Society's Child
Speaking during a podcast interview with Kara Swisher, 49-year-old Musk stated that neither he nor his children are at risk for Covid-19 and therefore would be unlikely to need the vaccine.
"This is a no-win situation. It has diminished my faith in humanity, this whole thing... The irrationality of people in general," Musk said. He also decried lockdowns across the globe and in the US in particular, having previously referred to them as "unethical" and "de facto house arrest."
Musk said widespread lockdowns were a mistake and only at-risk people should quarantine "until the storm passes."
When pressed about the risk to his own employees and their families, with Swisher asking what if someone dies, Musk pithily responded: "Everybody dies."
The College Historical Society (the Hist) has tonight rescinded its invitation to Richard Dawkins to address the society next year....She had "read his Wikipedia page", the third paragraph of which begins with the phrase "Dawkins is known as an outspoken atheist." But she was surprised, apparently, to learn that he's not a huge fan of Islam, as well as not being a huge fan of Christianity.
Auditor of the Hist Bríd O'Donnell announced the cancellation in a statement on her Instagram page, saying that she had been "unaware of Richard Dawkins' opinions on Islam and sexual assault until this evening", adding that the society "will not be moving ahead with his address as we value our members comfort above all else".
"The invitation to Richard Dawkins to speak at the society was made by my predecessor and I followed up the invitation with limited knowledge of Mr. Dawkins. I had read his Wikipedia page and researched him briefly. Regretfully I didn't look further into him before moving forward with the invitation. I want to thank everyone who pointed out this valuable information to me", O'Donnell added. "I truthfully hope we didn't cause too much discomfort and if so, I apologise and will rectify it."

The police operation to move about 700 migrants from their camp in Calais, northern France.
The operation to clear the makeshift camp, which was home to about 700 people, began shortly before sunrise on Tuesday. It was the biggest such operation since the sprawling camp known as the "Jungle" was broken up four years ago.
Several thousand people have attempted the perilous crossing this year, often paying people-smugglers to help them traverse one of the world's busiest shipping lanes in overloaded rubber dinghies.
Britain has repeatedly pressed Emmanuel Macron's government to do more to prevent people leaving France. The British government has called the high numbers who made the illegal crossing this summer unacceptable. France says it has stepped up patrols.
The decision by the FAW to introduce a no smoking policy on the side-lines of its small-sided, children's football games has been welcomed by Health Minister Vaughan Gething and follows a campaign by ASH Wales aimed at de-normalising smoking and preventing children from ever taking up the habit, particularly in light of the Covid-19 pandemic and increased risks faced by smokers.
It launched the policy on Monday to mark World Heart Day which is run by the World Heart Federation and supported by UEFA and Healthy Stadia.
In the first grass-roots country-wide initiative of its kind in the UK, FAW and FAW Trust will ask all small-sided football teams to apply the policy during games and training sessions for 522 junior clubs, 3,159 teams and 42,232 players across Wales.
As people are once again told to work from home, our freedoms in this realm become more crucial than ever.
One freedom that is being progressively eroded is the choice of whether or not to smoke in your home. The home - or place of residence - was until relatively recently considered immune from any public smoking regulations. The UK's 2006 ban on smoking in enclosed public places restrictions explicitly excluded places of residence.
Yet now, with bans on smoking indoors and outdoors in mental-health institutions, prisons, and other state institutions, the mood is shifting.
When I asked UK councils about their current policy on employees' smoking, Hammersmith and Fulham replied to my Freedom-of-Information request with a document (produced in alliance with Kensington and Chelsea council in 2015) that said council home workers were banned from smoking in their private offices. The document stated that: 'any part of a private dwelling used solely for work purposes will be required to be smoke-free... home workers are expected to have the same set-up at home as they do in the office. Smoking is not allowed in any of the council's offices and home workers should not smoke at their workstation during office hours.' It even said that 'family members should not be allowed to smoke in the home worker's office'.
In the past, Marxism had primarily economic appeal to those choosing it. A mixture of various tyrannical states, some capitalist, some allegedly power hungry in the same way, could be taken as legitimate points of grievance, where a person could point at the wealth of others and agree with the proposal that Marxism might offer a truly utopian path to some sense of "equality."
Peterson notes a grisly prediction by no less than Friederich Nietzsche - that the process of trying to implement Marxism would be the catalyst of the destruction of hundreds of millions of innocent lives. It has been so.
Comment: The cultural Marxists of today are incapable or unwilling to give their thinking the critical distance required to see and understand what individuals like Jordan Peterson are warning of. Ideological possession, by its very nature, is an emotional state of being that seeks to cut out any rationality from its "discourse," and even worse, seeks to impose this way of being on others by acts of coercion, manipulation and even terror. On top of all that, cultural Marxism is a deeply cynical ploy that has been weaponized, ultimately, by the same interests who are least likely to have a sincere concern about the very issues that the rest of the world is getting propagandized and pounded over the head with.
Mr Andrews announced an indefinite crackdown for mandatory masks on Sunday, including banning face shields, scarfs and bandannas and requiring a "fitted mask that covers nose and mouth" which he expects to remain over the summer.
But health experts said the mandatory order should be directed at higher risk shopping, public transport and workplace settings.
Comment: See also:
- Coming Soon to Your City: Victoria's Totalitarian Response to Covid is Setting a Precedent for Every Wannabe-Dictator
- Melbourne Uni chief says Victoria must address 'difficult' ethical questions
- 'Dan Andrews' Stasi': Victoria premier under fire for proposed law allowing govt officials to arbitrarily arrest citizens
- Victoria police could arrest people who 'MIGHT' breach Covid lockdown under proposed bill

Guests wear masks as required to attend the official reopening day of the Magic Kingdom at Walt Disney World in Lake Buena Vista, Fla., Saturday, July 11, 2020.
Squeezed by limits on attendance at its theme parks and other restrictions due to the pandemic, The Walt Disney Co. said Tuesday it planned to lay off 28,000 workers in its parks division in California and Florida.
Two-thirds of the planned layoffs involve part-time workers but they ranged from salaried employees to hourly workers, Disney officials said.
Comment: As the PTB continue with the pandemic charade, major and minor businesses continue to fall. When major tourist attractions like Disney World/Land are going down the tubes, it's unlikely anything will dissuade the controllers from destroying the economy. It seems clear that this is exactly what they want to do.
See also:
- Disney's toxic strategy for its Star Wars franchise: Lie, fail, attack the fans
- Apple, Disney, others reportedly push back on call with White House over WeChat ban
- Disney World enlists 'Star Wars' Stormtroopers to enforce social distancing
- Disney Execs push back on terms of pay cuts
- If you felt Disney's Frozen didn't have enough climate & toxic masculinity propaganda for your kid, you'll LOVE its new sequel
- Disney+ recuts own classics: Why do corporate gatekeepers think we will turn racist if they don't censor content?
'Period' is a bold shade of red unveiled by Pantone on Tuesday. The company's color palette is already used extensively in the design industry, and this latest addition is a collaboration between the company and Intimina, a Swedish firm that sells menstrual cups.
Comment: See also:
- J.K. Rowling under fire for pointing out that 'people who menstruate' are women
- Colorado State: Students should avoid saying 'Americans', 'male', 'female', 'normal person' among other 'non-inclusive' words
- PC ideological European Parliament wants to abolish sexist words like 'man-made', 'mankind' and 'layman'
- The radical Left's language police want to rewrite 'sexist' dictionaries — the real objective is THOUGHT CONTROL
Recent polling has consistently shown smaller and smaller numbers of Americans saying they would be willing to take a coronavirus vaccine as soon as one becomes available, as well as rampant concern over the safety and efficacy of a vaccine if it were rushed to meet an election Day deadline.
A new Axios-Ipsos poll bears much of that out, and illustrates that skepticism with an unusual question.
Respondents were asked if they would be "very likely" or "somewhat likely" to take a first-generation vaccine under a variety of circumstances, one of which is being paid a $100 incentive to get the shot.
Comment: See also:
- Just 51% of Americans would get coronavirus vaccine right now
- Almost half of Russians say they don't want to be vaccinated against Covid-19 & 43% believe dangers of coronavirus are exaggerated
- Nearly 3 in 4 adults plan to get vaccinated against the coronavirus, World Economic Forum survey shows
- Only 16% of Britons have enough sense to refuse a coronavirus vaccine













Comment: See also: Let's All Light Up!