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We laugh about it but it’s actually dangerous, see women cops hiding at bondi beach and also women getting attacked.
 
We laugh about it but it’s actually dangerous, see women cops hiding at bondi beach and also women getting attacked.
Oh it can definitely get people killed. I was laughing at the absurdity of the statement. If women were equally capable, they wouldn't have lower physical standards for the military. The dumbest thing I saw in the comments section, a male feminist. Says women can more easily shut off their emotions and kill, so they're actually better soldiers :lol: :lol: Yeah, that's EXACTLY what women are known for, being able to shut off their emotions :lol:
 
A Student Publication at Harvard Echoed Hitler. Now It Has Been Suspended.

The Harvard Salient, a conservative outlet, used a phrase that was similar to a speech given by Hitler. Its independent board paused its operations over material it called “reprehensible, abusive and demeaning.”
The board of a conservative magazine at Harvard known for its muckraking suspended the publication on Sunday, citing the printing of “reprehensible, abusive and demeaning material.”

The magazine, The Harvard Salient, which was founded during the Reagan era and revived four years ago after a decade-long absence, is editorially and financially independent from the university.

The statement from the board, which is made up of conservative alumni, did not provide any detail about what incident prompted the review, but the publication had recently been embroiled in a controversy over an article that included a line similar to one in a Hitler speech.

The article, written by David F.X. Army, a Harvard student, in the magazine’s September edition, included the line, “Germany belongs to the Germans, France to the French, Britain to the British, America to the Americans.” The article argued that Europe’s native populations were being displaced by migration from Africa and Asia.

In a January 1939 speech that Hitler delivered to the Reichstag, in which he predicted that another world war would lead to the annihilation of Jews in Europe, he said, “France to the French, England to the English, America to the Americans, and Germany to the Germans.”

In a separate article in The Harvard Salient, Richard Y. Rodgers, the magazine’s editor, said the similarity to the Hitler line was not intentional. He wrote that “neither the author nor the editors had recognized the resemblance and that the phrase long predates the Third Reich.”

The Salient article by Mr. Army also argued for values rooted in “blood, soil, language, and love of one’s own.”

“Blood and soil” was a nationalist phrase used extensively by the Nazis.

In a statement to The New York Times late Monday, Mr. Rodgers said that the decision blindsided the magazine’s leadership and came after an unauthorized board meeting, a situation he described as “a mutiny.”

“While I understand that some board members may have acted out of a sense of self-preservation,” he wrote, “their actions have effectively brought The Harvard Salient as we have known it to an end.”

Some on campus criticized the article and the university’s hands-off response, which they described as apathetic. The university declined to comment, referring the matter to the magazine’s board, which made the decision to suspend the publication.

Harvard has been under scrutiny over how it has responded to controversial speech. Republicans in Washington and others have pushed it to be more open to conservative voices, but also to limit speech seen as antisemitic.

“To be clear: Harvard should not censor The Salient,” Adam N. Chiocco, an opinion writer for The Harvard Crimson, wrote this month. “If the university started halting the publication of campus outlets, I worry where they would stop. But it is also obvious that any use of Nazi rhetoric is absolutely reprehensible.”

Amid pressure from alumni, donors and lawmakers who say that Harvard has become a bastion of liberalism, the university has tried to make the case that it is friendly to conservative voices. It embraced a version of institutional neutrality, which says that university leaders should avoid weighing in on social and political matters.

And when The Harvard Salient complained about its access to campus, the university announced in February that it would reinstall boxes on dormitory doors, making distribution of the print edition easier. The move was announced around the time that the university was making a number of moves that some professors and students said were intended to placate the new Trump administration.

One board member, the conservative author Naomi Schaefer Riley, celebrated the change this year that made distribution of the paper easier, saying, “The university is embracing the free exchange of ideas.”

The board now appears to be saying that some opinions go too far, even in a conservative magazine.

The board’s statement on Sunday did not offer details about precisely which material prompted the review. It said recent articles included material that was “wholly inimical to the conservative principles for which the magazine stands.”

The Salient describes its mission as defending “the university’s legacy of free inquiry, rigorous scholarship, and fearless debate — values now imperiled by the rise of ideological conformity on campus and in the broader culture.”

The statement on Sunday also raised concerns about behavior. “The board has also received deeply disturbing and credible complaints about the broader culture of the organization,” it said without elaborating.

Ms. Schaefer Riley declined to comment for this article. Alex Acosta, The Harvard Salient’s board chair and a labor secretary for Mr. Trump during his first term, could not be reached for comment.
 

A decade ago, the University of Washington (U.W.) adopted an official statement that "acknowledges the Coast Salish peoples of this land, the land which touches the shared waters of all tribes and bands within the Suquamish, Tulalip and Muckleshoot nations." Four years later, the Seattle university's Paul G. Allen School of Computer Science and Engineering began recommending that instructors include that statement in their syllabi.

Stuart Reges, a critic of such "land acknowledgments" who had taught an introductory computer science course, CSE 143, in that school since 2004, responded with a syllabus statement mocking the concept: "I acknowledge that by the labor theory of property the Coast Salish people can claim historical ownership of almost none of the land currently occupied by the University of Washington." That parody resulted in an internal investigation, a reprimand, and threats of disciplinary action. Those responses violated the professor's First Amendment rights, a divided three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit ruled last Friday in Reges v. Cauce.
 
But it is. Sure they integrated many aspects of pagan celebration of the winter solstice and yeah, it was done either to eradicate paganism or maybe to make the transition more palatable (I'd lean toward the former) and of course we know Jesus wasn't born on December 25th or even in the winter for that matter.......but "Christmas" has been celebrated for 1,700 years.....I think that's enough time to say that Christians own Christmas.
 
What harm are a few hippies I bet they said in 1969. Look at it
The article of the father of 6 with sole custody who is being deported after 34 years of residency......Of course the libs are saying he committed no crime. 34 years and you don't learn english or take the steps to become a citizen? One woman said we should embrace them because of empathy and common sense. Of course I had a hell of a reply for her, but I started with the Kirk spiel about empathy being a stupid fucking word. A white woman born in America can't possible empathize with him, it's literally impossible, and she clearly doesn't know what the fucking word means. And common sense? Common sense is to learn fucking english and try to assimilate at some point in the 34 fucking years he's illegally been here. Common sense was to not spit out 6 fucking kids while he was here illegaly. On and on.

I decide to look at her profile. A fucking old ass white woman. It's so infurirating, you know she was a useless fucking hippie. Liberals on FB always spouting emapthy and blah blah generally break down like this: 50% old white woman, 30% young brainwashed women, a decent % of whom are hispanic and also includes some men pretending to be dudes, 10% men, a mix of hippies and young guys who probably take it in the ass and 10% foreigners who aren't even in America. I'm ignoring the bots in this.
 
Empathy is highly selective with these people. They need a hobby. My bff is in a band with a bunch of old hippies and they just play boomer music, none of them are this cray .

Btw Imma be in jail soon if my states new commissar discovers my x feed



Tho I’m still a registered dem so that should help
 
It’s stunning serious people (Forbes!) take this person seriously and can’t see its fucking nonsensical grift.
 
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