Mark Zuckerberg Backs Islam

Mark Zuckerberg posts on FB:

I want to add my voice in support of Muslims in our community and around the world.
After the Paris attacks and hate this week, I can only imagine the fear Muslims feel that they will be persecuted for the actions of others.
As a Jew, my parents taught me that we must stand up against attacks on all communities. Even if an attack isn’t against you today, in time attacks on freedom for anyone will hurt everyone.
If you’re a Muslim in this community, as the leader of Facebook I want you to know that you are always welcome here and that we will fight to protect your rights and create a peaceful and safe environment for you.
Having a child has given us so much hope, but the hate of some can make it easy to succumb to cynicism. We must not lose hope. As long as we stand together and see the good in each other, we can build a better world for all people.

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Surprise! Harvard Doesn’t Reflect America

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Campus Protesters Match the Symptom List for Behavioral Disorders

LINK: This video illustrates how the thinking described by Jonathan Haidt and Greg Lukianoff in The Coddling of the American Mind can manifest in real life:

This is not an isolated incident. The mindset of “vindictive protectiveness” is taking over campuses across the country. An anonymous column entitled I’m A Liberal Professor and My Students Terrify Me appeared on Vox. Jonathan Chait wrote Can We Start Taking Political Correctness Seriously Now?

And it’s getting worse. The vitriol endured by the Yale professor was so relentless that he and his wife who is also a professor there have decided not to teach next semester, saying they “worry that the current climate at Yale is not, in my view, conducive to the civil dialogue and open inquiry required to solve our urgent societal problems.” The Dean of Students of Claremont McKenna College also resigned after suffering similar persecution.

There’s a frightening similarity between the behaviors of the “safe space” protesters and the following list of Emotional Symptoms of Behavioral Disorders from the Boston Children’s Hospital and PsychGuides.com.

Easily getting annoyed or nervous
Often appearing angry
Putting blame on others
Refusing to follow rules or questioning authority
Arguing and throwing temper tantrums
Having difficulty in handling frustration

There’s evidence that The Yale Problem Begins in High School. I believe it Starts in Kindergarten. The suggestion is strong that twelve years of coddling by our primary and secondary education system, and potentially four more at university, creates entire generations of citizens with rates of behavioral disorders much higher than normal, or necessary. What have we done? What sorts of future leaders, workers, and teachers are we sending out into the world?

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MSM Vs Donald Trump

The MSM hates Trump, and trashes him at every opportunity, and it just makes him stronger.

Washington Post: Tuesday’s edition of the “NBC Nightly News” closed with a video editorial by the newscast’s former anchor, Tom Brokaw, who said that “Trump’s promise to ban all Muslims from coming to America is more — much more — than a shouted campaign provocation. Trump’s statement, even in this season of extremes, is a dangerous proposal that overrides history, the law and the foundation of America itself.”

Brokaw added that “ISIS is likely to use Donald Trump’s statements as a recruiting tool” and went so far as to reference Japanese American internment camps, McCarthyism and Nazi Germany.

On NPR’s “Morning Edition” on Wednesday, longtime public radio host Diane Rehm, who plans to retire next year as host of her eponymous syndicated current-events talk show, explained to Steve Inskeep why she feels compelled to stay on the air through the 2016 presidential election.

“What’s happening now strikes me as something bizarre,” she said, seeming to reference Trump without naming him. “People are appealed to in the most fundamental, irrational terms rather than through persuasion, through discourse, through understanding key points. I want to help continue that rational discussion through the next campaign.”

And on MSNBC on Wednesday night, Dan Rather, Brokaw’s former counterpart as lead CBS anchor, asserted that “what [Trump] said about immigration and limiting immigrants … is the best propaganda tool that ISIS has had in a very long time.”

Now, Brokaw, Rehm and Rather don’t have the clout today that Cronkite did in 1968. No one does. That’s just the reality of media fragmentation and declining faith in the press overall. And, in Rather’s case, some have never forgiven him for the flawed report on President George W. Bush’s National Guard service that preceded his resignation.

But they’re about as heavy as the media heavyweights come these days — in different ways — and Trump will almost surely absorb their body blows, as he has so many others, and just keep swinging. He seems to grow stronger with every media fusillade.

There might be some voters who take the words of Brokaw, Rehm and Rather to heart. And these decorated journalists are only doing what they believe their jobs and consciences demand. But it is increasingly clear that if Trump’s supporters ultimately do fall away, it won’t be because the media talked them out of voting for him.

I don’t know whether Trump heard what this trio said. But I’m reasonably confident that he did not turn to an aide and say anything like, “If I’ve lost Tom Brokaw, I’ve lost the election.”

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WP: Why Franklin Graham says Donald Trump is right about stopping Muslim immigration

Washington Post: Amid an outcry over Donald Trump’s proposed ban on Muslims entering the country, prominent evangelist Franklin Graham has come out in support of the Republican presidential candidate’s plan, saying that he has been advocating a similar stance for months.

“For some time I have been saying that Muslim immigration into the United States should be stopped until we can properly vet them or until the war with Islam is over,” Graham wrote on Facebook on Wednesday. “Donald J. Trump has been criticized by some for saying something similar. The new Speaker of the House Paul Ryan said yesterday that he disagrees — saying that ‘such views are not what this party stands for and more importantly it’s not what this country stands for.’

“Politicians in Washington seem to be totally disconnected with reality.”

…In July, Graham, the son of Billy Graham, wrote on Facebook that the country should “should stop all immigration of Muslims to the U.S. until this threat with Islam has been settled.” That post came after four Marines and a sailor were fatally shot at military facilities in Chattanooga, Tenn., by a Kuwait-born U.S. citizen from a conservative Muslim family.

“Every Muslim that comes into this country has the potential to be radicalized — and they do their killing to honor their religion and Muhammad,” Graham wrote at the time. “During World War 2, we didn’t allow Japanese to immigrate to America, nor did we allow Germans. Why are we allowing Muslims now?”

Graham has long been an outspoken critic of Islam, the Religion News Service reported:

After the 9/11 terrorist attacks, he called Islam a “very evil and wicked religion” and last year called Islam “a false religion.” In 2010, he apologized after questioning President Obama’s Christian faith, saying he was “born a Muslim … and the Islamic world sees the president as one of theirs.”

“Basically for years, since 9/11, he has waged a campaign against Islam, against the rights of Muslims,” Khalilah Sabra, executive director of the Muslim American Society Immigrant Justice Center, told RNS in January.

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Risk Management – (Trump Persuasion Series)

Scott Adams writes:

If I had to put a label on Trump’s method of persuasion for this topic it would be a variant of the High Ground Maneuver. (I have called it the Big Picture Maneuver in the past. Same thing.)

The way this works with the question of Muslim immigration is that Trump was presented with impossible choices and he actually picked one. And in so doing, what he did to the media, his opponents, and the public at large was to make you defend the imaginary option in which none of the peace-loving Muslims are barred from legally entering the country and all terrorists are kept out. That uncomfortable realization will sink in with voters over time. In simple terms, Trump infantilized the entire country and installed himself as dad.

You know Dad; he’s the asshole who makes the hard choices. He makes you go to school when you don’t feel like it. He makes you come home before midnight when you know there is nothing magic about midnight. He prohibits you from watching X-rated movies when you are nine years old even though you are sure it would be fine.

Here I am not talking about logic and reason. I’m talking about the tendency of human brains to form automatic associations. Those automatic connections that are disconnected from reason are how hypnotists can hypnotize and influencers can influence. Reason aside, when you observe an older male authority figure making a hard choice on your behalf, it just feels dadlike. You can’t help make the connection.

The Dad idea won’t fully emerge until the general election…when Dad runs against mom. Speaking of Mom, you love what she stands for, but she can be such a bitch sometimes. Still, if you need a sandwich, or a hug, or some understanding, you probably pick mom.

But if you hear a loud noise downstairs, and you live in a dangerous neighborhood, you’re probably hoping Dad gets to the baseball bat before Mom, even if they are equally capable. You’re a sexist that way, in your irrational brain.

According to the Master Persuader filter, the selection of the next U.S. president is dependent on whether the public is feeling hungry or scared in the coming months. I’m betting on scared.

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TRUMP, ISLAM, AND CIVILIZATION

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The Tribal Addiction

When Jews like Thomas Friedman start talking like teenagers, it signals a tribal addiction uninformed by Torah and completely lacking respect for the host civilization. The whole “Banning Muslim immigration is a win for ISIS” is as childish as it is ridiculous. ISIS is chopping off heads and raping little girls of those who aren’t them. Arguing about open immigration policies is just weird. When radical Jews such as Friedman pretend stopping immigration is a “win for ISIS,” they are really saying, “We fear goy majority rule more than ISIS!” What they are really saying is “We prefer a win for Ishmael than a win to Esau.” When such Jews says something this absurd and silly and against the interests of his host civilization, he is really confessing his tribal hate. It is normal, natural and often healthy for strongly identifying in-groups such as blacks, Jews, Muslims, Chinese, etc, to have fear and hostility for out-groups but it needs to be kept in control or you unnecessarily alienate the majority and turn it against you.

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Will France Regain Itself?

Comments to Steve Sailer:

* My favorite response to Front National’s electoral victory was Sarkozy’s response that he understands the “exasperation of all those who are afraid that their identity and way of life is being treated with disdain”.

Well, better late than never, Nicolas.

The fact that he doesn’t really intend to do anything about their “exasperation” makes it seem like an echo of your favorite DeGualle quote: “I have heard you.”.

* Divisions loom.

As you mentioned, Marine Le Pen represents the Rust Belt.

The dewy Marion is running in a southeastern region which is arguably the nicest place on earth.

Nice, Cannes, Avignon, Grasse, Marseille, the French Riviera, almost anyplace you’d want to go outside of Paris — that is the area Marion will govern if she wins this weekend.

Oh, and Marine’s region is the poorest in the country, while Marion’s is the third wealthiest.

If the FN wins, intra-party conflict is guaranteed.

* It was much easier to scare people about the dangers of the French far-right when it was lead by a former paratrooper from the wars of French Indochina and Algeria like old man Le Pen than two blonde girls.

* Apparently a female Finnish cop got raped at a refugee center and the Finnish po-leece are covering it up – so crazy.

Speaking of Trump-related issues – isn’t it crazy that all these GOP politicians support pre-emptively bombing the **** out of any country deemed a threat but stopping people immigrating is the sin of all sins.

* Ezra Levant from the Right Wing Canadian website The Rebel, interviewed a lot of French Leftists right after the Paris attacks. There was a French Liberal who told Ezra that Christianity is just as violent as Islam. He used the Mexican drug cartels as an example of Christians who commit senseless barbaric violence.

What an extremely retarded example. Last time I checked power and money is what drives Mexican drug cartels to murder people, not Christianity. Mexican drug cartels do not chop people’s heads off, hang dead bodies on highways and cut off body parts because they believe Jesus Christ and God told them to do it.

Mexican drug cartels are not going around murdering people for being Atheists, pro-gay marriage, and or pro-abortion. What’s next, classify The Hell’s Angels as a Christian gang? Classify the Crips and The Bloods as a Christian gang? Classify MS-13 as a Christian gang? Classify Cosa Nostra as a Christian gang?

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Dr. Patrick Chavis — player in reverse discrimination case

I would prefer to not go to an affirmative action doctor.

Washington Post 2002: Patrick Chavis, a former Los Angeles area physician whose medical career was cited by both supporters and opponents of affirmative action as evidence for their case, was killed July 23 in Los Angeles. He was 50.

A spokesman for the Los Angeles County sheriff’s homicide office said Dr. Chavis was shot during a carjacking. The spokesman said Dr. Chavis was leaving a store and entering his car when three men attempted to take his car and shot him.

Dr. Chavis received a degree of fame through the quest of Allan Bakke to gain admission to the medical school at UC Davis in the 1970s. The medical school rejected the application of Bakke, who was white, but accepted five black applicants, including Dr. Chavis, who had lower test scores and lower college grades than Bakke. The five won admission under a special racial- preference quota.

Bakke sued. What became a landmark case, Bakke vs. Regents of the Board of the University of California, reached the U.S. Supreme Court, where the school’s affirmative action program was struck down in 1978. The court maintained that while an applicant’s race could be used as an admissions factor, it could not be the only factor. Bakke was admitted to the school and later graduated, as did Dr. Chavis.

There it might all have ended but for the partisans on both sides of the affirmative action issue. By 1995, Bakke was an anesthesiologist in Rochester, Minn., and Dr. Chavis was an obstetrician-gynecologist in an inner-city section of Los Angeles, where his patients were largely poor women of color.

Nicholas Lemann, in the New York Times Magazine, Tom Hayden, in the Nation magazine, and Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., speaking before a Senate committee, all called attention to the careers of the two medical school graduates. They pointed out that while Dr. Chavis was helping the poor of California, Bakke made his practice among much wealthier, largely white patients in the upper Midwest.

Then, it all started to go wrong for Dr. Chavis. As reported by conservative commentators as well as by such newspapers as the Washington Post and the Boston Globe, Dr. Chavis lost his medical license in 1997. He had switched his practice to cosmetic surgery, including liposuction, areas in which he met with difficulties and was accused of malpractice.

An administrative law judge found Dr. Chavis guilty of gross negligence and incompetence in the treatment of three women, one of whom died, and the California medical board suspended his license.

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