Elsewhere (160)
George Will on the dysfunctions of academia:
What I want to talk to you about tonight is the amount of intellectual ingenuity that is now devoted to rationalising the disappearance of free speech… Today’s attack… is an attack on the theory of free speech. It is an attack on the desirability of free speech… What we have today is an attack on the very possibility of free speech. The belief is that the First Amendment is a mistake.
The bureaucratic farces and assorted psychodramas described by Mr Will may be familiar to regulars of this parish. Though it may be news to some that Texas Tech University, with an undergraduate enrolment of 28,000 people, now confines displays of WrongThought™ to a “free speech gazebo” some twenty feet wide.
Charles C W Cooke on the cultivated pretensions of student “radicals”:
Take a look at this farcical missive from the Oberlin Review, in which around 150 students at the college claim repeatedly that Christina Hoff Sommers was coming to campus to present not a viewpoint with which many of the students vehemently disagree but rather an actual threat to student safety. Sommers, the signatories contend, is not an academic sharing her work, but a participant “in violent movements” and an accessory to “threats of death and rape.” […] Held hostage by the twin evils of mawkishness and self-indulgence, [the protestors] have taken to masquerading as the martyrs of the piece. You will note, of course, that none of the outraged parties at Oberlin were obliged to attend Sommers’s talk, or even to be on campus while she was being hosted. Had they wished, they could have sat the whole thing out with nary a word. Indeed, it was quite by choice they injected themselves into the event at all.
Ah, but a sense of moral proportion is of no use whatsoever to an in-group of narcissists, poseurs and passive-aggressive harpies. The kind of would-be intellectuals who, instead of doing something else, turn up out of spite to jeer and interrupt – thereby drawing attention to themselves – while making theatrical displays of how “unsafe” they feel when confronted with information they do not like. The kind of would-be intellectuals who claim that theirs is a campus “laden with trauma and sexualized violence,” who pre-emptively slander those who disagree with them, and who respond to criticism with the words, “We could spend all of our time and energy explaining all of the ways she’s harmful. But why should we?”
And Darleen Click quotes the deep, deep wisdom of professor of anthropology and ostentatious male feminist, Melvin Konner:
In addition to women’s superiority in judgment, their trustworthiness, reliability, fairness, working and playing well with others, relative freedom from distracting sexual impulses, and lower levels of prejudice, bigotry, and violence, they live longer, have lower mortality at all ages, are more resistant to most categories of disease, and are much less likely to suffer brain disorders that lead to disruptive and even destructive behaviour. And, of course, they can produce new life from their own bodies, to which men add only the tiniest biological contribution — and one that soon could be done without… There is a birth defect… called maleness… To call being male a syndrome is not an arbitrary judgment.
Yes, “a birth defect… called maleness.” Thank goodness only the finest minds educate your children.
“There is a birth defect… called maleness…”
David, do you remember the sickening “Conscious Men” video, in which contemptible worms apologized to “sacred” women for the sin of being men?
R. Sherman – that young man is Bad, Dangerous, and Off The Wall.
If he wants to make the world a better place he should take a look at himself and make that change.
“Laurie Penny, she of The Deep Wisdom™, has been busy telling us that the rioting is ‘justified’ and ‘America should listen.’ “
How would she feel if, every time a black thug murdered a Korean grocer, thousands of Koreans rioted, burning black homes and businesses, and beating and killing blacks? Just wondering.
David, do you remember the sickening “Conscious Men” video…?
Doesn’t ring a bell. Am I missing some quality material?
pst314 – HOW DID I MISS THIS GENIUS?
I prefer the Will Ferrell version though.
@Steve 2
My dick shriveled up just watching that. Put this with the whole “Krankies Key Party” comment from months ago with the reasons I hate you.
🙂
A comment from Steve-a-roni’s link:
I was certain that was parody leading up to a punchline. I mean, come on…balls and energy? I feel violated in my disappointment.
… around 150 students at the college claim repeatedly that Christina Hoff Sommers was coming to campus to present not a viewpoint with which many of the students vehemently disagree but rather an actual threat to student safety.
Hmm. Now consider this – not simply the content, but the fact that Channel 4 presents this as if we should be somehow surprised:
@_UmmWaqqas is today revealed by Channel 4 News to have been set up and operated by Rawdah Abdisalaam, a twenty-something female believed to be from Seattle. She advocates mass emigration to Islamic State while seemingly enjoying the creature comforts of the American lifestyle, watching the Denver Broncos on a super-widescreen HDTV and tweeting pictures of double cheeseburgers.
Of course, I am duty-bound to point out (as C4 news does to give them their increasingly rare due of credit) that it has not been yet confirmed that the person using the account is the same person who initially set up the account, but nevertheless – just how surprised, really, are we supposed to be about this?
She will not tell you what she wants, and you mustn’t ask her, because a man must be decisive. So you must determine what she wants from her body language, or by telepathy, or just guess.
Thing is, WOMEN can tell what other women want. Ya’ll need to hire a female translator (an ugly one, of course) to relay what your wife/girlfriend is saying and not saying.
Save many a marriage, that would.
Angel from “Buffy”.
SPIKE, you fool! British accent! Hello?
Speaking of Baltimore, I had this enlightening exchange.
There was plenty of this same idiocy going around the Twitters: if you’re more worried about “insured property” than the dead guy with the severed spinal cord…
Well. We know what THAT means, don’t we?
These people, however, prolly deserved it.
Nothing sets me off more than smug, self-satisfied, sanctimonious sophistry.
And alliteration.
Speaking of Baltimore, I had this enlightening exchange.
Heh. What a cock. I notice that Mr Jesse Benn, the grad student “creative” and professional question-begger, chose to add irony quotes to the word riot. I wonder how that irony would hold up if he were living a little closer to the beating, burning and looting.
“Insured property”
Oh, so I’m paying for it then.
Here in St Louis, we protest police brutality (be it real or imaginary) by liberating liquor bottles and hair extensions from the evil clutches of The Man. Just how we roll.
R. Sherman – I regret nothing!
WTP – I kept expecting them to tell us about the comet that’s coming to take us all up to space, but only if we snip off our bits first.
Dicentra – Pfft. He’s no Cary Elwes.
@Jerry C
I’m still in my cups because the Blues had another first round exit from the playoffs. If I had hair extensions, I’d hang myself with them.
Oh well. Now I can concentrate on baseball.
Genetically, women are closer to cats than they are to men.
That explains why so many feminists seem to like cats. They recognise their own kind.
http://imgur.com/gallery/QVh32
News just in, don’t trust the news!
ac1, don’t trust the newsmakers. Those City Paper staffers should be ashamed and then drummed out of journalism. Ha! I crack myself up, thinking “journalism” has any standards of truth nowadays .
News just in, don’t trust the news!
When journalism is seen as a branch of activism, and is taught as such, it will attract certain kinds of people, and this will happen. Which is why professional journalists, schooled in the idea that reporting is a vehicle for “economic justice,” are telling us that “these children” aren’t rioting thugs but are in fact “communicating,” and that “burning police cars and destroying private property is a legitimate political strategy.”
and that “burning police cars and destroying private property is a legitimate political strategy.”
Said the fuckwit hack whose home isn’t on fire.
Said the fuckwit hack whose home isn’t on fire.
Absolutely. But this is a very common theme. It’s a staple of leftist posturing. It’s blatantly non-reciprocal, premised on coercion and titillated by violence. It’s the morality of a sociopath.
@ Dicentra
You shouldn’t feel defensive about my Tweet, then. Have you been speaking out against racialized police brutality routinely?
That passive-aggressive tone is fairly routine for leftists. They’re not making a case, they’re just trying to provoke you by implying that you’re a racist/ sexist/ homophobe/ crimethinker unless you agree with them.
It’s just political correctness. Just laugh it off. It will magically go away. That’s what my doctor told me 20 years ago after I related being kept after diversity training class for rolling my eyes at it. See how well that strategy has worked?
Bad attitude + Women’s Studies degree = Burger King badge.
By the looks of things, it could be a loyalty badge.
What’s truly maddening about what’s going on regarding the killing of Freddie Gray is how the people on the outside are deliberately staking out the same positions that are designed to ensure nothing gets solved.
On the one hand, we have a bunch of race hustlers who say that you’re only allowed to discuss killings like this in the context of race. (Never mind somebody obviously innocent like Bou Bou Phonesevanh.) When Rand Paul pointed out that we have too many petty laws and that enforcement of a law about taxes on cigarettes led New York cops to kill Eric Garner, the howling from the race-baiters was overwhelming.
On the other hand, we’ve got people who see a bunch of race-hustlers shrieking, and then the rioting, and think, “Rioting is wrong; therefore the original police action must have been 150% right,” with no justification for making that logical leap. If you read people like Radly Balko or the Photography Is Not a Crime blog, you’ll have seen more than enough examples that there’s a double standard in that cops, even if they do get charged, it will be for something far less severe than a non-cop would be charged with, and cops lie all the time.
Meanwhile, the power of the state to fuck up people’s lives grows apace.
http://www.itv.com/news/update/2015-04-28/man-charged-over-threat-to-behead-ukip-candidate/
ROPMA
Another thing regarding Baltimore that is bugging me and I don’t see much push back on…The rioting and such is supposedly a reaction to a reported incidence of police brutality that resulted in an unfortunate death. Why are so many tweets, discussions, and such piling economic issues on top of this? Putting aside the obvious fact that rioting, burning, and looting are significant disincentives for the economic investment many of those tying this to economic issues are calling for? It’s yet another ouroboros.
“On the other hand, we’ve got people who see a bunch of race-hustlers shrieking, and then the rioting, and think, “Rioting is wrong; therefore the original police action must have been 150% right,”
Eh, I think that’s mostly a strawman. I, for one, am perfectly willing to accept the possibility that the cops used excessive force on Freddie Gray and wrongfully caused his death. And if so, the cops who acted improperly ought to be punished, training and officer recruitment re-evaluated, etc.
So maybe the cops were in the wrong here. Let’s accept that as a given for the sake of argument, even though the facts of the case aren’t entirely clear yet.
I am just not sure that police brutality, in a jurisdiction like Baltimore, is a problem that can actually be solved. You do what you can to minimize it, but like crime itself, excessive use of force by police is not really something that can be eliminated. Baltimore has a huge amount of crime, hence a huge number of police-suspect interactions, and a huge number of opportunities for things to go wrong. It is possible that Baltimore cops are not of the highest quality, but that could be because Baltimore is an unappealing place for policemen to work. It’s dangerous, the locals resent you and it’s a poor city, so the pay probably isn’t that great. How do you change that equation?
The conventional solution for riots ostensibly having to do with police brutality is more liberalism and more blacks in positions of authority. But Baltimore is pretty much maxed out on both those counts, so they’ll have to think of something else this time.
Eh, this race rioting in America makes me sad.
A few decades ago, Black America produced a man who is still an example to us all. A man of peace who was unflinching in the face of violence. A role model for men of all races. A hero for the ages. A man whose likeness deserves to be carved into Mount Rushmore.
I’m talkin bout Shaft. Can you dig it?
@Steve
The late, great Isaac Hayes!.
@Steve
Dovetailing with The Patriarchy, recall that the only person who understood John Shaft was his (N.B. patriarchal possessiveness) woman.
Once a year, The Patriarchy has a Shaft Film Festival held at the fairgrounds in Bugtussle, Oklahoma. You should try to make it if you get the chance.
http://www.newsweek.com/nepal-earthquake-could-have-been-manmade-disaster-climate-change-brings-326017.html
So, since the earthquake in Nepal was clearly the result of climate change, should we not also assume that the Baltimore riots were caused by climate change as well?
I am just not sure that police brutality, in a jurisdiction like Baltimore, is a problem that can actually be solved.
The people who are in the best position to yank on the cops’ choke-chain are the people who hire them, i.e., Baltimore City gubmint. Those are elected officials, and who elected them?
Baltimore citizens. No doubt Baltimore politics is dominated by a Chicago-style political machine whose purpose is to make sure the citizens are properly fleeced and graft is properly distributed.
Don’t like the policing in your own town, Baltimore? Quit voting the same creeps into office.
Rioting is wrong; therefore the original police action must have been 150% right
I’m with JerryC: that’s a strawman. I haven’t seen that connection expressed anywhere. Any defense of the cops is not predicated on the wrongness of the rioting.
should we not also assume that the Baltimore riots were caused by climate change as well?
You think you’re being ironic.
If Ferguson, therefore Baltimore.
Said the fuckwit hack whose home isn’t on fire.
In addition to Occam’s Nailfile, we have the Marxoid Monkey Spanner™. This handy device can be used by Marxoids around the world and fits anything, anywhere, anytime. So- covering riots in Baltimore? Use the MMS; it means that you can safely conflate the actions of churchy middle-aged ladies with good intentions and home-made cardboard signs who obey the curfew with those of the feral thugs who exploit the situation as an opportunity for arson and looting. You, the hack; you are also personally absolved and so do not have to take any kind of moral position; they are all the oppressed and they are fighting the power and you are telling it like it is.
Closer to home- Facebook and Twitter SJWs with SWP backgrounds; concerned that somebody in Whitehall/Westminster wants to reform Britain’s welfare system? Get out your MMSs; one good thrutch* and off you go: anybody who is in receipt of benefits for any reason is a poor oppressed person suffering from the ravages of almighty Capital and Tory vested interests, so get going with those vile misanthropic rants about Ian Duncan Smith and the legacy of Thatcher and the inherent vileness of anyone who ever went to public school (unless they have seen the light and joined the SWP, UAF or whatever).
It’s exactly the same mindset the world over. The SJWs of whatever stripe react to any given situation by jumping to a simplistic conclusion (dialectical materialism in action) and then next thing they’re either doing that snotty passive-aggressive/sarcastic thing or being overtly aggressive, not even shying away from violence if they think they can get away with it.
*A Lancastrian term meaning inter alia to apply brute force to an object by means of a hand-held tool (See also: explosive devices, detonation of; and alleviating symptoms of an acute manifestation of a common personal hygiene problem, surreptitious wriggling of the perineal area by means of.
Marxoid Monkey Spanner™.
I may have to borrow that one.
Jerry and Dicentra:
There may be more violent crime in big cities than elsewhere, but one of the reasons I mentioned Eric Garner was to make the point that a lot of the “crime” that leads to interactions between the cops and the people they’re brutalizing is stuff that shouldn’t be crimes at all. (The War on Drugs is evil, and has led to all sorts of predations against the fourth amendment for one.)
I also mentioned Photography Is Not a Crime precisely becuase it’s fairly well established that here in the US, you can video/photograph cops doing their job in public, and yet cops still try to rough up people who record the cops, presumably to prevent the mateerial from becoming public. The cops like to say, “If you’ve done nothing wrong, you should have nothing to hide.” But their actions imply that this maxim shouldn’t apply to them.
And there are a lot of people who think you deserve whatever happens to you if you don’t obey cops’ every order, like if you don’t consent to an obviously illegal search you deserve to be waylaid by the side of the road while the police backup is incredibly slow in coming.
Oh, and regarding that double standard for cops:
Ignorance of the law is no excuse, unless of course you’re a cop, as the Supreme Court recently informed us in Heien v. North Carolina
The gist is that a man was pulled over by the cops for having onely one working brake light, even though this is legal in North Carolina. The cops searched the car and found drugs. The conviction was upheld, even though there was no valid reason for the cops to pull the guys over in the first place.
This is why it’s not unreasonable for anybody to be nervous when approached by the cops, and why you should never consent to a search.
Once a year, The Patriarchy has a Shaft Film Festival . . .
And also on the bill are I’m Gonna Git You Sucka and The Hebrew Hammer . . .
The cops like to say, “If you’ve done nothing wrong, you should have nothing to hide.” But their actions imply that this maxim shouldn’t apply to them.
Back around the Ferguson riots there was an east coastIsh police department that got sued for harassing someone who had done nothing more than record video of police in action . . . and a particular point of all the articles covering the new lawsuit was that the particular lot of uniform idjits had already just lost a different lawsuit addressing the same issue . . . .
@Hal,
Puhleeze. The Patriarchy prefers the classics.
Back around the Ferguson riots . . .
. . and a bit of Goglemancy states that Philadelphia seems to be cursed with the particular collection of idjits . . .
The Patriarchy prefers the classics.
Oh, that too, but while also noting the lineage and leadership well established by Marx.
“Most women, or course, are sane …”
Not really – each one, in her own particular, unique way, is absolutley nuts.
Oh, and more of what is going on at Oberlin.
http://popehat.com/2015/04/27/tumult-at-oberlin-in-wake-of-emotional-support-animal-companion-initiative/
Since we’re sharing movies, here’s one for Oberlin: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0110759/?ref_=fn_al_tt_1
And then for the rest of us: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0057298/?ref_=nm_flmg_act_26
Hal:
The problem, of course, is that it’s the taxpayers that foot the bill for such judgments. I want to see a cop literally dragged out of his home at gunpoint while his children are being terrorized watching this as the home goes on the auction block to pay for the judgment.
Go ahead, call me hypocritical for saying this.
The problem, of course, is that it’s the taxpayers . . . .
Are you considering rather creative police funding to be a really, really, really—did I mention really?—-bad idea?
I do state that such is indeed totally and utterly devoid of, and the blatant, open, and utter opposite of To Protect And Serve . . . .
Come to think of them . . . two sets of notes on who can successfully demand occurrences and the joys of dousing fires with gasoline both started off as a single essay, and then once two parts took off in different directions it was just easier to make two copies and finish writing ’em out as separate items . . . . Both cite recent occurrences of 1992 because that’s when they were written—the 1996 at the bottom of each is merely when they went online.
Comment Is Free has been MUCH improved since I last browsed it.