In the context of sharing his ignorance, Biden bragged about his May 2022 executive order on police reform penned in the wake of Congress’s failed George Floyd Justice in Policing Act. The executive order “bans chokeholds and greatly restricts no-knock warrants,” as well as “creates a national database for officer misconduct and tightens the use-of-force policies to emphasize deescalation.”
Not bad suggestions. Of course, the devil is in the details. You will remember during the 2020 presidential campaign Biden telling an audience at Bethel AME Church in Wilmington, Delaware, “Instead of standing there and teaching a cop when there’s an unarmed person coming at them with a knife or something, shoot them in the leg instead of in the heart.”
Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden bows his head in prayer during a visit to Bethel AME Church in Wilmington, Delaware, June 1, 2020.
If a police officer draws his weapon and shoot somebody, then he means to stop an imminent threat to life or limb. Shooting a man in the leg may not end the threat. So if a man does not want a cop to use deadly force against him, then he shouldn’t put the cop in a position where he has to. Cops don’t want to kill people. But it’s a tough gig and sometimes they have to.
Tragically, there are people who create situations where cops must use deadly force for their personal safety or the safety of others. The suspect may be taking his chances knowing that if apprehended he may wind up in prison. Some men will not be taken alive. Others are suicide by cop. Either they’re too cowardly to do the deed or they’re seeking martyrdom. In all these cases, the police officer, like anybody else, has the right to self defense, and if the threat is serious enough, self defense may require deadly force. Cops risk their lives all the time to save the lives of innocents. Cops shouldn’t have to risk their lives on account of those who mean them serious harm.
The story reports: “Police reportedly killed 1,185 people in 2022, according to a data analysis by Mapping Police Violence. Less than 10% of the cases where an individual was killed by police involved an unarmed subject, according to the group.” Statistics I see find a smaller percentage than that (less than 5 percent). But it’s sort of beside the point. An unarmed man can be a serious threat to life and limb. Failing to neutralize a threat can lead to the assailant lifting from the officer his Taser or his gun. These things have happened. When a person is attacking you, you cannot always determine whether he is armed. Most of the time, the determination is made after the fact. A rational person presumes the person attacking him means to hurt him and may be—and almost always is—armed with a knife or a gun.
“I have a dream that my four little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their character.” — Martin Luther King, Jr.
Last year tomorrow, the Los Angeles Times published an op-ed, “King was a critical race theorist before there was a name for it,” by Kimberlee Crenshaw, an originator of the notion of “intersectionality.” I don’t like to speak for dead men, but I can say with confidence that King not only would have rejected the methods of Antifa and Black Lives Matter, but he would have rejected the theory upon which their actions are rationalized, namely critical race theory (CRT).
Black American civil rights leader Martin Luther King (1929 – 1968) addresses crowds during the March On Washington at the Lincoln Memorial, Washington DC, where he gave his ‘I Have A Dream’ speech.
I say this because King understood riots and rebellions even if he disagreed with violent action. But, while there was an explanation for blacks taking up violent action in the 1950s and 1960s, that explanation is no longer viable.
Except for affirmative action and other reparations programs and projects, except for the custodial state overseen by progressives, these enabled by black collaboration, there is no systemic racism in America. But for progressives, we’d have arrived or had in plain sight by now the colorblind society of King’s dream. Problems remain because elites still find useful the tactic of racial divisioning to maintain class power and to cover for the transnationalist project.
In his celebrated “I Have a Dream” speech, delivered on August 28, 1963, on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial, King asked when the “devotees of civil rights” will be satisfied? He then articulated a list of problems.
“We can never be satisfied as long as the Negro is the victim of the unspeakable horrors of police brutality.” As the scientific research makes clear, an extensive period of reform mobilized by the civil rights agenda finds that the criminal justice system, yes, including the police, hasn’t been racist for decades.
“We can never be satisfied as long as our bodies, heavy with the fatigue of travel, cannot gain lodging in the motels of the highways and the hotels of the cities,” said King. “We can never be satisfied as long as our children are stripped of their selfhood and robbed of their dignity by signs stating: ‘for whites only’.”
The 1964 Civil Rights Act ended racial segregation everywhere. Today, blacks are served in all places of public accommodation. The offensive signs were taking down long ago. White privilege was erased. Racism against blacks made illegal.
King told the throng gathered in Washington, “We cannot be satisfied as long as a Negro in Mississippi cannot vote and a Negro in New York believes he has nothing for which to vote.” The Voting Rights Act of 1965 was a landmark piece of federal legislation in the United States that prohibits racial discrimination in voting. Today, blacks in Mississippi can go the polls and vote. This is true everywhere.
The problem of blacks having nothing to vote for remains. This is a problem for ordinary whites, as well. For blacks, this problem is rooted in the fact that progressives are determined to keep America from realizing King’s dream—and they confuse and mobilize discontented youth to this end. Our youth are taught that the racial politics of woke progressivism is the extension of King’s teachings. This is a lie.
What King understood as the core problems facing all of humanity regardless of race—capitalism, imperialism, and militarism—remain unaddressed. More than this, progressives rationalize the corporate state agenda using the rhetoric of social justice. Put another way, they advance the agenda because it perpetuates the positions they manufacture for self-aggrandizement and enrichment. Where racial inequality and injustice remain, it is the work of progressives.
In King’s list was this item: “We cannot be satisfied as long as the Negro’s basic mobility is from a smaller ghetto to a larger one.” As Brown University economist Glenn Lowry told his audience in conversation with Columbia linguist John McWhorter just last year, it is progressives who have ruined American cities and kept blacks in their ghettos. It is capitalist globalization and social welfare programs, designed and pushed by progressives, that have idled black workers and undermined the black family. Blacks are limited by a custodial state apparatus constructed and defended by the very people who claim to care about the interests of black people—the same political party that served the interests of the slavocracy in the nineteenth century.
I prefer the social justice warriors who reject King’s legacy and method to those who repurpose his rhetoric. At least they’re honest. They’re still wrong, of course. Worse, their ideology, wrapped in Orwellian inversions, is itself racist and regressive. And they have corporate state power and the professional-managerial class in back of them.
This not a movement but a counter movement—and it’s left wing in neither the classical liberal nor socialist sense. The modern American conservative has a more profound grasp of King’s goals and method than does the progressive. At least they identify with King’s goals and method.
Martin Luther King, Jr., declared in his great speech that “we will not be satisfied until justice rolls down like waters, and righteousness like a mighty stream.” This won’t occur until progressivism is dislodged from our institutions and the nation returns to the American Creed that animated King’s vision of a colorblind society.
How do I know this? Because King, standing before the memorial statue of Lincoln, facing the Washington Monument, reminded us of Jefferson’s words in booming tones. “So even though we face the difficulties of today and tomorrow, I still have a dream. It is a dream deeply rooted in the American dream. I have a dream that one day this nation will rise up and live out the true meaning of its creed: ‘We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal’.”
Born in the early-1960s South and raised by civil rights and antiwar activists, Andrew Austin has pursued the study of race and ethnic relations his entire life, cumulating in a PhD focused on the question of racial justice, with a focus on the criminal justice system, and a tenured university position where he teaches and researches the problem of racism in American history. See, for example, his essay, “Explanation and Responsibility: Agency and Motive in Lynching and Genocide,” published in the Journal of Black Studies.
Prior administrations have had Presidential Records Act violations. Past presidents have had to return items they took with them after leaving the White House. There are a great number of documents generated and acquired during a presidency and sometimes presidents leave with or have shipped to them some of these.
I hasten to qualify the first sentence in the above paragraph. There are no criminal penalties attached to the Presidential Records Act. Therefore, “violation” may be too strong a word. It is more accurate to say that the Presidential Records Act is guidance for presidents to follow to make sure the national archivist possesses in the end of all public records generated by the president during his term in office. I should also note that there is Vice-Presidential Records Act. The vice-president has to follow the rules of everybody else who is not the president.
It’s important to recognize that problem here is not that presidents can’t keep records after their presidency. The law requires that each administration preserve presidential records so that a complete set of presidential records can be transferred to the National Archives at the end of the administration. A complete record of documents generated during a presidency is regarded as vital to the history of the republic.
Under the US Constitution, the president as commander in chief is given broad powers to classify and declassify information. Where the president does not have unilateral authority to declassify is in statute, e.g., information related to nuclear weapons is handled separately according to terms set forth in the Atomic Energy Act. Declassifying these secrets requires consultation with executive branch agencies.
When President Trump was president, his residences were modified and secured. For example, as president, Trump spent a lot of time at Mar-a-Lago, his Palm Beach estate. Considered one of the most secure buildings in Palm Beach, Mar-a-Lago was already built like a fortress. It was designed in the 1920s to withstand hurricanes (which it has without suffering any structural damage). Trump continues to enjoy Secret Service protection. The agency safe-proofed his house.
The SCIF at Mar-a-Lago where Trump viewed classified documents
The term “SCIF,” which I suspect a great many Americans are just learning about, is an acronym for “sensitive compartmented information facility.” There is a SCIF in the basement of Mar-a-Lago. Trump viewed classified documents there throughout his presidency. At other times they were kept in a safe.
The image shared publicly by DOJ showing redacted documents spread out on the carpeted floor of Mar-a-Lago, some with cover pages reading “Secret” on them are displayed in identical fashion to staged photos by the FBI and associates, e.g., the Fred Hampton assassination, as well as by the CIA, e.g., in the toppling of President Árbenz of Guatemala.
Classified document strew on the floor of a room at Mar-a-Lago during the FBI raid of the Trump’s residence and photographed by an agent.
The CIA-assisted coup in Guatemala involving public relations man Edward Bernays is instructive. Bernays, who had argued in his 1928 book, Propaganda, that the “manipulation of the organized habits and opinions of the masses is an important element in democratic society,” not only advised United Fruit President Sam Zemurray and the company’s publicity director Ed Whitman (the husband of Eisenhower’s personal secretary, Ann Whitman) on how to prepare the American public to view intervention in Guatemala as necessary and good, played a direct role in production of a photograph in which documents were arranged such to support the CIA’s claims that Árbenz was a communist.
Biden backing his Corvette into the garage of his Wilmington residence with boxes of classified documents clearly visible.
The Trump situation is very different from the Joe Biden situation. Biden was vice-president under Obama during the period these documents were removed. Some of the documents in his possession are marked top-secret compartmented, the highest-level of secrecy. He would only have been able to view these documents in a SCIF and under observation. A box of classified documents was found next to a Corvette in his garage. Biden’s garage is a not SCIF. It is not a secure location for highly classified documents.
The Biden family has had these top secret compartmented documents for at least six years. He has stashed these documents in multiple locations. How were these documents obtained? Documents like this have strict chain-of-custody. Nobody is going to allow a Vice-President or an aid to just leave with them without checking them out and checking them back in. Who obtained them? How many times were they moved after Biden came to possess them? Who moved them and when? Who has viewed them and where? Were copies made of these documents? If so, where are they? Do the attorneys reviewing these documents have the proper security clearance to do so? Why did the Executive wait until after the midterm elections to tell citizens that Biden was in possession of stolen documents when they knew this several days before the election? Did the FBI raid Biden’s offices and residence to look for these documents? If so, when? Which locations. If not, why not?
Why did Biden or his associates take these documents. Is there information in those documents that makes them useful to his family’s ambitions? Was there anything in those documents that implicates Biden or his associates in crimes? Did he shred any documents? Did he copy any documents? Shouldn’t the DOJ raid his offices and residences to find other documents. More keep showing up (another batch yesterday). Are Biden’s lawyers going through the documents and returning only those that don’t implicate the president in crimes or expose motivations behind his actions as president (for example the Ukraine war)? Shouldn’t law enforcement do this now to prevent the hiding and shredding of other documents? These are crime scenes. These are crimes that go the heart of national security. Biden has endangered America. You don’t allow somebody who is implicated in felonies to decide how, when, and what to return to the authorities. These are crimes Biden committed before he was president.
I will be interested to know how and why Biden removed them from their secure location to his offices at the Penn Biden Center and one of his residences and all the rest of it. But since they are stolen documents, how and why he made off with him is rather beside the point. Possession of stolen classified documents is a crime independent of motive. Biden’s attempt to excuse his actions as “inadvertent” won’t work, either. You don’t get to break the law and then claim you didn’t mean to.
But speaking of motive. Guess who shared the Wilmington, Delaware residence with Joe Biden?
Do you remember the beheading of Samuel Paty in France in October 2020? Paty was a French school teacher. A Muslim murdered him for showing cartoons in a class of free speech and expression. Search Google for details. It is a terrifying story. The Muslim intended to send a message to the West: you will affirm our religion by following its rules.
Free speech and expression, part of France’s principle of state secularism, or laïcité, is central to France’s national identity. Laïcité demands that public spaces—whether classrooms, government agencies, or workplaces—should be secular places. According to the principle, to restrict freedom of expression to protect the feelings of any particular community would undermine the national unity central to the perpetuation of the republic.
A few weeks ago, the United States had its own incident. Fortunately, the teacher wasn’t beheaded. Erika López Prater was fired. That’s bad enough. The same end was reached. A message was delivered. There is a difference. The perpetrators are facing no punishment for the deed.
“I’m 23 years old. I have never once seen an image of the Prophet,” said Aram Wedatalla fighting back tears during a press conference held Wednesday at the Minneapolis headquarters of the Council on American Islamic Relations (CAIR-MN).
Well, now she has. And it cannot be unseen.
“CAIR-MN executive director Jaylani Hussein said most Muslims around the world oppose the public display of images of the Prophet Muhammad. To show the image of the Prophet, said Hussein, is deeply offensive. And he called that violation of the prohibition an act of Islamophobia,” reports MPR News in the article “Hamline student, former instructor at center of debate over religion, academic freedom speak out.”
Executive director Jaylani Hussein of the Minnesota chapter of the Council on Islamic-American Relations.
This is an organized action. This is another moment in the ideological colonization of a national culture—here striking at the institutional foundation of the pursuit of truth, the American university. This is a moment in the attempted delegitimization of the foundation of the United States—the principles of religious liberty and free expression.
If this were a naive and brainwashed student, a shallow human being who did not understand the core values of the country in which she is living, perhaps that’d be one thing. There is a way to help her and she was potentially in the right place (unfortunately we can see that she is not). No, what we have here is the executive direction of CAIR-MN calling a depiction of Muhammad an instantiation of “Islamophobia.”
“Islamophobia” is a propaganda word Islamist activists plagiarized from the gay and lesbian movement. “Homophobia” refers to pathological fear, loathing, or hatred of homosexuals, so the Islamists fashioned a term like it in order to smear critics of Islam—and virtually all that is not Islam—bigotry.
However, Islam is an ideology. Ideologies concern what people believe. I was no more destined to identify as a Muslim than I was a Christian, only more likely to identify as the latter because of my upbringing. As it turns out, I identify as neither. I don’t believe in Christianity, therefore I am not a Christian. It follows that, in a free society, I do not have to follow the rules of Christianity. That’s not the way homosexuality works at all. Homosexual is who the person is, not what he believes. Same with being heterosexual. I can’t help it that I am attracted to women. It wasn’t a choice I made. I just am. That’s not ideology. Islamophobia is a nonsensical concept.
“I do not see it as Islamophobic,” said Amna Khalid, a history professor at Carleton College (in Northfield, Minnesota) whose opinion piece about the controversy was published in The Chronicle of Higher Education. “Islamophobic is about malintent towards Muslims, or something that is symbolic to Muslims. There is no malintent here.” Leaving aside that Islamophobia isn’t really a thing (again, it confuses ideology with people), the Islamist Hussein said it doesn’t matter that the instructor warned students before she showed the image. “In reality a trigger warning is an indication that you are going to do harm.”
My first reaction takes the form of a suggestion: If, in reality, a trigger warning is an indication that you are going to do harm, then let’s get rid of trigger warnings. But what harm does showing a depiction of Muhammad cause? A person is harmed because she is offended? Really? It’s even more ridiculous than that. An offense is caused by the person who takes it. That’s why call it “taking offense.” To “take offense” is to become angry or upset by something that another person has said or done. There is nothing inherent in a painting or a word that makes it offensive. You don’t like the word. It has made you angry or upset. Get over it.
But is it really about not liking a word or a picture? Don’t most people take offense—and claim oppression and all the rest of it—to control other people? I think so. It’s a power trip. It’s something like a cluster B personality disorder. You know, narcissism and those traits. Making somebody do something they otherwise wouldn’t gives the person taking offense feelings of control. “How dare you.” As if they’re so special others wouldn’t dare. As if others are beneath them. See, if a person can make another person kneel before her delusions, whether by coercion or force, then she has power over them.
Aram Wedatalla
That Wedatalla weeps at her press conference doesn’t make her any action any less vile. Emotional blackmail only compounds her offense.
Stand back and take note, people: Contemporary America is experiencing this type of personality more than ever, this character that demands others uphold their doctrine and affirm their delusions. “You will call me what I tell you to call me.” You will obey the rules of my religion.” Or what? You will be fired. Maybe killed. (Paty is not the only one. See Threat-Minimization and Ecumenical Demobilization.) It will not do anymore to humor these people, to smile and be polite to them. It’s beyond the time to be obnoxious about free speech and religious liberty.
“This course will introduce students to several religious traditions and the visual cultures they have produced historically,” reads a copy of Lopez Prater’s syllabus. “This includes showing and discussing both representational and non-representational depictions of holy figures (for example, the Prophet Muhammad, Jesus Christ, and the Buddha). If you have any questions or concerns about either missing class for a religious observance or the visual content that will be presented, please do not hesitate to contact me.”
No student contacted her with concerns. What more can she do? She can not present materials Muslims don’t like.
“You can’t erase history and I think it is actually important that we teach and demonstrate the internal diversity within the history of Islam which is a very, in my opinion, underrepresented and misunderstood religion,” she explained. She told MPR that the administration never reached out to her to discuss her side. Instead, they sent out a campus-wide email calling her actions Islamophobic.
The university in question is Hamline University. It’s located in St. Paul, Minnesota. That’s right next door to the 5th District, encompassing Minneapolis, represented in Congress by Ilhan Omar (I wonder whose side she’s on).
Taking up Jaylani Hussein’s angle, Wedatalla said, whether intended or not, the classroom display caused her pain. It hurt her. “It just breaks my heart that I have to stand here to tell people that something is Islamophobic and something actually hurts all of us, not only me,” she said.
But it’s not something that hurts “all of us” because there is no collective you. You are an individual. You don’t speak for others—even those who share your faith. To be sure, there are some Muslims who believe like you can hold other individuals accountable to your faith, to make them abide by the rules of a religion that is not there. They even resort to violence to impose their religious rules on others. You have the arrogance to presume to speak for other Muslims. You’re ego-tripping. Who appointed you head commissar of the Islamic faith?
Among men (and women, perhaps to a lesser degree, but maybe not), there is a felt need for positioning in the hierarchy. You can see it in the jockeying for status in the pecking order, formal and informal. Hierarchies, when they are not pre-established, usually work themselves out in what appears to be a natural way, even if the antecedents and consequents are phases of social structuring. Most of the process is subconscious. However, using our sociological imagination, we can see it at work.
From Elizabeth Tibbetts et al, “The Establishment and Maintenance of Dominance Hierarchies,” Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society.
Some individuals feel the pressure of the game and resist it. Why? Different reasons. Some march to their own drummer. Some are stubborn individualists. (Perhaps those are the same thing. Remember being told that the opposite of courage is not cowardice but conformity?) Others are scared to belong. They may feel inadequate. They may be shy. Whatever the motivation, the resisters find themselves outside the structure to varying degrees and may—in commensurate degrees—experience hostility, even loathing towards them. And they may return the favor. These dynamics underpin bullying and other life difficulties.
One mark of being outside the structure is whether one is allowed attitudes or to make observations that risk being characterized as arrogance or egoism. Those at the top of the structure are permitted self-assuredness and self-promotion even when these approach clinical narcissism. This is because such persons have been successful at hierarchy. Indeed, boasting and bragging are part of success in hierarchies, often with some disclaimer about false modesty. But not all of it. A lot of factors go into the ordering of dominance hierarchies, including probably body chemistry and animal instinct. Humans are after all mammals.
Those on the lower rungs of the hierarchy cower and demur in intensities reflecting their relative positions. Sometimes a subordinate might challenge someone over him, but those who keep their superior position do so by putting the subaltern in his place. Often jest and unctuousness are deployed to manage the tensions in all of this. There is a reward, of course: by being obsequious, one is never alone. The sycophant might even receive strokes of his own, if he is a good dog.
For those outside the structure, self-confidence and self-praise are treated as intolerable instantiations of conceit and hubris. Outsider status is conflated with a special designation of subordination, somebody who can be ignored and minimized—who can be talked over or asked to make an extra effort to be believed (and then disbelieved all the same). This is one of the aspects of human social organization that is so rough on people, as there is a basic human need to belong. I have always had a place in my life for people who are marginalized in this way. I call it the “Island of Misfit Toys.” Indeed, as a contrarian, I have often counted myself among those banished to this island.
For the established hierarchies in which one must participate for survival, for example corporate bureaucracies, there are mechanisms for compelling those who occupy its positions to serve the interests of those above them. These are preferably endogenously-felt compulsions to achieve, often according to some arbitrary standard. For example the Protestant ethic (aka the Calvinist work ethic, aka the Puritan work ethic), a work ethic emphasizing efficiency, predictability (conformity and uniformity), and control all wrapped in self-discipline and determined by calculable metrics. Those over others want to have some rational account of their efforts in order to hold them to the arbitrary standard. Otherwise, it all looks subjective (which it is).
In the university, for example, the tenured professor, a professional position that ought to see the man who has achieved that title (often at the expense of his family and his personal health) determine his own work on his own time, is instead subject to the administrator’s desire to look good in order to aid the latter’s climb up the hierarchy. The administrator seeks credit for the grants brought in (emphasizing their dollar amounts), the number of articles published in peer-reviewed academic journals, and the rankings, and therefore the prestige, of those journals. The administrators are not concerned so much with the numbers of those who actually read those publications (they don’t read them themselves), but they are impressed by the number of times they are cited by those who often don’t read them. They tend not to be concerned with the quality of the scholarship unless (they are told that) the content deviates from doctrine or has offended some busybody somewhere. To be sure, gatekeepers are rather good at keeping out the work of heretics, but every once in a while something blunt gets through.
This is the way it works: the honorific titles that come with advancement in the formal hierarchy of the academy depend on spending more than a year getting papers past gatekeepers and juries, with all their biases at the ready, to be read by two or three other academics. If one is lucky. That the content doesn’t really matter is revealed by a cursory review of the quality of scholarship; much of it is crackpot challenges to the normal or pages full of empirical trivialities confirming the intuitive. Those who avoid all this, if they have tenure, are shamed as deadwood. If they don’t have tenure, their contracts aren’t renewed.
It hasn’t always been this way. An article in the Guardian a few years back noted that Peter Higgs would not find his boson in the “publish or perish” culture of today’s academy. Jim Al-Khalili writes that “in today’s climate of harsh realities and impact-obsessed purse-string holders, Higgs would have been unlikely to receive any funding to conduct his research—for he was something of a maverick who worked alone in an unfashionable area of speculative theoretical physics. While lip service is still paid to the importance of funding basic research that does not have any obvious or immediate application in industry or societal benefits, Higgs would struggle to hang on to his academic post today. You might think that someone like him really need publish only one or two papers of (eventually vindicated) Nobel-worthy research over his entire career, but in today’s ‘publish or perish’ climate, that would simply not cut it.”
Higgs himself believes no university would employ him in today’s academy because he would not be considered “productive” enough. According to another Guardianarticle, “The emeritus professor at Edinburgh University, who says he has never sent an email, browsed the internet or even made a mobile phone call, published fewer than 10 papers after his groundbreaking work, which identified the mechanism by which subatomic material acquires mass, was published in 1964.” He said: “It’s difficult to imagine how I would ever have enough peace and quiet in the present sort of climate to do what I did in 1964.” He told the Guardian that he would almost certainly have been sacked had he not been nominated for the Nobel in 1980. Higgs said he became “an embarrassment to the department when they did research assessment exercises.” A message would go around the department saying: “Please give a list of your recent publications.” Higgs said: “I would send back a statement: ‘None.’”
By the time Higgs retired in 1996, the new academic culture troubled him. “After I retired it was quite a long time before I went back to my department,” he said. “I thought I was well out of it. It wasn’t my way of doing things any more.” He then said this remarkable thing: “Today I wouldn’t get an academic job. It’s as simple as that. I don’t think I would be regarded as productive enough.” He’s right about that. And the implications of this observation should trouble all of us.
I was chair of my department for six years. My big accomplishment in that role (one of them anyway) was rebuilding the department, which had just gone through a name chance and the construction of a new curriculum (with which I had a lot to do), after a series of departures. We’re a small department and lost nearly all of our tenured faculty members to retirement and other institutions. I am telling you this because, even though I am no longer chair, I still receive Human Resources training notes and workshop invitations.
A common HR communication to appears in my inbox concerns dealing with the non-performing employee, how to document his lack of performance and what to do about it. As I am close to retirement and thus have entered the winding-down phase of my career, I think about myself as that non-performing employee. Not that I don’t teach my classes, read and write science, or serve the university and the greater community. However, after several years of publishing in books, journals, and encyclopedia, I have not secured a peer-reviewed publication in many years. And I only attend academic conferences here and there.
Another common HR communication concerns passive-aggressive behavior. We hear this term thrown around a lot and people get it wrong a lot. It is usually thought of as a habit or pattern of indirectly expressing negative feelings instead of openly addressing problems. Put another way, there is a disconnect between what the passive-aggressive person says and what he does. There’s something to that, but the Diagnostic Statistical Manual of the American Psychiatric Association (APA), the DSM, now in its fifth iteration, defines “passive-aggressive personality disorder” as a “pervasive pattern of negativistic attitudes and passive resistance to the demands for adequate performance in social and occupational situations.”
Among the usages of the word “soldiering” is the act of making a show of working in order to escape discipline or punishment. The worker only works at the expected levels when he is under the gaze of the manager or owner. Otherwise, he does enough to get by and earn his wage. Many workers justify soldiering by recognizing that expectations have in back of them the imperative to maximize the surplus value that will (hopefully) be translated to profit in the market. In other words, the worker does for others and not himself. Given this really, why should a worker work harder than he needs to? The answer: because he may lose his job if he doesn’t and he will certainly be scolded or shamed for being a “non-performing employee.” It is in this dynamic that the worker may develop and exhibit the demeanor that the APA will psychiatricize to avoid harsh-sounding terms like “deadwood” and “soldiering.”
UPDATE November 17, 2023: We’re hearing that special counsel Robert Hur is not expected to bring charges related to the mishandling of classified documents at sites linked to President Joe Biden. Instead, Hur and his team are in the process of crafting an extensive report based on their year-long investigation. The report is anticipated to be critical of Biden and his staff’s handling of sensitive materials, providing a thorough account of the special counsel’s findings. While the investigators have expressed their goal of completing the report by the year’s end to other Justice Department officials, there is a possibility of the timeline being subject to change. In anticipation of the obvious, that there is a double standard at play, as Trump is being prosecuted for his handing of classified documents, CNN and other mainstream news outlets are already spinning the news. I have shown that the Biden case is much more egregious. See Is There an Equivalency Between Biden and Trump’s Handling of Classified Documents?
UPDATE: A special counsel has been appointed in the Biden case, Robert Hur. Hur clerked for Chief Justice William Rehnquist of the Supreme Court and (Reagan appointee) Judge Alex Kozinski of the US Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit. From 2007 to 2014, he served as an Assistant US Attorney in the District of Maryland, where he prosecuted, among other things, white-collar crimes. This is promising. There is some concerned that he previously served as special assistant and counsel to Christopher Wray when the latter was Assistant Attorney General in charge of the Justice Department’s Criminal Division, but we will put that to the side for now. He seems like a serious guy. But I do not trust Merrick Garland at all.
We have finally learned that the other set of classified documents were found in Biden’s garage. And yet another classified document was found at a Biden’s residence. And this disturbing connections is starting to make the rounds: Hunter Biden asked for four extra sets of keys for his House of Sweden office in Georgetown. Among those keys, one for his father, one for his uncle, James, one for Jill Biden, and another for Chinese businessman Ye Jianming. He never picked up the keys because Swedish officials regarded Hunter as a security risk after he smuggled a young woman and a homeless friend into the Swedish embassy building in Washington DC. This was reported in the Swedish press in February 2021. Does Hunter Biden have any classified documents?
Who is Ye Jianming? He’s the founder and former chairman of CEFC China Energy Company Limited, a global energy and finance conglomerate that was placed under detention in China on charges of bribery in March 2018. He was a close associate of the Bidens, and an economic advisor to the Czech President Miloš Zeman. The US Justice Department has accused CEFC of offering bribes for oil rights and money laundering. Ye was detained and put under investigation in March 2018 on suspicion of economic crimes, and control of CEFC China Energy was subsequently taken over by Shanghai Guosheng Group. Prosecutors have also alleged that former Communist Party Secretary of Gansu province, Wang Sanyun, accepted bribes from Ye in 2011.
We know from Hunter Biden’s laptop that Biden not only used his father’s influence to enrich himself, and in extension also Joe Biden, but that Joe and his brother James are the ring leaders of the Biden crime family. They were in business with various Ukrainian and Chinese enterprises. Remember this bit of braggadocio?
Joe Biden bragging about withholding military aid to coerce the Ukraine to fire a prosecutor looking into foreign corruption, January 23, 2018
* * *
The Wall Street Journal runs a story about classified documents in Biden’s possession—top secret and compartmented no less, some from the time period (2013-2016) the Washington organized a color revolution to overthrow the Ukrainian government in order to establish a forward area post in the proxy war against Russia—with a picture of Trump on it.
Corporate state propagandists are downplaying the story, claiming that President Trump, who, unlike a Vice-President, actually has the power to declassify documents, committed the more egregious act in his removing classified documents to his estate at Mar-a-Lago, Florida.
However, Biden took compartmented top secret documents from their controlled space and stored them at the Penn Biden Center, Biden’s offices at the University of Pennsylvania. These are felonies of the most serious kind. Leaving with classified documents is a felony. Storing classified documents in an uncontrolled space is a felony. Moving classified documents is a felony.
To view compartmented top secret documents one has to enter what’s called a SCIF, the name the security state gives a secure room. SCIF stands for sensitive compartmented information facility. You have to enter the room under observation, and leave your phone and other electronic devices with the guards. Did Biden or an associate with his level security clearance sneak these documents from the SCIF? If not, how did Biden get his hands on them? He wasn’t the President. Obama was the President.
The admitted fact that the Vice-President removed the highest-level classified documents to the offices of Penn Biden Center without the authority is even more troubling given other facts. As we know from Hunter Biden’s laptop, Joe Biden is a corrupt and compromised figure, having made deals with several foreign governments and powerful associated private entities, including corporations tied to the Chinese Communist Party. It is no secret that Biden and China’s leader Xi Jinping have been close associates for many years.
So it might not surprise you to learn that the Penn Biden Center is bankrolled by the Chinese Communist Party. This corrupt and compromised politician illegally removed and kept top secret compartmented documents in a facility financed by the only foreign nation in the world that represents an existential threat to the United States of America.
Biden has turned on the legalese: “My lawyers have not suggested I ask what documents they were.” He knows what documents they were. His denials are lies.
The New York Post ran with a story by Isabel Vincent with this headline yesterday after the second batch of classified documents found at the Penn Biden Center: “Penn Biden Center where classified papers were found is a ‘dark money nightmare.'” From the same newspaper that brought you the Hunted Biden Laptop story. This is what happens when you keep pulling at a thread: the cloak unravels.
It has been revealed that the legal team for Joe Biden disclosed the existence of the first batch of documents several days before the 2022 midterm elections. Would this have affected the outcome of the election in which Republicans narrowly regained the House of Representatives?
Surveys indicate that a majority of Americans believe that the FBI and intelligence community deliberately kept the public in the dark by discouraging social media platforms from sharing information about the Hunter Biden laptop, which they labeled as “disinformation” from foreign sources. Many respondents believe that any potential collusion between high-ranking Democrats, the FBI, intelligence officials, and the Biden campaign to keep the story under wraps would have limited voters’ access to crucial information ahead of the election.
Furthermore, surveys reveal that a significant number of respondents believe they would have made a different voting decision if they had known that the information regarding Hunter Biden’s laptop was true. Both Republicans and Democrats appeared to have similar views on this question. A large majority of respondents believed that a truthful examination of the laptop issue could have influenced the outcome of the 2020 presidential election, in which Biden defeated Trump by a narrow margin.
Biden has said he wants to see the investigation of the removal and storage of compartmented top secret documents in an CCP-financed space wrapped up soon. It’s his appointed director of that agency, Merrick Garland, the man who has weaponized the DOJ against the opposition to the corporate state, who is in charge of the investigation. Did Biden just interfere with what is supposed to be independent investigation of his felonious conduct by communicating to Garland his desire that the investigation be concluded quickly while also saying he doesn’t know how the documents end up at the Penn Biden Center?
All this comes as House Republicans voted as a bloc on Tuesday to establish a panel that will investigate the alleged abuse of power by the executive branch of the Biden Administration, giving them the authority to investigate a range of government agencies. The panel will investigate the collection of information on US citizens, and whether the executive branch engaged in “illegal, improper, unconstitutional or unethical activities” against US citizens. The scope of the panel appears to be broad, allowing House Republicans to use their subpoena power to access details of ongoing investigations.
Tom Cole of Oklahoma, who introduced the resolution to establish the panel, argued that the federal government has “abused its authority and violated the civil liberties of American citizens.” He cited examples such as the government’s role in “suppressing information” on Twitter, and the Department of Homeland Security’s plans to create a disinformation governance board. As I reported on Tuesday, the panel will be headed by Jim Jordan, who served as one of Trump’s leading defenders during his impeachment trials. Jordan described the panel as a safeguard to Americans’ constitutional rights, stating that it is about the First Amendment (as we will see, it’s also about Fourth Amendment). On the agenda is Hunter Biden’s laptop. And, surely, Biden’s handling of classified documents.
Predictably, Democrats criticized the panel, calling it a “monstrosity” that will “further empower extremists” and allow Republicans to shut down ongoing investigations into their own alleged wrongdoings—the very weaponization of which Republicans mean to get to the bottom.
As a preview of coming attractions, Ilhan Omar (D-MN), Adam Schiff (D-CA), and Eric Swalwell (D-CA) will be stripped of their committee appointments. Swalwell will loose his security clearance. These three cannot be trusted. Schiff pushed the big lie that Trump was a Russian asset. Swalwell slept with a Chinese spy. Why Omar is in Congress is a testament to the pernicious effects of immigration. Congress needs to investigate Omar for probable violation of immigration law. If this is proven true, then at least remove her from office. But deportation would be preferable.
The select panel will operate underneath the Judiciary Committee, and will be chaired by Rep. Jim Jordan.
Politico and other news organizations are preparing the ground for administrative state rationalization of noncooperation with the Church Committee 2.0 by framing it as “safeguarding investigations.”
The is a barely disguised subterfuge. Don’t fall for it. There is a way to squeeze the agencies if they don’t cooperate: Congress controls the pursestrings (it’s called “fencing”). Withholding money from these agencies has in the past forced agencies to release documents and testify more forthrightly.
Church 2.0 is absolutely necessary if we are to stand any chance of saving the republic and restoring protection of the fundamental rights of citizens.
The character of the weaponization of the DOJ involves surveillance and harassment of enemies of the Administrative state, what goes by the name “counterintelligence.” Nobody is safe—not even mothers speaking against the crackpot theories of woke progressives at school board meetings.
This is what Church 1.0 back in the 1970s was all about: exposing the operations of the deep state. If you are unfamiliar with the Church Committee hearings, go look it up. Allow yourself to slide down the rabbit hole. It will blow your mind.
When progressives mock you for using the term “deep state” and call you a “conspiracy theorist” they hope you don’t go look at the congressional record documenting the existence of the deep state and the conspiracies it ran out of its offices.
It’s a fact: the FBI and CIA ran numerous counterintelligence programs for decades, perhaps most famously the interagency war against the Black Panthers and other radical political organizations. The FBI even organized in assassinations of American citizens.
We cannot say for sure that the FBI was directly responsible for the assassinations of Malcolm X and Martin Luther King, Jr., but we do know the agency was for the assassination of Fred Hampton, the false imprisonment of Geronimo Pratt, several KKK bombings and killings, and a myriad of other disturbing actions.
And we know that the FBI had a plan to neutralize Malcolm X, MLK, and other black leaders that at the very least set them up for assassination. We know this because we have the documents.
I suspect some of those who know about all of this are particularly concerned that you might learn that Frank Church who headed up the committee was a Democrat and wonder why there are no more Democrats like him.
Church’s personal journey saw him begin his political career as a progressive and a supporter of the Vietnam War. He was a protege of Lyndon Johnson. But the war and his experiences with the fourth branch of government radicalized him. He turned against the war and against the deep state.
With no more Frank Churches in the Democratic Party, it’s the populist Republicans who are taking up the cause of liberty and justice. In the end, the Democrats could not stop the populists from taking the People’s House. Finally we see some movement.
For those of us who remember Church 1.0 and Frank Church there is probably some sadness in seeing how far Democrats have sunk into the slime of the swamp. Today’s Democratic Party is the party of neoliberal globalism and they use the deep state to carry out their agenda.
You have a front row seat to living history. Please take advantage of the opportunity to learn about the real structure of power. With any luck, the awokened will meet the awakened and we can begin to dismantle the administrative state and restore the greatest republic the world has known.
A teacher at Hamline University in Saint Paul, Minnesota has been fired for showing a work of art depicting the founder of Islam (in conversation with the angel Gabriel). Journalist and essayist Douglas Murray shared the image on his Twitter feed:
An academic at Hamline University just got fired for showing this image to a class. Is that not strange in America in the 21st century? It is a classic of Persian art. pic.twitter.com/E9gyuhI4zl
That’s right, right here in the good old USA, with its First Amendment codifying the Enlightenment principles of religious and expressive liberty, at an institution of higher learning at the center of which lies the ethic of academic freedom, a teacher was fired from her job by sharing with students a classic of Persian art. (This article from ArtNet provides a detailed summary of the case.)
Islam prohibits graphic depictions of Muhammad. The practice is called aniconism. It is a general principle in Islamic aniconism that images of sentient beings is forbidden. This is an extension of the prohibition of idolatry found in ancient Judaism. Muslims have killed people for showing such depictions. Remember the mass murder of French cartoonists? In 2015, men raided the offices of the satirical weekly magazine Charlie Hebdo and killed a dozen people for publishing cartoons offensive to Muslims (Threat Minimization and Ecumenical Demobilization). It was the only time I ever featured the flag of another country on my Facebook profile.
Graphically depicting Muhammad if one is a Muslim may be a violation of religious faith (there is a disagreement over the nature and extent of aniconism in Islam, as the Quran is not explicit about this). But how does this limit the ability of a person who is not a Muslim to graphically depict Muhammad?
You may be a Christian (a lot of my readers are). If so, Islam is not your religion. Yet you are being told to live by the rules of a religion that is not only not your own but that denies key elements of your faith. While Muslims regard Jesus as a prophet in their tradition, they deny that he is the son of God. How can it be that you are required to obey the doctrine of a faith that denies your own?
This is a country with religious liberty. You have a right to your religion or to no religion at all. What about your rights? Muslims are going to come here and take away your rights? You’re going to let this happen? Hamline University president and shill for clerical fascism Fayneese Miller said that respect for Muslim students should supersede academic freedom. What makes Muslims any more special than members of any other religion—or no religion at all?
Hamline University president Fayneese Miller
Erika López Prater, the fired teacher, warned students on the syllabus that her class would contain images of holy figures, including Muhammad and the Buddha. Students were told they could contact her with any concerns about the course material. None of them did. Prater warned her students that a painting containing an image of Muhammad was going to be displayed a few minutes ahead of time, giving anyone who might be offended by such imagery an opportunity to leave the classroom. None of them did. All that amounts to consent.
Aram Wedatalla, the Muslim student who complained about the image.
Instead, senior Aram Wedatalla, a Muslim in Prater’s class and a member of the Muslim Student Association, complained about the image, said she was blindsided by the image. “I’m like, ‘This can’t be real’.”
Why should a teacher go to such lengths to accommodate those who hold not only ridiculous beliefs but beliefs that are used to subordinate women and medically alter gay males to look like women? Wouldn’t that be unreal? Are we going to avoid showing pictures of Nazi propaganda glorifying Hitler in class because there might be Nazis in the room (not that they would complain)?
President Miller acknowledged in her letter that “academic freedom is very important,” but argued that “it does not have to come at the expense of care and decency toward others.” Actually, academic freedom does come at the expense of the sensibilities of others. That’s sort of the point.
This is where this absurd notion of inclusivity takes us. This is what lies at the end of woke progressive ideology. As I have stated repeatedly on Freedom and Reason, inclusivity is a form of intolerance that sacrifices the diversity of ideas for the diversity of identities. Inclusivity has teachers walking on eggshells and talking like 3rd-graders. What is accomplished via terrorism is also accomplished via inclusivity.
Here’s how we will deal with the problem. You’re a Muslim. Great. Whatever. You don’t like images of Muhammad? Then don’t look at them. One interpretation of aniconism is avoidance of images of sentient beings. Just take a break from your screen (this was an online class). But don’t tell me I can’t see the image and hear about its purpose. Why are you even enrolled in an art history class?
For those who don’t like America’s free and open culture, don’t come to America.
There are a lot of great memes that cross my desk in the court of a day. But rarely do I see one this devastating:
Buffalo Bills football player, 24 years old, Damar Hamlin survived his cardiac event. He remains hospitalized and his prognosis is not clear. But he is alert and talking. We all hope he makes a full recovery (even if we don’t pray on it).
While the sharp increase in athletes collapsing on court and field baffles those who shape mass opinion, the public is being led to believe that Hamlin’s collapse was due to a hit he took on the field of play known as commotio cordis, which occurs when the subject experiences a trauma to his chest that causes additional waves of electricity to pass through the heart muscle, throwing off the heart’s rhythm (arrhythmia), resulting in cardia arrest.
Here is the event in question:
Damar Hamlin’s collapse on the field of play
This hit doesn’t look like commotio cordis. I’m not saying it wasn’t, it doesn’t look like somebody taking a projectile (like a baseball) directly over the precordial region. It does not appear to be a very hard hit at all. Those of us who follow professional football routinely see far more wicked hits. However, this does look a lot like what we are seeing around the world where athletes are collapsing on court and field.
Commotio cordis is extraordinarily rare. Of the millions of people who play contact sports every year, there are only about 10-20 incidences of commotio cordis, and almost all of them in children under the age of 18. Moreover, this has never before happened in the history of the NFL, either in a game or on the practice field.
Was Hamlin jabbed with the mRNA shot? If so, when? And how many jabs? How recent was his last one? In a recent tweet I said that the Bills were all vaccinated. I was wrong about that. Cole Beasley was fined for refusing the vaccine. Isaiah McKenzie was also fined for refusing the vaccine, as well, but he did in the end get jabbed. Wouldn’t we know if Hamlin weren’t? Look at the dust up over Green Bay Packers Aaron Rodgers’ vaccine status. For the record, vaccine take-up among NFL players is well over 90 percent.
It is useful to know whether Hamlin was jabbed because myocarditis, a type of injury to the heart muscle, is a common side effect of mRNA. Myocarditis is a major source of heart arrhythmia in young men and can result in death. My immediate family has been affected by mRNA-related myocarditis so this is not a phenomenon remote to my life. Many observers are wondering whether myocarditis played a role in this case.
Something unusual is certainly going on. Before the vaccine rollout in 2021, the average number of cardiac arrests in otherwise healthy athletes stood at twenty-nine year-to-year. After the vaccine roll out, the number of cardiac arrests has soared to more than fifteen hundred. Sixty-nine percent of such coronary events are fatal. Noting all this, however, is verboten. We’re supposed to “trust the science,” which, in this case, means trust the corporate state.
The question was immediately confronted with the predictable charge of “conspiracy theory.” RollingStone ran the headline: “Anti-Vaxxers Turn Damar Hamlin’s On-Field Collapse Into a ‘Vile’ Conspiracy Theory.” The author, Tomas Mier, writes, “As prayers for Damar Hamlin, the Buffalo Bills player who collapsed during a game Monday, began to roll in on social media after he received CPR on the field, so too did the inevitable conspiracy theories that somehow the cardiac arrest he suffered came from the COVID vaccine.”
Before getting to Mier’s deployment of this thought-stopping device, I can’t let slide Mier’s comment about prayers. We’re not supposed to ask questions about whether a player who suffers a coronary event was vaccinated, a relevant question in light of what we know about this vaccination, but we can engage in that act of magical thinking called prayer without being for a moment suspect of irrationalism.
At any rate, conspiracy, a category in law, a species of inchoate offense, is a clandestine plan by two or more individuals to do something unlawful. A theory is a scientific causal explanation for associated phenomena. You can therefore have theories about conspiracies. Indeed, this happens at trial when the prosecution makes an argument to convince judge and jury that a crime has occurred and that the defended perpetrated that crime.
Another predictable response was to attack contact sports generally. The New York Post reports “Joy Behar rips ‘heterosexual men’ for supporting tackle football.” The View co-host Joy Behar said “45 percent of Americans think that tackle football is appropriate. Heterosexual men voted the most support for kids doing football. And conservatives were more likely to support youth tackle football. Just saying.”
We should emphasize that this statistic (from a study conducted by The Ohio State University) concerns youth (Behar was clear). One would think that Behar and her colleagues at The View would be okay with youth consenting to harmful activities. Is it the heterosexuality piece that’s the problem? I’m surprised the term “toxic masculinity” was not uttered (maybe it was—I confess that I don’t watch The View). There are so many sports that risk injury. Baseball. Boxing. Hockey. Soccer. Volleyball.
Though they deny it, elites are aware that athletes (and others) across the West are collapsing in numbers much greater than in previous years. Sudden death has drastically increased since the rollout of the mRNA gene therapy falsely marketed as a vaccine against COVID-19, a weaponized strained of coronavirus manufactured in a laboratory in Wuhan China using US tax dollars to fund the work.
The freakout here looks all the world like sublimation, a type of defense mechanism in which socially unacceptable idealization (here, that the mRNA jab is neither safe nor effective) are transformed into socially acceptable actions or behavior (here, that masculinity is a toxic thing). Unconscious guilt infuses the sublimation here. Those who shamed people into taking the shot, which authorities admit damages the heart, suspect deep down that these deaths and injuries have something to do with heart damage and that their aggressive vaccine advocacy implicates them in those deaths and injuries. So they instead blame the deplorables—those working class men they love to loathe. Rather than blame a toxic product from Big Pharma, they turn to the mythology of toxic masculinity.
Again, we know that the mRNA jab can damage the heart. Sorry to sound like a broken record, but the FDA has admitted it what many of us were censored and cancelled for reporting. CDC analysis shows that the number of serious adverse events reported in less than two years for mRNA COVID-19 jab 5.5 times greater than all serious reports for vaccines given to adults in the US since 2009. The FDA has pulled many products that were less harmful than the mRNA jab. Why aren’t they pulling this product?
And the problem with mRNA is much greater than the picture these numbers paint. VAERS (Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System) undercounts vaccine injuries for several reasons—and not by a little. There is a pronounced desire to protect the record of this particular product (mRNA technology promises big things to come). Remember, VAERS is a passive reporting system, meaning it relies on individuals to send in reports of their experiences (that fact is admitted by the Department of Health and Human Services—the agency from where I obtained it). Obviously, undercounting deaths and injuries is associated with the general ignorance in the population that such a thing as VAERS even exists. Moreover, even when there is some vague recognition of its existence, ignorance about how one goes about reporting something like that is expected—and the government doesn’t make reporting vaccine injuries easy. Many (like literally every progressive I know) have been convinced that vaccines are safe and thus attribute injuries to other things. I have observed this with Bell’s palsy cases, as well as with parents who makes their kids get shots denying that the rare conditions that follow, such as Guillain-Barre syndrome (GBS), have anything to do with the decision they made to vaccinate their children.
Why the effort to shame those who ask the obvious question? I think you know why. Maybe folks should ask themselves: “Why am I denying the relevance of the question of vaccine injury in this case?” Maybe we should encourage them to search their environment for the sources of conditioning—and their minds for the constellation of ideological points and personality traits that prepare their brains for indoctrination.
I want to briefly return to the question of conspiracy theory. Maybe that term is more diversionary than thought stopping. After all, the makers of the mRNA vaccine operate in the open. Moreover, they have admitted the vaccine damages the heart. They continue to sell the product to make money. At one level, it’s the result of what we call capitalism, a system that puts money over lives. But, at another level, the reluctance to release all the information concerning the development and testing of the product, and the organized effort to stifle questions about the mRNA shot, which is obviously in large measure the result of a well-indoctrinated population, feels like a conspiracy, the goal of which is to hide criminal responsibility. How do capitalists train up an army of apologists? Perhaps the same way religious institutions do. But a lot of collusion is suggested by the patterns of evidence.
Finally, we are hearing calls for easily available AEDs, or automated external defibrillators, to deal with all the cases of SADS, or sudden arrhythmic death syndrome. SADS occurs when someone dies suddenly and unexpectedly from a cardiac arrest, especially when the cause of the event is unknown. Since none of the events can be explained by mRNA jabs, we must for some unknown reason be expecting a sharp rise in the incidence of commotio cordis. Shall we have these AEDs distributed across the nation in churches, malls, and schools? Better to do this than remove the mRNA shot from the market. That way, the makers of AEDs also have a show at historic profits.
On Tuesday, I published a blog, The Elite Obsession with Prepubescence, that expresses my dismay at the mainstreaming of child sexualization. I ended that blog by telling readers of Freedom and Reason that I would follow up with more blogs on the topic.
Reflecting on what I wrote there has moved me to follow up sooner than I anticipated. I have been moved in this way because I had hoped for decades that revelations about the extent and harm of child sexual abuse would encourage authorities to do something about it. Watching the way authorities and elites not only deny and obfuscate these crimes but are also often pushing these ideas under the cover of the rhetoric of “diversity” and “inclusivity” troubles me greatly.
I have not been hoping for authorities to act and experts to tell the truth from the sidelines. I’ve been publishing and talking about the problem of child sexual abuse for decades now, showing in empirical study that child sexual abuse produces continuing trauma in adulthood and suggests a persistent situation of powerlessness across the life course.
You can read my writings for yourself. I published a peer-reviewed article in the Journal of Aggression, Maltreatment & Trauma in 2004 concerning the life-course effects of child sexual abuse. And I am the author of the lengthy entry “Child Sexual Abuse” in Sage’s Encyclopedia of Social Deviance, published in 2014. My opinions are therefore not lay opinion but expert.
I write in that Sage encyclopedia article that “the effects of childhood sexual abuse maytake the form of psychological maladies and conduct disorders that obscure the initial trauma, often compounding with the unfolding of time.” What is more, I write, “Childhood sexual abuse is associated with continuity in sexual and other forms of victimization over the life course.”
I say other things in that entry I believe will help readers understand the problems with child sexual abuse. I encourage you to find the entry and read it. However, I will say a few things here that speak to the current circumstances.
We often think of child sexual abuse as involving some form of physical action involving a child’s body. This is certainly true. But child sexual abuse also involves sexualizing children or placing them in sexualized situations, what I identify as “sexually exploitative activities.”
One example is pornography. Federal law defines child pornography as any visual depiction of sexually explicit conduct involving a minor. Federal law prohibits the production, importation, distribution, reception, or possession of any image of child pornography. (See Citizen’s Guide to Federal Law on Child Pornography). Child pornographic images memorialize the sexual exploitation of children.
I write in the entry that exploitative exploitative activities “can either be a non-touching offense or touching offense depending on the circumstances.” I note that other acts included in the definition of child sexual abuse or exploitation are “indecent exposure, exposing a child to pornography, and facilitating sexual relations between minors.”
Crucially, research indicates that all of these situations can produce trauma. “The traumatic effects of childhood sexual abuse are recorded in a number of psychiatric conditions, such as anxiety, depression, post-traumatic stress disorder, eating disorders, and in various behavioral problems (many coded as conduct disorders) and institutional complications, such as withdrawal from social activity and frequent and intense associations with antisocial circles. These conditions can snowball into problems of substance abuse and juvenile delinquency.”
“Children often blame themselves for sexual abuse perpetrated on them, which not only makes it less likely that they will disclose the event, but makes it more likely that trauma remains unaddressed. Also, failure to address sexual victimization can perpetuate the patterns of interaction that contributed to the initial event. The literature suggests that the likelihood of future sexual victimization, even into adulthood, is greater among those who have abused in the past.”
In 2007, the American Psychological Association published a report by its Task Force on the Sexualization of Girls. The examples the report gives are commonplace today. (I have removed citations and edited text for ease of read, so see the original report here: Report of the APA Task Force on the Sexualization of Girls.)
“Toy manufacturers produce dolls wearing black leather miniskirts, feather boas, and thigh-high boots and market them to 8- to 12- year-old girls; clothing stores sell thongs sized for 7– to 10-year-old girls, some printed with slogans such as ‘eye candy’ or ‘wink wink’; other thongs sized for women and late adolescent girls are imprinted with characters from Dr. Seuss and the Muppets children.”
The report continues: “In the world of child beauty pageants, 5-year-old girls wear fake teeth, hair extensions, and makeup and are encouraged to ‘flirt’ onstage by batting their long, false eyelashes. On prime-time television, girls can watch fashion shows in which models made to resemble little girls wear sexy lingerie (e.g., the CBS broadcast of Victoria’s Secret Fashion Show on December 6, 2005).”
“Journalists, child advocacy organizations, parents, and psychologists have become alarmed,” the report notes, “arguing that the sexualization of girls is a broad and increasing problem and is harmful to girls.”
Nothing has changed in this. Moreover, we not avoid recognizing that sexualization affects boys, too.
The task force defines sexualization: “sexualization occurs when a person’s value comes only from his or her sexual appeal or behavior, to the exclusion of other characteristics; a person is held to a standard that equates physical attractiveness (narrowly defined) with being sexy; a person is sexually objectified—that is, made into a thing for others’ sexual use, rather than seen as a person with the capacity for independent action and decision making; and/or sexuality is inappropriately imposed upon a person.”
“All four conditions need not be present; any one is an indication of sexualization,” the APA report clarifies. “Much of the evidence that we evaluate in this report is specific to the third condition— sexual objectification.The fourth condition (the inappropriate imposition of sexuality) is especially relevant to children.”
Pay close attention to this line: “Anyone (girls, boys, men, women) can be sexualized. But when children are imbued with adult sexuality, it is often imposed upon them rather than chosen by them.”
To be sure, as I discuss in The Elite Obsession with Prepubescence, there was that period in the 1970s when the culture industry presented children as sexual objects (Shields being the obvious example), but there wasn’t the degree of sexualization that we see with child beauty pageants and, more recently, parents taking their children to strip clubs and encouraging their children to participate in rituals formerly limited to adults.
Also disturbing is K-3 curriculum and public library programming across the country that exposes children to age-inappropriate and suspect ideas concerning sex and gender, ideas often conveyed using hyper-sexualized materials and presented by exaggerated personifications of gender stereotypes.
Let’s recall that line from the APA report: “when children are imbued with adult sexuality, it is often imposed upon them rather than chosen by them.”
Parents and community members need to understand the negative impact the sexualization of children has on the cognitive development of children. I know a lot of people are too young to remember the crisis of anorexia nervosa, a form of body dysmorphia, and the recognition that it is, at least in part, associated with the way women and girls are depicted in by the culture industry, as well as the social contagion aspect to this. Children are highly vulnerable to suggestion.
The APA report refer to “models made to resemble little girls wearing sexy lingerie.” The infantilization of women in consumer culture is rampant. Feminists have long criticized this practice. I would ask whether it changes anything to have a man made to appear as a little girl wearing sexy lingerie performing in front of children. Because this is happening and it is being promoted as progressive political action on the cultural front.
Do people really not see the way the sexualization of children is today moving behind the cover of diversity and inclusion?
I do not advocate the general censorship of ideas and expression. It think, however, that the culture industry and educational systems should be criticized for sexualizing human beings. And with respect to children, there is a government role to play, and Florida is leading the way on this.