On this, the 19th anniversary of 9/11.
Your thread is open.
On this, the 19th anniversary of 9/11.
Your thread is open.
Well, maybe one.
CalFire: "Return to base. It's too dangerous!"
Cal NG: "This is why no one will remember your name". pic.twitter.com/QaaYBh2L9A
— Marcus The Revenant (@DeucianRevival) September 10, 2020
More here. Some think the characterization of CalFire is unfair, and they may have a point. And from the responses: “Just in case anybody who still wants to waste their time and or money watching overpaid millionaires in tight pants knelling [sic] on the football field. This is what real heroes do and look like!”
More photos.
Choppers coming in. Image taken by one of the people waiting. Image is NOT edited. Folks sheltered at the shore and in lake. A few burn victims, broken bones/ankles from the run from campsites to the shore. Took fire 45 mins to burn through/around the lake. pic.twitter.com/iJWiad9FS8
— N2PNZ (@Pinz4BobbyD) September 10, 2020
My day started at 3:45am with a round trip drive to Edmonton and back. I’m kind of beat, so blogging will resume in the morning.
A British Columbia carbon tax hailed by cabinet as a model for the nation has not lowered greenhouse gas emissions, says the Department of Environment. Even rebates for electric car buyers failed to cut pollution in B.C.’s transport sector: “British Columbia shows it.”
It didn’t fail. “Carbon” was the pretense, revenue was the objective.
Oscars’ woke quota (via Ed Driscoll);
The easiest criterion to meet is apprenticeships for members of underrepresented groups, meaning anyone but straight white non-handicapped males. Welcome to low-paid internships, people of color! I’m sure Hollywood race relations will feel totally chill five years from now, when every java boy and latte girl serving America’s showbiz aristocracy is black. Soon the last surviving copy of “Gone with the Wind” will be locked in a vault accessible only to scholars of racism, but you’ll be able to see Tara re-enacted in Burbank and Culver City.
WE! WE! WE!
All the way to a jurisdiction without a extradition treaty.
(I’m only guessing).
h/t KAR
Who had "Lead Global News reporter says "the banks" exclusively support the white race" on their Bingo card?
Oh, and raise your hand if you are white and have never been given access to a program exclusive to your skin colour worth $53 million? https://t.co/lz3oE9sMhI— Keean Bexte (@TheRealKeean) September 9, 2020
In any other Presidency this would be a done deal: A Norwegian lawmaker has nominated Donald Trump for the Nobel Peace Prize for 2021 for helping broker a deal between Israel and the United Arab Emirates
Now deleted, oddly enough. But we have screenshots!

“Democrats need to embrace Hollywood because this is where they need to come to learn how to tell a story.” – Michael Moore.
In Incredibly Awkward Moment, Kamala Harris Again Refuses to Take Questions From the Press: “Nope, I Think We’re All Set”
369,548 Chinese students = 34 % of foreign students at US universities. If they are no longer welcome -> devastating impact on US college finances. https://t.co/5ZFHVr406e pic.twitter.com/w7B9Yvxsjs
— Adam Tooze (@adam_tooze) September 8, 2020
Via Wayback, reprinted here as the original website is now gone (George Jonas passed away in 2016) and I think it’s in the interest of free thinking people that it not be.
My misgivings about hate-speech legislation and Human Rights Commissions go back to 1977. In those days such laws seemed progressive. Only a few considered that compelling liberalism may be illiberal. In time, second thoughts and questions emerged. A National Post editorial published in January, 1999, viewed Canada’s hate-speech legislation as “potentially sinister” whose proposed new provisions “could be put to authoritarian and illiberal purposes.”
I wrote that hate-speech laws were sinister by definition and could only be put to illiberal purposes. Certainly John Stuart Mill thought so. He phrased his objection rather forcefully 150 years ago: “The peculiar evil of silencing the expression of an opinion is, that it is robbing the human race; posterity as well as the existing generation; those who dissent from the opinion, still more than those who hold it… We can never be sure that the opinion we are endeavouring to stifle is a false opinion; and even if we were sure, stifling it would be an evil still.”
What is “hate-speech”? It’s speech the authorities hate. No doubt, it is often worth hating. It may be speech that every right-thinking person ought to hate, but it is also, by definition, speech that falls short of unlawful or tortuous speech — i.e., speech that’s fraudulent, defamatory, seditious, conspiratorial — for which a person could be either sued or charged criminally. Hate-speech legislation seeks to regulate speech that is not against any law — logically, since unlawful speech doesn’t need to be outlawed. Here’s the paradox. Hate-speech legislation can only ban free speech. Prohibited speech is already banned. People often say that freedoms aren’t absolutes and they’re right. Free expression is anything but “absolute” in free societies. It’s hemmed in by strictures against slander, official secrets, perjury, fraud, incitement to riot, and so on. The question is, should laws go beyond these strictures? And if they do, won’t they suppress opinion and creed in the end?
The answer is yes. There is nothing else for them to suppress. Repressive positions are difficult to defend for those who wish to keep their liberal credentials intact. They usually do so by quoting bits of pernicious nonsense from the kind of speech they would ban to illustrate how worthless and abhorrent it is. But pointing to the abhorrent nature of despised speech is insufficient because no speech is legislated against unless it’s abhorrent to some. Nobody outlaws Mary Poppins, not even the Human Rights Commissions (though this could be famous last words).
If suppressing opinion breaches axioms of liberalism, can it be justified by utility? Canadian defenders of hate-speech laws rarely offer any examples, other than the dubious benefit of distinguishing ourselves from Americans (one Human Rights-type called free speech an American concept in a recent court case) but one suggestion is that such laws would have stopped a Hitler. The problem is, the Weimar Republic had such laws. It used them freely against the Nazis. Far from stopping Hitler, they only made his day when he became Chancellor. They enabled Hitler to confront Social Democratic Party chairman Otto Wels, who stood up in the Reichstag to protest Nazi suspension of civil liberties, with a quotation from the poet Friedrich Schiller: “‘Late you come, but still you come,'” Hitler pointed at the hapless deputy. “You should have recognized the value of criticism during the years we were in opposition [when] our press was forbidden, our meetings were forbidden, and we were forbidden to speak for years on end.”
The Nazis would have been just as repressive without this excuse, but being able to offer it made Hitler’s task easier. Like Canadian supporters of hate-speech legislation, supporters of the Weimar Republic thought that their groups and causes would occupy all seats of authority and set all social and legal agendas forever. Shades of the Canadian Civil Liberties Association or the Canadian Jewish Congress! They couldn’t envisage the guns of their own laws being turned around to point at them one day. Eradicating hateful ideas through free discourse is liberal; trying to eradicate them through legislation is illiberal. “There is always a chance that he who sets himself up as his brother’s keeper,” wrote Eric Hoffer, “will end up by being his jail keeper.”
Another thing: “Banned in Boston” sells tickets. As Victor Hugo put it: “The writer doubles and trebles the power of his writing when a ruler imposes silence on the people.” I’d think twice before banning neo-Nazis for this reason alone.
© 2002 – 2015 George Jonas
This “story” is utter propaganda and a vivid example of the deep bias the mainstream Canadian media has for the Green Party. Read this trash and ask “if this was a paid advertorial from the party, would anything be different?” @macleans should be ashamed. https://t.co/HECDlZe87F
— J.J. McCullough (@JJ_McCullough) September 8, 2020
#Venezuela: Black market gasoline hits $12 per gallon in Venezuela. 75% of country without running water. Mass shortage of everything from meds to food. Most recent example of riches to rags scenario. Socialism didn't fail in Vnzla, it worked perfectly! *$2.10 monthly min. wage. pic.twitter.com/KIMXnwonM8
— Maj. Lawrence, PhD, USAF (ret) (@NoRemorseAFVET4) September 7, 2020