Elsewhere (228)
Claire Lehmann on the denial of gender differences and its (literally) poisonous effects:
[Feminist author Cordelia Fine] argued that neuroscientists should be schooled in the theory of intersectionality — “the principle that important social identities like gender, ethnicity, and social class mutually constitute, reinforce, and naturalise one another.” At first glance, this is a peculiar demand… To practise intersectionality, one must privilege the voices of black women over white women, and the voices of women over men, for example. The least privileged deserve the most sympathy; the straight white male deserves the least. The relevance for neuroscience is unclear at best. But its utility as an ideological weapon has made it popular among academics hoping to politicise scholarship and silence their enemies.
Richard Reeves and Dmitrios Halikias on our new would-be overlords:
One overlooked irony of the events at Middlebury is how they proved some of the points that [Charles] Murray made in his book, Coming Apart, which he had been invited to discuss. The book documents the separation of a “new upper class,” raised in rich neighbourhoods, immersed in liberal, cosmopolitan values, and educated at expensive, liberal universities. In other words, it profiles the students of Middlebury College… We found that the schools where students have attempted to disinvite speakers are substantially wealthier and more expensive than average. Since 2014, there have been attempts at some 90 colleges to disinvite speakers, mostly conservatives. The average enrollee at a college where students have attempted to restrict free speech comes from a family with an annual income $32,000 higher than that of the average student in America. In the chart below, the pattern is clear: the more economically exclusive the institution, the more likely it is the students have attempted to hinder free speech.
For those who missed it, Dr Murray’s first-hand account of the Middlebury protest-cum-riot can be found here.
Jordan Peterson on “white privilege” as a rhetorical tactic:
The idea that you can target an ethnic group with a collective crime, regardless of the specific innocence or guilt of the constituent elements of that group, there is absolutely nothing that’s more racist than that. It’s absolutely abhorrent… and precisely the sort of danger that people who are really looking for trouble would push.
And Cathy Young on the dishonesties and delusions of feminist author Rebecca Solnit:
Solnit claims domestic violence is the leading cause of injury to American women; yet Centres for Disease Control and Prevention statistics show that all assault, domestic or not, ranks eighth among causes of injury to women — behind not only falls and car accidents but insect stings and animal bites.
Feel free to share your own links and snippets, on any subject, in the comments.
New superhero-related outrage discovered.
Good thing, feminists have addressed all the other important issues.
Meanwhile, in intersectional sporting news:
Another illustration of how political activism can be difficult to distinguish from a mental health issue.
Imagine the disturbance to The Force, were Wonder Woman to have armpit hair . . . but braided . . .
Jeff do you mean this wrestling team?
http://www.konbini.com/us/lifestyle/mack-beggs-transgender-boy-wins-womens-wrestling-title-texas/
Incidentally, Cordelia Fine, the feminist author who wants neuroscientists to be schooled in intersectionality, gets a bit of a trashing here.
There was standing ovation in the conference hall, with one member of the audience saying how “brave” xe was to enact change
The “standing ovation” is always a clue that the story being told never happened.
I bet they slow-clapped as well, like in the movies.
Almost every presenter had a story of a time they got a co-worker, employee, or boss fired.
Someone should explain public relations to them.
Someone should explain public relations to them.
It’s not a good look. And so I wonder how many of those triumphal stories were like the quoted example, upthread, in which an older co-worker isn’t comfortable using xem and xe to refer to what (presumably) appeared to be a female colleague, and in which there’s no mention of malicious intent on the part of the older man. To my ear, based on the details given, the person insisting on being identified as some ungendered entity, and demanding that people be fired if they don’t comply, doesn’t sound particularly deserving of applause.
…demanding that people be fired if they don’t comply, doesn’t sound particularly deserving of applause.
You mean you don’t believe childish, petty vindictiveness is a virtue???
Has dicentra finished her session with the Scold-O-Mat?
You mean you don’t believe childish, petty vindictiveness is a virtue???
Well, without knowing the details, it sounds pretty vindictive. Not something you’d want to applaud or have at the forefront of your campaign for public acceptance.
And the whole ‘I-am-an-ungendered-entity’ thing is a particularly hard sell, much more so, I think, than getting along with transgender people who want to arrive at one of the two familiar destinations. As I’ve said before, you can adjust to the company of a trans person at work or whatever – with greater or lesser difficulty depending in part on how well or not they pass as their intended sex. Once you manage to get past the initial and unavoidable surrealism of the situation, you can start to deal with them as a person, an individual. But I don’t think many of us have a mental space for people who insist they have no gender at all and who demand we use Martian pronouns. There’s no existing template.
I dunno, I’m starting to think some feminist academics have unrealistic expectations of we men: http://bit.ly/2nj85Do
A Hampshire College student is. . . assaulting a female basketball player from another school . . Carmen Figueroa ordered members of the Central Maine Community College basketball team . . .
Sooo, seeing as the story is of a student, not any sort of administrator, and the story tells of the student’s reaction to quite unrelated visitors, then apparently “ordered” is a rather incorrect description, given that the person so described has utterly zero capability of giving any order to anyone, especially those not related to her campus . . .
The correct phrasing would seem to be Carmen Figueroa petulantly demanded that members of the Central Maine Community College basketball team remove braids from their hair, . . .
Over at Ace’s (tempting the spam filter again), a “She E O” of an empowered business turns out to be, get this, a bit of a corrosive nutter.
http://ace.mu.nu/archives/368947.php
According to a complaint filed late last week by a former employee (and echoed in interviews with multiple current and former employees), those things have included: the size and shape of her employees’ breasts, an employee’s nipple piercings, her own sexual exploits, her desire to experiment with polyamory, her interest in entering a sexual relationship with one of her employees, and the exact means by which she was brought to female ejaculation
In what I’m sure will come as a shock to everyone, she is an attendee of Burning Man orgies, has recently raised funds for a bidet business (“Tushy”) and described the pads business (“Thinx”, her main venture) with “The entire period space has been so tired and so lame… [Now] it’s artful, it’s beautiful, and it’s culturally relevant.”
We joke about the sort of jobs available to Studies majors, but seldom about what happens when one is an entrepreneur…
A Hampshire College student is facing charges after allegedly assaulting a female basketball player from another school for “culturally appropriating” hair braids.
I bet those horrible girls also wear hoops when they aren’t on the court…
intersectional sporting news
Cultural Appropriation, aka adopting ideas from elsewhere, is a time-honoured practice: think of tea, the Brits’ preferred cure-all. And braids in various forms exist in almost every culture: Chinese pigtails, French plaits, Dutch plaits, Yulia Tymoshenko’s halo, cornrows, etc. As for starting a physical fight over a hairstyle, Carmen Figueroa must be mentally unbalanced (just don’t let her use that as a defence when her case comes to court!).
Oh Lordy David, I just re-opened your home page and my eye went straight to this line but with my failing eyesight I didn’t see the first hyphen and I thought things are now getting “out of hand”!
“…… account of the Middlebury protest-cum-riot”
someone who removed nipples because those represent either gender
I am doing my best to adhere to all this correct-speak stuff, but it’s so complicated. Are there genuinely ungendered (U) people? If so, where do we insert them in the current LGBTQ (or, if you’re a purist, LGBTQQIP2SAA) nomenclature?
Are there genuinely ungendered (U) people?
While noting immensely variable definitions of genuinely, a definition involving law courts has occurred and states Yes.
If so, where do we insert them in the current LGBTQ . . .
Bugger all if I know, but then I have yet to encounter such a need and am happy to leave that to the theorists to see if anything concrete can be established.
. . . (or, if you’re a purist, LGBTQQIP2SAA) nomenclature?
I rather enjoyed the note that popped up awhile back which suggested that soon enough the collective term will simply be the leftover one to three or four letters left unclaimed.
If so, where do we insert them in the current LGBTQ (or, if you’re a purist, LGBTQQIP2SAA) nomenclature?
At this point, I’m so fed up by the tedious grandstanding of it all that I’ve got quite a few suggestions about exactly what should be inserted, and where.
Someone should explain public relations to them.
There IS something infuriating about being forced under the threat of termination to use made-up words and, in fact, change lifelong speech patterns at the demand of a coworker. Don’t people have enough to worry about at work?
I suspect they have less interest in public relations than in relishing the power to impose their will on colleagues. The more petty the demand, the better.
lisboeta,
Are there genuinely ungendered (U) people?
Perhaps you’ve never heard of a Nullo.
[Warning: Gawker link – although I was first exposed to this phenomenon at Zombie’s blog some years ago.]
Indeed, I do.
And this gender-of-the-moment nonsense will be the end of women’s sports.
Or women’s sports will put paid to this gender whatever BS.
Both can’t exist at the same time.
I’m watching Iron Fist out of cussedness, because I hate the whiny little pricks criticising it for not being “woke” so very very much. It’s mediocre and cliched at worst. Certainly not an occasion for a load of self-important handwringing.
The idea of “cultural appropriation”, like that of “punching down” in comedy, is underpinned in the worldview of the sanctimonious little turds that push it by a rigid racial hierarchy. Whitey being good at Eastern martial arts is problematic. Black people being better at boxing than the English is fine. This is because non-white people are permanently victims and white people permanently oppresssors. You might wonder why the Chinese and the Japanese, with the second and third largest economies in the world, are considered victims. Because of a century and a half of (anomalous) Western dominance, that’s why, shitlord.
I’m not sure if anyone else remembers the BBC 3 programme “Last Man Standing”, which put an interesting spin on this sort of thing. Essentially a group of British and American amateur sportsmen were invited to take part in various local sporting events. Where a huge amount of skill was involved, they’d generally struggle against the locals. But in the more physical events, you’d quite often find that native experience didn’t count for much against (for example) a really big West African.
I remember one episode where they did wrestling in India. They had to get a champion out of retirement to beat one of the competitors, a British-Nigerian fireman.
Perhaps you’ve never heard of a Nullo.
You’ve delivered me from blissful ignorance. Thanks. Ever so.
Not buying this transgender story from The Federalist. “Anonymous” writes in a manner that reminds me very much of that (Steven?) Glass character who wrote for The New Republic back in the 90’s. Something smells here. Why would an editor allow such vague sourcing and references? “My state”?
The original Nullos:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Skoptsy
Things to come:
A future variant of the Skoptsy’s appear briefly in The Stars My Destination, a 1956 science fiction novel by Alfred Bester. These Skoptsys have their sensory nerves severed, rendering them deaf and blind and unable to feel their bodies.
Or has this already happened?
–Bad News
A couple of links regarding the “Hair Warrior” Carmen Figueroa:
Photos. Scroll down to see the elephant photo. Said elephant was presumably in Thailand. Hampshire College costs exceed $62,000 per year.
Come and experience the new and exciting future of academic development at Wellesley college, where their deep concern and respect for students has lead to the following statement:
There is no doubt that the speakers in question impose on the liberty of students, staff, and faculty at Wellesley. We are especially concerned with the impact of speakers’ presentations on Wellesley students, who often feel the injury most acutely and invest time and energy in rebutting the speakers’ arguments.
How dare you expect students to invest mental effort in addressing the arguments of others!
Source:
https://www.thefire.org/subject-facstaffdiscuss-statement-cere-faculty-re-laura-kipnis-freedom-project-visit-aftermath/
There is no doubt that the speakers in question impose on the liberty
An exercise of liberty, with no physical contact or control of any kind asserted over another, somehow imposes on the liberty of these to (implicitly) control the liberty of the first party. It’s the “freedom from harmful effects” nonsense engineered beyond the usual redefinition of “freedom from ()” to one of “liberty”, which reveals the whole thing as being even more Orwellian farce than usually obvious.
Of course, “no doubt” is a preemptive attempt to prohibit scrutiny, as these are (as David might say) not load-bearing arguments. Thus, they intend to limit the liberty of others to question whether their further limits on liberty preserve any liberty whatsoever.
It is a culture of lies and reversal.
…Wellesley students, who often feel the injury most acutely and invest time and energy in rebutting the speakers’ arguments.
Point of order: I’ve yet to observe the Clown Quarter denizens actually rebut a conservative argument. (Unless, of course, throwing a tantrum which would embarrass a toddler is considered “rebuttal.” In which case, more evidence to support your invocation of Orwell.)
Scroll down to see the elephant photo.
Every photo had an elephant in it.
More academic-bubble insanity:
A university administrator delivered a speech in which he described “whiteness” as “a way of thinking, a way of acting” that is fundamentally opposed to Christianity.
Paul Dionne, Inclusive Success Coordinator for Beloit College’s Office for Academic Diversity and Inclusiveness, gave a speech entitled, “Working Against Whiteness” as part of a “Love Made Public” lecture series.
To help define “whiteness,” Dionne instructed the student attendees to chant “imperialist, capitalist, white supremacist patriarchy,” a phrase originating from feminist and self-avowed socialist bell hooks, who spells her name with all lowercase letters.
“Working against whiteness for me is interrogating myself and who I am and where I come from and all of my privileges,” said the school administrator…
Ohferfuckssake. If Dionne were truly serious, he’d give up his position to a more deserving “person of color”.
Somewhere out there, George Orwell is shaking his head and muttering “I told you so”.*
.
[*cribbed from DC commenter “Navyvetew1”]
Oh, and this:
Inclusive Success Coordinator for Beloit College’s Office for Academic Diversity and Inclusiveness
A third party (the government, student loan programs) paying for it is only part of the reason why tuition at US colleges and universities has become so outrageously expensive.
This could be, by a long way, the best and most interesting piece I have read on privilege and feminism, well, ever.
It is long, but well worth it.
@Vince
*Golf clap*
Whitey being good at Eastern martial arts is problematic.
But that’s not what’s going on in Iron Fist. The problem is that whitey is better at martial arts than everybody in Asia, including presumably disciples who have been training for this their entire lives, and has earned a massive supernatural boon that none of the natives have ever pulled off. It’s the equivalent of (say) a Chinese comic book about a twenty-something college student from Shenzeng visiting Great Britain on an exchange program, setting foot on Lia Fail as a lark, and having the thing roar and declare him rightful High King of Ireland.
It’s not worth getting one’s panties in a bunch about, but it is possible to admit it’s a little presumptuous.
By contrast, compare Walter Gibson’s Shadow, who was simply the only white man to have learned the secrets of hypnotism and mind control; his archenemy was a Chinese student of the same Tibetan monks.
‘reverse iron fist: a chinese girl’s plane goes down over the texas wilderness. she returns years later with the mystical art of gunslinging’

Found in the replies:
To help define “whiteness,” Dionne instructed the student attendees to chant “imperialist, capitalist, white supremacist patriarchy,”
Not so much an argument as an elaborate racial fetish.
Inclusive Success Coordinator for Beloit College’s Office for Academic Diversity and Inclusiveness
The stated goal of which is,
As noted before, in the language of “diversity” bureaucrats, “equity” translates as “equality of outcome regardless of inputs.” Or as it’s more generally known, lowering standards.
It is long, but well worth it.
That, and much of the rest.
SJW logic.
https://twitter.com/primalpoly/status/844236425134403584
http://www.spiked-online.com/newsite/article/yvette-cooper-the-witchfinder-general-of-the-web/19573#.WNJI0lWLSDI
Creeping authoritarianism. One of the many people trying to censor the internet is Yvette Cooper. More italics coming up…
In Cooper’s view, all ‘vile’ online content should be blocked or removed, lest it break the sacred bounds of ‘common decency’. This is shocking. What right does an MP have to dictate what can and cannot be said on the web? Cooper seems to think she has every right. She kept asking the directors why posts that she and her committee had flagged up were still online. The sinister and shocking message is that if an MP says it’s wrong, then it’s wrong, and it has to go.
More italics coming up…
Just sayin’.
Elsewhere in culture war news:
A book store which only sells works by black authors is facing closure because it can no longer attract enough customers to turn a profit.
Minority interest shop finds it’s in a minority.
As such, the store says it faces imminent closure unless donors give them £10,000 and free labour.
Slavery, anyone?
Store manager Janice Durham called on black people in particular to visit the store and hold meetings there to defend their culture.
Reverse the races and see what happens.
New Beacon has excluded profitable releases by choosing a racial focus… the store says it faces imminent closure
It’s almost as if there’s a moral to the story. A teachable moment, as it were. Though I suppose the owner will regard the lack of public interest in race hustling literature as a bad thing.
Dionne instructed the student attendees to chant “imperialist, capitalist, white supremacist patriarchy,”
That’s a cheer sure to generate a lot of school spirit during football games.
Just sayin’
Egad, it works!
Egad, it works!
Next week I’ll be showing you all how to change the time on the microwave.
Fake “hate crime” #642.
R.Sherman,
That’s a cheer sure to generate a lot of school spirit during football games.
You mean the New Red Guards’ “struggle sessions” won’t build camaraderie? Are you some kind of wrecker?
Fake “hate crime” #642.
Somewhat related: ” These aren’t the White Supremacists you’re looking for“.