NPR: How Billionaire Techies Hope To Reshape The Immigration Debate

Know your enemy and when you can, take revenge.

NPR: The immigration-reform advocacy group founded by Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg — FWD.us (pronounced “forward U.S.”) — and funded by fellow Silicon Valley entrepreneurs including Microsoft’s Bill Gates and Yahoo’s Marissa Mayer — is rolling out a plan for the 2016 election that will include “substantial” investments in battleground states.

This primary campaign season, the immigration conversation has been dominated by hard-line rhetoric about border walls, mass deportations and birthright citizenship, and now Donald Trump’s Muslim immigration ban. FWD.us says it’s trying to refocus the conversation on comprehensive immigration reform.

“We are making the case over the next year that immigration reform needs to be something that gets done right away under the next presidency,” said Todd Schulte, president of FWD.us. “That starts with making clear the awful and absurd policies of mass deportation that we’re hearing.”

FWD.us won’t be targeting a particular candidate. But with a focus on mass deportations, it’s clear one immediate target for these tech billionaires is a fellow billionaire — Donald Trump, and the immigration rhetoric his campaign has sparked this primary season.

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Salon: Was planning a march against violence against women an inherently racist undertaking?

From 1999:

There is one person on the planet whom I can honestly say I hate. This in spite of two and a half years of lovingkindness meditation. I’m not talking about the profound yet somehow abstract hatred you feel for a brutal dictator in a far-off land, nor the reluctant half-desire, half-loathing of an ex-lover. I’m talking about the peculiarly bitter, tenacious hatred you feel for a person who once caused you an acute and unforgettable humiliation before a tribunal of peers.

Oberlin College in the mid-’80s was fertile ground for humiliation.
“Identity” politics were gathering steam, and everyone was discovering his or her oppression. In the larger superstructure of both the college and society, minorities of all categories still struggled for basic parity. Our student social life, however, had become a sort of inverted universe: The more oppressed groups you belonged to, the higher your status. And the higher your status, the more license you had to publicly call people on their unconscious bigotry.

Generally, those of us whose sole claim to oppression was gender had only white males on whom to take out our anger (and I took mine out in spades). Occasionally, however, someone could gain status through the sheer force of moral indignation and be accepted as an honorary member of a more oppressed group than her own. These individuals were always the most virulently righteous when taking other members of their own societal subsection to task for their sexism, racism, classism or homophobia.

Don’t misunderstand me. I have no desire to belittle anyone’s anger at injustice by slapping it with the mocking label “politically
correct.” College is a violently politicizing time; the sudden awareness of your personal story as part of a broader societal mosaic can galvanize phenomenal growth, courage and action. And if some tender feelings get hurt along the way, I’m not convinced that’s always a bad thing, especially if those feelings have survived 18 years without close examination. Given all of that, why do I still hate her, after all this time?

“Laura” was a latter-day hippie when she arrived at Oberlin from a New England prep school in 1984. She played Woody Guthrie songs on her guitar, was openly bisexual and wore her muddy blonde hair hanging straight down her back. She seemed to frequent every political organization on campus, but was most visible in the Women’s Center, where she was the primary contact for Violence Against Women Awareness Week (VAWAW) and its crowning event, the
Take Back the Night March.

That same year, I arrived at Oberlin from Lawrence, Kan., with shaved legs and lipstick, wearing polka-dot leotard and mini-skirt combos, my wavy brown hair permed in a fluffy ‘fro. Like Laura, I was eager to get involved in the abundant political life of the Oberlin campus. Giddy with admiration for the feisty, articulate student activists, I focused my political energies on SANE/Freeze and Democratic Socialists of America. For a solid year I remained blithely oblivious to the Oberlin aesthetic, roundly confused when
the scruffy, defensive young men I worshipped wouldn’t give me the proverbial time of day.

By our senior year, Laura had become an ultra-hip leather dyke, or its vinyl equivalent (leather didn’t go over too well in our largely vegetarian school). Her hair, now platinum, was short and spiky, and her acoustic guitar had long since gone electric. She was no longer involved with the Women’s Center, but had become the most prominent white anti-racism activist on campus. I, meanwhile, had grown out my leg and underarm hair, gained 20 pounds, traded my polka dots for tie-dye, and become an outspoken bisexual.

I was now co-chair of the Women’s Center and a primary organizer of
Violence Against Women Awareness Week and the Take Back the Night march. I revered Laura, but whenever I tried to connect with her, she looked at me as though I were an unwelcome pop quiz. Still, I managed to invite her to appear in our VAWAW panel discussion on “Rape and Racism,” and to my delight, she accepted.

Posted in Academia, Blacks, Homosexuality, Rape | Comments Off on Salon: Was planning a march against violence against women an inherently racist undertaking?

Marrying Your Way Up The Academic Ladder

BLOG: I read with great interest in today’s Careerist column about Harvard Law School granting tenure to Professor Jeannie Suk.  Vivia Chen stated that she was surprised to learn that Professor Suk was the first Asian-American woman granted tenure at Harvard, and then looked briefly at the lack of diversity among female tenured professors at the school.

This is a fertile topic of conversation, but there was something that struck me as particularly interesting in the article.  In the original post, Chen said: 

“Call me naive, but I was genuinely shocked that this big, prestigious bastion of liberalism didn’t have a tenured woman of Asian descent until this year. (Harvard announced Suk’s tenure last fall.)  The much smaller Yale Law School, which has 60 full-time faculty members to Harvard’s 100, has two–Amy Chua and Jean Koh Peters.”

(The article was corrected after this was written to state that Professor Koh Peters was actually a clinical professor, and thus not tenured, making Yale’s population of tenured Asian-American professors the same as Harvard’s:  one.) 

What caught my eye was the fact that by my unofficial count, these three women–Professors Suk, Koh Peters, and Chua–were all themselves married or related to other law professors.  Professor Suk is married to Professor Noah Feldman, who came to Harvard as a tenured professor back in 2007 from NYU.  Professor Chua, she of the Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother fame, is married to Yale Law Professor Jed Rubenfeld, who Above the Law describes as “a Yale law professor, overachiever, and certified hottie, just like his wife.”   Finally, Professor Koh Peters is the sister of former dean Harold Koh of Yale Law School (who is now the Legal Advisor to the Department of State).

Posted in Academia, Marriage | Comments Off on Marrying Your Way Up The Academic Ladder

National Front Fails To Win In France

Comments to Steve Sailer:

* Reading the French media as best I can, I get the sense the vacuum on the Right is sucking the Sarkozy’s party over toward the Le Pen side, which will force a crisis down the road. If the Left does not follow, then the schism in the ruling coalition will become a serious problem down the line. In other words, by averting one crisis they setup the next crisis.

This is the reverse of what we have seen in the US for as long as any of us have been alive. The pattern in the US has been for the Progressive wing of the ruling coalition to drag the center over to the left, drawing what we call the Right with it. As I’m fond of pointing out, I worked for Democrats in the 80′s who held all the same positions as Ted Cruz, who is the outer edge of the official Right these days.

Speaking of which, the wireless brings word that Cruz is reconsidering his unlimited green-card program, now slapping a minimum wage on H1B visas of $110K.

* Every third Frenchman is chained to two others who have decided they’d prefer to commit cultural and national suicide to doing anything “extreme.”

The French will eventually realize their mistake. Look to the American South, where political loyalties have been along racial lines. That is how it will soon be in an ever increasing number of jurisdictions.

* Really depressing. As in 2002, FN barely increased its vote share after minor parties were eliminated.

The closest thing to win was in Bourgogne-Franche-Comté:

Socialists 34.68
Republicans 32.89
National Front 32.44

In Nord, Marine went from 40.64 in round 1 to 42.64 in round 2. The Republican went from 24.97 to 57.77.

Florian’s share was only 0.01 higher than in round 1.

Marion had the highest FN share and most impressive improvement, from 40.55 to 45.22.

* Some will say FN is locked in an electoral ghetto and point to these results (generally no rise in support first vs. second round), but you’ve just had nearly 30% of the population voting for a “far right” party. The FN remains one crisis away from power.

Posted in France | Comments Off on National Front Fails To Win In France

US Orthodox Jewish groups reject Trump call to bar Muslims

Jewish groups have universally lined up against Donald Trump on repeated occasions. In other words, they’re siding with the coalition of the fringe (homosexuals, blacks, trannies, latinos, Muslims, etc) against America’s white Christian core.

Regular Jews, however, tend to be sympathetic to Trump’s proposal. I don’t know any Jews in my personal life who want more Muslims in America.

If Donald Trump wins despite the major Jewish groups attacking him, then what? Does that mean the age of Jewish dominance in America is over? Will people no longer fear organized Jewry? If Donald Trump can give organized Jewry the finger, who will follow his example?

Israel has the same immigration policy towards Muslims that Trump proposes but Jewish groups don’t quibble with that. They want the Jewish state to enjoy cohesion while they push the poison of diversity on gentile states.

REPORT: WASHINGTON — Two prominent modern Orthodox Jewish groups issued a joint statement rejecting Donald Trump’s call to ban Muslims from entering the United States.

Unlike the range of other groups that have condemned the call by the Republican presidential candidate, the Orthodox Union and the Rabbinical Council of America did not name Trump or mention Muslims specifically in their statement.

Instead, the two organizations said they “reject calls to limit immigration to the United States based on religion.”

“We call on all Americans to reaffirm that discrimination of any group solely upon religion is wrong and anathema to the great traditions of religious and personal freedoms upon which this country was founded,” O.U. Executive Vice President Allen Fagin said in the statement.

RCA President Rabbi Shalom Baum said threats of terrorism are real and need to be addressed, but “in sober and responsible ways.”

The statement quoted Natan Sharansky, a former prisoner of the Soviet gulag and now the chairman of the Jewish Agency, who said of Trump’s call: “We should not permit ourselves to turn our legitimate fears and threats and challenges of terror into hatred of the other, into dismissing whole national or religious groups of people.”

Trump issued his call after last week’s massacre in San Bernardino, California, carried out by a couple who had become militant Islamists. Fourteen people were killed and 21 wounded.

Numerous other Jewish groups have rejected Trump’s call, including the Jewish Council for Public Affairs, the Anti-Defamation League and the American Jewish Committee.

However, the umbrella group for the Jewish community on foreign policy matters, the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations, has declined to issue a response to Trump’s call. The umbrella group did not respond to inquiries from JTA.

Posted in ADL, Donald Trump, Islam, Orthodox Union, RCA | Comments Off on US Orthodox Jewish groups reject Trump call to bar Muslims

Jewish groups slam Trump for call to block entry of Muslims

Andy Castillo writes:

Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn said: “Trump’s call to ban Muslims from entering the USA is an attack on democratic values”.

Pinellas County U.S. Rep. and Florida Republican Senate candidate David Jolly is calling on Donald Trump to quit his presidential bid after the GOP front-runner said all Muslims should be banned from entering the U.S.

Despite broad public outrage at many of his remarks, billionaire real estate mogul is leading in polls of likely Republican voters and is the clear frontrunner for the conservative party’s nomination as presidential candidate for the 2016 USA election. “We believe that the way we cover the campaign should reflect this shift”, Huffington said. “Nobody understands why. If you’re not going to even use the term, you’re never going to solve the problems”.

Those camps, however, have been widely decried in the decades since the war. This logic would bar Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Muhammad Ali, Dr. Oz, Dave Chappelle, Ice Cube, and Representatives Andre Carson and Keith Ellison from freely practicing their Islamic faith in a hypothetical Donald Trump America, along with millions of ordinary Muslims like me. He adds U.S. relatives tell him they’ve been victims of “really racist comments”. Graham said it’s a “dirty little secret” of American history that there has always been an appetite for bigotry and exclusion, but a presidential candidate should “bring us together”.

Tweet: “Sorry White Europeans, you’re not allowed to organize in your own interest. Land Of The Free.”

jews

Posted in Donald Trump, Jews | Comments Off on Jewish groups slam Trump for call to block entry of Muslims

Donald Trump Isn’t Hitler, Jewish Republican Supporters Say After Muslim Controversy

Different groups have different interests. That is the whole Torah. Everything else is commentary. Go and study.

If Donald Trump backs down from his proposed immigration ban on Muslims, he may gain a few Jewish votes but he’ll lose just as many Jewish votes and a massive amount of gentile votes.

Donald Trump Isn’t Hitler, Jewish Republican Supporters Say After Muslim Controversy

Joel Leyden, 56, is by all accounts an avid Donald Trump supporter. The international media consultant and journalist, who splits his time between New York and Israel, has even started a Facebook page called “Jews 4 Trump,” which has more than 7,000 likes, along with a Twitter handle that has more than 1,300 followers.

“He’s done a fantastic job. The man is a marketing genius,” Leyden said during a telephone interview this week.

But for Leyden and many other Jewish-Americans, the Republican presidential front-runner’s recent remarks about Muslims echoes the earliest days of Nazi propaganda in 20th century Germany. The controversy could jeopardize Trump’s following in the Jewish community, a small but promising voting bloc for the GOP.

“[Trump] does not have a racist bone in his body. I believe he really means well,” Leyden insisted. “But he is doing some things almost in a reckless manner.”

Trump has made a number of incendiary statements along the campaign trail about Hispanics and women. But Trump’s campaign press release Monday “calling for a total and complete shutdown of Muslims entering the United States until our country’s representatives can figure out what is going on” struck outrage among people of all races and religions around the world. And his refusal to call Jerusalem Israel’s undivided capital at the Republican Jewish Coalition’s presidential forum last week offended Jewish voters in the U.S. even further.

Frank Ross comments: I don’t undestand the Jewish people for condeming #DONALDTRUMP? He would be there for them if the Muslim Terrorist start HACKING THEIR HEADS OFF!

Posted in Donald Trump, Jews | Comments Off on Donald Trump Isn’t Hitler, Jewish Republican Supporters Say After Muslim Controversy

Where Are The White Running Backs?

Comments to Steve Sailer:

* White men are not really valued at Running Back, due to a perceived lack of explosiveness. With tough defenses, in the upper reaches of minor league (College) football, and in the NFL, all the speed and toughness and strength don’t mean as much as timing and explosiveness/acceleration. In other words, a first down rather than a sack at the goal line is determined by balance, the ability to “sit down” while running to the line and change direction suddenly and then accelerate through a tiny hole in the defensive line.

Accurate or not, White men are believed to lack this ability. And no amount of film, stats, or anything else will convince scouts and GMs to take a White running back for any significant draft picks or money, because you can’t go wrong with a Black pick (i.e. press and fans and owners won’t beat up the decision makers) like you can and will with a White player. Even if the White player dominates, the cry will always be that there were “better” picks who were Black left out there.

The sole exception is the Patriots, who under owner Kraft cares more about winning Superbowls in a small market team than aping Jerry Jones and other owners. Thus moneyballer Belichick is allowed a relatively free hand.

Indeed I’d argue that at least some of the anti-White male agenda stems from the fact that White men are just not competitive in much of the NFL save QB and a few short-yardage Wide Receivers (Edelman, etc.) Given that the NFL due to TV deals (its on over-the-air national broadcast TV on Sundays for decades) is the “national sport” this has negative impacts.

* Alabama gave Henry the ball 90 times in the last two games: that sounds pretty irreplaceable.

By the way, shouldn’t there be a limit in the college game on how many carries per game a player could have? Ricky Bell had a 56 carry 350 yard game for USC in the 1970s. Coach John McKay joked afterward that many carries isn’t bad for the running back because the ball isn’t heavy. Bell was dead within a decade of some weird disease. Unrelated? Probably. But still …

Or Earl Campbell, the single most heroic running back I’ve ever seen. His first 3 years in the pros his coach’s strategy was to have him personally beat up the 11 man defense for 3 quarters so he could run wild in the 4th quarter. Incredibly, it actually worked. But Campbell is pretty much in a wheelchair today.

A thirty carry maximum per game would seem pretty reasonable.

Posted in Blacks, Football, Whites | Comments Off on Where Are The White Running Backs?

Steve Sailer: Harvard Law Professor: Majority of Men Accused of Campus Rape Are Minority

Steve Sailer writes:

But in passing in a New Yorker article, Harvard Law School criminal law professor Jeannie Suk drops a bombshell: on average, male students accused of sexual assault look less like Haven Monahan than like, say, Heisman Trophy-winner Jameis Winston. From The New Yorker:

Shutting Down Conversations About Rape at Harvard Law
BY JEANNIE SUK

This is a piece on a subject about which I may soon be prevented from publishing, depending on how events unfold. Last month, near the time that CNN broadcast the documentary “The Hunting Ground,” which focuses on four women who say their schools neglected their claims of sexual assault, I joined eighteen other Harvard Law School professors in signing a statement that criticized the film’s “unfair and misleading” portrayal of one case from several years ago. A black female law student accused a black male law student of sexually assaulting her and her white female friend. The accuser, Kamilah Willingham, has graduated from the law school and is featured in the film. The accused, Brandon Winston, who spent four years defending himself against charges of sexual misconduct, on campus and in criminal court, was ultimately cleared of sexual misconduct and has been permitted to reënroll. The group that signed the statement, which includes feminist, black, and leftist faculty, wrote that this was a just outcome. …

But last week the filmmakers did more than understandably disagree with criticism of the film, which has been short-listed for the Academy Award for best documentary. They wrote, in a statement to the Harvard Crimson, that “the very public bias these professors have shown in favor of an assailant contributes to a hostile climate at Harvard Law.” The words “hostile climate” contain a serious claim. At Harvard, sexual harassment is “unwelcome conduct of a sexual nature,” including verbal conduct that is “sufficiently persistent, pervasive, or severe” so as to create a “hostile environment.” If, as the filmmakers suggest, the professors’ statement about the film has created a hostile environment at the school, then, under Title IX, the professors should be investigated and potentially disciplined.

It’s funny how you used to hear all the time about the dangers of any “chilling effect” on freedom of expression, but now you hear all about how allowing freedom of expression creates a “hostile environment” and the phrase “chilling effect” has vanished.

Professor Suk goes on to argue that the current campus atmosphere of Always-Believe-the-(self-proclaimed)-Victim is disproportionately bad for black men:

It is as important and logically necessary to acknowledge the possibility of wrongful accusations of sexual assault as it is to recognize that most rape claims are true. And if we have learned from the public reckoning with the racial impact of over-criminalization, mass incarceration, and law enforcement bias, we should heed our legacy of bias against black men in rape accusations. The dynamics of racially disproportionate impact affect minority men in the pattern of campus sexual-misconduct accusations, which schools, conveniently, do not track, despite all the campus-climate surveys. Administrators and faculty who routinely work on sexual-misconduct cases, including my colleague Janet Halley, tell me that most of the complaints they see are against minorities, and that is consistent with what I have seen at Harvard. The “always believe” credo will aggravate and hide this context, aided by campus confidentiality norms that make any racial pattern difficult to study and expose.

That’s not exactly transparent prose, so let me elucidate: what Professor Suk has privately heard from professional campus rape experts and what she has seen at Harvard is that most of those accused of sexual assault don’t look like Haven Monahan, but are instead minorities. And the context of the paragraph suggests that a large fraction of this minority majority of accused student rapists are black.

COMMENTS:

* All there is here is a massive wreck at the intersectionality of feminism and black. There aren’t enough non-existent white men like Haven Monahan to blame all the time.

One of my pet theories about the genesis of the mania about rape culture is that this is how white men in frats get the blame for black men raping white women on campus.

* “It is as important and logically necessary to … recognize that most rape claims are true.”

How does she know? How does anyone know? I find it hard to see how anyone does. She surely can’t mean that most claims result in a conviction in a court of law, does she?

* It is a good thing Jeannie Suk is
1) female
2) Asian
3) tenured
or she would already be a non-person.

The Overton Window truly is shifting. Trump has show that you can tell the truth.

* The left cares about rape in the same way they care about slavery. We know slavery was bad 150 + years ago , it still gets more air time in the usa media than the 650,000 people living in slavery in present day Islamic republic of Mauritania.

* The demographic thing suggests that the accusations are more likely to be true than some of us have assumed — otherwise it’s unlikely that the numbers would closely track real world sexual assault demographics, rather than the demographics of the men histrionic, sheltered coeds are most likely to hook up with.

* Possibilities, neither of which are things that can be said in public:

1. Black college boys are more confident that she wants the D. Often this may be true, sometimes it’s not. (Applies especially to athletes, super-especially to star athletes)

2. Drunk Janet gets a case of jungle fever, hungover Janet would never do that to Brad. That Jamal is a rapist.

* When a black man rapes a white woman, everyone needs to keep it quiet because it violates that man’s civil rights to have to deal with the sheer horror of being accused of rape. The victim doesn’t have any civil rights because she is white.

Likewise, if we tell white women that black men are targeting them, we’re preaching hate. Supposedly 91% of rape victims are white. Liberals may say “well, minority rape victims are less able to report the crime for fear of revenge” while trying to convince us that most wife-beaters are beer-guzzling white males.

I think soon we will realize that mainstream American liberalism is all about race, and even the feminists will find themselves at cross-purposes. There will be associations of “women of color”, but they will be more focused on protection for rape victims and battered women’s shelters than on getting Equal Pay or maternity leave legislation through Congress. Just like environmentalism lost the war against aggressive immigration, white feminists will lose the battle against all of the non-white men.

* I bet, if you asked her, she’d say that, while the reports against black men are mostly true, there are a higher number of actual rapes by white men, but they never get reported because our racist patriarchal system makes women afraid to report rapes by white men. They’re just too intimidated by the power white men have over them.

* Pretty hilarious the way the left demands that cops stop shooting people… so of course crime skyrockets in black neighborhoods and lots more black people die. The left also demands that we punish gun crime more harshly and pass lots of new anti-gun laws… which of course if enforced will fall heavily on black neighborhoods and send lots more black people to jail. And here we have the left demanding that rape be punished more severely and all accusations be believed… which means lots more innocent black guys getting railroaded by the system. Just insane.

* As with a lot of Korean & SE-AZN profs her command of the American professional idiom is terrible: “the filmmakers did more than understandably disagree with the criticism”–what’s she saying, that the flavor of their disagreement was not “understandable” (N.B. she relies on its weasel-word bureaucratic connotations, not literal meaning)? Or that it was a better-than-understandable kind of disagreeing and if so, whence her protest?

* Right, the “not classic French prose” of Suk had me thinking at first that she was Vietnamese and engaging in some payback.

Her main stylistic problem is that she qualifies her sentences as she writes them, instead of using subordinate clauses or separate sentences. It’s as if she is speaking linearly and has to front load all of her qualifications as she moves along so she won’t be shouted down. Two ways to fix that: #1 – Speak more simply. #2 – Start with the neutral sentences and build to the debatable ones.

“the filmmakers did more than understandably ….. ” means that, hey, some people made a film, and they were criticized, and they disagreed — this is understandable. But they went further and accused anyone who criticized the film of enabling hostile environment, etc. etc. There are a lot simpler ways of expressing this.

Another problem with her style is her dependence on endless qualification: not just germane qualifications, but sidebar references to all kinds of things that could easily be left out. Try to make one point at a time. A third problem is her reliance on jargon: “mass incarceration”? Brother.

* “The dynamics of racially disproportionate impact affect minority men in the pattern of campus sexual-misconduct accusations….”

The woman who wrote that is a professor at Harvard Law School. Let that sink in. That might be the worst sentence ever to appear on this blog.

* She is attempting to say that there’s a contrast between the racist attitude that disbelieved the rape claims of women against color, and the racist attitude the believed rape accusations against men of color, and she is trying to use the latter against the former. Which is fine, that argument has been made on this blog many times in the past year. But there was a much better way of doing it. Moreover, by invoking “mass incarceration” she is merely pandering.

Posted in Academia, Blacks, Censorship, Harvard, Rape | Comments Off on Steve Sailer: Harvard Law Professor: Majority of Men Accused of Campus Rape Are Minority

Will Canadian Anthropologist Peter Frost Give Up Blogging?

“When Peter’s posts first showed up here, he had moderation power. He and Unz got into some sort of a tiff and Unz took it away.”

Peter Frost writes: I made a decision to continue with my postings until the end of this month. If the situation doesn’t improve, I won’t continue in the new year.

The legal environment in Canada has changed over the past few months, especially with Bill 59. It’s not just the $10,000 fine. I could also be put on a list of “terrorists,” which would make it hard for me to travel abroad, get my passport renewed, or do jobs that require RCMP clearance (yes, I’ve done that kind of work).

In Canada, human rights commissions have become quasi-judicial bodies with police powers. Like the police, they prefer to go after “soft targets.” It’s like the police officer who hands out speeding tickets to little old ladies on Sunday morning, as opposed to going into a tough neighborhood.

For our human rights commissions, a soft target is a blog that features long, rambling comments about “niggers,” “homos,” and “Jews, Jews, Jews.” That’s a slam-dunk prosecution.

No one wants a court trial that may turn out badly for their side. In that case, the tables can be turned, especially if the prosecution is trying to get a conviction under a controversial law. This was the case with Philippe Rushton. After a while, he gained a certain immunity from prosecution because he was too articulate, too calm, and too scholarly. The Ontario premier and the Ontario Provincial Police tried to make him look like a nut case … and finally gave up.

I don’t fear being prosecuted for stupid things I write. I can defend my beliefs in a courtroom, if need be. But I fear being prosecuted for stupid things that others write.

I wouldn’t shame them. I would just hit “delete.” After a while they would get the message. It’s called dog training.

Posted in Canada, Censorship | Comments Off on Will Canadian Anthropologist Peter Frost Give Up Blogging?