News of the Week for November 12th, 2023
News of the Week for November 12th, 2023
Though begun as “Armistice Day,” Veterans Day has expanded in the United States as a day for all those brave men and women who fight to keep us free. But we must never forget those who sacrificed themselves.
Lest we forget, the photography that came from the Western Front in 1917.
On the 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th month, let us remember they who risked everything for freedom, including their very lives.
Another “quick takes” on items where there is too little to say to make a complete article, but is still important enough to comment on.
The focus this time: Slaves to an imaginary spiritual Earth
First, a little mood music:
Carrying on…
Ironic that a journal called “Science” is shilling the cultish “nature rights” movement that has nothing to do with actual science.
“The rights of nature–which include geological features–are generally defined as the right to ‘exist, persist, maintain and regenerate its vital cycles, structure, functions and its processes in evolution.’ Nature is, of course, not sentient. So, this campaign is really about granting environmental extremists legal standing to enforce their policy desires through litigation as legal guardians serving nature’s best interests.
“But the movement has a problem. It is clearly ideological rather than rational. So now, three law professors and a biologist writing in Science urge scientists to promote the agenda by giving courts a scientific pretext to enforce nature rights laws, or even, impose the agenda from the bench (as has already been attempted several times). From, “Science and the Legal Rights of Nature:”
“‘By contributing to interdisciplinary analyses of rights-of-nature laws before disputes arise, scientists can help contribute to the effectiveness of these laws. The availability of credible scholarly analysis of legal scientific terms used in law would make these rights more tangible and accessible to the judges whose role it is to apply them. Although scientific uncertainty often cannot be eliminated, it’s reduction in turn reduces legal uncertainty and thus helps meet the objection that rights-of-nature laws are too vague to be applied.’
“And here it really gets irrational:
“‘Another type of interdisciplinary scholarship that would assist the functioning of rights-of-nature laws would be the examination of the duties of nature. Although some rights-of-nature laws grant rights for nature without corresponding duties, others equate nature to a legal person with both rights and duties. Uncertainty over liabilities and duties of nature has been an impediment to implementing some rights-of-nature laws. Scientists can help legal systems comprehend nature’s potential legal obligations (e.g.,“ecosystem services”), and what environmental protection measures may also be legally required to ensure natural entities can continue to fulfill these obligations.”
“Good grief. Such nonsense in a science journal. ‘Nature’ is not a moral entity. It is not conscious. It is not a discrete thing. It includes everything from rock outcroppings, to algae, swamps, oceans, lion prides, earthquake faults, glaciers, and the moon. It–and its constituent aspects–cannot owe anything or anyone duties. No matter how destructive, a river that floods has done nothing ‘wrong.’ The very notion is nonsensical.”
Increasingly, it feels as if colleges and universities have become insular communities where bizarre beliefs not only thrive, but are enforced one way or another. Is college a cult?
“The parallels are suggestive. Parents have wondered about the ever-longer ‘orientations’ their 18-year-olds go through at the start of their college journey. It often starts at check-in with a love bomb from aggressively friendly student volunteers. (These ‘peer assistants’ somehow recognized my daughter, screamed out her name, and started applauding even before we’d parked our vehicle at her freshman dorm.) Soon thereafter, students are separated from their families, who are told, ‘It’s time to say good-bye.’ They are assigned spartan living quarters, to be shared in many cases with complete strangers. From there, students are put through a ringer of immersive, morning-to-night activities for as long as a week. Free time is limited. Sleep deprivation is common. There are lots and lots of speeches. This transition partly takes place in small groups, carefully organized by the administrators who guide students through their acclimation. Here they learn new rules (in particular, about things you should and should not say). Discussions might simply be quirky or awkward (‘What’s your spirit animal?’), though they may veer into more intrusive territory by encouraging students to talk about their sexual preferences. Some activities attempt to create an artificial bond, while others divide and induce shame in ways that a neutral observer might consider to be hazing.
“…
“Compliance is maintained through a system of bureaucratic and curricular sticks and carrots, nudges, and social pressure. Welcome-week orientations have expanded into semester- or year-long ‘first-year seminars.’ These are largely devoid of academic content and taught by staff who curate a ‘first-year experience,’ with required attendance at lectures outside of class time on topics that reinforce the relentless messaging.
“…
“But this is to leave out the other aspect of what people mean when they think of cults, namely, that they hold really weird beliefs. When it comes to incubating odd ideas and indulging idiosyncratic obsessions, colleges can more than hold their own. This cannot all be laid at the feet of administrators and student-services functionaries. Faculty share responsibility on this score.
“Citing examples is like shooting fish in a barrel. One professor identifies Jesus as a masochistic “drag king.” An education department proposes abolishing the word ‘field’ because it evokes memories of slavery. Hundreds of scholars conduct a witch hunt against a philosopher for publishing a heavily-footnoted article in a peer-reviewed journal, on the grounds that she ‘enacts violence and perpetuates harm’ by using ‘phrases like “male genitalia.”’ Entire courses are devoted to zombies and cryptozoology. University-supported research papers find that pigeons are connoisseurs of modern art and that unicorns might exist in another universe. While some of these cases are relatively frivolous, others—expressions of unhinged anti-Semitism, for example—are more disturbing.”
Wow, it’s not like they’d actually offer formal degrees in something like, for example, witchcraft!
Oh, wait…
“A new master’s degree in witchcraft, magic, and occult science is scheduled to be offered September 2024 at the University of Exeter in England as faculty cite growing student interest.
“The new program will explore ‘specific interests within the long and diverse history of esotericism, witchcraft, ritual magic, occult science, and related topics,’ and ‘build interdisciplinary expertise,’ according to the university website.”
If Florida is where “woke goes to die”, these smut peddlers (i.e. a public school board) haven’t gotten the message. Yet again a parent is stopped from showing a book, available in the school library, in public at a school board meeting because it’s too obscene… this time by a police officer!
UNREAL: Cop stops mom from showing images of graphic books available to students in @HillsboroughSch.
Too obscene for a room of adults but totally OK for kids in school! pic.twitter.com/NcjUvDoSeB
— Libs of TikTok (@libsoftiktok) October 25, 2023
Don’t they understand that they are proving the parents point?
News of the Week for November 5th, 2023
In the hopes of encouraging a more civil, and illuminating, discourse, here is another episode of William F. Buckley, Jr.’s “Firing Line”.
The Palestinians being provided arms by foreign powers to wage war on Israel is nothing new. Let us look back forty years ago when William F. Buckley, Jr., Claire Sterling, and Jeremiah Denton discuss the question of what to do about terrorism.
Another “quick takes” on items where there is too little to say to make a complete article, but is still important enough to comment on.
The focus this time: Living is a luxury only the perfect in society can afford.
First, a little mood music:
Carrying on…
Many people suffering from autism can be easily manipulated into killing themselves, and The Netherlands is all in on that!
“Several people with autism and intellectual disabilities have been legally euthanized in the Netherlands in recent years because they said they could not lead normal lives, researchers have found.
“The cases included five people younger than 30 who cited autism as either the only reason or a major contributing factor for euthanasia, setting an uneasy precedent that some experts say stretches the limits of what the law originally intended.”
A picture is worth a thousand words and a simplified symbol even moreso, especially when it becomes so mundane that people don’t realize they’ve been propagandized.
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The radical left is already using the "paragliding terrorist" as a symbol for the exact same reason they use the picture of Communist leader Che Guevara on t-shirts:To normalize it's use as a leftist symbol so the idea of it gets absorbed into the edges of the discourse. https://t.co/NzIycb9TMF pic.twitter.com/8T34KjZko9
— Wokal Distance (@wokal_distance) October 11, 2023
Here is the German silent classic, The Man Who Laughs from 1928, whose title character was the inspiration for the Batman villain “The Joker”.