Elsewhere (214)
Via dicentra, the Z-Man on the ongoing disappearance of mainstream media comment sections:
The reason news sites are killing off comment sections is two-fold. One, it is usually where you get the bits of the news story our betters edited out in order to maintain the narrative. The “Minnesota man” in the story is identified in the comments as Jorge Gonzalez, an illegal from Guadalajara. It’s where the “suspect wearing a red shirt” is identified as a black guy named T’Q’ull Ferguson with a Facebook page full of pics of him holding a handgun and a bong. The comment sections have become a leak in the system. The other problem, especially for opinion sites like the Spectator, is the comments have become the place that makes the writers cry. Sure, there’s lots of inane chatter, but it is also where some smart people post corrections and point out the many glaring logical errors. [Opinion writers] have fragile psyches, so seeing their mistakes highlighted for everyone to see, right under their posts, is a source of constant distress.
Ed Driscoll has more. See also this.
Somewhat related, Christopher Snowdon on Oxfam’s dishonesties:
If you look at the BBC’s inequality report you will find no challenge, no rebuttal and no response from anybody who disagrees with Oxfam’s warped interpretation of the data. Whether it knows it or not, the BBC is complicit in the fabrication.
Thomas Sowell suggests some election year reading:
If you are concerned about issues involved when some people want to expand the welfare state and others want to contract it, then one of the most relevant and insightful books is Life at the Bottom by Theodore Dalrymple. What makes Life at the Bottom especially relevant and valuable is that it is about the actual consequences of the welfare state in England — which are remarkably similar to the consequences in the United States. Many Americans may find it easier to think straight about what happens, when it is in a country where the welfare recipients are overwhelmingly whites, so that their behaviour cannot be explained away by “a legacy of slavery” or “institutional racism,” or other such evasions of facts in the United States. As Dr Dalrymple says: “It will come as a surprise to American readers, perhaps, to learn that the majority of the British underclass is white, and that it demonstrates all the same social pathology as the black underclass in America — for very similar reasons, of course.” That reason is the welfare state, and the attitudes and behaviour it promotes and subsidises.
And Katherine Timpf on that quality education you’re spending so much money on:
[University of Colorado political science sophomore] Peyton Smith reported that the professor… decided to begin the semester by shaming the United States military, and saying that the outcome of the Brexit vote is going to destroy the future for young people. The professor also attributed the (supposed) gender wage gap to the fact that the Constitution fails to mention women. “I was then baffled when he even called American patriotism ‘foolish,’” Smith writes.
Somewhat related to that, readers may recall Michigan State’s tenured professor of creative writing, William Penn, whose first lesson of the year was caught on camera in eye-widening detail.
Feel free to share your own links and snippets, on any subject, in the comments.
[ Clutches pearls, faints with outrage. ]
. . . and then what immediately came to mind was of hipsters—or yuppys or preppys or whatever the title of the moment—instead going for clutches outrage, faints with pearls . . . .
Bill Whittle on the Clinton Lie Ratchet.
For evidence that random posts in comment sections are often superior (or at least more amusing) to the underlying work, check out the reviews on Amazon for Clinton’s and Kaine’s book “Stronger Together.” https://www.amazon.com/Stronger-Together-Hillary-Rodham-Clinton/dp/1501161733
..re-enact frankie vaughn style money shots…

Whut?
“If you see FRENCH MAN ARRESTED AFTER BOMB ATROCITY as a BBC website headline, you know that there might have been a bomb, there might have been an atrocity, and the person arrested was probably a man. But you can be quite sure he wasn’t French.”
http://www.samizdata.net/2016/09/samizdata-quote-of-the-day-754/
You almost have to admire the man’s chutzpah.
The Guardian: Wrong about everything. All the time.
https://twitter.com/NickNchlsn/status/778213268112351232
“There be some scary, scary shit”
Yep. Posted this the other day. It seems the same Jody Allard is also the author of a piece that appeared back in February explaining how one of her teenage sons was suicidal.
Some suggest that she might be encouraging self-loathing in her sons. I don’t want to suggest that I know her family, or the reasons for his depression. I have 2 sons myself, and I don’t want to imagine her distress. But really, she could think about going a bit easy on them – they can’t possibly be aided in any way by having their lives paraded (and shamed) in world famous news sites..
An oldy but goody from the charming and sagacious Melissa A. Fabello: http://everydayfeminism.com/2015/09/playing-devils-advocate/
Whenever someone responds to my critique of the culture in which we live with what they believe to be a deep conundrum or contradiction, my first thought is, “Wow. You have absolutely no respect for me as an intellectual being.”
Now, I’ll be the first to say that I don’t think we should value intellect (and particularly the narrow definition that we allow for it) as a trait (hi, that’s ableist) – and yes, I know that you devil’s advocates out there want to argue that intellect and its associated innovation is valuable to the propagation of our species – but I do think that we should respect one another for whichever ways our smarts show up for us.
And in today’s news, free classes at Berkeley are, like intellect, deemed ableist: http://news.berkeley.edu/2016/09/13/a-statement-on-online-course-content-and-accessibility/
Berkeley’s likely solution is to shut the courses down; this was brought about by a complaint filed with the Department of Justice by 2 people who were not Berkeley students.
I never read the Guardian articles, only the comments.
“the British student uprisings of 2010”
Eh? I missed that. What happened?
“the British student uprisings of 2010”
Eh? I missed that. What happened?
. . . . Apparently these, ah, discussions . . .