Sound essential, and preferably loud.
Via Centripetal Notion. Related. And.
Sound essential, and preferably loud.
Via Centripetal Notion. Related. And.
There’s this general misconception that there’s a right not to be offended, and that it’s okay to punish students and faculty members for engaging in speech that offends someone, even if that speech would be entirely constitutionally protected.
Samantha Harris, FIRE.
Evan Coyne Maloney, director of Indoctrinate U, and Andrew Marcus have produced a short film about FIRE, The Foundation for Individual Rights in Education. The film outline’s FIRE’s principles and highlights some of the PC follies and coercive unrealism with which the organisation contends. Watch it here.
The case mentioned in the film is discussed here.
A few months ago, I posted a short extract from Vanessa Engle’s Lefties documentary series, which seemed to go down well, possibly due to the heady mix of affectation and farce. I watched the third episode again recently and, as it made me laugh and despair in more or less equal measure, I thought I’d share it in full. A Lot of Balls details the comically inept attempt in 1987 to launch a “radical” left wing tabloid, The News on Sunday. The project was, unsurprisingly, a disaster, but what’s interesting is why. Engle’s documentary teases out how staggering incompetence was a direct result of ideological pretension. This is perhaps best illustrated by the scene in which, with the paper’s first edition about to go to press, most of the staff is out of the office on a deafness awareness day.
Enjoy.
Statement of intent. “Our truth.” Big Flame. Class consciousness.
Wearing suits. Other people’s money. The proletariat in charge. “Because you’re black.”
An unholy war. Avoiding London. Qualified staff. Black man versus white lesbian.
“No, but…” Pilger’s horror. Dummies and factions. Ad hell.
Indignation. Causes and committees. “Theoretical crap.” Deafness awareness.
Remote concerns. Public sector money. Kinnock and competence. Falling apart.
All three episodes – Property is Theft, Angry Wimmin and A Lot of Balls – can be viewed in full here.
Related: the rise of Thatcherism. (h/t, The Thin Man.)
Subsidise my mischief. It’s for the greater good.
Today is Holocaust Memorial Day, marking the anniversary of the liberation of the Nazi concentration camp Auschwitz-Birkenau. If the point of HMD seems a little fuzzy or remote, the following episode of the outstanding World at War series may serve as a reminder. I should point out that some of the material is graphic and distressing.
With Dr Westerhaus in mind, here’s Miss Brigitte Bardot performing Serge Gainsbourg’s Contact, circa 1968. The dress is by Paco Rabanne, who designed the costumes for Roger Vadim’s Barbarella, released the same year, and the sculptures are the handiwork of the late Nicolas Schöffer. Note this was filmed before Miss Bardot’s more recent excursions into space.
Via io9.

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