#263551
Carbon emissions from the Glasgow climate conference are expected to reach more than double the amount pumped into the atmosphere during the last COP, The Scotsman can reveal, with the event on track to be the most polluting summit of its kind.
#263552
Klaus Schwab's World Economic Forum has scrubbed the page about the bankrupt FTX crypto exchange from its website
#263553
I was once called a “cracker” by a member of the Nation of Islam. It was in the mid-1980s and I was driving through Washington, D.C., in the kind of neighborhood that conservatives call dangerous and liberals call “transitioning.” I saw a member of the Nation of Islam, bow tie and all, on the corner hawking copies of The Final Call, the NOI’s newspaper. I rolled down the window and asked for a copy.
That’s when he hit me with it: “F*ck off, cracker.”
I thought of this gentleman fondly when I was reading the new book, The Demon in Democracy: Totalitarian Temptations in Free Societies by Polish scholar Ryszard Legutko. The book is an intense read that argues that liberal democracies are succumbing to a utopian ideal where individuality and eccentricity might eventually be banned. As liberals push us towards a monoculture where there is no dissent, no gender, and no conflict, the unique and the great will eventually cease to exist. No more offbeat weirdoes, eccentric crazies, or cults. No more Nation of Islam there to call me a cracker. No more of the self-made and inspired figures of the past: Duke Ellington, Hunter Thompson, Annie Leibowitz.
Legutko’s thesis is that liberal democracies have something in common with communism: the sense that time is inexorably moving towards a kind of human utopia, and that progressive bureaucrats must make sure it succeeds. Legutko first observed this after the fall of communism. Thinking that communist bureaucrats would have difficulty adjusting to Western democracy, he was surprised when the former Marxists smoothly adapted — indeed, thrived — in a system of liberal democracy. It was the hard-core anti-communists who couldn’t quite fit into the new system. They were unable to untether themselves from their faith, culture, and traditions.
Both communism and liberal democracy call for people to become New Men by jettisoning their old faith, customs, arts, literature, and traditions. Thus a Polish anti-communist goes from being told by communists that he has to abandon his old concepts of faith and family to become a member of the larger State, only to come to America after the fall of the Berlin Wall and be told he has to forego those same beliefs for the sake of the sexual revolution and the bureaucratic welfare state. Both systems believe that societies are moving towards a certain ideal state, and to stand against that is to violate not just the law but human happiness itself. Legutko compares the two:
“Societies — as the supporters of the two regimes are never tired of repeating — are not only changing and developing according to a linear pattern but also improving, and the most convincing evidence of the improvement, they add, is the rise of communism and liberal democracy. And even if a society does not become better at each stage and in each place, it should continue improving given the inherent human desire to which both regimes claim those found the most satisfactory response.”
Legutko argues that, of course, there are huge differences between communism and liberal democracy — liberal democracy is obviously a system that allows for greater freedom. He appreciates that in a free society people are able to enjoy the arts, books, and pop culture that they want. Our medical system is superior. We don’t suffer from famines. Yet Legutko argues that with so much freedom has come a kind of flattening of taste and the hard work of creating original art.
We’ve witnessed the a slow and steady debasement of our politics and popular culture — see, for example, those “man on the street” interviews where Americans can’t name who won the Revolutionary War. Enter the unelected bureaucrats who appoint themselves to steer the ship; in other words, we’re liberals and we’re here to help. Inspired by the idea that to be against them is to be “on the wrong side of history,” both communism and contemporary liberalism demand absolute submission to the progressive plan. All resistance, no matter how grounded in genuine belief or natural law, must be quashed.
Thus in America came the monochromatic washing of a country that once could boast not only crazies like Scientologists and Louis Farrakhan, but creative and unusual icons like Norman Mailer, Georgia O’Keefe, Baptists, Hindus, dry counties, John Courtney Murray, Christian bakers, orthodox Jews, accents, and punk rockers. The eccentric and the oddball, as well as the truly great, are increasingly less able to thrive. As Legutko observes, we have a monoculture filled with people whose “loutish manners and coarse language did not have their origin in communism, but, as many found astonishing, in the patterns, or rather anti-patterns that developed in Western liberal democracies.” The revolution didn’t devour its children; progressive-minded bureaucrats did.
— Mark Judge writes for Acculturated, where this piece originally appeared. It is reprinted with permission.
#263554
"I am pro-life, and I think everyone knows." Uh huh...
#263555
NORTH CAROLINA—Election fraud has been suspected in North Carolina's 9th congressional district as Russian president Vladimir Putin emerged victorious in the contest Friday.Putin gave an acceptance speech in Congress, but some still allege the election may have been tampered with. They cite the fact that some of the ballots looked suspicious, as well …
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Representative Ilhan Omar (D-MN) said Thursday on MSNBC that President Donald Trump should be investigated and prosecuted for his "dangerous criminal neglect" in the coronavirus pandemic. | Clips
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#263558
For months, this election was all about angry voters demanding change. They seemed to echo the plaintive cry of Howard Beale in the movie “Network,” who screams to the world,
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A San Antonio man charged with theft is facing two years in state jail after he allegedly took a cap from a teen and threw a drink in his face.
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Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez warned that electing Mike Bloomberg in November would pave the way for another candidate who could be “even worse” than President Trump.
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The U.S Justice Department on Friday charged a China-based Zoom executive with disrupting video meetings commemorating the 31st anniversary of the 1989 Tiananmen Square massacre.
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Musk's reaction to this is going to be fun...
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Morning Joe co-host Joe Scarborough brought on Time magazine Editor Nancy Gibbs to discuss the publication’s latest cover story about toxic environments on the internet. “I think we are all probably first amendment extremists about, yes, part of our life is that people will call us stupid and idiots and that's fine,” stated Gibbs, “But at what point do you not defend speech that suppresses speech?” Ironically the writer of the piece has his own history of trolling, and so does Morning Joe and MSNBC.
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Stonewall Democrats don’t want you to know gay Republicans exist. But we do, our ideas are better than theirs, and we’re not going anywhere.
#263565
"The elite take care of their friends and you get to suffer"
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The FBI’s criminal and counterterrorism divisions have created a "threat tag" to aid in tracking alleged threats against education officials nationwide.
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In a mandatory course at the University of Delaware titled 'UNIV 101: First Year Experience,' students have been asked to assess their levels of privilege by completing a 'Privilege Checklist.'
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The new head of the Quds Force, Gen. Esmail Qaani, is someone who not only desires to kill Americans but also boasts about killing Americans. According to the U.S. Treasury Department Qaani covered "financial disbursements to IRGC-QF elements, including
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Members of Cornell University’s student government tried to pass a resolution last month that would disarm the school’s police, but the resolution failed.
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COP26 saw plenty of pledges, promises, and tall talk, but just four days after the landmark climate negotiations concluded, the US is set to sign off the l
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Terry Adirim appears to have tried to sidestep the law again this time by liking a partisan tweet in potential violation of the Hatch Act.
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“We have laid hands on him, and I believe without a doubt Mr. Trump truly, truly wants to be a president for all Americans."
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A Nike lawyer Wednesday recounted for jurors the surprising second he claims he was shaken down by Michael Avenatti — in what he described as a “rehearsed” speech laden with “surprising” language. “I used to be flabbergasted, my jaw hit the desk,” Scott Wilson mentioned of the March 2019 assembly through which Avenatti allegedly promised …
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U.S. - In order to receive the help they need after the government shut down their businesses and forced them to stay home, many clever Americans have disguised themselves as foreigners in hopes of receiving more COVID aid.'With this pork-filled spending bill, Congress showed us where their priorities lie,' said local out-of-work bartender Darnel ...
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Two Jury Notes Surface From Rittenhouse Trial--People's Pundit Breaksdown What they Mean