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Irishize

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Who does shit like this to another human being?

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">More peace and tolerance in the progressive dystopia that was once the greatest city on earth. Congrats, <a href="https://twitter.com/BilldeBlasio?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@BilldeBlasio</a>! <a href="https://t.co/QLYwwIMhna">https://t.co/QLYwwIMhna</a></p>— Dave Rubin (@RubinReport) <a href="https://twitter.com/RubinReport/status/1283857721263980544?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">July 16, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 

ThePiombino

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Who does shit like this to another human being?

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">More peace and tolerance in the progressive dystopia that was once the greatest city on earth. Congrats, <a href="https://twitter.com/BilldeBlasio?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@BilldeBlasio</a>! <a href="https://t.co/QLYwwIMhna">https://t.co/QLYwwIMhna</a></p>— Dave Rubin (@RubinReport) <a href="https://twitter.com/RubinReport/status/1283857721263980544?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">July 16, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
Not that it makes it any better for the victim, but this wasn't a random assault. That was her ex-boyfriend.

Sent from my Pixel 4 XL using Tapatalk
 

ulukinatme

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Fuck that guy, glad they were able to identify him. Sounds like the mother and baby are recovering and will make it. Don't know if they've caught the guy yet, but here's hoping he's in a world of hurt in the future.
 

Irish#1

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Fuck that guy, glad they were able to identify him. Sounds like the mother and baby are recovering and will make it. Don't know if they've caught the guy yet, but here's hoping he's in a world of hurt in the future.

Maybe they could put him in the same cell that Epstein was in.
 

Irishize

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LOL

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Selling Protest Footage to FOX AND CNN <a href="https://t.co/0iNRmUI1mC">pic.twitter.com/0iNRmUI1mC</a></p>— Ryan Long (@ryanlongcomedy) <a href="https://twitter.com/ryanlongcomedy/status/1272534112327393288?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">June 15, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 

TorontoGold

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LOL

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Selling Protest Footage to FOX AND CNN <a href="https://t.co/0iNRmUI1mC">pic.twitter.com/0iNRmUI1mC</a></p>— Ryan Long (@ryanlongcomedy) <a href="https://twitter.com/ryanlongcomedy/status/1272534112327393288?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">June 15, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

lmao this guy is actually from Toronto, and did stand up in the same bars as my buddy.

His twitter is pretty good, takes a good amount of shots at both the right/left.
 

Irishize

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lmao this guy is actually from Toronto, and did stand up in the same bars as my buddy.

His twitter is pretty good, takes a good amount of shots at both the right/left.

He really puts thought into his routine yet keeps them lighthearted. He did one w/ another comic on Woke & Racist but I figured posting it would be too much for some to take.
 

TorontoGold

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He really puts thought into his routine yet keeps them lighthearted. He did one w/ another comic on Woke & Racist but I figured posting it would be too much for some to take.

Lol watched that one too, pretty good stuff.
 

NorthDakota

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lmao this guy is actually from Toronto, and did stand up in the same bars as my buddy.

His twitter is pretty good, takes a good amount of shots at both the right/left.

Canadians are periodically good at things. Rare...but not unheard of.

I loved his woke and racist one. I haven't seen the others but I'll make a point to check him out.
 

Bluto

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LOL

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Selling Protest Footage to FOX AND CNN <a href="https://t.co/0iNRmUI1mC">pic.twitter.com/0iNRmUI1mC</a></p>— Ryan Long (@ryanlongcomedy) <a href="https://twitter.com/ryanlongcomedy/status/1272534112327393288?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">June 15, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

That's hilarious.
 

Irishize

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Why?

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Video shows father & daughter viciously beaten in Manhattan bodega attack, suspects sought by NYPD <a href="https://t.co/1pmfDMk6Xp">pic.twitter.com/1pmfDMk6Xp</a></p>— Breaking911 (@Breaking911) <a href="https://twitter.com/Breaking911/status/1286809268797288448?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">July 24, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 

Circa

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<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Social Experiment: Is It Really All About Slavery <a href="https://t.co/jmrnANwvWt">pic.twitter.com/jmrnANwvWt</a></p>— Ami Horowitz (@AmiHorowitz) <a href="https://twitter.com/AmiHorowitz/status/1280969393506263041?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">July 8, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
I love this video. it shows the ignorance that social media has on our children. 20-30 year old children.
 

Irishize

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<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Joe Rogan is leaving Los Angeles and moving to Texas because there's more freedom there <a href="https://t.co/UpiFZucqms">https://t.co/UpiFZucqms</a></p>— TheBlaze (@theblaze) <a href="https://twitter.com/theblaze/status/1286826011385044998?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">July 25, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 

Circa

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<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Joe Rogan is leaving Los Angeles and moving to Texas because there's more freedom there <a href="https://t.co/UpiFZucqms">https://t.co/UpiFZucqms</a></p>— TheBlaze (@theblaze) <a href="https://twitter.com/theblaze/status/1286826011385044998?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">July 25, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

Yea... Kinda older news, but worthy...

If i just signed a contract that gives me more than 100 mils... I'd go to the state that has another beautiful coastline too.
I'd stay away from Austin tho....
 
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Irishize

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Yea... Kinda older news, but worthy...

If i just signed a contract that gives me more than 100 mils... I'd go to the state that has another beautiful coastline too.
I'd stay away from Austin tho....

Right, but it’s just now been confirmed. If you’ve been listening he’s frustrated w/ bums & feces everywhere. I know that’s hyperbolic but when it was once limited to skid row and is now pretty much everywhere, there’s some things you don’t want to raise your family around.
 

Circa

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Right, but it’s just now been confirmed. If you’ve been listening he’s frustrated w/ bums & feces everywhere. I know that’s hyperbolic but when it was once limited to skid row and is now pretty much everywhere, there’s some things you don’t want to raise your family around.

Yep. I've heard him act the part... He recently said he went to get Donuts with his Fam..... JRE has a way in him that seems human enough...
I'll be honest, I like his long form conversations. It's people being human. He has the conversation most people want to have or be the follower and listen to....
It's also crazy that he was just an itch in the crawl 10 years ago...
 
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Irishize

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https://nypost.com/2020/07/11/the-fallacy-of-white-privilege-and-how-its-corroding-society/

The fallacy of white privilege — and how it’s corroding society
By Rav Arora July 11, 2020 | 12:20pm | Updated

Last month, I retweeted a comment by a contrarian writer who questioned whether racism was to blame for the spread of the coronavirus, and a close (white) friend responded to me with a well-meaning text:

“I feel it is my calling to help end the oppression people of color like you face in our society,” he wrote. “I understand I have white privilege. And that has consequences.”

His message left me feeling bewildered. What “oppression” had I actually faced? And what “privilege” had society conferred upon my friend because of his white skin?

Growing up as a Sikh, turbaned boy in the majority-white environment of British Columbia, Canada, I was a constant target of bullying throughout my elementary school years. On bus rides home, I remember having to sit in the back where the older, “cool” kids hung out, and they used to jump up and slap the top part of my turban. I was consistently harassed with comments like “Go back to where you came from” and “You don’t belong here.”

Upon immigrating from India when I was 4, my family suffered tremendous economic hardships and cultural challenges. My father drove a taxi at night and my mom worked many menial jobs as a cook, housecleaner, barista and motel cleaner. It’s fair to say my family never had success handed to them on a silver platter. But more than a decade post-immigration, we have found our footing in Western society, with my dad making nearly six figures operating his own software company.

Rising from poverty to economic prosperity is a common narrative for immigrants from all backgrounds in the West. For example, after the communist takeover of Cuba in 1959, many refugees fled to America, leaving most of their wealth behind and having to start from the bottom. But by 1990, second-generation Cuban Americans were twice as likely to earn an annual salary of $50,000 than non-Hispanic whites in the United States.

The notion of white privilege stems from the idea that white people have benefited in American history relative to “people of color.” And it’s true that the institution of slavery and the following decades of anti-black dehumanization has a continuing impact today. A major 2013 study from Brandeis University found that 32 percent of the wealth gap between whites and blacks can be attributed to inherited wealth and length of homeownership, two factors linked to institutionalized racism. Meanwhile, Harvard economist Roland Fryer’s much-publicized study on racial bias in policing found that cops are 53 percent more likely to use physical force on black civilians compared to whites (his study, however, found no anti-black bias in fatal police shootings).

Because of facts like these, an emerging definition of white privilege is now being widely circulated on social media: “White privilege doesn’t mean your life hasn’t been hard. It just means your race isn’t one of the things that make it harder.”

And yet, this definition suffers from several shortcomings. For one, it ignores anti-Semitism — the second leading cause of hate crimes in America, according to the FBI. In addition, the growing demonization of whiteness now means that white people are no longer immune to racism. I can think of several instances where friends and colleagues have been racially targeted for being white and holding contrarian but intellectually defensible positions such as “we need to have generous, but reasonable limits on our immigration system” or even “I don’t think racial minorities are systematically oppressed in Western society today.”

And the concept of white privilege can’t explain why several historically marginalized groups out-perform whites today. Take Japanese Americans, for example: For nearly four decades in the 20th century (1913 – 1952), this group was legally prevented from owning land and property in over a dozen American states. Moreover, 120,000 Japanese Americans were interned during World War II. But by 1959, the income disparity between Japanese Americans and white Americans nearly vanished. Today, Japanese Americans outperform whites by large margins in income statistics, education outcomes, test scores and incarceration rates.

One could argue the successful stories of my family, Cuban Americans and Japanese Americans are cherry-picked cases. But whites are far from being the most dominantly successful group in Western society. A wealth of data collected in a longform Quillette analysis, shows overwhelming white underachievement relative to several minority groups among health outcomes, educational achievement, incarceration rates and economic success.

On the whole, whatever ‘systemic racism’ exists appears to be incredibly ineffectual, or even nonexistent, given the multitude of groups who consistently eclipse whites.
According to median household income statistics from the US Census Bureau, several minority groups substantially out-earn whites. These groups include Pakistani Americans, Lebanese Americans, South African Americans, Filipino Americans, Sri Lankan Americans and Iranian Americans (in addition to several others). Indians, the group I belong to, are the highest-earning ethnic group the census keeps track of, with almost double the household median income of whites. In Canada, several minority groups also significantly out-earn whites, including South Asian Canadians, Arab Canadians and Japanese Canadians.

Interestingly, several black immigrant groups such as Nigerians, Barbadians, Ghanaians and Trinidadians & Tobagonians have a median household income well above the American average. Ghanian Americans, to take one example, earn more than several specific white groups such as Dutch Americans, French Americans, Polish Americans, British Americans and Russian Americans. Do Ghanaians have some kind of sub-Saharan African privilege?

Nigerian Americans, meanwhile, are one of the most educated groups in America, as one Rice University survey indicates. Though they make up less than 1 percent of the black population in America, nearly 25 percent of the black student body at Harvard Business School in 2013 consisted of Nigerians. In post-bachelor education, 61 percent of Nigerian Americans over the age of 25 hold a graduate degree compared to only 32 percent for the US-born population.

These facts challenge the prevailing progressive notion that America’s institutions are built to universally favor whites and “oppress” minorities or blacks. On the whole, whatever “systemic racism” exists appears to be incredibly ineffectual, or even nonexistent, given the multitude of groups who consistently eclipse whites.

In fact, because whites are the majority in Canada and America, more white people live in poverty or are incarcerated than any other racial group in those countries. If you were to randomly pick an impoverished individual in America, you are exponentially more likely to pick a white person than a “person of color,” because of population differences. Today, 15.7 million white Americans (almost twice as many as black Americans) live in poverty. Given such facts, why would we deem all white people as privileged, even if whites have lower poverty rates compared to African Americans and Hispanics?

It should also be noted that suicide rates are disproportionately high among the white population. In 2018, whites had the highest suicide rate of 16.03 per 100,000. The New York Times has reported that whites are dying faster than they are being born in a majority of US states — in large part due to high rates of substance abuse and suicide. In comparison, black Americans had a suicide rate less than half of whites (6.96) and Asian Americans/Pacific Islanders had the lowest rate of 6.88 per 100,000. In this context, do blacks and Asians have some kind of unmerited “privilege” they must atone for?

If we look at health outcomes reported by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, we find that African Americans are less likely than whites to die of several health conditions such as bladder cancer, leukemia, esophageal cancer, lung cancer, bladder cancer, brain cancer and skin cancer, to take a few arbitrary examples. But no one in their right mind would protest any “health privilege” enjoyed by African Americans in these instances. And while blacks have the highest COVID-19 death rate, more than double that of whites, the group with the lowest death rate from the coronavirus is actually Asian Americans. Given the crisis of the pandemic, perhaps it would be laudable for Asians like me to confess their “Asian privilege” on social media because otherwise, as the Twitter hashtag goes, #SilenceisViolence.

Overall, I can think of several privileges I have benefited from that are arguably more significant than “white privilege.” Roughly speaking my family has more wealth than many in my social circle, including my friend who texted me to atone for his white privilege. This would be a form of class privilege.

I was also afforded the privilege of taking a full one-year break from education to pursue my passion for creative writing and social commentary. Had I been in a different economic circumstance, I would’ve been forced to immediately attend college or spend a substantial portion of my time working in my gap year. Comparatively, my friend who texted me went to university right away and tenaciously worked part-time on the weekends to afford his tuition. Perhaps it would be more appropriate for me to confess economic privilege to him. I was also afforded the privilege of my parents strongly encouraging me to read books and learn new vocabulary words at a very young age, which has undoubtedly aided me in my freelance journalism career. This kind of “literacy privilege” has, in part, given me the tremendous opportunity to write essays for top publications like The Globe and Mail and The Grammy Awards, despite being just 19 years of age.

Writing this essay, I also have the immense privilege of being a person of color. I receive plentiful backlash for defending the positions I hold, but had I been a white person, I would have easily been demonized as “alt-right” or even a “white supremacist,” despite having average libertarian or classical liberal views on politics.

Fundamentally, privileges of all kinds exist: able-bodiedness, wealth, education, moral values, facial symmetry, tallness (or in other contexts, shortness), health, stamina, safety, economic mobility, and importantly, living in a free, diverse society. Rather than “whiteness,” an exponentially more predictive privilege in life is growing up with two parents.

This is why 41 percent of children born to single mothers grow up in poverty whereas only 8 percent of children living in married-couple families are impoverished. In a racial context, the poverty rate among two-parent black families is only 7.5 percent, compared to 11 percent among whites as a whole and 22 percent among whites in single-parent homes. In fact, since 1994 the poverty rate among married black Americans has been consistently lower than the white poverty rate. Furthermore, an illustrative study published in the Journal of Marriage and Family found that when controlling for family structure, the black-white poverty gap is reduced by over 70 percent.

When surveying the tremendous complexity of racial disparities, it’s simply wrong to presuppose all whites are “privileged,” let alone racist. Using the despicable actions of a few to judge an entire group of people is never sound reasoning. Just because some white people (who were kids) weaponized their whiteness and harassed me for the color of my skin, doesn’t mean I view all white people as racist or privileged.

None of the statistics in this piece discount racial prejudice, unequal opportunities or the privilege of not experiencing racism. They simply point to the glaring fallacies of the all-consuming white-privilege narrative which has degraded our national discourse into identity politics and racial tribalism. White people are now one-dimensionally seen as an undifferentiated mass of privilege and wealth whereas minorities are seen as powerless victims oppressed by a society ingrained with white supremacy and racial bigotry.

Ultimately, I don’t want to be treated as “Rav, the brown-skinned boy” or “Rav, the underprivileged minority.” I want to be treated as an individual with a unique set of circumstances and characteristics. To cohere as a multiethnic, pluralistic society this standard must be applied to all colors and ethnicities. But until we collectively repudiate race-based stereotyping and fallacious, inflammatory generalizations, we shift the focus away from real inequity and discrimination — and never truly make progress.

Rav Arora is a 19-year-old writer based in Vancouver, Canada, who specializes in topics of race, music, literature and culture. His writing has also been featured in The Globe and Mail and City Journal.
 

Bishop2b5

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https://www.nationalreview.com/2020...ough Friday 2020-07-31&utm_term=NRDaily-Smart

This type of thing is becoming too common and is nothing but outright thought policing and an organized attempt to shut down free speech, dissent, and any opposing ideas. On the surface it sounds almost comical until you realize it's happening in more and more fields and the implications are scary.

A University of North Texas music professor who oversees a publication devoted to a long dead music theorist published a rebuttal to another professor who criticized that theorist as racist and posited, “a ‘white racial frame’ in music theory that is structural and institutionalized.” So, dead music theorist's views on music theory are centered on the structured and institutionalized works and developments of white guys like Bach, Beethoven, Mozart, and etc., therefore he's racist. UNT prof rebuts the assertion (heaven forbid we have rebuttals and disagreements in academia).

So, do they discuss it, agree to disagree, look at the evidence rationally and try to understand anything? Of course not. The progressives instead demanded that the professor who defended the long dead music theorist against charges of racism should be investigated, his publication shut down, and his position eliminated. All for disagreeing with someone else's view in academia and daring to defend against charges of racism, that universal boogaboo whose use is to shut down any dissent or opposition.

This reeks of 1984, the USSR in the 20's and 30's, the "cleansing" of the French Revolution, and Nazi Germany. This is what the thought police do. This is mob rule. There's no thinking allowed. It's agree with us or be destroyed.
 
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Irishize

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https://www.nationalreview.com/2020...ough Friday 2020-07-31&utm_term=NRDaily-Smart

This type of thing is becoming too common and is nothing but outright thought policing and an organized attempt to shut down free speech, dissent, and any opposing ideas. On the surface it sounds almost comical until you realize it's happening in more and more fields and the implications are scary.

A University of North Texas music professor who oversees a publication devoted to a long dead music theorist published a rebuttal to another professor who criticized that theorist as racist and posited, “a ‘white racial frame’ in music theory that is structural and institutionalized.” So, dead music theorist's views on music theory are centered on the structured and institutionalized works and developments of white guys like Bach, Beethoven, Mozart, and etc., therefore he's racist. UNT prof rebuts the assertion (heaven forbid we have rebuttals and disagreements in academia).

So, do they discuss it, agree to disagree, look at the evidence rationally and try to understand anything? Of course not. The progressives instead demanded that the professor who defended the long dead music theorist against charges of racism should be investigated, his publication shut down, and his position eliminated. All for disagreeing with someone else's view in academia and daring to defend against charges of racism, that universal boogaboo whose use is to shut down any dissent or opposition.

This reeks of 1984, the USSR in the 20's and 30's, the "cleansing" of the French Revolution, and Nazi Germany. This is what the thought police do. This is mob rule. There's no thinking allowed. It's agree with us or be destroyed.

The shroud themselves in “Democracy”. America is not a Democracy, it’s a Representative Republic. The Founders internationally set it up that way b/c they realized the a pure Democracy is Mob Rule.
 

Ndaccountant

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2020 summed up in less than 3 mins


<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Hard to tell if I recorded this 30 years or 10 minutes ago... <a href="https://t.co/GPDURhYIJL">pic.twitter.com/GPDURhYIJL</a></p>— John Cleese (@JohnCleese) <a href="https://twitter.com/JohnCleese/status/1271535485467283457?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">June 12, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 

Legacy

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2020 summed up in less than 3 mins


<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Hard to tell if I recorded this 30 years or 10 minutes ago... <a href="https://t.co/GPDURhYIJL">pic.twitter.com/GPDURhYIJL</a></p>— John Cleese (@JohnCleese) <a href="https://twitter.com/JohnCleese/status/1271535485467283457?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">June 12, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

Nice. Truth through comedy.

This seems appropriate:

From a April 2016 interview with Bob Woodward when asked if it was incumbent on him as the Rep nominee to quell the anger within his Party. He answered that it was, but:

“I bring rage out. I do bring rage out. I always have. I think it was, I don’t know if that’s an asset or a liability, but whatever it is, I do. I also bring great unity out, ultimately. I’ve had many occasions like this, where people have hated me more than any human being they’ve ever met. And after it’s all over, they end up being my friends. And I see that happening here.”

After almost four years, we can judge whether he is The Great Unifier he sees himself as. And how our culture has changed because of him.
 
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Old Man Mike

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Well, no one can with a straight face consider this president a great unifier. I have never experienced (in America) a more effective divider in a publicly important position. His method is well described and has been a steroids-boosted version of the political pragmatics of Karl Rove --- who formulated the theory of ruthless division and playing to cultural base as the means to election in a society where a minority of eligible voters can get you into office.

There was an exaggerated analogy made between Stalin and Trump here not long ago. Regardless of the true merit of that (emotions of course rage) Rove would be Lenin to Trump's Stalin. (My view is that Trump pays attention to no one, so the fact that he is a public Rove on steroids is a "happy" accident for him and those who, deep down, support this division.)
 

Whiskeyjack

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Matthew Walther just published an article titled "Life is worth living":

From 1952 until 1957, one of the most widely viewed programs on American television was Bishop Fulton Sheen's Life is Worth Living. It is difficult to imagine anything like this inspirational one-man lecture show becoming a hit now. But the seemingly unremarkable proposition offered by its title is one that I wish more of us were willing to affirm.

Between 2007 and 2018, the suicide rate among young people aged between 10 and 24 increased by some 57 percent. This is nearly double the already significant increase of around 28 percent among the American population as a whole during roughly the same period.

Why are young people in this country taking their own lives with such horrifying frequency? Any number of facile explanations have been advanced. The most common one is that there is insufficient public investment in mental health services. I find this unpersuasive, not least because the number of young people committing suicide was much lower 50 years ago, when virtually no one received (or even offered) such treatment. It is the usual liberal answer that more money and more credentialism can solve any problem, the same one offered (even more dubiously) to explain why American children are worse at reading than they were half a century ago, when we spent vastly less on education and teachers had studied their subjects instead of pseudo-scientific pedagogy and there were no iPads in our classrooms.

Others will mention the economy, that catch-all replacement for what we used to think of as "society." While it is true that the uptick during the last decade began with the crash of 2007-08, it continued apace during the long recovery of Barack Obama's second and Donald Trump's first presidential terms. If the recession were the sole or even among the main culprits, one would expect to have seen a leveling off many years ago.

The last and almost certainly the most absurd explanation you are likely to encounter for the increase in suicide among the young is private firearm ownership. While it is true that self-inflicted gunshots are the method used in a narrow majority — just over 50 percent — of suicides, the staggering rates of gun ownership belie any meaningful causal relationship. Besides, among the group in which the suicide rate is increasing most precipitously — white teenaged girls — firearms account for vastly fewer deaths than, for example, suffocation. We live in a country full of guns. Blaming them for an increase in suicides makes about as much sense as blaming pillows.

At bottom, it seems to me that there is no single identifiable explanation for this distressing phenomenon. The horror of self-slaughter is one of those great human constants, like normative monogamy or artistic creation, that has prevailed across all decent civilizations throughout the history of our species. There is a very real sense in which I think a person's decision to take his or her own life can never be explained.

There is, however, one thing to which I would point if asked to give my best guess about why we are seeing more suicides among younger people: widespread use of social media. Even now I think it is still almost impossible for those of us who came of age before the use of these platforms — and the ownership of mobile phones — became ubiquitous to imagine what it is like to have all the ordinary problems of adolescence magnified by the screen. This is especially true for girls, one quarter of whom now say that they have cut or otherwise injured themselves deliberately. Imagine spending nine hours a day having your physical appearance and your every utterance concerning your tastes, opinions, and feelings evaluated quantitatively by means of likes, faves, and so on. It is hard enough on adults.

But even the problem of social media seems to me epiphenomenal. The real crisis that I think underlies the increase not only in suicide but in other so-called "deaths of despair" is the problem of loneliness. Surveys suggest there is a meaningful relationship between these and that it works in both directions: persons who report more frequent social media use are much more likely to say they are lonely, and those who claim to use social media sparingly are much less likely to feel alone. What remains unclear is the causal mechanism. Are frequent users of social media already lonely, hence their attempts to pursue meaningful connections online, or does social media make people feel lonelier or otherwise encourage patterns of behavior that increase feelings of loneliness? I suspect that both of these things are true.

So much for the cause or causes, if indeed they can ever be identified. What can be done about the problem? I think the single most important answer is community — not "putting yourself out there," which is just another inducement to anxiety, but meaningful organic membership in a body in which one's status is not contingent. (One of the strangest paradoxes of American life is that for all the iniquities visited upon them sense of community membership is strongest among racial minorities, whose rates of suicide are not increasing at the same rate as those of white people.)

How exactly we should go about shoring up community is a very difficult, indeed perhaps unanswerable question. Any large-scale positive attempts are likely to fail for obvious reasons. The bonds that create meaningful human relationships cannot be willed into existence. Instead the best we can probably hope for is the gradual elimination of identifiable obstacles to community. "We must love one another or die."
 

zelezo vlk

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https://www.espn.com/college-football/story/_/id/29893046/the-star-college-football-recruit-parents-unusual-decision-cross-country-move

I know that many people are laughing at this story, but I find it extremely troubling. It bothers me not only that this is a thing, but also that people think so very little of marriage as to celebrate this. Qui bono? Who is really benefiting by Jake playing his senior year of high school 2000 miles away from his friends and family? He's already committed to USC, so it's not even a shot to get a scholarship. This thing is ridiculous.

There was only one catch.

How college football is impacted by the recruiting dead period
For a transfer student to be immediately eligible under Georgia High School Association rules, he or she must make a "bona fide move," in which the "student moved simultaneously with the entire parental unit or persons he/she resided with at the former school, and the student and parent(s) or persons residing with the student live in the service area of the new school."

Moving to Georgia wasn't a problem for Randy, who retired in 2012 after working for 32 years with the Los Angeles Police Department. Yvonne, who works as an administrative assistant, had to remain in California for her job. For Jake to be eligible for one season at Valdosta High, Randy and Yvonne legally separated to meet the Georgia residency rules. According to court records, Randy and Yvonne dissolved their marriage on Aug. 20. They plan to get back together once Jake's season at Valdosta High ends.
 

greyhammer90

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<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/JTfhYyTuT44" frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; clipboard-write; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture" allowfullscreen></iframe>
 

Legacy

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Sad that the Portland Elk - a true icon and part of Portland's cultural history - was taken down out of caution for damage because some antifa started a fire. Brats. An unknown sclupturer put up a make-shift sculpture in downtown.

Some bozos of Patriot Prayer came from Washington with an act that is reminiscent of high school. What fun to get in pickups and steal a "mascot".
Members of Patriot Prayer Stole an Elk Statue Erected by Anti-Fascist Protesters in Downtown Portland

Afterwards, how stupid can you be to cross the state border back into Washington, post on social media, help identify themselves with a photo with their weapons for the FBI Task Force, and feel that it was somehow important. High School. Except in this atmosphere, they even said they wanted to send a message to the Gov and Mayor that they - in camo with semis - could go anywhere and appear where they wanted. They even registered the "nightmare elk" as a Republican. Why not appear in the photo with a Trump flag?

True Patriots.
 
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