Author Topic: Race, religion, ethnic origin, LGBT, "discrimination", & discrimination.  (Read 415655 times)

Crafty_Dog

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WT: Catholic Schools draw clear lines on gender
« Reply #850 on: August 29, 2022, 02:46:10 AM »
second

Catholic schools draw clear lines on gender

Dioceses want no identity crises

BY MARK A. KELLNER THE WASHINGTON TIMES

An official statement saying its parochial school students will have to conform to the gender with which they were born or leave school has put the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Omaha squarely in the middle of a raging national debate over gender, identity and faith.

At least two other U.S. Catholic dioceses also have issued statements affirming what they say is church teaching on gender dysphoria. The Omaha, Nebraska, document has drawn local attention for its assertion that students who won’t conform to their biological gender may not be “a proper fit” for Catholic school education.

“Students will conduct themselves in accord with their biological sex on parish and school campuses as well as during parish and school-sponsored activities off campus,” the “Archdiocese of Omaha Pastoral Guidelines for Gender Dysphoria” document reads. The rule will apply to “restrooms, dress codes, athletics, single-sex small groups, housing at overnight events and dates for parish and school-sponsored events,” a local church official said.

In addition, the document said, “Catholic parishes and schools will not allow or otherwise cooperate in the administration of puberty-blocking or cross-sex hormones on school property.”

The rules will take effect on Jan. 1, the Omaha World-Herald reported. Archbishop George Lucas said the newspaper endorsed the policy.

The diocese of Sioux Falls, South Dakota, also released guidelines this month. The diocese advises that “those who cannot accept” the church’s norms on gender can go elsewhere for education.

Students in Sioux Falls diocesan schools “are to wear only those uniforms and conform to all dress codes in accord with his or her biological sex,” the rules state, and restroom use “will align with his/her sex.”

The Sioux Falls statement also says “students, teachers and school personnel must use accurate gender references and language in all circumstances and at all times” and when classmates use “inconsistent” pronouns for a given student, “this behavior shall be addressed immediately.”

Bill Donohue, president of the conservative Catholic League, praised the Sioux Falls document as “fair, yet firm, and in complete agreement with Catholic moral theology and social teachings.”

He said Sioux Falls Bishop Donald E. DeGrood “has the wisdom and courage not to duck the hard questions that such a policy entails, especially these days.”

The Catholic Diocese of Arlington, Virginia, put forth its statement on gender last year. In a policy document for schools, the diocese said cases of gender dysphoria “need to be handled with gentle and compassionate pastoral skill and concern, with the utmost sensitivity and charity, while avoiding all unjust discrimination.”

It notes that Catholic teaching “emphasizes the personal unity of body and soul, and the importance of accepting one’s sexed body as a gift from our Creator. Consequently, the Catholic Church opposes all interventions intended to facilitate the individual’s rejection of his or her biological sex, or to facilitate the individual’s assertion of an identity at odds with biological sex.” Requests to use “an identity at odds with biological sex … will be denied.”

The Arlington policy does not say nonconforming students will be denied admission, but it is firm on such hotbutton issues as the use of personal pronouns favored by the individual: “All young people and their family members will be addressed and referred to with pronouns and names or nicknames consistent with their God-given biological sex. If a young person or family member proposes the use of any different name or nickname (male, female or neutral) in connection with the assertion of an identity at odds with biological sex, that request will be denied.”

The Archdiocese of Washington did not respond to a request by The Washington Times for comment on its policies for gender dysphoria among its students.

However, a posted “Admissions and Non-Discrimination Policy” states that while its schools “are not required to adopt any rule, regulation or policy that conflicts with the religious or moral teachings of the Roman Catholic Church,” Maryland law requires such schools not to discriminate on the basis of sexual orientation or gender identity.

Not everyone in the Roman Catholic community endorses the statements. The Rev. James Martin, a Jesuit priest whose Outreach faith website seeks to “build bridges” with the LGBTQ community and has been lauded by Pope Francis, said in an email that the church “should be listening more to transgender people themselves.”

“This phenomenon is still being understood by physicians, biologists and psychologists. So before the church issues documents, with restrictive rules and regulations that end up excluding transgender people, we need to listen and learn.


Crafty_Dog

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Ex-trans teen sorry she whacked off her breasts
« Reply #852 on: August 30, 2022, 08:38:21 AM »
https://www.theepochtimes.com/ex-transgender-teen-recounts-horrifying-experience-of-transition-surgery_4694543.html?utm_source=News&utm_campaign=breaking-2022-08-30-1&utm_medium=email&est=Lj57Rap6k3K4sWgpndBGQWWqw6ff4381dyAzxDnd1Mhqco93G%2BlaTYFoZx8x%2FUC8DRYu

Ex-Transgender Teen Recounts ‘Horrifying’ Experience of Transition, Surgery
By Brad Jones August 29, 2022

Chloe Cole was 15 years old when she agreed to let a “gender-affirming” surgeon remove her healthy breasts—a life-altering decision she now deeply regrets.

Her “brutal” transition from female to male was anything but the romanticized “gender journey” that transgender activists and medical professionals had portrayed, she told The Epoch Times.

“It’s a little creepy to call it that,” she said.

Cole, who is now 18, feels more like she’s just awoken from “a nightmare,” and she’s disappointed with the medical and school system that fast-tracked her to gender transition surgery.

“I was convinced that it would make me happy, that it would make me whole as a person,” she said.

Although she feels “let down” by most of the adults in her life, she doesn’t blame her parents for following the advice of school staff and medical professionals, who “affirmed” her desire for social transitioning, puberty blockers, cross-sex hormones, and surgery.

Epoch Times Photo
Chloe Cole holds testosterone medication used for transgender patients, in Northern California on Aug. 26, 2022. (John Fredricks/The Epoch Times)

Most of the medical professionals did nothing to question or dissuade her or her parents, she said.

“They effectively guilted my parents into allowing them to do this. They gave them the whole, ‘Either you’ll have a dead daughter or a live son,’ thing. They cited suicide rates,” she said. “There is just so much complacence on the part of educators—all the adults basically. I’m really upset over it. I feel a little bit angry. I wasn’t really allowed to just grow.”

Her parents, though skeptical, trusted the medical professionals and eventually consented to their daughter’s desire for medical interventions, including surgery, which was covered by their health insurance policy.

“It shouldn’t be put on adolescents to make these kinds of decisions at all,” she said.

Transgenderism
Transgenderism, while widely celebrated in popular culture and on social media, is a much more divisive issue than people may think, Cole said.

Today, Cole is one of a growing number of young “detransitioners” who reject current trends in transgender ideology and oppose the “gender-affirming” model of care being pushed by progressive lawmakers at state and federal levels.

She recently testified against California Senate Bill 107, proposed legislation authored by Sen. Scott Wiener (D-San Francisco), that would shelter parents who consent to the use of puberty blockers, cross-sex hormones, and gender transition surgery on their children from prosecution in other states that view such actions as child abuse.

Epoch Times Photo
Chloe Cole speaks at an Assembly committee hearing for Senate Bill 107 in Sacramento on June 28, 2022. (Screenshot via California State Senate)
“I think that is really dangerous for families across the US. It can tear families apart,” said Cole, who is expected to testify against the bill again this week.

Cole has been harassed on social media and received a couple of death threats from trans activists since she announced her detransition and took a stand against “gender-affirming” policies.

“Now that I’m completely disillusioned from all of it, it’s really shocking that we’ve even gotten to this point,” she said.

The Struggle
Diagnosed with ADHD at a young age, Cole now believes she’s “on the spectrum.”

“There is really a high comorbidity rate between gender dysphoria and autism,” she said.

Though “very feminine” as a young child, Cole was “a bit of a tomboy,” as she grew older.

“I just really hated dresses, skirts, and things of that sort,” she said.

Epoch Times Photo
Chloe Cole holds a childhood photo in Northern California on Aug. 26, 2022. (John Fredricks/The Epoch Times)
Children’s TV shows had left her with the message “girls are less significant,” because they often depict characters who are more girly or feminine as “stupid, airheaded, and like just get in the way of things,” she said. “And that kind of imprinted on me.”

However, her real fear of femininity and early disdain for womanhood began years ago on social media and LGBT websites, she said.

“I had started puberty fairly young, about nine years old, and I started to struggle with growing into a woman,” she said.

She started her first social media account at 11 on Instagram, and with nearly unrestricted access to the internet, she was exposed to inappropriate content, including pornography and “sexting” in the online communities.

On Instagram, she was first approached by boys who identified as gay and bisexual through the platform’s messaging feature, but eventually began spending more time on recommended websites for 12-to 19-year-old “trans” teens.

“There was one particular page that stood out to me. It was a bunch of adolescents who identified as FTM [female to male]. It seemed like they were very closely knit, a very supportive community, and that just kind of spoke to me because I’ve always struggled with making friendships and feeling excluded. I’ve never really fit in with other kids my age.”

Cole seldom interacted with the transgender community in real life, but she noticed from online discussions with trans teens that many of them had deep emotional scars and mental health issues.

“Pretty much every transgender person I’ve ever met, especially around my age either has really bad family issues, or they’ve been sexually abused or assaulted at a very young age, and it’s really concerning that nobody really talks about that association,” she said.

Epoch Times Photo
Chloe Cole stands near her home in Northern California on Aug. 26, 2022. (John Fredricks/The Epoch Times)
At 11, Cole also didn’t understand she wasn’t supposed to look like the sexualized images of scantily clad women she saw online.

“I didn’t know that then,” she said. “I started to develop body image issues. I started thinking, ‘Why don’t I look like this? Am I not a woman?’ And a lot of the feminist content pushed by other girls was making womanhood out to be this terrible thing.”

The Transition
By the time she was 12, Cole told her parents she was transgender and they sought out professional medical help.

Cole went to a gender specialist, who referred her to an endocrinologist. When the endocrinologist refused to prescribe blockers or hormones, citing concerns about how they could affect Cole’s cognitive development, he became the first and last doctor to ever deny her gender-affirming care.

“It was very easy to just find another endocrinologist who would affirm me,” she said.

After two appointments, a second endocrinologist approved both puberty blockers and testosterone.

Cole was 13 when she began physically transitioning. The puberty blocker injections reduced the estrogen in her body, and about a month later she started injecting herself with testosterone, a process medical professionals call hormone therapy.

“They put me on blockers first,” she said. “I would get hot flashes. They were pretty bad. They would happen kind of sporadically, and it would get to the point where it would feel really itchy. I couldn’t even wear pants or sweaters in the winter. It’s like an artificial menopause.”

Once on testosterone, Cole’s voice “dropped pretty low” and her breasts got smaller and lost their shape over time, she said.

Cole stayed on puberty blockers for about 18 months and testosterone for about three years.

The hot flashes ceased when she stopped taking the puberty blockers, she said.

Binding Decision
At school, Cole was “an awkward kid,” but had made a few more friends online and in person. But, because she had only come out to her closest friends, she had to deal with anxiety over the possibility of being outted.

“I never even told teachers my preferred name or anything up until high school, but I was presenting in men’s clothes and shorter haircuts,” she said.

Epoch Times Photo
Chloe Cole holds a body brace that she used while she was taking transgender hormonal treatments, in Northern California on Aug. 26, 2022. (John Fredricks/The Epoch Times)
A few months after she was prescribed testosterone, Cole was groped by a boy in the middle of her eighth-grade history class, which was so chaotic, no one noticed—including her teacher, she said. The incident sealed her decision to wear binders to flatten and conceal her breasts.

“I had a relatively small chest, but it still did a bit of damage to me. My ribs are a little deformed because of them. The way they work—it’s not like the breasts just disappear—they push the breast into the ribcage,” she said.

Cole recalls her binder sticking to her skin in the hot Central Valley California weather and her chest feeling constricted. “It was just the most uncomfortable thing,” she said.

She used the men’s bathroom, but always feared she might be sexually assaulted.

However, she didn’t change in the boys’ locker room because she was afraid of being seen with her binder, and “that somebody would make a comment on it, and target me for it,” she said.

Most of the students, except those who had known her as a younger child, knew her as a male, but a boy in her Phys-Ed class eventually noticed her feminine features.

“There was one time during P.E. when we were swimming. I took my shirt off. I was wearing a binder, and somebody pointed out my body shape. That was another thing that made me want to get rid of my breasts,” Cole said. “He said something along the line of, ‘I don’t know what it is, but you’re looking kind of feminine,’ and that kind of hurt me.”

Before the first day of her freshman year in high school, Cole went to the principal’s office with her parents and asked for her name and records to be changed to “Leo.”

‘Top Surgery’
Before her operation, Cole attended a “top surgery” class with about 12-15 other children and their parents to learn about the different types of incisions.

In hindsight, she said, “it kind of felt like propaganda—the words they use like ‘gender-affirming care’ and things of that sort,” she said. “It does feel like I was sold a product.”

Epoch Times Photo
Chloe Cole stands near her home in Northern California on Aug. 26, 2022. (John Fredricks/The Epoch Times)
Cole recalls looking around the room and noticing about half of the other kids appeared they were a few years younger than her. “Looking back on it now is a little horrifying. It’s a little weird considering … they were already considering surgery,” she said.

But, at the time, seeing other kids and knowing she wasn’t alone, solidified Cole’s decision to go ahead with the most widely performed type of double mastectomy called a “double incision with nipple grafts” in June 2020. She was 15.

The surgery involved removing breast tissue and contouring the chest to make it look more masculine.

“They take off the nipple and reattach it in a more masculine position, and there are a few side effects associated with it,” Cole said.

Not only is there loss of sensation from cutting away the breast tissue, but repositioning the nipple requires severing the duct that supplies breastmilk to the nipple, she said.

The surgery left Cole with deep muscle soreness for which she was prescribed an opioid-based medication, but because the pain from the resulting digestion problems was worse than the pain in her chest, she stopped taking the pills.

“I was actually disabled for a while. I had a really limited range of motion, especially in my arms and upper body. There were a lot of things I couldn’t do. I couldn’t even leave the house for a few weeks,” she said. “I remember that being really upsetting.”

The most devastating part of the recovery process has been ongoing post-op issues with her nipples, she said.

“It’s been two years, and I’m still having some really bad skin issues,” she said. “The way the skin heals over the grafts … is just awful. It’s really quite disgusting.”

Cole said she had trouble contacting her surgeon afterwards, and although she was supposed to have a follow-up appointment with him, she ended up having a call with two nurses who were in the operating room instead.

She also worries the puberty blockers might have affected her brain development as her first endocrinologist had warned, but her greatest regret is how the surgery has permanently affected her as a woman.

Epoch Times Photo
Chloe Cole stands near her home in Northern California on Aug. 26, 2022. (John Fredricks/The Epoch Times)
“I was 15. You can’t exactly expect an adolescent to be making adult decisions,” she said. “So, because of a decision I made when I was kid, I can’t breastfeed my children in the future. It’s just a little concerning that this is being recommended to kids at the age I was, and now even younger. They’re starting to operate on preteens now.”

Detransition Dilemma
During the COVID-19 lockdowns and distance learning, Cole resorted to social media for virtual interaction and noticed girls her age were posting “super-idealized” pictures of themselves. Although she realized the images were edited and enhanced, they triggered the same body image issues she had experienced as a child.

“For a while it made me wonder, ‘Is this really a woman’s worth? If I don’t do this, does that make me not as good as these other women?’” she said.

But eventually, Cole bought some feminine clothing and makeup, which she only wore in the privacy of her room. “I guess subconsciously I started to realize like what I was losing started to miss presenting more femininely, like being pretty,” she said.

Over time, she grew increasingly more disillusioned with the idea of living as a man.

“I realized I wasn’t really up for a lot of the responsibilities that come with it,” she said. “There were times when I felt like I wasn’t good enough as a girl, but maybe I’m not good enough as a boy either, and maybe I just can’t be good enough to be either, so I don’t really know what I am.”

Epoch Times Photo
Chloe Cole stands near her home in Northern California on Aug. 26, 2022. (John Fredricks/The Epoch Times)
Over the next few months, the isolation of the lockdowns and school closures took their toll on Cole’s state of mind. She was depressed and fell into an emotional tailspin.

During the second semester of her junior year, Cole’s grades plummeted, and her parents decided to put her into an online-only school program.

“It was sort of like a homeschooling program, except I would have to go to the district office at least once per week for testing purposes,” she said. “My school performance actually got a lot worse, because now I was truly isolated.”

But Cole admits less social interaction gave her time for more introspection.

During the last quarter of her junior year, she took a psychology class for the first time and learned about child development. One of the lessons covered the Harlow experiments on infant rhesus monkeys with a theme of maternity, mother-child bonding, and breastfeeding.

“I started to realize this is what I’m taking away from myself. I’m not going to be able to bond with my children the same way that a mother does by taking on a male role and I’ve gotten rid of my breasts, so I can’t feed my children naturally or be involved with them in that way. And I think that was like the biggest catalyst in me realizing how wrong all of this was,” she said.

Embracing Womanhood
Cole announced her detransition in May 2021, about 11 months after the surgery, and has embraced womanhood.

“I am a woman,” she said.

Despite her transition, Cole said she has always been mainly attracted to masculine men and had only ever been “marginally attracted” to women. She is now “straight,” she said, and knows now that her gender confusion as a child was based on insecurity and her fear of being a woman.

Cole has enjoyed “cultivating” a new feminine look for herself, but says she still isn’t really into makeup and doesn’t have time for it most days.

Epoch Times Photo
Chloe Cole near her home in Northern California on Aug. 26, 2022. (John Fredricks/The Epoch Times)
“I’m almost always in a dress or a skirt because, honestly, it’s really comfy,” she said.

She’s learned to accept her body the way it is, she said, and doesn’t want to go through the process of reconstructive surgery or get breast implants.

“There are multiple options for reconstruction, but I honestly don’t think it’s worth it,” she said. “I will never get the function back no matter what I do, so there’s not really a point in doing it.”

Cole graduated from high school in May and she has applied for college.

Message of Hope
Though she has been harassed on social media and threatened by activists, Cole said she’s committed to sharing her story.


“I want to prevent more cases like mine from happening,” she said.

She wonders why educators have become complicit in the “gender-affirming” process.

“The problem is they’re not really pushing back on this whole trans thing. When I told the high school to change my name, and my email, and their records, there was really no pushback or anything,” she said.

Cole urged children who may be thinking about gender transition surgery “not to get caught up in the whole romanticization” of what it might be like to be the opposite gender and suggested they consider that there may be “other reasons” underlying gender dysphoria, including autism or other mental health issues.

“I very much suggest waiting, because the brain doesn’t stop developing for most people until about their mid 20s, if not a bit later, and teenagers are known for making rash decisions. It sucks hearing that, especially as a kid, but it’s the truth,” she said. “There is a reason why you can’t buy cigarettes or alcohol or vote or rent a car under a certain age.”

Crafty_Dog

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NRO: Sleuthing in Trans Youth chatroom
« Reply #853 on: August 30, 2022, 08:49:36 AM »
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Undercover Mom Discovers ‘Pandora’s Box’ of Depravity in Trans Youth Organization’s Chatroom
By CAROLINE DOWNEY
August 30, 2022 6:30 AM

Editor’s Note: The article that follows contains sexually explicit content that will likely be disturbing to readers; this includes explicit messages the article links to in order to provide corroboration for the undercover mom’s account.

“I have been looking for a binder, but I have no clue where to get one? Does anyone know where I could get a reliable binder?” a gender-confused adolescent asked on TrevorSpace, the anonymous online forum for LGBT youth hosted by the well-funded and influential Trevor Project.

An adult user replied with a list of brands that sell binders, which are devices worn under the clothes to conceal female breasts, adding “I really recommend TransTape.”

“If it’s your first time I started with TomboyX compression tops,” another adult wrote.

This is the startling scene Rachel, a Brooklyn mom with a gender-dysphoric child, discovered when she went undercover as a pre-teen in the chat, searching for resources for detransitioners. She found none.

Instead, she opened a “Pandora’s box” of sexually perverse content, aggressive gender re-assignment referrals, adults encouraging minors to hide their transitions from their parents, and many troubled kids in need of psychological counseling. She shared screenshots of the chat with National Review.

Rachel says she looked to the Trevor Project in desperation, “when I thought my child was going to kill herself.” The organization frequently claims that LGBT youth are more than four times more likely to attempt suicide than their peers. It claims to be a refuge for these people with its crisis services including TrevorLifeline, TrevorText, and TrevorChat.

Under the advice of a “highly credentialed” medical and mental-health team, Rachel and her husband decided to socially transition their child a few years ago, she told National Review. After that, her child was hospitalized three times for self-harm and suicidality, including at least one suicide attempt. In New York, due to a ban on psychotherapy, so-called gender affirmation was the only legal option they could pursue, she said.

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They were at their wit’s end, until her spouse sat her down and presented her with a PowerPoint, showing statistics that people who transition are, by a huge factor, much more likely than the general public to commit suicide.

“My jaw hit the floor. I said, ‘Oh my God we’ve been lied to’,” she says.

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Since then, Rachel, a lifelong Democrat and feminist, has been dedicated to exposing the child gender-transition craze, which she argues is driven by “predatory medicine” incentivized by the government.

In TrevorSpace, she got a bird’s-eye view of the progressive non-profit giant that is claiming to save young lives but is really driving them further into existential rabbit holes, depravity, and potential danger, she said.

She documented kids talking about how to buy binders, an undergarment that constricts breasts, behind their parents’ backs. “I know the way people usually do this is by ordering it to a friend’s house or something of the sort, but I don’t have anyone to do that with,” wrote a girl whose account says she’s under 18. “I have money and know where I want to get it from and all that. I just need a means of getting it.” Another user suggested she have the binder sent to a post office where she could pick it up without her parents’ knowledge. Other users were referred to eBay to purchase a packer, or an artificial appendage meant to mimic a penis.

When people sign up for TrevorSpace, they have the option of placing themselves within the age ranges of “under 18” or “18-25.” The community is open to people 13-24, according to the site. There is no system in place to confirm a person’s age, Rebecca says and National Review confirmed. She also said she noticed entries from people claiming to be over 25 too, as well as guest accounts with no age listed.

Other teens, presumably girls transitioning to boys, testified to the effectiveness of Minoxidil, an over-the-counter medication that stimulates facial hair growth. “Can I get and use Minoxidil without my parents knowing?” a girl asked.

The kids Rachel followed on TrevorSpace spanned a diverse spectrum of gender disorientation, some confident in their belief that they were the opposite sex and some just gender curious. But, as Rachel observed, they were all pointed in one direction: gender transition. In a significant number of cases, adults gave minors this validation.

“I still feel more masc and more fem on days, but it doesn’t matter what I’m feeling I will always prefer to be a girl,” one youth wrote. “Does that make me trans or am I still genderfluid? Help I don’t know.”

An adult replied: “If I had to guess based on your post, I’d say it sounds pretty trans.”

The Trevor Project has subforums on “Transitioning,” “Fashion and beauty,” “Dysphoria,” and “Gender queer, non-binary, and gender fluid,” but none on detransitioning or desistance — the common phenomenon of children “growing out of” their transgender identity as they age.

One adult posted a message touting previous invasive medical interventions, noting a willingness to pursue nullification surgery, which involves removing all external genitalia from the abdomen to the groin for the purpose of appearing non-binary. “I am loving my medical transition now, and have discovered FtN/MtN surgeries that I am now considering. I’m glad I took my time in figuring out what felt best for me,” the user wrote.

Rachel then dove into an abyss of concerning sexual conversation. Some transgender-identifying adults confessed in detail their masturbation addictions and experiences with autogynephilia, or the propensity of a male to become sexually aroused by the thought of himself as female, as well as autoandrophilia, or the propensity of a female to become sexually aroused by the thought of herself as male.

An adult male wrote, “So I woke up this morning with a huge urge to masturbate, even though I knew I couldn’t, and it would hurt me if I did, I went and did it anyway. And it felt awful, the sensations I felt, the kind of orgasm I had, it was all male, and it just completely shattered my womanhood and served as a cruel reminder of the female sensations I can’t hope to feel because of the male body I was born in.”

In some cases, users under 18 spoke with adult users about their sexual preferences, including BDSM, polyamory, and others. Users over 18 asked about paraphilia: “What’s the weirdest sexual thing you know?” People responded with “gokkun” — the act of drinking multiple male ejaculations from a container; “bukkake” — the fetish of being covered with ejaculate; “scat play” — deriving sexual gratification from fantasies involving feces; and “forniphilia” — a form of bondage in which a person’s body is incorporated into furniture for sexual acts.

An 18-25 age user posted: “Can I just say they’re all rough doggystyle??.” An under-18 user replied, “I’ve heard doggystyle hurts in a good way, but I wouldn’t know. I will say I’m not going to die a virgin. If I have to pull an Evan Hansen and bang a tree, I will.”

Rachel also ran into references to animal kinks, something which professed non-binary drag queen Sam Britton, a recent hire of the Biden administration and now nuclear waste deputy at the Department of Energy, has dabbled in. Britton worked at the Trevor Project for four years, first as the Head of Advocacy and Government Affairs and then as Vice President of Advocacy and Government Affairs. He has bragged about participating in kink relationships as a “pup handler” — a person, typically a gay man, who enjoys taking care of other typically gay men who pretend to be dogs.

Alix Aharon, an anti-pornography campaigner and the creator of Gender Mapper, which tracks gender-clinic locations across the country, was particularly alarmed that the Trevor Project encourages contact between kids and adult strangers.

“There should never be a situation in which a young girl is talking to a man. What was most disturbing was their forum and their chat service where you can chat to an adult if you’re a child,” said Aharon, who is on the board of the radical feminist organization Women’s Liberation Front.

Many messages obtained by National Review showed users attempting to connect privately, on apps such as Discord, an instant messaging social platform.

The Trevor Project did not respond to request for comment.

Blinded by its mission to affirm transgender-identifying youth, the Trevor Project ignores the underlying issues turning children, especially girls, to its offerings, Aharon said. For girls, “we call it the trifecta: eating disorder, mental illness, and early exposure to porn,” she says. Instead of targeting those root causes, however, the organization leads youth deeper into delusion that they can become what they innately are not, she suggests.

In Republican-dominated states, the Trevor Project has fought to oppose bills outlawing reconstructive surgery and hormone therapy for children, as well as legislation barring males from competing in women’s sports.

Trevor Project has also infiltrated classrooms nationwide. Steadily, it has increased its involvement in K-12 education, boasting that it has trained over 20,000 educators “to create safe spaces in schools.” And during the outbreak of Covid-19, many more youths found an outlet there. During the peak of the pandemic, between February and March 2020, TrevorSpace experienced a surge of 40 percent in new registered users. By April, new registrations were up 139 percent compared to February.

Between August 2019 and July 2020, the Trevor Project added $35 million to its coffers, thanks to the largesse of many household name brands. Rainbow-tier sponsors, which gave $1 million or more, include Google, Lululemon, Abercrombie and Fitch, Puma, and Macy’s. Premier-tier sponsors, who gave $500,000 or more, include Proctor and Gamble, Harry’s, AT&T, Pinterest, and others. Platinum-tier sponsors, who gave $250,000 or more, include Coca-Cola, Chipotle, Wells Fargo, YouTube, and others. There are dozens more gold, silver, bronze, and chrome-tier corporate donors, including State Farm, Aetna, Bank of America, Fed Ex, the Walt Disney Company, American Express, Best Buy, and others.

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Re: NRO: Sleuthing in Trans Youth chatroom
« Reply #854 on: August 30, 2022, 08:59:09 AM »
The adults involved in this need to be found and held accountable.


second

Undercover Mom Discovers ‘Pandora’s Box’ of Depravity in Trans Youth Organization’s Chatroom
By CAROLINE DOWNEY
August 30, 2022 6:30 AM

Editor’s Note: The article that follows contains sexually explicit content that will likely be disturbing to readers; this includes explicit messages the article links to in order to provide corroboration for the undercover mom’s account.

“I have been looking for a binder, but I have no clue where to get one? Does anyone know where I could get a reliable binder?” a gender-confused adolescent asked on TrevorSpace, the anonymous online forum for LGBT youth hosted by the well-funded and influential Trevor Project.

An adult user replied with a list of brands that sell binders, which are devices worn under the clothes to conceal female breasts, adding “I really recommend TransTape.”

“If it’s your first time I started with TomboyX compression tops,” another adult wrote.

This is the startling scene Rachel, a Brooklyn mom with a gender-dysphoric child, discovered when she went undercover as a pre-teen in the chat, searching for resources for detransitioners. She found none.

Instead, she opened a “Pandora’s box” of sexually perverse content, aggressive gender re-assignment referrals, adults encouraging minors to hide their transitions from their parents, and many troubled kids in need of psychological counseling. She shared screenshots of the chat with National Review.

Rachel says she looked to the Trevor Project in desperation, “when I thought my child was going to kill herself.” The organization frequently claims that LGBT youth are more than four times more likely to attempt suicide than their peers. It claims to be a refuge for these people with its crisis services including TrevorLifeline, TrevorText, and TrevorChat.

Under the advice of a “highly credentialed” medical and mental-health team, Rachel and her husband decided to socially transition their child a few years ago, she told National Review. After that, her child was hospitalized three times for self-harm and suicidality, including at least one suicide attempt. In New York, due to a ban on psychotherapy, so-called gender affirmation was the only legal option they could pursue, she said.

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They were at their wit’s end, until her spouse sat her down and presented her with a PowerPoint, showing statistics that people who transition are, by a huge factor, much more likely than the general public to commit suicide.

“My jaw hit the floor. I said, ‘Oh my God we’ve been lied to’,” she says.

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Since then, Rachel, a lifelong Democrat and feminist, has been dedicated to exposing the child gender-transition craze, which she argues is driven by “predatory medicine” incentivized by the government.

In TrevorSpace, she got a bird’s-eye view of the progressive non-profit giant that is claiming to save young lives but is really driving them further into existential rabbit holes, depravity, and potential danger, she said.

She documented kids talking about how to buy binders, an undergarment that constricts breasts, behind their parents’ backs. “I know the way people usually do this is by ordering it to a friend’s house or something of the sort, but I don’t have anyone to do that with,” wrote a girl whose account says she’s under 18. “I have money and know where I want to get it from and all that. I just need a means of getting it.” Another user suggested she have the binder sent to a post office where she could pick it up without her parents’ knowledge. Other users were referred to eBay to purchase a packer, or an artificial appendage meant to mimic a penis.

When people sign up for TrevorSpace, they have the option of placing themselves within the age ranges of “under 18” or “18-25.” The community is open to people 13-24, according to the site. There is no system in place to confirm a person’s age, Rebecca says and National Review confirmed. She also said she noticed entries from people claiming to be over 25 too, as well as guest accounts with no age listed.

Other teens, presumably girls transitioning to boys, testified to the effectiveness of Minoxidil, an over-the-counter medication that stimulates facial hair growth. “Can I get and use Minoxidil without my parents knowing?” a girl asked.

The kids Rachel followed on TrevorSpace spanned a diverse spectrum of gender disorientation, some confident in their belief that they were the opposite sex and some just gender curious. But, as Rachel observed, they were all pointed in one direction: gender transition. In a significant number of cases, adults gave minors this validation.

“I still feel more masc and more fem on days, but it doesn’t matter what I’m feeling I will always prefer to be a girl,” one youth wrote. “Does that make me trans or am I still genderfluid? Help I don’t know.”

An adult replied: “If I had to guess based on your post, I’d say it sounds pretty trans.”

The Trevor Project has subforums on “Transitioning,” “Fashion and beauty,” “Dysphoria,” and “Gender queer, non-binary, and gender fluid,” but none on detransitioning or desistance — the common phenomenon of children “growing out of” their transgender identity as they age.

One adult posted a message touting previous invasive medical interventions, noting a willingness to pursue nullification surgery, which involves removing all external genitalia from the abdomen to the groin for the purpose of appearing non-binary. “I am loving my medical transition now, and have discovered FtN/MtN surgeries that I am now considering. I’m glad I took my time in figuring out what felt best for me,” the user wrote.

Rachel then dove into an abyss of concerning sexual conversation. Some transgender-identifying adults confessed in detail their masturbation addictions and experiences with autogynephilia, or the propensity of a male to become sexually aroused by the thought of himself as female, as well as autoandrophilia, or the propensity of a female to become sexually aroused by the thought of herself as male.

An adult male wrote, “So I woke up this morning with a huge urge to masturbate, even though I knew I couldn’t, and it would hurt me if I did, I went and did it anyway. And it felt awful, the sensations I felt, the kind of orgasm I had, it was all male, and it just completely shattered my womanhood and served as a cruel reminder of the female sensations I can’t hope to feel because of the male body I was born in.”

In some cases, users under 18 spoke with adult users about their sexual preferences, including BDSM, polyamory, and others. Users over 18 asked about paraphilia: “What’s the weirdest sexual thing you know?” People responded with “gokkun” — the act of drinking multiple male ejaculations from a container; “bukkake” — the fetish of being covered with ejaculate; “scat play” — deriving sexual gratification from fantasies involving feces; and “forniphilia” — a form of bondage in which a person’s body is incorporated into furniture for sexual acts.

An 18-25 age user posted: “Can I just say they’re all rough doggystyle??.” An under-18 user replied, “I’ve heard doggystyle hurts in a good way, but I wouldn’t know. I will say I’m not going to die a virgin. If I have to pull an Evan Hansen and bang a tree, I will.”

Rachel also ran into references to animal kinks, something which professed non-binary drag queen Sam Britton, a recent hire of the Biden administration and now nuclear waste deputy at the Department of Energy, has dabbled in. Britton worked at the Trevor Project for four years, first as the Head of Advocacy and Government Affairs and then as Vice President of Advocacy and Government Affairs. He has bragged about participating in kink relationships as a “pup handler” — a person, typically a gay man, who enjoys taking care of other typically gay men who pretend to be dogs.

Alix Aharon, an anti-pornography campaigner and the creator of Gender Mapper, which tracks gender-clinic locations across the country, was particularly alarmed that the Trevor Project encourages contact between kids and adult strangers.

“There should never be a situation in which a young girl is talking to a man. What was most disturbing was their forum and their chat service where you can chat to an adult if you’re a child,” said Aharon, who is on the board of the radical feminist organization Women’s Liberation Front.

Many messages obtained by National Review showed users attempting to connect privately, on apps such as Discord, an instant messaging social platform.

The Trevor Project did not respond to request for comment.

Blinded by its mission to affirm transgender-identifying youth, the Trevor Project ignores the underlying issues turning children, especially girls, to its offerings, Aharon said. For girls, “we call it the trifecta: eating disorder, mental illness, and early exposure to porn,” she says. Instead of targeting those root causes, however, the organization leads youth deeper into delusion that they can become what they innately are not, she suggests.

In Republican-dominated states, the Trevor Project has fought to oppose bills outlawing reconstructive surgery and hormone therapy for children, as well as legislation barring males from competing in women’s sports.

Trevor Project has also infiltrated classrooms nationwide. Steadily, it has increased its involvement in K-12 education, boasting that it has trained over 20,000 educators “to create safe spaces in schools.” And during the outbreak of Covid-19, many more youths found an outlet there. During the peak of the pandemic, between February and March 2020, TrevorSpace experienced a surge of 40 percent in new registered users. By April, new registrations were up 139 percent compared to February.

Between August 2019 and July 2020, the Trevor Project added $35 million to its coffers, thanks to the largesse of many household name brands. Rainbow-tier sponsors, which gave $1 million or more, include Google, Lululemon, Abercrombie and Fitch, Puma, and Macy’s. Premier-tier sponsors, who gave $500,000 or more, include Proctor and Gamble, Harry’s, AT&T, Pinterest, and others. Platinum-tier sponsors, who gave $250,000 or more, include Coca-Cola, Chipotle, Wells Fargo, YouTube, and others. There are dozens more gold, silver, bronze, and chrome-tier corporate donors, including State Farm, Aetna, Bank of America, Fed Ex, the Walt Disney Company, American Express, Best Buy, and others.




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AMcC: Let the Floyd Case be the End of It.
« Reply #858 on: October 31, 2022, 11:38:01 AM »
Let the End of the George Floyd Case Mark the End of a National Psychosis

Thousands of protesters fill the streets in a march to demand justice for George Floyd in Brooklyn, N.Y., June 2, 2020. (Erik McGregor/LightRocket via Getty Images)
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By ANDREW C. MCCARTHY
October 29, 2022 6:30 AM
The results of the midterms could help to close this sad chapter in our nation’s history.

The state prosecution of the two remaining former Minneapolis police officers implicated in George Floyd’s May 2020 death is drawing to a close. One has pleaded guilty. The other will face a bench trial on stipulated facts — meaning no jury, no witnesses, and no in-court presentation of evidence.

Appeals loom, but the end of the trial-court proceedings closes an important chapter in a national nightmare. Its ramifications will be with us for a long time to come . . . including in the midterm elections just ten days away.

On Monday, J. Alexander Kueng pled guilty to manslaughter, as the result of an agreement with Minnesota state prosecutors. In the deal, the murder charge was dropped, and the parties agreed to a sentence of three and a half years. That term is to run concurrently with the three-year sentence imposed on Kueng after he and two other ex-cops, Thomas Kane and Tou Thao, were convicted by a federal jury on civil-rights charges.

As readers may recall, I believe the civil-rights convictions should be reversed because the Biden Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division essentially made up two crimes — the deprivation of a person’s supposed rights (1) “to be free from a police officer’s deliberate indifference to his serious medical needs,” and (2) to have police officers intervene in another police officer’s use of excessive force. (See, e.g., here and here.) You may think these should be federal rights and thus that the deprivation of them should be a civil-rights crime. They are not in the Constitution, however, nor has Congress enacted them into statutory law. Instead, they reflect the Biden administration’s preferred policing policies, which the Justice Department is treating as if they had the status of law. For whatever reason, the presiding judge, Paul Magnuson of the federal district court in Minnesota, waited until after the defendants were convicted to notice the “dubious constitutionality” of the prosecution’s case

The Justice Department had to concoct civil-rights crimes because there was no evidence of the theory that fueled its determination to prosecute the case: the woke-progressive story line that racial prejudice explained the police detention that resulted in Floyd’s death. To the contrary, Floyd was detained because he committed a crime and violently resisted arrest, and his vulnerability to being held in a position that police should not have applied was exacerbated by his use of illegal drugs and other medical issues.

There is, of course, no excuse for the cops’ persisting in restraining Floyd when he had stopped breathing and had no pulse. That is why the state manslaughter charges were warranted, and why a state jury validly convicted the main defendant in the case, Derek Chauvin, of murder. But the civil-rights prosecution is a different story. Kueng, who is black and was a new rookie cop at the time of the incident, has always complicated the Left’s narrative of the case as part of the supposed crusade of American police departments to hunt down young black men.

The state guilty plea means that Kueng will serve roughly the sentence that was imposed in the civil-rights case even if that conviction is eventually overturned. And in the interim, he is serving his time in federal custody, which (as we observed in connection with Chauvin’s case) is preferable for the inmate to incarceration in a state prison.

In his state jury trial, Chauvin was convicted of murder and manslaughter. He was also found guilty of a depraved-indifference-murder charge that should not have been in the case, so his conviction on that count will undoubtedly be reversed on appeal. The other two convictions, however, are likely to stand despite significant violations of his fair-trial rights. After his state conviction, Chauvin pled guilty in the federal civil-rights case and thus waived his right to appeal those charges. He is serving his time in federal prison and was given a 21-year federal sentence that roughly equates to his 22-and-a-half-year state sentence. Ergo, if the latter were ever reversed, he would still do the time under the former.

As noted above, Thomas Lane and Tou Thao were also convicted in the federal civil-rights trial. Afterwards, Lane struck a plea agreement with state prosecutors in Minnesota. As with Kueng’s state guilty plea, in Lane’s deal the murder charge was dropped in exchange for his guilty plea to a less-serious manslaughter charge. Last month, Lane was sentenced to three years’ imprisonment, to run concurrently with the sentence of two and a half years he is now serving in federal custody for the civil-rights conviction. Thus, again like Kueng, Lane will serve roughly the same sentence even if the civil-rights conviction is eventually overturned.

Lane clearly got the lightest sentence because, in a normal case without political overtones, he probably would not have been charged. Lane was another rookie cop, and he advocated that Floyd be rolled over, which would have made it easier for him to breathe. Lane’s suggestions were rebuffed by Chauvin, the senior cop on the scene.

That leaves Tou Thao as the last of the four former cops still facing state charges. His case is complicated, too, because he did not take part in holding Floyd down on the ground. Rather, Thao kept the increasingly agitated crowd at bay, mainly with his back to Floyd and the other police, during the nearly ten minutes that Floyd was being restrained. After his conviction in the civil-rights case, a 42-month federal prison sentence was imposed.

Having seen the due-process debacle that was Chauvin’s state trial, and then been convicted himself in the dubious federal civil-rights trial, Thao decided a trial before a jury marinated in prejudicial publicity — much of it generated by federal and state prosecutors and public officials — would not be in his interest. Yet, he maintains his innocence and has thus resisted pressure to plead guilty. So, he has agreed to a state bench trial before Minneapolis judge Peter Cahill (who presided over Chauvin’s trial, as well as all the state proceedings involving the other three former cops).

It will be a highly unusual trial for a criminal case. Rather than in a courtroom with live witness testimony, the presentation of evidence, and lawyer arguments, Thao’s trial will occur on paper. As the New York Times reports, the two sides will agree on a set of facts in a written stipulation that will be presented to Judge Cahill. The prosecution has agreed to proceed only on the manslaughter charge. (The Times says the prosecution “could theoretically reinstate the murder charge,” but I don’t see how Thao would agree to that, or Cahill would allow it.) On the basis of the stipulated record, Judge Cahill will decide whether Thao is guilty or not guilty, and will issue a written opinion explaining his verdict.

I would anticipate that Thao’s case will be decided in short order. This past Monday, jury selection was supposed to have begun in the state prosecution of Kueng and Thao. When Kueng agreed to a last-minute plea deal, though, that opened the door for Thao — now the lone remaining defendant — to forgo a jury trial. Since the parties were ready to go to trial, they should be in a position to present Judge Cahill with a stipulation promptly. Since the judge knows the case inside-out, he will presumably not take long to decide.

It has been a long two and a half years since George Floyd died in police custody — since he was killed in police custody, as state and federal juries have concluded. It was tragic for the Floyd family. It has been tragic for the country, catalyzing progressive Democrats to agitate for de-funding police departments and to enact pro-criminal “reforms” that have sent urban crime rates soaring. The result: surges of murder and mayhem. To be sure, inflation and the specter of recession are causing widespread anxiety. But if, as expected, voters hand Democrats a stinging defeat at the ballot box next week, the national psychosis that began on Memorial Day 2020 will also be a huge reason why.

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The Lunacy of Racial Categories
« Reply #859 on: November 06, 2022, 04:02:47 PM »
The Lunacy of Racial Categories
By RICH LOWRY
November 6, 2022 7:53 AM

University administrators are bad and incompetent racialists.

It’s not just that colleges and universities discriminate on the basis of race, ethnicity, and national origin. They do it badly.
This is one of the themes that emerged in the oral arguments at the Supreme Court in the Harvard and University of North Carolina affirmative-action cases last week.

The racial categories that the schools use are completely bonkers, an arbitrary mess mostly left over from the work of federal bureaucrats in the 1970s that can’t withstand the slightest scrutiny.

The administrators who rely on these categories are beholden to senseless and unscientific distinctions — they aren’t even competent or rational racialists.

Justice Samuel Alito raised this issue in the arguments, pretty clearly relying on the work of George Mason University professor David Bernstein, who eviscerated the categories in an amicus brief and has written a book on their origin and implications, Classified: The Untold Story of Racial Classification in America.

The categories throw together a kaleidoscope of races and ethnicities in six neat categories: Asian, Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islander, Hispanic, White, African American, and Native American. Created for federal bookkeeping purposes 50 years ago, they long ago hardened into orthodoxy, with some adjustments here or there.

If you think it makes sense to — as the Bernstein brief puts it — throw 60 percent of the world’s population into one category as Asian, or to consider white Europeans, indigenous Mexicans, and Afro-Cubans as all Hispanic, you must work in a university admissions office.
“These racial categories are rife with inconsistencies and lack parallel construction,” scholars Michael Omi and Howard Winant have written. “Only one category is specifically racial, only one is cultural, and only one relies on a notion of affiliation or community recognition.”

Consider the Asian category. It doesn’t make sense to many of the people collected under it. One study found that less than 40 percent of Indian, Chinese, and Filipino respondents considered themselves Asian or Asian American.

East Asians and South Asians are yoked together under the category, even though they have nothing in common, and South Asians have formed their own representative organizations. It used to be that South Asians were considered white, but they shifted over to Asian to gain the status of a minority group (it turns out that they chose the wrong group).

On the other hand, Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander used to be subsumed under the Asian category, until these groups realized it was better to have a category of their own.

Yet, Filipino Americans, who would seem Pacific Islanders by definition, are still “Asian.”

Got it?

Then, there’s the Hispanic category, which is sweepingly inclusive of anyone whose family comes from a country with a Spanish culture, regardless of race or anything else.

Jonathan Borak and his coauthors wrote in the journal Epidemiology, “The term ‘Hispanic’ was created by the U.S. government; the population so identified is, in fact, an artificial rubric for a set of diverse populations that resulted from the mixture of indigenous American peoples, African slaves, and Europeans.”

The result is that no white Europeans are presumed to contribute to diversity at colleges except white Europeans from Spain.

As the Bernstein brief notes, the Hispanic category “includes people whose ancestors’ first language was not Spanish and who may have never spoken Spanish. This includes immigrants from Spain and their descendants whose ancestral language is Basque or Catalan. It also includes indigenous immigrants from Latin America whose first language is not Spanish, whose surnames are not Spanish, and whose ethnic and cultural backgrounds are not Spanish.”

White is just as capacious, including not just Europeans but people from North Africa and Asia west of India. It comprises, as the Bernstein brief relates, “Welsh, Norwegians, Greeks, Moroccans, Chaldeans, Afghans, Iranians, and North African Berbers.”
A freshman dorm could be hugely diverse drawing from this “white” category alone.

Of course, universities are making admissions decisions based on these random boxes, reducing enormous complexity to a few simplistic, often misleading choices.

“Neither Harvard nor UNC,” the brief points out, “has explained why a white Catholic of Spanish descent, classified as Hispanic, gets an admissions preference for contributing to educational diversity, but a dark- skinned Muslim of Arab descent, an Egyptian Copt, a Hungarian Roma, a Bosnian refugee, a Scandinavian Laplander, a Siberian Tatar, or a Bobover Hasid—all classified as ‘white’—do not.”
“Similarly,” it continues, “it is hard to see how diversity is better accomplished by admitting an additional ‘Hispanic’ student of Mexican ancestry over an equally or better qualified student whose parents immigrated from Turkmenistan, who would be the only Turkman in the entire student body, because the Turkman is arbitrarily classified as ‘white.’”

There is a good case for rationalizing and updating all of this, but an even more compelling case for scrapping it altogether.

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Re: Race, religion, ethnic origin, LGBT, "discrimination", & discrimination.
« Reply #860 on: November 28, 2022, 05:21:02 PM »
"WHO renames monkeypox as mpox, citing racism concerns."

  - Isn't the racist the one who associates monkeys with one race or another.of humans.

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The gay scholar who took on Christianity by Jonathan Poletti
« Reply #861 on: January 12, 2023, 03:49:27 AM »
https://link.medium.com/OhFOZuKCewb

I'm not an expert or scholar on anything religion to refute this..  Interesting read.

There is a political war still going on between (some) "fundamental" Christians and gays. (Other churches are welcoming.) This makes a serious challenge to those religious interpretations.

My conclusion from it and from the world I see around me is that a small percentage of people have been gay for as long as we know.  The Biblical argument against that is not as clear as some argue.

I would add that if some are born to be gay, not choose to be gay, and you believe in God, then God has a hand in that.  OTOH, I don't see the same reasoning work to justify the human genital and hormone tampering involved in transgenderism, which to me fights against the will and design of the Creator.
« Last Edit: January 12, 2023, 06:22:56 AM by DougMacG »

ccp

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Even L James gets doxxed
« Reply #862 on: January 29, 2023, 07:41:04 PM »
Denying the truth will not you FREE !

https://www.breitbart.com/sports/2023/01/29/we-are-our-own-worst-enemy-lebron-james-accused-blaming-black-people-tyre-nichols-death/

no matter how hard they try - > I ain't paying reparations.

Crafty_Dog

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Sowell on the cultures of races
« Reply #863 on: February 20, 2023, 07:30:26 PM »

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Re: Sowell on the cultures of races
« Reply #864 on: February 21, 2023, 06:23:18 AM »
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bp7IfPv4vQM

Capture all the wisdom of Thomas Sowell you can.

Some groups, some cultures, some people have a stronger work ethic than others.

Central tenet of liberalism and leftism:
People who don't work hard or produce much should make just as much money as people who do.

Take that one step further, you should make just as much money before you acquire your skills, education, work ethic and productivity as after.

Does any one of them ever stop and think what consequences come with complete removal of incentives to work hard, improve yourself, invest and produce?
« Last Edit: February 21, 2023, 06:26:53 AM by DougMacG »

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Re: Sowell on the cultures of races
« Reply #865 on: February 21, 2023, 07:24:16 AM »
Imagine a nation where young black men admired Thomas Sowell rather than thug rappers glorifying drugs and violence.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bp7IfPv4vQM

Capture all the wisdom of Thomas Sowell you can.

Some groups, some cultures, some people have a stronger work ethic than others.

Central tenet of liberalism and leftism:
People who don't work hard or produce much should make just as much money as people who do.

Take that one step further, you should make just as much money before you acquire your skills, education, work ethic and productivity as after.

Does any one of them ever stop and think what consequences come with complete removal of incentives to work hard, improve yourself, invest and produce?

Crafty_Dog

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Re: Race, religion, ethnic origin, LGBT, "discrimination", & discrimination.
« Reply #866 on: February 23, 2023, 05:04:54 PM »
Some do.  They just don't get on MTV or the Pravdas.
« Last Edit: February 24, 2023, 06:17:12 PM by Crafty_Dog »

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Re: Race, religion, ethnic origin, LGBT, "discrimination", & discrimination.
« Reply #867 on: February 24, 2023, 06:36:47 AM »
Some do.  They just don't get on MTC or the Pravdas.

How many?


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The Demographics of Murder
« Reply #868 on: March 13, 2023, 02:50:21 AM »

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ccp

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really bad
« Reply #872 on: May 09, 2023, 07:33:26 AM »
just saw image of killer with nazi tattoos

then I read this :

https://apnews.com/article/fact-check-mauricio-garcia-texas-shooting-mugshots3-235054966595

So now I don't know if the images I saw of a man with clear cut nazi tattoos is the killer or another perhaps with same name

We can't read anything and be sure we are seeing the truth

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Re: really bad
« Reply #873 on: May 09, 2023, 07:36:54 AM »
just saw image of killer with nazi tattoos

then I read this :

https://apnews.com/article/fact-check-mauricio-garcia-texas-shooting-mugshots3-235054966595

So now I don't know if the images I saw of a man with clear cut nazi tattoos is the killer or another perhaps with same name

We can't read anything and be sure we are seeing the truth

Imagine how many persons with that name have been arrested in Texas. This is why law enforcement uses fingerprints to confirm ID.

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is this the right guy or not
« Reply #874 on: May 09, 2023, 09:29:42 AM »

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The LEFT LOVES racial discrimination!
« Reply #878 on: June 11, 2023, 04:22:16 PM »

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American Romans vs American Africans
« Reply #879 on: June 12, 2023, 09:02:10 AM »
this sad pitiful show

reminds me of Spike Lee's "Do The Right Thing"

wherein at the and you have a riot between Blacks and Italians:

https://nypost.com/2023/06/12/floyd-mayweathers-family-threatened-after-john-gotti-iii-brawl/

PS I did not see the fight in the ring but likely the post fight fights were better
glad I was not there.


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Complex systems won't survie the competence crisis
« Reply #880 on: June 12, 2023, 07:20:25 PM »

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Booker T. Washington speech recording
« Reply #881 on: June 17, 2023, 12:36:45 AM »

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Henninger: Obama is a race baiter
« Reply #882 on: June 28, 2023, 08:13:28 AM »
The Talented Mr. Obama
The former president should be leading a discussion about race. Instead, he attacks Sen. Tim Scott.
Daniel Henninger
June 21, 2023 6:00 pm ET

Republican presidential candidate Tim Scott is always worth listening to, and never more so than his remarks this week in response to critical comments made about him by former U.S. President Barack Obama.

“Whenever the Democrats feel threatened,” Sen. Scott said, “they pull out—drag out—the former president, have him make some negative comments about someone running, hoping that their numbers go down.”

Mr. Obama hasn’t appeared much in public during Joe Biden’s presidency, so the fact that he made it a point to derogate a black Republican explicitly on a racial basis deserves wide attention. An editorial on the Obama statement appeared in these pages several days ago, and my colleague Jason Riley commented Wednesday. This in part is what Mr. Obama said about Tim Scott: “I think there’s a long history of African-American or other minority candidates within the Republican Party who will validate America and say, ‘Everything’s great, and we can all make it.’ ”

I would say that Mr. Obama’s remarks about Sen. Scott are on a par for political incivility with Donald Trump’s that John McCain wasn’t a war hero because he was captured. As with Mr. Trump’s preposterous logic, Mr. Obama is saying that Sen. Scott lacks legitimacy and credibility as a black man because he is a member of the Republican Party.

For starters, there is that matter of “a long history.” President Lyndon Johnson announced the War on Poverty in his 1964 State of the Union speech. Worth noting are the causes Johnson gave for the persistence of poverty in U.S. cities. He said it was rooted “in a lack of education and training, in a lack of medical care and housing, in a lack of decent communities in which to live and bring up their children.” Today, in the summer of 2023, every one of those issues remains as a problem of inner-city life.

California has spent $17 billion on homelessness the past four years to little effect. Public housing projects built in the 1960s are deteriorating. In New York, Gov. Kathy Hochul and Mayor Eric Adams have made the creation of affordable housing a priority, to minimal effect. Over the past holiday weekend, there were mass shootings in Chicago, Baltimore, Philadelphia, New York, San Francisco and Milwaukee. In the Chicago area alone, some 60 people were shot.

As to education and training, the reason for the rise of the charter-school movement and school-choice programs more than 20 years ago in cities like New York, Milwaukee and Cleveland is that the public schools were manifestly failing black and Hispanic children. This Wednesday the federal report card called the National Assessment of Educational Progress showed a striking 13-point decline in reading scores for black students since just before the pandemic. Parents want alternatives, and in the past two years charters and choice have won significant legislative expansions, but only in Republican-controlled states. Democratic legislatures won’t do it.

This week, the Journal ran a canary-in-the-mineshaft story about the future of big U.S. cities under the headline “Wall Street Sours on America’s Downtowns.” It described how investment capital is shifting to the suburbs, away from city centers like New York, Chicago and San Francisco. The Catholic Archdiocese of New York has just gone through another catastrophic round of neighborhood school closings for lack of financial resources.

Race in America is running perilously off the rails following George Floyd’s killing in Minneapolis in May 2020. The language around race has become intense, escalating to charges of irresolvable systemic racism or white supremacy. The indictment of subway rider Daniel Penny in New York over a fatal chokehold has become a racial incident. California, a nonslave state, is engulfed in a debate over racial reparation payments of up to $1.2 million per person.

If after nearly 60 years of directed federal outlays some of America’s poorest neighborhoods remain almost as economically and socially impoverished as they were then, it is reasonable to have a discussion and debate on the way forward. Mr. Obama in his Scott remarks called this status quo “crippling generational poverty,” but blamed it on “hundreds of years of racism in this society.”

There is a school of thought among Mr. Obama’s partisan detractors that he remains stuck in his roots as a politicized community organizer in Chicago. But Mr. Obama stands as the first black American voted into the presidency, and no one is better placed than he to lead a productive conversation about race.

That, essentially, is what Sen. Scott is proposing in his own candidacy. Instead, Mr. Obama reduced Mr. Scott’s side of the argument to a few tossed-off lines of moral condescension.

I’m not sure if racial mockery of Republicans is a winning political tactic right now. And if Joe Biden’s recent speeches are any indication, such as the one he gave to the unions that endorsed him this week, opposition derision is about all he’ll bring to this debate.

Whatever his presidential prospects, Tim Scott has the rest of the year to talk about race in America. I suspect most voters are willing to meet him halfway, even if Barack Obama is not


G M

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Re: Heather MacDonald: Affirm Action was hurting black students
« Reply #884 on: July 02, 2023, 09:59:26 AM »


https://www.spectator.co.uk/article/affirmative-action-was-hurting-black-students/?fbclid=IwAR2fuv6n49wZIFEtwnUNAxwd9nlZgFNCJzkqJRq_T5RkcvKjzA0xvAc_ip0

"But the only reason that Harvard excluded so many perfect-scoring Asian applicants was that they took up places that needed to be kept clear for much lower-scoring black students."

Can you explain why Asians score so much better? White supremacy?

https://www.emilkirkegaard.com/p/a-plethora-of-evidence-for-genetic

ccp

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"Can you explain why Asians score so much better? White supremacy?"

must be legacy of slavery and James Crow!    :wink:

Funny , I didn't recall in my history classes that Asians were part of the white supremacy cabal .

 :wink:

Of course never mentioned is why do Asians kick white supremacists' asses with better grades?

I thought whites have such an incredible advantage .

Using Rev Al's logic should I be asked are we (whites ) just too dumb?


G M

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"Can you explain why Asians score so much better? White supremacy?"

must be legacy of slavery and James Crow!    :wink:

Funny , I didn't recall in my history classes that Asians were part of the white supremacy cabal .

 :wink:

Of course never mentioned is why do Asians kick white supremacists' asses with better grades?

I thought whites have such an incredible advantage .

Using Rev Al's logic should I be asked are we (whites ) just too dumb?

Whites created a system that doesn't allow POC to succeed!

Also:

https://www.pgpf.org/blog/2023/02/income-and-wealth-in-the-united-states-an-overview-of-recent-data


Crafty_Dog

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A better line of analysis:  Fatherless homes and a family environment that does not value education.

G M

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A better line of analysis:  Fatherless homes and a family environment that does not value education.

Why didn't Asians jump onto the "Great Society Gravy Train" the same way at the same time?

Crafty_Dog

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Easy. 

Better values, better choices, intact family structure.

G M

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Easy. 

Better values, better choices, intact family structure.

I thought it was the “Great Society” that was responsible for breaking up the black family. That isn’t the case?

Crafty_Dog

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Your question was about the Asians.

G M

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Easy. 

Better values, better choices, intact family structure.

I thought it was the “Great Society” that was responsible for breaking up the black family. That isn’t the case?

Why did Asians have a stronger family structure?

Crafty_Dog

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I decline your homework assignment to write a major essay, all too likely to be dismissed with a snarky (albeit often witty) remark.

Short version:  They did not have Slavery, Segregation, leading to War on Poverty, etc.  They were heirs of thousands of years of civilization whose Confuscian ethics emphasized family.

DougMacG

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Prof VDH puts the nail in the coffin of 'Affirmative Action '
« Reply #894 on: July 14, 2023, 05:22:19 AM »
https://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2023/07/14/ten_reasons_why_affirmative_action_died_149493.html

Read the whole thing but he hits a home run with point 2.  Racial parity never happened because Democrats always opposed school choice in K-12.  They left way too many black kids in bad schools then then set up colleges and employers to give them preference:

"Second, affirmative action was imposed on the back end in adult hiring and college admissions. However, to achieve parity, remediation early at the K-12 school level would have been the only solution. Yet such intervention was made impossible by teachers' unions, the rise of identity politics and government entitlements. All were opposed to school choice,"
« Last Edit: July 14, 2023, 05:29:31 AM by DougMacG »

ccp

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NCAAP and Sharpton should be fired !

or be  arrested for racketeering,,,,

We need more African Americans to take the mantle from THEM

like Tim Scott

 


DougMacG

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When a Black attacks an Asian, it's rooted in white racism
« Reply #897 on: August 05, 2023, 07:27:06 AM »
No, I didn't make that up or take it out of context. It's quoted directly from the head of the department at the University of Colorado Boulder in a published work:

"when a Black person attacks an Asian person, the encounter is fueled perhaps by racism, but very specifically by white supremacy"

  - Professor Jennifer Ho, Ethnic Studies, University of Colorado Boulder.

https://www.colorado.edu/asmagazine/2021/04/08/white-supremacy-root-race-related-violence-united-states

Two follow up points:

Are you sure that a person with the degree in this is more educated than a person without? Maybe the word for it is not educated.

Second, a definition:  If you do not know that Black violence against Asians is rooted in white racism, you are not woke.


Crafty_Dog

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Canada
« Reply #899 on: November 06, 2023, 07:16:31 AM »
There is a whole world where material like this is shared and the emotions it generates fester.

https://twitter.com/besiktassnews0/status/1720830644211618298