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"Luke Ford reports all of the 'juicy' quotes, and has been doing it for years." (Marc B. Shapiro)
"This guy knows all the gossip, the ins and outs, the lashon hara of the Orthodox world. He’s an [expert] in... all the inner workings of the Orthodox world." (Rabbi Aaron Rakeffet-Rothkoff) LATEST POSTS:
- Dennis Prager Health Update: June 2026
- Ken Dito: A Life in Bay Area Radio
- Lowell Cohn and the Stories he Didn’t Write
- Bob Grant and the Invention of Combat Talk
- Joe Pyne and the Ranking Nuisance of Broadcasting
- Gloves Off by Lowell Cohn
- NYT: The Secret Reason Bosses Want Everyone Back in the Office, Every Day of the Week
- Dennis Prager Prefers Clarity to Agreement
- Pinsof on Democracy
- Catharine MacKinnon
- Who Rules: The Political Thought of Angelo Codevilla
- The Other Constitution: John Marini on Bureaucracy and the American Founding
- Nancy MacLean and the History of Concentrated Power
- Freedom and Authority: The Work of Christoph Bezemek
- The Not Boring Hero System
- Zero Percent Noise
- The Patron Saint of Lost Causes: Gustavo Arellano’s Hero System
- The Hero System of Los Angeles Times Columnist Steve Lopez
- The Hero System of San Francisco Chronicle’s Ace Investigative Journalists
- The Hero System of San Francisco Columnist Emily Hoeven
BEST POSTS:
* American Epistemics (1-19-26)
* The Most Socially Toxic Inconvenient Truths (1-18-26)
* The Luke Ford Genre (1-18-26)
* The Filkins Pivot: Legacy Prestige and the Fracturing of the Chattering Class (1-16-26)
* Decoding The Trump Doctrine (1-4-26)
* If Tatiana Schlossberg were “Tatiana Smith” (12-30-25)
* ‘I’m So Trained’: How The Credential Society Burned Down the Palisades (12-28-25)
* Status Closure and The Lost Generation (12-25-25)
* The Bondi Massacre (12-15-25)
* Sydney Jews Learn That Their Aussie Social Contract Has Become A Suicide Pact (12-15-25)
* Terror in Sydney: Analyzing the “Chanukah by the Sea” Massacre (12-14-25)
* Decoding Nick Fuentes (11-2-25)
* The Landscape of Emotional Sobriety (10-29-30)
* The Rise & Fall Of Air Supply (10-19-25)
* No Kings, No Results: How Elite Pride Replaced Real Progress (10-19-25)
* You Are An Important Soldier In A Great War (9-7-25)
* The Revolt Of The Masses (8-31-25)
* The Covenant of Ashwood (8-24-25)
* If you can’t trust central bankers, then who can you trust? (8-23-25)
* Why Is The Elite Media Singing From The Same Hymnal About The Trump-Putin Summit? (8-17-25)
* Why Do Smart News Operations Sound So Uniformly Dumb So Often? (8-16-25)
* Nobody Is Coming (8-10-25)
* When Elites Restrict Our Speech, It’s Because They Love Truth, Freedom & Democracy (8-3-25)
How Is The Jewish Media Reacting To The Jewish State Declaring Itself The Jewish State?
* Joe: “Netanyahu is nothing special. His major asset is that much of the global media is Jewish-owned and therefore biased towards Israel. That same Jewish-owned media is biased against the United States and Europe except when they do boneheaded things such as inviting in hordes of Syrians and Mexicans.”
* International Jew: “Well, we can see that the Jewish-owned New York Times is none too supportive of this move.
Let’s play a game. You find a Jewish-owned media outlet that supports this new law, and I’ll match that with a Jewish-owned media outlet that doesn’t support it. We’ll add up their subscribers/viewers to keep score.
I’ve already taken my turn actually; I said “New York Times”. 500,000 print subscribers, 2,500,000 digital subscribers. Your turn, Joe.”
Small Is Beautiful: Economics as if People Mattered by E.F. Schumacher (7-20-18)
* The education and Catholic conversion of E.F. Schumacher.
* Small Is Beautiful is Oxford-trained economist E. F. Schumacher’s classic call for the end of excessive consumption. Schumacher inspired such movements as “Buy Locally” and “Fair Trade,” while voicing strong opposition to “casino capitalism” and wasteful corporate behemoths. Named one of the Times Literary Supplement’s 100 Most Influential Books Since World War II, Small Is Beautiful presents eminently logical arguments for building our economies around the needs of communities, not corporations.
* Schumacher’s perspective is informed by Gandhian and Buddhist concepts of scale, i.e., the appropriate scale for a business or a job is the scale that an individual can understand and enjoy. As such, he runs directly against the “bigger is better” philosophy of mainstream economics that argues in favor of increasing scale until marginal costs begin to rise. Further, Schumacher goes against the idea that profits, per se, are the only goal. As a free-market economist, I have strong doubts about these ideas; as an environmental economist concerned with sustainable systems, I have to agree that his ideas are more sensible than those that pursue profits at all costs.
If these ideas had displaced mainstream economics (to the extent that Gordon Gekko said “small is beautiful” instead of “greed is good”), we would be living in a very different world today. Schumacher is certainly aware that he is fighting an uphill battle, but his analysis never veers from good economics. He does not hope that people will just “do the right thing.” Instead, he pays attention to incentives and how they can be changed to accomplish his goals.
This book is full of wisdom, and the writing sparkles. Although you should read it to experience it yourself, I will leave you with this passage:
We are always having all sorts of clever ideas about optimizing something before it even exists. I think the stupid man who says “something is better than nothing” is much more intelligent than than the clever chap who will not touch something unless it is optimal.
Bottom Line: Economists study how humans use scarce resources. Their decisions are motivated by philosophies of why they want to use those resources. This book discusses those decisions with an important question: Is the goal more consumption or happier people? Since consumption does not appear to make us more happy, we have to ask what does, and Schumacher answers that question by noting that people living in communities and doing meaningful work are happier.
2014 update (after using the book to teach): Schumacher has a lovely vision for how a bottom-up system of production by the masses would work, but he does not describe a strategy for dealing with people(s) who prefer large and ugly, e.g., China, the US, Canada, et al. This weakness puts his advice into the aspirational rather than pragmatic section of my bookshelf.
Our society is seriously out of scale. This fact has produced a range of dysfunctional behaviors that we have incorporated into our behavioral framework, creating further imbalance. The end result will be atomization, depopulation, and social chaos. The only remedy for this problem, long term, is reduction in scale, achieved by reorganizing nations into manageable and relatively homogenous populations, population and immigration control, and restraint of technological, economic, and social policies which give rise to problems of scale.
This remedy is not, I must stress, a devolution–it is not a reversion to the past, much less an idealized past free from worry. In any composition of society, there will be tension between traditional and progressive outlooks, there will be complacency and conflict and all the usual human evils. Nor is the primary concern Malthusian, that is to say an unsustainable growth in resource consumption (while this is a problem we face as a result of scale, it is not my focus here).
By scale I mean more than mere population growth; I refer also to the scale of complexity created by the West’s conversion to a multicultural, globalized social model. In this model, all distinctions including race (meaning ethnicity), nationality, culture, and religion are viewed as subordinate to the division between the managerial class and the managed class. Thus effective democracy is blunted and masses of people are shifted and reorganized in accordance with the decisions of a managerial class. Aside from the negative consequences brought about by heedless change, a second order of effects is seen in the dramatic increase in social complexity and the need for citizens to accomodate radically different (and in some cases incompatible) outlooks.
‘Boyle Heights Anti-White Vigilantes Try to Drive Out Kosher Coffee Shop’
* These days “anti-gentrification” is just a generic term for kicking people you don’t like out of the neighborhood.
* If people in a 94% white neighborhood in say W. Virginia were protesting the opening of a Jewish owned coffee shop in their neighborhood (not that they would ever do that in the US – even in the worst of the bad old days there were no anti-Jewish shop boycotts in the US the way there were in Poland and Germany in the ’30s) then they would be condemned far and wide, but because it is Hispanics and Antifas, crickets.
I don’t think that the “liberal” Jews of America are going to like the new America as much as they thought they would.
* CBS News calls Boyle Heights “rapidly gentrifying”. That seems premature, considering Boyle Heights is 95% Hispanic.
* What would the reaction in the popular press be if whites had organized a boycott of a shop because the shop owner supported Barack Obama?
* The stereotype around here is of the “unbased” Jew – the secular liberal Ivy educated Ellis Island descendant (or nowadays even 1970s wave Soviet Jew descendant) Chuckie Schumer type Jews who are the epitome of American “liberalism”. BUT, there are a lot of Jews who are not like that at all – Israeli Jews, Orthodox Jews, Soviet Jews (the immigrant generation, not their kids), even some Ellis Island Jews who never drank the Kool-Aid. And in the future there are going to be a lot more (as a % of the Jews) because the Chuck Schumer type liberal Jews are dying off and not being replaced – either they have no children or their kids and grandkids are not (fully) Jewish anymore.
* An enterprising young reporter should put the national Chamber of Commerce on the spot and ask if they support the Boyle Heights Chamber’s decision to eject Shalom. Putting a spotlight on this could help erode their membership in more conservative parts of the country.
* Just remember everybody:
When an angry mob of mask wearing, feces flinging thugs engaged in de facto riot show up at your place of business to shut you down
YOU are the hater.
The day is going to come when somebody goes Napoleon on their asses and then it will get interesting.
* Remember those Trump inauguration protestors? The 200 who were arrested? And charges were pressed? The left forgot about them, and their moms had to mortgage their houses for legal fees.
There are legal ways to deal with protestors like these. Insist that the cops arrest people. Don’t clean up the shit. Hire a biowaste firm, and get a receipt. Automatic felony. Press charges. The cops and prosecutors can ID the perps. If not, or in addition, file civil charges against the organizing groups and a list of John Does. Get subpoenas. Put phone video online. Notify everyone involved to preserve evidence, including SMS stuff and web contents, with anti spoilation notices.
What about the sponsoring groups? Do they have a board? Contact the members one by one. Go to their offices or homes. “Do you approve of throwing shit at my coffee shop?” There are donor organizations and individuals who support the protestor organizers. “Do you approve of this? Do you think [current president of anti gentrification organization] should keep her job?”
What about the companies run by the board members? Perhaps their products should be boycotted.
And so on. Scorch the earth on these guys. A single event can produce years of hell for these guys.
* Blacks and Mexicans are sitting on potentially billions of $ worth of valuable real estate and you don’t want to put yourself between the Establishment and a billion $ horde.
The Best Of Steve Sailer
* Steve Sailer writes: “…the success of Israeli nationalism has made Israel the vanguard style-setting country of the last 70 years and much of the rest of the world is now looking to the example long set by The Jewish State”.
* Sailer writes: “I suspect that Trump’s problem this week is that he looked beta to Putin’s alpha at their much denounced press conference.”
COMMENTS ON SAILER’S BLOG:
* President Trump sounded tired (and looked a bit old) in that press conference, especially when you compare it to the press conference just a few days ago, with Theresa May.
Also, Putin, although much smaller than Trump, comes across as very physically fit and vigorous in his manner, and mentally quick, more so than most other current world leaders.
Some years ago I watched part of one of Putin’s four hour long town-hall citizen Q&A sessions. He really is good at thinking on his feet and is well prepared and informed, with facts at his fingertips.
* Sailer writes: “Hispanics flock to UC Merced because they can’t get in to better UC schools because on average Hispanics can’t compete with Asians on test scores.”
I didn’t read the Jennifer Medina story in the New York Times on UC Merced because it sounded boring.
COMMENTS:
* Merced is Spanish for “mercy” or “favor”, and it does sound like someone is doing them a favor.
* I sat through my son’s graduation ceremony at SLO last month and it was one long slow cringe. First was the ( President ?) that talked about the bad old days and how far we have progressed. Then he mentioned the new dorms that were named after the now extinct Indian tribe. Next was female Afro-American who lectured about black struggles, etc. etc. Then came the gay SJW who lectured us about the time he spent teaching in the inner city. On and on. It was pretty bad. And when you consider what the school administration sounds like, I am sure the purges are coming soon.
Sadly, you want to hear something positive and congratulatory. Instead it was resentful and depressing. Contrast that to 4 years earlier in the orientation speech for the Mom’s and Dads (where all their money comes from) when they were courting the recruits. Excellence, great experience, and out in 4 years (SLO’s biggest selling point is that the average student gets out in 4 years saving junior’s time and dad’s money).
* A friend says:
Both Steve Sailer and the commentators seem to think that the UC system is superior to the Cal State University System in all ways.
Cal Poly SLO has a terrific engineering school. It is comparable to the undergraduate engineering schools at the mid range UC’s and better than the lower ones.
It also has an agricultural program which for whatever reasons don’t attract large numbers of Latinos or Blacks.
I have a real issue about comparing undergraduate educational programs at different public and private colleges and universities. The reputation of the UC system is not based on the quality of its undergraduate education. Because some of the schools are so selective, they are a sorting mechanism for intelligence of the student body, but almost all undergraduate education (except in subjects like engineering and some but not all stem) is good and can be excellent depending upon how much effort the student wants to put into it. Since grade point average as an undergraduate is one of the factors that graduate programs look at, in addition to the test scores, if someone wants to go to business, law or medical school, their best bet is to do the first two years at community college, acing all the classes and then transferring to a less competitive UC or State University, really applying themselves to get the best grades possible and then to take one (or possibly more) of the entrance exam preparation classes. This will minimize the expense and maximize the chances of acceptance into a superior graduate program.
Anyway, among the California State Universities, both Cal Poly SLO and Long Beach State are very good undergraduate schools.
Physical Ailments At Work That Disappear When You Leave
The Homosexual Question, Media Lament Toxic Twitter
* MP3.
TOPIC: The Costs of Homosex. Trump’s ban on transgendered in the military, citing costs, re-ignited the culture war. In that context we examine the economic and social price of LGBTQ behavior.
Show Notes
Donald J. Trump Tweet, Jul. 26, 2017: “After consultation with my Generals and military experts, please be advised that the United States Government will not accept or allow……”
Donald J. Trump Tweet, Jul. 26, 2017: “….Transgender individuals to serve in any capacity in the U.S. Military. Our military must be focused on decisive and overwhelming…..”
Donald J. Trump Tweet, Jul. 26, 2017: “….victory and cannot be burdened with the tremendous medical costs and disruption that transgender in the military would entail. Thank you”
Michael Harris in The Walrus, Sep. 12, 2011: Life after Death–Thirty years after HIV/AIDS was first identified—after it decimated gay communities across the country—a new generation comes of age in its long shadow
Rand Corporation: Explore Tobacco and Smoking
QUOTE: “The most recent published estimate of lifetime HIV treatment costs was $367,134 (in 2009 dollars; $379,668 in 2010 dollars).”
CDC: HIV Cost-effectiveness
Dan McLaughlin in National Review, Jul. 26, 2016: Military Fitness Is a Military Decision
CDC: HIV Among Transgender People
The Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation, Feb. 7, 2017: Black Americans and HIV/AIDS: The Basics
Christopher Ingraham in the Washington Mockingbird, Jul. 26, 2017: The military spends five times as much on Viagra as it would on transgender troops’ medical care
Teen Vogue, Nov. 24, 2015: You Won’t Believe How Much It Costs to Be Transgender in America
Walt Heyer in The Daily Signal, Jul. 26, 2017: I Was Once Transgender. Why I Think Trump Made the Right Decision for the Military.
Deadline, Jul. 26, 2017: Caitlyn Jenner Slams Donald Trump Over Transgender Military Ban; Hollywood Reacts To POTUS Tweets – Update
Military.com, Sep. 21, 2016: Pentagon to Pay for Some Sex-Change Operations for Transgender Troops
Kevin Michael Grace tweet, Jul. 27, 2017: “Yes, I am. Bradley Manning was a train wreck & gender dysphoria was used as an excuse by his defence at his court-martial”
Infogalactic: Chelsea Manning
Daily Mail, May 17, 2017: Canada introduces bill to protect transgender people
CBC, Jul. 24, 2017: Man tied to $1K reward for videos of Muslim students praying charged with hate crime–Kevin J. Johnston released on bail, set to appear in court again in September
Freedom Report, YouTube, Jul. 24, 2017: Kevin J Johnston Arrested Under Motion M103
Justice Laws Website: Canadian Criminal Code 319, Public incitement of hatred
John Tierney in The New York Times, Jun. 15, 2001: The Big City; In 80’s, Fear Spread Faster Than AIDS
The Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation, Jun. 10, 2016: U.S. Federal Funding for HIV/AIDS: Trends Over Time
QUOTE: “The fact is, I am now convinced, AIDS is not a disease at all—it is a government program.”
Reason, Dec. 1 1994: Letter by Tom Bethell
USAID: HIV and AIDS
The Guardian, Jan. 11, 2017: Population growth in Africa: grasping the scale of the challenge
My Posting Career Thread: The Institute for Advanced Homophobia
QUOTE: ‘On AIDS, Buchanan wrote in 1983: “The poor homosexuals — they have declared war upon nature, and now nature is extracting an awful retribution (AIDS).”‘
FAIR.org, Feb. 28, 1996: Pat Buchanan in His Own Words
Amazon.com: Sexual Ecology: The Birth of AIDS and the Destiny of Gay Men by Gabriel Rotello
The New York Times, Books, May 25, 1997: A Culture of Risk–In their new books, Gabriel Rotello and Michelangelo Signorile ask what made gay men so susceptible to AIDS
Amazon.com: Faggots by Larry Kramer
Xtra, Nov. 16, 2011: The murder that changed us–Aaron Webster, 10 years later
Globe and Mail, Dec. 19, 2003: Teen gets 3 years for hate-crime killing
Crisis Magazine, Aug. 15, 2016: They Are Not Everywhere. They Are Not Like Us.
Amazon.com: Virtually Normal: An Argument about Homosexuality by Andrew Sullivan
The New York Times, Feb. 2, 2016: Zika Infection Transmitted by Sex Reported in Texas
QUOTE: “While no mosquitoes have tested positive for the virus, health officials can find no other explanation for the infections. As far as scientists currently know, the only way to spread the virus is through sex or a mosquito bite.”
Daily Mail, Jul. 29, 2016: Zika HAS hit America: Florida governor confirms all four ‘mystery’ infections came from local mosquitoes
From the Library of Hate
Lesbians are 2.5x more likely than straight women to be obese. Source: http://takimag.com/article/the_straight_dope_on_homosexuality_elizabeth_mccaw/print
Lesbians are twice as likely as straight women to have eating disorders. Source: http://takimag.com/article/the_straight_dope_on_homosexuality_elizabeth_mccaw/print
h/t Bixxy Noodles in the first post of The Institute of Advanced Homophobia at mpcdot.com
2blowhards, Feb. 1, 2007: AIDS and Immune Systems
Wikipedia: Sexual Ecology
CBC, Oct. 4, 2013: A Look Back At Canada’s Tainted Blood Scandal
Canadian Press via the Halifax Chronicle Herald, Jul. 23, 2017: Trudeau’s pink-shirted stroll a hit at sunny 30th Halifax Pride event
hiv.gov: Paying for HIV Care
Tom Bethell in National Review via Duesberg on AIDS, May 10, 1993: The Cure That Failed
WND, May 4, 2000: AIDS hype In Africa?–No HIV test required, disease defined differently than in U.S.
“What the CDC people, with their newfound African strategy, planned to tell Washington was that “AIDS was a plague alright, but that no one was immune.”
Excerpt from The Politically Incorrect Guide to Science by Tom Bethell, pg. 112
QUOTE: “If you say your father has died in a car accident, it is bad luck, but if he has died of AIDS, there is an agency to help you.”
Excerpt from Inventing the Aids Virus by Peter H. Duesberg
LifeSiteNews, Mar. 17, 2010: CDC: Gay Men Over 44 Times More Likely HIV+ than Hetero Men
IMDb: Philadelphia (1993)
The New York Times, Apr. 26, 2016: Gay Dance Clubs on the Wane in the Age of Grindr
IMDb: Looking for Mr. Goodbar (1977)
Infogalactic: Stonewall riots
Julian Barnes in the New Yorker, Jul. 7, 2003: Hate And Hedonism–The insolent art of Michel Houellebecq
Urban Dictionary: circuit party
Urban Dictionary: chemsex
Concept Central, Jul. 20, 2017: ‘Chemsex’ boosting HIV infections among gays
The New York Times, Mar. 29, 2013: Why Are Boomers Getting S.T.D.s?
CNN, Aug. 3, 2016: Why millennials are having less sex than Generation Xers
Celia Farber in Harper’s, Mar. 2006: Out of control–AIDS and the corruption of medical science
AIDS Truth (PDF) Mar. 25, 2006: Errors in Celia Farber’s March 2006 article in Harper’s Magazine
Celia Farber in Spin, Oct. 5, 2015: AIDS and the AZT Scandal: SPIN’s 1989 Feature, ‘Sins of Omission’–The story of AZT, one of the most toxic, expensive, and controversial drugs in the history of medicine
LifeSiteNews, Apr. 6, 2017: It’s a secret: Alberta schools are not to tell parents if their kids join gay-straight clubs
IMDb: Brokeback Mountain (2005)
Richard Duncan in the Daily Reckoning, May 19, 2011: Credit Growth Drives Economic Growth, Until it Doesn’t
Medical Daily, Feb. 9, 2015: Canada Legalizes Euthanasia, As High Court Passes Assisted Suicide Law
Women Tend To Regret Sex That Doesn’t Lead To Marriage
* …things like hook-up culture (either in college or the workplace) are an anathema to most women. Whether they look back fondly on a particular sexual act or not depends not on the act itself in the moment but on the long term outcome. This is totally different from men. If they got drunk and banged the boss or some Haven Monahan this can be a positive or negative experience depending on whether they ended up advancing their career in a meaningful way/had a long term relationship, or (best option) got married.
Since most of these hookups don’t end up in marriage this culture ends up not being a good experience for most women. And since most careers, even very successful careers, provide very little fulfillment compared to friends and family, most women end up unhappy with the trades that they made.
* For a long time, whites have been well trained, or just naturally inhibited, against “carding” blacks. In the mid-90’s I was friendly with a 250 lb. black guy named Hodge, who made his living scalping tickets at big sporting events like the Indy 500, the Final Four, etc. I first met him at the Oakland Coluseum, and then he became a regular at the Mon-Wed-Fri noontime basketball game on the Berkeley campus. I just assumed he’d bought a community membership like I had, but then one day we entered the buikding together, and when the desk clerk asked him for his pass, he said, “don’t bother me with that pass stuff man, I ain’t got time for that,” and just waltzed through. If I’d done the same, the kids would’ve called the cops to haul me out, but he was a fixture there for years. Nice guy though – he’d introduce me to people as “cold lefhand J.”
* In other times and places one wouldn’t need to call the police for non-criminal events. One would just politely tell the other person that what they are doing is not allowed, or that a certain place is for members only.
In a diverse setting with blacks, there is both imagined and real risk that:
1) Confronting an unknown black in public could lead to a real physical altercation;
2) Even if a physical altercation is avoided, you could still land in hot water if the black claims you used racial slurs.
So whites increasingly opt to call the cops to insulate themselves from the above. Now that is being taken away. It does seem very coordinated as if someone turned on a light switch. This has obviously been going on for some time, but all of a sudden it’s all over the news.
It just goes to show how control of the media can be used to turn almost anything toxic overnight. If people like Buchanan and Coulter ran the media, we’d have 70 percent of Americans participating in the round up of illegal aliens just by spending a couple of months highlighting each day the various crimes and scams committed by them.
Instead we are hunting down whites who just want to avoid engaging with a black “keepin it real” while the big problems go unreported and unnoticed.
* REUTERS: Dutch Foreign Minister Stef Blok defended himself on Wednesday after coming under fire for saying multi-cultural societies could never be peaceful, and former colony Suriname was a “failed state” because of its diverse ethnic makeup.
“Give me an example of a multi-ethnic, multi-cultural society, where the indigenous population still live… where they live in a peaceful, societal union,” Blok told a gathering of Dutch employees of international organizations. “I don’t know of any.”
Someone in the audience suggested Surniame, a former Dutch colony on South America’s Atlantic northern coast populated mainly by the descendants of Asian indentured workers, African slaves and indigenous people.
“I admire your optimism,” he replied. “Suriname is a failed state and that is very much linked to its ethnic composition.”
* Santa Monica is nowhere as bad in the feces department as San Francisco at present. In general, the SMPD seems to be keeping down the homeless numbers to the usual, which have been rising in the rest of SoCal ever since voters decided to vote a vast pile of money to Solve the Homeless Problem, which immediately made it worse as people from outside California rushed in for some sun and handouts. But Santa Monica has had 40 years of experience dealing with opportunists who like to camp out in the ultra-mild climate, unlike more inland parts of SoCal, such as Anaheim.
Jews & The Western Tradition
Debate Night!
Tonight I will be Moderating on Luke Ford Livestreams as Luke Ford @lukeford takes on Rodney Martin @MovementCritic .
Topic: Jews and the Western Tradition
Time: 11:00pm EST (8:00pm PST)
Place: https://t.co/fCnBEeDOHs
This Is Not To Be Missed! pic.twitter.com/lZry1nm4tS— Halsey English (@HalseyEnglish) July 18, 2018
Luke’s sources: Nathan Cofnas and John McIntyre.
Mommy Bloggers, #MeToo, & The Incel Threat
* An Open Letter to John Brennan
* NYT: ‘A French Novelist Imagined Sexual Dystopia. Now It’s Arrived.’
MP3.
Author Kelly Oxford, Who Started #NotOkay, Claims Her Ex-Husband Once Threw a Phone at Her Head
Kelly Oxford is opening up about the possible reason she and ex-husband divorced.
The New York Times bestselling author, 41, claimed her ex-husband James Oxford was allegedly abusive in a series of Instagram Story photos on Monday.
The mother of three divorced from James in 2016 after 17 years of marriage. That same year, Oxford started the #notokay hashtag on Twitter after a 2005 video conversation between Donald Trump and Billy Bush emerged in which the now-president how he liked to grab women by their genitals.
Women shared their stories of sexual abuse and sexual harassment on Twitter with #notokay. Now, Oxford is now explaining her own #notokay moment, beginning with what ended her marriage with a simple caption explaining that she was writing alone.
