting anti-Arab slogans in front of the National Monument on Amsterdam's central Dam square, including "Fuck you Palestine", in videos verified by Reuters. Dutch pro-Palestinian groups planned a demonstration outside the stadium during the game. They argued that the match should have been cancelled because of Israel's war in Gaza, in which more than 43,000 Palestinians have been killed... Calls to target returning Maccabi supporters began circulating on Dutch messaging groups, leading to what mayor Halsema described as "antisemitic hit and run assaults". Police used to dispersing football mobs could not easily stop smaller, highly mobile groups of attackers with no obvious club allegiance. Police said they collected around 200 Maccabi fans on Dam square to protect them and escort them back to their hotels. But many others were assaulted elsewhere in town, and the perpetrators quickly fled on motor scooters. Social media videos verified by Reuters showed groups attacking Israelis, kicking victims after they had fallen, throwing fireworks and in one instance shouting: "That's Palestine. That's Gaza, mother-fucker...now you know how it feels."... Antisemitic incidents have surged in the Netherlands since Israel launched its assault on Gaza after the Hamas attacks on Israel in October 2023. Many Dutch Jewish organisations and schools have reported threats and hate mail. Less than 1% of Amsterdam's population is Jewish following the Holocaust, while around 15% is Muslim, mostly second and first generation immigrants from North Africa and the Middle East. The conservative Dutch government has vowed to implement Europe's strictest measures to limit immigration and reject asylum-seekers."
Terrorist supporters were pretending that this was just "Zionists" who taunted Palestinians getting their just desserts. By this logic, October 7th justifies nuking Gaza and killing everyone in there

Antisemitic violence plagues Amsterdam streets, trams set alight - "Violence erupted on the streets of Amsterdam on Monday night in the second wave of antisemitic attacks to hit the Dutch capital over the last week, according to local media reports. One of the city's famous trams was set alight by rioters dressed in black and armed with fireworks, according to De Telegraaf. The rioters threw debris and shouted "Kanker Joden" (cancer Jews), but it is used to mean "f*** the Jews."... Masked men reportedly roamed the streets yelling "Free Palestine." De Telegraaf reported that journalists witnessed a bystander being ripped from his bike and beaten by the rioters.  It was later reported that private vehicles and bikes were destroyed.  The young rioters reportedly actively sought to confront officers.  Geert Wilders, leader of the PVV, responded to the events by saying, "After the Jew-hunt, the Intifada."... Following the attack, the city announced a three-day ban on all demonstrations to maintain public order. Furthermore, the government had announced it would hold stricter border control until December 9.  Hundreds of people defied the ban, which had been upheld by a local court earlier in the day.   They chanted "Free Palestine" and "Shame on you" and called for an end to the war in Gaza."

Jewish youth soccer team attacked in Berlin by knife-wielding mob - "Players from TuS Makkabi, a youth under-17 soccer team in Berlin, were reportedly chased and assaulted on Thursday after playing against DJK Schwarz-Weiß Neukölln, according to international media reports.   The players were reportedly chased by a crowd wielding sticks and knives, according to German news site Tagesspiegel daily.  Players from the opposing team reportedly yelled “Free Palestine” at the Jewish team, one of the player’s fathers told the media. The children were also allegedly spat at repeatedly, and the father claimed the referee failed to intervene... The club members have reportedly faced similar abuse over the last month, the Telegraph reported. A fan of the team, wearing a scarf representing the team, was in a cafe when he was reportedly punched in the face after being asked if he was Jewish."
Terrorist supporters can't lie that this is self-defence. But they hate "Zionists" anyway and think they deserve to die

The Amsterdam 'Jew hunt' wasn't spontaneous. It was planned - "“I’m not Jewish!” cried one man as he was beaten by a mob. Others were forced to prove this by presenting their passports. One man jumped into a canal to escape his tormentors. Still others were attacked with fireworks, punched in the head, and, in one case, kicked repeatedly while unconscious on the ground. This could be mistaken for a scene from one of the many antisemitic purges Europe has witnessed in past centuries. But it happened in Amsterdam on Thursday night, when Israeli football fans were hunted down in a coordinated act of violence... Some media outlets, however, have framed the violence as more of a “clash” between rival football thugs—sparked by Israeli fans chanting anti-Arab profanities and tearing down a Palestinian flag. Admittedly, the Maccabi Tel Aviv fans, who refer to themselves as “super Jews”, were at times chauvinistic and loutish in the build-up to their game against Ajax; reportedly harassing locals, bellowing “f*** you Palestine”. And this may have grated some of Amsterdam’s large Arab-Muslim population. But what followed transcended the bounds of uncouth football rivalry: it was an act of calculated barbarism, organized over WhatsApp and Telegram. “Tomorrow after the game, at night, part 2 of the Jew Hunt,” one message read. This was not idle talk. Legions of antisemitic ghouls, some carrying knives, prowled around the Dutch capital in search of targets. A short drive from the Anne Frank House, Jews were hounded, beaten and humiliated for one reason only: because they are Jews. Those targeted may have had no association with the Maccabi troublemakers. This mattered little to their attackers, to whom they pleaded for mercy, appealing in vain to a humanity and reason that simply weren’t there. Predictably, some pundits were quick to attempt to justify the unjustifiable. I suspect this is in part because the villains of this story — who are modern-day Brownshirts — consist largely of Dutch-Arabs. Some donned keffiyeh scarves, others wailed “free Palestine” and “now you know how it feels” as they pummelled Israeli tourists. This pogrom-in-miniature, rooted in an ethno-religious conflict thousands of miles away, is emblematic of a far larger problem in Europe. For years, Holland and other European countries have invited vast numbers of people whose values and culture are often at odds with their own. This was a bold experiment made to appear less hazardous through rose-tinted spectacles. Europeans thought vainly that because we had largely set aside ethno-sectarian politics after the atrocities of the 20th century that others would do the same once they arrived. But they have not. Instead, many newcomers have brought their cultural and political allegiances with them — often responding to events in the Middle East with violence in Europe. To make matters worse, the problem tends to compound as later generations can display more cultural separatism than their forebears. As a result, our societies have gradually splintered into fragile, Lebanon-like entities, where sectarian divides often eclipse any sense of cohesive national identity. Some of the consequences of this were made apparent on Thursday night. Perhaps the most unsettling part of this self-described “Jew hunt,” which left five people hospitalized, was the paltry response of the Dutch police. Reports suggest officers failed to act swiftly and, in some cases, to act at all. “I and two others ran to the nearest police station, but they didn’t open the door,” one of the victims claimed. One hopes there is a reasonable explanation for this. Yet Amsterdam’s police force — with its increasingly diverse make-up — may have had other reasons for their reluctance to intervene. Last month, the Dutch Jewish Police Network warned that some officers “no longer want to protect Jewish targets or events,” vaguely citing “moral dilemmas.” Ethnic fault lines in policing aren’t unique to the Netherlands; a similar trend can be seen in Britain, where the Metropolitan Police sometimes deploys ethnic associations to manage crime in their own communities — in effect, allowing certain ethnic groups to police themselves. The erosion of impartial law enforcement is one of the many unintended consequences of Europe’s experiment with mass migration and multiculturalism — outcomes which politicians have, for decades, either failed to foresee or chosen to overlook. The events of Thursday night highlight a painful truth: Europe’s experiment with mass migration has left Jews increasingly vulnerable. Antisemitism has risen as the continent has absorbed more people from regions where this prejudice is endemic, particularly in parts of the Islamic world. In France, for example, “nearly all” violent antisemitic acts have been linked to individuals with a Muslim background, according to sources cited by the Times of Israel. The consequences of this rising antisemitism are stark: Jews are leaving Europe. Over the past 50 years, Europe’s Jewish population has halved—from 3.2 million in 1970 to 1.3 million in 2020. During the same period, Europe’s Muslim population has doubled, now totalling more than 26 million people. The scenes in Amsterdam — reminiscent of Europe’s darkest hours — will likely accelerate this trend, as more Jewish Europeans are made to feel unsafe. Ironically, they also serve as a stark reminder of the enduring need for the state of Israel."
Clearly, they meant that they were hunting "Zionists". The Mossad must have sent that false flag message about the "Jew Hunt"
Diverse police are obviously more effective

'We're being rejected outright': Amsterdam mayor bans rally against antisemitism - "Amsterdam Mayor Femke Halsema banned a rally against antisemitism that was set to occur Thursday evening, citing a concern for Jewish citizens of the city, according to the mayor’s office. “This Thursday is one of the busiest shopping evenings of the year. There is a good chance that there will be spontaneous dissenting voices,” a spokeswoman for the mayor said. “The police do not have sufficient abilities at that location to guarantee the safety of participants in the demonstration and for the shopping public.”... “It is deeply disheartening that in 2024 the safety of peaceful demonstrators cannot be guaranteed on the Dam in Amsterdam. Meanwhile, pro-Palestinian demonstrations continue to be held at the very site where we annually commemorate the horrific murder of Jews during World War II,” said van Oordt, according to De Telegraaf. “It is extremely unfortunate that the Amsterdam triangle reached this decision, especially since pro-Palestinian demonstrations continue to take place at Dam Square, the site where the annual commemoration of Jewish victims of the Holocaust occurs,” van Oordt added. “Moving the rally feels like a slap in the face to the Jewish community. We are being told we cannot unite at the National Monument to stand against hatred and intimidation.” The mayor’s office defended its decision and claimed that it had made the same request for pro-Palestine rallies at the same location, according to De Telegraaf. An upcoming pro-Palestinian protest is set to be held on Saturday in Dam Square. De Telegraaf reported that no statement has yet been made about whether it will be moved."

They are hunting Jews in Amsterdam. Canada could be next - "Anne Frank famously wrote: “What is done cannot be undone, but one can prevent it from happening again.” Anne Frank was from Amsterdam, the sight of last night’s bloody pogrom and the Netherlands failed to prevent it from happening again. If Canada, which is a mirror reflection of the Netherlands, continues on the path it is today, it too will see this unfathomable eruption of violence. Antisemitism today is surging unabated. The streets of Toronto, Montreal, Ottawa and beyond, are witnessing almost daily protests by pro-Hamas mobs, with chants to “Globalize the Intifada” and “Free Palestine,” just as in Amsterdam, while the police watch from the sidelines, and many elected leaders remain silent. Synagogues are being attacked. Jewish kindergartens and schools are being shot at, and Holocaust museums are being protested. Elite Canadian universities are welcoming convicted terrorists, Hamas sympathizers and UN officials, with deep-seated histories of employing antisemitic tropes, Holocaust distortion and justification of the October 7 attacks. All this while the Canadian government proudly announces an unchecked mass intake of purported refugees and migrants from Gaza, the same Gaza that produced such widespread support for the Hamas monsters responsible for October 7... Whilst the denunciations of antisemitism are nice, without real, tangible, and urgent action, they are entirely meaningless, and it is only a matter of time before we see a pogrom on the streets of Canada. It should not be lost on us that the attacks in Amsterdam occurred on the eve of Kristallnacht (“Night of Broken Glass”), when in 1938, Nazis and their enablers across Germany and Austria razed over 1,400 synagogues, smashed the windows of and plundered over 7,500 Jewish-owned businesses, murdering almost 100 Jews in a violent pogrom, that was a jarring prelude to the further evil that would ensue."
Time to use Charlottesville from 2017 as an excuse to jail more white "far right" "extremists" to keep Jews "safe"

Jews and gay people should hide identity in 'Arab neighbourhoods', says Berlin police chief - "  Jews and gay people should hide their identity in parts of Berlin with large Arab populations, the German capital’s police chief has warned.  “There are areas of the city, we need to be perfectly honest here, where I would advise people who wear a kippah or are openly gay to be more careful,” said Barbara Slowik.  “There are certain neighbourhoods where the majority of people of Arab origin live, who also have sympathies for terrorist groups,” she said, adding that they were often “openly hostile towards Jews”.  She told the Berliner Zeitung newspaper that “violent crimes against Jewish people are few and far between, but every act is one too many”.  A fortnight ago, a youth football team from Makkabi Berlin, a Jewish sports club, reported being “hunted down” by youths carrying sticks and knives after a match in an Arab neighbourhood of the city. The victims, aged 13 to 15, said they were spat at and insulted throughout the match.  The incident took place on the same night that migrant gangs filmed attacks on fans of the Israeli club Maccabi Tel Aviv after a European football match against Ajax in Amsterdam. Germany has seen a surge in anti-Semitism since the beginning of the war in Gaza, with reported incidents doubling in 2023 compared with previous years.  Since Oct 7 last year, Berlin’s police have opened more than 6,000 investigations connected to anti-Semitism, according to Ms Slowik. Most of these concern online hate speech or graffiti.  Other incidents in Berlin include a football fan being attacked for wearing a scarf with a Star of David on it, a petrol bomb attack on a synagogue shortly after the Oct 7 massacres in southern Israel, and a couple being attacked in a fast-food outlet for speaking Hebrew. On the day of the Hamas massacres, men handed out sweets in celebration in the Berlin neighbourhood of Neukolln, an incident that shocked Germany and led to deep anxiety over whether the recent waves of migration had made Jewish life less safe.  Neukolln, also famous for its LGBT nightlife, is the Berlin district with the highest Arab population. The two communities have coexisted for years, although there have been several incidents of gay couples being physically assaulted in recent years. Earlier this month, a large majority of lawmakers in the Bundestag, Germany’s national parliament, voted for a new resolution against anti-Semitism that mentioned migration from the Middle East as a factor.  The resolution, drafted by the Greens, the Social Democrats and the Christian Democrats, warned of an “alarming extent of anti-Semitism based on migration from countries where anti-Semitism and hostility to Israel are widespread due to state indoctrination”.  The resolution could lead to refugees having their asylum status taken away if they are found guilty of committing anti-Semitic crimes."
Weird. I thought no go zones was a far right conspiracy theory and misinformation

Berlin police advise LGBTQ and Jews to avoid Arab-majority areas : r/worldnews - "don't you know, it's my religious freedom to hate you but it's xenophobic when you are afraid of me"

Berlin police advise LGBTQ and Jews to avoid Arab-majority areas : r/worldnews - "Lol...soon Jews and LBGT will be forced to leave Europe so they won't upset the Muslim community."
"People keep telling Israelis to "go back to Europe" but when Europe is like this, where are they expected to go? Absurd"
"Also over half of Israelis are from Arab countries and they can't go there either"
"yep, that's why they came up with Israel in the first place..."
"Setting aside that only 25% of Israelis are Ashki and the vast majority of Israelis are Mizrahi or Sephardi or Beta Israel (so ... not 'european' at all)... And setting aside that Jews were never 'europeans' according *to* europeans at any point in history up until basically the modern era--Jews did 'go back to poland" after the holocaust. After the holocaust many who survived camps went back to the places they were living before. But what happened? The locals welcomed them? No... over and over and over the locals killed them. After the war. And so the Kielce Pogrom was the last straw. What happened in Kielce? A European kid lied blaming the Jews for something bad happening and the locals slaughtered them. So when people say people went to Israel because of the Holocaust—no! Jews went by the hundreds of thousands to Israel because of Kielce, Poland … which was after the war was over.  Because Hitler wasn’t the only problem. His death didn’t mean squat to locals who still hated Jews. We knew after Kielce that no one learned a damn thing.   Meanwhile the absurdity of people saying 'before zionism' everything was fine in 'Palestine'. BHAHAHHAHAHA. No. The Jerusalem Riots of 1834, Safed Pogrom of 1834, Safed Pogrom of 1837, Petah Tikva Raid of 1886, Jaffa Riot of 1911, Jaffa Riots of 1921, and 1929 Massacres and Riots of Jerusalem, Safed, and Habron... I could go on and on and on. Jews living under Arab Muslim rule were never welcome or safe. We were the target of massacres and rape and looting. It's such a fucking asshole thing when people peddle that bullshit that we all got along if only Israel didn't exist. Israel exists for a very good reason that isn't only about the holocaust or what happened in Europe. No, it exists as much for Jews who have literally been in eretz Israel since the birth of Judaism in that land."

Berlin police advise LGBTQ and Jews to avoid Arab-majority areas : r/worldnews - "I feel like this fetishization of other cultures is a mere symptom, not the cause. Anything but the West! We're so terrible.  This self-flagellation and cultural masochism is truly pathological.  Douglas Murray covers this brilliantly in The War on the The West."
"It was weird to me as an immigrant, reading my school textbooks about all these great scientists and thinkers. Made me feel “wow this culture is great, Western enlightenment values changed the world, we should be like this!” But then when I got older, I noticed the western self hate termites burrow deeper, disparage western culture at every turn and elevating other cultures in some way to make themselves look sophisticated and progressive.  It’s all so strange and disappointing. Large portions of our populations have this affliction."
"Yeah, and it's managed to permeate education, basically turning universities into indoctrination camps where any viewpoint diversity, failing to toe the "party line," gets you ostracized.  Entertainment media and a massive chunk of the news media have been co-opted for the same purpose.  Our greatest enemy is ourselves. This is a very odd cultural self-destruction that is taking place."

Berlin police advise LGBTQ and Jews to avoid Arab-majority areas : r/worldnews - "If you can't protect your own citizen anymore, maybe think if offering protection (Asylum) for foreigners is still feasable?"

Jesse Kline: The lie behind definitions of 'anti-Palestinian racism' - "Rather than working toward a world in which everyone is treated with dignity based on their inherent human worth — not treated differently due to their religion or ethnic background — we are now locked in an arms race between groups seeking to define various forms of racism. This process has been spurred on by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, who seems to think that stuffy conferences and lengthy dissertations are the solution to the ever-growing levels of hate on Canadian streets... he ended with an acknowledgement of “anti-Palestinian racism,” lest he violate the left’s prohibition on discussing Jew-hate without conflating it with racism perpetrated against Muslims... We live in a world in which the Jewish state is constantly accused of committing “war crimes” and perpetrating a “genocide” despite the fact that the number of Arabs killed in all of Israel’s wars combined over the past 76 years is dwarfed by the number of civilians killed in Afghanistan during the 20-year war of which Canada was a part (double standard, anyone?). We live in a world in which Israel’s enemies have adopted every vile antisemitic trope of the past but re-framed them as being anti-Zionist rather than anti-Jew. “Zionists” have been told they are not welcome on university campuses. A mob in New York went on a “Zionist” hunt . A protest sign claimed , “Zionists Are Not Humans! They Are the Evil of the World!” A university professor kicked up a fuss over an Israeli flag displayed in an Ontario school during Jewish Heritage Month, something that wouldn’t be made into an issue if it were a Greek flag commemorating Greek Heritage Month. And the “Zionist state,” as the Jewish state is referred to by Iran and its minions, is blamed not just for all the trouble in the Middle East, but the world at large — just as the Jews were in past eras. The list goes on and on. It’s little wonder that Jew-haters want to exempt criticism of Zionism and the Jewish state from any generally accepted definition of antisemitism... Just because it’s become unfortunately necessary to have a common definition to antisemitism, however, doesn’t mean we need to go about defining novel forms of discrimination, such as “anti-Palestinian racism” — a term coined by the anti-Zionist crowd to silence pro-Israel voices. I can already hear my critics accusing me of rank hypocrisy, but bear with me. The main issue is that we already have a term for racism espoused against Muslims: Islamophobia. There is no need to obfuscate the issue by creating separate forms of racism for Muslims or Arabs of different geographical origins. The only reason to do so is to try to pretend that legitimate differences of opinion over the admittedly very complex Israeli-Palestinian conflict are somehow racist, or that criticizing the tactics of Palestinian terrorist groups should be verboten. And make no mistake: the definition put forth in a 2022 paper from the Arab Canadian Lawyers Association does just that. It defines “anti-Palestinian racism,” in part, as “failing to acknowledge Palestinians as an indigenous people with a collective identity, belonging and rights in relation to occupied and historic Palestine,” and “defaming Palestinians and their allies with slander such as being inherently antisemitic, a terrorist threat/sympathizer or opposed to democratic values.” This is far more specific than the double-standards test included in the IHRA definition and would seem to define as racist hard truths such as the fact that the Jews’ claim of indigeneity far predates that of the Palestinians, Israel’s borders are still subject to negotiation under the Oslo Accords, rates of antisemitism within the Palestinian territories are exceptionally high , terrorism has become a common tactic used by Palestinian political groups and elections have not been held in the West Bank or Gaza since 2006."
Of course, left wingers claim if you're tough on crime, you're racist, so once again it's double standards with the biggest dog whistle in the world

NDP is right to question Canada's definition of antisemitism - "I suspect they’re right for a bad reason, namely, to placate their anti-Israel constituency. (They need any constituency they can get nowadays.) The party certainly isn’t a stalwart on free-speech issues, happily promoting Winnipeg MP Leah Gazan’s private-member’s bill that purports to outlaw “residential school denialism.” And as recently as 2015, New Democrats supported the Ottawa Protocol on Combating Antisemitism, a predecessor document to the IHRA definition that contained nearly identical language about applying double-standards to Israel... At best, I think, this is going to sow even more confusion among Canadians as to what constitutes illegal and illegal speech in this country. Since 2022 there has been a law on the books that purports to target someone who, “by communicating statements, other than in private conversation, wilfully promotes antisemitism by condoning, denying or downplaying the Holocaust.” Here’s how you know the Liberals took the initiative very seriously: It was jammed into that year’s budget implementation bill, and it doesn’t bother to define “antisemitism.”... Why is the government adopting a definition of antisemitism if it doesn’t intend to use it in any official capacity? And what will it attempt to define next?"
It is very important to protect hate speech the left approves of, even celebrating proscribed terrorists like Sinwar, because of freedom of expression, but speech the left hates must be banned because it is harmful

Chris Selley: The perils of 'defining' bigotry - "Some of the definitions of anti-Palestinian racism out there certainly seem studiously, deliberately vague. Citing the Arab Canadian Lawyers Association , Canadians for Justice and Peace in the Middle East includes as examples “erasing the human rights and equal dignity and worth of Palestinians,” which is meaningless; and “justifying violence against Palestinians,” which could easily include defending Israel’s right to retaliate against Hamas atrocities."

Qatar reportedly tells Hamas they are not welcome in the country
What a coincidence. I wonder what can have caused this
I was told that Putin didn't invade Ukraine under Trump because he was waiting for Trump to pull the US out of NATO. How curious that he ended up invading under Biden when the US was still in NATO

Sediq Sediqqi: Canada must redouble efforts to ensure foreign aid is not appropriated by the Taliban - "a recently released report from the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) revealed the details of the Taliban’s systematic interference in aid operations throughout the country. In September alone, the OCHA recorded 173 incidents of the Taliban interfering in humanitarian operations, which led to the suspension of 83 humanitarian projects. The report also said that during this period, the Taliban arrested nine aid workers, closed three aid facilities and restricted the movement of aid workers. This is part of a trend that has seen the Taliban work to infiltrate aid operations and exert control over international aid organizations, including setting up fraudulent non-governmental organizations to appropriate foreign aid in order to fund the regime. The Taliban also benefit from taxes levied on foreign-funded aid programs and their employees. The Taliban’s survival rests on illicit drug revenues, arms sales and extortion. It has used this money to build and fund jihadi madrassas intended to shore up its support among future generations. The country is now home to 21,000 madrassas, where a new generation of Taliban are being trained to take up the mantle of global jihad. The Taliban’s draconian laws, gender-based discrimination and oppression has severely exacerbated the country’s humanitarian crisis."
Damn Zionists, interfering with aid agencies in Gaza! Hamas seizing aid and killing "collaborators" is Israel's fault, because if Israel had never existed, it wouldn't be a convenient scapegoat for them

Meme - Ritchie Torres @RitchieTorres: "Every college and university has a constitutional right to teach whatever content it wishes, unencumbered by government interference.   Having said that, the government is under no obligation to use taxpayer funds to pay  for courses that romanticize antisemitic terror and violence as “resistance.”  The government should stop subsidizing ideological indoctrination masquerading as instruction."
"Gaza, Indigeneity, Resistance. E. Cheyfitz.
The first half of the course will be devoted to situating Indigenous peoples, of which there are 350,000 globally, in an international context, where we will examine the proposition that Indigenous people are involved historically in a global war against an ongoing colonialism. The second half will present a specific case of this war: settler colonialism in with a particular emphasis on what the International Court of Justice (ICJ) has termed a "plausible genocide" in Gaza.
Outcome 1: Identify and analyze key components of Indigenous perspectives on political, social, and environmental systems(this can be through written reflections and discussions).
Outcome 2: Define and differentiate key terms such as "Indigeneity," "Resistance," "SettlerColonialism," and "Genocide" in both international law and Indigenous can be through writing assignments and presentations)."

Israel Defense Forces on X - "The same civilians that Hamas outspokenly claimed to be fighting for, are the same civilians being tortured in this video. Hamas is not only Israel’s enemy—they’re Gaza’s enemy also."
Damn Zionists! How can they torture the poor Palestinians?!

AG on X - "It has been almost a week since Israel published CCTV footage of Hamas torturing Palestinian civilians. I can't find one article on CNN, Reuters, NBC News, the AP, WaPo, or NYT covering it. Imagine if these were videos of Israel doing the same thing..."
The terrorist supporters are still trying to find a way to blame Israel for this

Eyal Yakoby on X - "Van Jones with absolute moral clarity: "The Palestinian cause has been hijacked by a Nazi organization called Hamas, they are not freedom fighters, they are freedom takers... They are trying to destroy Israel way more than they are trying to help the Palestinian people.""
Caroline Glick on X - "Hamas didn't hijack anything. They won the election. The "Palestinians" don't want a state. They want to annihilate the Jews. Hamas is not an alien entity. It is the Palestinians."

Israel is not a 'settler-colonial state' - "Akub, a fashionable Palestinian restaurant in London’s Notting Hill. It is more than just a high-end eatery. In an interview with the New York Times in 2022, its French-trained chef and founder, Fadi Kattan, said his mission was to ‘reclaim a cuisine that is part of a broader Arab tradition involving foods like hummus, falafel, tabbouleh, fattoush and shawarma, that he felt was being co-opted by Israeli cooks’. It seems that whereas normal people cook food, in the eyes of Kattan, Israelis ‘co-opt’ it. This position relies on a highly selective view of history. As one reader remarked in the comments section: ‘Jews have also been making these foods for centuries and have appropriated nothing. There’s been a continuous Jewish presence in the land of Israel for thousands of years. What’s more, many of these foods are not limited to the land of Israel, but common across the former Ottoman Empire.’   People often forget that Judaism is two millennia older than Islam and 1,500 years older than Christianity. Israel was the cradle of Jewish civilisation. At least a thousand years before the birth of Jesus Christ, Jerusalem’s most famous Jew, King David, made the city the capital of the Land of Israel. It has been home to greater or lesser numbers of Jews – the very word ‘Jew’ is a shortening of Judea, the ancient kingdom radiating from Jerusalem in the Iron Age – in Jerusalem ever since. Culturally, Jews have always intertwined their identity with the land of Israel... By 1896, more than three-fifths of the 45,300 residents of Jerusalem were Jewish (2). Yousef al-Khalidi, the mayor of the city, wrote to his old friend, Zadok Khan, chief rabbi of France: ‘Who can contest the rights of the Jews to Palestine? God knows, historically it is indeed your country.’ In 1915, as the contours of the future Jewish state were continuing to emerge, Palestinian Arab nationalism had yet to appear. ‘Questions of Arabs and their nationality are as far from them as bimetallism from the life of Texas’, wrote TE Lawrence of Arabia at the time. ‘Christians and Mohammedans come [to Jerusalem] on pilgrimage; Jews look to it for the political future of their race.’ (3)...   The Jewish side had accepted the UN partition plan. After all, to the north, the Syrians and Lebanese had likewise agreed to be partitioned, despite much grumbling from the Alawites and Druze. But the Palestinians – led by the Mufti of Jerusalem, Amin al-Husseini, who had collaborated closely with the Third Reich during the war and relished the idea of exterminating the Jews – rejected any treaty that involved the establishment of a Jewish state. Just hours after Ben-Gurion’s speech, following Husseini’s lead, the armies of Egypt, Jordan, Iraq, Lebanon and Syria attacked the fledgling Jewish country. ‘This will be a war of extermination and a momentous massacre’, announced Abdul Rahman Hassan Azzam, secretary-general of the Arab League, ‘which will be spoken of like the Mongolian massacres and the Crusades’. The Mufti called for jihad, crying: ‘Murder the Jews! Murder them all!’ Ironically, as the scholar Joseph Spoerl has pointed out, ‘the plan for ethnic cleansing in Palestine in 1947-8 was an Arab plan, not a Zionist one’ (4)... The existence of two million Arab citizens of Israel today shows how allegations of ‘ethnic cleansing’ have long been twisted and weaponised... The 1949 Armistice Agreement, supervised by the UN, split Jerusalem and placed the Old City in the hands of King Abdullah of Transjordan, who had also succeeded in annexing the West Bank, which the UN had set aside for the Palestinians. ‘Nobody will take over Jerusalem from me unless I’m killed’, he declared. The terms allowed Jews access to the Western Wall, the cemetery on the Mount of Olives and the tombs of Kidron Valley, but these pledges were never honoured. Jews were not able to visit the wall for the next 19 years, and their gravestones were defaced... Today, nearly 80 years after the War of Independence, 80 per cent of Israeli Jews were born in Israel and half of the country’s Jewish population is now black or Middle Eastern, meaning that whites are in the minority. Far from being a white-supremacist state, Israel is a deeply multiracial one.   The demonisation of Israel presents it as a unique historical evil. In truth, the manner of its creation was typical of the period... aside from the singularity of the ancient Jewish story, the Holocaust and the volume of migration from the diaspora, only two things were exceptional about Israel’s birth. First, the 50 per cent of the Arab population that had remained within its borders were granted full citizenship. Second, despite its messiness, it became a liberal democracy with a strong economy, which made it unique in the region. Yet despite all this, Jews are still blamed for stealing the hummus. Customers of the Akub restaurant are served their ‘reclaimed’ dishes against a backdrop of rows of keys displayed on the wall. These represent the property that was lost by the 700,000 Arabs who fled when Israel was founded, fuelling demands for restitution. Palestinian dispossession has become one of the world’s best-known historic injustices. In that same period, millions of other people were driven across borders in Europe and Asia, amid the same post-colonial turmoil, in more violent circumstances, their homes seized, their relatives killed, their cultures lost and their families fragmented. Yet their stories have been buried by history.  Who laments the plight of the Greek Orthodox Christians, or the Indian Hindus and Sikhs, or the Armenians, or the Irish refugees created after the bloody British partition of 1921, or the 12million ethnic Germans expelled from Eastern Europe on Churchill’s instigation after the Second World War? Or the Jews of the Middle East, for that matter?... no nation it seems is more singled out and demonised than Israel."

Gunmen shoot and kill aid worker in Gaza, charity and family say - "Gunmen in the Gaza Strip shot and killed a Palestinian aid worker from a U.S. based charity, firing on her car in what officials from the Hamas-run government told her family was a case of mistaken identity. The car in which Islam Hejazy, Gaza program manager at HEAL Palestine, was traveling was intercepted on Thursday in the area of Khan Younis in the south of the enclave."
Weird how there's never any outrage when Palestinians kill aid workers

Shiites voice growing criticism of Hezbollah as cease-fire stalls: 'You could have prevented death and destruction'

A Battered and Diminished Hezbollah Accepts a Cease-Fire - The New York Times - "For years, Hezbollah told the Lebanese that it alone could defend them from Israel. It boasted of powerful weapons and hardened commandos who would unleash deadly “surprises” if war broke out. And it assured its followers that a regional alliance of militias supported by Iran would jump in to support it in battle.  Those myths have now been shattered.  After 13 months of war, Hezbollah entered a cease-fire with Israel on Wednesday that it will struggle to convince anyone, other than its most fervent loyalists, is not in fact a defeat. The 60-day truce, which is supposed to lay the groundwork for a more lasting cease-fire, comes after three months of withering Israeli attacks that have thrown the organization into disarray.  Deep intelligence infiltration enabled Israel to assassinate many senior leaders, including Hezbollah’s secretary general of 32 years, Hassan Nasrallah. Israel bombarded the group’s most loyal communities, forcing hundreds of thousands of people to flee and blowing up dozens of villages, ensuring that many people have no homes to immediately return to.  And Hezbollah’s fateful decision to consult no one before firing rockets at Israel, setting off a conflict that grew into Lebanon’s most deadly war in decades, has left it isolated in the country and in the wider Middle East, with Lebanon facing an exorbitant bill for reconstruction. Many of Hezbollah’s opponents in Lebanon and elsewhere hope that the war has weakened it enough that it will no longer be able to impose its will on the country’s political system. But it remains unclear whether Lebanon’s other parties will now feel empowered to stand against it.  Hezbollah still has many thousands of fighters in Lebanon and commands the loyalty of a large share of the country's Shiite Muslims... Many honked their horns, waved yellow Hezbollah flags and said the fact that Hezbollah survived amounted to a win... “None of this is important,” he said. “What is important is the victory and the resistance. We are with them to the end.”... Hezbollah began firing on Israel in solidarity with Hamas after that group’s deadly attack on Israel on Oct. 7, 2023. For months, as Israel and Hezbollah exchanged fire across the Israel-Lebanon border, Hezbollah’s leaders swore that the battle would end only when Israel stopped attacking Gaza.  That demand is nowhere to be found in the new cease-fire, leaving Israel free to continue its quest to destroy Hamas. The new cease-fire also gives an oversight role to the United States, which Iran and Hezbollah have long railed against for its staunch support for Israel. Iran and Hezbollah would have only accepted such an arrangement if they were desperate to stop the war, analysts said. “It indicates the degree to which Iran is concerned and worried about its new vulnerability and the incoming Trump administration,” said Paul Salem, a Lebanon expert at the Middle East Institute, a think tank... “The shoe that hasn’t fallen yet is the obvious fact that there is a huge imbalance between Israel and Iran,” Mr. Salem said. “Israel can attack Iran at will and Iran cannot do the same.”  In Lebanon, too, Hezbollah is likely to face an array of economic, social and political challenges if the cease-fire holds.  For years, it justified its arsenal to other Lebanese as essential to defend the country against Israeli attacks. Now, it has not only failed in that defense but must answer to fellow Lebanese who are angry that it single-handedly dragged the country into a costly war that no one else wanted... The war has displaced 1.2 million people, the government says, mostly Shiite Muslims from Hezbollah strongholds in southern Lebanon, the southern suburbs of Beirut and the eastern Bekaa Valley.  Many of them are now sheltering in areas dominated by other sects — Sunni Muslims, Christians and Druse — many of whom do not want them to stay and fear that Hezbollah members could draw Israeli fire... Hezbollah’s remaining public figures have already begun marketing the cease-fire as a victory, saying their fighters kept firing missiles, rockets and drones into Israel and valiantly confronted the Israeli troops who invaded southern Lebanon.  “From now, we confirm that the resistance will remain, will continue, will carry on,” Hassan Fadlallah, a Lebanese parliamentarian from Hezbollah, told Reuters"
Clearly, if Hezbollah attacks Israel again, it will be Israel's fault for refusing to be destroyed
Weird. We were told that Trump being elected would embolden dictators and cause another World War, just like the World War that happened during his first term
Strange how Israel only committed "genocide" against Shiite Muslims (of course, this has nothing to do with Shiites welcoming Hezbollah), not Sunni Muslims, Christians or Druse. The Zionists' fingers extend further than expected! The non Shiite Muslim Lebanese don't know that it's their Duty to Resist till the end of time

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