Reheated (119)
Some items from the archives:
Don’t Oppress My People With Your White-Ass Folk Music.
White people strum banjos, have fun. Fretting ensues at University of Sheffield.
Behind this mannered waffle is the weird implication that devotees of folk music are somehow, simply by existing, excluding racial minorities. Shooing them away. Though, as so often, details on this point are neither obvious nor forthcoming.
Still, perhaps we can look forward to an academic interrogation of classic car shows in Nottinghamshire as some heinous bastion of “white-centricity.” Another item on the list of Things That Must Be Decolonised And Morally Corrected.
“Our aim,” say our tearful academics, “is to break down the barriers for people to get involved in folk music. Opening up the genre to different audiences.”
Different audiences. Not the audience that folk music actually has, mind, the one it attracts and which is arrived at via choice and musical inclination. And again, no actual barriers to participation are specified. But the audience is nonetheless all wrong, apparently.
On media mendacity and self-congratulation:
Journalists, we’re told, are “exposed to danger in the digital world” and consequently suffer high rates of “anxiety, depression, and post-traumatic distress.” As a result of being mocked or disagreed with on social media. “We don’t want our journalists to be killed,” says Catherine Tait, the president and CEO of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation.
The term “hate” is used often and expansively – not only to cover threats and vividly abusive emails – “violent messages” – but also mockery and brusque corrections of factual and logical error. Even being referred to by the public as woke is presented as a basis for weeping, a form of psychological torture.
Indeed, almost any kind of demurral is framed as an attempt to “silence” the journalists’ self-declared heroism, to deny them their cosmic destiny. And hence, it seems, the imperative to shut down reader-comment sections on national newspaper websites, on grounds that readers are no longer content to confine their feedback to the polite correction of typos.
Throughout, the air is heavy with self-elevation, and claims of being scrupulously unbiased and “speaking truth to power” are deployed entirely without irony.
On spite as progressive pseudo-piety.
It’s not just the conceit that vandalising some random person’s car is a thing one should do, as a good person, as an act of righteousness. Bewildering as that is. It’s the idea of doing that to a make of car that’s famed for its ability to record anything that approaches. Which suggests a level of emotional dysregulation, of total impulse control failure, that’s quite hard to relate to.
I Know, Let’s All Film Our Mental Breakdowns.
An election occurs. Cue meltdowns and moon-howling.
Of course, Ms Prose was far from alone in her weird theatre of distress, and social media was ablaze with performative convulsion. Among the titans of the fabulist resistance was a tightly wound progressive chap, who envisioned internment camps for those like himself, i.e., tightly wound progressives, with the streets being patrolled by some Trumpian Sturmabteilung.
Oh, and let’s not forget the Ohio high-school teacher Danielle Mann, whose post-election demands, issued from her classroom, included a list of the addresses of likeminded progressives, all of them, everywhere, and the mandatory wearing of identifying bracelets. So that she would know how everyone else voted.
In which we’re told “LGBTQ+ people experience time differently.”
Readers will note the combination of meandering blather and grafted-on buzzwords, like lumps in porridge. I suppose it’s the curse for people who desperately want to seem more interesting than they actually are, or indeed ever will be, and who are compelled to refer almost any topic of conversation – even quantum mechanics – back to themselves. People who wish to become complicated and fascinating by having an “identity.”
It’s also a curse for anyone unable to escape their presence, of course.
For those craving more, this is a pretty good place to start.
By all means consider this an open thread. Share ye links and bicker.





£1,485,400. For “interviewing acquaintances”…
Plus “extra funds” from Research England. Because folk music must be “decolonised” and purged of its “white-centricity.” By weird neurotics tugging at the taxpayers’ teats.
And we mustn’t forget that our fretful academics also employed a word-association game, with which those acquaintances were probed for any scandalous biases. Say, by thinking of Bob Dylan instead of Joan Baez.
It’s the bleeding edge of academic rigour.
Re-reading that post, I’d forgotten just how contrived and unconvincing the academics’ reasoning is. If reasoning is quite the word. They claim that folk music is terribly important and “should be celebrated,” while denouncing how “white-centric” it is, and while telling us how much it needs “decolonising,” via which it will be transformed into… well, something else.
Something less like, you know, folk music.
Just as they repeatedly stress the importance of “removing barriers” to minority participation, and claim that there’s an obvious and urgent need to “break down barriers,” while unearthing no evidence – no evidence at all – that any barriers exist. Despite their alleged cleverness, despite many months of research, and despite very generous funding.
And it seems that no-one in the orbit of these pale, progressive academics, none of their peers, pointed out the weirdness and incoherence of their project and public statements, the fundamental question-begging. The sheer fatuousness of it all.
DANGER! WHITE PEOPLE!
In France (obviously).
People must not be allowed to engage in fellowship outside the aegis of the state.
That’s also why the lockdowners went after outdoor church services.
“At the start of a nappy change, ensure your child knows what is happening,” researchers from Deakin University wrote in a November 2025 guide. “Get down to their level and say, ‘You need a nappy change,’ and then pause so they can take this in.”
I recently did some Santa sessions where I had to swallow my desire to punch a set of parents and grandparents from giving way too much authority to a 3-year-old. “Honey, do you want to sit next to Santa Claus?” Same towards the 18-month-old sibling. Eveything was preceded by asking the children for their “permission.”
I had the same frustration when I practiced law. I recall a client saying to me that he didn’t see WHY he should spend custodial time with his 12-year-old son because the son “wasn’t making an effort to bring anything to the relationship.” Others would call a 7-year-old “selfish.”
Yeah, Because they have immature minds. BECAUSE THEY’RE CHILDREN.
These people shouldn’t own dogs much less breed.
Demosthenes, Lycurgus, Cato, Cicero, Charles the Great, Jefferson, Madison, Disraeli, Churchill, and now…
I need a grant for £1,485,400 to find out why reggae music is mostly a black people thing and what can be done about it.
That’s the kicker. The assumption that something must be done.
But only to White Devils.
What Stephanie said. It’s a very broad problem.
Exactly this. Most people literally don’t understand how to be the grownup in relation to their dog.
I’ve concluded they should all be made redundant.
Well, the choice of “research” topic – and the nature of said “research” – does rather suggest that these are people desperate for something to do in order to justify their salaries. Which is to say, people who could be fired with little loss to human betterment.
That they chose the “white-centricity” of folk music as an obvious and urgent problem, something in need of correction, at taxpayer expense, also suggests that they’re addled by ideology and disinclined to question their own dodgy assumptions.
So, not, I think, people from whom great insight should be expected.
And then there’s the disingenuous waffle by Fay Hield, professor of music at the University of Sheffield, who claims, implausibly, that, “The term decolonisation is often misinterpreted.” Implying that white people have no reason to be wary of the process or its perverse and corrosive effects, despite the kinds of people who typically mouth the word, and their obnoxious racial assumptions.
Speaking of research…
…surprising exactly no one, but nice to have evidence, I guess. Wade through the whole thing at your leisure.
It’s a grift. Anything that isn’t STEM is a grift.
Because it’s a grift.
I think it’s the other way around. Most people have pets as child substitutes, and treat their pets accordingly rather than as animals.
Broadly true…or not…it still does not absolve one from being a grownup, in relation to a dog or a child. Both entities are social animals. Both seek leadership and will become difficult and ultimately unhappy if allowed to bounce about in life with no responsibilities in an environment with a weak or ineffectual leader. The root of the misbehavior has been evolutionally programmed into social animals to try to become the leader in such weak environments. However achieving too much autonomy at an early stage is not good for the dog, the child, the grownup, or the family/social group as a whole.
Goes double for the females.
Maybe it’s the nakedness of the hustle that catches one off-balance. I mean, there’s barely a fig leaf. It’s basically just something something decolonise something something word-association something something white-centricity.
Ker-ching!
All to “break down barriers” that don’t seem to exist and to learn that the word guitar was mentioned more often than tin whistles.
The last few times I ventured onto a university campus, in each case to visit an art museum, the far-left propaganda was everywhere–including in the museums.
Tbf, that’s at least an order of magnitude above the autoethnographic* research technique used in most Studies programs.
*A research method, whereby, the author pulls his information from his own ass.
Like I said, anything that isn’t STEM is a grift.
One of the reasons I only pursued ancient history/archaeology as a minor was the realization back in 1994 – long before the current woke madness – that the entire academic field was just making shit up to attract grants. I did a paper on a particular pharaoh about whom not much is known; a 300-page book on the motives for his actions during his reign rested entirely on the ass-pull by the author in the first chapter that his queen came from a particular foreign state. There’s zero documentary or archaeological evidence for any of that, but this guy got a book deal out of it.
Nobody said “hey, you just made all of that up“. Because it’s a grift. “the Ancient Greeks were black because melanomorphia” and “Sea Peoples because climate change” is a cosmetic difference.
Fixed.
Who Killed Homer? by Victor Davis Hanson and John Heath, 1998
From the world of which. For those who missed it.
A footnote:
And in fairness we also learned that the Cellophane wrappers of his pornography collection “signalled luxury and investment in myself.”
So there’s that.
Life’s little pleasures.
So, my city has an online tool that can be used to report issues that may arise, such as, they don’t pick up your green bin. Well, they missed my green bin this week and I used the tool to report the error. After hitting “enter” I received a message back saying:
Somehow, I believe a lot of thought went into choosing the word “submission.”
[ Cues Inigo Montoya ]
[ Digs out second fluff-covered roll of Sellotape, slides it towards Steve. ]
A lot of websites require you to click “Submit”.
But it’s “Post Comment” here at David’s Fine Establishment.™
[ Plays Rogue Defence, deploys Laser Refraction and triple Thunder Core. ]
[ Mad laughter. ]
These are the same people who declare that “telling” your 5 year old to give grandma a hug before she leaves are engaged in “grooming your child to future sex abuse because you don’t allow them to say ‘no'” … and when the kid turns 13 and wants cross-sex hormones, you have to ‘affirm’ them.
Holy crap.
People talking past each other on social media, due to haste or ignorance or dogmatism or desire for controversy-bait:
Actress who played Laura Ingalls Wilder expresses an opinion:
Coderdyne disagrees:
But the actress was upset about the age difference of the actors, not the historical characters. She was only 15 at the time, 8 years younger than the actor playing her love interest.
Re: “A 23-yo male marrying a 15-yo female was not uncommon then”:
I suppose it depends on what “not uncommon” means. I dug up a study on marriage statistics, and only about 10% of women married before age 18. [Historical Trends in Marriage Formation, United States
1850 – 1990, Fitch and Ruggles, University of Minnesota.]
Median age of first marriage in 1890: 22 for women and 26 for men. Which is well above 18.
My paternal grandparents — just sayin’
Re: genealogy above .. my paternal grandmother, Jannette — her parents were 21/15 when married in 1892. She was #7 out of 8 children. (Mormons)
My parents married around 30 (him) and 27 (her) but WWII delayed/derailed virtually everyone’s normal plans.
But yeah, she’s the victim here.
“If I’m a guest in your house and you offer me cockroach milk I’m beating your ass.”
The referenced CNN article is over 9 years old. But scientists are still touting the “nutritional benefits” of it and bug food in general. So might it be time to upgrade to showing up at the scientists’ homes to beat their asses? Or at least talk publicly about how they should be treated?
There is a subset of gay men who aren’t just sexually oriented towards men but who hate women with a visceral disgust. There are also lesbians with the same attitude towards men. “Ick! Eew! Cooties!”
I noticed the different spellings of your grandmother’s name. That wasn’t uncommon for the times. My father-in-law passed three weeks ago and my wife is going through all his documents. One says his middle name is “Maurice” while another says it was “Maurise” while still another says it was “George.” It’s interesting that his wedding certificate doesn’t even have his middle name and he was married in the Catholic Church.
Especially when it comes to both Ellis Island and census takers. There are about 4 or 5 families that settled in the Floyd County area of Kentucky –Click, Salmons, Tuttle, Rice … and when I was looking at census records the poor Salmons family last name is all over the place – most common, dropping the “L” or “S”. Then on my maternal side, the family “Rüppel” (umlaut over the u) migrated from Germany in the 1850’s through Ellis Island and the paperwork became Rippel. Heh.
A great-great grandfather, on a great-grandmother’s side, was Irish. The only fragment of the family tree that was of any professional class. His name was Rial…or Ryal…of which there are numerous variations that can even infer descent from Riley or O’Riley..or…or..or…The thing with him being a professional, a lawyer as it happened, there are numerous sons, grandsons on down who became judges or otherwise prominent in the legal system in western PA, but the family names are spelled differently. You would think someone would have caught that.
It wasn’t just here. My grandmother said she was Ukrainian, but she was born in Austria-Hungary. Her village was very near Poland, So she speaks Ukrainian and Polish. No German and no Hungarian. She immigrated to Canada around the time of the First World War as a teenager.
The Bluesky demographic.
I’d imagine there’s some overlap, certainly.
What caught my eye at the time was how many of the perpetrators were women, and how many were ostensibly respectable and expensively educated. Some were teachers. Which makes the delinquency, the failure of impulse control, even more striking.
And then of course there was the bewilderment at being arrested, sometimes minutes later, as if the idea that criminal behaviour might have consequences were utterly alien. A thing they hadn’t considered. Because they’re such good people.
And when you’re picking at your own arse in a car park, on camera, and wiping the excavated material onto some random person’s car, as if this were a moral triumph, a measure of personal righteousness, then I think it’s fair to say the mental wheels have rattled loose.
“A certain amount of deception is required.”
The totalitarian motto.
I was wondering where everyone had gotten to.
Related: Glenn Reynolds of Instapundit spoke Monday at the University of San Diego Law School.
Out back, racing the fluff-covered rolls of Sellotape.
[ Orders more fluff-covered Sellotape. ]
For the Christmas party.
You say that as if you’re surprised.
“It was always the women, and above all the young ones, who were the most bigoted adherents of the Party, the swallowers of slogans, the amateur spies and nosers-out of unorthodoxy.” ~ George Orwell, 1984