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'They are undesirable & they must feel it': Denmark planning to send unwanted refugees to remote island

Lindholm Island
© Google Maps
Lindholm Island
Denmark will send rejected asylum seekers to live on a remote island. Located in the freezing Baltic Sea, the island is currently home to animal research laboratories and crematoria.

"If you are unwanted in Danish society, you should not be a nuisance to ordinary Danes," immigration minister Inger Støjberg wrote in a Facebook post on Friday. "They are undesirable in Denmark and they must feel it!"


Binoculars

Topsy turvy world: Britain's top cop wants public to protect police

cressida dick
Met Police chief Cressida Dick has urged members of the public to "get involved" if they see officers being attacked in the street.

She said it was "absolutely awful" that bystanders filmed attacks on officers and uploaded them to the internet without intervening.

The Met Commissioner was speaking on Nick Ferrari LBC radio show today and asked people to do more to help police officers in need.

Her plea came after a video of a police officer being assaulted with a flying kick was captured on a mobile phone and then circulated on social media.

She said: "What we seem to be seeing now is not only police officers being assaulted, but sometimes crowds gathering and then some people filming, laughing, joking."

Comment: Talk about missing the point. If civilians have to protect the police from attackers, and not the other way around, something is really wrong. Maybe this has something to do with it:


And this:





Apple Red

Fraternities and sororities sue Harvard for discouraging same-sex clubs

harvard
© Darren McCollester / Getty Images
Several national fraternities and sororities sued Harvard University on Monday over a 2016 rule that discourages students from joining single-gender social clubs, marking the first legal challenge to the school's policy.

Two fraternities and two sororities filed a lawsuit in Boston's federal court, while another sorority separately sued the school in Massachusetts state court. Both cases argue that the school's policy discriminates against students based on their sex and spreads negative stereotypes about students who join all-male or all-female organizations.


Comment: Grievance politics are a knife that cuts both ways. Ironically, the policies set up to combat "isms" often embody those isms better than whatever it is they are trying to fight. Affirmative action is actually racist. Title IX rape tribunals are actually sexist.


Harvard officials did not immediately provide comment on the suits.

Starting with last year's freshman class, Harvard students who are members of single-gender clubs are barred from leading campus groups or becoming captains of sports teams. The school also refuses to endorse the students for prestigious fellowships, including the Rhodes and Marshall scholarships.

Comment: See also:


Crusader

Landmark case: Tribunal to decide if veganism a 'philosophical belief' akin to 'religion' after sacked vegan claims discrimination

Jordi Casamitjana veganism lawsuite

The League Against Cruel Sports said: 'Mr Casamitjana was dismissed from his position because of gross misconduct. He is seeking to use his veganism as the reason for his dismissal. We emphatically reject this claim.'
A tribunal is to be asked to decide whether veganism is a "philosophical belief" akin to a religion, in a landmark legal action.

Jordi Casamitjana says he was sacked by the League Against Cruel Sports after disclosing it invested pension funds in firms involved in animal testing.

He claims he was discriminated against, and the tribunal will now decide if veganism should be protected in law.

The League Against Cruel Sports says he was dismissed for gross misconduct.

It denies the sacking was because of his veganism.

Mr Casamitjana says he is an "ethical" vegan.

"Some people only eat a vegan diet but they don't care about the environment or the animals, they only care about their health," he told the BBC.

"I care about the animals and the environment and my health and everything.

"That's why I use this term 'ethical veganism' because for me veganism is a belief and affects every single aspect of my life."

Comment: Predictably, the Twitterverse erupts:










Heart - Black

Infirm woman left alone to languish in wheelchair after flight at O'Hare cancelled

Olimpia Warsaw
Olimpia Warsaw flew into Chicago to attend a relative's funeral. The 67-year-old made it to O'Hare, but family member Julian Coltea can't say the same for her luggage.

"She had to miss the first part of his funeral because she had to get clothes," Coltea said.

Warsaw has Parkinson's and diabetes and has trouble walking.

Claude Coltea said Friday after his father's funeral, his mom was set to return to Detroit. He would catch his flight shortly after.

"I walked with her all the way to her gate," he said. "I confirmed with the gate agent that the flight was on time. Everything was ok. She said, 'Yup, all's fine. We'll take good care of your mom'."

But, it turns out, Warsaw's flight was canceled.

NPC

End racism..but bashing white people is A-ok: California university hosts 'critical look at whiteness' forum

CalState whiteness forum
The Christian cartoon "VeggieTales" is racist because the villains are vegetables of color. The NFL is racist since most players are black and most coaches and owners are white. White women advance white supremacy when they support President Donald Trump.

These are some of the arguments made by students at a "Whiteness Forum" held at Cal State San Marcos on Thursday that aimed to take a "critical look at whiteness," according to organizers.

The two-hour event took place in a large multipurpose room, with more than a dozen poster board projects lined up in a circle around the room for viewers to review.

The forum is a result of Professor Dreama Moon's Communications 454 class titled "The Communication of Whiteness," with the annual event serving as a showcase of students' final projects for the class.

Briefcase

UC Berkeley settles lawsuit for discriminating against conservative speakers; agrees to stop charging 'security fees'

Conservative counterprotesters at UC-Berkeley
© Reuters / Stephen Lam
Conservative counterprotesters at UC-Berkeley
The University of California at Berkeley on Monday settled a free speech lawsuit accusing the school of discriminating against speakers with conservative views.

Under the settlement filed with the federal court in San Francisco, the university will modify its procedures for handling "major events," which typically draw hundreds of people, and agreed not to charge "security" fees for a variety of activities, including lectures and speeches.

It will also pay $70,000 to cover legal costs of the Berkeley College Republicans and the Tennessee-based Young America's Foundation, which filed the lawsuit in April 2017.

The settlement followed an April 27 decision by U.S. District Judge Maxine Chesney letting the plaintiffs challenge what they called the university's "secret" or unfairly restrictive policies toward conservative speakers.


Comment: See also:


Sherlock

Chinese creator of first gene-edited babies now missing, reportedly under campus house arrest

He Jiankui, gene-edited babies
© Anthony Wallace / Getty
He Jiankui at the Second International Summit on Human Genome Editing in Hong Kong, on November 28. His whereabouts are unknown since the summit took place.
Mystery surrounds the whereabouts of a Chinese scientist who claimed to have produced the world's first gene-edited babies.

He Jiankui appeared in Hong Kong last week at the second International Summit on Human Genome Editing and has not been seen since.

He was called "China's Frankenstein" after he released a video on YouTube in which he claimed that his team had modified the embryos of two sisters to switch off an HIV-related gene because their father had the virus.

The claim sparked controversy and criticism among the medical community. Scientists said implanting such an embryo was a boundary that should not be crossed until the associated risks were known and eliminated.

Comment: The University has denied reports the scientist is under house arrest but has refused to elaborate.


USA

Stanford University thinks the American flag might offend you - because it definitely offends them

Sigma Chi
An administrator encouraged Sigma Chi to take down the American flag flown in front of its house in order to improve its image on campus.

Let me explain. We all know the fate of Sigma Chi: it no longer exists. As is the experience of many Stanford Greek organizations past, while on probation last year, Sigma Chi sought to improve its image with the university so as to ensure its survival and the eventual lifting of its probation. Obviously, this aim was not realized. Sigma Chi is gone. Nevertheless, some administrative advice extended to Sigma Chi during this effort is worth noting, even after the fact, for its anti-Americanism.

Pablo Lozano '18 is the primary source for the following account. Other individuals, who asked not to be named, have corroborated it.

Lozano told that while on probation, Sigma Chi sought to make itself "an ally of the university." An administrator assigned to serve as a liaison between Residential Education and Sigma Chi - let's call him Mr. Z - was, in Lozano's words, "supportive" in trying to help Sigma Chi outlast probation and "transparent" in explaining often obscure bureaucratic processes. The Sigma Chi brothers appreciated the candid and genuine guidance that Mr. Z offered them throughout their fight for survival.

Comment: See: The Real Problem with Nationalism, Without the Virtue Signaling


Red Flag

Apple CEO Tim Cook suggests it's 'a sin' not to ban certain people from social media

Apple CEO Tim Cook
© Brendan McDermid / Reuters
Apple CEO Tim Cook speaks at the Anti-Defamation League's "Never is Now" summit in New York City on Dec. 3, 2018.
Technology companies must take a moral stand against hate speech, said Apple CEO Tim Cook on Monday during a speech at the Anti-Defamation League.

"I sometimes say that I worry less about computers that think like people and more about people that think like computers, without values or compassion, without concern for consequences," Cook said, as he accepted the Anti-Defamation League's first-ever "Courage Against Hate" award on Monday night, an honor that will be given each year to a business leader who champions equality.

The Apple CEO had a message for anyone trying to push hate, division or violence: "You have no place on our platforms. You have no home," he said.

Comment: It's funny how the question of who has the right to determine what constitutes 'hate speech' never seems to occur to these tech giants. They assume their own 'solid moral compass' is enough to set the standard for policing the rest of us, free speech be damned.

See also: