Society's Child
Football banning orders will be changed to cover online racism in the wake of the social media abuse directed at England players, Boris Johnson has told MPs.
The prime minister said the change will mean "if you are guilty of racist abuse online of footballers then you will not be going to the match".
Update (1702ET): Vigilante groups and armed community members patrol Gauteng and KwaZulu-Natal, the two provinces hit hard by the social unrest in South Africa. The country could become a failed state as the police and military have yet to quell the violence.
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Update (1455ET): Social unrest raged in South Africa for nearly a week as food, fuel, and ammo shortages materialized. Farming, manufacturing, and oil refining have gone offline in certain regions as the worst unrest in decades continues.
President Cyril Ramaphosa released a statement Wednesday that deployment of the military will expand. Political leaders have requested the president to put more boots on the ground as local police forces are overwhelmed. In some areas, police have looted businesses themselves as the country descends into what could be a failed state.
"President Ramaphosa welcomed proposals made by political leaders and said expanded deployment of the South African National Defence Force was being addressed," according to a statement from the president.According to the "Unrest Map" via PolicyLab, the unrest unfolds in two provinces, Gauteng and Durban.
Comment: The situation has been brewing out of sight for a long time. Sadly, matters may be too far gone to prevent a bloodbath, as corruption and regional loyalties overtake the national cohesion that Nelson Mandela fought so hard for.
- South Africa's deterioration worst among nations not at war
- The row raging over a corrupt former president's jailing shows that South Africa is heading down a sad and familiar path
- South Africans protest President Zuma as country downgraded by rating agencies
- 28 arrested as protests erupt in South Africa over jailed former president Zuma
- South African president pledges to seize white farmers land without compensation and redistribute to black citizens
Having successfully turned an extended online article into a New York Times bestseller, introduced a previously oblivious audience to the idea of everyday 'white supremacy' and 'white fragility', and made it clear that white women crying is something we should avoid at all costs, Robin DiAngelo's managed to strike gold in the racism business.
Who can begrudge her? In her new book, Nice Racism: How Progessive White People Perpetuate Racial Harm (why do these academics always give the entire game away in the title?), DiAngelo relates the miserable poverty she endured when growing up, living with her single mother and sisters in their car at times, as they struggled to find somewhere to live.
Comment: If the progressive, SJW, libtard echo chamber wasn't propping Diangelo up, she and her lunatic theories would have properly vanished from the public scene ages ago.
- 'White Fragility' is an exhausting, dull, racially obsessed book that only serves to deepen divisions
- The dehumanizing condescension of 'White Fragility'
- 'Whiteness studies' professor tells students white people 'dangerous' if they don't see race
- Appropriate cancel: LinkedIn deletes racist Robin DiAngelo 'course' that told people to 'be less white
But the court said it would not accept lawsuits from people and businesses who want to sue the government because they lost money due to the lockdown.
The government declared a state of emergency on 14 March 2020 to curb the first wave of Covid-19 infections.
At the time, coronavirus cases and deaths were rising and hospitals were quickly becoming overwhelmed. Since then, more than 81,000 people in Spain have died with coronavirus.
One of today's most vexing Supreme Court cases is Students for Fair Admissions v. Harvard, which has brought anti-Asian discrimination to the forefront of the current cultural discourse. SFFA (Students for Fair Admissions) contends that Harvard's "race-conscious" admissions process violates the Constitution by disadvantaging Asian American applicants based upon their race, while Harvard argues that campus diversity goals justify their race-based process.
Most of the reasoning behind Harvard's admissions process comes from critical race theory (CRT), a theory of race which originated with Harvard University. Another hot topic recently, critical race theory teaches that America is divided into privilege and oppressed groups based on race. Negative aspects of modern society follow from that dichotomy, and the only way to fix it is to revolutionize the way we think about race, culture, and society.
Under the critical race framework, "white supremacy" covers a lot of different phenomena. Everything from blatant discrimination, to the existence of English grammar, to choosing not to riot are included under the term. And in the words of social justice activist and author Ibram X. Kendi, "The only remedy to racist discrimination is anti-racist discrimination. The only remedy to past discrimination is present discrimination. The only remedy to present discrimination is future discrimination." In order to combat white supremacy (however broadly defined), critical race theorists view "antiracist" discrimination as the only legitimate response.
More than 1,200 people have been arrested in the lawlessness that has raged in poor areas of two provinces, where a community radio station was ransacked and forced off the air Tuesday and some COVID-19 vaccination centers were closed, disrupting urgently needed inoculations.
Many of the deaths in Gauteng and KwaZulu-Natal provinces occurred in chaotic stampedes as thousands of people stole food, electric appliances, liquor and clothing from stores, police Maj. Gen. Mathapelo Peters said in a statement Tuesday night.
Comment: South African troops deployed as looting and destruction create a path to chaos:
See also:
- 28 arrested as protests erupt in South Africa over jailed former president Zuma
- The revolt spreads - 'We don't want Western institutions to dictate us what to do' - South Africa's Zuma
- Chinese development is an alternative to Western colonialism - S. African President
A divided panel on the Richmond, Va.-based Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals overturned a Virginia federal judge's ruling upholding the federal Gun Control Act of 1968.
"When do constitutional rights vest? At 18 or 21? 16 or 25? Why not 13 or 33?" asked US Circuit Judge Julius Richardson in his ruling.
"In the law, a line must sometimes be drawn. But there must be a reason why constitutional rights cannot be enjoyed until a certain age. Our nation's most cherished constitutional rights vest no later than 18. And the Second Amendment's right to keep and bear arms is no different."Richardson, who was appointed to the bench by former President Donald Trump, went on to note that 18-to-20-year-olds
"enjoy almost every other constitutional right, and they were required at the time of the Founding to serve in the militia and furnish their own weapons ... Despite the weighty interest in reducing crime and violence, we refuse to relegate either the Second Amendment or 18- to 20-year-olds to a second-class status."
Comment: See also:
- Illinois House passes bill to confiscate currently legal firearms from gun owners under 21, moves to state Senate
- The reasons why leftists will never successfully disarm Americans
- Disarming America: "Sweeping" gun control bill passed by the House of Representatives, more on the way
- Did a book written in 1991 predict the connection between mass shootings and manipulated public demand for gun control?
- Coming for your guns: Since Parkland shooting, 26 states have passed 55 gun control laws with bipartisan support

Kindergarteners in the classroom on the first day of in-person learning at Maurice Sendak Elementary School in Los Angeles, on April 13.
The California Department of Public Health published its guidance for K-12 schools Monday afternoon, mandating that students wear face coverings indoors and stating that "schools must exclude students from campus" if they did not comply, directing them to offer such students "alternative educational opportunities."
But by Monday evening, the department said in a tweet that it would clarify its masking enforcement guidance, "recognizing local schools' experience in keeping students and educators safe while ensuring schools fully reopen for in-person instruction." The Los Angeles Times reported that the department planned to drop the wording about excluding students.
Comment: The preoccupation with masks is alive and well - one of the best fixations ever perpetrated.
See also:
- Study finds high carbon dioxide levels in kids who wear face masks, concludes: 'Children should not be forced to wear face masks'
- Masks have no place in the classroom
- New York rescinds requirement for children to wear masks

People hold placards as they join a spontaneous Black Lives Matter march at Trafalgar Square to protest the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis and in support of the demonstrations in North America on May 31, 2020 in London, England.
In its new report on race equality, Runnymede Trust said legislation, institutional practices and societal customs continue to harm ethnic groups - who are "consistently more likely to live in poverty, to be in low-paid precarious work and to die of Covid-19."
Noting that these inequities are "sustained across the areas of health, housing, criminal justice system, education, employment, immigration and political participation," the group said the situation has "worsened" since the UK's last periodic report to the United Nations Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination five years ago.
Comment: Inequalities are not necessarily the result of racism. But simple minds crave simple answers to complex problems.
Over that period, the report contends, the UK government has "failed to address" the issue and "is in breach" of its obligations under the UN International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination (ICERD).
Comment: Racial discrimination may not have much, if anything, to do with it. These are the kind of people who still believe the "wage gap" is a result of sexism.
The report, compiled by the Runnymede Trust in consultation with over 150 civil society organisations, claims that the government's approach to issues of equality will "fail to improve these outcomes for BME (black and minority ethnic) communities and may in fact worsen them".

Stickers with an image of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange are seen outside HMP Belmarsh prison, where Assange is held, in London, Britain, January 6, 2021.
The same concerns about Assange's mental health that led to the High Court in London blocking his extradition to the US in January are still relevant, perhaps even more so, today, Dr. William Hogan, a specialist in internal medicine and professor of biomedical informatics at the University of Florida's College of Medicine, said.
Hogan was among more than 200 medical experts who signed an open letter published last month in the respected medical journal The Lancet, which demanded an end to the "torture and medical neglect" faced by the Australian journalist as he languishes in London's maximum-security Belmarsh Prison.
Comment: Back in December 2019 even the UN stated that Assange was showing signs of torture. And this travesty of justice may be a sign of what's to come in the UK, considering it recently granted its own agencies legal powers to commit any crime it deems necessary to fulfill its goals; whatever they may be.













Comment: What a charade! It's important to remember that it's highly unlikely that either Johnson or Starmer actually care about racism. They're simply using the issue to try to score points with the plebs.
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