Elsewhere (275)
Zareer Masani on artefacts, treasures and preservation:
Before the British came [to India], there was no indigenous tradition of exploring or conserving antiquity. The wonderful Buddhist stupas of the Mauryan empire (circa 2nd century BC) were destroyed, abandoned and forgotten during the Hindu revival, and then many Hindu temples met a similar fate during Muslim invasions from the 12th century… The fact is that we have no idea what would have become of the world’s ‘looted’ antiquities if they hadn’t been preserved in Western collections. Would the treasures of Beijing’s Summer Palace have survived Mao’s Cultural Revolution? Would the Elgin marbles have survived Turkish tour guides chopping off chunks to sell as souvenirs? Would ISIS have spared those Middle Eastern artefacts that survive in European museums?
Readers may care to speculate as to whether, for instance, the Natural History Museum of Berlin’s famous Brachiosaurus, the tallest mounted skeleton in the world, which was discovered and excavated by German palaeontologists in 1909 and is currently maintained by German taxpayers, would have fared better had it remained in Tanzania.
Jonah Goldberg on “affirmative action” and its victims:
If Harvard lifted its anti-Asian [admissions] criteria, Harvard’s own Office of Institutional Research said the share of Asian students at Harvard would more than double, from 19 percent to 43 percent. But that 43 percent wouldn’t be distributed equally among all courses and disciplines. It would be a boon for computer-science and biology classes, but even more seats would go empty in women’s history or poetry courses. And I can’t help but think that the faculties in the humanities and the softer social sciences have disproportionate sway on the cultural and political assumptions of the school’s administration. They are, after all, the talkers.
Related: Law professor Gail Heriot on the same, and on other campus dramas:
You can bet that if it’s your job to find and worry about race and sex discrimination, then one way or another you’re going to find that discrimination, even if you have to define sexism and racism down, sometimes way, way down. Only the hopelessly naïve would expect that none of this would affect campus culture.
And not entirely unrelated to that, Sarah George on correcting the inherent evils of pallor:
Humboldt State University, in Arcata, California, is offering its students a series of workshops this summer designed to cultivate a “positive white racial identity” in its white participants.
Apparently, the “racial identity” of pale-skinned students is uniquely monstrous and dysfunctional, being as it is so “ignorant” and “oppressive,” and must be dealt with accordingly. Readers are welcome to imagine any other campus demographic being told repeatedly and at length, by administrators and educators, that its “identity” is not only insufficiently “positive,” i.e., insufficiently deferential and submissive, but also the cause of almost all human woe.
As usual, feel free to share your own links and snippets, on any subject, in the comments.
Technically, didn’t Canada’s “First Nations” of today ethnically cleanse other groups who moved further south?
Yes. Also, Great Slave Lake is called that because its shores were the slave trading highway for the native tribes of the area, before the British showed up and put a stop to that nonsense.
http://theothermccain.com/2018/07/03/bisexual-gender-fluid-7th-grader-leads-pride-march-in-maryland-capital/
Did you ever notice how these Woke kids all talk like 35-year-old SJWs? I call bullshit.
Well, you are still dumber than a creosote post without the creosote and don’t know any of the material, but gosh darn it, you worked hard, here is your A.
You need to understand that there are a tremendous number of people out the who ascribe to the labor theory of value. Very, very smart people. Educators, professors even, with PhD’s and stuff. WTF are you to question this?
Perhaps a workable solution would be to augment the Bachelor of Arts and the Bachelor of Science degrees with an equivalent* Bachelor of Participation degree.
* Not really.
Heh.
Nonsense, we have already established that illegal immigrants make us safer. We must forcibly relocate as many Central and South Americans as possible immediately. For the Women.
Well, here’s a novel problem…
https://metro.co.uk/2018/07/02/nobody-knows-why-its-rained-poo-18-times-over-british-colombia-7676952/
Bachelor of Participation degree.
And, everybody who participates wins a trophy!
Well, here’s a novel problem…
San Fransisco to British Columbia: Here, hold my syringe and spoon.
OK, then. San Fransiscans are now at the point of patting people on the head for putting crap in a bag and not just crapping on the street, can’t wait not to go there.
Pulitzer Prize-winning photographer Alan Diaz dies at 71.
For reason, the article doesn’t show the prize-winning photograph.
Er, that was supposed to say “for *some* reason”.
Then why do I keep reading about people dying whilst on a surgery waiting list…(kind of like the Canadians coming to the US to pay to have a procedure performed because it would take years to have it done in Canada [however, in Canada, it’s “free”])
https://www.theguardian.com/society/2018/jul/02/is-the-nhs-the-worlds-best-healthcare-system
That photo still looks staged. What was Diaz doing in the house during the raid?
As I’ve said before, pretty soon everything will be declared racist…
https://www.therebel.media/mic_com_says_square_dancing_is_racist
If you read the obituary, he was supposedly nearby, having gained the family’s confidence, and was able to get in the house quickly when the raid started.
Well, here’s a novel problem…
I’m wondering if it’s caused by the massive butthurt that the regressives are experiencing over Trump lately…
…he was supposedly nearby…
I’m sure – since those sorts of raids are usually carried out very slowly and deliberately, the element of surprise absolutely *not* being an issue. It strikes me, as well, that when harbouring a fugitive and hearing a knock on the door (or hearing it kicked in), MY first reaction would be to carry said fugitive to the door – no doubt to save wear and tear on the lino.
You know, sometimes you don’t want to argue, you just want to slap the snot out of someone.
MY first reaction would be to carry said fugitive to the door – no doubt to save wear and tear on the lino.
I remember this very clearly, and they didn’t bring Elian to the door. If you notice they’re in an internal room with a closet to the right of Elian and the man holding him.I believe they were hiding in a back bedroom of the house at the time.
…you just want to slap the snot out of someone.
Indeed, as someone downstream from that pointed out, not nazi.
.I believe they were hiding in a back bedroom of the house at the time.
That was my recollection of the story as well. The cameraman was in the house with the family at the time of the raid. IIRC there was a long siege (for lack of a better word) where authorities were asking for the child to be handed over. Media were all over the place and a few friendlies were invited inside to get as much of their story our as possible. While I agree the photo definitely looks staged, I didn’t see it that way at the time. Seemed quite opportunistic but believable.
That cat lady ain’t going to dethrone Paul Gallico, for sure. He was an unjustly forgotten 20th-century American writer who wrote at least 3 novels from the viewpoint of an animal: The Abandoned; Thomasina, The Cat Who Thought She Was A God; and The Silent Miaow. And then we have Jack London, Anna Sewell, Richard Adams, Donald Harington, Felix Salten…