Society's Child
In a 1998 speech delivered before a domestic violence conference in El Salvador, former US senator and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said that "Women have always been the primary victims of war. Women lose their husbands, their fathers, their sons in combat."
These statements are illustrative of a wider trend of "male disposability."
What is Male Disposability?
"Male disposability" describes the tendency to be less concerned about the safety and well-being of men than of women. This might sound surprising given the emphasis in contemporary Western discourse on the oppression of women by men. How is it possible that societies built by men have come to consider their well-being as less important? But embedded in this kind of question are simplistic assumptions that flatten a good deal of complexity.

The notorious, massive Qalandiya checkpoint lies in the center area surrounded by three roundabouts. Qalandiya is the scene of relentless ethnic control, murders by the IDF, violently suppressed protests, and a major cause of the impossibility of normal civilian life and movement. On GoogleMaps, the checkpoint does not exist.
What Orwell could not have foreseen was a world in which Big Brother did not need to destroy evidence, a world in which evidence did not exist in physical form and could be changed at will without a trace. All "copies" of a virtual newspaper would instantly update to every new "truth". Thought-criminals might, of course, have saved a copy of the previous virtual file, or even a screen-grab, but all these were nothing but numbers on media. What proof of whose sets of digits were the true ones, when there is no physical, forensic trail? True, false, faked, real, new, old, past, present, cause, effect, and even time-stamps and digital signatures, are ultimately nothing more than sets of ones and zeros with no distinction, because - to rewrite another Orwell novel - all numbers are created equal, none more equal than others. Whoever controls the virtual printing press that creates and rewrites reality as needed, wears the Wagnerian ring of the Nibelung - is granted the power to rule the world.
Welcome to the present. Welcome, for example, to Google Maps.
What makes this situation more insidious is that Facebook aided and abetted the doxxing by providing The Daily Beast with Brooks' personal information so that they could further antagonize.
Comment: We're in the advanced stages of pathocracy now, when the pathocrats go after people for laughing at them...
I mean, who inspired the label on blow dryers that points out the device should not be used in the shower? And what would even be the point, barring electrocution? Why would you dry your hair while the water is spraying you?
And are there actually people who need to be cautioned not to light a candle until they remove it from the package?
Also, you know those plastic bags that hold clothing when you order it online? Who needs to be offered the sage advice that it's not a good idea to put said bag over their head?
Maybe, with all of these warning labels, we're rendering Darwin's principle of natural selection invalid.
Before the emails roll in telling me that I "don't science," I'm well aware that the theory of natural selection was about genetic changes that occur over a series of generations. However, the point remains that once upon a time, being stupid got you killed. And no one got sued. The person who couldn't figure out that some ill-conceived idea was a bad one faced the consequences. If the consequences didn't kill them, they learned not to do the stupid thing again, making them just a teeny bit smarter and more equipped to deal with the world. Some who believe our planet is overpopulated might even argue that the obsolescence of natural selection is the root cause of the people boom.Darwin's hypothesis states that living organisms evolve by differential survival in a world with "Malthusian" overpopulation, in which only the fittest spread their genes into future generations. By fittest we mean best adapted to the prevailing environment, and by environment we mean both the living and the nonliving environment. (source)
The Arabic-language website of Sputnik news agency quoted Brigadier General Ali Maqsoud as saying on Thursday that the Syrian army tactically withdrew from Kafar Naboudeh in Northern Hama after killing over 200 terrorists in three massive offensives by them.
He added that the terrorists reinvigorated their positions immediately after arriving in the town with the support of the foreign experts and intelligence officers of several countries, including Turkey and Israel.

Rep. David Cicilline (D-RI) said they will focus less on specific companies and more on the “tremendous concentration of market power” that Silicon Valley has on the Internet.
The Democrat-led investigation arises after the Donald Trump Department of Justice (DOJ) announced an antitrust investigation into Google, and the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) has moved into its final steps towards a potential probe into Google.
House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerry Nadler (D-NY) said in a statement Monday, "The open Internet has delivered enormous benefits to Americans, including a surge of economic opportunity, massive investment, and new pathways for education online. But there is growing evidence that a handful of gatekeepers have come to capture control over key arteries of online commerce, content, and communications."
Although Congress does not have the regulatory power of the DOJ or the FTC, it can outline possible legislation and subpoena tech executives and documents relating to big tech's practices on privacy, tech censorship, and competition.
Let's look at the former first. Earlier this month, HBO host Bill Maher said, "I can't think of a better gift to our planet than pumping out fewer humans to destroy it," and he claimed that the world is "too crowded." He is not alone in that belief. More than a third of U.S. millennials worry about the environmental effect of childbearing, including congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, who recently questioned the ethics of producing more children.
Comment: See also:
- Birth rates on the decline as women having fewer children than ever
- Empire in decline: CDC reports US birth rates are falling while deaths from age-related diseases are rising
- Birth rates hit record low in Italy, population shrinks
- Declining Birth Rates Threaten Japan
- How anti-humanism conquered the Left
- Biological Annihilation: A Planet in Loss Mode
The Justice Department has decided not to charge Julian Assange for his role in exposing some of the CIA's most secret spying tools, according to a U.S. official and two other people familiar with the case.
It's a move that has surprised national security experts and some former officials, given prosecutors' recent decision to aggressively go after the WikiLeaks founder on more controversial Espionage Act charges that some legal experts said would not hold up in court. The decision also means that Assange will not face punishment for publishing one of the CIA's most potent arsenals of digital code used to hack devices, dubbed Vault 7. The leak - one of the most devastating in CIA history - not only essentially rendered those tools useless for the CIA, it gave foreign spies and rogue hackers access to them.
Comment: One can only assume that the US feels they have enough to go after Assange with the Manning leak to be able to avoid having to admit the legitimacy of the Vault 7 material. There's no question they're out for blood, how they get it is almost immaterial.
See also:
- Swedish court rejects detention in absentia for Assange, won't request extradition from Britain
- UN Torture Report confirms 'demonized' Assange has faced 'psychological torture'
- An endless stream of procedural abuses show Assange's case was never about the law
- BBC, Sky News deep-six their interviews with UN expert on the torture of Julian Assange
- Former Congressman Ron Paul speculates US and UK authorities 'could be trying to kill Julian Assange'
- Head of Russia Today on why Julian Assange is the greatest journalist of our time
- UN Special Rapporteur on Torture exposes anti-Assange smear campaign waged by Ecuador, Sweden, the UK and the US
- Julian Assange's mother condemns UK government for 'unlawfully slowly killing my son'
- UN Expert: Assange deliberately subjected to prolonged cruel and inhuman psychological torture
- Persecution: Julian Assange lawyers say he is too ill to appear in court even by video link
Universities tell students it's okay to disrupt campus events when administrators fail to punish activists for previous disruptions.
Harvard University went even further with anti-fossil fuel activists: It didn't threaten to punish them at all.
Isa Flores-Jones of Divest Harvard told The Harvard Crimson that "none of" the group's members were "directly" threatened with discipline, much less punished, for their shutdown of President Lawrence Bacow's event with the Harvard Kennedy School in April.
Comment: Regardless of the justness of their cause, this whole 'scream-and-shout-not-letting-others-speak' and rejecting invitations for actual dialogue will be the downfall of the social justice movement. That Harvard has chosen to do nothing in response shows who's really in charge in the Universities.
See also:
- Canadian government imposes 'social justice' on all universities
- Social justice warriors must stop harassing scientists
- I am sick of being silenced by social-justice warriors whose self-assurance is only matched by their ignorance
- UW's teacher preparation program: A militant immersion in social justice activism and identity politics
- Tyranny of the Good: How social justice ideologues hijacked a Canadian legal regulator
- Sarah Lawrence Prof writes Op-Ed about lack of intellectual diversity - and social justice warriors want him kicked off campus
- Western civilisation "not welcome here": Social justice infects the study of history
This has made it very difficult to figure out what's going on, both in our lives and in the world. Here are some tips for navigating this complex manipulation-laden landscape, whether that be the manipulations you may encounter in your small-scale personal interactions or the large-scale manipulations which impact the entire world:
Comment: See also:
- We live in uncertain times: How to navigate with poise
- A cognitive theory and politics
- The seven cognitive biases that can ruin how you make decisions
- Beyond spirituality: Meditation for mental health
- Spotting the sociopath in your midst
- Study links career success with narcissism and psychopathy













Comment: See: Feminist Angelina Jolie teams up with NATO to 'make the world safe for women'