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31 December, 2014
"Straight" is an offensive word?
Jeremy Clarkson has once again become embroiled in controversy after
appearing to poke fun at the 'slope' racism row on the Top Gear
Christmas special.
The 54-year-old appeared to mock the decision by Ofcom earlier this year
which ruled he had been 'deliberately offensive' after using the word
'slope' on an episode of the BBC show.
In Saturday's Christmas special, Clarkson told co-presenter Richard
Hammond: 'That is a proud moment, Hammond, but... is it straight?' as
they admired their makeshift bridge in Argentina.
Many took it to as a reference to his comments in a March episode of the
show in which he said: 'That is a proud moment, but there's a slope on
it', as a man walked towards them on their makeshift bridge over the
River Kwai in Thailand.
At the time, viewers complained about the use of the word 'slope', which
is considered a derogatory term for people of Asian descent.
Ofcom launched an investigation into the Burma TV special and ruled in
July that the presenter had 'deliberately employed the offensive word to
refer to the Asian person'.
SOURCE
Clarkson was of course cautiously mocking the pomposity of "slope" being
declared a racial slur. Australia has a large East Asian minority
so I have certainly heard it at times but all the reports about
Clarkson's use of the term had to explain that it was derogatory.
Clearly very few Brits had heard the term. It was not therefore
derogatory in Britain. I believe the term originated among the
troops in Vietnam. Britain did not take part in the Vietnam war.
English people must not refer to Scots as trash
Scots call the English worse than that
A teenager has been arrested after allegedly posting an offensive
message on Twitter regarding the fatal bin lorry crash in Glasgow.
The 19-year-old, believed to be Ross Loraine, from Sunderland, handed
himself in to police yesterday evening after a number of complaints were
made about the tweet.
He is alleged to have written: So a bin lorry has crashed into 100
people in Glasgow eh, probably the most trash its ever picked up in one
day that.
Northumbria Police said he was arrested on suspicion of making a
malicious communication and had been bailed while they made further
inquiries into the incident.
Six people were killed when the lorry careered out of control in Glasgow
city centre yesterday afternoon, with three of them being from the same
family.
SOURCE
30 December, 2014
Must not disrespect the metric system
A Fox News host has drawn the ire of the internet after speculating on
air what could have caused the disappearance of AsiaAir Flight QZ8501.
Fox News co-host Anna Kooiman interviewed former FAA spokesperson Scott
Brenner about the search for the missing flight Sunday morning, asking
the airline industry insider whether foreign pilots were at a
disadvantage since they were trained using the metric system.
'Even when we think about temperature, it's Fahrenheit or Celsius,'
Kooiman said. 'It's kilometers or miles. You know, everything about
their training could be similar, but different.'
While the Imperial System may provide a conversion challenge for metric
users, it likely was not a problem since the vast majority of the world
excluding the U.S. uses the metric system.
Brenner pointed out that the bigger difference was foreign pilots'
reliance on auto-pilot, which he says they are often required to switch
over to after take-off. This requirement is due to the fact that most
crashes are due to pilot error.
This line of questioning earned Kooiman some flack on Twitter, where
users critiqued her questioning the metric system's relevance in the
disappearance.
'Most all media speculation right after an air crash is ludicrous but Anna Kooiman takes the cake,' one user wrote.
SOURCE
Australia: Chilli sauce label criticized for calling Prime Minister 'an idiot'
A chilli sauce company has been under attack on social media after
labelling prime minister Tony Abbott an 'idiot' on their product.
Darwin Chilli Co has triggered an online storm after a photograph of a
'Darwin Hot Sauce' bottle label was shared across Twitter and Facebook,
which also drove the company's Facebook page to 72,000 percent in
traffic.
The label reads: 'Darwin hot sauce (sriracha style) is what it is. We
are sorry that our Prime Minister, Tony Abbott, is an idiot. Heat level:
Cat3.'
The company owner, who wished to not be named, told Daily Mail Australia
the idea came to light from an 'old school labelling joke that started
in France from the 1980s'. 'A french clothing company wrote under
their washing instructions that they were sorry that their president was
an idiot. It's funny and I've always remembered that.
He said the label is 'just a bit of a joke' and 'nearly everyone gets
it' but it has offended a few over social media and has attracted a
significant amount of 'internet trolls'. 'The negative comments don't
bother us - it's just a sense of humour and we think it's hilarious.
Despite the negative backlash on social media, the owner said the
company will continue to run their 'Tony Abbott' labels. 'By
popular demand, our Tony Abbott labelled sauce will be available for
backorder,' he said.
SOURCE
29 December, 2014
A town's attempt to restrict church advertising goes to SCOTUS
A small church relies on temporary signs to invite and direct worshipers
to its services. However practical, the pastors goal ran up against a
towns strict limitations on the size of signs, the number that can be
posted and for how long.
The town officials of Gilbert, Ariz., however, dont impose those same
restrictions on political and ideological messages or on signs put up by
homeowner associations.
Good News Presbyterian Church rents space in various places for weekly
services in Gilbert. Because the church changes locations regularly,
Pastor Clyde Reed promotes his services with cardboard signs posted on
the lawn of the latest site.
Reed must adhere to Gilberts sign regulations, which the town says were
designed to promote optimum conditions for serving sign owners needs
and respecting their rights to identification while balancing the
aesthetic interests of the community.
The churchs signs, along with signs for other non-profit, event-related
activities can be only six square feet in size, displayed for no more
than 14 hours and are limited to four per property.
Reeds lawyer, David Cortman, is affiliated with Alliance Defending
Freedom, an organization that seeks to protect the religious rights of
individuals. Cortman says the towns sign code is a form of
discrimination that allows the government to decide what speech is more
valuable and thus granted greater protection under the First Amendment.
Speech discrimination is speech discrimination, Cortman says in a press release on the case.
In a phone interview with The Daily Signal, Michael Hamblin, a lawyer
for the town of Gilbert, dismisses the accusation. Hamblin says the
towns restrictions dont violate the First Amendment.
Hamblin says he is confident the Supreme Court will rule in favor of the
town, as did the District Court of Arizona and the Ninth Circuit Court
of Appeals. But, he adds, even if it doesnt, the town will be
happy to receive any guidance that the Supreme Court has.
Cortman will make oral arguments for Reed and his church before the Supreme Court, Jan. 12, in Washington, D.C.
SOURCE
Haven for Islamic terrorists is angry that they are described as a haven for Islamic terrorists
The Pakistani government has hit out at U.S. television series Homeland
over its portrayal of the country as a safe haven for Islamic
terrorists.
Diplomats condemned producers for depicting Islamabad, the setting of
the show's fourth series, as a 'hellhole' refuge for the Taliban.
Complaining to Showtime which airs the Emmy-winning show, one official described it as a 'disservice to the people of the US'.
The fourth series of the popular show sees star Claire Danes acting as a
member of the Central Intelligence Agency in Islamabad.
'Maligning a country that has been a close partner and ally of the US...
is a disservice not only to the security interests of the US but also
to the people of the US,' Pakistan Embassy spokesman Nadeem Hotiana told
the New York Post.
The Pakistani directorate for Inter-Services Intelligence has been
widely accused of hosting and assisting terrorist activity in the past.
Based in Islamabad, doubt was cast over the ISI in 2011 upon the news of
Osama Bin Laden's execution by U.S. forces. How, it was asked,
could the government not have known the world's most wanted terrorist
was taking refuge in a rural compound some 30 miles from its
headquarters?
Following his assassination, Adm Mike Mullen, then the most senior U.S.
military officer, said Pakistan had a 'long-standing relationship' with
Afghan insurgents.
SOURCE
28 December, 2014
Canada: It's 'Merry Christmas' again: Religious leaders, retail gurus say expression is making a comeback
Retailers large and small that had tossed Christmas and embraced the
generic exhortation Happy Holidays in advertising and in-store
promotion are becoming Christmas-friendly again.
The ability to tap into the massive increase in consumer spending during
the pre-Christmas period can mean the difference between survival and
bankruptcy for many retailers, so connecting with the Christmas
gift-givers or at least not alienating them appears to have produced
a shift in strategy.
Marketing specialist Robin Ritchie, an assistant professor at Carleton
Universitys Sprott School of Business, says there is a renewed sense
that its acceptable again to use Christmas.
Like a lot of these things, pendulums swing and then they swing back,
he said. To some extent, this is a correction for a well-intentioned
effort to try and be accommodating and respectful of other faiths and
cultures. Canada has long prided itself on that.
SOURCE
Does "Merry Christmas" offend Jews?
The Jewish guy below doesn't seem to be offended by it
(www.youtube.com/embed/xh80vhMG6MM)
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's Christmas Greeting - 2014
For people with a strong Bible background, getting a Christmas greeting from Zion (Jerusalem) is emotionally powerful.
26 December, 2014
One in three Brits say Farage is RIGHT to claim using 'Chinky' and 'Poofter' is normal language for working class
'Poofter' is Australian/British slang for a male homosexual. I
often used the word myself in less censorious times now well into the
past. It was normal pretty well everywhere then and remains normal
in some circles now
One in three people agree with Nigel Farage that using the words chinky and poofter is normal, a new polls has revealed.
But the Ukip leader is still in a minority with just under half of voters insisting the terms are racist and homophobic.
It comes after Mr Farage last week defended former Ukip candidate Kerry
Smith as a council house boy who talks in a way a lot of people from
that background do after he was caught on tape making a series of
derogatory remarks.
But a YouGov poll for the Sun showed 49 per cent found chinky
offensive while 36 per cent did not. Six out of 10 found poofter
offensive compared to just over a quarter who did not.
The councillor made a string of comments, including a reference to a
chinky bird, mocking poofters and making jokes about shooting
peasants.
Mr Smith, a Ukip councillor on both Essex County Council and Basildon
District Council, received a storm of criticism claiming he was racist
and homophobic over the comments in a leaked phone call.
But Mr Farage insisted he had endured a tough time. I think we
are very snobbish in London about condemning people, perhaps for the
colloquial language they use, particularly if its not meant with really
unpleasant intent, he told LBC Radio.
SOURCE
One Frenchman gets it
France is engulfed in a free speech row after a TV commentator was
sacked for appearing to suggest all 5million of the country's Muslims
should be deported to prevent civil war.
There's a low-level war being waged by Muslims there already -- JR
The comments by ric Zemmour, who has previously been convicted of
inciting racial hatred, prompted outrage and led to him being dropped
from an 11-year stint on a chat show.
But many sprang to the best-selling author's defence including the
far-right National Front leader Marine Le Pen, who declared the move
'loathsome censorship'.
Mr Zemmour's interview with Italian newspaper Corriere della Sera went
largely unnoticed on the other side of the Alps for more than a month
after it appeared in October.
It sparked a public debate, however, after the comments were picked up by former French education minister Jean-Luc Mlenchon.
Although the original interview has been deleted from Corriere della
Sera's website, it was copied and translated several times by people on
both sides of France's political divide.
In the interview Mr Zemmour said Muslims 'live among themselves' in
suburbs which French people have been forced to leave, according to one
of his supporters.
The interviewer then asked: 'Then what are you suggesting? To deport 5million French Muslims?'
Mr Zemmour is said to have replied: 'I know it's unrealistic, but
history is often surprising. Who would have thought in 1940 that a
million pieds-noirs [Europeans living in North Africa], twenty years
later, would have left Algeria to return to France? 'Or that after
the war five or six million Germans would leave Central-Eastern Europe
where they had lived for centuries?'
The interviewer protested that Mr Zemmour was 'speaking of exoduses
triggered by immense tragedies', to which he replied: 'I think we are
heading for chaos.
'This situation of a people inside a people, of Muslims inside French
people, will lead us to civil war. 'Millions of people live here
in France and refuse to live in the French manner.'
The controversy sparked a Twitter campaign with the hashtag
#ZemmourDeporteMoi - Zemmour would deport me - and outrage among leading
French politicians.
France's population of 5million Muslims is the largest of any country in
Europe, and France also has the largest Jewish diaspora on the
continent.
Mr Zemmour's parents were Jewish Berbers who emigrated from Algeria in the 1950s.
SOURCE
25 December, 2014
Gun range sparks outrage over billboard of Santa with an assault rifle
A grim gun-toting Santa has been spotted advertising assault rifles on a
billboard in California. Steve Dyke, the co-owner of Down Range
Indoor Training Center in the city of Chico, commissioned the billboard
to catch the attention of drivers travelling along Highway 99 - but some
people are not happy about it.
The tooled-up Father Christmas has no jolly smile, is wearing
sunglasses, and wields the AR-15 firearm next to the slogan: 'We build
AR's for Santa.'
'You know, 'tis the season, so we thought it would be a good idea,' Mr
Dyke told CBS. 'We actually got a kick out of it - thought it would be
good and other people would think it was funny.'
However, teacher Sara Welday told the TV station she thinks the ad is
'kinda scary'. She said: 'As a teacher, I would not want my students to
see that. I don't think you need to put out that as Santa has a gun.'
But Mr Dyke has no plans to take the ad down and says he has received support from customers.
SOURCE
Australian rural restaurant in trouble for anti-Islamic sign
A Longreach restaurant that placed a sign reading "Sorry No Muslims"
outside its front doors has caused consternation on social media.
Local Helen Day posted pictures of the chalkboard outside the Eagle's
Nest Bar and Grill on its Facebook review page last Friday.
"Just a bit surprised to see the sign up [reading] 'Sorry No Muslims'
... what's that about?" Ms Day wrote. "I certainly won't be going
into a place where my Muslim friends are not welcome!"
The full handwritten message on the sign read "2000 years ago Jesus
Christ made headlines turning water into wine...the tradition
continues...We turn money into beer [Sorry No Muslims]."
Ms Day's pictures were reposted by Facebook group Boycott Halal in
Australia? No Way, and a moderator for that group told Brisbane Times
the image had since been shared widely. "Our page has only been
going three weeks and we had a 'Total Reach' of up to 7,000 people," the
moderator said. "We put the story up a day and a half ago and are
now reaching almost 80,000 people and rising, because of that one
post."
Anti-Islamic sentiment has risen in Australia since last week's Sydney
cafe siege, with movements like #illridewithyou acting as a counter
argument.
Comments on the Eagle's Nest Bar and Grill's Facebook page have ranged from outraged to unapologetic.
A Longreach Regional Council spokesman confirmed a verbal complaint had
been received. He said they were seeking more information about
the sign and would consider an investigation, or referring the matter to
the appropriate body.
The spokesman said the operator of the Eagle's Nest had a history of
writing quirky, tongue-in-cheek slogans on his chalkboard that changed
daily.
SOURCE
24 December, 2014
Australia: Must not mention that women still do most of the household budgeting
Senior Liberals were privately aghast when the Prime Minister nominated
repealing the carbon tax as his "biggest achievement" for women because
they are "particularly focused on the household budget".
Foreign Minister Julie Bishop was forced to defend Tony Abbott's latest
gender-related gaffe as Labor lashed the Prime Minister as "stuck in the
past".
Mr Abbott was asked to name his biggest achievement as the Minister for
Women during an appearance on the Nine Network's Today program. "Well,
you know, it is very important to do the right thing by families and
households. As many of us know, women are particularly focused on the
household budget and the repeal of the carbon tax means a $550-a-year
benefit for the average family," he said.
SOURCE
Don't say Merry Christmas! British civil servants urged to put Season's Greetings in emails and not use pictures of SKIN
Government staff sending festive emails have been urged to not to say Merry Christmas.
The extraordinary advice was sent this week to avoid offending people of other faiths and agnostics.
The email was sent to staff this week who wanted advice on what to send in festive e-cards
The ministry, led by Lib Dem Ed Davey, sends e-cards instead of traditional paper greetings to save money and paper.
An email sent to some officials this week gave advice on what the
messages should and should not say, to avoid offending people who do not
celebrate Christmas.
The message was sent on Monday to staff who wanted to know how to style
festive greetings sent from the department, The Sun reported. It
stated: When picking, think Seasons Greetings rather than Merry
Christmas.
The email added: As an organisation of multiple faiths and agnostics
serving a community of the same and in the interest of inclusion, Id
avoid images with skin.
Tory MP Ian Liddell-Grainger said the advice was just pathetic.
They should grow up and get a grip. We live in 21st century Britain and
we should be able to get on and celebrate Christmas and recognise
people have different faiths without offending anyone.
SOURCE
23 December, 2014
British footballer sparks fury after 'blacking up'
An international rugby player is at the centre of a race storm after blacking up as an African football star for a photograph.
Wales full-back Liam Williams dressed as Premier League striker Wilfried
Bony for the picture, which he then posted on Twitter. Williams, 23,
wore the white strip of Bonys club, Swansea City, donned a black wig
and painted his face black to impersonate the Ivory Coast footballer.
Yesterday he was accused of racism over the image, which was retweeted
160 times and favourited 345 times after he shared it with his 31,000
Twitter followers.
Williams, who plays for the Llanelli-based Scarlets rugby union team,
insisted Bony had given him permission, through a friend, to wear the
costume.
But Show Racism The Red Card criticised the player who featured in one
of its campaigns last season saying his behaviour was unacceptable.
Campaign manager Sunil Patel said: I cant comment on whether Wilfried
is fine with it, but I am sure many black people would not be fine with
it. Its something we might have seen 30 or 40 years ago but it is not
something we expect to see in a multicultural society.
And Weyman Bennett, secretary of Unite Against Fascism, added: This
picture is absolutely not appropriate. It is racist to black up.
But yesterday he tweeted: I am very sorry for any offence caused by my
actions. Im not a racist and there was no malice behind it.
SOURCE
Innocent fun under attack
North Korea and the Speech Police
A good essay by Ross Douthat -- token conservative at the NYT
OF course it had to escalate this way. We live in a time of consistent
gutlessness on the part of institutions notionally committed to free
speech and intellectual diversity, a time of canceled commencement
invitations and C.E.O.s defenestrated for their political donations, a
time of Twitter mobs, trigger warnings and cringing public apologies. A
time when journalists and publishers tiptoe around Islamic
fundamentalism, when free speech is under increasing pressure on both
sides of the Atlantic, when a hypersensitive political correctness has
the whip hand on many college campuses.
So why should anyone be remotely surprised that Kim Jong-un decided to get in on the dont offend me act?
Lets get some qualifiers out of the way. The North Korean regime is
arguably more evil than any other present-day dictatorship, its apparent
hack of Sony Pictures is a deadly serious act of cyberterrorism, and
the response by Sony the outright withdrawal, after theater chains
balked at showing it, of the offending comedy, The Interview, in which
the North Korean dictator is blown to smithereens sets a uniquely
terrible precedent.
Its terrible for cinema, since the film industry, already wary of any
controversy that might make its blockbusters hard to sell in Asia, will
no doubt retreat even further into the safety of superhero franchises.
More important, its terrible for any future institution or individual
hacked or blackmailed by groups seeking similar concessions.
So the Sony affair is more serious than many other debates about speech
and power in the West right now. But the difference is still one of
magnitude, not kind.
After all, the basic strategy employed by the apparently North
Korean-backed hackers is the same one employed for years by Islamic
extremists against novelists and newspapers and TV shows that dare to
portray the Prophet Muhammad in a negative light (or in any light at
all). And the weak response from Hollywood, where the towns movers and
shakers proved unwilling to even sign a George Clooney-organized public
petition pledging solidarity against the hackers, isnt so very
different from the self-censorship by networks and publishers and even
opera houses that have fallen afoul of Islamist sensitivities over the
years.
Moreover, the demand that The Interview be withdrawn because it treats
North Korea disrespectfully as it most certainly does isnt all
that different from the arguments behind the various speech codes that
have proliferated in Europe and Canada of late, exposing people to fines
and prosecution for speaking too critically about the religions,
cultures and sexual identities of others.
Nor is it all that different from the arguments used in the United
States to justify canceling an increasing number of commencement
speakers including Condoleezza Rice and Ayaan Hirsi Ali and Christine
Lagarde when some hothouse-flower campus activists decided they
couldnt bear to sit and hear them. Or the mentality that forced out the
C.E.O. and co-founder of Mozilla, Brendan Eich, when it was revealed
that he had once donated money to a ballot initiative that opposed
same-sex marriage. Or the free-floating, shape-shifting outrage that now
pervades the Internet, always looking for some offensive or un-P.C.
remark to fasten on and furiously attack whether the perpetrator is a
TV personality or some unlucky political staffer, hapless and heretofore
obscure.
The common thread in all these cases, whether the angry parties are
Hermit Kingdom satraps or random social-justice warriors on Twitter, is a
belief that the most important power is the power to silence, and that
the perfect community is one in which nothing uncongenial to your own
worldview is ever tweeted, stated, supported or screened.
And the other common thread, of course, is the pathetic response from
the cultural entities that are supposedly most invested in free speech
in our culture universities, Internet companies, the press and the
film industry, all of which seem disinclined to risk much on behalf of
the ideals they officially cherish.
As a conservative, you take for granted that these institutions are
often political monocultures that the average commencement speaker,
like the average academic, will be several degrees left of center, that
Silicon Valley isnt the most hospitable place to be a religious
conservative, that when Hollywood gets edgy or controversial its
usually a right-wing ox thats being gored.
But it would be far easier to live with this predictable liberalism if
these institutions, so pious about their commitment to free expression,
werent so quick to knuckle under to illiberalism in all its varied
forms.
We cannot have a society, President Obama said on Friday, when asked
about the Sony hack, where some dictator someplace can start imposing
censorship here in the United States.
In theory, thats absolutely right. But in practice, Kim Jong-un has our
cultures number: Letting angry people impose a little censorship is
just the way we live right now
SOURCE
22 December, 2014
Smothering Free Speech Via 'The Interview'
Should a North Korean tyrant be allowed to dictate what Americans can see?
Gone are the days when Hollywood released Charlie Chaplins The Great
Dictator, a film lampooning Adolf Hitler. Although the film was
released March 1941 months before the attack on Pearl Harbor it was
the comedians most successful film.
Today, we have a studio poised to release another lampoon of another
infamous dictator but essentially self-censoring the film at the threat
of hackers, who appear to be connected to North Korea. The hackers broke
into Sony Pictures computer network, released sensitive information,
apparently because of The Interview.
After threatening 9/11-type terror on any theater that dared air the
film, which is about the assassination of Kim Jong Un, the hackers
forced Sony to bow to the rule of terror even though DHS thought the
threat was not credible.
In light of the decision by the majority of our exhibitors not to show
the film The Interview, Sony said in a statement, we have decided not
to move forward with the planned December 25 theatrical release. Those
who attacked us stole our intellectual property, private emails, and
sensitive and proprietary material, and sought to destroy our spirit and
our morale all apparently to thwart the release of a movie they did
not like.
The movie appeared to be a crass film dragged along by sex jokes. The
product wasnt worth defending, but the ideal of free speech is.
SOURCE
Santorum: Separation of Church and State' Was in Soviet Constitution Not U.S. Constitution
In response to a question about how the agenda of the far left in
America mirrors that as detailed in The Communist Manifesto, former
Senator Rick Santorum (R-Penn.) said it is worth noting that the words
separation of church and state do not appear in the U.S. Constitution
but are cited in the constitution of the former Communist Soviet Union.
The word separation of church and state is not in the U.S.
Constitution, but it was in the constitution of the former Soviet Union.
Thats where it very, very comfortably sat, not in ours, said Sen.
Santorum during a coalition telephone call sponsored by STAND and posted
on Dec. 1.
SOURCE
This needs to be said more often
21 December, 2014
British anti-Europe politician defends use of word 'Chinky'
Nigel Farage has defended the use of the word "Chinky" after a UK
Independence Party parliamentary candidate was sacked after using the
term to refer to a Chinese woman.
The Ukip leader said Kerry Smith, who stepped down as Ukip's South
Basildon and East Thurrock candidate, was a "rough diamond" from a
council estate who "talks and speaks" like lots of Britons.
Mr Farage said on LBC Radio: "If you and your mates were going out for a Chinese, what do you say you're going for?"
He added that "a lot of people would" and railed against the "snobbish"
London elite who sneer at such "colloquial" language, but made clear it
was right Mr Smith was not standing to become an MP.
It comes after Mr Smith was forced to resign just days after being
selected to run for one of the Ukip's top target seats when
controversial comments on an old recording were leaked to a national
newspaper.
SOURCE
Don't say 'illegal immigrants': British bureaucracy prefers
'clandestine entrants' or 'irregular migrants' to avoid 'connotations'
The Home Office risks accusations of political correctness after saying
that foreigners sneaking into Britain should not be referred to as
illegal immigrants.
The department said those trying to get into Britain unlawfully should be referred to as 'clandestine entrants'.
The debate about the correct term to use was ignited after John Vine,
the independent immigration watchdog, described them as 'irregular
migrants'.
The Home Office later said that the preferred term for 'illegal immigrants' was 'clandestine entrants'.
If you say 'illegal immigrants' there is a presumption and
connotations that they have done something wrong said the Home Office
spokesman
SOURCE
19 December, 2014
UK: Anti-Europe candidate quits after bigoted rant
Private jokes made public
One of the UK Independence Partys most prominent general election
candidates has resigned after being forced to apologise for a series of
offensive comments.
Kerry Smith, the candidate for the top target seat of South Basildon and
East Thurrock, is said to have mocked gay party members as poofters,
joked about shooting people from Chigwell in a peasant hunt" and
referred to someone as a Chinky bird.
His rants were revealed in recordings of phone calls obtained by the Mail on Sunday
SOURCE
Sony emails reveal how racist Leftists are in private
FOX News contributor Juan Williams discusses his recent column where he
addresses the racist emails traded between a Sony executive and a
producer where they joke about what President Obama's taste in movies
must be. They suggested he must love Django Unchained or The Butler,
movies that have black characters as the leading role.
Scott Rudin, a movie producer, said, "I bet he likes Kevin Hart." Kevin
Hart, a black comedian, has been in several recent box office hits.
JUAN WILLIAMS: I wrote about this for FOXNews.com because to me, the
idea of white liberal hypocrisy of these Hollywood executives who are
giving money to the Democrats and then go, "What do we talk to the
president of the free world about?"
We don't have to talk about foreign affairs or what's going on in the
world. No, you know what, this guy is just like any other 'black guy'
even though he's a Harvard-educated constitutional lawyer. "I bet that
Kevin Hart, you know the slapstick comedy, that's about his level. Then
we can talk to him about the slave movie, that's about what we can talk
about." Holy smokes.
LAURA INGRAHAM: But it's the most tolerant people are in many ways
behind closed doors just as intolerant as the yahoos they have imagined
in West Virginia sitting around their, you know, wood stove.
SOURCE
18 December, 2014
BBC are 'wrong' and insensitive to broadcast book about Margaret Thatcher's assassination, Tory MP says
Hilary Mantel is a bitter and barren Leftist blob. Will she
also write a story about Tony Blair being assassinated? And would
the BBC air it? I think we know those answers
BBC bosses are under fire over plans to broadcast a controversial story imagining the assassination of Margaret Thatcher.
Tory backbencher Nadine Dorries said the former prime minster's family
are still "grieving" from her passing last year and said the Corporation
should have "taken stock" of their pain.
It comes amid outrage that BBC Radio 4 has picked Hilary Mantel's
controversial new novel for serialisation in its prestigious Book At
Bedtime slot.
The Booker Prize winner's new book, titled The Assassination of Margaret
Thatcher, has been criticised for insensitivity over imagining the
former Tory leader's murder so recently after her death.
Mrs Dorries said that the BBC "has a responsibility to the people who
pay its license fee", adding that she would think the same if a book
about Tony Blair's death was broadcast by the Corporation.
She added: "I think because Margaret Thatcher's death is so recent and
her family are still grieving, I think the BBC should just have taken
stock of that. "I think they've made the wrong decision, they
should have been a little bit more sensitive. She added: "Maybe in a few
years time, but just not now."
SOURCE
Lady Jenkin: the unacceptable face of prole-bashing
Conservative peer Lady Jenkin, who this week helped launch a Church of
England-funded report into the problem of hunger, certainly seems to
know the solution. Teach the poor how to eat. Or as she herself put it:
We have lost a lot of our cookery skills. Poor people do not know how
to cook. She then said something about how much cheaper porridge is
than Coco Pops.
Unfortunately for Lady Jenkin, the sight of a Tory posho denigrating and
patronising the poor was too much for the tediously left-righteous.
Twitter flowed with allusions to Marie Antoinette, and toff-baiting
gags. And the press, like foodies in foie gras, have been rolling around
in Jenkins cheap snobbery for the past 24 hours. Admittedly, she has
since apologised, but her explanation - I was stupidly speaking
unscripted was not the most sage.
Yet in a way, Jenkin has a point: she wasnt reading the script
properly. That was the source of her faux pas, her gaffe, not her actual
belief that the less well-off are too stupid to feed themselves. After
all, the belief that the poor do not know how to cook is not anathema
to Jenkins left-liberal knockers it is an article of faith. Jenkin
just put it badly.
What she needed, of course, was the correct script. She needed one penned on the left, and, ideally, published in the Guardian.
She needed the script followed by Jamie Oliver, New Labours head cook,
who, in 2006, could call parents who gave their children fizzy drinks
arseholes, tossers and idiots, and be praised by broadsheets, and
venerated by politicians. He could even complain, as he did in 2013,
that the poorest families choose the most expensive way to hydrate and
feed their families the ready meals, the convenience foods, and
barely anyone cocked a snook.
Or better still, if Jenkin really wanted to find an acceptable way to
articulate the poor-bashing heart of the politics of food, she could
have checked out Jack Monroe, the modern face of poverty, as the
Guardian called her (at about the same time it gave her a column). If
she had, shed have found a multitude of ways to suggest that the poor
eat badly and wrongly without incurring the wrath of the kneejerk
anti-Tories. Take this statement: You can overhaul the education system
but there is still a lost generation of people growing up without basic
food knowledge. That sounds very much like something Jenkin might have
said, if shed had the script. But this wasnt Jenkin, this was Monroe,
the elphin face of poverty herself, at her most sermonising and
patronising, lecturing a lost generation of people on their inability
to feed themselves without a) spending a fortune, and b) eating
non-basic food (Coco Pops, probably).
SOURCE
17 December, 2014
Christmas clanger: Lily Allen upsets Christians with 'tactless' nativity performance
English pop singer Lily Allen has upset conservative Christians by including a nativity scene parody in a concert performance.
Allen was performing on December 12 at London's O2 Arena when the lights
came up at start of Sheezus to reveal the singer lying in a manger
(yes, just like the baby Jesus) wearing a short skirt and golden halo,
surrounded by three performers.
Allen hasn't responded to the criticism. Perhaps her views on it were
already clear from her Twitter post which included a photo of herself
with the words: "Just hopping out of my manger. As you do
#littlebabySHEEZUS."
She may have considered it a bit of cheeky fun, but Christian and
conservative groups were not amused. Stephen Green, from the group
Christian Voice told Britain's Sunday Express: "It is tasteless, it is
disrespectful and it is crass."
Conservative MP Martin Vickers joined in, adding: "This could be
extremely offensive to many Christians. It is important that all
religions are given the respect they deserve."
SOURCE
Would she have parodied Mohammed?
Australia: Must not mention the absence of Aborigines
Even though that is a major factor that people would want to know about
The developer who partnered with the Aboriginal Housing Company to
redevelop The Block in Redfern has been forced to explain why an
advertisement for a development completed in 2012 stated that Aborigines
had "moved out" of the suburb.
The owner and director of DeiCorp Construction, Fouad Deiri, says that
the statement on the website of Sydney-based Great Fortune Investments
had "not been worded correctly". Great Fortune Investments was engaged
by DeiCorp in 2010 to market Redfern's 19-storey Deicota Apartments to
local and international Asian investors.
But Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Justice Commissioner
Mick Gooda says that the developer is "guilty-by-association" and that
the incident should lead to a rethink as to whether they're the right
partners for The Block.
"I've been out and about in Redfern and they're pretty pissed off," says
Mr Gooda. "They reckon there's got to be some sorting out of this."
The advertisement, which was removed from Great Fortune Investment's
website earlier this week after being flagged by The Australian, said
that: "'The aboriginals [sic] have already moved out, now Redfern as
[sic] the last virgin suburb close to city, it will have great potential
for the capital growth in the near future."
Mr Deiri points to their Chinese origins and says that it was
grammatical failure. "The Block was being relocated at the time and it
was a point about the relocation," he says.
That doesn't wash with Mr Gooda who says that he's both outraged and
saddened by the comments in the advertisement. "What were they trying to
say by referencing Aboriginal people?" he says. "What are we? Noxious
weeds or something?" [No. Problem people who are often drunk and pestering in public]
SOURCE
16 December, 2014
Must not applaud a death
An anti-bloodsport campaigner and councillor has provoked fury by
claiming that the suicide of a former soldier and game hunter was the
best use of a gun I can think of.
Thomas Woodward is facing calls to quit over the outrageous remarks,
which were posted on the Hunt Saboteurs Associations Facebook page.
The 48-year-old a Liberal councillor on Ryedale District and Pickering
Town councils in North Yorkshire made the comments after reading
reports about the death of Allan Ellis.
Mr Ellis, 50, a former Scots Guard from Bacup, Lancashire, shot himself
in August after learning he was to be sued over a 40,000 debt. Mr
Woodward wrote: We would all rather live in a world where no one kills
for fun. However, if you choose to own a gun and kill for pleasure, then
its best you kill yourself.
Richard Ali, of the British Association for Shooting and Conservation,
said: Mocking the suicide of anyone is absolutely unacceptable. Going
further and stating that lawful gun owners should kill themselves is
despicable behaviour. This man is not fit to hold a public office.
Tim Bonner, of the Countryside Alliance, called the remarks outrageous
and added: Mr Woodward should consider his position and those in
authority in his party and council should consider disciplinary action.
SOURCE
Outrage at Maryland sorority sister who celebrated birthday with racist cake and shared image on Instagram
Sounds like a joke gone wrong
A sorority girl at the University of Maryland is facing outrage after
she posed for a photo with a racist birthday cake made of alcohol
bottles that reads, 's*** a n**** d***' on her 21st birthday.
The photo from Delta Gamma Sorority was posted online to Instagram along
with an offensive hashtag comment that featured the 'n-word.'
University of Maryland student Chandler Perry told Pulsefeedz that she
saw the photo on her Instagram feed and was angered by what she
saw. I was so baffled that 77 people liked it and none of those 77
people told her it was inappropriate,' Perry said.
The photo reached the eyes of the vice president of public relations for
the University of Maryland's Black Student Union Samira Jackson who
wasnt pleased. 'I didnt know it was okay for white people to say
n**** now? Who knew?'
As soon as the University heard about the backlash surrounding the
photo, The University of Maryland Department of Fraternity and Sorority
Life posted a response to their Twitter and said, 'We are aware of an
insensitive post from a community member and are addressing it with the
chapter as it does not align with our Greek values.'
The sorority posted on their Facebook saying, 'We have become aware of
an unacceptable Instagram post by a member of our chapter. The
Fraternity volunteers and staff are working with our chapter at the
University of Maryland at this time to hold this member accountable.'
SOURCE
15 December, 2014
Is this the rudest necklace ever? 'phallic' pendants spark fury
Controversial designer Tom Ford has sparked fury by launching a range of
penis necklaces - just in time for Christmas. The phallic
pendants - which resemble the shape of a cross - come in gold or silver
and are available with small, medium and large charms.
Intended as the perfect holiday gifts for kinky fashionistas, size apparently doesn't matter as they are all priced $790.
But the latest offering from the designer provoked outrage on Twitter
from users who said the necklaces were 'unbelievably offensive' to
Christians and branded Ford 'sick' for combining a phallic image with a
religious symbol.
Kevlyn Hall added: 'How dare you use a phallic symbol in the Christian cross! You insulting piece of trash! HOW DARE YOU!'
One user said on Twitter: 'This is unbelievably offensive to me. Is he insane?'
SOURCE
I have no doubt that these pendants were meant to offend and were
probably seen by their creator as innovative and original. They
are not however. The cross was originally a pagan sex symbol,
meant to symbolize a male penetrating a female. With the
encouragement of St. Paul, however, the early Christians adopted many
pagan practices, such as Sunday observance, Easter etc. Use of the
cross is another such borrowing.
In the original Greek of the New Testament there is no mention of Christ
dying on a cross. The words usually translated as "cross" are
either "xylon", which simply means "wood" or "stauros", which simply
means "stake'. Christ was executed by nailing him to a stake with
his hands both directly above his head. Why bother to add a
crossbar when a simple stake could do all that was needed?
'Swastika' wrapping paper withdrawn after complaint
Shopper complains after finding wrapping paper with 'swastika' design in store's Hannukah display
You have to squint to see any swastikas there. And half of the
arms are pointing the wrong way for a Nazi "Hakenkreuz" anyway.
Their resemblance is to an Indian Swastik
Wrapping paper featuring a blue and silver design has been withdrawn
from shops after a complaint that the gift wrap featured swastikas.
A shopper noticed the paper in a Hanukkah display at a branch of Walgreens in California, US, and complained.
Hallmark Cards has since apologised and said that any similarity to a
swastika was unintentional, adding that the pattern has been in the
company's reference archives for several years.
"As soon as we were made aware of the situation, we began taking steps
to remove the gift wrap from all store shelves and we will ensure the
pattern is not used on any product formats going forward," a company
statement said. "We sincerely apologise for this oversight and for any
unintended offense."
Roughly 6m Jews were murdered by the Nazis in Germany during the Second
World War, and the swastika is seen by many as a symbol of support for
the Nazis.
Hallmark, which is privately owned, has roughly $4bn in annual revenue
from sales of greeting cards, gift wrap and other products sold in 100
countries.
SOURCE
In India, you see swastikas plastered over trucks and buses
everywhere. I wonder how the sensitive souls go if they visit
India?
14 December, 2014
Black dolls must cost the same as white doills
Target has been heavily criticized by customers after listing a black
Barbie doll on its website for two times the price of the near-identical
white alternative.
According to Buzzfeed, the glaring error was first brought to the
attention of the retailer - and the public - by Cincinnati resident
Warren Johnson, who noticed the bizarre price discrepancy when he logged
onto the Target website to buy a Christmas present for his daughter.
After noticing the difference in cost between the Barbie Fashion Design
Maker Doll, which was until recently priced at $23.49, and the Barbie
Fashion Design Maker African-American Doll, which was priced at $49.99,
the outraged 30-year-old contacted the store to ask why there was such a
difference in price between the two toys.
The 30-year-old spoke to three different stores and while two told him
the price difference was an error, a third admitted that the white doll
was cheaper because it was more popular with customers.
An official spokesperson from Target's corporate office was quick to
reject this theory however, but admitted that she could not give any
real reason as to what could possibly make one doll so much more
expensive than the other.
'[The Target saleswoman] was speechless and said she really didnt have
an explanation and she was apologetic, and she told us that a change
would be made,' Mr Johnson told Buzzfeed. 'Then she gave us the doll for
the price that the white doll was.'
Target later released a statement blaming the shocking price discrepancy on a 'system error'.
SOURCE
Brad Badiuk, Winnipeg teacher, on leave after controversial Facebook posts on aboriginals
A Winnipeg high school teacher who posted controversial remarks on
Facebook about First Nations people is now on paid administrative leave.
Some of the comments made by Brad Badiuk, an electronics teacher at
Kelvin High School, concern aboriginal people generally. Others targeted
Derek Nepinak, the grand chief of the Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs
(AMC).
Kevin Hart, who works with the Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs, lodged a
formal complaint about Kelvin High School teacher Brad Badiuk's comments
about aboriginal people.
The controversy started when another teacher posted an article on her
Facebook page about John Ralston Saul's book, The Comeback, which
contends that repairing the relationship between First Nations peoples
and the rest of Canada is a pressing issue.
In response, Badiuk put these posts (taken verbatim) on Facebook, "Oh
Goddd how long are aboriginal people going to use what happened as a
crutch to suck more money out of Canadians?
"The benefits the aboriginals enjoy from the white man/europeans far
outweigh any wrong doings that were done to a concured people."
Another line read, "Get to work, tear the treaties and shut the FK up
already. My ancestor migrated here early 1900's they didn't do anything.
Why am I on the hook for their cultural support?"
Kevin Hart, who works with the AMC, complained to the school board about
the comments, calling them racist and hurtful, and demanding action be
taken.
School officials could not say how long the investigation would take or whether Badiuk might face discipline.
"It's obviously really disheartening," said Mark Wasyliw, chair of the
board of the Winnipeg School Division. "We are a very diverse school
division. We have a huge population of aboriginal students and these
types of allegations are always concerning and demoralizing for staff."
SOURCE
Interesting that no-one seems to be disputing the truth of what he
said. Another case of truth that must not be mentioned, it seems.
12 December, 2014
Campaign launched to ban singing of Tom Jones' hit Delilah at Welsh rugby matches 'because it glorifies domestic violence'
A campaign has been launched to ban Sir Tom Jones' hit Delilah from
being sung at Welsh rugby matches over claims it 'glorifies domestic
violence'.
Senior politician Dafydd Iwan, 71, is leading a protest to ban the
iconic ballad being sung by choirs at the Millennium Stadium in Cardiff,
Wales, because he claims it depicts a brutal revenge killing of a
woman.
The campaign over the song, which has become an unofficial anthem for
Welsh rugby fans, comes more than 40 years after it was first recorded
by Sir Tom.
Bosses at the Welsh Rugby Union (WRU) have defended the hit by comparing
its dark subject matter to the best of Shakespeare's works like
Macbeth, Romeo and Juliet and Coriolanus.
A spokesman said: 'Within rugby, Delilah has gained prominence through its musicality rather than because of its lyrics.
'There is however plenty of precedent in art and literature, prominently
in Shakespearean tragedies for instance, for negative aspects of life
to be portrayed.'
SOURCE
Wrong to say ALL lives matter
Must concentrate on black lives
Smith College President Kathleen McCartney led a vigil attended by 130
people Monday afternoon three days after she apologized for her original
wording in an email she sent to the campus community in reaction to the
recent police killings of three blacks.
McCartney sent two emails Friday, which were obtained by the Gazette
from a Smith faculty member. The first, with a subject line reading All
Lives Matter, was sent by McCartney to Smith students, faculty and
staff with a list of actions that would taken on campus to heal those in
pain, to teach, learn and share what we know and to work for equity
and justice.
Nearly six hours later Friday evening, McCartney sent a second email
expressing regret that she was unaware the phrase all lives mater was
used by some on social media as a counter to the #BlackLivesMatter
movement protesting the grand jury decisions not to indict police
officers in the deaths of Michael Brown and Eric Garner.
McCartney closed her email acknowledging her mistakes, despite my best
intentions, and thanking those who shared their wisdom and wise
counsel with her.
SOURCE
Amusing that even liberals can get caught out as incorrect
11 December, 2014
Prophetic for our times
Im Dreaming of a Racially Ambiguous Holiday Season
Darius Rucker takes heat for singing White Christmas in the wake of the Eric Garner decision.
Quick: If you had to pick one classic Christmas song that the thought
police would deem racist, which would it be? If you said, White
Christmas, congratulations!
The 82nd Annual Rockefeller Christmas Tree lighting last Wednesday was
interrupted by protesters in the wake of the grand-jury decision to not
indict an NYPD officer in the death of Eric Garner. The lighting went
forward as planned, and Hootie & the Blowfishs lead singer, Darius
Rucker, sang Irving Berlins White Christmas.
Although Ruckers was a perfectly adequate performance, the song enraged
some on social media. An African-American musician singing a song that
had the word white in it, despite the words referring to snow and not
skin color, so close to the Eric Garner decision was apparently
offensive enough that many felt the need to sound off on Twitter.
SOURCE
10 December, 2014
Using the term "Strange Fruit" makes you a racist(!)
An Austin-based public relations firm is making headlines this week
and not because of its talented clients. Strange Fruit PR, the local
hospitality PR firm that represents many of Austin's most popular
restaurants, is under fire for its racially insensitive name.
On Saturday, a slew of tweets called out the company for using a name
associated with the lynching of blacks in the South. Based on a poem by
Abel Meeropol, "Strange Fruit" was made famous after it was recorded as a
song by Billie Holiday in 1939. The phrase "strange fruit" refers to
the bodies of black men and women hanging from trees.
Strange Fruit PR shared its official statement with CultureMap via email:
"We were wrong. We extend our deepest & sincerest apologies for the
offense caused by the name of our public relations firm. This is very
troublesome to us & was most definitely never our intention to draw
any parallels to Abel Meeropol's powerful poem & the song that holds
the name. We thought the term "strange fruit" really could stand for
someone who stood out in a crowd, a talent that was different and
remarkable in a good way."
SOURCE
The pussification of students at the University of Iowa
Students at the University of Iowa occupied the Office of the Registrar
on Friday after a controversial display was placed in the heart of
campus.
The statue a 7-foot-tall Ku Klux Klan robe with a vinyl hood, an
affixed camera and screen-printed newspaper articles chronicling more
than 100 years of race riots and hate crimes was erected at 7 a.m. by
Serhat Tanyolacar, a visiting art professor.
The artwork was removed around 10:30 a.m. after officers with the
University of Iowa Police Department discovered that Tanyolacar failed
to secure a permit for it.
After a gathering outside UI President Sally Masons office students
moved to the Iowa Memorial Unions Bijou Cinema to share their emotions
about the statue. Vice President for Student Life Tom Rocklin and
Georgina Dodge, UIs chief diversity officer and associate vice
president, were present for the discussion.
SOURCE
"Sharing emotions"! Is that what universiity students now do? How about having rational discussions?
9 December, 2014
Must not say that Indians in Britain work in shops
Patels were originally small landlords in the Indian State of Gujurat
and many are still small businessmen, running shops, small hotels and
motels etc. so the judge's guess was pretty good -- but he should have
posed his thoughts as a question rather than as an assertion
A judge has quit after allegedly making a racist comment about an Asian
crime victim in court. Peter Hollingworth had asked lawyers to
fetch the harassment victim so he could finish sentencing her
ex-boyfriend.
Prosecutor Rachel Parker said she was unsure whether the woman in
question, Deepa Patel, could attend at short notice due to work
commitments.
The district judge allegedly replied: It wont be a problem. She
wont be working anywhere important where she cant get the time off.
Shell only be working in a shop or an off-licence.
When Miss Parker asked the judge to clarify his comments, he added:
With a name like Patel, and her ethnic background, she wont be working
anywhere important where she cant get the time off. So thats what
well do.
At this point Miss Parker withdrew from the case at Preston Magistrates
Court and told the judge: I am professionally embarrassed. I cannot
prosecute this case.
The Crown Prosecution Service made an official complaint after the
incident on October 30, and Mr Hollingworth resigned four weeks later
from his part-time job as a deputy district judge.
Miss Patel, a 22-year-old from Preston, is currently working in an
office after completing a law degree. She told The Sun: I was born and
bred in this country... its shocking and disgusting for anyone to say
that, especially a judge.
SOURCE
Must not dress up as members of a black gang
Partygoers were satirizing the Crips gang based in California
A Clemson fraternity has suspended all activity after students and
university President Jim Clements raised concerns about a themed party.
The "CRIPmas"-themed party Saturday night raised concerns about the
campus climate, Clements said in a statement posted on the university
website. Some students and faculty said on social media the party was
racially insensitive.
The national office of the fraternity, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, apologized to the campus and community in a statement.
The party was not sanctioned by the university, said spokesman John
Gouch. According to the fraternity statement, the party took place at a
private, off-campus residence.
Many students said on social media the party's theme was racist, and
some pointed out the Crips are a primarily black gang. Some faculty and
staff expressed dismay on Twitter as well. Many called for Clements to
take action.
Other students said the theme was insensitive, but race was not an
issue. Lesley Smith said in a message that the party theme seemed
insensitive toward anyone affected by gang violence, but that was not
limited to people of one race.
SOURCE
8 December, 2014
Former England footballer Michael Owen is slammed on social media after comparing women to luxury cars
Former England footballer Michael Owen has been inundated with critical messages after starring in a 'sexist' new car ad.
In the ad, which was made on behalf of his local car dealership, Owen,
who is married to childhood sweetheart Louise Bonsall, compares women to
luxury cars and goes on to boast about the 'dozens' of Jaguars he owns.
'You've got to go for looks to start with,' said the star in the
clip, before adding: 'Then you look inside. It's probably similar to
girls isn't it?
'The look attracts you to start with and then you get to know them a bit more, I think it's the same with cars.'
Andrew North, a director at Alexanders Prestige, the dealership behind
the ad, defended Owen's statement when contacted by MailOnline. 'I
think it's a fair comparison,' said Mr North. 'You are attracted to the
outside but ultimately, it's what's on the inside that counts and
that's what he was trying to say.
Defending his star, Mr North added: 'Michael was a pleasure to work
with. We have known him for years and he have previously worked with him
and his family through the equestrian side of the business. 'He was
very happy to take part in the advert and we will be working with him
again.'
SOURCE
California college settles First Amendment suit with student
A California community college has settled a lawsuit with a student who
claimed it violated his First Amendment rights when an administrator
threatened him for collecting petition signatures outside of a small,
designated "free speech zone."
Student Vincenzo Sinapi-Riddle, with help from the Foundation for
Individual Rights in Education, sued Glendora, Calif., Citrus College
after the incident, which occurred on Sept. 17, 2013 - the day
designated as "Constitution Day." Sinapi-Riddle was collecting
signatures for a petition condemning the federal National Security
Agency's domestic surveillance activities.
When he left the area for a lunch break and headed to the student
center, he and another student discussed the petition, prompting an
administrator to intervene, according to FIRE. Claiming that a political
discussion could not take place outside of the free speech zone, the
unidentified school employee threatened to eject Sinapi-Riddle from
campus for violating the policy.
After a suit was filed in U.S. District Court for the Central District
of California, the school agreed to pay Sinapi-Riddle $110,000 in
damages and attorneys' fees, as well as to revise its free speech
policies. In a statement, the school noted the settlement figure was far
less than the anticipated cost of fighting the lawsuit and defended its
policies as in compliance "with a long line of U.S. Supreme Court cases
relating to speech activities in public places, including college
campuses." But the school affirmed its support for free speech and
agreed to change some campus regulations.
SOURCE
7 December, 2014
Australia: Eccentric parishioner denied right to pass out leaflets inside church he was criticizing
The Court of Appeal has refused a "free speech" bid by a Yepoon
parishioner to permit pamphlet distribution criticising the theology
being preached by the pastor of his local Wesleyan Methodist Church.
The parish considered his brochures that connected the 9/11 twin towers
attacks to imperfect religious instruction and praised Russian president
Vladimir Putin "as an exemplar of Christian values", to be
objectionable.
Removed by police on two occasions after being denied entry, Ron
Gallagher filed a claim against parish board members requiring he be
permitted "to pass freely without let or hindrance into the sanctuary"
of their premises and for an order disallowing their "edict of
suppression made in disregard of the God-given privilege of freedom of
speech".
Of historical interest was the court ruling that article 9 of the
English Bill of Rights of 1688 on which Gallagher relied - that applies
in Queensland by virtue of the Imperial Acts Application Act 1984 -
contained no speech freedom guarantee as argued.
Such freedom and the limited "implied constitutional right to
communicate on government and political matters" recognised by
Australia's High Court were irrelevant, so ruled the court, to his
ouster. No one had taken steps to prevent Gallagher's pamphlet
distribution elsewhere, they objected only to him so doing on their own
premises.
As a regular member of the church's congregation (but not a member of
the church itself), he was merely a licensee whose right to enter could
be revoked - at will - by the property owners or the parish board as the
owner's representative.
And in the case of a place or worship, a person's right to enter was in
any event subject to a legally recognised qualification that he or she
must "behave in reasonable conformity with the requirements of the
religion in which he was participating".
Gallagher simply had no legal or equitable right to be on the church's
property for any purpose once informed he was no longer welcome.
The court also noted the somewhat obscure Criminal Code offence of
engaging in conduct that "caused disquiet or disturbed" persons
assembled for religious worship, was punishable by a $10 fine and in
more serious cases, by imprisonment.
SOURCE
UK: Businesses must not seek to hire "good-looking girls"
A job advertisement by Pizza Hut which said it was looking for "decent,
good-looking girls" has been removed after complaints it was sexist.
The advert for the chain's Leatherhead branch was posted on the website
Gumtree but was removed after people reported it to Pizza Hut's head
office.
It read: "Pizza Hut Leatherhead looking for full and part time drivers.
Need to have your own car. "We are also looking for a decent good
looking girls for Reception. That role is just part time."
Jackie Quinn, the president of Leatherhead's Chamber of Commerce
president said the advert was sexist and claimed Pizza Hut had "let
itself down". "It's not acceptable to be sexist, they could have
put good-looking girls or boys but they didn't even do that," she said.
SOURCE
5 December, 2014
Twitter Mass Suspends Conservatives Who Posted NYT Address #Ferguson
What's OK for the NYT is not OK for conservatives, apparently
The People's Cube is reporting that their Twitter account with over 4000
followers has been suspended for retweeting a post with the addresses
of New York Times reporters Julie Bosman and Campbell Robertson.
The Times reporters had posted the address of unindicted Ferguson police
officer Darren Wilson and his wife shortly after the verdict.
The popular conservative art humor website is not alone among conservative Twitter accounts that have been targeted.
It has also been reported that the Cube is not alone, indicating that
Twitter is targeting conservative reaction to the outing of Wilson.
Wilson has received multiple death-threats and the FBI has arrested
Jaleel Tarik Abdul-Jabbaar for plotting to kill Wilson.
GotNews Editor-in-Chief, Charles C. Johnson was suspended by Twitter for
posting the reporters addresses on the GotNews website and merely
mentioning it on Twitter. Bosman has complained to the Chicago police
and demanded V.I.P. protection though the Chicago Police say there's no
credible threat against her.
Conservative twitters have been emailing Johnson trying to reinstall their own accounts after they were mass suspended.
UPDATE: As of 11:40 December 3, 2014 Twitter has reinstated the The People's Cube Twitter account.
SOURCE
"Ghetto" is a naughty word
James Delingpole appeared on a BBC TV Programme ...
"I have experienced immense obtuseness from BBC audiences on two
occasions recently. One was Free Speech - a youth debate programme
redolent of that old Not The Nine O'Clock News sketch where Griff Rhys
Jones tries unsuccessfully to get down with the kids on a show called
Hey, Wow! - in which I made the H.M. Batemanesque mistake of pointing
out that, thanks to the failed experiment of multiculturalism, there
were now parts of inner-city Britain which were effectively Muslim
ghettos.
Rather than dispute the premise - not an easy task, given the widespread
evidence from Birmingham and Bradford to Luton - the young audience and
most of my fellow panellists decided to attack me for my choice of
terminology. `Ghetto' was a racist word, they told me. Islamophobic too.
The more they hissed and jeered and showed their disapproval of my vile
bigotry, you could tell, the more warm and gooey they felt inside. See
what good, sensitive, caring, non-judgmental people they all were:
uniting as one against the language of hatred and intolerance! (But if
you go to Birmingham and Bradford and Luton, I suspect the sectarian
problem I've described won't have gone away)".
SOURCE
4 December, 2014
Must not mention racial details of Egyptians
A famous ancient Egyptian -- with hat
News Corp chairman Rupert Murdoch has come under fire on social media after making a racially insensitive tweet.
Mr Murdoch struck a wrong note minutes ago after offering his opinion on
the casting controversy surrounding the 2014 film 'Exodus: Gods and
Kings'.
Under his authenticated Twitter handle @rupertmurdoch, the media mogul
wrote: "Moses film attacked on Twitter for all white cast. Since when
are Egyptians not white? All I know are."
Predictably, the tweet went down like a tonne of bricks, but still
determined to get his point across Mr Murdoch followed the original
tweet with: "Everybody-attacks last tweet. Of course Egyptians are
Middle Eastern, but far from black. They treated blacks as slaves."
After a barrage of criticism, which included some users telling Mr
Murdoch to "drop dead", the News Corp chairman relented, tweeting:
"Okay, there are many shades of colour. Nothing racist about that, so
calm down!"
SOURCE
Rupert was perfectly right. Arabs ARE white -- a little swarthy,
like most Mediterranean people, but a long way from black.
I suppose the issue is whether the ANCIENT Egyptians were white but we
have rather a lot of paintings from ancient Egyptian tombs which show
Egyptians as light brown (suntanned?) and many of their slaves --
Nubians -- as black -- as black as modern Africans. So there
definitely was a color divide and it was not favorable to blacks.
So the ancient Egyptians may have been a bit darker than
modern-day Arab Egyptians but they were sun-worshippers in part so it
may have been religiously correct to portray them with suntans. In
which case what we see in the tomb paintings may simply be suntanned
versions of a Mediterranean skin. Tanned skin does after all have a
following to this day.
Note also that the ancient world seems to have been very little
concerned about race. People from all over the empire became Roman
emperors, for instance. There may therefore have been some
occasions when the ancestors of African blacks rose to positions of
influence in ancient Egyptian society. If Obama is good
enough for modern-day America, why not another black for Pharaoh?
It was of course religion, not race, that mattered most to the ancient
world and that was true up until fairly recently. The first set of
writings that obsessed about race that I know of is the correspondence
between Karl Marx and his disciple Friedrich Engels. And the
obsession of America's Democrats with race also goes back to around the
mid-19th century.
A 19th century election poster
Even Houston Stewart Chamberlain, writing in the late 19th century, who
is sometimes claimed as the main theorist behind Nazism, in fact thought
that it was only out of racial mixture that the gifted could be
created. He considered that the evidence of this was provided by the
Prussian, whom he saw as the superman, resulting from a cross between
the German and the Slav. From this Chamberlain went on to argue that the
sum of all these talented people would then form a "race," not of blood
but of "affinity." Not very racist in the modern sense.
UK: Calling Ukip candidate by Turkish name seen as fanning prejudice
UKIP is an anti-immigration party. There can be little doubt that
directing attention to the man's partly Turkish ancestry was intended to
damage him in the eyes of potential voters
A controversial Tory leaflet referring to a Ukip candidate by his
Turkish name is not racist and will probably "do him a favour",
according to the Conservative MP who will fight him at the next
election.
Jackie Doyle-Price told The Telegraph the flier calling Tim Aker "Timr"
in an apparent attempt to remind voters of his foreign root would give
him "credibility" with the electorate.
She admitted the move was "childish" but rejected the comment was
racist, saying: "Frankly, I don't consider this a big deal at all."
James Forsyth, a political commentator, accused the Tories in the Mail
on Sunday of "diving headfirst into the gutter" with the "attempt to
remind voters of his Turkish roots" in the leaflet.
While Mr Aker was born "Timr", he refers to himself as Tim and appears
on the ballot paper in the council by-election under that name.
SOURCE
3 December, 2014
Must not criticize Obama's daughters
The Republican spin doctor who scolded Barack Obama's teenage daughters
for lacking "class" in their attitude and dress sense has resigned amid a
fierce backlash.
Elizabeth Lauten, the communications director for a Tennessee
congressman, said that she was quitting after earlier apologising for
her "hurtful words".
The firestorm of controversy reflected a long-standing consensus that
the children of presidents should be spared from the partisan and often
highly personal invective that characterises US politics.
For a senior political operative whose role was to spread the message of
her boss Stephen Fincher, Ms Lauten's taunt that the girls should "try
showing a little class" is also being touted as a case study in how not
to do the job.
She launched her tirade in a Facebook posting about the appearance of
13-year-old Sasha and her sister Malia, 16, at the annual White House
turkey pardoning - normally an uncontroversial event even in the
partisan world of Washington.
Several media outlets noted that the girls looked distinctly
underwhelmed and were casually dressed as their father spoke on the eve
of Thanksgiving. But Ms Lauten went much further.
"Dear Sasha and Malia, I get you're both in those awful teen years, but
you're a part of the First Family, try showing a little class," she
wrote. "Rise to the occasion. Act like being in the White House matters
to you. Dress like you deserve respect, not a spot at a bar."
SOURCE
Black British footballer faces investigation over 'racist and anti-Semitic' Instagram post
His blackness will protect him, of course
Mario Balotelli, the Liverpool striker, faces a Football Association
investigation and possible five-match ban for an inflammatory social
media message that has earned him a public rebuke from his club and an
angry response from the Jewish Leadership Council.
Balotelli posted and then swiftly deleted an image on his Instagram page
depicting the computer game character `Super Mario' alongside a racial
stereotype and anti-Semitic remark - "jumps like a black man and grabs
coins like a Jew".
Simon Johnson, the former FA executive and now chief executive of the
Jewish Leadership Council reacted angrily to post on Monday night.
"We abhor all forms of racism, wherever it is found," Johnson said. "We
call upon the FA to investigate this offensive social media post and to
take action if appropriate if we are to succeed in kicking racism out of
football."
The provocative language in Balotelli's post, even if he claims it to be
an ironic anti-racist message, leaves the Italian open to a breach of
the FA's social media guidelines. If charged, the minimum ban on
race-related breaches is five games.
At the very least, the striker has had to explain his intentions to his
club and the swiftness with which it was removed demonstrated Liverpool
concerns. The FA is sure to explore it further.
SOURCE
2 December, 2014
I've lost my lawsuit. But I'm going to appeal. Here's why
Ezra Levant
Today I lost the lawsuit against me brought by Khurrum Awan, the former youth president of the Canadian Islamic Congress.
You can read the full ruling here. The judge awarded Awan a whopping $80,000 plus legal costs.
I am reviewing the technical aspects of the ruling with my lawyer. But
there is something terrifying, buried in this ruling, that I already
know I simply must appeal - all the way to the Supreme Court if
necessary.
On paragraph 166 of the decision, the judge ruled that calling Awan an
anti-Semite is defamatory, and that's one of the reasons I lost, and
have to pay him so much money.
But Awan was, at one time, the youth president of the Canadian Islamic
Congress, an anti-Semitic organization. At the time Awan was its youth
president, the CIC was led by a notorious anti-Semite, Mohamed Elmasry.
Elmasry famously went on national TV to state that any adult in Israel
is a legitimate target for terrorism. The CIC has publicly called for
the legalization of anti-Semitic terrorist groups.
And yet the judge ruled that it is defamatory to call the former youth
president of an anti-Semitic organization, anti-Semitic. Because he
denied it in court, and said he never knew about his organization's
infamous misconduct.
This should concern anyone who is worried about radical Islam, the right
to criticize it, and the right to call out anti-Semitism in the public
square.
If this judgment stands, anyone who dares to challenge members of Muslim
extremist groups on the basis of their affiliation with such groups is
at risk of costly lawsuits - and all the member of the anti-Semitic
group needs to do is to deny that they share the beliefs of their
organizations that they work hard to promote, or say they had no clue
their anti-Semitic group was anti-Semitic.
If this ruling is allowed to stand, it will hinder anyone who campaigns
against anti-Semitism - any Jewish group, any pro-Israel group, even
anyone who criticizes radical Islam.
This ruling doesn't just affect my rights. It's a setback for freedom for everyone.
The comments in question were written on my personal blog six years ago,
and so I'm footing the legal bills for this fight myself.
SOURCE
SCOTUS verdict on threatening speech due soon
Anthony Elonis claimed he was just kidding when he posted a series of
graphically violent rap lyrics on Facebook about killing his estranged
wife, shooting up a kindergarten class and attacking an FBI agent.
But his wife didn't see it that way. Neither did a federal jury.
Elonis, who's from Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, was convicted of violating a
federal law that makes it a crime to threaten another person.
In a far-reaching case that probes the limits of free speech over the
Internet, the Supreme Court on Monday was to consider whether Elonis'
Facebook posts, and others like it, deserve protection under the First
Amendment.
Elonis argues that his lyrics were simply a crude and spontaneous form
of expression that should not be considered threatening if he did not
really mean it. The government says it does not matter what Elonis
intended, and that the true test of a threat is whether his words make a
reasonable person feel threatened.
SOURCE
1 December, 2014
Did the Department of Defense Just Go All Politically Correct in Describing Captured Enemies?
The Department of Defense just changed the wording of their categories
for detainees. It's a subtle adjustment with real implications.
This is a screen shot from the May 30, 2008 version of their Joint Publication 3-63 on Detainee Operations:
Note that of the three categories, the ones actively involved in fighting are referred to as "enemy combatants."
Now this is a screen shot from the November 13, 2014 version:
Note the change from "enemy combatant" to "privileged belligerent and unprivileged belligerent."
Apparently, the word "combatant" was no longer acceptable and was replaced with "belligerent."
To give some context, the words "privileged" and "unprivileged"
basically mean people who are members of regular armed forces and fight
under traditional rules of combat, versus those who fight with
non-traditional groups or in non-traditional manners.
Even so, the wording seems soft. Is this an example of finely-tuned
language, or a submission to the politically correct notions that would
rather avoid negative labels?
SOURCE
Kids must not see a Christmas tree
It's a Christmas miracle! An elementary school in a Boston suburb that
was going to cancel its annual trip to see The Nutcracker has decided
allowing kids to see a Christmas tree on stage will not destroy the
non-Christians in the audience. According to whdh.com:
"The trip to see the famous ballet has been a
tradition at the school for years, but apparently some felt the trip was
improper because there is a Christmas tree on the stage.
The issue came to a head at a [Butler Elementary
School] PTA meeting Tuesday night. A source said some people were told
they were being discriminatory if they supported their kids going to
"The Nutcracker."
The controversy was so white-hot, the PTA apparently worked in secret to cancel the field trip:
Some parents of the second graders, who didn't want
to appear on camera, told 7News that they're also upset because PTA
leaders secretly cancelled the field trip without telling anyone, but
word spread.
PTA Co-President Barbara Bulfoni said, "In the past
years there were parents complaints as 'The Nutcracker' has a religious
content."
You know what? The Nutcracker does indeed have religious content.
Everyone in the ballet is celebrating Christmas, a Christian holiday
commemorating Christ. Same thing happens in A Christmas Carol, How The
Grinch Stole Christmas, A Christmas Story, A Charlie Brown Christmas,
White Christmas, Black Christmas (a slasher movie) and-heck-Handel's
Messiah.
Are these a terrible influence, one and all? How about all those
Renaissance paintings of Mary and Jesus? Should the PTA ban trips to the
art museum?
Kids can be exposed to ideas and cultures different from their own and
not immediately feel offended. In fact, I'm betting Christian kids could
probably survive seeing Adam Sandler's Eight Crazy Nights without
insisting afterward that mom burn the tree and leave Santa a bowl of
liver and onions.
The Nutcracker is a ballet, not fundamentalist propaganda. I'm glad the Butler School PTA figured that out.
SOURCE
This is Tongue-Tied 2
Posts by John J. Ray (M.A.; Ph.D.)
Alternative (monthly) archives for this blog are here
Is the American national anthem politically incorrect? From the 4th verse:
Praise the Power that hath made and preserved us a nation.
Then conquer we must, when our cause it is just,
And this be our motto: "In God is our trust."
Mohammad
"HATE SPEECH" is free speech: The U.S. Supreme Court stated the general
rule regarding protected speech in Texas v. Johnson (109 S.Ct. at
2544), when it held: "The government may not prohibit the verbal or
nonverbal expression of an idea merely because society finds the idea
offensive or disagreeable." Federal courts have consistently followed this. Said Virginia federal district judge Claude Hilton: "The
First Amendment does not recognize exceptions for bigotry, racism, and
religious intolerance or ideas or matters some may deem trivial, vulgar
or profane."
Even some advocacy of violence is protected by the 1st Amendment. In
Brandenburg v. Ohio (1969), the U.S. Supreme Court held unanimously that
speech advocating violent illegal actions to bring about social change
is protected by the First Amendment "except where such advocacy is
directed to inciting or producing imminent lawless action and is likely
to incite or produce such action."
The double standard: Atheists can put up signs and billboards saying
that Christianity is wrong and that is hunky dory. But if a Christian
says that homosexuality is wrong, that is attacked as "hate speech"
"I think no subject should be off-limits, and I regard the laws in many
Continental countries criminalizing Holocaust denial as philosophically
repugnant and practically useless in that they confirm to Jew-haters
that the Jews control everything (otherwise why arent we allowed to
talk about it?)" -- Mark Steyn
A prophetic comment on Norwegian hate speech laws: As Justice Brandeis
once noted, repressive censorship breeds hate and that hate menaces
stable government, rather than promoting safety; the path of safety
lies in the opportunity to discuss freely supposed grievances and
proposed remedies.
Voltaire's most famous saying was actually a summary of Voltaire's
thinking by one of his biographers rather than something Voltaire said
himself. Nonetheless it is a wholly admirable sentiment: "I disagree
with what you say but I will defend to the death your right to say it".
I am of a similar mind.
The traditional advice about derogatory speech: "Sticks and stones will
break your bones but names will never hurt you". Apparently people today
are not as emotionally robust as their ancestors were.
Thomas Jefferson on free speech: It does me no injury for my
neighbors to say there are 20 gods, or no god. It neither picks my
pocket nor breaks my legs.
The KKK were members of the DEMOCRATIC party. Google "Klanbake" if you doubt it
A phobia is an irrational fear, so the terms "Islamophobic" and
"homophobic" embody a claim that the people so described are mentally
ill. There is no evidence for either claim. Both terms are simply abuse
masquerading as diagnoses and suggest that the person using them is
engaged in propaganda rather than in any form of rational or objective
discourse.
Leftists often pretend that any mention of race is "racist" -- unless
they mention it, of course. But leaving such irrational propaganda
aside, which statements really are racist? Can statements of fact about
race be "racist"? Such statements are simply either true or false. The
most sweeping possible definition of racism is that a racist statement
is a statement that includes a negative value judgment of some race.
Absent that, a statement is not racist, for all that Leftists might howl
that it is. Facts cannot be racist so nor is the simple statement of
them racist. Here is a statement that cannot therefore be racist by
itself, though it could be false: "Blacks are on average much less
intelligent than whites". If it is false and someone utters it, he
could simply be mistaken or misinformed.
Categorization is a basic human survival skill so racism as the Left
define it (i.e. any awareness of race) is in fact neither right nor
wrong. It is simply human
Whatever your definition of racism, however, a statement that simply
mentions race is not thereby racist -- though one would think otherwise
from American Presidential election campaigns. Is a statement that
mentions dogs, "doggist" or a statement that mentions cats, "cattist"?
Was Abraham Lincoln a racist? "You and we are different races. We
have between us a broader difference than exists between almost any
other two races. Whether it is right or wrong I need not discuss, but
this physical difference is a great disadvantage to us both, as I think
your race suffer very greatly, many of them by living among us, while
ours suffer from your presence. In a word, we suffer on each side. If
this be admitted, it affords a reason at least why we should be
separated. It is better for both, therefore, to be separated." -- Spoken at the White House to a group of black community leaders, August 14th, 1862
Gimlet-eyed Leftist haters sometimes pounce on the word "white" as
racist. Will the time come when we have to refer to the White House as
the "Full spectrum of light" House?
The spirit of liberty is "the spirit which is not too sure that it is
right." and "Liberty lies in the hearts of men and women; when it dies
there, no constitution, no law, no court can even do much to help it.
While it lies there it needs no constitution, no law, no court to save
it." -- Judge Learned Hand
Mostly, a gaffe is just truth slipping out
Two lines below of a famous hymn that would be incomprehensible to
Leftists today ("honor"? "right"? "freedom?" Freedom to agree with them
is the only freedom they believe in)
First to fight for right and freedom,
And to keep our honor clean
It is of course the hymn of the USMC -- still today the relentless warriors that they always were.
It seems a pity that the wisdom of the ancient Greek philosopher
Epictetus is now little known. Remember, wrote the Stoic thinker, "that
foul words or blows in themselves are no outrage, but your judgment
that they are so. So when any one makes you angry, know that it is your
own thought that has angered you. Wherefore make it your endeavour not
to let your impressions carry you away."
"Since therefore the knowledge and survey of vice is in this world so
necessary to the constituting of human virtue, and the scanning of error
to the confirmation of truth, how can we more safely, and with less
danger, scout into the regions of sin and falsity than by reading all
manner of tractates, and hearing all manner of reason?" -- English poet
John Milton (1608-1674) in Areopagitica
Hate speech is verbal communication that induces anger due to the listener's inability to offer an intelligent response
Leftists can try to get you fired from your job over something that you
said and that's not an attack on free speech. But if you just criticize
something that they say, then that IS an attack on free speech
"Negro" is a forbidden word -- unless a Democrat uses it
"It is impossible to speak in such a way that you cannot be misunderstood." -- Karl Popper
Why are Leftists always talking about hate? Because it fills their own hearts
Leftists don't have principles. How can they when "there is no such
thing as right and wrong"? All they have is postures, pretend-principles
that can be changed as easily as one changes one's shirt
When you have an argument with a Leftist, you are not really discussing
the facts. You are threatening his self esteem. Which is why the normal
Leftist response to challenge is mere abuse.
The
naive scholar who searches for a consistent Leftist program will not
find it. What there is consists only in the negation of the present.
The intellectual Roman Emperor Marcus Aurelius (AD 121-180) could have
been speaking of much that goes on today when he said: "The object in
life is not to be on the side of the majority, but to escape finding
oneself in the ranks of the insane."
I despair of the ADL. Jews have
enough problems already and yet in the ADL one has a prominent Jewish
organization that does its best to make itself offensive to Christians.
Their Leftism is more important to them than the welfare of Jewry --
which is the exact opposite of what they ostensibly stand for! Jewish
cleverness seems to vanish when politics are involved. Fortunately,
Christians are true to their saviour and have loving hearts. Jewish
dissatisfaction with the myopia of the ADL is outlined here. Note that Foxy was too grand to reply to it.
Email me here (Hotmail address).
Index page for this site
DETAILS OF REGULARLY UPDATED BLOGS BY JOHN RAY:
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Paralipomena 3
To be continued ....
Queensland Police -- A barrel with lots of bad apples
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BLOGS NO LONGER BEING UPDATED
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OF INTEREST (2)
QANTAS -- A dying octopus
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Obama Watch
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